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Plainview, Virginia Weather Forecast Discussion

709
FXUS61 KAKQ 210548
AFDAKQ

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Wakefield VA 148 AM EDT Sun Sep 21 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A backdoor front drops southward through the area today, bringing a return to seasonably cool and cloudy conditions this weekend. A warm up in temperatures from high pressure returns early next week.

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.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM THIS MORNING/... As of 815 PM EDT Saturday...

Key Messages:

- A weak cold front has pushed into northern NC this evening, and will drop south of the area overnight.

- An overcast sky is expected overnight, with lows in the low to mid 60s.

Latest analysis shows 1028+mb sfc high pressure centered over QC and northern New England. Weak cold front is now along/just south of the VA/NC border as of this writing, with temperatures in the mid 60s to low 70s north of the front, with mid 70s south of the front. Showers and storms which developed earlier this afternoon have weakened with post- frontal stabilization. Will likely see a few more isolated showers across northeast NC as the front settles south, but otherwise remaining mainly dry for the rest of the night.

Becoming overcast tonight, expect low stratus to build into the area overnight as that front moves into the Carolinas. Visibility guidance suggests there could also be some patchy fog again late tonight into early tomorrow morning, primarily in piedmont. However, given the cloud cover, have kept dense fog mention out for now. Overnight lows will be in the low to mid 60s for most of the area, under a mostly cloudy sky.

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.SHORT TERM /6 AM THIS MORNING THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/... As of 245 PM EDT Saturday...

Key Messages:

- Cooler temperatures in wake of backdoor cold front.

- High pressure returns to the region, keeping conditions dry.

Behind the cold front, a weak low pressure will form along the front on Sunday, but model guidance continues to show the low remaining further off coast in the Atlantic ocean. Therefore, still expecting dry weather tomorrow. High pressure will return to region but partly to mostly cloudy skies are expected Sunday and Monday with around average high temperatures in the mid 70s to around 80 and lows in the upper 50s to lower 60s.

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.LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 245 PM EDT Saturday...

Key Messages:

- Mainly dry with near to slightly above average temperatures early next week.

- Rain chances and cooler temperatures potentially return by the middle and end of next week.

Ridging will build offshore of the SE CONUS coast next week, while a strong upper low dives into the central Plains. Model guidance continues to indicate that high pressure will return to south of the area by early next week, favoring a warming trend due to developing return of flow out of the south. Highs will rebound to the low-mid 80s forecast for Tuesday and Wednesday. Daily chances for showers/thunderstorms return by the middle of the week due to the approaching upper low and trough, which is expected to advance eastward through the MS Valley during the middle and end of next week as high pressure returns to the Quebec region. This will bring slightly below average temperatures to region by the end of the week.

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.AVIATION /06Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 150 AM EDT Sunday...

Degraded flight conditions for most terminals will persist through the early morning. All major terminals except for ECG are experiencing MVFR CIGs as a backdoor front moved through the region earlier now provides low stratus clouds. Some locally IFR CIGs are possible through 09z at ORF, as there has already been a short period of IFR, but confidence is lower, so only have included a TEMPO for now. RIC will likely see IFR CIGs between 08z-14z, then increasing to MVFR for the majority of the day. Outside of RIC, cloud decks will increase in the morning to early afternoon (14-18z) to VFR. NE winds will be 5-10 kt throughout the TAF period.

Outlook: Sub-VFR conditions are expected again Sunday night into Monday morning with widespread lowered CIGs and patchy fog. High pressure will then return Monday and Tuesday along with VFR conditions. Unsettled weather is expected late week with possible sub-VFR conditions.

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.MARINE... As of 300 PM EDT Saturday...

Key Messages:

- Small Craft Advisories are in effect for the Atlantic coastal waters, mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, and Currituck Sound from late tonight into Sunday night. SCAs linger into Monday for the Atlantic coastal waters due to elevated seas.

- There is a high rip current risk for both tomorrow and Monday.

This afternoon, a backdoor cold front has crossed the marine area and is now located just south of the local waters. Meanwhile, high pressure is building to our north over Canada is SE into New England. Winds have become NE in the wake of the front, generally ranging from 5 to 10 knots across the southern waters and 10 to 15 knots further north. Seas are generally around 2 feet, but have increased to 2 to 3 feet across the far northern waters. Waves in the Bay are around 1 foot (2 feet at the mouth).

High pressure slides SE across New England and into Atlantic Canada into tonight and builds to ~1030mb. High pressure remains over the Canadian Maritimes Sunday as an inverted trough sharpens off the NC coast. Winds become NE and increase to 10 to 15 knots over all the waters later this evening into tonight. Winds increase further later tonight into Sunday, becoming 15 to 20 knots with gusts approaching 25 knots for the ocean, mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, and Currituck Sound (remaining 10 to 15 knots with gusts ~20 knots elsewhere). Meanwhile, seas to 3 to 4 feet later this evening into tonight (from N to S), and then 4 to 5 feet N to 5 to 6 feet S Sunday into Sunday night. SCAs remain in effect for the coastal waters, mouth of the Bay, and Currituck Sound beginning late tonight and continuing into Monday (longest for the coastal waters due to linger 5+ feet seas). Local wind probs for sustained 18 knots and gusts to 25 knots continue to drop off quickly W of Little Creek, thus the SCA doesn`t extend past the mouth of the Bay.

The pressure gradient relaxes early next week as high pressure builds S into the region and then nudges offshore by midweek. Seas will be slow to subside Monday, but sub-SCA conditions should gradually return and then prevail for the entire marine area by the middle of next week.

Rip Currents: A high risk is forecast for Sunday due to an increasing NE wind and nearshore waves of 4-6ft. A high risk is expected to continue into Monday due to elevated seas in combination with some long period swell from distant TS Gabrielle (forecast to be Hurricane Gabrielle by that point).

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.AKQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MD...None. NC...None. VA...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 6 AM this morning to 1 AM EDT Monday for ANZ633. Small Craft Advisory from 6 AM this morning to 7 AM EDT Monday for ANZ634. Small Craft Advisory from 6 AM this morning to 1 PM EDT Monday for ANZ650-652-654-656-658.

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SYNOPSIS...KMC/SW NEAR TERM...AC/MAM SHORT TERM...AC/KMC LONG TERM...AC/KMC AVIATION...KMC MARINE...AJB/AJZ

NWS AKQ Office Area Forecast Discussion

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