Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH

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801 FXUS61 KCLE 221744 AFDCLE Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 144 PM EDT Wed May 22 2024 .SYNOPSIS... A cold front will move slowly across the area this afternoon and evening and reach the Ohio River by Thursday morning. High pressure will settle across the area for Thursday. The former cold front over the Ohio River will be lifted north as a warm front on Friday. A cold front will move across the area on Saturday. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY/... Convection redeveloped this morning across north central and northeast Ohio and intensified as it approached the PA border. A bowing squall line is currently progressing through nw PA with some damaging winds expected especially in Crawford County. This convection will exit the area by 17z and the focus will turn further west for possible redevelopment of convection. Instability increases to around 2000 J/kg with effective deep shear increasing to 40 knots. Convective initiation will likely develop between 17-18Z along and slightly west of I-71 and then move to the northeast and intensify and increase in coverage. The deeper shear should allow for storm organization and longevity. Minor changes were made to temps/dewpoints. Previous: Made only minor adjustments to the forecast for the afternoon. Ongoing convection over southwest Ohio is weakening as shown by the warming cloud top temperatures as this debris advects northeast into the region. The showers and clouds will slow the warming today and keep max temperatures cooler than yesterday. There is still some uncertainty on the potential development of more robust/severe convection this afternoon and evening especially with the present debris clouds/showers moving into the region. Timing of more significant convective initiation may be after 18Z to 20Z. Previous discussion... Some light radar returns are showing up across Northwest Ohio, but these largely are not making it to the surface. Meanwhile, a complex of showers and storms is moving along the Ohio River. Have some slight concerns that this feature could rob some moisture away from the area and further limit storm potential later this morning in Northwest Ohio. Meanwhile, this complex will move northeast in some form and could have implications for the slight risk area for the eastern portion of the area. Previous Discussion... An occluding low pressure system just northeast of Duluth, Minnesota will continue spinning northeast into Canada today, as the main upper trough consolidates into a closed upper low over Northwest Ontario. The occluding low has extended a cold front well south, stretching through Southeast Wisconsin to the St. Louis Metro and into northern Texas. Ahead of this front, a subtle trough is moving through western Indiana, supporting the development of some shower and thunderstorm activity. This trough feature has the support of a mid-level vorticity maximum advecting east across the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley regions and will be the feature to watch today for future shower and storm development. For Northwest Ohio, this boundary will have a small chance at bringing some showers and storms around daybreak, but the trend is down as the region has stabilized and the low level jet has not be super successful in supporting new convection. Therefore, PoP trends are down for the western third of the area. However, still suspect this boundary to be more successful in convective development further east as the atmosphere is able to better destabilize this afternoon. The other possible source for storm development today will be along the lake/land interface in northern Ohio and NW PA, as there could be a subtle lake boundary that will set up this afternoon with the land/water temperature differential and become a focus source for storms for the far eastern portions of the area. There won`t be a bonifide lake breeze with the stronger pressure gradient across the region to allow for a larger boundary for storm development, but this more subtle boundary could be enough. Finally, there is the main cold front, which is both apart from better upper level support and will be slowing as it enters the region. It will be present to provide one final source of lift for convective development, but other mechanisms may prompt new convective initiation first and this boundary is seen more as the end of storms for the day. The overall picture is that storms are expected to form off the aforementioned boundaries and develop in an environment suitable for strong to severe storm development with up to 2000 J/kg of MLCAPE and 0-6 km bulk shear of around 35 kt. Forecast soundings across the eastern half of the area depict steep low level lapse rates and mid-level dry air that will be favorable for damaging wind gusts. There is enough shear to support a more sustaining updraft and introduce some rotation for large hail or a tornado; however, these threats appear more marginal compared to the wind threat. The overall limiting factor for today will be if the region remains too capped and storm coverage ends up being low. The total aggregate of lifting mechanisms are several subtle and mistimed features that will not be aligned to allow for widespread, explosive convective development. Therefore, the eastern half of the area is delineated in a Slight Risk for severe weather for the wind threat and the best window for anything would be Noon to 6 PM or so for this region. For the western marginal