Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Honolulu, HI

Home |  Current Version |  Previous Version |  Text Only |  Print | Product List |  Glossary On
Versions: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32
623
FXHW60 PHFO 040648
AFDHFO

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Honolulu HI
848 PM HST Fri May 3 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Breezy trade winds will continue into Monday as a high pressure
system remains anchored far north of the state. An upper level
low northwest of Kauai will slowly drift across the island chain
enhancing shower activity mainly over windward and mountain areas
of each island. By Tuesday the disturbance aloft weakens and
drifts northeast of the state, briefly decreasing shower activity.
A low level cloud band will ride into the islands on the trade
winds with support from an upper level trough from Wednesday to
Thursday, increasing shower trends over all islands.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Satellite imagery water vapor channel shows an upper level low
roughly 700 miles to the west-northwest of Kauai this evening. An
upper level trough is also evident over the islands enhancing
trade wind showers as shown on island radar. The subtropical jet
stream lingers just south of the Hawaiian Islands and will slowly
drift north over the next few days.

A 1030 mb high pressure center and subtropical ridge will remain
anchored over the Central Pacific basin, far north of the Hawaiian
islands through the weekend. This system will produce breezy
trade winds across the Hawaii region into Monday. Trade wind
speeds will slowly decrease to moderate levels from Monday into
Tuesday as the high pressure center drifts eastward away from the
island chain and a long wave trough moves into the Central
Pacific. Easterly trade winds will continue to blow at moderate
levels through Friday.

Expect continued enhanced showers across the state as the unstable
upper level disturbance slowly drifts eastward across the island
chain. Most of the rainfall amounts will favor windward and
mountain areas as breezy trade winds build clouds up and over the
windward mountain slopes. Down sloping trade wind flow over the
leeward sides of island mountain ranges will tend to decrease
shower activity for leeward areas of each island. Shower trends
will tend to increase during our typical diurnal rainfall maximum
in the overnight to early morning hours.

In the extended forecast we continue to see a long band of
unsettled shallow clouds, remnants of an old Eastern Pacific cold
front, drifts into the islands on the moderate trade winds from
Wednesday morning into Thursday. This cloud band may produce wet
weather over all islands for an 18 to 24 hour time period. The
highest rainfall amounts will tend to favor windward and mountain
areas, however many leeward sites may also see measurable
rainfall totals with this next system. This fairly shallow cloud
band will likely not be deep enough to produce heavy rainfall,
rather more beneficial rain is forecast for all islands.

&&

.AVIATION...
Breezy easterly trade winds will persist through the weekend,
with clouds and showers favoring windward and mauka locations.
MVFR CIGs/VSBYs in showers are possible over these windward areas,
especially overnight through the early morning periods.
Elsewhere, VFR conditions will prevail with an occasional shower
making it to leeward sections of the smaller islands.

AIRMET Sierra is in effect for tempo mountain obscuration for
windward portions of the Big Island. This AIRMET will likely need
to be expanded to other windward areas later this evening.

AIRMET Tango is in effect for mod turb below 9000 feet downwind
of island terrain, which will continue through the weekend.

&&

.MARINE...
Consolidating high pressure far N of the islands will support
strong E trade winds into Monday, with winds accelerating to
near-gale force in the windier channels. The high will move E
thereafter, leading to a gradual easing in trade wind speeds by
the middle of next week. A Small Craft Advisory (SCA) for all
waters will remain posted through at least Sunday.

A medium- to long-period NNW swell is building in island waters
this evening, with NDBC buoys 51101/51001 NW of Kauai reporting
swell heights a couple feet larger than anticipated by wave model
guidance. If current trends continue, forecast surf heights for
Saturday will be increased for N and W facing shores, but peak
surf heights will remain below High Surf Advisory (HSA) levels.
This swell will gradually diminish Sunday, but another relatively
small, moderate-period NW swell is expected Monday and Tuesday.

Increasing short-period wind waves along E facing shores will
result in rough and choppy surf for at least the next several
days. Elsewhere, the storm track in the S hemisphere recently
became increasingly favorable for the generation of S swells,
with these swells arriving on-and-off in the islands for at least
the next week. The first of these long-period swells is expected
this weekend and early next week, with peak surf heights remaining
below HSA levels, although later swells may turn to be large enough
to warrant a HSA.

&&

.HFO WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM HST Monday for all Hawaiian
waters-

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Bohlin
AVIATION...Gibbs
MARINE...Birchard