Your favorites:

Beaverlett, Virginia Weather Forecast Discussion

902
FXUS61 KAKQ 141937
AFDAKQ

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Wakefield VA 337 PM EDT Sun Sep 14 2025

.SYNOPSIS... High pressure builds into New England with dry and mild conditions through early Monday. Confidence continues to increase in a coastal low impacting the region late Monday through midweek, bringing widespread rain, cooler temperatures, and breezy conditions. A warmup is expected by late week.

&&

.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM MONDAY MORNING/... As of 335 PM EDT Sunday...

Key Messages:

- Clouds continue to increase from SE to NW tonight.

Afternoon analysis shows 1008mb low pressure off the Carolina coast and a 1024mb high centered over eastern Ontario, ridging south into the local area. Aloft, there is a weak upper low/trough over the GA/FL coast with a tall/skinny ridge over the Mississippi Valley ahead of another trough over the high Plains. High level cirrus clouds continue to stream north and west ahead of the coastal low. Temperatures this afternoon are highly dependent on cloud cover with the far NW counties generally in the mid 80s while areas to the south and east are in the mid to upper 70s. A few low 70s persist into NE NC where cloud cover has been the thickest. NE winds continue tonight, strongest SE where the pressure gradient is steeper. This will continue to be the case tonight. Low temps tonight fall into the upper 50s to low 60s for most of the area but a few mid and upper 60s are possible near the coast in SE VA and NE NC. Clouds lower tonight into early Monday as coastal low pressure drifts northward.

&&

.SHORT TERM /6 AM MONDAY MORNING THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... As of 335 PM EDT Sunday...

Key Messages:

- Increasing confidence that a coastal low will impact the region from Monday afternoon into Wednesday night, bringing widespread rainfall, cooler temperatures, and breezy conditions.

- Locally heavy rainfall is possible, primarily on Tuesday and focused across the SE portions of the area including the Hampton Roads vicinity into NE NC.

The upper trough over the Southeast is forecast to cut off into a closed low on Monday with surface low pressure lifting slowly northward toward Cape Hatteras by the evening hours. Increasing Atlantic moisture feed becomes established across the region with PW values increasing to 1.8-2.0". 12z guidance suite has converged and nearly all models show low pressure lifting along the NC coast and then turning NW and moving inland on Tuesday as the upper low remains to the SW of the surface feature. Confidence continues to increase that widespread rainfall will impact the region along with breezy to windy conditions, especially along the coast. Rain moves into NE NC by Monday afternoon, spreading slowly N and W overnight. Temperatures Monday will follow a similar configuration to today`s with the relative warmest temps north and west of Richmond (near 80 degrees) with mid and upper 70s for the remainder of the area. Have increased PoPs to likely/categorical for most of the area Monday evening into Tuesday as surface low pressure moves inland across NC. Winds likely peak Monday night into Tuesday. Not quite confident enough at this point for a Wind Advisory but there is certainly the potential, especially for coastal areas as the gradient will be quite steep between the coastal low and high pressure anchored to the north. Forecast soundings don`t show much in the way of instability across region Monday and Monday night so have removed the mention of thunder from most of the area during these periods. Some elevated instability develops on Tuesday as onshore flow brings some higher theta-e air into the region but this will be limited to the SE quarter of the area. In areas to the N and W, widespread clouds and rainfall will hold temps in the 60s to low 70s but robust frontogenesis aloft may allow for a rumble of thunder or two. Forecast for heavier rainfall lifts northward Tuesday night into Wednesday as the surface low starts to move back to the east and north. Temperatures will be similar on Wednesday with many Piedmont locations not making it out of the 60s with mid to upper 70s along the coast. Have maintained mention of thunder across the region on Wednesday but suspect it will continue to favor the eastern half of the area where the warmer surface temperatures will be confined. Widespread rainfall totals average 1-3" across the region (lowest NW and highest SE), though locally 4+ inches is possible before precip comes to an end Wednesday night. WPC has included NE NC in a Marginal ERO on Monday, extending north into the Hampton Roads region on Tuesday. Given very dry antecedent conditions, not expecting widespread flooding issues but will continue to monitor the need for a targeted Flood Watch in subsequent forecast cycles.

