Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Blacksburg, VA

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952 FXUS61 KRNK 281734 AFDRNK Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Blacksburg VA 134 PM EDT Sun Apr 28 2024 .SYNOPSIS... A strong low pressure system will track from the Central Plains to the Great Lakes today and Monday while high pressure was off the East Coast. This system will push and cold front through the region on Tuesday bringing a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Temperatures will remain above normal through the middle of the week. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY/...
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As of 100 PM EDT Sunday... Key Message: 1. Abnormally warm temps to continue. Strong ridging remains the dominant force across the area with mostly clear to partly cloudy skies under the subsident airmass. While afternoon max temps today should warm up decently reaching near 10 deg above climo norms, we shift even more on the western side of the ridge for Monday and a persistent SW fetch. Resultant max temps Monday afternoon are progged to rise into the low to mid 80s for many locations and may even flirt within a few degrees or so of some local record highs. Cloud coverage should generally be partly cloudy to mostly clear with a diurnal cu field and possible cirrus, though some lower stratocu or patchy fog could be across some of the valleys and far north in the early morning. Forecast confidence is high. Climate Records Summary Monday 04/29/2024 Site MaxT Year MinT Year LoMax Year HiMin Year KBLF 86 2017 30 1946 42 2008 66 2017 KDAN 91 1981 35 2010 49 1999 68 2017 KLYH 88 1974 31 1976 50 1999 66 1956 KROA 89 1915 32 1944 49 1968 67 2017 KRNK 86 2017 25 1967 45 1988 59 2021
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&& .SHORT TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/...
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As of 130 PM EDT Sunday... Key Messages: 1. Above normal temperatures Tuesday and Wednesday. 2. Scattered showers and storms Tuesday. Mid level ridging holds over the southeastern coast Monday into Tuesday, with a surface high sitting offshore of the Carolinas, will start off the work week. A shortwave trough and associated surface frontal system will track across the area through Tuesday. Southwesterly flow around the surface high and ahead of the cold front will bring warmer and more moist air into the area to sustain warmer than normal temperatures for Tuesday, albeit a few degrees cooler than Monday. Scattered showers and thunderstorms are possible along the cold front Tuesday afternoon and into the evening, with the highest probabilities for convection along and west of the Blue Ridge, as the front reaches the western counties in the forecast area near the peak heating of the day. Low level shear is forecast to be between 25 to 35 knots across the area, as some deterministic models have the cold front weakening as it approaches and then crosses the area. That being said, not expecting widespread coverage of showers and storms. Following the frontal passage, surface high pressure returns to the area, and mid level ridging builds back in, continuing the above normal temperatures for the middle of the work week. As the 500mb shortwave moves offshore Wednesday, could see some lingering showers in the east, but Wednesday should be dry and warm for most. Overnight lows will be on the mild side, mainly in the 50s and 60s.
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&& .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
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As of 130 PM EDT Sunday... Key Messages: 1. Above normal temperatures continue through the week. 2. Daily chances of showers and storms, greatest coverage Saturday. Surface high pressure over the northeast US will slide offshore during the second half of the work week, and winds will turn easterly then southeasterly Thursday into Friday. The 500mb trough will have moved off the Mid Atlantic Coast by late in the week. Thus, may see some isolated showers in the eastern most counties of the forecast area Thursday afternoon, although confidence in this low, as high pressure should suppress most of the precipitation. By the end of the week and into the weekend, another 500mb trough will dig southward into the central Plains region. A stronger cold front approaches the area Friday and into the weekend as the associated surface low deepens and tracks into the Great Lakes region. As the previous forecast discussed, the timing of this front has slowed in recent model runs, resulting in the better coverage of showers and storms Friday night and through Saturday, but uncertainty still remains in the timing of this front. Surface high pressure pushes back into the area from the west for Sunday following the frontal passage. High temperatures through the period will be in the upper 70s to mid to upper 80s, and lows in the 50s and 60s.
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&& .AVIATION /18Z SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/...
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As of 130 PM EDT Sunday... VFR conditions expected for most sites through period. Some diurnal cu field today near 5 kft and again for Monday with possible cirrus, otherwise KLWB could have some reduced VSBYs or lower cigs and possible fog development for Monday morning. Overall winds mainly SW 4-10 kts and some decreasing in the overnight period. Extended Aviation Outlook... Monday should be mainly VFR with southwest winds. NW winds arrive behind a cold front crossing the area Tuesday with TSRA and MVFR or lower ceilings. Widely scattered SHRA/TSRA will be possible again each afternoon on Wednesday and Thursday.
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&& .RNK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VA...None. NC...None. WV...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...AMS NEAR TERM...AB SHORT TERM...AS LONG TERM...AS AVIATION...AMS/AB