Bazaar
Winter Storm Kori Produced Feet of Sierra Snow and Flooding Rain in California | The Weather Channel
Advertisement
Advertisement

Winter Storm

Winter Storm Kori Produced Feet of Sierra Snow and Flooding Rain in California

Play

At a Glance

  • Winter Storm Kori iced up parts of the Northwest.
  • Heavy snow fell in California's snow-weary Sierra.
  • Heavy rain caused flooding in California.

Winter Storm Kori began its pounding of the West Tuesday with an ice storm and spread heavy mountain snow and rain into storm-weary California Friday, thanks to another atmospheric river that set up over the region.

(MORE: Winter Storm Central | How Winter Storms Are Named)

More than 3 inches of rain in the Sherpa Fire burn area west of Santa Barbara, California led to mudslides. Cabins and cars were washed away after heavy rainfall there on Friday. 

The Setup

On the heels of a period of flooding and prolific snow last week, another deep plume of moisture known as an atmospheric river has pushed ashore along the West Coast.

Kori will then push into the Rockies, raising the threat of flooding rain, more heavy mountain snow and, in some areas, more freezing rain and sleet.

If that wasn't enough, yet another powerful Pacific storm lurks behind Kori for Sunday with more rain and mountain snow, including in southern California. For more on that story, click the link below.

(MORE: New Storm to Close the Weekend)

Kori will also bring mainly rain to the Northeast early next week, but interior parts of the region could see snow, sleet and freezing rain. For more on the impacts expected in the Northeast, click the link below.

(MORE: Nor'easter Will Bring Mostly Rain, Wind Early Next Week)

Ice, Sleet and Snow Reports

Mammoth Mountain in California's southern Sierra Nevada had picked up 20 to 30 inches of snow from Kori, as of early Thursday. The ski resort said this winter storm has vaulted them to their snowiest January on record.

As expected, the heaviest ice accumulation has been in the Columbia River Gorge and upper Hood River Valley.

A report of 2 inches of ice accumulation came in Wednesday morning from North Bonneville, Washington, between Hood River and Portland, Oregon. The ice has reportedly broken lots of tree limbs in the area. A 2-inch ice measurement has also been reported near Snowden, Washington.

(NEWS: Winter Storm Kori Becomes Icy Mess for Northwest Travel)

Hood River, Oregon, measured 1.5 inches of ice accretion, while Stevenson and Underwood, Washington, both reported 1 inch of ice accumulation.

Precipitation changed over to rain in the Portland, Oregon, metro area by late Tuesday evening, but not before 0.64 inches of ice accumulated at the airport.

(MORE: America's Most Winter-Weary City)

Elsewhere, one-quarter of an inch of ice accumulation was observed near Wenatchee, Washington, followed by 3 inches of a snow/sleet mix.

Advertisement

Up to one-quarter of an inch of ice was also measured near Spokane, Washington, with up to 3 inches of snow/sleet on top of it. Precipitation changed to rain early Wednesday morning in Spokane.

Ahead of the first Pacific front of Winter Storm Kori, winds have gusted as high as 87 mph on the Yaquina Bay Bridge in Newport, Oregon.

A "Mixed Blessing" of Drought Relief

Last week's heavy rain and feet of Sierra snow effectively wiped out the California drought north of Interstate 80, which had been in place, there, since Dec. 20, 2011.

A big player in California's water supply is spring snowmelt of the Sierra's snowpack. Fortunately, thanks to the recent barrage of storms, the water content of the Sierra snowpack is now almost double the average for mid-January.

Furthermore, reservoir levels in most of the state's major reservoirs are near or above average for this time of year.

However, parts of southern California remain in an extreme to exceptional multi-year drought.

Drought relief in southern California is more tricky, often posing a Catch 22.

While some rain is good to moisten soil and vegetation to reduce any fire risk, a wet winter season can fuel the growth of brush that can serve as fuel for wildfires during the summer/early fall dry season. 

Furthermore, heavy rain in southern California has two additional impacts:

  • Flash flooding triggered from rapid runoff over impervious surfaces in the L.A. Basin's "concrete jungle."
  • Debris flows over recently-burned wildfire scars. 

The rain rates needed to trigger debris flows in southern California, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, are as low as 0.2 inches per hour.

So, the reality of the situation is, unless the storm's water ends up in a reservoir, one could argue that despite the drought this upcoming barrage of storms may be more headache than helpful for southern California.

Parts of southern California including San Diego, Santa Barbara, and the valleys surrounding Los Angeles had flooding on Friday, Jan. 20. Widespread totals of 2-5 inches accumulated.

MORE ON WEATHER.COM: Winter Storm Kori (PHOTOS)

Advertisement
Hidden Weather Icon Masks
Hidden Weather Icon Symbols