


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Mt. Holly, NJ
Issued by NWS Mt. Holly, NJ
Versions:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
642 FXUS61 KPHI 292109 AFDPHI Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Mount Holly NJ 509 PM EDT Fri Aug 29 2025 .SYNOPSIS... A cold front will move across the area through this afternoon. High pressure will then build in over the weekend and early next week. An area of low pressure is forecast to develop off the southeast coast early next week but remain well away from our area. A cold front is forecast to arrive into our region later Thursday. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/... A cold front will continue moving across the area through this afternoon as an upper level low continues to deepen over southern Quebec. With the upper level low and associated colder air aloft combined with surface heating and the forcing from the cold front, there will continue to be considerable cloudiness around at times this afternoon. We also maintain chances for some isolated showers or sprinkles but with any of these being confined mainly to NE PA into northern NJ. Even here though, most places won`t see anything. Expect NW winds around 10 gusting 15 to 20 mph. Afternoon highs will be in the 70s to near 80 with comfortable humidity levels as drier air moves in. For tonight, the front moves offshore with high pressure building in over the Great Lakes region. This set up will continue to advect cool, dry air into the area due to continuing NW winds. As a result, it will be a chilly night by late August standards. Lows in the urban areas as well as along the coast and the Delaware Bay will be mainly in the middle to upper 50s. Meanwhile the normally colder spots such as the Pine Barrens, eastern PA, and NW NJ will see lows generally getting down into the upper 40s to low 50s. Across the Poconos, it could even get down close to 40 in spots. For Saturday, high pressure will continue to be centered to our west and will dominate our weather leading to mainly sunny skies, cool temperatures (again, by late August standards), and low humidity. Expect highs mostly in the 70s with even some upper 60s over the Pocono Plateau. Generally expect NW winds around 5 to 10 mph. && .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/... An upper-level trough, with a closed low centered to our north and northeast Saturday, lingers across the entire region. Despite this, the pattern favors surface high pressure centered initially across the Great Lakes to build into our area. This will reinforce the dry and cool/chilly conditions through Saturday night. Light to calm winds and a clear sky Saturday night will lead to a chilly overnight with low temperatures in the low to mid 50s, with some areas dropping into the 40s. As we go through Sunday, the upper-level trough from the Canadian Maritimes back across the Northeast to Ohio Valley is forecast to gradually weaken. This results in surface high pressure shifting eastward and southward some more into and across our area. Our sensible weather looks to be controlled by this area of high pressure and therefore dry conditions continue. Little in the way of clouds are anticipated due to the presence of surface high pressure and the trough aloft weakening. Temperatures are forecast to remain below average, and with weak low-level flow a sea breeze should develop during the afternoon hours. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... Summary...Temperatures below average overall, and dry weather continues until late in the week when some showers will become possible. Synoptic Overview...An expansive upper-level trough is forecast to remain across the East early next week before a potentially strong trough develops across the Midwest that then shifts eastward through Thursday. The guidance has varied quite a bit with embedded shortwave energy, which has offered timing and amplitude differences with the overall trough as it develops and shifts eastward. This has also been responsible for some of the guidance strengthening a coastal low as it shifts north and northeastward. While there still remains signals among the guidance/ensembles that a low pressure system develops off the Southeast U.S. coast next week, it may end up remaining weak and disorganized and be slow to move. Its northward motion may be halted for a while given high pressure to the north, until a stronger incoming trough and cold front arrives later Thursday. For Monday through Wednesday...An upper-level trough in the East is forecast to weaken some and lifting northeastward while another upper-level trough amplifies across the Northern Plains and Midwest. Much of the guidance has favored more of separation of the shortwaves and therefore delays the eastward shift in the amplifying upper-level trough later in the week. This result ins surface high pressure across our area gradually shifting eastward while is also weakens. While some rain is needed, the overall pattern looks to favor the surface high protecting our area from systems. Surface low pressure developing along a lingering baroclinic zone from off the Southeast U.S. coast to the northern Gulf should be slow to organize and also show little north or northeast motion given high pressure to its north. Our dry weather pattern looks to continue, with the exception of a slight chance for some showers Wednesday night as some moisture starts to increase from the south associated with perhaps a weak surface trough extending northward. Temperatures mostly below average. For Thursday...An amplifying upper-level trough gradually approaches from the west. This should drive a cold front into our area by later in this time frame. Some moisture return ahead of this front combined with at least some large scale ascent will bring the chance for showers and perhaps a thunderstorm. The timing of this will ultimately depend on the amplitude of the incoming upper-level trough and an associated cold front. This system should also pull whatever low pressure system is off the Southeast U.S. coast northeastward and keep it offshore, although perhaps some moisture could be enhanced into our area from it. Given the typical uncertainty at this time range, did not deviate from the National Blend of Models (NBM) output which shows PoPs increasing to 40-50% across the area. && .AVIATION /21Z FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... The following discussion is for KPHL, KPNE, KTTN, KABE, KRDG, KILG, KMIV, KACY and surrounding areas. This afternoon...A few brief showers or sprinkles possible but it should remain VFR with a scattered to at times broken cloud deck around 5 kft. NW winds around 8-10 kts with some gusts up to 20 kts. Tonight...VFR. Northwest winds dropping to around 5 kts late. High confidence. Saturday...VFR under mainly clear skies and NW winds around 5-10 knots. High confidence. Outlook... Saturday night through Wednesday...Prevailing VFR. No significant weather. && .MARINE... Generally expect winds shifting to NW and increasing to 10-15 with some gusts up to 20 knots by early this evening continuing through most of tonight. The conditions should remain below Small Craft Advisory levels both through tonight and Saturday though with seas 2-3 feet. Outlook... Saturday night through Wednesday...The conditions are anticipated to be below Small Craft Advisory criteria. Fair weather. Rip Currents... For Saturday and Sunday, winds turn to be onshore/shore parallel, out of the NNE but will only be around 10 MPH. Easterly swell of around 2 feet with a 6-8 second period will result in breaking waves of 1-2 feet in the surf zone. As a result, a LOW RISK for the development of rip currents is forecast for all beaches through Sunday. For specific beach forecasts, visit weather.gov/beach/phi && .PHI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... PA...None. NJ...None. DE...None. MD...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Fitzsimmons NEAR TERM...Fitzsimmons SHORT TERM...Gorse/Staarmann LONG TERM...Gorse/Staarmann AVIATION...Fitzsimmons/Gorse MARINE...AKL/Fitzsimmons/Gorse