000
FXUS61 KOKX 281433
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
1033 AM EDT Mon Aug 28 2023

.SYNOPSIS...
High pressure north of the area slides offshore tonight.
A stationary front slowly lifts north as a warm front tonight into
Tuesday as Tropical Cyclone Franklin remains well offshore. A cold
front moves through on Wednesday. High pressure builds in Thursday
and remains in control into the start of the weekend.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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No significant changes to forecast thinking this morning. Lower stratus is beginning to break up and lift, and should continue to do so over the next couple of hours. Higher canopy will persist with a stationary boundary to our south and a moist SW flow aloft. Forecast remains on track and previous discussion follows. High pressure is currently ridging down from the north. Shower chances will therefore remain minimal today as a result, although there will be a good deal of cloud cover along with an onshore flow. Slight chance PoPs only cover a portion of far western Orange County for today. The clouds will keep temperatures a bit below the seasonal averages for today. Due to the cloud cover temperatures are expected to average about 5 degrees or so below average. It will still remain somewhat humid with dew point reading still mainly in the middle 60s for today. Clouds will remain for tonight as shortwave energy and a stationary boundary off to the south begin to lift closer. Much of tonight should remain predominantly dry. After 6z precip chances begin to gradually increase from south to north. Consensus forecasts has the area remaining dry, especially further north until daybreak. Towards daybreak the leading edge of convective activity may approach far southern portions of the area. It will remain seasonable as far as temperatures go tonight, but it will be continued humid, especially closer to the coast with an onshore flow bringing in higher dew points off the ocean.
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&& .SHORT TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... The latest CAMs are signaling that convective rain is possible with the southern edge of the CWA flirting with an area of moderate to potentially heavy rain through the morning and perhaps up to the early afternoon on Tuesday. WPC has a sharp cut off in the QPF amounts which lead to a very deterministic QPF forecast. The question remains how much of a tropical connection will exist between Tropical Cyclone Franklin and the stationary / warm front off to the south, and where does any moderate to heavy rainfall actually take place. The guidance consensus places the bulk of the heavy rain along the far eastern and southeastern edge of the CWA. As a result WPC has placed the eastern half to eastern third of the area in a marginal risk of excessive rainfall for Tuesday. This seems reasonable given the uncertainty of where heavy rain may take place, along with the ingredients being in place, most noticeably winds below 20 kt through a deep layer through 15 kft, and high PWs and high mean RH values. Rainfall rates cloud approach an inch per hour in any robust embedded convection. Have included slight chance / isolated t-storm for Tue AM. In any event, much of the guidance is suggestive of lower rain chances into the afternoon and early evening as any moisture ahead of the warm front moves northeast with a break in any rainfall before the cold front draws closer into Tue night. Therefore later in the day Tue looks to be predominantly dry, especially further west and northwest. During Tue night some shortwave energy is progged to push through early, followed by a cold front approaching which should start to push through into Wed morning. Around the same time frame Tropical Cyclone Franklin is expected to lift north in the Western Atlantic and pass well east of the area during the day Wed as the system is progged to stay offshore with no direct impacts. However, some indirect impacts will be dangerous rip currents due to an increasing swell and high surf, especially out east with regard to the surf. With an onshore flow it appears that instability will be fairly minimal, especially at the sfc Tue night. With some elevated instability pushing through from the west and southwest have included slight chance thunder. The cold front associated with the upper trough begins to pivot through into early Wed AM. Did maintain some continuity with the cold frontal passage with shower chances and slight chance thunder through much of the day Wed, especially for the eastern third of the area. Chances for precip does become quite minimal into the afternoon on Wed, as drier air mass attempts to nudge in towards evening. With more sunshine overall on Wednesday temperatures will be closer to normal in the upper 70s and lower 80s. Monitor https:/www.weather.gov/okx/tropical or http/www.nhc.noaa.gov for the latest NHC forecasts on this tropical system and others. && .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/... A quiet period of weather is expected in the long term. The cold front should be offshore by the start of Wednesday night and the upper level shortwave trough axis should also be just to our east. Thereafter, heights rise aloft and broad high pressure builds in at the surface over the northeast. The high remains in control through the weekend and will keep the area dry and mostly sunny. Stuck close to the NBM through much of the forecast. Made the most tweaks to Thursday night lows. Given good agreement from the global models in the placement of the high, light northerly winds across the interior and clear skies should allow temperatures to drop to the upper 40s and low 50s. Blended in MEX guidance to capture this. Winds may stay up too much across Long Island and did not go as low there. High temperatures will be about 5-10 degrees below normal on Thursday, but a gradual warming trend through Sunday is expected. Sunday will feature highs back in the low to mid 80s. Dewpoints will also be lowest on Thursday, low 50s, as dry air filters into the area. With the center of the high sliding east late on Friday the winds become southerly and dewpoints slowly creep back up. Tropical cyclone Idalia is forecast to pass to our south and off the Carolinas Thursday into Friday. The northern edge of the cloud canopy from this system may lead to more clouds than sun on Friday but all indications for now is it stays dry this far north. Monitor https:/www.weather.gov/okx/tropical or http/www.nhc.noaa.gov for the latest NHC forecasts on this tropical system and others. && .AVIATION /15Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/...
