November Weather in the Northwest: Gusty Winds, Rain, and Snow in Western WashingtonOn November 2nd, western Washington braced for another round of stormy weather as a low pressure system moved away. While most of the earlier rain had moved north and east, showers and gusty winds lingered into the evening, particularly in the San Juan Islands, north of Whidbey Island, and around Admiralty Inlet. Wind gusts reached over forty miles per hour in exposed areas, while most Puget Sound communities saw winds around twenty miles per hour.A Convergence Zone set up between Snohomish and King counties, causing scattered heavy rain and stronger winds during the early evening commute. Snow levels dropped to around thirty-five hundred to four thousand feet, leading to a mix of rain and snow at Stevens Pass and mainly wet conditions at lower Snoqualmie Pass.Authorities monitored the Skokomish River in Mason County and the Snoqualmie River at Carnation, both of which flirted with minor flood stage but did not threaten homes or property. Overnight lows dipped into the mid-forties, but the worst of the storm had passed by morning.Tomorrow promises calmer weather with only a few showers and lighter winds, with temperatures climbing to the mid-fifties. Despite another week of on-and-off wind and rain in the forecast, a few breaks of sunshine are expected. This is the kind of November weather you'd expect in the Northwest—cool, damp, and always changing.
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