Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Portland, OR

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240 FXUS66 KPQR 241032 AFDPQR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Portland OR 332 AM PDT Tue Sep 24 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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High pressure today with temperatures around 10 degrees F above normal. Cooler wet front moves in on Wednesday bringing widespread rain. Showers persist through Friday morning, then ridging persists through early next week.
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&& .SHORT TERM...
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Now through Friday...Observations this morning show marine stratus along the coast with decreased visibility in fog. Satellite shows clouds moving in along the Columbia River towards Portland but no fog is expected due to a dry lower atmosphere. Clouds will burn off today as high pressure builds through the day. The ridge axis is setting up along the coast which will promote a very weak easterly flow which will transition to the south as the thermal trough moves inland over eastern Oregon. Temperatures are expected to rise considerably today with highs inland in the 90s, with the coast fairly mild in the 70s. Now, if the cloud cover becomes more pervasive or doesn`t erode all the way, this could inhibit the daytime heating and thus temperatures will be lower. Based on high- resolution ensembles there is more of a spread than what we have previously seen in the longer range outputs. In the greater Portland-Metro area the spread from the 10th to the 90th percentile ranges from 85-92 degrees F. Similarly the NBM shows a range of the 10th-90th percentile of 84-91 degrees F. The deterministic outputs are trending on the warmer side of this spread but, as previously stated, if the ridge moves/decays faster or if cloud cover persists, temperatures will be on the lower end side. This ridge is just one component of a very broad Omega blocking pattern combined with several low pressure systems that are rotating around one another. This is known as the Fujiwhara effect. One low is positioned over Mississippi (not associated with the incoming system in the Atlantic), and the backside low over the northeast Pacific near the Alaska Panhandle. Through the day today, the low in the Pacific will drop down causing the ridge to flatten and shift eastward through Wednesday morning. This will set the stage for a cooler front to advect over the Pacific Northwest. The incoming low is cool air wrapped with temperatures at 850 mb around 3 degrees C which will mix down causing highs to drop significantly. We could see as much as a 25 degree F swing between today`s and Wednesday high temperatures. In addition to the colder air, precipitation is expected. Now the low is weakening as it nears the coastline. This rain will persist through Friday as yet another shortwave trails behind this first front on Thursday night into Friday morning. Accumulations will vary greatly based on the location and terrain. Counties north of Marion- Polk will see the bulk of the rain - especially along the coasts and ranges. A bit of a rain shadow will keep accumulations lower in the Willamette Valley. Accumulation will range from 0.05-0.75 inch through Friday. -Muessle .LONG TERM...Friday Night through Monday...Little to say in the long-term forecast as yet another ridge builds in. The jet stream will become zonal on Friday night and shift well to the north of the region. This will allow for the ridge to build, and conditions to dry and clear. Temperatures will stay seasonable with northerly winds in the afternoon. Now something to note though is that on Saturday night into Sunday morning, there is a shortwave trough that is moving through at the mid-levels. At this point, not quite sure at what the impact will be, but it`s not uncommon to see breezier winds and a more unstable atmosphere. This trough is most likely associated with a weak tropical storm that is over the California coast. Dry and seasonable conditions persist through Monday. -Muessle
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&& .AVIATION...
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Upper level high pressure will continue to shift inland today with increasing south to southwesterly flow aloft. Light offshore flow in the lower levels this morning will likely maintain VFR conditions across the area, except for marine stratus along the northern Oregon coast slowly pushing up the lower Columbia River. LIFR CIGs and fog at KAST likely (40-60%) persists through 16z this morning. As of 10z, lower MVFR stratus around FL015 has pushed into KKLS. Expect the stratus to lift and scatter out by this afternoon, improving to VFR briefly. As flow turns more onshore this evening, expect stratus offshore to push onto the coast by 00-01z Wednesday. High probability (60-80%) for conditions to deteriorate at KONP and KAST to IFR or LIFR. Prevailing VFR inland with variable high clouds. Low chances (10-20%) for MVFR CIGs between 12-18Z this morning. PDX APPROACHES...VFR with variable high clouds expected through the period. Low chances (10-20%) for low-end MVFR stratus between 12-18z this morning. Winds expected to remain light. -DH
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&& .MARINE...
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Thermal trough along the Oregon coast will maintain breezy north winds with gusts up to 20 kt across the coastal waters through this afternoon. Thermal troughing shifts inland later today as high pressure weakens over the waters, allowing for winds to decrease and turn onshore tonight. An approaching front will turn the winds southerly late Tuesday night into Wednesday. Guidance continues to show a 60-70% chance that winds climb into the 20-25 kt range briefly ahead of the front, with highest probabilities across the inner waters between 8 AM and Noon on Wednesday. Winds are expected to abruptly shift to the northwest with the frontal passage by Wed afternoon. Winds turn southerly again on Thursday ahead of another frontal system. Still expecting a low pressure system to rapidly intensify across the far NE Pacific and move toward Haida Gwaii on Thursday. The trailing cold front associated with this low will likely approach the coastal waters later Thursday. While the majority of models suggest Small Craft Advisory winds, there is still a 20-40% chance of Gale Force southerly wind gusts to 35 kt across the northern coastal waters. Seas continue build to around 8 to 9 ft on Tuesday as a fetch of northwest swell moves into the coastal waters. Seas likely linger around 7 to 9 ft through Thursday. Another west to northwest swell is expected to move in behind the front on Friday with seas likely building up to around 12 to 14 ft. -DH
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&& .PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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OR...None. WA...None. PZ...Small Craft Advisory until 5 AM PDT early this morning for PZZ272-273.
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