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Harbor, Oregon Weather Forecast Discussion

013
FXUS66 KMFR 051011
AFDMFR

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Medford OR 311 AM PDT Sun Oct 5 2025

.DISCUSSION...Shower activity in the area has come to an end early this morning with no returns appearing on radar. We`ll transition to a period of warmer and drier conditions beginning today as upper level ridging builds in overhead from the west, and offshore flow (east to northeasterly winds) develops, peaking tonight but continuing into early Tuesday morning.

Low level cloud cover has lingered across the region this morning, primarily in West Side Valleys, but also across northern Klamath County and much of Lake County. This should keep temperatures up some across the the Christmas Valley this morning, but we still expect freezing temperatures this morning and again Tuesday, with even the warmer areas still seeing lows near freezing. On the coldest morning of this episode, a hard freeze is expected for much of the East Side on Monday morning. Given the recent cold mornings and that we`ve reached the time of year when normal low temperatures average freezing, we`ll forego any additional freeze warnings for the season. After a cool, cloudy start, skies will quickly clear today under a drying air mass and increasing east to northeast winds. We`ll see a warming trend west of the Cascades by about 10 degrees compared to yesterday, with similar to a few degrees warmer for the East Side. The Chetco Effect will bring warm temperatures to the coast with Brookings already 10 degrees warmer than surrounding areas early this morning, and forecast to reach into the mid/upper 70s this afternoon. Meanwhile, West Side Valleys will see highs also reach into the mid/upper 70s while the East Side hovers in the 55-65 degree range (still about 10 degrees below normal).

With offshore flow strengthening tonight into Monday morning, skies will remain clear for the whole forecast area. Though there could be pockets of fog/low clouds in the deeper valleys west of the Cascades, even the marine layer is likely to be non-existent and clear skies are expected at the coast. Temperatures will trend warmer again on Monday by about 5 degrees compared to Sunday`s values for all areas, so even the East Side will see temperatures closer to seasonal normals (upper 60s/low 70s). The Chetco Effect will bring another day of elevated temperatures to the Brookings area and even areas north of Cape Blanco are forecast to reach into the upper 70s on Monday. Rinse and repeat for Monday night into Tuesday, though east to northeast flow will begin to weaken Monday night. Cooler temperatures are expected at the coast on Tuesday, with similar values expected over West Side Valleys. Meanwhile, temperatures trend warmer by about 5 degrees east of the Cascades on Tuesday. /BR-y

Wednesday through Saturday...Models continue to show a closed low developing over the Gulf of Alaska before digging south towards the area later in the week. Models historically have difficulty with determining where wobbly, broad, closed upper level troughs will track, and this trough is no exception. The Wednesday into Thursday period has the highest probability of being characterized by increasing high clouds and a southerly flow, with a low, but highest probability of light showers for the coast. Of note, the NBM brings precipitation into the coast by Wednesday night, but the vast majority of ensemble members across the EC and GFS suites do not bring measurable precipitation to the coast or any other part of the forecast area until at least 24 hours later. The forecast was trimmed back, but some residual precipitation chances remain due to current restraints on the forecasting process. Most likely, though clouds will increase Wednesday, precipitation will not arrive in the area until the trough approaches the area late Thursday or Thursday night, then sticks around producing cooler and wetter conditions through the weekend. -BPN

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.AVIATION...05/12Z TAFs...The remnants of a front have left enough residual low level moisture for areas of mixed IFR/MVFR ceilings along the coast north of Cape Blanco (including North Bend), and in the Umpqua Basin (including Roseburg). Also, patchy fog and low clouds have developed and could last for several hours this morning in the valleys/basins of northern California and over the East Side where it has recently rained. Northeast winds will develop and this may cause some of these ceilings to erode early Sunday morning.

Elsewhere, area of VFR will prevail, and with dry east winds developing across the area tonight, lower flight conditions are much less likely to develop, even along the coast. -BPN/DW

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.MARINE...Updated 200 AM PDT Sunday, October 5, 2025...A thermal trough along the coast will cause moderate to strong north winds over the waters tonight into Monday. Winds and seas will be highest south of Cape Blanco, though all areas will have conditions hazardous to small craft. The thermal trough will weaken early next week with winds and seas subsiding from east to west over the waters on Monday. A brief period of calmer conditions is expected Monday night into Tuesday, but north winds and steep seas could return for Wednesday. -Spilde/BPN

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.FIRE WEATHER...Updated 200 AM PDT Sunday, October 5, 2025...A thermal trough will set up along the coast the rest of this weekend and this will result in a period of gusty east winds over the upper slopes and ridges beginning tonight. However, RH recoveries tonight should be good (80-100%) given the recent moisture/rainfall. Fuels have also moderated substantially, with all locations in moderate and/or low fire danger. We do expect things to dry out across the landscape today through Tuesday with afternoon humidity bottoming out in the in the 15-25% range. And, with gusty east winds continuing tonight and Monday night over the upper slopes/ridges, weather conditions may approach critical levels during this time period. East winds are expected to peak tonight near critical values over the ridgelines, but recoveries will remain moderate. Monday night, ridgetop recoveries will trend poorer, but with weaker winds. Despite these dry conditions, we don`t think fuels will return to levels necessary for RFW. We`ll headline the Fire Weather planning forecast to enhance the message that it will turn drier into mid next week. Confidence beyond Wednesday is quite low with many possible scenarios, though with a slight lean in favor of breezy, cooler weather Thursday into next weekend with a chance of rain. -Spilde/BPN

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.MFR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...CA...None.

PACIFIC COASTAL WATERS...Small Craft Advisory until 5 AM PDT Monday for PZZ350-356-370-376.

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NWS MFR Office Area Forecast Discussion

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