080 FXUS61 KOKX 170228 AFDOKX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service New York NY 1028 PM EDT Wed Apr 16 2025 .SYNOPSIS... A series of weak surface troughs move through the area into Thursday. High pressure then builds overhead Thursday night and then offshore on Friday. A warm front lifts north of the area late Friday into Friday night. A cold front moves through Saturday night into Sunday morning followed by brief high pressure. Then, a frontal system impacts the region late Monday through late Tuesday. High pressure then follows into Wednesday. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY/... Upper trough moving through the region as seen on water vapor loops, and was moving a strato cu layer southward. Sky conditions have remained mostly cloudy. Winds and gusts are also remaining stronger with the trough moving through. Otherwise, an upper trough will continue pushing offshore tonight. Closed low over southeast Canada will also continue to spin as it slowly lifts towards the Maritimes into Thursday. This pattern will keep the region between building high pressure to the west and the aforementioned low pressure to our northeast. The low begins to weaken as it moves over the Maritimes late Thursday allowing the high pressure to begin settling over the area. Breezy WNW winds will continue tonight, weakening during the overnight with a few locations losing the gusts. The boundary does not decouple with the gradient in place so sustained winds will likely remain up and be around 10 mph for most spots. Moisture trapped beneath a subsidence inversion around 4-5 kft diminishes overnight. The broken stratocu associated with the subsidence inversion should scatter out leading to mostly clear skies overnight. Lows will fall into the middle 30s inland and upper 30s and low 40s closer to the coast. Frost is not expected where the growing season has begun due to the winds remaining up and temperatures struggling to fall into the mid 30s. WNW-NW flow will continue on Thursday, but the air mass begins to moderate. Mixing does not appear as deep, but models have struggled all year with the depth of the mixed layer and resulting winds. Thursday looks like another day where winds will likely be a bit stronger than modeled, which will also lead to slightly warmer temperatures. Have gone closer to the NBM 90th percentile for temperatures, which yields highs in the lower 60s for most spots. Sustained winds 10-15 mph with gusts 20-25 mph look likely, especially in the late morning and afternoon. Winds will start subsiding late in the day as the pressure gradient relaxes due to the high pressure nearing the region. Mostly clear skies are expected for Thursday. && .SHORT TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/... Ridging will build both aloft and at the surface Thursday night. Winds should be weak under clear skies and a dry air mass. This will set the stage for ideal radiational cooling conditions outside the NYC metro. Lows look to fall into the lower 30s inland and middle to upper 30s most elsewhere. Temperatures will likely remain in the 40s in the NYC metro. The LI Pine Barrens should also bottom out around 30 degrees, where the growing season has already begun. Some patchy frost has been included here for now, but confidence in widespread freezing temperatures is low for any headline at this time. Ridging will continue to build over the eastern US on Friday. The surface high will shift offshore through the day setting up a southerly return flow. A weak shortwave is expected to traverse around the periphery of the ridge which should send a warm front towards the area late in the day. The lower levels should remain dry, but mid and upper level moisture increase in the afternoon. Model consensus PoPs have largely remained around 20 percent across the interior late in the day, but overall mainly dry conditions will continue. The southerly flow will hold temperatures close to seasonable levels across Long Island and Southern CT. Temperatures across portions of NYC, NE NJ, and Lower Hudson Valley should rise into the middle and upper 60s. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... Key Messages: * Warm temperatures Friday night into Saturday with highs in the 70s to low-80s. * Slight chance of showers ahead of cold front Saturday evening into early Saturday night. * Average temperatures and dry weather into Sunday under brief high pressure. * Additional showers possible late Monday into late Tuesday with a frontal system, but uncertainty remains. An upper-level ridge will be in place Friday night into Saturday with a warm front moving north of the area. This keeps us warm- sectored Friday night into Saturday with strong warm air advection. Lows will much warmer Friday night, as a result, in the mid-50s to upper-40s. Well above average highs are expected on Saturday in the low-80s to 70s. Mainly dry weather on Friday night, but that may change by late Saturday into Saturday night. Low pressure that brought a warm front through the area will eventually track into eastern