Weather
Lewiston, Idaho
Current Conditions
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Almanac
Average High: 38°
Average Low: 28°
Record high/year: 66° (1953)
Record low/year: -9° (1909)
Sunrise: 7:29 AM
Sunset: 4:20 PM
Detailed History
Sun and Moon
Sunrise: 07:29 AM (PST)
Moon Rise: 02:37 PM (PST)
Sunset: 04:20 PM (PST)
Moon Set: 06:27 AM (PST)
Moon Phase
Next 12 Hours
Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database
5-Day Forecast
Forecast for Lewiston Area
Today
Partly sunny. Highs in the lower to mid 40s.
Tonight
Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s to lower 30s.
Saturday
Mostly cloudy. Highs in the upper 30s to lower 40s. South wind around 15 mph in the afternoon.
Saturday Night
Cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain. Lows in the 30s. Southwest wind around 15 mph.
Sunday
Mostly cloudy. Highs in the lower to mid 40s. Southwest wind around 15 mph.
Sunday Night
Mostly cloudy. Lows in the 30s.
Monday
Partly sunny with a 20 percent chance of rain. Highs in the lower to mid 40s.
Monday Night
Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid to upper 30s.
Tuesday through Thursday
Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 30s to mid 40s. Lows in the upper 20s to lower 30s.
Record Report
Statement as of 12:16 am PST on January 09, 2009
The low temperature at Mullan Pass in the past 24 hours
was 27 degrees. This sets the record for the warmest low temperature
for this date. The previous record of 26 degrees was set in 1945.
Records have been kept at this site since 193
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
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Location: Tyler and Kelly, Lewiston, ID Updated: 4:19 AM PST |
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| Temperature: 39.1 °F | Dew Point: 30 °F | Humidity: 70% | Wind: Calm | Pressure: 30.37 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 39 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: Normal Hill Weather Station, Lewiston, ID Updated: 4:19 AM PST |
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| Temperature: 39.6 °F | Dew Point: 19 °F | Humidity: 43% | Wind: Calm | Pressure: 29.59 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 40 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: Harvest Vista/Pheasant Trail Estates @ Schaub Ranch, Lewiston, ID Updated: 4:19 AM PST |
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| Temperature: 36.9 °F | Dew Point: 27 °F | Humidity: 68% | Wind: Calm | Pressure: 30.40 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 37 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: ITD Shirrod ID US ITD, Genesee, Dry Updated: 3:46 AM PST |
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| Temperature: 31 °F | Dew Point: 24 °F | Humidity: 74% | Wind: West at 14 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 21 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: CityView Addition, Genesee, ID Updated: 1:19 AM WST |
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| Temperature: 30.7 °F | Dew Point: 18 °F | Humidity: 60% | Wind: West at 12.3 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 21 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: ITD Winchester ID US ITD, Updated: 11:34 AM GMT |
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| Temperature: 28 °F | Dew Point: 27 °F | Humidity: 97% | Wind: Calm | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 28 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: Camas Prairie, Reubens, ID Updated: 4:19 AM PST |
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| Temperature: 28.7 °F | Dew Point: 24 °F | Humidity: 84% | Wind: WSW at 3.5 mph | Pressure: 30.58 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 25 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: Sand Road, Moscow, ID Updated: 4:19 AM PST |
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| Temperature: 30.7 °F | Dew Point: 25 °F | Humidity: 78% | Wind: WNW at 8.5 mph | Pressure: 27.27 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 23 °F | Historical Graphs |
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MSN Maps of: |
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| Temperature | Dew Point | Humidity | Wind | Pressure | Hourly Precipitation | - | |
NWS Forecaster Discussion
894 fxus66 kotx 091118 afdotx Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Spokane Washington 318 am PST Friday Jan 9 2009 Synopsis... drier and cooler air has temporarily moved into the inland northwest. This airmass change will dramatically slow the runoff going into area rivers and streams through today. The weather pattern will remain cooler through the weekend...however a weak front will bring the threat of light to moderate snow to locations near the Canadian border and Saturday and then shift southward on Sunday. Strong ridging will then bring dry conditions to the area through most of next week. && Discussion... today and tonight...quiet weather at last will be the norm over the inland northwest today. Early this morning...the water vapor loops were depicting a departing shortwave trough over SW Montana...with resultant unsettled northwest flow behind it. Earlier this morning...this triggered scattered showers over the southeast corner of the County Warning Area...with a nice orographic signature over the northern portions of the Camas Prairie. Lately...the Spokane radar has generally lost all echoes...as increasing warm air advection in the middle-atmosphere has put a lid on the potentially unstable airmass. This increasing stability developed as yet another zonal flow pattern develops over the inland northwest. More on this later though. For today...we suspect most locations will generally be dry while snow levels will be considerably lower than yesterday. This comes as good news for all the Hydro concerns over the area...as the runoff today from snowmelt will be rather negligible and limited mainly to valley locations. The lack of significant precipitation will also help matters. This will