Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH

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460 FXUS61 KCLE 011905 AFDCLE Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 305 PM EDT Wed May 1 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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A weak cold front will move east through the area tonight and stall across the Lower Ohio Valley. This front will lift back north as a warm front on Thursday, followed by a cold front on Friday into Saturday. Another weak cold front may cross the area on Sunday.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/...
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A scattered cu-field has developed ahead of a weakening cold front across portions of eastern MI and Northwest OH this afternoon, although NUCAPS sounding indicate an abundance of mid-level dry air so not really anticipating any precipitation associated with the front apart from perhaps a brief isolated shower or two this afternoon/evening. Otherwise, attention then turns towards Thursday as this weak cold front will lift back north as a warm front. There may be enhanced convergence with the interaction of the lifting warm front and developing lake breeze Thursday afternoon and evening, particularly across north-central and Northwest Ohio. Started with a slight chance of thunderstorms at this point for Thursday afternoon/evening, but think that further adjustments may be necessary if trends continue. Above-average temperatures in the upper 70s to lower 80s will persist through the near term period.
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&& .SHORT TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/...
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Friday will be the start of an unsettled weather pattern that will carry on into next week. A mid/upper shortwave trough over the northern Plains in the morning will deamplify and lift into the vicinity of James Bay by Saturday, with a weakening surface low taking a similar track as the closed and occluding system tries to become vertically stacked. This will result in a weakening cold front slowly pivoting into the area late Friday, with the front further slowing as it attempts to cross the region Friday night into Saturday, likely stalling and washing out in far eastern Ohio, western PA, and the Appalachians by Saturday night. Deepening warm/moist advection and the approaching front will start to bring scattered showers and thunderstorms into the area Friday as boundary layer heating of increasingly moist low-levels results in MLCAPE of 1000-1500 J/Kg, with slightly more SBCAPE. However, there is not much of a trigger for convection until the front moves in, and poor mid-level lapse rates of only around 5 to 5.5 C/Km will prevent any higher instability. This will limit the coverage of the showers/storms during the day Friday, with most not arriving until Friday night, and it will also greatly limit any severe weather potential, with generally garden variety thunderstorms expected. Once the front starts to slowly cross the region Friday night, the showers/storms will become more widespread. Still not expecting anything severe since the instability will be waning overnight and the main jet dynamics lift well to the NW, but lift from the pivoting frontal boundary will allow it to rain in most areas Friday night. As mentioned above, the front will start to stall and wash out over eastern/southeastern areas Saturday and Saturday night. This is due to mid/upper ridging holding strong over the eastern CONUS and the dynamics becoming displaced well to the NW. This will keep fairly widespread showers/storms over the area through Saturday, especially east of I-77. Cannot rule out locally gusty winds with any thunderstorms, but the main impact will be locally heavy rainfall from slow moving and training storms Friday night and Saturday. The stalling boundary, weak shear profiles, and deep layer flow aligned parallel to the boundary all support slow moving, training convection, and with seasonably high PWATs averaging 1.50 inches, this could lead to localized flooding. Eastern Ohio and western PA have had drier weather the past 2 weeks, so they can take some rain, and that is where the risk for training will be, so will leave any flood mention out of the HWO for now. Coverage of precip will gradually decrease Saturday night as the front washes out. Highs Friday will reach the low/mid 80s with sticky dew points in the low 60s. Highs Saturday will cool into the upper 60s/mid 70s. Lows Friday night will drop into the upper 50s/low 60s, with ranges of about 55-60 Saturday night.
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&& .LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
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A few showers and thunderstorms will continue Sunday as moisture tied to the old washing out front remains in the area, but coverage should be far less than Saturday leading to a nice overall day. Attention then turns to what could potentially be a very wet and stormy pattern next week as a deep mid/upper trough develops over the Rockies and slowly moves through the Plains through midweek, forcing height rises and a broad SW flow to develop from the Lower Mississippi Valley through the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes. Several lead shortwaves ejecting out of the main trough will likely traverse an active baroclinic zone oriented SW to NE, and this combined with broad warm/moist advection will support waves of convection. Guidance is in poor agreement on where the boundary will set up and the timing of shortwave energy, as is expected this many days out, so stayed with NBM PoPs Monday through Wednesday which has a gradual increase to likely/categorical by Tuesday and Wednesday. It will definitely not rain all the time, but the windows of drier weather will be pinpointed as we get closer. The location of the boundary will also determine the extent of any severe weather or flooding threats. What is certain is that it will turn very warm and humid again. Highs in the low/mid 70s Sunday and Monday with reach the upper 70s/low 80s by Tuesday and Wednesday.
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&& .AVIATION /18Z Wednesday THROUGH Monday/... VFR across the TAF sites early this afternoon with VFR to persist through the TAF period. Can`t rule out a brief isolated shower/storm somewhere across the area later this afternoon ahead of a weak cold front, but chances appear too limited to include in TAFs so have gone ahead and removed vcsh mention from CLE. Winds are generally out of the southwest ahead of the approaching cold front, 10 to 15 knots with gusts of 20 to 25 knots. Winds will shift towards the west immediately behind the cold front later this afternoon and evening, decreasing to 10 knots or less after sunset. Winds may become light and variable overnight before favoring a slight east to northeast direction by Thursday morning. A lake breeze may develop at CLE/ERI late Thursday morning/early afternoon. Outlook...Non-VFR likely in showers and thunderstorms Friday afternoon through Saturday. Non-VFR may persist in additional isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms on Sunday and Monday. && .MARINE...
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Quiet marine weather will continue through the weekend outside of locally higher winds and waves from thunderstorms since pressure gradients will remain weak. Winds will turn light and variable tonight followed by ENE at 5-15 knots Thursday as high pressure builds into the eastern Great Lakes. Winds will then oscillate between ENE and ESE at 5-15 knots Thursday night through Friday night until turning more SE at 10-15 knots late Saturday and finally S to SW Sunday while decreasing to 5-10 knots. ENE winds of 10-15 knots will then redevelop by Monday.
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&& .CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...None. PA...None. NY...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Kahn NEAR TERM...Kahn SHORT TERM...Garuckas LONG TERM...Garuckas AVIATION...Kahn MARINE...Garuckas