A parade of cold winter storms will bring heavy snow to the Sierra next week along with rounds of rain and windy conditions for the Valley and lower Foothills. The KCRA 3 weather team is issuing weather Alert Days for Monday and Tuesday because of snow reaching lower elevations, extended amounts of rain and strong winds. Travel is discouraged on Alert Days because of risky conditions posed by weather on Alert Days.Intense snowfall rates and strong winds will make travel difficult to impossible above 5,000 feet. The snow level will drop as low as 3,000 feet.Wednesday is a KCRA 3 weather Impact Day; conditions will not be as risky, but travel and outdoor activities are likely to be affected. Snow will continue to fall, but the intensity will ease. Long delays are still likely throughout the day. The Valley and Foothills will have stormy weather to deal with each of these days, too. Below is a breakdown of what the KCRA 3 weather team is expecting. SnowMountain snow is in the forecast any time between Sunday night and Wednesday. Snow will be heaviest late Monday through Tuesday night. During this time, snow could accumulate at one to two inches per hour. This, combined with strong winds, could create blizzard-like conditions with near-zero visibility. Sunday’s snow level will be around 5500 feet. By Monday, the snow level will drop to 4000 feet. Tuesday and Wednesday could see the snow level bottom out around 3000 feet. Donner and Echo Summit could pick up three to five feet of snow between Monday and Wednesday. Similar totals are possible down to 5,000 feet, which includes places like Blue Canyon. People living at 4,000 feet should prepare for the possibility of disruptive snowfall and closures next week. A foot of snow is possible at this elevation. Some accumulation is possible as low as 3,000 feet. The KCRA 3 weather team will focus on numbers for lower elevations over the next couple of days.RainRainfall totals will pale in comparison to snow numbers next week. The storm track will bring systems in from the north, where air tends to be dry, rather than from the south, which tends to breed warm, wet storms. There is no atmospheric river connection with next week’s pattern. The Sacramento Valley will see one to two inches of rain between Sunday night and Wednesday. Lower numbers are forecast for the San Joaquin Valley.The Foothills will see up to four inches of rain over three days. Rain totals in these ranges are enough to keep things wet for several days, and there may be some street flooding in poor drainage areas. Creeks, streams and rivers will not flood. WindNext week will be windy at times as lines of precipitation move across the Valley and into the Sierra. The Valley and Foothills may experience wind gusts near 40 mph for a few hours at a time. Gusts over the Sierra summits could top 60 mph.Wind gusts of 40 mph can make a mess of any yard furniture, décor or trash bins, but major damage is not currently expected.Winds could trigger outages in the Sierra. Starting this weekend, high-resolution forecast models will give the KCRA 3 weather team better insight into specific wind strength.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

A parade of cold winter storms will bring heavy snow to the Sierra next week along with rounds of rain and windy conditions for the Valley and lower Foothills.

The KCRA 3 weather team is issuing weather Alert Days for Monday and Tuesday because of snow reaching lower elevations, extended amounts of rain and strong winds. Travel is discouraged on Alert Days because of risky conditions posed by weather on Alert Days.

Intense snowfall rates and strong winds will make travel difficult to impossible above 5,000 feet. The snow level will drop as low as 3,000 feet.

Wednesday is a KCRA 3 weather Impact Day; conditions will not be as risky, but travel and outdoor activities are likely to be affected. Snow will continue to fall, but the intensity will ease. Long delays are still likely throughout the day.

The Valley and Foothills will have stormy weather to deal with each of these days, too.

Below is a breakdown of what the KCRA 3 weather team is expecting.

Snow

Mountain snow is in the forecast any time between Sunday night and Wednesday.

Snow will be heaviest late Monday through Tuesday night. During this time, snow could accumulate at one to two inches per hour. This, combined with strong winds, could create blizzard-like conditions with near-zero visibility.

Sunday’s snow level will be around 5500 feet. By Monday, the snow level will drop to 4000 feet. Tuesday and Wednesday could see the snow level bottom out around 3000 feet.

snow level

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Snow levels next week will be the lowest Northern California has seen this winter.

Donner and Echo Summit could pick up three to five feet of snow between Monday and Wednesday. Similar totals are possible down to 5,000 feet, which includes places like Blue Canyon.

snow

Hearst Owned

Snow will be heaviest Monday and Tuesday, but major travel impacts are still likely Wednesday as road crews play catch-up. 

People living at 4,000 feet should prepare for the possibility of disruptive snowfall and closures next week. A foot of snow is possible at this elevation.

Some accumulation is possible as low as 3,000 feet. The KCRA 3 weather team will focus on numbers for lower elevations over the next couple of days.

Rain

Rainfall totals will pale in comparison to snow numbers next week.

The storm track will bring systems in from the north, where air tends to be dry, rather than from the south, which tends to breed warm, wet storms.

There is no atmospheric river connection with next week’s pattern.

The Sacramento Valley will see one to two inches of rain between Sunday night and Wednesday. Lower numbers are forecast for the San Joaquin Valley.

qpf

Hearst Owned

Rain totals will pale in comparison to snow totals next week.

The Foothills will see up to four inches of rain over three days.

Rain totals in these ranges are enough to keep things wet for several days, and there may be some street flooding in poor drainage areas.

Creeks, streams and rivers will not flood.

Wind

Next week will be windy at times as lines of precipitation move across the Valley and into the Sierra.

The Valley and Foothills may experience wind gusts near 40 mph for a few hours at a time. Gusts over the Sierra summits could top 60 mph.

Wind gusts of 40 mph can make a mess of any yard furniture, décor or trash bins, but major damage is not currently expected.

Winds could trigger outages in the Sierra.

Starting this weekend, high-resolution forecast models will give the KCRA 3 weather team better insight into specific wind strength.

See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel