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Battery Park, Virginia Weather Forecast Discussion

440
FXUS61 KAKQ 252351
AFDAKQ

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Wakefield VA 751 PM EDT Thu Sep 25 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A slow moving cold front moves into the area tonight and Friday, with an upper trough settling over the Southeast by the weekend. This will bring more unsettled conditions late this week through the weekend. Impacts from any tropical development would be Monday into Tuesday if they occur. However, uncertainity remains high regarding this.

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.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM FRIDAY MORNING/... As of 750 PM EDT Thursday...

Key Message:

- Scattered showers and thunderstorms are expected through early Friday morning, with the highest coverage shifting to central and eastern portions of the area. There is a marginal severe threat through this evening for damaging wind gusts.

A deep, positively tilted upper trough remains centered to our west with an upper low over the Great Lakes. Upper ridging continues to be anchored offshore. Deep layered SW flow prevails across the Mid- Atlantic. At the surface, high pressure is centered offshore, with a weak cold front just to the NW of the central Appalachians. Showers and a few storms have mostly been confined to SE portions of the area so far this evening but some new development near and north of Raleigh may spread into areas generally along and east of the I-85 corridor this evening as height falls aloft finally overspread the region. Thunder chances gradually fall overnight but showers will likely linger into early Fri AM as the surface boundary settles in from the NW. Warm and humid tonight with lows in the upper 60s to lower 70s.

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.SHORT TERM /6 AM FRIDAY MORNING THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 300 PM EDT Thursday...

Key Messages:

- An upper low southwest of the region will bring showers, a few embedded thunderstorms, and locally heavy rain Friday and especially Saturday.

- Shower chances continue on Sunday with less in the way of thunder chances.

The trough to our west eventually splits as a northern stream shortwave passes by to our NE and a closed low develops over the Mid South. Meanwhile, the cold front is expected to stall over central and southern VA on Friday. Lesser coverage of showers is expected early Friday with the diurnal cycle, with scattered showers and tstms expected to redevelop along and south of the front Friday afternoon and evening. PW values are expected to be near 2.0" across SE VA/NE NC Friday and locally heavy rain is possible. The closed low is progged to slowly track NE Friday night into Saturday. Height falls are expected as the flow becomes southerly over the entire area ahead of the approaching upper low. This will allow deep- layered moisture to increase Friday night and especially Saturday, with PWs surging to 1.9-2.2" over the entire area. Scattered to numerous showers overspread the area from south to north late Friday night into Saturday morning, with numerous showers and a few tstms expected Saturday afternoon/evening. Saturday will be the wettest day of the period, with areal average rainfall of ~1" expected, with localized totals of 2"+ possible. WPC has a Marginal Excessive Rainfall Risk for the entire area on Sat to account for this. Not quite as warm Friday with highs in the lower to mid 80s, with mid to upper 70s Saturday with the showers/cloud cover. Lows Friday night and Saturday night will mainly be in the 60s. Shower chances continue Saturday night/Sunday as the closed low lingers just to our W/SW. With the low-level increasing a little bit out of the NE, expect it to be more stable on Sunday with less in the way of thunder chances (but cloudy and showery throughout the day). Highs only reach the mid-upper 70s with areal avg QPF of 0.25-0.5". WPC once again has a Marginal Excessive Rainfall Risk for the entire area on Sun.

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.LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 300 PM EDT Thursday...

Key Messages:

- A unsettled pattern continues late this weekend into early next week.

- Tropical Storm Humberto is forecast to become a major hurricane well offshore and AL94 has a 70% chance of development through 48 hours and 90% through 7 days.