&&

.LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 335 PM EDT Sunday...

Key Messages:

- Low pressure moves away from the area Thursday with rebounding temperatures.

- A backdoor front potentially moves into the region this weekend with cooler temperatures and increasing clouds.

Precip moves out of the area on Thursday with just slight chance PoPs for NE portions of the area. High temps warm back into the upper 70s to low 80s with clearing skies by late afternoon. Lows Thursday night around 60 degrees inland and mid 60s near the coast. Dry and warm on Friday with westerly surface winds. Highs climb into the low/mid 80s before a backdoor front drops south across the area as high pressure builds to the N of the region. Lows overnight Friday into Saturday fall into the upper 50s to low 60s. Highs Saturday around 80 degrees with lows again in the 50s and 60s. Blended guidance suggests some low end precip chances on Sunday but not much support from the latest deterministic and ensemble guidance so very low confidence in the PoPs this weekend.

&&

.AVIATION /20Z SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 130 PM EDT Sunday...

VFR flying conditions prevail today and tonight across the region. Low pressure off the SC coast and high pressure to the north over eastern Canada will support continued NE winds across the region. The gradient is tightest across the SE terminals with winds 10-15 kt and gusts around 20 kt. Widespread high clouds continue to lift northward across the area. Latest guidance shows lowering CIGs from S to N on Monday. Will show prevailing MVFR late in the period at ECG but will hold just above MVFR for ORF and PHF. Rain also spreads north tomorrow with localized MVFR VSBY possible in the heavier precip.

Outlook: The coastal low approaches Mon afternoon and lingers into midweek, leading to increased clouds, widespread rain, and an increasing chance for reduced CIGs and VIS across all area terminals.

&&

.MARINE... As of 300 PM EDT Monday...

Key Messages:

- SCAs remain in from Monday through Tuesday for 20-25 kt NE winds and elevated seas. SCAs remain in effect starting today feet for northern waters and the Chesapeake Bay north of Windmill Point for Monday and Tuesday. Gale Warnings have been issued for the SE VA/NE NC coastal waters, the lower Chesapeake Bay, lower James River, and the Currituck Sound.

- A High Rip Risk remains in place for the southern beaches with a Moderate Rip Risk across the northern beaches through Monday. The rip risk increases to high across the northern beaches on Tuesday.

- A period of low-end gale force gusts cannot be ruled out across the middle and upper Bay Monday night-Tuesday.

Latest analysis reveals 1018mb surface high pressure just offshore of the east coast and ridging south into the mid-Atlantic and southeast CONUS. Weak low pressure remains off the coastal Carolinas this afternoon, with the gradient between these features compelling some gusty winds across the region. Winds are E-NE as of this writing 10-15 kt, highest over the SE VA/NE NC coastal waters mainly south of Cape Charles, with winds closer to 10 kt over the northern waters. Seas are ~3-4 ft N and 5-7 ft S.

The building E-SE wind wave allow for seas to remain elevated (5-6 ft) off the Currituck Outer Banks, and south of Cape Charles, and the SCA remains in effect tonight. Winds remain marginal, but look to increase late this afternoon into this evening, and a SCA remains in place there as well. The pressure gradient looks to briefly slacken to some extent this evening, before tightening once again late tonight and Monday.