allow US to begin paring back some of the Hydro headlines. We will begin near the Cascades...where according to the latest hydrographs...all rivers have crested or will very shortly. Over central Idaho and southeast Washington...the situation is a little more complicated as much of the runoff from the past few days is still working down lower portions of the rivers. This process has also been held up in many cases by significant icing. Ice damming is still likely present on the St. Joe river downstream from Calder. For this reason we will continue with the Flash Flood Watch for downstream locations. Meanwhile the ice jams have seemingly broken on hangman creek and the Palouse river...both of which are beginning to fall. Expect many of the other unable gaged smaller rivers and streams still have some icing problem...so we will let all other Hydro headlines ride for now and allow the water slowly work its way out of the system. Now onto the weather. The latest GFS and NAM were both quite similar in bringing a 130kt westerly jet across southern British Columbia and Alberta later this afternoon and tonight. According to the latest AMSU/SSMI/GPS precipitable water imagery this jet was embedded with a tap of sub-tropical moisture streaming northeast from the western Hawaiian Island. Despite the tap into the sub-tropics...this plume was much narrower and held a fraction of the moisture that was embedded over the pacnw over the past several days. This moisture plume is expected to set up over extreme southern British Columbia and Alberta late this afternoon and into tonight. Model cross sections through the northern tier of zones suggest initially we will see increasing clouds near the Canadian border...however the precipitation will likely hold off until after 00z. Persistent westerly flow in the 850-700 mb layer will result in significant rain shadowing over the Cascade. This suggests areas such as the Okanogan Valley and Highlands will largely be spared by this moisture whereas the north Idaho Panhandle and Cascade crest will receive most of the snow. Quantitative precipitation forecast totals through tonight are not impressive...with totals ranging from .07 to .15 inches over the northern selkirks and northern Cascade crest...with much lighter amounts elsewhere. This may result in 1 to 2 inches of snow for northern valley locations such as Metaline Falls and Bonners Ferry. Fx Saturday through Thursday...subtropical moisture tap sags into the west side of a general longwave ridge with an axis just off the coast Saturday and Saturday night. With no significant amount of cold air damming expected to be in place for much of The Lowlands with perhaps the exception of the far northern third of the forecast area a substantial rainshadow off the Cascades is likely as this system sags through. Locations along the periphery of the shadow...locations in the immediate vicinity of the Cascade crest...extreme northern Washington mountains and portions of the northern Idaho Panhandle will be better positioned to get measurable precipitation when this baroclinic band/subtropical moisture tap sags southeast through the forecast area Saturday and Saturday night. Sunday into Tuesday the longwave ridge axis shifts further west allowing at least two disturbance to slide into the area...first feature would be the baroclinic band/moisture tap from Saturday and Saturday night that moves back northward and through the forecast area as a warm frontal type feature...and after that another disturbance that slides down through southern British Columbia along the east side of the ridge in a northwest to southeast trajectory and over the forecast area Monday and Monday night...with the basin still not set up with cold enough air to allow any efficient isentropic upglide probability of precipitation again will remain fairly well focused over the earlier discussed periphery of the Cascades. Depending upon how close the surface low associated with the disturbance passage Monday is there could be some breezy conditions as the surface pressure gradient tightens across the County Warning Area Monday. Wednesday and Thursday the western US ridge amplifies and also Narrows...the result being the northwest to southeast oriented storm track on the east side of the ridge either gets pushed far enough east to allow shortwaves migrating through it to influence the forecast area or perhaps the path might actually just be void of shortwaves during that time...so there is the tendency to keep that part of the forecast the driest. Forecast temperatures do not show much of a trend through this time period except perhaps from about Wednesday on as GFS shows some colder air spilling over the Continental Divide from Canada and Montana...so a slight cooling trend...more apparent in overnight lows is depicted from then on. /Pelatti && Aviation... clearing developing from the west and northwest Thursday night... with wind slowly decreasing will allow for some stratus development across the Palouse through Spokane/c'da area later overnight into Friday morning...with patchy fog. Look for IFR/local MVFR ceilings to develop toward 12-15z. Once the stratus develops it appears it will be slower to erode until middle and high clouds ahead of the next system approach later Friday (20z-03z). The western taf sites are expected to see predominately VFR conditions with the potential for vcfg early Friday. /Jcote && Preliminary point temps/pops... Spokane 37 25 36 27 36 30 / 10 10 20 40 20 20 Coeur D'Alene 37 27 36 27 35 30 / 10 10 30 60 30 20 Pullman 38 27 40 33 41 32 / 0 0 10 30 20 20 Lewiston 47 29 42 35 44 36 / 0 0 0 10 10 10 Colville 36 23 32 25 33 27 / 10 20 30 50 30 10 Sandpoint 39 27 32 28 34 29 / 10 30 40 60 30 30 Kellogg 36 22 36 29 34 31 / 10 10 30 60 40 40 Moses Lake 40 26 35 27 36 32 / 0 0 0 10 0 0 Wenatchee 42 27 37 30 39 31 / 0 0 0 10 0 0 Omak 38 25 31 25 35 27 / 0 10 10 10 10 0 && Otx watches/warnings/advisories... Idaho...Flash Flood Watch through Saturday morning for central Panhandle mountains...Idaho Palouse. Washington...none. && $$