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PORTLAND, Ore. — Below-freezing temperatures and gusty winds are forecast to cause icy stretches of road along I-84 through the Columbia River Gorge Thursday.The National Weather Service warns ...
Like many commercial fishermen, Kelsey Cutting relies on data from weather buoys at the mouth of the Columbia River to guide his decisions whether to set out for Dungeness crab.But as he’s ...
The Columbia River steelhead forecast calls for returns of about 75,000 fish, including 55,600 A-run steelhead bound for ...
Current COLUMBIA RIVER BAR - 20NM West of Columbia River Mouth (46T29) Buoy (46T29) swell report with the latest in wave height, peak period and mean wave direction data. Along with weather ...
NOAA weather buoy No. 46089, vital for Columbia River ... on Earth meant the famed 178-year-old organization frequently had to suspend its service of guiding ships across the Columbia River Bar. ...
ASTORIA, Ore. — A Camas father and his 11-year-old son are still missing after their boat capsized at the Columbia River Bar earlier this month. Two men, who were also on the boat, survived and ...
Massive cargo ships cross the Columbia River bar, either coming from or going to the Pacific Ocean, about 10 times each day. They're guided by local pilots. Skip Navigation ...
The U.S. Coast Guard said they suspended the search for two people in the Columbia River Bar late Saturday night. READ MORE | One dead, two still missing following a capsizing on the Columbia ...
The Columbia River Gorge was hit with flooding, rockslides and powerful winds on Feb. 23 as an atmospheric river bombarded the region, bringing record rain to downtown Portland.
The disappearance of No. 46089 compounded the earlier loss of No. 46029, which is the closest of three NOAA weather buoys used to predict weather at the Columbia’s mouth.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration last month redeployed an important weather buoy about 70 miles into the Pacific Ocean from the mouth of the Columbia River.