Quebec bringing a cold front through the area Saturday night into Sunday morning. This will bring a quick chance of showers and bring down temperatures on Sunday. Previously, there was quite a bit of disagreement on the cold front timing, with some guidance bringing it in Saturday night and other guidance bringing the cold front in on Sunday night or even Monday night. Now the 12Z GFS/GDPS/ECMWF are in agreement on the front pushing through by or during Sunday morning. It appears a longwave trough moving in through southern Canada will help push this front all the way through and to the south of our area. It looks like the 13Z deterministic NBM was still in favor of the later timing of the front, so blended in some NBM 50th for highs to steer away from this bias. This brings Sunday`s highs down into the 60s. Its important to note that there is still a chance, although smaller now, that the front could come in later than Sunday morning. Should this occur, such as what the 12Z ICON thinks, would lead to warmer temperatures on Sunday that currently forecast. PWATs climb to 1.4-1.5" ahead of the cold front Saturday evening and early night with increased dewpoints. Isolated to scattered light showers are possible during this timeframe before moisture drops fast in response to the approaching and passing cold front. Monday through Wednesday is filled with much uncertainty. All available 12Z guidance diverges and brings different solutions. In general, late Monday through late Tuesday a frontal system is expected to impact us and bring a chance for showers. Timing, placement, and magnitude still vary. Some guidance bring a low over the area, others have a low pass northwest with another low developing at the coast along a front. Went with a general NBM blend for this time frame. High pressure will likely settle in following the frontal system, which would be timed for Wednesday. && .AVIATION /03Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... High pressure builds in from the west through Thursday, and settles just to the south Thursday night. VFR through the TAF period. Gusty NW winds have remained higher, and longer than expected, and should diminish during the overnight as a trough moves through the terminals. Gusts are likely to end at the outlying terminals around or just after 05Z, with gusts possibly ending or becoming more occasional at the NYC metro terminals. WNW winds increase to around 15kt with gusts 20-25kt by early Thursday morning, and back more to the west during the afternoon. Toward the end of the forecast winds and gusts diminish, with the outlying terminals possibly losing the gusts around 23Z. And in the metro area gusts end by 02Z Friday. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... No unscheduled amendments expected. .OUTLOOK FOR 00Z FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY... Thursday night: VFR. Friday: VFR. A slight chance of showers late afternoon across the NW and N interior. S winds G15-20kt. Saturday: Mainly VFR. Chance of showers, mainly NW interior. SW winds G20-25kt. Sunday: VFR. NW wind gusts 15-20kt possible. Monday: VFR early, then sub VFR late day and at night with a chance of showers. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90 && .MARINE... Winds gusts nearshore remain at or above 25 kt at several locations, so will continue the non ocean advisory until its expiration. Gusty WNW winds will continue on the waters tonight, but should begin subsiding below 25 kt on the non ocean waters. SCA gusts may continue on the ocean until late tonight. Ocean seas will also gradually subside below 5 ft by day break Thursday. No changes were made to the ongoing SCA headlines. Winds may still gust 15-20 kt on Thursday, but will remain below SCA levels. Weak flow Thursday night into early Friday will continue to lead to conditions below SCA levels. Winds and seas begin building late Friday with potential of SCA conditions Friday evening. These conditions will continue through Saturday evening. Thereafter, winds will be below SCA levels on all waters. Waves on ocean waters climb to 6-8 feet Friday night and remain there through Saturday. Saturday night, ocean waters may have 5 ft waves linger through Sunday afternoon before dropping below 5 ft. Thereafter, waves will be below SCA levels on all waters. && .FIRE WEATHER... An SPS will be issued this evening for Thursday for the Lower Hudson Valley, New York City Metro, and Long Island due to an elevated threat of wildfire spread. This is collaborated with neighboring WFOs and NY State land manager due to drying fuels, gusty WNW-NW winds 20-25 mph, and RH values falling to 25-30 percent. && .HYDROLOGY... There are no hydrologic concerns through the middle of next week. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 2 AM EDT Thursday for ANZ331-332- 335-338-340-345. Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM EDT Thursday for ANZ350-353- 355. && $$ SYNOPSIS...BR/DS NEAR TERM...BR/DS/MET SHORT TERM...DS LONG TERM...BR AVIATION...MET MARINE...BR/DS/MET FIRE WEATHER... HYDROLOGY...BR/DS