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Doolittle Millpond, North Carolina Weather Forecast Discussion

553
FXUS61 KAKQ 051919
AFDAKQ

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Wakefield VA 319 PM EDT Sun Oct 5 2025

.SYNOPSIS... High pressure will gradually shift offshore through Monday. Seasonably warm and dry conditions continue through Tuesday before a strong cold front crosses the area on Wednesday. This will bring scattered showers Wednesday. Much cooler temperatures arrive late this week behind the cold front. A coastal low may develop off the Southeast coast this weekend, potentially resulting in rain and breezy conditions for a portion of the local area.

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.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM MONDAY MORNING/... As of 315 PM EDT Sunday...

Key Message:

- Mostly sunny and slightly warmer today.

- Patchy fog possible tonight.

Latest surface analysis depicted high pressure centered over the Mid- Atlantic into the western north Atlantic this afternoon. Aloft, an upper level ridge remains over the Eastern CONUS. As such, temps have already risen into the upper 70s to around 80F across the region as of 2 PM. Have risen highs temps to the lower 80s across most of the area with mid-upper 70s along the coast. Partly cloudy skies continue across the S/SW half of the area with sunny skies N/E. Clouds dissipate this evening with loss of diurnal heating.

Given high pressure overhead, calm winds, and clear skies tonight, expect another night of at least patchy fog and/or low-level stratus. Lows tonight are expected to be a bit milder compared to the last few nights with temps dropping into the lower to mid 50s inland and lower 60s along the coast. Will note that, while an outlier, the MET does have localized lows in the upper 40s across inland areas. As such, cannot rule out cooler temps. However, given higher dew points, confidence is low in temps dropping below 50F.

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.SHORT TERM /6 AM MONDAY MORNING THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... As of 315 PM EDT Sunday...

Key Message:

- Continued mild and pleasant through Tuesday.

- Scattered showers are expected on Wednesday as a strong cold front moves through.

Aloft, a ridge over the East Coast gradually moves offshore by Tue night as a trough takes it`s place. At the surface, high pressure slides offshore Mon, allowing for mild weather to continue through Tue. Highs in the upper 70s to lower 80s (most in the lower 80s) continue Mon and Tue. Dry weather continues through Tue with increasing clouds late Tue.

A strong cold front moves SE across the area on Wed with scattered showers developing along it. PoPs increase to 60-80% Wed with showers first moving into the NW Piedmont Tue night and across SE VA/NE NC Wed afternoon. Confidence continues to increase in most areas receiving around 0.5" of rain with a swath of 0.5-0.75" possible. GEFS and EPS probs disagree with the location of the heaviest rain with the GEFS showing a 50-60% chance for 0.5" across the NW whereas the EPS showing the same probs just over central and E portions of the FA. As such, the NBM meets in the middle and shows 0.5-0.75" from Richmond NE into the Eastern Shore. Additionally, can`t rule out a few isolated storms, however, confidence is low. Given the precip, highs will be cooler on Wed with temps in the lower 70s inland and upper 70s to around 80F across far SE VA/NE NC. Much cooler temps arrive Wed night with lows in the mid 40s NW to upper 50s to around 60F SE.

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.LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 315 PM EDT Sunday...

Key Message:

- Much cooler weather arrives Thursday and continues into the weekend.

- A coastal low is possible by this weekend and may bring rain and breezy conditions to the area.

Aloft, a trough remains across the eastern CONUS through late week. By the weekend, a ridge across the central CONUS becomes positively tilted and orients from SW to NE between a trough across the Pacific Northwest and over the Southeast. At the surface, a strong area of high pressure builds in (centered across interior New England) late this week, gradually lifting north by this weekend. This will result in much cooler weather with highs in the mid-upper 60s inland (upper 60s to around 70F across far SE VA/NE NC) Thu and Fri (lower 70s across far SE VA/NE NC Fri). Highs gradually moderate into the upper 60s to lower 70s Sat and Sun. Lows will be quite cool as well with temps in the lower 40s NW to mid 50s SE (upper 50s along the coast) Thu night, upper 40s NW to upper 50s SE (around 60F along the coast) Fri and Sat nights, and around 50F NW to upper 50s to lower 60s SE Sun night. Will note that the coolest night of the season is possible Thu night into Fri morning with upper 30s not out of the question across the far NW Piedmont. NBM 25th percentile had upper 30s across the Piedmont with NBM 10th percentile showing ~35F across the NW Piedmont. As such, will continue to monitor in case temps trend cooler, given that the lower end of guidance has temps marginally conducive to frost formation.