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High pressure to our north moves off the New England coast early today. A weak frontal boundary and wave of low pressure approach from the south early Tuesday. MVFR cigs will hang around through the morning. Conditions improve to VFR late morning or early afternoon. Winds will be light E to SE to light and variable this morning, and generally light SE through today under 10 KT. MVFR to IFR cigs return this evening, spreading from southeast to northwest through tonight. A batch of rain will approach the area late tonight. The bulk of the rain looks to just pass to our south and east. Have only prevailed -SHRA at KJFK for now out of the 30 hour TAF sites. PROB30 -SHRA at the other NYC terminals. KGON could go LIFR late in the forecast period in fog and low stratus and have TEMPOd this. THE AFTERNOON KLGA AND KEWR HAZE POTENTIAL FORECAST IS YELLOW...WHICH IMPLIES SLANT RANGE VISIBILITY 4-6SM OUTSIDE OF CLOUD. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... Amendments may be needed with improvement to VFR this morning and then again this evening as conditions lower. OUTLOOK FOR 12Z TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY... Tuesday: MVFR or lower in SHRA, mainly KJFK, KISP and KGON. Wednesday: MVFR possible in the morning in SHRA, otherwise mainly VFR. Thursday and Friday: VFR. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
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&& .MARINE... Sub small craft conditions take place with mainly 3 ft seas out on the ocean for today and tonight. An increasing SE / S swell then sets up with the onset of small craft conditions out on the ocean by Tue evening. The swell will continue to increase through Tuesday night, and even more so through the day Wed as ocean seas climb to 5 to 6 ft for much of the ocean waters. Further east out on the ocean 7ft seas are more of a likelihood by late in the day Wed and into Thu AM. Also by late Wed night and early Thu small craft gusts to 25 kt out on the ocean will be more likely. Also during this time period, rather energetic S to SE swells will peak at 13 to 14 seconds. Seas are then expected to come down gradually late Thu and Thu night, with sub small craft conditions possible by late Thu night and Fri morning. A 9 to 10 second S to SE swell is expected to linger through a good portion of Friday. && .HYDROLOGY... There are some indications from some of the higher resolution convective allowing guidance that there may be a period of heavy rain for Tuesday morning and early Tuesday afternoon. WPC has put the eastern half of the area in a marginal risk of excessive rainfall. At this point in time hydrologic impacts are not anticipated, but nuisance minor urban and poor drainage flooding can take place in some locations. && .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... There is a moderate risk for rip current development for all the beaches today due to a 2-3 ft ESE swell and E winds 10-15kt, then becoming a high risk on Tuesday as more energetic long period swells arrive from Tropical Cyclone Franklin. Swells from Tropical Cyclone Franklin begin to build late today into Tuesday. This will continue and peak into midweek with 13 to 14 second long period swells from late Tue through Wed night. In addition, a full moon Wed night will have astro tides increasing through the mid to late week period. Thus, chances remain high for high surf and dangerous rip currents through early Thursday. Combined with the high surf, the potential exists for areas of ocean beach erosion/flooding and for scattered areas of dune erosion during the times of high tide Tue/Wed. With respect to coastal flooding, coastal flood statements have been issued for this evening`s high tides for the western LI south shore bays of Nassau and Queens, and for coastal Fairfield, CT. More locations like Brooklyn and Staten Island may approach minor benchmarks Tue night, with some gauges in the western LI south shore bays potentially exceeding minor benchmarks for Tue night. This potential will likely linger into the Wed and Thu night high tide cycles as well. In subsequent forecast releases additional coastal flood statements, along with coastal flood advisories may be needed, especially for the western LI south shore bays. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...JE/JT NEAR TERM...JE/DR SHORT TERM...JE LONG TERM...JT AVIATION...BC MARINE...JE/JT HYDROLOGY...JE/JT TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...