
"WeatherLight to modest early week snow refreshes the Washington and Oregon Cascades, with the biggest boost focused on Mount Baker, before a quieter midweek and a warmer, wetter pattern building late in the period. A weak system Monday night into Tuesday drops a few inches of mid-density snow on the northern Washington crest and around an inch or so elsewhere, with snow levels generally near 3,000 to 4,000 feet and all featured resorts remaining closed and quietly building base."
"At Mount Baker, snow levels around 3,100 to 3,300 feet keep precipitation all snow from the 3,500 foot base upward, with roughly 3 inches of mid-density snow expected by late Tuesday as snow-to-liquid ratios hover near 10:1. Stevens Pass, near 4,000 feet, picks up close to 2 inches from the same wave with similar 10:1 ratios and temperatures in the upper 20s to near 30 degrees, producing reasonably supportive but not ultra-light snow on the still-closed slopes."
Light early-week snow refreshes the Washington and Oregon Cascades, with the largest accumulations at Mount Baker and lighter amounts elsewhere. A weak system Monday night into Tuesday deposits a few inches of mid-density snow on the northern Washington crest and around an inch elsewhere, with snow levels near 3,000–4,000 feet and resorts remaining closed while building base. A second small wave Wednesday night into Thursday mainly targets Mount Baker with a couple more inches; most Cascade passes and high Oregon terrain stay mostly dry. Late-period conditions trend warmer and wetter, favoring continued base-building at mid and upper elevations while increasing the chance of denser snow or mixed precipitation near lower passes.
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