2024 Hurricane and Tropical Weather

Now it’s our turn here on the west coast! A “Bomb cyclone” is expected to hit the Pacific Northwest and Northern California this week. We’re hunkering down near Medford OR and expecting the infamous Siskiyou Summit on Interstate 5 to close, as it often does during the winter.

A powerful “bomb cyclone” will combine with an atmospheric river to unleash over a month’s worth of rain, hurricane-force wind gusts and feet of mountain snow to parts of the Pacific Northwest and Northern California.

A storm system off the Pacific Northwest is expected to rapidly intensify on Tuesday in a phenomenon called “bombogenesis” and earn it the moniker of “bomb cyclone.” It will intensify so much so quickly that it could become a “triple-bomb,” tripling the criteria needed to be considered a bomb cyclone, the National Weather Service in San Francisco said.

Bomb cyclones are formidable and unload heavy snow and strong winds during the winter. This one could be among the most intense on record for its location, a storm that occurs only “about once every ten years,” and will generate “some of the strongest winds we have seen in several years” that churn up “very dangerous mountainous seas of 30 to 35 feet,” the National Weather Service in Medford, Oregon, said.

The storm will strengthen so fast that it will fit into a special category of weather terminology known as a bomb cyclone. A storm, or cyclone, is essentially a giant spinning vacuum in the atmosphere. When a storm's central pressure drops 0.71 of an inch of mercury inches (24 millibars) or more in 24 hours or less, it is considered to be a bomb cyclone.

"This storm's central pressure is forecast to crash from 29.53 inches (1000 mb) to at least 28.05 inches (950 mb) in 24 hours, which is double the criteria for a bomb cyclone," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Heather Zehr said.



This sounds awful! Hope you will be all right, Lilibet.
 
This sounds awful! Hope you will be all right, Lilibet.
Thanks @anneg. I think we’ll be OK. There are other areas I’m more concerned about. Where we used to live on the CA Northcoast south of Eureka in the redwoods looks like it’s going to get slammed with rain. Flooding is likely IMO.

I’ve kept meaning to ask if you were impacted by Helene, although you didn’t mention it or else I missed it.
 
Thanks @anneg. I think we’ll be OK. There are other areas I’m more concerned about. Where we used to live on the CA Northcoast south of Eureka in the redwoods looks like it’s going to get slammed with rain. Flooding is likely IMO.
I keep thinking of all the places in the Northern California coastal mountains and western Oregon that have burned in the last few years -- anyplace that isn't fully regenerated with vegetative ground cover is at risk of scouring debris flows and all attendant problems (like trees coming down, roads washing out when debris blocks culverts, etc).

My area will see a little of this storm but only the very tail end -- I'm too far east to be at any real risk other than of power outages which might end up being widespread, especially if Bonneville Power transmission lines are damaged. Hopefully those lines are also too far east to be vulnerable.
 
As far as I can tell wind and rain haven’t been extreme in our part of Southern Oregon. There were some power outages in our town. I expect there will be more detailed news in the morning.


A “once in a decade” bomb cyclone is sweeping through the northwest United States and parts of Canada early Wednesday –– leaving at least one person dead and hundreds of thousands without power across Washington state, California and British Columbia.

In Seattle and neighboring cities, strong winds are tumbling trees, with some falling on houses and placing lives at risk.

In Lynnwood, north of Seattle, a woman in her 50s was killed when a large tree fell on a homeless encampment shortly after 7 p.m. PT, South County Fire Department told CNN.

More than 650,000 customers lost power in the early hours of Wednesday in Washington, while about 140,000 customers were without power in British Columbia, BC Hydro reported on its website. As of midnight PT, over 24,000 customers in California were without power.
 
Thanks @anneg. I think we’ll be OK. There are other areas I’m more concerned about. Where we used to live on the CA Northcoast south of Eureka in the redwoods looks like it’s going to get slammed with rain. Flooding is likely IMO.

I’ve kept meaning to ask if you were impacted by Helene, although you didn’t mention it or else I missed it.
We got through Helene fine, no power outages or damage except for a lot of branches down in the yard we had to clean up. We did have tornado warnings but thankfully no tornadoes in our area. Thanks for asking!
 
I thought the bomb cyclone was pushing the cool weather to SWFL but that doesn’t appear to be the case. Looks like our intermittent rain today may just be tropical moisture moving across the GOM. It’s a light steady soaking rain which is what we need. I haven’t been able to do a full yard tour yet but it should dry out by this afternoon.

My sunflower bed needs to be redone. A branch on my silver buttonwood tree looks dead. My butterfly garden took a beating but there are still monarchs fluttering around. Found a chrysalis hanging above my door. Hopefully my strawberry bed will recover. I’m ready for hurricane season to be over!
 
A little more bomb cyclone and atmospheric river news from the west coast.



Locally, Interstate 5 is closed southbound despite what your GPS tells you.

 
West coast bombogenesis/atmospheric river: storm finally got far enough east to reach me (Modoc County, CA), got half an inch of rain and lots of wind overnight. Low temp was 40°F so no snow for now. @Lilibet how are things in your area now?
Just gloomy and wet. No wind. We survived! :D
 
So how are people in Northern California faring? I live 10 miles East of Seattle and we gust got the light back. The cyclone itself was overrated in our part of the state, and in Seattle, too. It felt like two hours of gusty wind but the blackout still continues in many areas. Personal conclusion: invest in Starlink or such. No cell carrier worked during the outage. BTW, absence of traffic lights everywhere the next morning was scary. The traffic was quite heavy as people were driving towards places with the light and the internet. Too much unsafety in situations like this.
 
So how are people in Northern California faring? I live 10 miles East of Seattle and we gust got the light back. The cyclone itself was overrated in our part of the state, and in Seattle, too. It felt like two hours of gusty wind but the blackout still continues in many areas. Personal conclusion: invest in Starlink or such. No cell carrier worked during the outage. BTW, absence of traffic lights everywhere the next morning was scary. The traffic was quite heavy as people were driving towards places with the light and the internet. Too much unsafety in situations like this.
Glad your power is back! Here are some links about Northern California. The first one pertains to Humboldt County where we lived prior to Oregon.

These links cover more areas.


 
Glad your power is back! Here are some links about Northern California. The first one pertains to Humboldt County where we lived prior to Oregon.

These links cover more areas.


Here's a bit of unusual storm effects: Entire city of San Francisco under flash flood warning

(actually, if you go to KCRA's main page, KCRA.com, you'll see many if not most of the top headlines are about storm impacts.)
 
Glad your power is back! Here are some links about Northern California. The first one pertains to Humboldt County where we lived prior to Oregon.

These links cover more areas.



Seems like Northern California is in a much worse situation, tbh. The cyclone just barely touched PNW, and our power outages are common. However, Northern California is experiencing a more typical, and potentially more hazardous, weather disaster. Fingers crossed for them.
 
In the 1980s, when I first heard about global warming, I thought it meant more extreme storms where storms already happen. I didn't realize that it meant hurricanes on Vancouver Island. Bomb Cyclone or hurricane cloud formations, it looks the same. Bomb cyclone or hurricane, tidal wave or tsunami - different words for the same thing.

 

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