Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Portland, OR

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819
FXUS66 KPQR 142203
AFDPQR

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Portland OR
303 PM PDT Tue May 14 2024

.SYNOPSIS...High pressure will maintain mostly clear, dry, and
warm conditions through tomorrow (Wednesday). Expect the marine
layer to return to the coast tonight. On Thursday, the ridge
begins to break down as a trough pushes southeast into BC from
the Gulf of Alaska. This will return slight chances for
precipitation for higher terrain as well as cloud cover. The
long term forecast looks mostly dry, however, weak troughing
could bring slight chances of precipitation.

&&

.SHORT TERM...Tonight through Thursday...Satellite imagery as of
3 PM PDT depicts mostly clear skies across northwest Oregon and
southwest Washington as upper level high pressure builds over
the Pacific Northwest. High temperatures this afternoon are on
track to reach the mid 70s for interior valleys and upper 50s to
low 60s along the coast and higher terrain. As we cool down
tonight, we`ll likely see a re-development of the marine layer
along the coast. Onshore flow doesn`t look strong enough for the
marine stratus to filter into the Willamette Valley via Coast
Range gaps and the Lower Columbia River Valley. However, there
could be some back-building stratus against the Cascades,
particularly in the east Portland Metro Area. Locations in this
area could start tomorrow morning with some cloud cover, but
will quickly dissipate as daytime heating progresses.

Clear and dry conditions prevail tomorrow (Wednesday) as high
pressure remains over our area. Tomorrow is expected to be the
warmest day of the week as models suggest the upper level ridge
building to its maximum amplitude. Afternoon highs tomorrow are
forecast in the upper 70s for interior valleys and upper 50s to
60s along the coast and higher terrain. NBM suggests a 30-50%
chance of exceeding 80 degrees tomorrow (highest in the Portland
Metro Area) within interior valleys. With this summertime
pattern in place, we`ll also maintain northerly to northwesterly
surface winds.

On Thursday, ensemble guidance shows an upper level trough
from the Gulf of Alaska progressing southeastward toward British
Columbia. This weak trough will begin breaking down the ridge
into more zonal upper level flow over the Pacific Northwest.
Additional cloud cover will begin filtering in to the area,
leading to partly sunny skies. Thus, we`ll see cooler afternoon
highs for interior valleys (about 4-8 degrees cooler than
Wednesday). By evening time, precipitation chances (15-35%) over
higher terrain return as the upper trough quickly brushes the
northern most areas of the Pacific Northwest.     -Alviz


&&

.LONG TERM...Thursday Night through Monday...As the weak upper
trough quickly progresses through the Pacific Northwest, the
Cascades will maintain a 15-35% chance of precipitation. Snow
levels will be above 6500-7500, so any snow shower activity
would be well-above the Cascade passes. Friday to Saturday, WPC
cluster analyses depict mostly zonal flow or weak troughing over
the Pacific Northwest. This suggests that we`ll be mostly dry
and maintain relatively cooler high temperatures.

On Sunday, the majority of clusters suggest another trough
dipping down into the Pacific Northwest from Canada. This
scenario could also return a slight (15-24%) chance of
precipitation over higher terrain. By early next week (Monday),
some uncertainty remains with the progression of the
aforementioned trough. About 60% of ensemble members suggest
that the trough will continue progressing southward into the
Great Basin. In this case, we would maintain more cloud cover
and precipitation chances. Meanwhile, 40% of the members suggest
a return to either zonal flow or ridging. If this pans out, we
would return to clearer and drier conditions.     -Alviz

&&

.AVIATION...High pressure continues, and VFR conditions with
clear skies remain in place for most of Tuesday. Around 05z
Wed, some lower level stratus clouds move inland, bringing 90%
chance of MVFR cigs at coastal terminals. Slightly more cloud
cover is expected at northern areas (such as KAST); around a 80%
chance of IFR cigs can be expected there during this time.
Stratus clouds burn off going into Wednesday morning, with 90%
confidence in return to VFR conditions by 20z Wed.

Winds will be northerly throughout the period, with somewhat
breezy/gusty winds at times throughout the rest of Tuesday
afternoon and evening. Coastal terminals could see gusts up to
25-30 kt up until around 08z Wed, after which winds will begin to
weaken. At all inland terminals, winds should peak around 20-25 kt
during this period. No LLWS expected.   /JLiu

PDX AND APPROACHES...VFR with relatively clear skies throughout
most of the TAF period, other than some light high cloud cover.
Winds will become a bit gustier going into the evening, with gusts
up to 20kt possible beginning 22z Tue. These calm again going into
Wednesday morning, dropping to 5-10 kt around 07z Wed. Some cloud
cover backbuilding from the Cascade foothills will approach PDX,
but model guidance points towards it not reaching quite far
enough. Most likely outcome is continued clear skies through the
night.   /JLiu

&&

.MARINE...Typical summertime pattern of northerly winds as high
pressure builds through mid week. Winds for the rest of this
afternoon and evening will see gusts up to 30 kt possible. A few
geographically isolated pockets may see one-off gusts to 35 kt,
but due to how isolated this would be, a Gale Warning has not been
issued. Winds will continue to barely meet Small Craft Advisory
criteria each afternoon and evening until at least the weekend, as
diurnal driven changes in wind continue to be the main determining
factor.

In regards to seas, nothing overly remarkable as the
primary swell is from the northwest, and the wind wave from the
north. Wind waves will range from around 4 to 6 feet. Combined
seas will be 6 to 8 ft through Tuesday, though conditions ramp up
mid-week. -Muessle/JLiu

&&

.PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...

OR...None.
WA...None.
PZ...Small Craft Advisory until 11 AM PDT Wednesday for PZZ251>253-
     271>273.
&&

$$

www.weather.gov/portland

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