Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Medford, OR
Issued by NWS Medford, OR
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533 FXUS66 KMFR 300338 AFDMFR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Medford OR 838 PM PDT Mon Apr 29 2024 .DISCUSSION...The forecast is on track for this evening. Activity from this morning`s front has decreased to the slightest hint of showers over eastern Douglas County. A Freeze Warning is in place from Tuesday at 3 AM through 10 AM for areas of the Illinois Valley south of Selma. Temperatures in this area are forecast to be in the low 30s tonight, which can be hazardous to plants and animals. Another cold front will arrive tomorrow, although precipitation ahead of the front will be limited to the Oregon coast, across Douglas County, and over the Cascades. Other areas, especially east of the Cascades, will see gusty afternoon and evening winds but nothing near advisory levels. -TAD && .AVIATION...30/00Z TAFs...Conditions will briefly improve this evening between frontal systems, with mainly VFR expected. Gusty westerly breezes will continue early this evening, strongest east of the Cascades with gusts up to 30 kt possible, including at Klamath Falls. Another front brings a renewed risk of lower ceilings (MVFR) and showers to the coast and Umpqua region from around 06Z late this evening into Tuesday morning. Elsewhere, clouds will also thicken tonight but VFR is expected to persist. Showers will linger near the coast Tuesday afternoon, but clouds will generally diminish across the area. Westerly winds again increase and become gusty Tuesday afternoon, with gusts up to 35 kt possible east of the Cascades. -DW && .MARINE...Updated 800 PM Monday, April 29, 2024...Seas will be hazardous to small craft through Tuesday evening with a combination of wind seas and west-northwest swell. Low pressure will move north of the waters Tuesday with high seas building to a peak in the evening. Weak high pressure will move in Wednesday with moderate north winds, highest south of Cape Blanco. Then, another front will move through the waters Wednesday night and onshore Thursday with winds and wind wave dominated seas likely reaching advisory levels. A break with calmer conditions is expected Thursday night into early Friday. A series of fronts is likely to follow Friday into early next week with stronger winds and building seas. && && .PREV DISCUSSION... /Issued 253 PM PDT Mon Apr 29 2024/ SHORT TERM...Tonight 4/29 through Monday night 4/30...Satellite imagery shows some cloud cover associated with an unstable atmosphere with RADAR showing show showers across portions of southern Oregon and western Siskiyou County in northern California. Most of northern California is experiencing mostly clear skies. The showers and clouds are part of a frontal boundary that is swung through the area earlier today. Web cameras showed some reduced visibility due to snowfall near Willamette Pass, but snow was not accumulating on the roads. The showers will continue to dissipate over the next several hours. Tonight, expect mostly cloudy skies across much of the area. However, high resolution ensemble members are showing some clearing in Josephine County around midnight to 3 AM. This could let temperatures fall to freezing. With the National Blend of models signifying an 80% chance of reaching freezing in the Illinois Valley, have decided to upgrade the freeze watch to a freeze warning. Higher elevations of Douglas and Jackson Counties may reach freezing as well, but the valleys should remain relatively warm. On Tuesday, another weak trough pushes largely north of southern Oregon. This will bring a few showers to the coast, Douglas County and the Cascades from Crater Lake northward. Precipitation will be light, and snowfall accumulations will be around 1-3 inches in the Cascades. GEFS and EC ensembles suggest a trace of rain in Medford proper, but not measuring. Have gone with the NBM on this. Tuesday night could see temperatures approach freezing again for the Illinois Valley, but want to see how tonight plays out before issuing a freeze watch for tomorrow as some of the same issues will exist with cloud cover associated with this front. Elsewhere, temperatures will be cooler than normal. -Schaaf LONG TERM...Wednesday through Monday, May 1-6, 2024... The first week of May will feature fairly typical spring weather. The pattern will remain progressive, at least initially, as WNW flow persists. One trough will exit to the east on Wednesday, so heights will rise with surface high pressure building in strongly by Wednesday morning. This will result in another cold morning east of the Cascades and in most of NorCal with areas of frost and even possibly freezing temperatures for the valleys west of the Cascades. Highest probabilities for temperatures <=32F are in the typically colder spots like the Illinois and Applegate valleys (50-80% chance), while locations like the Rogue Valley and Umpqua Basin are more likely to have temperatures bottom out in the mid to upper 30s. This could still bring frost, so those that have done some early gardening should consider covering sensitive vegetation or moving it temporarily indoors. The short wave upper ridge will be over the area resulting in at least a partly sunny, milder afternoon with temperatures getting back closer to (but not quite) seasonal normals. Expect highs in the mid 60s west of the Cascades with mid- upper 50s in NE Cal and over the East Side. The fast flow pattern across the Gulf of Alaska has been causing some havoc in the timing/strength of another disturbance and short wave trough expected to scoot by to our north and east Wednesday night into Thursday. But, this system could bring another shot of light precipitation to parts of the area. Recent 12z deterministic GFS/EC/Canadian models are showing this system digging farther south than the last several model runs. And, a larger percentage of members from the 12z ensembles are also showing a stronger system. That said, still about half of all members show a dry scenario (for Medford) and are closer to the weaker 12z NAM. Given the uncertainty, going to stick with the NBM, which has increased PoPs modestly (to 30-50%) along the coast, north of the Rogue/Umpqua Divide and over to the Cascades, but has kept things dry across NorCal. Best chance of showers (20%) here in Medford is Thursday morning. We`ll see if any further adjustments are necessary. Overall, temperatures have trended downward a little for Thursday, especially across NW sections due to the potential for increased cloud cover and at least light precip. The upper trough shifts into eastern Oregon and western Idaho by Thursday evening, so it should dry out again, with another short wave ridge building into SW Oregon/NorCal by Friday. Only modest warming is expected with a warming air mass aloft, primarily since yet another stronger system is forecast to dive southeastward from the Gulf of Alaska. This could bring cloud cover back in over the area late Friday afternoon and there`s a good chance (40-60%) of rain along the coast by Friday evening. This system will bring a change to cooler, wetter weather for all areas Friday night/Saturday with a fairly high probability of rain/showers (40-80% chance). The upper trough is likely to remain over the area next weekend with a showery pattern persisting Saturday night into Sunday. The cooler, wetter pattern could last into early next week as model ensembles/clusters/NBM are showing another wetter system arriving around next Monday. The Climate Prediction Center`s 6-10 day outlook is also showing the bullseye of higher odds for cooler, wetter weather (60-70% chance) squarely over NorCal and Oregon. -Spilde && .MFR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...Freeze Warning from 3 AM to 10 AM PDT Tuesday for ORZ024. CA...None. PACIFIC COASTAL WATERS...Small Craft Advisory until 11 PM PDT Tuesday for PZZ356-376. Small Craft Advisory until 11 PM PDT Tuesday for PZZ350-370. && $$