Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Medford, OR

Current Version |  Previous Version |  Text Only |  Print | Product List |  Glossary Off
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
-- Highlight Changed Discussion --
-- Discussion containing changed information from previous version are highlighted. --
381 FXUS66 KMFR 120541 AFDMFR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Medford OR 1041 PM PDT Sat May 11 2024 .DISCUSSION...
-- Changed Discussion --
Updated Aviation and Marine sections... .AVIATION...12/06Z TAFs...Along the coast and just offshore, marine stratus is currently being observed along the coast to around 15 nm from shore north of Cape Blanco and has pushed farther south and is filling along the south coast tonight, resulting in IFR ceilings. Breezes are expected once again in the afternoon. Inland, VFR ceilings will continue through the TAF period. The marine stratus could work its way into the Coquille Basin late tonight, but it should be shallow and burn off towards 18z Sunday. -Petrucelli/Hermansen
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .MARINE...
-- Changed Discussion --
Updated 800 PM Saturday, May 11, 2024...The latest surface analysis shows the thermal trough inland with winds and seas diminishing. This is being supported by the latest ASCAT pass which shows winds around 10 knots closer to shore near Gold Beach and around 15 knots beyond 5 nm from shore. The latest high res guidance shows an expansion fan southeast of Port Orford to around 40 nm from shore late this afternoon into Sunday afternoon, and the combination of seas and winds could result in low end small craft conditions. Therefore adjustments were made to the coverage area for Small Craft conditions to better match what the data is supporting. The thermal trough will strengthen late Sunday afternoon with Small Craft Conditions affecting all of the waters. The thermal trough will strengthen further late Monday afternoon and likely remain a factor for most of next week, with moderate to strong winds and steep to very steel wind driven seas. Confidence is high enough for gale force winds to develop late Monday afternoon and persist through at least Tuesday afternoon. It`s not out of the question Gales could persist beyond Tuesday afternoon. Thus a Gale Watch has been issued for most of the southern waters, except withing 5 nm from shore and for the northern waters west of Cape Arago and beyond 10 nm from shore west of Cape Blanco through Tuesday afternoon, but it could very well go beyond Tuesday afternoon. Please see MWWMFR for all of the details on the various marine headlines. -Petrucelli/Smith
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .PREV DISCUSSION...
-- Changed Discussion --
/Issued 217 PM PDT Sat May 11 2024/ DISCUSSION (Today through Friday)... Overview: An overall quiet forecast with very little weather impacts to speak about. That said, we do have a couple items that are noteworthy. There will be a very slim chance at thunderstorms both this afternoon (<15%) and tomorrow afternoon (<20%). The coverage area is also very small, but given the threat for lightning it is worth mentioning. The area would be mainly for eastern Siskiyou/western Modoc Counties in northern California and parts of the eastside over Klamath/Lake Counties. As mentioned, the main threat would be lightning as we are not expecting any severe weather. Additionally, with the warm weather continuing, we will have dry afternoons with RH dropping into the teens to 20% range. This is especially true for the eastside where these dry condition will last through next week. As for winds, is does look like each afternoon next week could have breezy wind speeds. Speeds may be around 10-15 mph nearly everywhere over the land, but the eastside may be around 15-25 mph. Further Details: Current visible satellite indicates mostly clear skies over the land, but we do have cumulus evident over the eastside as well as isolated westside areas; however, the Day Cloud Phase Distinction product doesn`t indicate much--if any--vertical growth. Models are suggesting we could see around 100-200 J/kg of most unstable CAPE this afternoon, but upwards near ~500 J/kg in the most aggressive solutions. We do not have the best forcing/dynamics around today, so even the 5-15% chance for showers/thunderstorms today might be too much, but its still not a zero chance. Tomorrow afternoon we have a better chance at hitting convective temperatures, so confidence is a little higher having that trigger mechanism, albeit still only around a 20% chance. Some of the HiRes convective allowing models are hinting at potential thunderstorms as well, so we`ll have to see how that all plays out. All that said, lightning would be a threat today and slightly more so tomorrow afternoon, but we are not expecting severe weather or widespread lightning if it does occur. At this time, there isn`t any one day in particular that stands out for wind speeds, but the pressure gradient will strengthen each afternoon with decent mixing each afternoon as well. The probability for us reaching advisory level wind speeds any afternoon next week is less than 20 percent at this time, but we should watch this trend going forward given the warm and dry conditions forecast to persist through next week. -Guerrero
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .MFR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...CA...None. PACIFIC COASTAL WATERS...Small Craft Advisory from 5 PM Sunday to 5 PM PDT Tuesday for PZZ350-356-370-376. Gale Watch from Monday afternoon through Tuesday afternoon for PZZ356-370-376. && $$