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Albany, Oregon Weather Forecast Discussion

510
FXUS66 KPQR 151037
AFDPQR

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Portland OR 337 AM PDT Mon Sep 15 2025

.SYNOPSIS...Showers associated with Sundays frontal passage have diminished, leaving dry and calmer conditions for today. Offshore flow will strengthen tonight into Tuesday, producing warm temperatures and breezy to locally strong easterly winds through the Columbia River Gorge and Cascade gaps. Onshore flow and a weak front brush the coast midweek with only limited precipitation potential. A broader troughing pattern from the northeast Pacific may then bring increasing rain chances into the weekend.

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.SHORT TERM...Now through Tuesday Night...As of 4 AM, skies remain mostly clear across interior valleys with only patchy stratus noted over the Cascades. Fog has not been observed so far, though patchy development is still possible near sunrise in more sheltered valleys of southwest Washington. Confidence in widespread dense fog remains low.

Building shortwave ridging today ensures dry conditions with near-seasonal highs - mid to upper 70s inland and mid 60s at the coast. By this evening, a thermally induced surface trough strengthens along the coast, tightening the offshore pressure gradient (-4 to -6 mb KTTD-KDLS). This sets up breezy to locally strong easterlies beginning tonight.

Winds will peak late tonight into Tuesday morning, strongest through the western Columbia Gorge and Cascade gaps where gusts of 25-40 mph are expected. There is a 40-60% chance for gusts exceeding 40 mph in favored locations such as Crown Point and Three Corner Rock. Winds will gradually ease Tuesday evening as gradients relax, with gusts generally dropping below 20 mph outside of exposed terrain.

Temperatures climb sharply Tuesday under downslope offshore flow and compressional warming. Interior valleys carry a 70-90% chance of reaching or exceeding 85 degrees, with a 10-30% chance of touching 90 degrees. A few isolated sites are likely to reach 90 degrees. Elevated fire weather conditions will accompany the warm, dry, and breezy pattern, through the strongest winds should precede the lowest daytime humidities, reducing overlap of critical thresholds.

.LONG TERM...Wednesday through Sunday...Onshore flow returns Wednesday as a weak trough brushes the region. Light rain (10-20% chance) will be confined to the immediate coast and adjacent waters, while inland areas are expected to remain dry. Beyond midweek, ensemble guidance diverges on the amplitude and timing of subsequent troughing. Roughly 80% of members favor drier weather Thursday into Friday, while 20% maintain light showers along the coast tied to continued weak troughing. Attention then turns to the weekend, when more organized troughing from the northeast Pacific digs into the region. This feature may reintroduce precipitation chances area-wide, with current ensemble probabilities showing a 20-40% chance for measurable rainfall across southwest Washington and northwest Oregon late Saturday into Sunday. Confidence is modest at this range, but trends support increasing rain chances over the weekend compared to the midweek system. Temperatures cool accordingly, with ensemble ranges generally mid 70s to low 80s Saturday, then low to upper 70s by Sunday. ~Hall

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.AVIATION...Predominately VFR conditions with mostly clear skies. The clear skies under building high pressure following yesterday`s rain could lead to fog or low stratus development in the Willamette Valley between 10-18z Monday. There`s around a 35-50% chance of IFR ceilings along the I-5 corridor in the Willamette Valley with best chances are for the Portland area terminals where winds will be weakest. Conditions may fluctuate between MVFR and IFR through this time period. There is high probability for fog formation for Coast Range and Cascade valleys. Along the coast, easterly winds will prevent marine stratus from forming, though they could push some stratus from the Coast Range east to coastal terminals. However, winds along the far northern Oregon coast will be more northerly and lighter, which will better allow for stratus formation with a 50-70% chance of IFR conditions at KAST between 10-18z Mon. Winds inland are more northerly and light, increasing in the central and southern Willamette Valley after 15z Mon up to 10 kts with gusts up to 15-18 kt, decreasing after 03z Tue.

KPDX AND APPROACHES...VFR conditions through the TAF period except for a 40-50% chance of low stratus development sometime between 10-18z Mon. If stratus develops, expect conditions to fluctuate between MVFR and IFR. North to northwest winds less than 5 kts, increasing to 6-8 kts after 18z Mon. -HEC

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.MARINE...Northwesterly winds, increasing to around 10-15 mph with gusts up to 20 kt this afternoon and evening, mainly for zones PZZ272, 273, 252, and 253. There could be some isolated gusts up to 25 kt for those zones as well, but not widespread enough for a Small Craft Advisory at this time. Will monitor observations in case this changes. Seas 4-6 feet at 10-12 seconds expected through the middle of the week as a northwesterly swell moves into the waters.

Weak offshore flow will develop briefly late tonight into Tuesday morning. However, this will be short lived as another low pressure system and associated surface front approaches the waters Tuesday into Wednesday. As the system approaches, winds become west/northwest and will increase with gusts up to 25 kts. Seas will also build towards 7-10 ft, as well. There still remains some uncertainty as to the exact timing and overall strength of the midweek system, so will hold off on issuing any Small Craft Advisories at this time. -HEC

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.PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...

OR...None. WA...None. PZ...None.

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NWS PQR Office Area Forecast Discussion

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