Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Newport/Morehead, NC

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129
FXUS62 KMHX 300840
AFDMHX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Newport/Morehead City NC
440 AM EDT Sun Jun 30 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Hot and humid conditions persist today ahead of an approaching
cold front. The front will move through the area tomorrow
morning with high pressure building back into the area from the
north on Tuesday. Oppressive heat and humidity build back in
over the second half of next week.

&&

.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 PM THIS EVENING/...
As of 425 AM Sun...Latest analysis this morning depicts weak
flow aloft over eastern NC while a shortwave over southern
Canada aids in deepening low pressure over Quebec, with the
attendant cold front stretching into the western Great Lakes
southward into the Southern Plains. Ahead of this front, well
defined surface trough sits in the lee of the Appalachians.

Ongoing light shower activity along OBX will persist through
dawn this morning. Otherwise, main focus for today`s forecast
will be hot and humid conditions, giving way to afternoon and
evening convection. Highs today are expected to soar into the
mid to upper 90s inland, and near 90 along the coast. Combined
with Tds in the mid 70s thanks to moist southerly flow, heat
indices will rise above 105 for many locations away from the
coast this afternoon. This required the continuance of a Heat
Advisory for this afternoon.

The aforementioned heat and humidity will drive up instability
this afternoon, rising to near 2000 J/kg SBCAPE. The
aforementioned lee trough will serve as the initiation point for
storms today, primarily in multi-cluster cells given only
marginal shear of around 20-25 kt. Activity will not reach the
coastal plain until mid-afternoon at the earliest, but pre-storm
environment will be favorable for storms capable of damaging
down bursts, especially owing to precipitation loading as PWATs
climb well above 2" and hi-res guidance depicts thin skinny CAPE
profiles. SPC has our entire area in a Marginal (Level 1 of 5)
risk for severe thunderstorms to convey this risk. Torrential
rainfall is likely in storms, and LPMM rainfall forecasts from
the HREF show the potential for isolated totals of 3-4 inches in
the most efficient storms. Despite dry antecedent conditions,
flash flooding is possible primarily in urban or poor drainage
areas. Inland areas are in a Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall
from WPC.

&&

.SHORT TERM /6 PM THIS EVENING THROUGH 6 AM MONDAY/...
As of 430 AM Sun...Earlier activity will lose organization and
severity as the sun sets tonight, but a second round of showers
and thunderstorms are likely, especially after midnight, as the
main cold front approaches and then crosses eastern NC. Very
high PWATs will remain in place ahead of the boundary, providing
a continued favorable environment for torrential rainfall and
potentially exacerbating any flooded areas from the afternoon
convection.

Another sultry night expected ahead of the front, but much drier
air will filter in behind the boundary being felt most across
the northwestern coastal plain by Monday morning as Tds fall
into the low 60s. Lows range from the mid to upper 70s along the
coast to upper 60s to around 70 north and west of Highway 64.

&&

.LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
As of 315 AM Sun...

KEY MESSAGES:

Cooler than average temps are forecast on Tue and Wed

Oppressive heat and humidity return Fri through Sun

Monday night through Wed...Cold front will be well offshore by Mon
evening with high pressure ridging building in from the north and
west overnight. Outside of a few lingering showers along the Crystal
Coast and OBX and a few rumbles of thunder offshore early Mon
evening, the area should remain relatively dry Mon night with cloud
cover clearing from north to south through the night. Will have a
steady but light NE wind through the evening as well behind the
departing front which should limit any potential fog threat. Cooler
temps persist behind this frontal passage as well with lows Mon
night getting down into the upper 50s to low 60s inland, and upper
60s to near 70 along the OBX.

Ridging gradually slides E`wards Tue and Wed bringing fair weather
to ENC as well as below avg temps. Highs get into the mid to upper
80s and lows get into the 60s each night. With dewpoints much lower
behind the front as well, it will feel more comfortable outside.

Thurs through Sat...Upper ridging will remain overhead into next
weekend as any upper level troughs struggle to dig S`wards. At the
surface, high pressure ridging will continue to push further
offshore allowing return flow to resume across ENC. This will bring
a return to oppressive temps and humidity especially Fri and Sat
which could threaten to bring more heat related impacts to the area
next weekend.

&&

.AVIATION /08Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
SHORT TERM /through 06Z Mon/...
As of 125 AM Sun...VFR conditions prevail across terminals this
morning in light to moderate southerly flow ahead of a pre-
frontal trough currently sitting in the lee of the Appalachians.
Some spotty MVFR cigs are popping up along OBX associated with a
sharpening offshore trough and associated iso shower activity.

