Lovelock, Nevada Weather Conditions
Severe Weather Alerts
Next 12 Hours
5 Day Forecast
- Monday
-
- High: 34 °
- Low: 22 °
- Snow
- Tuesday
-
- High: 45 °
- Low: 22 °
- Chance of Snow
- Wednesday
-
- High: 43 °
- Low: 20 °
- Chance of Snow
- Thursday
-
- High: 49 °
- Low: 22 °
- Partly Cloudy
- Friday
-
- High: 54 °
- Low: 25 °
- Partly Cloudy
Forecast for Lovelock, Nevada
Updated: 5:32 PM PST on February 12, 2012
Winter Weather Advisory in effect from 4 am to 4 PM PST Monday...

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Tonight
Isolated showers in the evening...then snow and rain likely after midnight. Snow level 5000 feet lowering to the valley floor. Snow accumulation up to 1 inch. Lows 30 to 35. Southwest winds around 10 mph.

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Monday
Periods of snow...snow may mix with rain in the morning in the lowest valleys. Snow accumulation 1 to 4 inches. Highs 35 to 42. East winds around 10 mph shifting to the northwest in the afternoon.

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Monday Night
Snow showers likely in the evening...then chance of snow showers after midnight. Snow accumulation up to 2 inches. Lows 23 to 28. North winds 10 to 15 mph.

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Tuesday
Mostly cloudy. Slight chance of showers. Highs 42 to 47. Northwest winds around 10 mph.

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Tuesday Night
Mostly cloudy. Slight chance of snow showers after midnight. Lows 23 to 28. Southwest winds up to 10 mph.

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Wednesday
Mostly cloudy with a slight chance of snow showers. Highs 41 to 46.

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Wednesday Night
Partly cloudy. Lows 16 to 26.

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Thursday through Friday
Partly cloudy. Highs 51 to 56. Lows 25 to 30.