The closed low will remain over the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast through early next week as strong high pressure builds SE across Ontario and Quebec. Further complications arise from AL94 and TS Humberto (forecast to become a major hurricane by late Sunday), how these systems interact with each other, and how much the trough interacts with AL94. While forecast guidance continues to have a large spread in terms of both track/intensity with respect to AL94, there is increasing confidence that there will be some degree of tropical development off the SE CONUS coast by Monday morning. Direct local impacts, if they do occur, would likely be from late Monday through late Tuesday. Regardless, unsettled conditions and rain chances continue early next week, with increasing onshore flow as the strong high builds SE from Canada. Depending on the track of the system, locally heavy rainfall is certainly possible across parts of the area which could lead to flooding especially with the rain already expected this weekend.

By mid to late next week, the high builds farther down toward the area with fairly strong CAA expected. Breezy NE winds are likely by Wed/Wed night as the gradient between the high to our north and any low to our S/SW/SE increases. Also, drier wx should finally return by Wed or Wed night. Highs mainly in the 70s next week. Temperatures may struggle to get out of the 60s by next Thu in parts of the area.

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.AVIATION /00Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... As of 750 PM EDT Thursday...

VFR conditions prevail at the terminals early this evening. Some light showers may creep into the ORF vicinity over the next hour or so. Additional showers and deeper convection have started to develop west of the TAF sites and this activity may spread towards RIC, PHF, ORF, and SBY later this evening into the overnight. Not sure how much instability will remain by that time so have removed the mention of thunder from SBY, PHF, and ORF as convection will take longer to move into these areas. That said, height falls aloft begin to overspread the area with cooler temps aloft that may allow for some limited instability overnight. Some lingering showers are possible later tonight, with some IFR/MVFR CIGs likely late tonight and toward 12z Friday. A SSW winds generally 5-10 kt this evening, closer to 5 kt late (outside of any showers/storms). Winds become light and somewhat variable on Friday as a weakening cold front settles into the region. CIGs gradually rise to MVFR by midday Fri and likely improve to VFR Fri aftn.

Showers are likely with a few tstms possible across SE VA/NE NC Friday aftn/evening, with widespread showers likely at all of the terminals on Saturday. Occasional sub-VFR conditions are expected. A chc of showers lingers into Sunday and Monday.

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.MARINE... As of 300 PM EDT Thursday...

Key Messages:

- Breezy southerly winds expected ahead of a cold front through late this evening.

- Sub-SCA from Friday through the weekend, then elevated NE winds likely from the early to middle part of next week.

A cold front to the west has nudged closer to the area since this morning, while high pressure remains anchored well the the NE. There is enough of a pressure gradient between these features to support southerly winds on either side of 15kt in the bay/rivers and 15-20kt over the coastal waters. Seas are 2-3ft and waves are 1-2ft based on latest buoy obs. Gusty southerly winds continue through late this evening as the cold front moves into Virginia. Still thinking there will be an couple of hours between 7pm and 9pm where gusts over the coastal waters touch 25kt. Seas build toward 4ft this evening with 5ft seas likely staying out near 20nm. No SCA has been issued for this evening due to the short lived nature of the 25kt wind gusts, the tendency of southerly winds to under perform, and 5ft seas likely not making within 20nm of the coast. By Friday, the front will stall over our local waters leading to weaker winds with low confidence in wind direction. High pressure builds in during the weekend bringing benign marine conditions across all waters. Unsettled marine conditions are likely from early-mid next week as Canadian high pressure slowly builds SE from the Great Lakes and a tropical system potentially forms to our south and tracks toward the waters. There is a large amount of uncertainty with respect to the track and strength of any tropical system that does develop. Regardless of any tropical development, a period of elevated NE winds appears possible from the early to middle part of next week.

A Moderate rip risk remains in place for today, dropping to low on Friday. A low rip risk is expected this weekend, with a high rip current risk likely for much of next week due to swell from any offshore system.

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.AKQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MD...None. NC...None. VA...None. MARINE...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...AJZ/ERI NEAR TERM...ERI/RHR SHORT TERM...AJZ/ERI LONG TERM...AJZ/ERI AVIATION...ERI/RHR MARINE...AC

NWS AKQ Office Area Forecast Discussion

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