risk, the threat will be over quickly in the day and likely will not exist past 4 PM. The marginal areas are already starting to seem less favorable for much to happen, given how little has happened in Indiana overnight and the current timing of boundaries that would be while the environment remains fairly stable. The surface cold front will eventually work its way through the area behind the main severe show and would generate some light shower/storm activity, if the environment isn`t already worked over this afternoon. This front will be the ending point for convection and have trended the forecast drier sooner from northwest to southeast across the area. High pressure will build into the area behind the front and keep most of the area dry for tonight into Thursday. The front will settle near the Ohio River tonight and attempt to nudge north on Thursday and have some small PoPs in the southern counties, but overall, Thursday should be dry. Temperatures won`t have to do much to return to the 80s today. The cold front isn`t all that strong with the air mass change and a mix of 70s to lower 80s will be expected for Thursday. && .SHORT TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/... Dry weather will prevail Thursday night into at least the first half of Friday as a ridge expands east into the region. A cold front over the Ohio Valley will begin to lift north as a warm front throughout the day Friday as a vertically stacked low drifts north-northeast across the Upper Midwest. Most of the area will likely be in the warm sector by Friday afternoon/evening and an approaching shortwave will allow PoPs to increase from the southwest Friday afternoon and especially Friday evening into Friday night as the low`s associated cold front approaches from the west. Still some uncertainty in the timing of the front and the resulting precipitation chances. The GFS has a bit more low to mid level moisture and higher precip chances than other deterministic guidance members Friday afternoon and Friday evening, whereas the ECMWF, NAM, and Canadian hold off on precipitation until the front arrives later Friday night or early Saturday morning. The best thermodynamics will likely remain to the south of the area and do not anticipate organized convection, especially since the highest rain chances will occur during a diurnally unfavorable period. PoPs will be highest in the western half of the CWA Friday night and in eastern zones Saturday afternoon. Dry weather should return by Saturday evening as high pressure briefly builds over the region. Warm air advection will result in above normal highs in the low to mid 80s Friday with overnight lows in the low to mid 60s. Saturday will be slightly cooler with maximum temps in the upper 70s to lower 80s and minimum temps in the mid to upper 50s. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... The dry forecast will be short-lived as the next system, likely an upper trough with a deepening surface low, lifts northeast from the central Plains/Mississippi Valley Sunday. The approaching system will lift a warm front across the region Sunday before tracking into the Great Lakes or northern Ohio Valley Sunday night into Monday. Still a lot to iron out with the synoptic setup for this system, but all guidance indicates a decent chance of precipitation Sunday evening through Monday, which is reflected with chance to likely PoPs across the area. Cyclonic flow both at the surface and aloft may persist through Tuesday and there might even be some lake- enhanced rain showers over the area. Above normal temperatures (upper 70s to lower 80s) continue into Sunday before temps cool to near normal values (low to mid 70s) for Monday. By Tuesday, cyclonic flow/cold air advection will likely provide slightly below normal highs in the upper 70s to lower 70s. Overnight lows will be in the 50s and lower 60s each night. && .AVIATION /18Z Wednesday THROUGH Monday/...
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Convective activity has shifted east of the terminals by 1730Z with VFR prevailing. Another round of showers and thunderstorms is possible from near I-71 east into nw PA. Scattered coverage may produce pockets of MVFR ceilings and visibility through 21Z. A weak cold front will move through the region this evening and allow drier air to filter in. SW winds of 15 knots with gusts to near 30 knots will diminish toward sunset and become west to northwest. Outlook...Scattered showers and storms on Friday and Saturday could produce brief non-VFR conditions.
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&& .MARINE... Southeast winds will increase to 10 to 20 knots by late morning or early afternoon as a cold front approaches from the west. Showers and thunderstorms are possible well ahead of this front this afternoon. As of now, a Small Craft Advisory is not needed since waves will be under 4 feet due to offshore flow. Winds diminish below 10 knots and shift to the west/northwest behind the front before becoming variable and remaining under 10 knots Thursday through much of Friday. Expect flow to shift from the southeast to southwest and increase to 10 to 15 knots as a cold front crosses the lake Saturday before gradually backing to the east/northeast Saturday evening into Sunday. A warm front will cause winds to shift to the southeast Sunday evening. && .CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...None. PA...None. NY...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...LaPlante NEAR TERM...LaPlante SHORT TERM...Maines LONG TERM...Maines AVIATION...LaPlante MARINE...Maines