Marine conditions still look to deteriorate quickly from south to north on Monday, and especially Monday night, as the weak low off the Carolina coast deepens and lifts NNE toward the mid-Atlantic coast. The 14/12z suite of guidance have continued the trend from the past few runs towards a stronger low that lifts closer to the mid-Atlantic coast. Winds likely increase to SCA criteria by morning/midday Monday across the lower bay/lower James and SE VA/NE NC coastal waters, with gusts to Gale Force expected by afternoon and through the evening. Winds increase further Monday night as the pressure gradient tightens a bit more due to the approaching low. Peak winds will likely occur Monday night into Tuesday (NE around 25 kt with gusts to 25-35 kt). Local wind probs for 34+ kt wind gusts have increased to 60-80+% along the coast and 40-60% in the lower Ches Bay. Have therefore issued Gale Warnings for the coastal waters south of Parramore Island, the lower Ches Bay south of New Point Comfort, the lower James and the Currituck Sound. Gale starts Monday morning over the coastal waters (with winds to increase through the afternoon), with the Gales starting over the remaining areas referenced Monday evening. Both run into Tuesday morning. Farther north, SCA remain in effect. Gale Warnings may need to be extended farther northward if model trends continue.

Winds gradually decrease from south to north from Tuesday evening into Wednesday, as the vertically-stacked low tracks over the marine area (resulting in a slackening pressure gradient). Sub-SCA winds are then expected late this week. With the increasing NE winds, seas will build to 7-10 ft by Mon night/Tue with 3-5 ft waves on the bay (potentially to ~6 ft at the mouth of the bay). High Surf Advisories are likely to be needed for VA Beach and the NE NC Outer Banks by Monday evening. The high rip risk will continue for the southern beaches through at least Tuesday. The rip risk is moderate across the northern beaches from through Monday, increasing to high on Tue.

&&

.TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... As of 300 PM EDT Sunday...

With the increasing NE winds and building seas Mon night-Tue, tidal anomalies across the lower bay and SE VA/NE NC coast are expected increase by 1-1.5 ft. Anomalies across the upper bay won`t increase as much. This will likely result in another round of minor tidal flooding across the tidal York/James, Middle/Lower Bay, and SE VA/NE NC coast. ETSS shows solid to high-end minor flooding across these locations, with peak water levels occurring during the Tuesday evening high tide cycle. There is some potential for localized moderate flooding at Jamestown/Lynnhaven, with the 4.5 ft MLLW threshold falling between the 50th and 90th percentiles in the NAEFS based P-ETSS. Peak water levels from the deterministic ETSS Tuesday evening also generally fall between the 50th and 90th percentile from the NAEFS-based P-ETSS.

&&

.CLIMATE... Record Low Maximum Temperatures:

9/16 9/17 RIC 65/1959 61/2011 ORF 64/1963 65/1986 SBY 59/1963 63/1924 ECG 66/1963 65/2011

&&

.AKQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MD...None. NC...None. VA...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 4 PM Monday to 7 PM EDT Tuesday for ANZ630-631. Small Craft Advisory from 7 AM to 6 PM EDT Monday for ANZ632- 634-638. Gale Warning from 6 PM Monday to 11 AM EDT Tuesday for ANZ632- 634. Small Craft Advisory until 6 PM EDT Monday for ANZ633. Gale Warning from 6 PM Monday to 6 AM EDT Tuesday for ANZ633- 638. Small Craft Advisory from 6 AM Monday to 6 PM EDT Tuesday for ANZ635>637. Small Craft Advisory from 10 AM Monday to 7 PM EDT Tuesday for ANZ650-652. Gale Warning from 6 AM Monday to 6 AM EDT Tuesday for ANZ654- 656-658. Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM EDT Monday for ANZ656-658.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...RHR/RMM NEAR TERM...RHR SHORT TERM...RHR LONG TERM...RHR AVIATION...RHR MARINE...MAM TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... CLIMATE...

NWS AKQ Office Area Forecast Discussion

WeatherForYou.com, LLC is not responsible for any damages or problems caused by this service. Current weather conditions are obtained from the closest government operated station, a personal station contributing to the PWSweather.com network or from the Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System (MADIS). Some weather information is powered by XWeather. WeatherForYou.com, NOAA, AerisWeather and their data providers disclaim liability of any kind whatsoever, including, without limitation, liability for quality, performance, merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose arising out of the use or inability to use the data. Like all things, this site belongs to Jesus Christ ... He just trusts us to maintain it. If you have any questions or comments please use the suggestion box.

Copyright © 1999 - 2025, WeatherForYou.com LLC. All rights reserved.