


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Anchorage, AK
Issued by NWS Anchorage, AK
636 FXAK68 PAFC 150041 AFDAFC Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Anchorage AK 441 PM AKDT Mon Jul 14 2025 .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA (Days 1 through 3/Tonight through Thursday)... A fairly complex split in the upper level flow is in place over Alaska and the Peninsula. A weak short-wave trough is embedded in the flow up the west side of the ridge, tracking northeastward across Southcentral this afternoon. This has brought widespread cloudy skies and areas of light rain showers, mainly along the south to west side of mountain ranges in weak upslope flow. A somewhat stronger short-wave is pushing onshore of western Alaska, with a deep low and building short-wave ridge upstream over the western Bering Sea. In the southern stream, a deep cut-off low over the north-central Pacific (south of the eastern Aleutians and Alaska Peninsula) is couched between two ridges. A jet streak along the eastern side of the low is helping force it northward. As it continues northward through Tuesday, the ridge over the northeast Pacific will connect with the ridge ahead of the western Bering low and move across southern Alaska. As a result, expect decreasing clouds and warmer/drier conditions for Southcentral on Tuesday. The track of the low becomes a little more questionable on Wednesday as the ridge settles over Interior Alaska and blocks the low from progressing northward. Model spread is fairly large with the track of the low, as it is forced westward from the Gulf and across Southwest Alaska Wednesday through Thursday. There is confidence in a frontal boundary crossing Kodiak Island Tuesday night and pushing northward across the Kenai Peninsula Wednesday, bringing rain and some wind. However, guidance varies on the progression of the front inland and track of trailing upper level short-waves Wednesday night through Thursday. Based on this, expect mostly cloudy skies with a chance of rain region-wide. It`s much more difficult to say where and when the chances of rain will be highest. Nonetheless, none of the features look particularly strong, so any rainfall will be light. As for winds, small craft advisory level winds will develop over the western Gulf ahead of the surface low and front Tuesday night through Wednesday. The building surface ridge ahead of it will lead to southeasterly gap winds into Southcentral Wednesday afternoon/evening. Uncertainty in the strength and progression of the front lead to low confidence in the strength of gap winds. -SEB && .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA/BERING SEA/ALEUTIANS (Days 1 through 3: Today through Wednesday)... A low pressure system in the Western Bering Sea continues to push a trough and front into the Central Bering and across the Central Aleutians early this week. Gusty southerly winds along the frontal boundary along with light-to-moderate rainfall across the Aleutian Chain, reaching Unalaska by Wednesday afternoon. Southwest Alaska is currently under a col, with little influence from systems over other areas of Alaska. Cloudy skies will help keep interior Southwest cool, mitigating convective potential for the area. Expect increasing shower chances to expand northward over the Alaska Peninsula Tuesday night, with widespread shower chances to unfold across Southwest Alaska through Wednesday evening. This will help drive the cooling trend for Southwest through the middle of the week. By Wednesday, the low pressure system will have shifted to the northern Bering and will continue to spin about, holding position in the northwestern Bering. A new low pressure system in the northern Pacific aims to fill in behind the exiting trough. By Thursday morning, the approaching low may merge with the established low in the northwest Bering, reinvigorating the pattern, bringing up winds and rain to the eastern Aleutians and Alaska Peninsula by Thursday afternoon. The progression of this secondary low is suffering from a large amount of model disagreement, making the progression of the pattern relatively muddled. Stay tuned as we continue to monitor the details on the progression of the pattern, however expect a continued generally unsettled, rainy and windy pattern across the Bering and Aleutians. The merged low re-upping the southerly winds is also expected to bring a shortwave over Southwest Alaska by Wednesday morning. Bristol Bay and the Alaska Peninsula to see a round of rain beginning Wednesday morning, poised to continue into late this week as the trough approaches the coast, supporting the rainy pattern. -CL && .LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7: Friday through Monday)... The big picture has a broad upper level low in the Bering Sea and a building ridge of high pressure extending from the North Pacific and across Southcentral Alaska through the forecast period. For Southcentral, the building, blocking ridge of high pressure will promote drier conditions across much of the region. In the West, the upper level low pressure system generally remains over the central Bering Sea during the longterm. The main uncertainty with the Bering low is in regards to how it interacts with surrounding shortwaves/lows and the speed of its surface front. The GFS/Canadian solutions would push the surface features quickly across SW AK whereas the European model now tends to have the features move slower across the region. Nonetheless, expect an active pattern out west for the forecast period. -DD && .AVIATION... PANC...VFR conditions will generally prevail for ANC. A shortwave trough lifting north across Southcentral AK will continue to bring light rain to the area through the remainder of the evening before diminishing overnight. The Turnagain Arm is also expected to pick up later this afternoon with up-inlet flow, which could bring southerly to southwesterly wind gusts up to 20 kts before abating overnight. && $$