


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Juneau, AK
Issued by NWS Juneau, AK
797 FXAK67 PAJK 011247 AFDAJK Southeast Alaska Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Juneau AK 447 AM AKDT Mon Sep 1 2025 .SHORT TERM... Warm. Dry. Sea breezes. are the primary threats over the short- term forecast as abnormally high temperatures advect over the region, especially in the southern Panhandle, where forecasted 16-18C 850mb temps are near record values for this time of year (25/75 percentile at PANT are 2.4C to 7.4C). Setting aside thermodynamics and how that translates to surface temps the simple message is expect abnormal heat for this time of year, about 10F-13F afternoon highs above normal. Along with the heat, sea breezes will dominate the inside so expect more-or-less of what we have been seeing the last few days, for more info see marine section. .LONG TERM.../Tuesday into the weekend/... Key Messages: - High pressure over the gulf continues the warm, dry weather. - Temperatures will be above normal through most of the week. - Low rain chances (20-40%) return late this week and last into the weekend. Details: Little changes to the inherited forecast for the upcoming week. The broad upper level ridge and resilient surface level high will keep the panhandle dry and warm, prolonging the clear skies and above normal temperatures. Max temperatures in the panhandle are expected to reach well into the 70s up to around 80 on Tuesday and potentially Wednesday. Inland areas will be the warmest as they won`t be impacted by sea breezes. Confidence is high for well above normal temps with forecasted 850 mb temperatures aloft around 16 to 20 degrees Celsius with the southern panhandle at the higher end of that range. When 850mb temps get that warm, temps in the 70s are likely. The second half of the weekend looks like a potential pattern change. The high pressure looks to break down as a low pressure approaches. The will bring increasing clouds Thursday with low chances (20 to 40%) for rain Thursday night for Yakutat. Friday, these low chances for rain spread into the rest of the panhandle. These low rain chances last into the weekend. When these rain chances actually move in will be highly dependent on when the high pressure breaks down. If the ridge looks like it will linger, then these rain chances will be delayed. Stay tuned. && .AVIATION... Expect generally VFR category flight conditions for most of the Panhandle through the daytime period with enhanced afternoon sea breezes for many locations. The exception will be around Yakutat, where a marine layer has redeveloped and resulted in MVFR/IFR CIGS and VIS. Flight conditions should improve up to the VFR category by noon Alaska time for all TAF locations. Marine layer influence will return Tuesday night for parts of the Outer Coast and potentially the Icy Strait Corridor (Gustavus, Pelican, and Hoonah)- with reductions back to MVFR and IFR as the marine layer restrengthens. LLWS values continue to be benign through the period. && .MARINE... Outside: 1030mb high continues to dominate. Swell remains out of the south at 2ft 14-18 seconds, with wind waves of 6 to 10ft less than 10 seconds along the Prince of Wales (PoW) Coast and Dixon Entrance. These wind waves are being driven by fresh to strong breezes (17 to 27 knots) out of the NW, highest winds off the coast of PoW and Cape Fairweather. There is a decent chance to see near 30 knots of wind for a few hours off the coast of PoW Monday evening, have updated the forecast to reflect this. Not a great day for small skiffs to poke their heads out to any coastal waters exposed to WNW wind. Inside:Sea breezes continue to be the primary concern for the inner channels over the next 48 hours as the high in the gulf continues to dominate our weather. Highest danger from 15 to 25 knots of wind continues to be near Pt. Couverden, western Frederick Sound (near Cape Fanshaw into Cape Strait), southern Chatham, and down into Clarence Strait. && .FIRE WEATHER... Hot and dry conditions continue with poor RH recovery, relative to rainforest standards, for areas above the marine influence (above 1500ft). FFMC continues to drive the fire danger indices, residing in the upper 80s to low 90s in select areas of Prince of Wales, Ketchikan, and Skagway. The message remains consistent, we do not expect large 10+ acre fire growth in old growth timber; however, fire danger for fine flashy fuels continues to persist. && .AJK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... PUBLIC...Heat Advisory from noon to 7 PM AKDT Tuesday for AKZ319-325-328- 330-332. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory for PKZ641>644-661>664. && $$ SHORT TERM...AP LONG TERM...GJS AVIATION...GFS MARINE...AP Visit us at http://www.weather.gov/Juneau