000
FXUS61 KOKX 241125
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
725 AM EDT Wed May 24 2023

.SYNOPSIS...
A cold front approaches from the north today, moving through
this evening. High pressure then builds over the region Friday
and remains Saturday. The high weakens and moves offshore Sunday
and Monday as a backdoor cold front approaches from the
northeast, and low pressure approaches from the south. High
pressure strengthens Tuesday.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
Chilly start to the day outside the urban metro, though
temperatures will be quick to rebound into the 60s by mid
morning. Forecast remains on track and previous discussion
follows.

A sharp trough in the northern branch of the jet swings
southeast from Canada, sending a surface cold front toward and
through the region into tonight.

Weak surface high pressure in place continues to shift offshore
today as the front drops south. Ahead of the approaching
boundary, persistent onshore flow will limit daytime heating
along the coast, where highs remain in the 60s. Elsewhere
however, a mild SW flow allows temperatures to climb into the
70s, with mid-to-upper 70s expected in parts of NE NJ and the
Lower Hudson Valley under plenty of sunshine.

An expansive area of smoke stemming from wildfires over western
Canada remains overhead. This may contribute to a hazier than
typical look to the sky, and perhaps add a bit of color to the
sunrise/set, with little additional impact.

By late afternoon or early evening, a fairly uniform line of
showers along the advancing cold front is expected to enter
northern portions of the Lower Hudson Valley. BUFKIT soundings
indicate MUCAPE values as high as 500 J/kg up in this area,
which may allow for a few embedded thunderstorms in the line and
produce a quick downpour. The line should largely dissipate
though as it progresses south and east and runs into a much more
stable air mass along the coast. It`s possible some coastal
areas remain entirely dry. Hi-res short-term guidance, including
the 00z HREF, have nudged rainfall amounts up a tad, generally
a few tenths across Orange/Putnam, lightening to up to a tenth
elsewhere. It`s possible some parts of Long Island and SW CT
remain entirely dry.

Conditions dry out tonight as increasing northerly winds behind
the front advect in a cooler, drier air mass. Largely followed
blended guidance in this period, though blended in NBM 90th
percentile to bump up winds behind the fropa.

&&

.SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/...
Into Thursday, the trough cuts off from the jet, and the upper
low lingers over northern New England through Thursday night.
Surface high pressure gradually builds into the Great Lakes
behind the fropa, allowing for a mix of sun and clouds through
the day.

Blustery conditions persist though through the morning hours with
the tightened pressure gradient, with occasional gusts topping
20-25 mph. This should lighten as the gradient relaxes by the
afternoon hours.

Temperatures will be relatively cool for late May, with highs in
the 60s regionwide, or around 5 degrees below historical averages.
Maintained a bit cooler forecast than the national blend given
what appears to be another ideal night for efficient radiative
cooling outside the urban metro. Otherwise, blended guidance was
followed for this update.

&&

.LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
High pressure will dominate through most of the extended period,
with a backdoor cold front approaching Sunday into Monday, and then
moving back north as a warm front Tuesday. Meanwhile, a weak low
along the southeast coast will slowly move northward, but likely
remains to the south as upper level ridging builds to the north
Saturday and remains into the beginning of next week. The
deterministic models keep the area dry, while ensembles bring slight
chances of precipitation, mainly just along the coast, from Saturday
night into the beginning of next week. With the uncertainties with
the low and backdoor cold front followed the NBM guidance for the
extended period.

&&

.AVIATION /11Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
-- Changed Discussion --
High pressure will remain in control through early this morning. A cold front approaches from the north this afternoon and passes through by this evening. High pressure builds in from the northwest late tonight. Winds light and variable early, become S mid to late morning. Southerly winds increase into the afternoon, possibly briefly becoming SW just before the cold front passage. The SW flow is more likely at KSWF. Winds shift to N behind the cold front with winds increasing into the evening and overnight, with gusts 20-25kt. VFR with a chance of showers this evening. There is a low chance of brief MVFR ceilings with the showers, but confidence too low to put in the TAFs. The exception is KSWF where showers are likely, as well as MVFR ceilings. There is a chance of a thunderstorm with briefly gusty winds. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... There is a low chance of brief MVFR ceilings with showers. Timing of wind shift with cold frontal passage may be off +/- 1-2 hours. There may be occasional northerly gusts with the showers. OUTLOOK FOR 12Z THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY... Thursday-Friday: VFR. N wind G20-25kt Thursday morning. Saturday-Sunday: VFR. A slight chance of showers on Sunday near the coast. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .MARINE... A cold front moves through the waters this evening, with increasing northerly flow behind the passage. Gusts 25 to 30 kt develop on the ocean waters late tonight, continuing into Thursday morning before subsiding. Ocean seas will also increase to around 5 ft by Thursday morning, and potentially linger into the afternoon. Extended the SCA in place until 18z Thu to account for this, though a further extension is possible. On remaining waters, including the NY Harbor, Long Island Sound, and the back bays, occasional gusts to 25 kt will be possible late tonight into early Thursday morning. A short-fuse SCA is not out of the question. Otherwise, winds and seas remain below SCA levels across all the forecast waters late Thursday through Sunday night as high pressure dominates. && .HYDROLOGY... No hydrologic impacts expected through early next week. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 11 PM this evening to 2 PM EDT Thursday for ANZ350-353-355. && $$ SYNOPSIS...DR/MET NEAR TERM...DR SHORT TERM...DR LONG TERM...MET AVIATION...MET MARINE...DR/MET HYDROLOGY...DR/MET