Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Brownsville, TX

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508 FXUS64 KBRO 130502 AAA AFDBRO Area Forecast Discussion...UPDATED National Weather Service Brownsville TX 1202 AM CDT Thu Jun 13 2024 ...New AVIATION... .SHORT TERM... (Tonight through Thursday night) Issued at 133 PM CDT Wed Jun 12 2024 It`s hot again this afternoon with heat index values from 105 to 110 degrees in many areas. A weak sea breeze is under way over the coastal counties. That, said, the weather tonight will be quiet and warm with lows in the mid 70s to near 80. Skies will be partly cloudy with light winds. Patchy, light fog/haze could develop over the Northern Ranchlands late tonight. H5 ridging upstream will build over the Southwest United States and will topple east into North Texas. That will leave a weakness over the Northwest Gulf and Northern Gulf Coast in general. Isolated Gulf showers will remain. The pressure gradient and surface winds will remain light to moderate onshore. PWAT is progged to increase to 2 inches or better tomorrow, likely supporting a more robust sea breeze. SPC has maintained a general thunderstorm outlook for our coastal counties on Thursday. Skies will be partly cloudy except mostly cloudy with the sea breeze. High temps will run from the mid 90s to near the century mark. Heat index values will again be in the 105 to 110 degree range, just shy of heat advisory criteria. Thursday night should again be quiet under partly cloudy to mostly clear skies and light winds as the toppling mid-level ridge makes its presence felt. Low temps will be in the mid 70s to near 80. The moon will be a waxing crescent, a couple of days away from first quarter. Rip current risk should remain low for a couple more days. && .LONG TERM... (Friday through next Wednesday) Issued at 133 PM CDT Wed Jun 12 2024 Ridging aloft stretching from most of Northern Mexico into the Southern Plains will primarily dominate the synoptic pattern through Saturday across our CWA. A general subsident flow albeit not quite as strong as in recent days and weeks will keep most of the CWA dry through Saturday, especially for areas west of I-69C. East of I-69C, there will remain a slight chance to low chance for mainly seabreeze diurnal convection. By Sunday, an inverted trough axis begins to advance westward across the central Gulf and Bay of Campeche. In response, the ridging aloft across our CWA will begin to weaken and retrograde westward. A gradual moistening up of the tropospheric column will ensue on Sunday. As the inverted trough axis slowly moves into the W Gulf on Monday and across our CWA on Tuesday and Wednesday, deep layer tropical moisture with PWATS as high as 2.8-2.9 inches will overspread most of the CWA. If verified, these PWATs would be record levels for the date. The next question is how will rainfall chances be affected by any tropical cyclone development. Both deterministic and ensemble guidance continue to come into better agreement with tropical cyclone development across the Bay of Campeche during the Sunday night to Wednesday period. The consensus guidance solution is the development of a tropical storm. A ridge aloft is expected to expand and build from Northern Mexico into the Southern Plains and MS Valley region by Tuesday and Wednesday. This should tend to keep the core of the tropical cyclone track well to our south. As a result, the most likely landfall at this time points to somewhere between Tampico and Veracruz. This guidance is in line with the NHC/WPC day 7 spot low location of 22.5N 96.5W next Wed. NHC has increased their TC probabilities now to 30% and would expect these probabilities to continue to increase over the next several days given the trend in the NWP guidance. For now will go with POPs increasing to chance to likely category for most of the CWA beginning on Sunday with the peak rain chances on Tuesday and Wednesday. For now, rainfall amounts of 1-3 inches with locally higher amounts will be possible between Monday and Wednesday. One caveat to this will be if this system further intensifies. In this scenario, the heavier rainbands would be most likely remain south of the Rio Grande Valley, thus limiting QPF amounts for us. Will not get too cute with this, especially since we are dealing with a Day 6-7 forecast. Just something for later shifts to consider. Besides the mostly beneficial rain (due to our below normal rainfall situation), other impacts will be increased rips and the potential for minor coastal flooding. The ESTOFS guidance depicted these increasing water levels for the Mon-Wed timeframe. This is quite reasonable given the long fetch of E/SE gradient flow of 20-25 kts (with pockets of 30 kts) that will develop across the southwestern one-third of the Gulf. A nearly perpendicular angle of incoming large swells will increase the rip risk to high for early next week. High temperatures through the weekend will generally be close to or just slightly above normal. Heat indices will overall remain mainly in the 105-110 range through the weekend which is just below heat advisory criteria. A slow cooling trend is expected as we head into the Mon-Wed timeframe given the increased cloud cover and higher rain chances. Did have to lower the NBM high temperatures for Tue and Wed as they were just far too warm given these expected cloudier and rainier conditions. && .AVIATION...
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(06Z TAFS) Issued at 1200 AM CDT Thu Jun 13 2024 VFR will prevail at the aerodromes through the next 24 hours.
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&& .MARINE... Issued at 133 PM CDT Wed Jun 12 2024 Tonight through Thursday night...Generally light to moderate east to southeast winds and low to moderate seas will prevail through Friday, courtesy of a weak pressure gradient. Isolated showers and thunderstorms will pop up periodically over the Gulf waters. Friday through next Wednesday...A weak to occasionally moderate easterly flow will prevail through Sat across the Lower Texas coastal waters as weak high pressure remains anchored across the Northern Gulf and Deep South. The initial swells due to a long moderate to strong E/SE fetch that will be developing across the southern and central Gulf will begin to arrive in our coastal waters by Sun. As discussed above, TC development is becoming a growing possibility for the Sun night through Wed timeframe across the Bay of Campeche. As a result, we anticipate long period swells to increase in intensity through Wed as they continue to impact the coastal waters. Overall seas are expected to reach as high as 10 ft (or possibly higher) by Tue and Wed. Widespread small craft advisories will likely be required for the Mon-Wed period. Numerous showers and embedded thunderstorms will prevail from Sun thereafter. && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
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BROWNSVILLE 78 95 78 95 / 10 20 10 30 HARLINGEN 75 96 74 96 / 0 10 10 20 MCALLEN 78 98 77 99 / 0 10 0 10 RIO GRANDE CITY 78 98 75 99 / 0 0 0 0 SOUTH PADRE ISLAND 82 88 82 88 / 10 30 10 40 BAYVIEW/PORT ISABEL 78 92 79 92 / 10 20 10 30
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&& .BRO WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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None.
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&& $$