930
FXUS61 KOKX 070953
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
553 AM EDT Fri Jun 7 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A series of weak low pressure systems head through New England today
through Sunday as broad high pressure slowly builds from the
southwest. High pressure then follows for the middle of next
week.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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The forecast is on track this morning with only minor updates. Have backed off on the patchy fog development with just some river fog evident in latest satellite imagery. Otherwise, patchy fog may still be possible for the next few hours across eastern Long Island and southern CT where dewpoints were highest and winds calm. The cold front was still located west of NYC this morning and slowly pushing east. NW flow behind the front is advecting in drier air with dewpoints in the mid and upper 50s. Skies should clear from west to east today as the front heads east and an upper low slowly moves from the Great Lakes region into upstate NY this afternoon. It should be a dry day for most, though a weak trough will approach the region this afternoon. Given the proximity to the deep cyclonic flow and cold pool associated with this upper low, expect diurnally driven isolated showers in the afternoon. This is most likely to occur across the interior, north and west of NYC. CAMs vary somewhat on degree of coverage, and model soundings do indicate a few hundred J/kg of CAPE so an isolated thunderstorm is not out of the question. However, think the better chances are farther north of the area, and so have kept thunder out of the forecast. Not expecting much in the way of precipitation with any shower or storm, up to perhaps a few tenths of an inch. Any shower activity that does occur will wane with the loss of daytime heating. Highs today will be similar to yesterday, in the mid 80s but will feel a bit less humid, with dewpoints in the 50s. A well-mixed afternoon boundary layer, as advertised by BUFKIT soundings, may also allow for some westerly wind gusts near 20mph.
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&& .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... The upper low remains over New England for the period slowly moving toward the Canadian maritimes. The mid level flow begins to flatten on Saturday, which should keep any precipitation away from the area. Dry conditions in store for the day, with temperatures a few degrees cooler under weak westerly surface flow. By Sunday, the more zonal mid/upper flow and a shortwave aloft will allow for a weak low pressure system and cold front to pass through the area. This will bring another chance for precipitation early on Sunday. Model soundings do not indicate much in the way of shear or instability so have left thunder mention out of the forecast. Skies may clear by later in the day, with temperatures similar to, or a few degrees warmer than, Saturday, depending on cloud cover. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... No significant changes to the forecast for next week. Stuck fairly close to the NBM. *Key Points* *A few weak fronts or surface troughs may pass early next week, but conditions should remain mainly dry. *Temperatures likely end up a few degrees above normal this weekend, trend near normal early next week, then edge above normal middle of the week. The upper trough axis associated with an upper low then lingers over the region Monday. The guidance indicates the trough axis could shift offshore Tuesday, but it may also remain nearby. While moisture and lift are limited, an isolated shower is possible Monday afternoon and evening and then again on Tuesday. The trough moves east and gets replaced by more of a zonal flow in the mid levels, however the 00z GFS is showing another shortwave approaching. Will stick fairly close to the NBM with just slight chance POPs Tuesday through Thursday. However, if the GFS were right with this faster, more progressive shortwave, POPs will have to be increased on Wednesday. && .AVIATION /10Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
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A cold front slowly pushes across the terminals this morning. Weak high pressure then remains over the terminals through tonight. Mainly VFR. There may be a brief MVFR cig this morning. Light WNW-NW winds back WSW-SW late this morning/early afternoon, then shift back WNW behind a weak cold front/trough late day/early evening. Gusts up to around 20kt during the afternoon and evening. Winds fall to 10kt or less overnight with some outlying terminals becoming light and variable. NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... A few gusts may develops earlier than forecast. OUTLOOK FOR 06Z SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY... Friday night: VFR. Saturday-Sunday. VFR, MVFR possible with a chance of showers late Saturday night through Sunday. Monday-Tuesday: VFR. A slight chance of showers Tuesday. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
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&& .MARINE... SCA continues for the ocean waters east of Fire Island Inlet through 6am. Marginal seas around 5 ft prevail during this time. Conditions are expected to remain below SCA levels Friday into early next week. && .MARINE...
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SCAs have been cancelled on all remaining waters as seas have fallen below 5ft. Conditions are expected to remain below SCA levels through early next week. Low pressure may impact the waters mid to late next week. If this occurs, seas may increase to SCA levels.
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&& .HYDROLOGY... No hydrologic impacts are expected into early next week. && .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...
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Have issued coastal flood statements this morning for this evening`s high tide cycle. These are for southern Nassau and the western LI Sound, as high astronomical tides and a southerly wind component this afternoon may lead to some isolated minor benchmarks being reached. Steven`s median guidance was near or just over observed values for last night`s high tide for points in these areas, and so weighted this more heavily in the forecast. Should newer guidance increase values, advisories may be needed especially across the western LI Sound. Some question for Saturday`s afternoon high tide cycle as well, as some locations may again just touch minor benchmarks. A moderate rip current risk today through the weekend at all Atlantic facing beaches due to 3-4 ft seas and lingering southerly swell. This is supported by the latest RCMOS.
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&& .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...None.
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&& $$ SYNOPSIS...BC/DBR NEAR TERM...DBR SHORT TERM...DBR LONG TERM...BC AVIATION...BC MARINE...BC/DBR HYDROLOGY...BC/DBR TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...