Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Blacksburg, VA

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395 FXUS61 KRNK 232342 AFDRNK Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Blacksburg VA 742 PM EDT Sun Jun 23 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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A front crosses the region tonight with a chance for showers and thunderstorms. Drier weather returns for Monday and Tuesday with temperatures and humidity gradually increasing again by Wednesday. The next chance of showers and thunderstorms arrives on Wednesday afternoon, with the heat again returning Friday and Saturday.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY/...
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As of 730 PM EDT Sunday... Key Messages: 1. Scattered showers/storms through early overnight with best chance in the mountains. Small threat of strong/severe storms. 2. Drier and a few degrees cooler Monday. Pre-frontal trough along with an embedded upper impulse combined with good heating to generate a few storms in the piedmont this afternoon. Main front lingers back across the upper Ohio Valley into the lower TN Valley. This front will likely cross the area by Monday. Appears models have greater agreement in the mountains getting a needed rainfall overnight with some storms, so kept likely pops across southeast WV into the Mountain Empire tapering to high chance to the New River Valley and low chance along/east of the Blue Ridge. Severe threat will be limited as best instability stays well north and west this evening and with better dynamics staying north as well. Previous discussion... Plentiful sunshine today and west-southwesterly surface flow has helped push temperatures back into the upper 80s and low to mid 90s. Heat indices are approaching the upper 90s out in the Piedmont, and near 100 degrees is certainly possible, though generally staying below Heat Advisory criteria. Scattered cumulus clouds have developed, especially along and west of the Blue Ridge, and some higher level clouds are starting to reach the area from the west. This may impact temperatures in the west if that cloud cover can thicken enough before diurnal heating peaks, but thinking plenty of heating before then for the increase in cloud cover to make much of a cooling difference on high temperatures this afternoon. Overnight, not thinking a lot of relief from the heat, with the clouds lingering until tomorrow morning, as lows only reach the low to mid 60s in the west and and low 70s in the east. Monday will be a few degrees cooler than today, with the passage of the cold front. The biggest difference in temperatures will be felt in the west, where highs could be five to ten degrees cooler tomorrow than today, and with a decent northwesterly breeze and drier airmass, should feel more pleasant. Highs tomorrow in the east will be in the upper 80s to low 90s, as the front exits the area after mid morning. With ample daytime heating today, high res guidance is showing good surface based instability, especially out in the east. A few thunderstorms have already developed in the Piedmont this early afternoon, tapping into the better moisture and instability. The better forcing is well to the north of the area, closer to the upper low, so coverage would be isolated to scattered at best. As the front nears the mountains this evening and into tonight, storms may develop over the higher terrain with the additional orographic forcing. Forecast soundings show an inverted V profile, and decent DCAPE, so the primary threat continues to be damaging winds.
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&& .SHORT TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... As of 100 PM EDT Sunday... Key Messages: - Increasing confidence of lower humidity on Tuesday - Next front and thunderstorms on Wednesday A drier air mass advances into the Mid Atlantic region as the cold front progresses into the Carolinas. Surface dew points will lower into the 50s by Tuesday afternoon which will result in a lower heat index. Deeper moisture and a higher probability of thunderstorms will return to the region on Wednesday ahead of the next upper long wave trough and surface cold front. The best dynamics and jet structure remain north of the region, so expecting isolated to scattered coverage of thunderstorms, mainly Wednesday afternoon and evening. Only plan to deviate from NBM temperature guidance is on Monday night when surface dew points lower and surface high pressure directly over the central Appalachians will lead to light and variable or calm winds. Will lower mins Monday night a few degrees below guidance. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 100 PM EDT Sunday... Key Messages: - Heat returns for Friday and Saturday - Moderate confidence for showers and thunderstorms on Sunday Thursday and Friday will have a limited threat for showers and thunderstorms behind the mid week front. The upper pattern returns to zonal flow with little forcing for any organized probability of precipitation. The North American Ensemble shows 500MB ridging from the Southern Plains to the Mid Atlantic region by Saturday with above normal heights over the Mid Atlantic States. Overall warm temperatures at mid levels of the atmosphere may create a cap on thunderstorm development, but by Saturday there will be at least an isolated threat of thunderstorms, especially near the typically favored higher elevations. Long range synoptic scale guidance brings the next cold front through the region on Sunday. Will keep probability of precipitation in the chance range until the timing trends with this front become more consistent. && .AVIATION /00Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/...
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As of 730 PM EDT Sunday... Generally VFR through most of the period. However, showers/storms around BLF/LWB and perhaps BCB this evening into overnight could drop cigs/vsbys to IFR. Any showers/storms will be gone before 11z, with skies clearing Monday morning after 12z. South to southwest winds under 10kts this evening to shift to the west/northwest behind the front late tonight into Monday. Gusts to 20kts possible at all sites during the day Monday. Forecast confidence is high, except on how low cigs/vsbys get with storms. EXTENDED AVIATION OUTLOOK... VFR conditions expected through much of the week, with the only exception being areas of valley fog in the early morning hours, and with any storms Wed-Fri.
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&& .RNK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VA...None. NC...None. WV...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...AS/BMG/WP NEAR TERM...AS/WP SHORT TERM...AMS LONG TERM...AMS AVIATION...AS/BMG/WP