By the weekend, attention turns to the coast as the upper level pattern is supportive of a coastal low forming. This pattern (a ridge orienting from SW to NE with a cutoff trough below it across the Southeast and a retreating high) has already occurred several times this Fall and has resulted in a coastal low forming near or off the coast on multiple occasions. The EPS continues to show increasing confidence in this scenario with many members now showing a coastal low forming off the coast of the Carolinas this weekend. Where this low goes into early next week remains very uncertain. However, given the pattern, there is a potential for widespread rain and breezy winds this weekend. The 12z EPS mean 72 hour precip total was 0.50-0.75" W of I-95 and 1-1.75" across E portions of the FA through Mon. The GEFS shows the potential as well, just with lower rainfall totals. Given that this potential threat is at the end of the forecast period, have kept the NBM PoPs for now (slight chance inland with chance along the coast) this weekend. However, if this trend continues, PoPs will likely trend higher.

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.AVIATION /19Z SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 140 PM EDT Sunday...

FEW-SCT CU have developed this afternoon across the S/SW half of the area with 3500-4500 ft CIGs. Clouds dissipate this evening with the loss of diurnal heating. Winds remain light and variable this afternoon around 5 kt, becoming calm tonight. Given high pressure overhead, clear skies, calm winds, and higher dew points than last night, another round of at least patchy fog appears probable across the area. While model guidance is optimistic with VIS and CIGs, forecast soundings support IFR/LIFR VIS and/or CIGs tonight across the area. Confidence is moderate in coverage of patchy to areas of fog/stratus and low with respect to whether IFR/LIFR VIS or CIGs are favored. As such, trends will need to be closely monitored later this evening into early Mon morning. For now, have added patchy fog and SCT002 CIGs to the tafs until confidence becomes clearer. Any fog/stratus is expected to clear by 14-15z Mon with some fair weather CU developing in the afternoon (CIGs 2500-3500 ft). Winds remain variable, increasing to ~5 kt Mon.

Outlook: VFR conditions are expected during the day through Tuesday as high pressure remains over the region. Scattered showers are expected on Wednesday along and ahead of a cold front. Skies will clear out in the wake of the front as a drier airmass moves in.

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.MARINE... As of 315 PM EDT Sunday...

Key Messages:

- The rip current risk drops to moderate on Monday.

- Benign conditions expected today into early this week, with a good chance of solid SCA conditions from Wednesday night- Thursday evening with NE winds.

- SCA conditions (especially due to seas) likely continue from Friday through next weekend.

High pressure remains centered over the area this afternoon with variable winds around 5 kt and 3-4 ft seas/1-2 ft waves. Benign marine conditions continue through Monday night with winds aob 10 kt as the surface high slowly shifts offshore. Winds become southerly and increase to 10-15 kt by late Tuesday well in advance of an approaching cold front. Sub-SCA S-SW winds are expected through much of Wednesday. Then, a strong cold front approaches and crosses the waters on later Wednesday into Wednesday night. Winds become N-NE at 20-25 kt by Wed night with frequent gusts to 30 kt expected. Winds become more northeasterly on Thursday and remain elevated with frequent gusts of ~30 kt expected throughout the day. While a period of low-end gale gusts is also possible during this time (especially over the ocean), probabilities have continued to decrease slightly. Seas continue to subside, and are expected to average 2-3 ft from tonight-Tuesday. Seas quickly build back to 5-8 ft by Thursday behind the front. While winds may diminish a bit by Friday-Friday night, seas likely remain elevated. The forecast becomes much more uncertain as we head into the weekend as low pressure may develop offshore. Regardless, winds may pick back up with SCA conditions likely continuing.

Rip Currents: The rip current risk gradually decreases early this week. Hazardous surf conditions are expected once again by Wed night/Thu due to short period large breaking waves.

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.TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... As of 315 PM EDT Sunday...

No coastal flooding is expected through Wednesday night. Given the very high astronomical tides combined with moderately strong NE winds, minor flooding is possible in areas adjacent to the lower Ches Bay/tidal James on Thursday.

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.AKQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MD...None. NC...None. VA...None. MARINE...None.

&&

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SYNOPSIS...RMM NEAR TERM...RMM SHORT TERM...RMM LONG TERM...RMM AVIATION...RMM MARINE...ERI TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...

NWS AKQ Office Area Forecast Discussion

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