Some MVFR stratus may develop in the pre-dawn hours for all
terminals early this morning but will quickly dissipate after
14z with increased mixing. Main aviation focus will turn to an
organized band of showers and thunderstorms, expected to
initiate ahead of the aforementioned lee trough and advance
towards the coastal plain, with upscale growth into a squall
line. Line will reach the far inner coastal plain by 21z and
quickly push southeastward into the early evening. Pre-storm
environment favors frequent lightning, torrential rainfall
lowering visibilities to IFR or worse, and wind gusts in excess
of 40 kt.

Activity will slowly fall apart in the evening, but another
round of frontally-forced convection will begin to approach the
terminals from the north by the end of the TAF period.

LONG TERM /Monday through Thursday/...
As of 320 AM Sun... Sub VFR conditions are forecast across the
area on Monday as a cold front tracks across the region bringing
a threat for widespread low stratus and reduced visibility in
any rain or thunderstorm activity that occurs with this frontal
passage. In addition to this, SW`rly winds Mon morning will
quickly shift to a N`rly direction from north to south and gust
to around 15-20 kts at times Mon afternoon before winds ease Mon
night. A return to primarily VFR conditions is then forcast Mon
night into the end of the period as high pressure ridging sets
up overhead.

&&

.MARINE...
SHORT TERM /Today and Tonight/...
As of 440 AM Sun...Regional observations across eastern NC show
southwesterly winds of 10-15 kt across all waters ahead of a
surface trough in the lee of the Appalachians this morning, with
seas of 3-4 feet. A stronger cold front is currently dropping
out of the Ohio Valley and is expected to work its way across
the waters early Mon morning.

Southwesterly flow will continue to gradually increase through
the afternoon ahead of the trough, and HREF probabilities show a
high likelihood (80-90% chance) of SCA force gusts developing
across area sounds and offshore waters by this afternoon and
into the evening hours. Therefore, headlines were introduced
this morning for most waters beginning 18-20z today. Headlines
extend well into Monday as winds turn behind the front (see LONG
TERM for details), but there will be a lull in winds just ahead
of the front itself which will last for a few hours. Seas will
reach up to around 4 feet for all waters.

Ongoing showers over the wall of the Gulf Stream this morning
will gradually ebb through morning. Showers and thunderstorms
are likely to impact most waters late this afternoon and
evening, with a second round immediately ahead of the
approaching cold front. The storms will be capable of torrential
rainfall and potentially damaging downbursts.

LONG TERM /Monday through Thursday/...
As of 330 AM Sun... Cold front will be tracking across the
region on Monday bringing widespread rain and thunderstorm
activity to our waters to start the period. SW`rly winds at 10
to 15 kts with gusts up around 20 kts out ahead of the front
will quickly shift to a N`rly direction behind the front at 15
to 20 kts with gusts up to 20 to 30 kts at times keeping SCAs
across our coastal waters and eastern sounds. Front should push
offshore and out to sea by Mon night with gusty winds quickly
diminishing to 10 to 15 kts and gusts to 20 kts by Tue morning
ending SCAs across our waters. Fair weather and benign boating
conditions are then forecast from Tue to the end of the period.
Winds will continue to ease Tue and Wed as high pressure ridging
extends over the our waters eventually down to 5 to 10 kts
while veering to an easterly direction by Wed. WInds eventually
become S`rly at 10-15 kts by Thurs as ridging shifts E.

2 to 4 ft seas will increase behind the aforementioned cold
front to 3 to 5 ft as winds increase Mon night. A few 6 ft seas
will be possible mainly along the Gulf Stream waters Mon night
as well. As we get into Tue and beyond, as the winds ease seas
will also lower down to 2 to 4 ft by Tue and remain at these
heights into the end of the period.

&&

.MHX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
NC...Heat Advisory from 11 AM this morning to 7 PM EDT this evening
     for NCZ029-044>047-079>081-090>092-094-193-194-198.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 2 PM this afternoon to 9 PM EDT
     Monday for AMZ135.
     Small Craft Advisory from 2 PM this afternoon to 8 PM EDT
     Monday for AMZ150-231.
     Small Craft Advisory from 5 PM this afternoon to 6 AM EDT
     Tuesday for AMZ152-154-156.
     Small Craft Advisory from 11 PM this evening to 6 AM EDT
     Tuesday for AMZ158.

&&

$$
SYNOPSIS...MHX
NEAR TERM...MS
SHORT TERM...MS
LONG TERM...RCF
AVIATION...MS/RCF
MARINE...MS/RCF