by Mike Godsey, mike@iwindsurf.com & Matt Sounders
A few days ago I wrote a blog about the strange Cut-Off Low at ≈ 18,000 ft. feet between Hawaii and Baja that was tracking towards San Francisco where it would bring epic winds. Then how the Cut-Off Low would create explosive winds for the Gorge
First – as it moved towards the Columbia Basin it would allow the North Pacific High to move towards us stacking isobars over the Gorge creating a strong pressure gradient.
Second – as the Cut-Off Low would deepen the low pressure in the Basin making for even a stronger pressure gradient.
Third – Matt Sounders, one of our Weatherflow Gorge forecasters was focusing on the clouds, winds and storm conditions that would arrive at the same time
Image #2 shows the Cut-Off Low at ≈ 18,000 ft. near San Francisco and how it is impacting the Gorge clouds Saturday morning.
All this strongly suggested that we would see explosive winds, lightning, and locally heavy rain and even a chance of large hail at some locations.
We tend to follow wild events like this carefully since there is much to learn.
The following is imagery and text messages between Mike Godsey & Matt Sounders the day of the storm and its aftermath.
Some of this is technical but skip to the good parts:
Saturday Morning
Mike Godsey7:13 AM
Gusts to 30 knot at my house. Thin hazy clouds overhead. So far the storm bands are W and E of the Gorge. Lots of lightning strikes in just one hour to the E and W. Main body of storm is still to the SSW at the Oregon – California border
IMAGE Image #3 shows the swell of convective clouds E. and W. of the Gorge and how they missed the corridor in the morning.
#4 shows radar imagery of heavy rain in yellow and orange with lightening strike. Notice how in the morning this action is focused E. and W of the Gorge.)
Matt Souders8:40 AM
Look at those overshooting tops casting shadows over the Columbia Basin!
8:41
I see a new convective band is impacting Roosevelt/Arlington
Matt Souders9:35 AM
I’ve never been so nervous about a forecast. I was right about things calming back down in the Corridor once the stuff near Stevenson cleared off…thank goodness...
Mike Godsey 11:26 AM
Several windsurfers out at the Hatch at the moment. What do you expect for the wind out east? No hint of rain here.
Godsey12:05 PM
Meant to say… about a half dozen windsurfers out at the Hatch
Matt Souders12:43 PM
You’ll see a big bloom of thunderstorms (mostly targeting the Cascade peaks and Western Gorge, and from Doug’s east) start popping off between 3 and 5 and hit peak intensity around 6-7.We’re roughly on track for wind speeds out to Maryhill(Arlington dipped a bit, which isn’t a complete shock, but it’ll recover in an hour or two and begin to climb rapidly after 3 or 4, peaking by 6-7). I’m still expecting upper-30’s at The Wall and low-40’s at Roosevelt by the time we peak – the only way I imagine busting is if thunderstorms get too intense and make the gorge flow too turbulent right at the crucial time when winds should be peaking
12:44
Looks like it was a good thing I upped my Corridor numbers early this morning…and mentioned a solid period through the early afternoon in my midday update. Really good conditions for a couple-few hours there before instability starts to break things up
12:45
I saw marine clouds reforming west of Viento at 10:45 when I started the update and confirmed my speculation from last night that conditions would stabilize for a few hours
Mike Godsey 1:23 PM
Mostly blue skies here. Solid marine layer to the west. This is one weird storm. There are storm clouds E. and W. of the Corridor.
Matt Souders2:15 PM
Getting nervous. :/
Mike Godsey 3:23 PM
Total white out at Hatchery 3 minutes ago:
Matt Souders3:23 PM
winds climbing out east…on schedule there…
3:24
wind quality appears to have imploded right after 1 PM at the Hatchery, if the sensor is to be believed.
3:25
Gust factor increased, lulls dropped…minute to minute averages got more variable.
3:26
wow…look at Viento…lull 22 gust 51…LOL (edited)
Mike Godsey3:28 PM
It does not show in the photo but that smoke on the water hit the parking lot.. Heavy rain and lightning just SW of Mt. Hood now.
Matt Souders3:28 PM
Impressive showing on radar…
Mike Godsey 3:29 PM
Look carefully at the image and you can see 3 windsurfers out just on that side of the river.
Matt Souders3:32 PM
I definitely see two of them…bottom left…even with wildly erratic winds, it’s still surfable even for tiny sails because the mean is so high…you have to catch the gusts and fight like hell to stay above water in the lulls…but I’m betting they’re not slogging.
Could you post that to the forums to alert anyone paying attention?
Matt Souders3:46 PM
yep…definitely about to rain where you are…that rain looks fairly light compared to what’s going on west and east of you, but it’ll dink with the winds in the Corridor, for sure.
Matt Souders4:00 PM
rains thickening up on radar as they approach…combined with gusty winds, visibility will be quite low over the next at least hour
4:01
This is what I was talking about, though…storms moving fast, giving almost no warning, conditions becoming chaotic.
Thunder every 10-20 seconds now
Matt Souders4:12 PM
storms backbuilding westward along the first spiral band associated with the upper-low, deepening just as they get overhead for the Corridor, becoming borderline severe as they head for Doug’s and Avery, and definitely severe for the cell heading for The Wall.
Gotta say…I’m pretty damned proud of my Gorge forecast for today. Most difficult forecast of my tenure here by a wide margin and:
I pegged timing of severe weather arrival inside of an hour
I warned of 60+ kt wind gusts out east
I predicted 40+ kt sustained winds for just about the right time (a little bit late at Arlington, but only an hour or so)
I correctly diagnosed from the early morning sky when the relatively stable time would be in the Corridor and when everything would change
I had Corridor speeds almost to the knot through 4 – held onto high winds a couple of hours too long because I wasn’t 100% sure on storm timing
If I get gripes for THIS forecast…I’m just gonna chuckle. (edited)
Mike Godsey 7:29 AM
I agree, it was a near perfect forecast. Plus, it played out with suspense since the first T storms passed E. and W. of the Gorge in the AM. Then mid day there were strong winds in the corridor and mild winds out east with blue skies over the corridor. Then suddenly mid afternoon the storm hit with rain and lightening in the corridor and very song winds gusting to 70 out east. Lot to feel proud of Matt.
Mike Godsey 8:50 AM
Just go a major complaint about yesterday’s Gorge forecast…
Matt Souders 8:51 AM
You’ve gotta be frickin’ kiddng me
Mike Godsey 8:52 AM
Greg says: “Matt totally missed predicting of 2 trees being uprooted at Roosevelt by the evening breezes in the parking lot narrowly missing cars.” (Meant in jest.)