Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Pendleton, OR

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585 FXUS66 KPDT 252343 AFDPDT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Pendleton OR 445 PM PDT Sat May 25 2024 Updated Aviation Discussion .SHORT TERM...
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This afternoon through Monday night...Isolated light showers will taper off over the Blue Mountains this afternoon and evening, followed by mostly dry conditions as a weak shortwave ridge moves overhead tonight through Monday morning. Any light precipitation that develops overnight through Sunday should remain pinned to the Washington Cascade crest as orographic lift wrings some moisture out of the entrenched marine layer. Breezy to windy westerly winds have indeed materialized this afternoon across climatologically windy regions such as the Kittitas Valley, lower Columbia Basin of Oregon, eastern Columbia River Gorge, and foothills of the Blue Mountains. While winds reaching sustained advisory criteria are not anticipated (outside of the Kittitas Valley), confidence is high (70-90% chance) that limited portions of the eastern Columbia River Gorge, lower Columbia Basin, and foothills of the Blue Mountains will see winds of 25-35 mph with gusts of 40-45 mph this afternoon and evening. In the Kittitas Valley, winds have been oscillating around advisory criteria all morning and early afternoon, primarily with respect to sustained winds (25-35 mph) as gusts above 45 mph have been brief. Will maintain the Wind Advisory since rationale from the morning update still appears valid -- in fact, cross-Cascade pressure gradients have strengthened to 5-5.5 mb. Sunday through Monday, mostly quiet weather, albeit with a warming trend, is forecast. Winds will slacken compared to today with just localized breeziness. Monday evening into Monday night, as flow aloft turns southwesterly ahead of an approaching offshore trough, guidance is advertising a surge of moist, slightly unstable, mid-level air into eastern Oregon and southeast Washington. While synoptic lift appears weak, indicators for elevated instability and shower development look good -- negative mid-level theta-e lapse rates overlap an RH field in excess of 70% in the vicinity of the right entrance region of a 300-200 mb jet. At minimum, expecting the formation of an altocumulus field; at most, some isolated thunderstorms may develop along with scattered rain showers (10-20% chance). Plunkett/86
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&& .LONG TERM...Tuesday through Saturday...Models in good agreement at the onset of the forecast period, with a system moving into the PacNW Tuesday afternoon/evening. Moisture over the area will produce light showers over the Blue Mountains ahead of this arriving trough. As the trough axis advances over the west coast on Tuesday afternoon, the Cascade Mountains will see an increasing opportunity (40-70% chance) for high elevation showers. While most will be rainfall, some mixed precipitation will be possible in the cooler pockets. The advancement of the trough across the forecast area on Wednesday will continue the threat for high elevation precipitation, with moisture also developing over the areas of central Oregon. Confidence is not as significant with these showers, with around a 10-20% chance of development on Wednesday afternoon, decreasing through the evening. The departure of the trough will bring a drier west to northwest flow across the area late Wednesday. Through this point, models remain in generally decent agreement, with cluster analysis demonstrating only minor variations. Cooling temperatures noted with this set-up, with values dropping 5-10 degrees between Tuesday and Wednesday. The level to which these resultant temperatures drop below normal overall mirrors their value drop (5-10 degrees below normal). Models begin to diverge Thursday, with disagreements becoming apparent in cluster analysis quickly. From the numerical guidance perspective, there are two scenarios possible for the end of the week. The first is a drier northwest flow persisting to keep showers generally at bay. The second is a trough and generally northerly flow into Friday with some lingering moisture. The NBM base of the forecast puts a lean on the slightly more active scenario, with showers lingering over the high terrain. Regardless of solution, a warming trend begins on Thursday. By Friday, however, models come into better alignment with an amplifying ridge. The degree of amplification does vary between solutions, along with the pace of progression of the ridge through the forecast area. The next system will advance in/towards the PacNW on Saturday. The arrival time of the system again varies with the pace of the departing ridge, with limited solutions bringing precipitation into the forecast area. Current forecast has a slight chance (10-20%) of showers over the higher peaks on Saturday, with otherwise dry conditions and continued warming temperatures. Branham/76 && .AVIATION...
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00Z TAFs...Winds remain the primary aviation concern this evening, but winds will decrease overnight. Westerly winds sustained at 15-25 kt gusting to 30-40 kt will decrease to 8-15kt before midnight. Skies are SCT-BKN between 5-10 kft with higher clouds above with some clearing overnight. Wister/85
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&& .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... PDT 40 71 45 78 / 0 0 0 0 ALW 44 73 49 81 / 0 0 0 0 PSC 46 76 51 83 / 0 0 0 0 YKM 40 73 43 79 / 0 0 0 0 HRI 44 76 48 82 / 0 0 0 0 ELN 43 68 44 76 / 0 0 0 0 RDM 33 72 40 79 / 0 0 0 0 LGD 36 69 43 78 / 0 0 0 0 GCD 35 71 43 81 / 0 0 0 0 DLS 46 74 49 79 / 0 0 0 0 && .PDT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...None. WA...Wind Advisory until 11 PM PDT this evening for WAZ026. && $$ SHORT TERM...86 LONG TERM....76 AVIATION...85