Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Newport/Morehead, NC

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960
FXUS62 KMHX 020504
AFDMHX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Newport/Morehead City NC
104 AM EDT Sun Jun 2 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Cooler and dry high pressure builds overhead through the
weekend. A backdoor front likely moves through the area late
Monday, with high pressure building in behind it from the north
through midweek. Thereafter high pressure will reestablish
offshore through late next week with increasingly unsettled
conditions possible.

&&

.NEAR TERM /REST OF TONIGHT/...
As of 1 AM Sun... No real changes to the forecast for the rest
of tonight as high pressure continues to gradually push offshore
this evening while high clouds continue to stream overhead.
Temps have gotten into the upper 50s and 60s overnight and will
likely not change much for the rest of the evening given the
ongoing cloudcover.

Prev Disc...Expansive ridging sits over the eastern
seaboard this evening while surface high pressure gradually
slides off the coast of the Carolinas overnight. Cirrus coverage
continues to gradually increase as a plume of moisture
associated with a barotropic low over the central MS River
Valley, and attendant surface front draped south to the Gulf of
Mexico, shifts eastward.

Forecast tonight is dry but increasingly cloudy as upper level
moisture continues to increase, aiding in broken to near
overcast skies. The increased coverage will inhibit the kind of
radiational cooling we saw last night, although temps will be
able to drop more rapidly this evening while coverage remains
scattered/less opaque.

With the surface high shifting offshore, winds overnight become
southerly to southwesterly encouraging low-level moistening.
Consequently, overnight lows will be considerably more mild with
lows ranging from the mid to upper 50s inland to the low to mid
60s along the water.

&&

.SHORT TERM /Sunday/...
As of 310 PM Sat...Heights fall tomorrow as central CONUS low
pressure lifts towards the Great Lakes, breaking down the ridge.
Surface high pressure will remain in control tomorrow while
shifting further offshore. Low- level thicknesses increase
modestly, and nudged highs up a couple degrees from the previous
forecast (mid 80s, low 80s OBX). A minority of CAMs are hinting
at a few showers developing along the sea breeze in the
afternoon, but think surface subsidence will win out and kept
PoPs below mentionable.

&&

.LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/...
As of 330 AM Sat...Pleasant and below normal conditions
continue Sunday. Then conditions become more unsettled Monday
ahead of a backdoor cold front which will move through the area
Monday night and bring slightly cooler conditions through
Wednesday. Scattered precip chances continue Tuesday, and then
increasingly unsettled weather is expected Wednesday through
late week as moist southerly flow increases.

Monday and Tuesday...Moisture will continue to spread into the
area early Monday morning from the top down, and may produce
some isolated showers through daybreak. Moisture advection
continues Monday as PWATs surge above 1.5", and expect a decent
coverage (~40%) of showers and thunderstorms with building
instability and the development of sea/sound breezes.

A backdoor cold front will move through the forecast area
overnight Monday into Tuesday morning and bring a more stable
and slightly cooler airmass to the coast. Onshore flow will keep
coastal areas mostly in the 70s, but further inland temps will
climb into the low to mid 80s, and encourage some scattered
afternoon thunderstorm development.

Wednesday through Friday...Moisture looks to quickly surge back
into the forecast area Wednesday as the high pressure to the
north breaks down. Southerly flow will return late in the day,
and will then continue through late week as high pressure
rebuilds offshore. Continued moisture advection will bring PWATs
up to 1.5-2" late next week, and there is a signal for unsettled
conditions ahead of a potent upper level trough. Temperatures
will climb to near normal with highs in the mid to upper 80s
each day, and lows mostly in the 60s to low 70s.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
SHORT TERM /through Sunday night/...
As of 1 AM Sun... No significant changes to the forecast. VFR
conditions with light winds are forecast to prevail across all
terminals through Sunday night as high pressure continues to
influence the weather with the probability of IFR flight
conditions over the next 24 hours is very low...less than 10%.

High clouds generally above 15-20 kft continue to stream in
from the west this evening as a moisture plume ahead of a weak
barotropic low over the Mississippi RIver Valley shifts
eastwards limiting the fog threat tonight and bringing little in
the way of impacts to operations. By tomorrow morning, the
high cirrus should move well east but increasing low- level
moisture with southerly return flow will aid in eventual diurnal
cu development Sun afternoon with SCT to BKN ceilings around
5kft expected between 18Z Sun to about 1-2Z Mon with 10-15 kft
high cirrus also increasing once again in the afternoon across
ENC. Once again minimal impact to operation is forecast into SUn
evening. As we get into Sun night iso shower chances gradually
begin to increase as a weak mid level shortwave approaches
though given the rather isolated nature of any precip that
develops will keep terminals precip free through the period
until higher confidence in precip chances occurs.

LONG TERM /Sunday night through Thursday/...
As of 330 AM Sat...Mostly VFR conditions are expected Sunday
with high pressure overhead. More unsettled conditions are
possible Monday through Wednesday which could bring some periods
of sub-VFR conditions to the terminals.

&&

.MARINE...
SHORT TERM /Tonight and Sunday/...
As of 920 PM Sun...Benign boating conditions expected through
the period as sprawling high pressure shifts offshore but
remains in control over area waters over the next 24 hours.
Light winds currently over the region this evening, with speeds
at 10 kts or less. As the high moves further out to sea, winds
overnight veer predominantly south to southwesterly around 10 kt
and remain so into Sun afternoon. Increasing thermal gradient
tomorrow afternoon will increase winds late in the day to 10-15
kt, especially for soundside waters and offshore waters north of
Cape Hatteras.

Currently observed seas of 2-3 feet will hold steady through the
period.

LONG TERM /Sunday night through Thursday/...
As of 330 AM Sat...Good boating conditions expected through the
period. High pressure continues over the waters Sunday and
Monday, and then a backdoor front moves through early Tuesday
and keep light onshore flow into Wednesday.

Winds will be mostly S 5-15 kts Sunday, and then turn to the SSW
Monday at 10-15 kts. Backdoor front moves through the waters
early Tuesday with winds becoming NNE behind it at 5-15 kts.
Flow then become E to SE Wednesday at 5-15 kts. Seas will be
mostly 2-3 ft through the period.

&&

.MHX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
NC...None.
MARINE...None.

&&

$$
SYNOPSIS...MHX
NEAR TERM...JME/MS/RCF
SHORT TERM...MS
LONG TERM...SGK
AVIATION...SGK/RCF
MARINE...JME/SGK/MS