It's turn back the calendar week. Back to November.

A series of storms will rush into Western Washington from the Pacific this week, bringing dreadful weather.

Western Washington will be under a wind advisory from noon to 9 p.m. Monday. Expect winds of 20 to 30 mph and gusts of 45 mph.

Expect rain Monday and through the week. The National Weather Service has forecast temperatures in the lower 50s through the week and a chance of rain each day.

No day looks to be dry, but Tuesday, with a 30 percent chance of rain, may be the least miserable.

The weather systems will bring more snow to the mountains, where there is a winter weather advisory until 5 a.m. Tuesday.

The snow level will be at 2,000 feet, and the snow will fall on both Stevens and Snoqualmie passes. Four to 10 inches of new snow are expected by Tuesday morning. Up to a foot could fall at Paradise on Mount Rainier.

Another storm comes in Wednesday, again bringing rain and mountain snow. There is also a chance, forecasters say, that lowland areas above 500 feet could see some snowflakes Wednesday night.

The UW's Cliff Mass notes that this April has already been the coldest on record for many Western Washington locations.

And Professor Mass, ever the bearer of good news, closes his weather blog with this:

"And one final note...the return to last week's pattern implies not only that we will go back to cool and wet weather, but the eastern part of the U.S. may be on tap to experience more savage storms. In fact, the computer models are predicting this."