410
FXUS61 KOKX 020128
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
928 PM EDT Tue Apr 1 2025

.SYNOPSIS...
High pressure builds over the area tonight into Wednesday. A warm
front then approaches from the southwest on Thursday. High
pressure briefly builds in from the north on Friday. A couple of
frontal boundaries near or over the region will bring unsettled
conditions this weekend. High pressure then slowly builds in
for Monday and Tuesday.

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.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM WEDNESDAY MORNING/...
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Temperatures were adjusted to account for slightly warmer observations. Otherwise, the forecast remains on track. Skies remain mostly clear for much of the overnight under the westerly flow aloft, though some high clouds look to begin to stream in toward daybreak. Temperatures tonight will be a bit tricky given this increase in cloud cover from the west along with weakening winds. With good radiational cooling/decoupling likely have maintained the cooler side of the guidance (MAVs) with mid 20s across the interior and across eastern Long Island, with mid to upper 30s elsewhere. Of course, should winds remain elevated lows will be a bit warmer. Note: The growing season begins today for parts of the area including Nassau County, NYC and parts of northeast NJ. Temperatures look to remain above freezing tonight for the zones where the growing season has begun; thus no headlines were needed.
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&& .SHORT TERM /6 AM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH THURSDAY/... Zonal flow aloft on Wednesday amplifies to more of a ridging pattern on Thursday as an upper low ejects out of the northern plains. Surface high pressure remains in control on Wednesday, keeping the local area dry. Winds do become southerly late Wednesday in early Thursday, as the ridge axis shifts east of the area. Highs remain in the upper 40s under predominately easterly surface flow. Low pressure over the Great Lakes heads east Wednesday night into Thursday, bringing a warm front to the area. Increasing moisture with southerly flow ahead of this front will provide increased chances of rain early Thursday along with fog potential. The front looks to lift north or remain draped over the northern parts of the CWA after 12Z Thursday. This will result shower chances for much of the day, depending where the front ultimately ends up. Highs will be warmer than on Wednesday as much of the region is warm sectored, in the mid and upper 60s across the coasts and interior and low 70s for NYC. Have kept thunder chances out for now with limited instability, but can`t rule out a rumble or two Thursday afternoon. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/... Model consensus brings high confidence in an upper ridge over the forecast area through at least Sunday afternoon. A few mid- level shortwaves and surface boundaries will bring varying probabilities of rainfall with perhaps the exception being Friday afternoon and night when surface high pressure dominates with dry weather. Best chances of rain (greater than 60%) would be Saturday and Saturday night with the approach of a warm front, although left Thursday night`s chances at 50-60% with uncertainty in the position of a frontal boundary nearby. Even though PWATs may be 2-3 standard deviations above normal, upward forcing looks to be relatively weak in the absence of notable low level jets and upper jet streaks in addition to shearing of mid level shortwaves as they run into the ridge in place. Hydrologic impacts would therefore appear to be limited at this time. As for temperatures through Sunday, NBM was used, however uncertainty increases significantly on Sunday as there`s a 10-20 degree spread between the 25th and 75th percentiles for high temperatures - a result of uncertainty surrounding the northward progression of a warm front and how much cloud cover would remain ahead of a trailing cold front. Given the synoptic pattern, thinking is that we would have a better chance of being on the warmer side of the envelope. As for Monday and Tuesday, an approaching longwave trough would help push a cold front through the area Sunday night. Some uncertainty regarding post-frontal shower chances for Monday as a cyclonic flow remains aloft and a strong upper jet streak enhances synoptic lift. In any case, moisture would be more limited, so the more likely scenario is for dry weather for Monday, which would last into Tuesday. && .AVIATION /02Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... High pressure gradually builds in through Wednesday morning, then moves off the New England coast Wednesday afternoon as a warm front approaches to the southwest and passes Wednesday evening-night. VFR for most of the TAF period. Some MVFR ceilings possible Wednesday evening/night, though uncertainty remains. It could end up being low-end VFR. Some rain is possible 20Z-4Z Wed- Thu, but too low to include in the TAFs except for at KSWF where there is a PROB30 mention for -RA 22Z-02Z. Winds gradually veer to N and diminish into tonight, then become NE toward Wednesday morning. There is some uncertainty as to how quickly winds become E/SE late Wednesday morning into the afternoon. Overall, winds will be 10kt and below through tonight into tomorrow, then become 10-15 kt tomorrow afternoon and evening. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... No unscheduled amendments expected. .OUTLOOK FOR 00Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY... Wednesday afternoon - Wednesday night: VFR, possibly becoming MVFR or lower late afternoon, with MVFR to IFR more likely at night with a chance of light rain. Thursday: MVFR to IFR, possibly LIFR with a chance of showers. in the morning and then again at night. S/SW wind 15-20kt, gusting 20-30kt during the afternoon, and highest along the coast. Friday: MVFR early with a chance of showers, then VFR. Saturday: MVFR to IFR, by afternoon with showers likely. E wind gusts 15-20kt. Sunday: IFR in the morning, becoming MVFR. A chance of showers. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90 && .MARINE... SCAs remain in effect on the ocean waters tonight through Wednesday morning. Almost canceled the advisory west of Fire Island Inlet based on observations at buoy 44025, which shows seas hovering just below 5 ft for the past few hours. With still a potential that a long period SSE swell pushes seas a little bit higher over the next few hours, decided to keep the advisory going for the time being. With that said, may be able to drop the advisory with the next update. The remaining ocean waters may be able to have the advisory dropped by the end of tonight as well. NWPS guidance has waves lowering for a period during Wednesday, before becoming more elevated Wednesday night and returning to advisory levels by late at night all the way into Friday morning. In addition, non-ocean waters could see gusts to 25kt Thursday afternoon. After some lingering seas of 5 ft possible Friday morning, the next chance of advisory conditions would be during the day on Saturday over the ocean waters, with a better chance following for Sunday as low pressure approaches. && .HYDROLOGY... No hydrologic impacts are expected through early next week. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until noon EDT Wednesday for ANZ350-353.
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&& $$ SYNOPSIS...JC/DBR NEAR TERM...JC/DBR/BR SHORT TERM...DBR LONG TERM...JC AVIATION...BR MARINE...JC/DBR HYDROLOGY...JC/DBR