A typical winter day is below freezing but above 0. Snow will fall and usually melts away a few times before sticking around until spring. Lows in an average year will have a few nights that drop below -10, but won’t hit -20.
That said, there’s a huge difference between the average and the extremes we sometimes get. Any given day in winter can range from about 50 to -50. I’ve had multiple apartments where frost forming on the walls was a problem. We might get absolutely buried in snow, or we might have almost no snow all winter and then get a blizzard in May. Last year the USDA updated plant hardiness maps and our area went up a level, then a month later we had a massive storm and deep freeze that killed a lot of trees.
Pacific northwest but west of the Cascades mountain range.
Rain. Rain for days on end.
It’s changed in recent times. It used to be more consistently constant with virtually no breaks in the rain and it was more of a drizzle too. Now it feels like it’s trending towards more substantial and less frequent, more like what the rest of the country is used to
Hot and damp like the rest of the year.
Cold and dry, but still pretty warm during the day. A good amount of snow can fall and be gone by the afternoon.
Less snowy than it used to be
(I consider that a bad thing)