000
FXUS61 KOKX 191148
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
748 AM EDT Fri May 19 2023

.SYNOPSIS...
High pressure moves further offshore today and tonight. An area of
low pressure develops just south of the area and moves through
Saturday, with a cold front quickly following into Saturday
evening. A weak cold front moves through on Sunday. High
pressure builds in for the beginning of next week and remains
in place through the middle of the week.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
Sat imagery shows high clouds clipping the southern portion of
the CWA early this morning. Thus for today look for a few more
clouds, especially later in the day and into the evening as
clouds attempt to move up from the south. The daytime looks to
remain dry with dew point readings mainly back into the 40s.
Temperatures today will be around seasonal levels with temps
getting to around 70 inland, and lower and middle 60s closer to
the coast.

For tonight moisture begins to move up along the coast, mainly
towards and after midnight. At the same time a cold front
transverses the Ohio Valley. Clouds will lower and thicken with the
area under a SE flow. Look for increasing lower level moisture and
clouds as per BUFKIT fx soundings. Towards and just after midnight
have PoPs going to slight chance, and towards daybreak from 9 to 12z
have chance PoPs. Followed closely the RGEM, NAM 3K, HREF guidance
for rainfall onset timing into early Sat AM.

&&

.SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/...
Beginning 12z Sat have the entire area increasing to Categorical
PoPs for much of the CWA. The most widespread period of steady rain
looks to be from 15z to 21z Sat with the arrival of best thermal
forcing via 35 kt 850 hPa jet. Have also shifted the axis of
rainfall a touch further west than previous package(s) which relied
more on the global guidance as higher res consensus is demonstrating
a bump up of QPF further west. There remains differences in the east
to west placement of moisture axis which of course impacts the
confidence on the higher QPF placement and coverage. Took more of a
compromise / blended approach with respect to rainfall amounts
through the day Sat. Have essentially settled in on 1 to 1.5 inches
of rain across the NE portions of the area before the activity
tapers and ends Sat night. Further west expect mainly a 0.5 to 1
inch rainfall. Stood fairly close to WPC Guidance. It should be
noted that the HREF is more aggressive with higher rainfall totals,
with it having over 2 inches across NE portions of the area. In any
event, rainfall has averaged well below normal this past two weeks,
thus it is a needed rainfall.

For Sat evening look for a cold front to move through which will
shift the winds to a drier westerly direction into Sat night. Look
for it to taper off after some showers occur along the cold frontal
boundary early on. Cannot rule out a rumble of thunder Sat.
night, but thunder probs remain relatively low at this time.
Any showers with the cold front should be relatively light as
the thermal forcing will have lifted well to the north and east
by this time. Otherwise gradual / partial clearing takes shape
on dry and cold air advection. A fair amount of clearing sets up
into early Sun AM. Lows will range in the 50s as the noticeably
drier push of air occurs late and dewpoints lower closer to
daybreak.

&&

.LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
A secondary and dissipating cold front or trough enters and attempts
to shift through during Sunday. Moisture is lacking by this time, so
dry weather expected. Temperatures aloft should rebound in the
afternoon, and with a westerly wind flow, high temperatures should
reach the 70s across the area, even at most coastal sections.

A surface ridge then slowly shifts through the Northeast and remains
in control of the weather through the middle of next week. Dry
weather expected through Thursday. High temperatures near normal on
Monday, then after a slight cool down on Tuesday, temperatures
slowly moderate for Wednesday and Thursday.

&&

.AVIATION /12Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
-- Changed Discussion --
High pressure east of Long Island continues to move east through this afternoon. Weak low pressure begins to approach along the coast late this afternoon into tonight. VFR through the day today for most terminals. Stratus has developed just to the west of KSWF. There is a chance that these MVFR ceilings could move into KSWF over the next hour, so continue with a TEMPO, though it continues to be a low chance. MVFR ceilings move in after 03Z Saturday and quickly drop to IFR, possibly just before 06Z, but confidence is low on exact timing at this time. High end LIFR conditions are also possible at times. A SE flow continues this morning, then winds will shift to the southeast this afternoon. Winds may shift to the S at times early this morning. Gusts 15 to 20 kt likely in the afternoon, ending toward sunset, with winds shifting more to the SE, then E toward daybreak Saturday. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... No unscheduled amendments are expected through the day today. Gusts in the afternoon may be more occasional, and may end 1 to 2 hours earlier than is forecast. Stratus may begin to move into the Long Island south coast and there is a low chance of MVFR at KJFK toward 00Z Saturday. MVFR and lower conditions may be off +/- an hour or 2 tonight. OUTLOOK FOR 12Z SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY... Saturday: IFR to LIFR with showers. Possibly improving to MVFR west late in the day. An isolated TSTM possible for eastern terminals, with a low chance for LLWS at 2 kft for these areas as well. Sunday: Chance MVFR/showers early, then VFR. Monday and Tuesday: VFR. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .MARINE... With high pressure moving further offshore today look for a southerly flow to prevail, and more of a SE flow tonight. Some gusts will likely approach 20 kts out on the western ocean and some of the near shore waters this afternoon and early this evening, but conditions fall short of small craft with respect to winds and seas. For Friday night a SE flow prevails with 3 ft ocean seas. During Saturday AM seas will climb to small craft levels as seas get to 5 to 7 ft by afternoon and stay elevated through a good portion of Sat night. The winds gusts to around 20 kt or thereabouts for the ocean and possibly the LI South shore bays into the first half of Sat night, followed by decreasing winds out of the west into early Sun morning. 4 to 6 ft waves slowly diminish Sunday with high pressure building in, falling below SCA Sunday night. With high pressure in control through the middle of the week, sub-SCA conditions are expected. A high pressure ridge then slowly shifts through New England Monday into Tuesday with E-NE winds 10-15 kt prevailing. An easterly swell may however contribute to 5 ft seas at times on the ocean both days. && .HYDROLOGY... Rain amounts from early Saturday morning through Saturday evening have increased in the last couple of runs. QPF overall is expected to be higher, especially across the eastern 2/3rds of the Tri- State area from previous thinking. However, with the dry antecedent conditions in the last couple of weeks, no hydrologic impacts are anticipated at this time. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 11 AM Saturday to 6 AM EDT Sunday for ANZ350-353. Small Craft Advisory from 11 AM Saturday to midnight EDT Saturday night for ANZ355. && $$ SYNOPSIS...JE/JP NEAR TERM...JE SHORT TERM...JE LONG TERM...JP AVIATION...JP MARINE...JE/JP HYDROLOGY...JE/JP