Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Medford, OR

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017
FXUS66 KMFR 160017
AFDMFR

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Medford OR
516 PM PDT Mon Jul 15 2024

Updated AVIATION section

.DISCUSSION...Well-heated atmosphere combined with the low off the
northern California coast has resulted in isolated thunderstorms
from western Siskiyou county extending east and northeast to Modoc
and Lake county. Gusty outflow of 50-60 mph can be expected with
any storms (Recent Montague METAR ob and Juniper Creek Raws ob)
and expect any activity to remain south and east of Medford this
afternoon and evening. Hi-res models continuing to show the
atmosphere too dry on the west side to support storms over here
even if cells migrate into the area or get initiated by an
advancing outflow boundary. Activity area-wide should die off
after 9pm.

The upper low off the coast will lift northward on Tuesday with a
short wave wrapping from SW to N-NE across the CWA. we expect to
see a 20-30 percent coverage of showers and thunderstorms develop
in advance of the wave from an area north of Medford to eastern
Douglas county and across the east side. Much of the activity
across the Cascades and west should progress north of the CWA by 5
or 6 pm while the east side activity should linger into Tuesday
evening. Not much rain expected with the activity in general -
mainly a tenth of an inch or less, but local amounts of a quarter
are possible with some training cells.

Winds are a concern for Tuesday afternoon as the low moves north
up the coast. Deep, very warm and dry layer of the atmosphere will
be unstable and model indications are that lower atmospheric
winds will be significant from the south and southwest. Should
see some afternoon gustiness from the south then from the west
over the west side here. Mainly southwesterly over the east side.
15 mph gusting to 25-30 mph looks reasonable for most areas.
Convection again should be monitored for potentiallocal strong and
gusty, possibly severe, wind gusts.

Cooler weather by 5-10 degrees will prevail Wednesday through
Friday in the wake of the low. So the Heat advisory headlines will
abate. However, the longer range solution supports the high
strengthening over the area again with the NWS Heat Risk forecasts
indicating more heat highlights possible starting again Saturday
or Sunday. Stavish

&&

.MARINE...Updated 245 PM Monday, July 15, 2024...Breezy north
winds will continue over most of the waters through tonight with
steep, choppy seas. These will gradually diminish as the thermal
trough weakens tomorrow with continued light winds and seas through
Thursday. The thermal trough will restrengthen Friday into the
weekend with possible advisory strength northerly winds and steep
seas. -Spilde/Hermansen

&&

.AVIATION...16/00Z TAFS...Thunderstorm outflows and cloud to
ground lightning are the main risks for inland areas early this
evening, but mostly just Medford. Here at the airport in the last
hour or so, SE outflow winds peaked near 35kt (or 40 mph). And,
earlier there was a peak gust 50+ kt (~60 mph) at Montague airport
in central Siskiyou County. We issued an airport weather warning for
the Medford airport for wind gusts of 35 kt through 530 pm. The
majority of the activity is in western Siskiyou County extending
northward to SW Jackson and into SE Josephine County. Expect
activity to wane around sunset. Activity should stay
south of Roseburg.

Stratus and fog are hugging the coast near Cape Blanco and
southward, while it has cleared at most areas to the north,
including North Bend. The clearing will be short-lived, however, as
stratus/fog are expected to return this evening and persist into
Tuesday morning. Gusty north winds along the coast this evening
will ease, then we are not expecting wiinds to be as gusty on
Tuesday.

Thunderstorms have caused smoke from the Shelly fire to mix down
to the surface and we have even had some whiffs of smoke from it
here in Medford as the cells moved through. But, the main visibility
reductions with that fire will be in the immediate vicinity
of the fire. -Spilde

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...Issued 300 PM Sunday July 14, 2024...Thunderstorm
potential remains the focus of the forecast efforts through
Tuesday. Strong high pressure will linger over the Great Basin
region into next week and a weak low pressure will move northward
just offshore of the California coast, finally moving out of the
region Tuesday night into Wednesday.

Isolated to scattered thunderstorms have already kicked off this
afternoon, with scattered activity expected to be focused over
western Siskiyou County and the Siskiyou Mountains today. Storm
coverage will be isolated east of the Cascades, and gusty outflows
of 35-45 mph remain a concern with any thunderstorms. Storm motion
today over the Siskiyous is from south to north, so it`s possible
for storms over the Siskiyous to get pushed northward into
Jackson/Josephine Counties this afternoon or evening. We`re
maintaining a Red Flag Warning through 9 PM today for lightning on
dry fuels, and more details can be found at RFWMFR. High resolution
models are showing some returns moving over the region tonight, but
the chance for thunder remains fairly low overnight tonight.

For Tuesday, moisture is shifting northward and thunderstorm
activity will shift northward as well. The best chances for Tuesday
look to be along an arc from southern Lake County northwestward
across Klamath County/Crater Lake into fire weather zone 617 and
eastern Douglas County east of the I-5 corridor. We`ll be in a bit
of transition pattern as drier air moves up from the south. The
trough will be taking on a negatively tilted orientation which is a
common wind maker pattern for us well. Strong gusty south winds are
expected across northern California, especially in the Shasta Valley
as well as in the Rogue Valley. These strong winds will combine with
low daytime RHs to result in near critical to critical fire weather
conditions for Tuesday afternoon.

Tuesday night into Wednesday, low pressure finally swings through
and out of our region. Given the negative tilt of the trough, it
could kick off some nocturnal storms, but it looks more like a
situation where storms develop along the Douglas/Lane County border
and then moves north out of our area. Moisture looks to be well
north and east of the region on Wednesday, so thunderstorm chances
drop out of the forecast after Wednesday afternoon and typical
summer weather conditions return. /BR-y

&&

.MFR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OR...Red Flag Warning until 9 PM PDT this evening for ORZ025>622.

     Fire Weather Watch from Tuesday afternoon through Tuesday
 evening for Ores-617-623>625.

     Heat Advisory until 8 PM PDT Tuesday for ORZ025-026.

 Red Flag Warning from 2 PM to 8 PM PDT Tuesday for Ores.

CA...Red Flag Warning until 9 PM PDT this evening for Caz080-281.

 Red Flag Warning from 2 PM to 8 PM PDT Tuesday for Caws.

PACIFIC COASTAL WATERS...Small Craft Advisory until 2 AM PDT Tuesday
     for Pzz350-356-370-376.

&&

$$