682 FXAK68 PAFC 091336 AFDAFC Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Anchorage AK 536 AM AKDT Mon Jun 9 2025 .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA (Days 1 through 3: Today through Wednesday)... A cold-core upper level low is moving into Southcentral Alaska today. The first wave from this low is moving through the Matanuska Valley and Susitna Valley early this morning bringing areas of fairly heavy rain showers. There will be periods of rain showers throughout SOuthcentral today as this low moves through the area. The big uncertainty is whether there will be enough instability for a thunderstorm or two to develop. The cold air aloft in conjunction with this low is certainly a big factor in favor of this possibility, however, it looks like surface temperatures will be cool enough throughout the day to really make it difficult to initiate convection. The big caveat is whether there will be any sustained breaks in the could over the Kenai Peninsula and Susitna Valley. this could happen as the low passes over the area and westerly flow in the lee of the Alaska and Aleutian Ranges allows enough cloud breaks, However, the atmosphere is pretty saturated so it does not look likely to have long enough breaks in the cloud cover today to really get the low levels warm enough so backed off on the chance of thunderstorms today, though it will be something to keep track of as the day progresses. By Tuesday, the low will move into the Gulf and then slowly continue its southeasterly journey out of the area as an upper level ridge moves into the region beginning Wednesday. This will bring some partial clearing for Tuesday, but still enough moisture for afternoon and evening showers along the mountains and in the Copper River Basin. Wednesday will see areas around Cook Inlet become mostly sunny and warm up to near or above normal temperatures. The Copper Basin may still see lingering showers or thunderstorms Tuesday or Wednesday. && .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA/BERING SEA/ALEUTIANS (Days 1 through 3)... Isolated thunderstorm activity is possible along the foothills of the Western Alaska Range and eastern portions of the lower Kuskokwim Valley this afternoon. Otherwise, mostly partly cloudy to mostly sunny and dry conditions are expected to continue across much of Southwest Alaska. Ridging over the eastern Bering Sea shifts eastward through today promoting areas of low stratus and/or patchy fog. Low clouds will spill over onto the Southwest Coast as the ridge pushes onshore today. A front moved into the western Bering/Aleutians yesterday evening, bringing widespread rain and small craft winds, as well as a small corridor of gales over the Rat Islands and Andreanof Islands. The front tracks eastward over the next couple of days, bringing precipitation to the Eastern Aleutians and southern Alaska Peninsula by Tuesday. As for mainland Southwest, the Kuskokwim Delta Coast and Nunivak Island have the best chance to see light rain on Tuesday as most of the moisture remains to the north of west of Bristol Bay and the rest of mainland southwest. && .LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7: Thursday through Sunday)... Ridging high pressure from the North Pacific will extend across much of the Gulf of Alaska and South Central portion of the State through late Saturday. The ridge breaks down over the Gulf as an an area of low pressure retrogrades westward from the Panhandle, back over the Eastern Gulf late in the weekend. This will setup a weak southerly wind pattern across western inland portion of the State and allow for warmer inland temperatures and an increased chance of convective activity across the inland regions. The GFS and Canadian models are in fair agreement with this pattern with the European being less dramatic with the westward progression of the Gulf low. A well developed upper-level low and its surface fronts, over the Western Bering Sea and Western Aleutians, will slowly weaken and recede northward towards the Chukchi Sea by early Saturday. A series of upper-level shortwave troughs will move into and across the Southern Bering and Central Aleutians through the end of the forecast period. The Canadian and European models handle this well with the GFS being the slight outlier. -DD && .AVIATION... PANC...VFR conditions and vicinity showers will be common through midday across Anchorage as an upper trough moves from interior Alaska down into the western Gulf. Expect shower chances to increase in the afternoon with MVFR conditions likely over the latter half of the day. Winds will remain light through the TAF period. && $$