000
FXUS61 KOKX 110951
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
551 AM EDT Tue Apr 11 2023

.SYNOPSIS...
High pressure anchored south of the area will be in control today. A
weak cold front passes through tonight. High pressure remaining
south of the area will remain in control as an early season Bermuda
high sets up through Friday. Weak low pressure will pass to our
south and east late Saturday as a frontal system slowly approaches
from the west Sunday into Monday.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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No big changes for this update as the forecast continues to be on track. A shortwave moves away well to the northeast of the area, and in its wake expect a fair amount of sunshine. A WSW flow will prevail with more of a hybrid sea breeze perhaps for eastern coastal sections during the afternoon. Temperatures will start to begin their warm up for this week as 850 mb temps gradually warm today with more of a wind out of the west at 5 kft. This should yield temperatures that warm into the lower and middle 70s well inland and further west across the area, with mainly 60s for coastal sections, especially southeastern coastal sections. With abnormally dry air in place and breezy conditions the risk of fire spread will be high. Refer to the fire wx section for details. Late this afternoon, and especially towards this evening expect more in the way of mid and high level clouds as a shortwave north of the area in Eastern Canada zips by to our north. This will serve to bring in more in the way of upper level moisture, but that will be the extent of it as ridging over the nation`s mid section begins to translate east. With a gradual warming of the air mass and a good amount of cloud cover expect temperatures to be milder with lows mainly in the 50s region wide.
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&& .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... Some mid level clouds will be around to start on Wed, but expect high to mid level clouds and moisture to thin out as more in the way of deep layer ridging works in. Temperatures will also continue their gradual ascent as 850 mb temps work to 10 to 12 C late in the day. With more in the way of sunshine, especially later in the day expect max temps on more of a offshore flow from the WNW to get well into the 70s from NYC on west and well inland, to mainly upper 60s and lower 70s across eastern most coastal sections. This will get most places 10 to 15 degrees above the seasonal averages, with somewhat lower departures from normal along coastal sections. With abnormally dry air remaining in place and breezy conditions the risk of fire spread will remain high over a relatively larger area. Refer to the fire wx section for details. For Wednesday night as the air mass in place continues to gradually warm temps will remain rather mild and a few degrees warmer in all likelihood from the previous night under a mainly clear sky. Enough of a westerly synoptic flow should preclude the formation of a marine layer with low clouds from attempting to push in. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... High pressure over the Western Atlantic remains in control through the end of the week. On Thursday, an upper level ridge builds in, with the axis passing to the east late Friday. Record or near record high temperates are expected at all climate sites Friday, with multiple days of record or near record high minimum temperatures possible as well. See the Climate section below. Sunny conditions on Thursday and Friday in a dry airmass. 850mb temperatures 14-16C will be near the max moving average and possibly above the daily max for OKX per SPC`s Sounding Climatology page. Highs in the mid 70s to mid 80s and dewpoints in the 40s and 50s will give the air a very dry feel. Minimum RH values will be 30 to 40 percent for most. There will be a weak pressure gradient over the area and thus light winds, so no fire weather concerns. Sea breezes are likely both days, this will keep highs along the southeast CT coast and eastern Long Island in the mid 60s to low 70s given a cool flow off of the water. Water temperatures are still in the mid 40s. A closed upper level low that was sitting over the southeast US will lift northeast towards our area late Friday into Saturday. An associated weak surface low will pass just to our southeast as high pressure over the Western Atlantic starts to push east. There continues to be differences in location and timing in this weak low, but this feature could bring our next chance of rain. Capped at slight chance for now Saturday afternoon. A larger and slower moving frontal system then approaches with a cold frontal passage sometime late Sunday into Monday. This front brings better shot at seeing rain. Currently chance PoPs. Temperatures will start trending down Saturday, but remain above average through Monday. && .AVIATION /10Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... VFR as high pressure becomes suppressed to the south. Light W-SW winds before daybreak or light and variable, then expect increasing WSW flow today, with speeds 15-20G25kt by afternoon, possibly 20G25-30kt or higher at the metros especially KJFK toward evening. Can`t rule out KJFK/KBDR/KGON and possibly KISP backing more to the SW than forecast via a partial sea breeze component. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... KJFK winds could back more SW than forecast This afternoon. ...OUTLOOK FOR 06Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY... Tonight: VFR. W winds gusting aoa 20kt. Wednesday: VFR. WNW winds 15-20G25-30kt, diminishing at night. Thursday and Friday: VFR. Saturday: Mainly VFR. Low confidence. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90. && .MARINE... By this afternoon a SW flow increases out ahead of an approaching cold front. Thus, small craft conditions will become increasingly likely for southern bays, the central and eastern ocean waters, the eastern half of LI Sound. Small craft conditions are therefore expected tonight, especially behind the cold front for all waters, with the exception being the western most ocean waters and NY Harbor with gusts being just short of criteria and seas up to 4 ft on the western ocean. Have added the western portion of LI Sound with gusts likely to get up to 25 kts for at least 3-4 hours tonight. The potential for SCA nearshore gusts will be possible on all waters on Wednesday in wake of the front on a WNW flow and with more mixing overall. Sub SCA conds likely return Wed night as high pressure builds enough to decrease the pressure gradient. Sub SCA conditions expected Thursday through most of the weekend, with a weak pressure gradient over the area and high pressure over the Western Atlantic largely remaining in control. && .FIRE WEATHER... An extended period (a week and counting) of dry conditions will continue through the week, with daytime min RH values mainly in the 20 and 30 percent range through midweek. A Red Flag Warning has been issued for today into early this evening for the Lower Hudson Valley, Southern Connecticut, and New York City. A Special Weather Statement is in effect for NE New Jersey and Long Island. There is potential to meet Red Flag criteria again on Wednesday, with min RH values likely dropping into the 20s to around 30 percent with gusts likely to be more frequent at 25 to 30 mph for much of the region. && .HYDROLOGY... No hydrologic concerns exist through the forecast period. && .CLIMATE... Daily Record High Temperatures... Apr 14 Bridgeport.....73 (1949) Islip..........73 (2022) LaGuardia......84 (1941) JFK............78 (1949) Central Park...85 (1941) Newark.........88 (2022) Daily Record High Minimum Temperatures... Apr 12 Apr 13 Apr 14 Apr 15 Central Park...49 (2017)...61 (1945)...60/2019...67 (1941) LaGuardia......54 (2017)...59 (2018)...58/1945...64 (1941) JFK............52 (2017)...53 (2019)...53/2022...58 (1960) Islip..........51 (2008)...53 (2019)...54/2022...54 (2012) Newark.........59 (2017)...61 (2019)...62/2014...60 (1960) Bridgeport.....49 (2017)...52 (2020)...51/2014...53 (2012) For more details see the WPC experimental NDFD Forecast Temperature Records page at: https:/www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/exper/ndfd/ndfd.html && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...Red Flag Warning from 10 AM this morning to 7 PM EDT this evening for CTZ005>012. NY...Red Flag Warning from 10 AM this morning to 7 PM EDT this evening for NYZ211-212. NJ...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 2 PM this afternoon to 8 AM EDT Wednesday for ANZ331-332-340-345-350-353. Small Craft Advisory from 8 PM this evening to 8 AM EDT Wednesday for ANZ335. && $$ SYNOPSIS...JE/JT NEAR TERM...JE SHORT TERM...JE LONG TERM...JT AVIATION...JT MARINE...JE/JT FIRE WEATHER... HYDROLOGY...JE/JT CLIMATE...