


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Juneau, AK
Issued by NWS Juneau, AK
741 FXAK67 PAJK 061843 AFDAJK Southeast Alaska Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Juneau AK 1043 AM AKDT Mon Oct 6 2025 .UPDATE...Update to include 18z TAF issuance... && .SHORT TERM.../ through Monday night / Weather front moving slowly east through the southern panhandle this morning and be out of the areas. The old surface slow is pushing into the north central gulf near Kodiak Island. Showers are spinning about int to the north central gulf, and these will take a half a day to move NE into the Northeast gulf by late afternoon. and then having the clearing back edge as a next ridge axis pushes the shower activity east and south. By early Tuesday rain should be east of Yakutat, however a few showers my be lingering there early in the morning. Periods of showers will continue in the onshore flow. .LONG TERM...Tuesday a long wave trough will be carrying a low and fronts across the region, with widespread stratiform precip transitioning to showers, a result of the cool unstable post frontal airmass. Freezing levels continue to drop, likely reaching 3,000 to 4,000ft Tuesday morning for the north. Main threat to see a dusting of snow will be along the upper portions of White Pass but weak snowfall rates and warm soil temperatures will limit any significant impacts to roads. Showers decrease late Tuesday as a ridge builds across the Gulf, bringing stout northwest winds to the coastal waters and drier/cooler conditions to the Panhandle. Another weak system impacts the region late Thursday into Friday bringing warmer onshore flow and rain; snow to areas above 3,000ft. Attention turns to the potential for our first cold outflow event this fall; at this time the source region of the air mass, surface high, and duration leave much to be desired in terms of seeing long duration (12+ hours) gale to storm force winds. Current forecast reflects a short period of northerly gale force conditions Friday into Saturday for Lynn Canal, with further trend analysis required moving through the week. For reference, most guidance has agreement on peak sea level pressure difference between CYXY-PAJN at 9mb and PAGY-PAJN near 5mb, which historically signifies sustained gale force winds this time of year. Main impact is colder surface temperatures for the northern Panhandle, with overnight temps likely reaching into the 20s this weekend, particularly concerning for our unhoused community. && .AVIATION.../Update for 18z TAF issuance/... The remnants of a band of rainy and breezy conditions has worked its way south through the panhandle this morning. Parts of the central and southern panhandle are seeing MVFR to IFR CIGs AoB 2500ft with lowered VIS and light to moderate rain rates as the band pushes out. The rest of the panhandle is seeing showers develop in the wake of this band with periods of moderate to heavy rain and gusty winds pushing through intermittently. CIGs are around 5000ft, though lower scattered and broken layers will move through with the lowered conditions. Winds up Lynn Canal are particularly gusty, and will stay elevated for a majority of the period. Conditions are expected to stay around MVFR for a majority of locations until later Monday afternoon when they will become VFR. Another weak front is expected to push into the northern and central panhandle Monday night into Tuesday morning, bringing largely MVFR conditions and light rain. Areas of the southern panhandle may not feel the full impacts of this system, though CIGs are expected to drop to MVFR for a period overnight. && .MARINE... Outside: Behind the front, fresh breezes around 20 kts continue in the gulf before the next low pressure system arrives Monday morning. As this system pushes to the east, winds will increase to 25 to 30 kts with gale force gusts along the far offshore waters. Similar to the inside waters, winds greatly diminish Monday night into Tuesday. Significant wave heights slightly subside this evening before the next system. As the next system arrives Monday, seas build to 12 to 14 ft with 16 ft in the far offshore waters due to a southwest swell. Inside: Winds across the inner channels are expected to be increase to fresh to strong breezes of 17 to 27 kts. These winds will remain elevated into Monday morning before the southern channels start to see decreasing winds. For the northern channels, winds will continue, even slightly increase, as the north to south pressure gradient gets stronger. Strong winds will continue over N. Lynn Canal, slightly increasing, as southerly strong breezes of 22 to 27 kts with near gale wind gusts up to 33 kts. Other northern and central channels will see fresh breezes with winds near 15 to 20 kts. Winds will begin to diminish Monday night into Tuesday. && .AJK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... PUBLIC...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory for PKZ012-013-022-053-641>644-651-652- 661>664-671-672. && $$ SHORT TERM...Bezenek LONG TERM...AP AVIATION...ZTK MARINE...Bezenek Visit us at http://www.weather.gov/Juneau