After enduring record rain, mudslides and hail, the northwestern United States will catch a few days of dry weather before a new storm rolls in later this week.
This past Friday and Saturday were active days in the Northwest as an unusually potent storm swept through the region. In several cities, Saturday entered record books in terms of daily rainfall.
The 0.80 of an inch officially recorded in Portland, Oregon, was the wettest August day since Aug. 29, 2005, when 1.05 inches fell. Saturday is also now the second wettest day so far this year, behind the 1.11 inches that soaked the city on Jan. 18.
“Many places, such as Portland, picked up more rain over the course of Friday and Saturday than they typically do in the entire month of August,” according to AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist and western U.S. blogger Brian Thompson.Rainfall in Portland spanning Friday and Saturday totaled 0.91 of an inch. The rainfall average for all of August is only 0.67 of an inch.
“The good news is that only a few of the fires ignited by lightning over the past few days are considered large,” he added. “Despite the lightning, the rain definitely aided firefighters.”Other thunderstorms produced accumulating hail and wind damage in some communities, and too much rain fell in a few areas.
Heavy rain triggered a mudslide on State Route 410 in the Washington Cascades on Friday night. The state’s Department of Transportation crews cleared the roadway and opened it back up to motorists on Saturday afternoon.Luckily, the forecast through the first half of this week will be nothing like Friday and Saturday across the Northwest.Dry weather will span the Northwest through Wednesday.
Partly to mostly sunny conditions will prevail with temperatures returning to the lower and middle 80s in Portland early this week. Highs in the upper 70s are in store for Seattle.Temperatures will climb back into the lower 90s in the warmest interior valleys but will not rise much above normal.Gusty winds will also be largely absent across the Northwest early this week, allowing firefighters to continue to get the upper hand on the ongoing blazes.
The dry weather will not last long across the Northwest as another storm will come ashore late in the week.
This storm may bring another flareup of showers and thunderstorms,” according to Thompson. “These will produce more much-needed rain but will once again bring a concern for new fires thanks to lightning.”Thompson also warned for an isolated number of the thunderstorms to turn severe.Similar to late last week, temperatures will take a noticeable tumble as the storm swings through.
The summer months are typically the driest of the year in the Northwest. Any rainfall now will be welcome with the AccuWeather long-range forecasting team anticipating a warmer and drier-than-normal autumn to take shape across much of the Northwest with continued drought and fire dangers.
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