Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Pendleton, OR

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 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
-- Highlight Changed Discussion --
-- Discussion containing changed information from previous version are highlighted. --
351 FXUS66 KPDT 272348 AAA AFDPDT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Pendleton OR 450 PM PDT Mon May 27 2024 Updated Aviation Discussion .SHORT TERM...This afternoon through Wednesday night...Quiet weather, albeit with FEW-SCT cirrus (area-wide) and fair-weather cumulus (over the mountains) clouds have prevailed through mid- afternoon. The axis of an upper-level ridge continues to amplify as it tracks eastward over the northern Rockies. Offshore, an upper-level trough is looming, a harbinger of weather to come. Later this afternoon, surface-based showers and thunderstorms may develop (10-20% chance) over the mountains of central and east- central OR, though 12Z HREF members were not in good agreement on coverage due to a wide spread in forecast boundary layer moisture and surface-based CAPE. As is often the case, the HREF ensemble mean dew point field has done a decent job depicting observed surface moisture -- observations range from the mid-40s to lower 50s, except for lower 30s to lower 40s in central and east-central OR. While confidence remains low in anything more than a cumulus field this afternoon, the best chances for showers and isolated thunderstorms will be over the high terrain, namely the Ochocos, Elkhorns, and other sub-ranges of the central and east-central OR Blue Mountains. East of the Cascade crest, the best chances will be over the Newberry Crater area. Any showers that do develop may produce gusty outflow winds due to ample DCAPE (500-800 J/kg) which has resulted from a well-mixed boundary layer and steep low- level lapse rates (9-10 C/km). As we transition to the evening and overnight hours, CAMs are in excellent agreement that surface-based instability from daytime heating will wane. Any subsequent instability would be facilitated by southwesterly flow aloft advecting moisture and increasingly steep mid-level lapse rates (7-7.5 C/km) northward across central/north-central OR and limited portions of south- central WA and northeast OR. Should the moist, steeper-lapse- rate solutions materialize, showers and a few isolated thunderstorms may develop this evening and track northward overnight (10-20% chance PoPs). Of note, global guidance is highlighting areas of negative Theta-E lapse rates coincident with 70-95% 700-500 mb RH, increasing confidence in at least some altocumulus and showers, though synoptic-scale lift is not robust until later Tuesday morning. As the upper-level trough approaches Tuesday morning into Tuesday afternoon, concerns shift to a low-end severe thunderstorm threat for east-central and northeast OR, mainly eastern Grant, Union, and Wallowa counties. While CAMs have backed off somewhat on forecast mid-level lapse rates (now 7-8 C/km) compared to yesterday`s runs, consensus is that surface dew points ranging from the mid-40s to mid-50s will lead to surface-based CAPE of 250-750 J/kg across much of the Blue Mountains with values of 500-1500 J/kg (locally higher) over far northeast OR. Upper-level support looks good as a mid- to upper-level jet swings into the region. Effective bulk shear of 40-50 kts is evident in plan view and sounding analysis of the aforementioned region. While some members show effective SRH values of up to 150 m2/s2, a broad range leads to low confidence in this field. That said, portions of Wallowa and southeast Union counties are under a Marginal Risk (5% chance of severe weather within 25 miles of a point) from the Storm Prediction Center. 12Z HREF members do show a signal for some organized convection with rotating updrafts, and the main threat will be gusty outflow winds and small hail. Breezy to windy westerly winds will accompany frontal passage Tuesday and linger Wednesday as the upper-level trough axis swings overhead. Confidence in widespread advisory-level winds was too low to issue any wind highlights this afternoon. Lingering showers across the forecast area on Wednesday will taper off through Wednesday night. Plunkett/86 .LONG TERM...Thursday through Monday...Models in good agreement early, but begin to diverge significantly by Sunday. The EOFs show discrepancies increasing Saturday and continuing into next week. WPC cluster analysis shows 57% of members showing an upper level ridge Saturday while 43% show a trough. By Sunday, it`s still leaning slightly ridgy, but by Monday, it`s about a 50% chance of either panning out. The ensembles are similar with GFS leaning towards a ridgier pattern while the ECMWF leans troughy. Given discrepancies, confidence is low (10-20%) on overall pattern so will stick with NBM. If the GFS pans out (a more ridgy pattern), PoPs will need to be lowered Sunday and Monday. If the ECMWF pans out (slightly more likely given better track record), we`ll see 1-3 days of afternoon/evening thunderstorms over our CWA next week under southwest flow aloft. At this time, the best chance of seeing 0.10 inch or more of precipitation will be Monday with the mountains approaching a moderate chance (40-50%) while the Columbia Basin is low to moderate (20-30%). Daytime highs are expected to be slightly below normal Thursday, but aforementioned discrepancies decrease confidence (low- moderate) highs will be near to slightly above normal. Earle/81 && .AVIATION...
-- Changed Discussion --
00Z TAFs...Various cumulus, altocumulus and cirrus clouds will be observed over the next 24 hours. Bases will range from 6-10 kft and 15-25 kft. There will be some towering cumulus and a slight chance that a thunderstorm will occur along the Blue Mtns and in the vicinity of PDT and ALW on Tuesday afternoon. West winds will increase on Tuesday and will be sustained 10-20 kt gusting to 25-30 kt by early afternoon. Wister/85
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... PDT 53 73 45 64 / 20 20 10 10 ALW 56 78 49 67 / 20 20 20 10 PSC 58 81 50 71 / 20 20 0 10 YKM 50 76 40 67 / 0 10 0 10 HRI 56 78 48 70 / 20 20 0 10 ELN 52 70 42 62 / 10 10 0 10 RDM 46 69 40 62 / 10 10 0 0 LGD 50 73 45 60 / 10 50 50 10 GCD 49 77 43 62 / 20 60 40 10 DLS 55 70 48 66 / 0 10 0 10 && .PDT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...None. WA...None. && $$ SHORT TERM...86 LONG TERM....81 AVIATION...85