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Northwest forecasters promise Thanksgiving break from rain

Inclement weather before and after will affect travel

The Columbian
Published: November 20, 2012, 4:00pm
2 Photos
A camp trailer is left upside down at the Old Mill Marina trailer park in Garibaldi, Ore., after high winds and rain hit the Oregon Coast on Monday
A camp trailer is left upside down at the Old Mill Marina trailer park in Garibaldi, Ore., after high winds and rain hit the Oregon Coast on Monday Photo Gallery

SEATTLE — Northwest residents might be thankful for a brief break in the rainstorms, if the forecast for Thursday is correct.

“I would say about 90 percent of our models are showing Thanksgiving Day will really not be a bad day at all,” said forecaster Jay Albrecht at the National Weather Service office in Seattle. Skies should be mostly clear, and there might even be a patch of blue.

Rains bracketing the holiday could make travel difficult in places, especially for those driving over Cascade mountain passes where they may encounter snow. But it won’t be anything like Monday’s storm that dropped a record 2.13 inches of rain at Sea-Tac Airport, flooded urban streets, knocked out power for 50,000 and killed a hunter on the Oregon coast when a tree blew down on his tent.

The severe weather is headed downstream.

“The big one has occurred already,” Albrecht said.

The Northwest is still in line for a series of Pacific frontal systems, but it’s back to typical November bluster.

“Just kind of showery and blustery conditions but not high winds or anything damaging,” he said. “This time of year, you can’t complain about that.”

Floodwaters were receding Tuesday in most places, except for the Chehalis River in southwest Washington, where forecasters said moderate flooding over roadways could threaten homes and businesses at Centralia and Grand Mound.

More than 100 residents of Nickelsville, a Seattle homeless camp, were trying to stay dry with tents on pallets or other platforms. A pump was moving foot-deep water out of a low spot as more rain fell Tuesday.

Fifteen mudslides hit Burlington Northern Santa Fe tracks between Seattle and Everett during the storm. The largest, which occurred early Tuesday at Everett, covered 50 feet of track up to 15 feet deep with mud, rocks and trees, said spokesman Gus Melonas.

Freight trains have been running sporadically. No Amtrak or commuter rail train will run between Seattle and Everett until 12:30 a.m. Thursday at the earliest.

Heavy snow in the Washington Cascades is allowing some ski resorts to open in time for the holiday weekend. Stevens Pass opened Tuesday. Crystal Mountain and Mount Baker are opening today.

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