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Adair Village, Oregon Weather Forecast Discussion

181
FXUS66 KPQR 051102
AFDPQR

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Portland OR 359 AM PDT Fri Sep 5 2025

.SYNOPSIS...Isolated showers and thunderstorms will lift northward over northwest Oregon early this morning, reaching southwest WA by late morning. Then, another round of showers and thunderstorms will move northward over the area late Friday afternoon and evening, followed by a third round Saturday afternoon through Saturday night. Note some locations will be missed by all three rounds given the showery nature of precipitation. The weather pattern becomes cooler early next week with showers becoming much more widespread as a closed upper level low settles directly overhead. These showers will result in more substantial rain amounts, with all locations in northwest Oregon and southwest Washington likely to see at least some measurable rain (80-90% chance), if not over 0.25" (50-70% chance).

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.SHORT TERM...Friday through Sunday night...The short term forecast is highlighted by a mix of clouds and sun with temperatures trending slightly cooler each day. In addition, there are several chances for showers and thunderstorms as 500 mb flow remains southerly to southeasterly and a series of disturbances lift northward over western WA/OR. Note it will be dry most of the time at any given location, and some locations will be missed completely due to the showery nature of precipitation.

The first chance for showers and thunderstorms is through this morning as a subtle upper level shortwave and associated vorticity max lifts northward over northwest Oregon, reaching southwest Washington by late morning. This wave is accompanied with substantial elevated instability/moisture, and isolated showers and thunderstorms were already being observed over the central Oregon Coast Range and areas west of Eugene-Springfield between 2-3 AM Friday per satellite and radar observations. These storms are generally producing around 0.1" of rain or less with very little wind. As such, the main hazard with these storms will be cloud-to-ground lightning and potential new wildfire starts. NBM PoPs and thunder probabilities were adjusted upward today to account for these showers and storms, which are not being handled well by most model guidance. It appears there will then be a break in precipitation most of Friday afternoon, before a second round of isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms arrives after 3-5 PM and lingers through Friday night, impacting the Cascades before sunset and locations west of the Cascades around or after sunset. Similar to the first round, the main hazard with these storms will be cloud-to-ground lightning.

The latest suite of hi-res model guidance then suggests another break in precipitation Saturday morning/afternoon, followed by a third round of showers and thunderstorms that are set to move northward over portions of northwest Oregon and southwest Washington late Saturday afternoon and evening. The Cascades have the highest chance of seeing showers and storms with the third round, with NBM PoPs around 50-70%. Probabilities west of the Cascades are lower, ranging from 30-45%. The 00z iteration of the ENS shows ensemble mean MUCAPE values peaking with this third round of showers and storms, reaching 1500-1900 J/kg over the Cascades and near 800-1000 J/kg west of the Cascades. With 0-6 km bulk shear values near 20-25 kt in the Cascades, the environment will be supportive of a few stronger thunderstorms capable of producing hail if enough forcing is in place. Note hi-res model guidance suggest most of Saturday`s thunderstorm activity will occur near the crest and east of the crest. Model soundings suggest these storms will be elevated due to a strong capping inversion between 750-800 mb preventing surface-based convection. With southeasterly cloud-layer winds, a few showers and storms may drift northwestward into the Willamette Valley. Chances for showers remain in the forecast on Sunday, mainly in the mountains. The lowlands will most likely be dry at that point. -TK

.LONG TERM...Monday through Thursday night...The long term forecast is highlighted by a cool and showery weather pattern with the potential for substantial rain amounts over all of northwest OR and southwest WA. This weather pattern shift is in response to a closed upper level low that will be settling over the region early next week. This low is currently centered over the Gulf of Alaska and is set to move towards the Oregon/Washington coast Monday, with showers likely becoming widespread over the area by Monday afternoon. With a saturated thermodynamic profile/PWAT values over 1", some showers will have the potential to produce heavy rain. All locations from the coast to the Cascades will likely see at least some measurable rain Monday/Monday night (80-90% chance). There is a 50-80% chance for 0.25-0.50" or more, with the highest probabilities over the Cascades and Lane County and the lowest probabilities over southwest WA. Rain amounts of this magnitude would help temporarily dampen fire season, and conditions will begin to feel more fall-like. -TK

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.AVIATION...Currently the region is contending with two distinct weather features stratified with height which are expected provide potential impacts moving through the TAF period: marine stratus at the surface and isolated to scattered high based thunderstorms aloft. Starting at the surface, northwesterly flow and a robust marine layer has lead to LIFR conditions across the coast into some the attendant valleys in the coast range. Confidence is moderate to high flight conditions will hold sub- VFR along the coast through the TAF period due to persistent onshore flow with a jump to IFR or low-end MVFR between 20z Fri to 01z Sat. Higher probabilities for persistent LIFR/IFR CIGS and VIS at KONP through the period. There are also increasing chances (50-65%) this morning for marine stratus to surge into the Portland Metro area, (mainly KTTD and KPDX) in addition to KEUG, between 13-18z leading to MVFR CIGs. After this point conditions likely return to VFR the remainder of the TAF period.

A slight chance for thunderstorms will also be present at all sites today into tonight with ongoing high based convection over Lane County already in progress as of 10-11z. Expect the current surge of activity to progress northward-northwestward over the next several hours, primarily impacting KEUG and KONP, before decreasing followed by another potential round of isolated to scattered convection later afternoon and evening ~20-22z onward. While models indicate this second round has the potential to push off the Cascades into the Willamette Valley and SW Washington, confidence in placement/timing remains too low to include this latter round in the TAF package - a feature certainly worth keeping an eye on.

PDX AND APPROACHES...Northwesterly flow at the surface continues with increasing chances for MVFR CIGs between 13-18z due to a stronger push of marine air than past days. Much higher confidence in prevailing VFR after this point onward. There is also a 15-20% chance for an isolated shower or thunderstorm to impact the terminal after 20-21z Friday through the evening and overnight hours. -Schuldt

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.MARINE...An area of surface high pressure just offshore continues to degrade today leading to lighter north winds compared to past days - gusts up to ~15 knots this afternoon. That said, dense coastal fog already in place likely persists through a decent chunk of the morning hours. Headed through the weekend, an area of low pressure is expected to drop southward into the area helping to facilitate a switch to southerly winds on Saturday. these southerly winds persist through Monday and Tuesday before turning northerly again on Wednesday. Seas will generally hold in the 3-5 ft range into early next week. There is a 25-30% chance of combined seas climbing above 5 ft during the middle next week with those probabilities climbing to ~50% by the end of next week. -Schuldt

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.PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...

OR...None. WA...None. PZ...Dense Fog Advisory until 7 AM PDT this morning for PZZ210- 251>253. &&

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NWS PQR Office Area Forecast Discussion

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