Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Blacksburg, VA

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937 FXUS61 KRNK 300920 AFDRNK Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Blacksburg VA 520 AM EDT Thu May 30 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Cold front pushes to the coast tonight. Dry and cooler high pressure will build in for Thursday and Friday with below normal temperatures. The next chance of rain will be late this weekend. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 200 AM EDT Thursday... Key Messages: 1) Dry and mostly sunny conditions today. Temperatures below normal. Troughing over the east remains in place today with northwest flow persisting. 850mb jet modeled around 30 to 35kts and this will be enough to remain well-mixed overnight, especially over the ridges. Highest elevations still gusting close to 20mph. Being well- mixed and coupled with large dew point depressions, fog development seems rather unlikely through this morning. Trough amplifies today and shifts east into the Atlantic late tonight. Will have strong Canadian high pressure build in behind the trough bringing clear and calm skies tonight. Chilly temperatures are expected overnight and will see widespread mid to low 40s. Some sheltered elevated valleys may even reach the upper 30s. Daytime highs in the upper 60s to 70s. && .SHORT TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/...
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Issued at 240 PM EST Wed May 29 2024 Key Message: - Benign and dry weather conditions with below normal temperatures. A broad upper low anchored across eastern Canada will continue to dominate the weather conditions within the RNK CWA throughout the forecast period. A pocket of unseasonably cold air at 850mb with temperatures as low as -1C across NY/New England will dip into the central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic through the weekend. Temperatures through the weekend will average around 10 degrees below normal for minimums and around 5 degrees below normal for maximums. A few low temperatures in the 30s are expected at locations such as Burkes Garden as well as potentially Lewisburg Friday morning and only a few degrees warmer than this Saturday morning. Normal low temperatures at this time of year are mostly in the lower to mid 50s. Otherwise, it will be a beautiful weekend with abundant sunshine and temperatures reaching the 70s in the afternoon. No precipitation is expected through the period. /Confidence Levels in Forecast Parameters/ - Moderate to High Confidence in Temperatures, - High Confidence in No Precipitation Through the Period, - Moderate Confidence in Wind Direction and Speed.
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&& .LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... Issued at 245 PM EST Wed May 29 2024 Key Messages: - Precipitation probabilities return to the forecast area. - Temperatures return to near normal levels for early June. An atmospheric disturbance is forecast to move from the Upper Midwest into the Great Lakes Sunday. There should be some flattening of the upper-level flow in response, with the boundary layer flow becoming southwesterly - or maybe west-southwesterly - and precipitable water levels increasing to near normal for this time of year (which is somewhere around an inch). The added moisture, combined with slightly better forcing, should allow cloud cover, as well as shower probabilities, to return to our area at some point Sunday. Right now, I`ve got a fairly low confidence in the timing of any precipitation Sunday. But it looks like areas east of the Blue Ridge will have greater odds in the afternoon, with no one particular time of day favored for showers west of the Blue Ridge. Beyond Sunday, about the best I can say is that it looks like unsettled weather conditions could continue. Overall, though, I have fairly low confidence in the overall evolutionary details of the forecast. The upper-level flow should more-or-less remain zonal through early next week. This will allow quick-moving shortwave troughs in the northern stream to dart across (or at least very close) to the region. Boundary layer moisture should remain ample for convection through Day 7, with precipitable water values at or above normal for early June. In fact, there is some indication in ensemble guidance of values approaching 2 standard deviations above normal (98th percentile). We`ll see what happens, though. Regardless of the details, it looks like scattered convection will be seen through the middle of next week. Temperature-wise, it looks like there will be gradual warmup through the long term portion of the forecast. I`m pretty confident that temperatures will go above seasonal levels, but I`m not sure to what extent. At this stage, I`ll stick pretty close to the national blend, which has highs by Wednesday around 80 in the mountains and in the upper 80s across the Piedmont/Southside Virginia. && .AVIATION /09Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 220 AM EDT Thursday... MVFR across the mountains and VFR east of the mountains through this morning. Upslope clouds will continue to bring BKN 1kft to 3kft cigs through daybreak. Should see upslope clouds dissipate late morning and all terminals are expected to remain VFR through the 24 hour TAF period. Removed any mention of fog in the TAFs as conditions still remain well mixed. Confidence is very low that there will be any fog this morning. EXTENDED AVIATION OUTLOOK... VFR much of the week, aside from potential fog at LWB/BCB early in the mornings. Storms may bring sub-VFR Sunday afternoon through Monday but low confidence. && .RNK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VA...None. NC...None. WV...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...BMG NEAR TERM...BMG/WP SHORT TERM...RAB LONG TERM...RAB AVIATION...BMG