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Friday Night through Sunday
Mostly cloudy with a slight chance of showers. Lows 25 to 35. Highs 46 to 56.
Severe Weather Alert Descriptions
Winter Weather Advisory
Statement as of 5:13 PM PST on February 12, 2012
... Winter Weather Advisory remains in effect from 4 am to 4 PM
PST Monday...
A Winter Weather Advisory for snow remains in effect from 4 am to
4 PM PST Monday.
* Timing: snow will develop late tonight and continue through
Monday afternoon... with the heaviest snow expected Monday
morning.
* Snow accumulations: 1 to 4 inches. The heaviest snows are
likely north of Lovelock and well east of Fallon by late
Monday morning.
* Impacts: hazardous travel conditions with slick and icy roads
and low visibility along Interstate 80... highways 50 and
possibly Highway 95.
Precautionary/preparedness actions...
Snow is expected to pose an inconvenience to travelers. Roads
will become slick and hazardous... with snow and ice first
developing on bridges and overpasses. Motorists should slow
down... use caution... and expect travel delays. Check our website
at weather.Gov/Reno or listen to NOAA Weather Radio for updates
on this situation.
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
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Location: MesoWest TOULON NV US NV DOT, Lovelock, NV Updated: 8:18 PM PST |
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| Temperature: 38 °F | Dew Point: 21 °F | Humidity: 49% | Wind: NW at 5 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 34 °F | Graphs |
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Location: MesoWest LOVELOCK NNR NV US SCAN, Lovelock, NV Updated: 7:00 PM PST |
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| Temperature: 41 °F | Dew Point: 18 °F | Humidity: 40% | Wind: WNW at 2 mph | Pressure: 30.00 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 41 °F | Graphs |
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Location: MesoWest CARSON SINK NV US DRI, Lovelock, NV Updated: 7:20 PM PST |
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| Temperature: 36 °F | Dew Point: 21 °F | Humidity: 54% | Wind: SE at 3 mph | Pressure: 29.82 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 36 °F | Graphs |
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MSN Maps of: |
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| Temp: | Dew Point: | Humidity | Wind | Pressure | Hr Precip | - | |
NWS Forecaster Discussion
Area forecast discussion...updated National Weather Service Reno Nevada 527 PM PST sun Feb 12 2012 Update... update this evening to increase chance of snow from Tahoe north to Lassen and into northern Washoe County. Precipitation is rapidly advancing in the California Central Valley with radar returns showing up over the Sierra. While the Sierra returns are likely virga due to the low-level dry air, it will rapidly moisten in the next couple hours. We are already seeing this at Ridgetop level as the Slide Mountain dewpoint depression has decreased from near 20 degrees to 3 in the last three hours. 18z model suite picked up on this and even show up to a 1/4 inch of liquid near the Sierra crest by 06z. Therefore, have moved up start times of Lassen/Tahoe advisories to 7 PM with the faster timing. Expect snow will begin to accumulate on the passes around then or shortly thereafter. Otherwise, everything seems on track for now. May need to increase timing later for points further east including the Reno area and the I-80 corridor. Other concerns still lie with the amount of precipitation in the Reno area Monday morning. Models show main band just to the north, but I have seen this before in similar situations (tonopah low type setup). In past situations the band was shown about 50 miles too far north and if this occurs tonight, Reno- Carson-Minden will likely see 2-4 inches of snow in the morning. Will be watching the surface pressure/changes carefully to determine where the surface low develops. The location will provide clarity as a position more toward Minden proves model positioning to be right. However, if the low is more toward Bishop-Hawthorne then the band will be further south. Wallmann && Previous discussion... /issued 258 PM PST sun Feb 12 2012/ Short term... current water vapor imagery shows a jet streak digging into the base of the trough offshore near 41n 130w. Forecast models remain fairly consistent with this feature moving on shore along the Oregon coast this evening then dropping southeast along the Sierra through Monday afternoon. Precipitable water plume ascd with this trough is up to about 1 inch off shore according to latest AMSU satellite data. Forecast precipitable water is around 0.8 inches as the low tracks southeast tonight and Monday. The track of the low is critical to the location of the best snowfall. It will generally be snow as forecast soundings show a quick drop in snow levels as precipitation starts. The only areas that may see a mix will be south of Highway 50 and along and east of Highway 95 early Monday. So have lowered snow levels most locations. As the European model (ecmwf)/NAM/GFS/Gem and most ensemble members track the low along or just west of the Sierra am fairly confident that Sierra will get a good amount of snow...at least enough for advisories to pan out. There will be an upslope component early for the Sierra crest but this will not be long lived and flow is not very strong. So heaviest precipitation in the Sierra will likely be late tonight and early Monday in the proximity of the upper low. This precipitation will taper off by late Monday afternoon. Questions on location of accumulating snowfall remain for east of the Sierra. Current track of the low puts much of the basin and range north of I-80 and east of Highway 95 in a favorable area for diffluence/deformation aloft late tonight and Monday. So have increased probability of precipitation and quantitative precipitation forecast over this area and will issue an advisory for zone 4 with a concentration along I-80 north of Lovelock and Highway 50 east of Fallon. If the track of the low shifts to the west this diffluent area will shift west as well. That would put the Reno/Carson City in a more favorable location for heavier snow. For now will leave the Reno/Carson out of any advisory...but all concerned parties should be cognizant of the potential for snow accumulations of 2 inches or more...especially in the foothills...for the Monday morning commute. The upper low continues to sag south Monday night with snow tapering to showers. Higher probability of precipitation will hang on longer in the west central portion of Nevada and also into Mono County where there will be a brief period of enhanced upslope...although this will be fairly weak. Short wave ridge develops for Tuesday with some drying and warming. European model (ecmwf) and GFS are now dropping another low into the region late Tuesday night. NAM does not have a closed low like the European model (ecmwf) and GFS but does drop a trough south into far eastern Nevada. With this big departure from the GFS and European model (ecmwf) have opted to largely ignore the NAM after Tuesday. Added some probability of precipitation for late Tuesday night to the far northern and western areas of the County Warning Area...but most of the impact of this low will be in the extended forecast. Mlf Long term...Wednesday through Sunday... cooled Wednesday several degrees for most areas, otherwise little change to the extended grids. Another slider will be dropping down into the region for Wednesday. There is large uncertainty as to where the low will pass by the region, with models flopping between near the Sierra crest and central Nevada and the 15z sref sporting a large Standard deviation bullseye over the northern Sierra (on the backside of its mean low). With all the uncertainty it has made pop easier as a broad brush slight chance to low end chance (mono County with possible upslope flow) the best way to go for now. The only thing that seems fairly clear is that if any precipitation falls it will likely be in the form of snow with a significant cold pool with the upper low in all models. In addition, I have lowered highs Wednesday given the strength of the cold pool. Wednesday night through Thursday night, there is good agreement with an upper ridge building overhead until the next system arrives by next weekend. As this system looks like another bowling Ball low breaking off from the main northern branch flow it has an inherent uncertainty as to where it will wind up moving through the southwest Continental U.S.. therefore, I have not gone to drastic on changing grids so we still have some chance of precipitation Friday and Friday night down to about Highway 50. However, the latest models would have US push the precipitation chances back 12-24 hours to the Saturday timeframe. With the eventual location of next weekend's system very hard to ascertain at this time, I have lingered pop through the weekend as precipitation cannot be ruled out. Snyder Aviation... for the Sierra, conditions will deteriorate by around midnight for ktvl/ktrk and the northern Sierra with IFR/MVFR conditions persisting through Monday and several inches of snow accumulation on runways. For the Mono County Sierra and kmmh, most of the snow tonight and Monday morning will be restrained to west of Highway 395 with breezy conditions and perhaps a few brief -shsn elsewhere. Conditions will deteriorate east of 395 and for kmmh later in the afternoon and into Monday evening as a wrap-around snow band develops. For krno and the western Great Basin, snowfall is a bit more uncertain and depends on where the incoming system's snow band sets up Monday morning, although at this time snow looks heaviest well north and east of krno in the basin and range. The critical time for runway accums will be before 10 am when the heaviest snow combines with the coolest ground temperatures. For krno, the best shot for a light runway accumulate will be between 2 and 7 am Monday when around a half-inch will be possible on untreated surfaces. However, if the system moves just 40 miles or so west heavier accums will be possible. By late morning and into Monday afternoon, the snow band is expected to decrease in organization and intensity as the best forcing moves into central Nevada. Also, paved surfaces should warm up for the melting of snow. Snyder && Rev watches/warnings/advisories... Nevada...Winter Weather Advisory from midnight tonight to 4 PM PST Monday nvz005. Winter Weather Advisory until 4 PM PST Monday nvz002. Winter Weather Advisory from 4 am to 4 PM PST Monday nvz004. California...Winter Weather Advisory until 4 PM PST Monday caz071. Winter Weather Advisory from midnight tonight to 4 PM PST Monday caz070. Winter Weather Advisory until 4 PM PST Monday caz072. && $$ Http://weather.Gov/Reno


