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Forestville Maryland Weather Forecast Discussion

004
FXUS61 KLWX 081300
AFDLWX

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Baltimore MD/Washington DC 900 AM EDT Wed Oct 8 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A strong cold front will move through the area today. High pressure will build to our north on Thursday and Friday. A coastal low will develop to our south and then move up the Eastern Seaboard this weekend into early next week.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 13Z/9AM EDT, a few spotty showers/sprinkles were quickly departing to the east in association with a strong cold front. This front extended from eastern PA southwestward roughly down the Blue Ridge Mountains, and was making steady southeastward progress. The front should move offshore by midday, with rapidly clearing skies shortly thereafter as winds abruptly shift to northwesterly; gusts of 20-30 mph are expected this afternoon.

Strong cold/dry advection will ensue behind the front this afternoon into tonight. The front will be strong enough to cause a temperature drop during the middle of the day following a brief spike immediately behind the front as skies clear. Many locations may have already reached their high temperatures. Temperatures will hold in the mid 60s to near 70 behind the front as cold advection aloft offsets daytime heating from the sun this afternoon. Clouds will quickly erode from northwest to southeast, with most locations experiencing at least some sunshine this afternoon (more northwest, less southeast).

Strong cold advection will continue overnight tonight, with most locations dropping back into the 40s and winds holding at around 5-10 mph out of the north. The pressure gradient should weaken just enough across western portions of the forecast area for sheltered mountain valleys to decouple and go calm. That should allow for frost to form in those locations late tonight. Frost Advisories are in effect tonight for portions of the Alleghenies and Potomac Highlands, where temperatures are forecast to drop into the mid 30s.

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.SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/... High pressure will build to our north Thursday into Friday. This will result in sunny skies during the day and clear skies at night. Temperatures will be the coolest of the season thus far, with daytime highs only reaching into the 60s (50s mountains).

A surface ridge will strengthen over our area to the southwest of the high pressure center tomorrow night. This should enable most locations to decouple. With clear skies and calm winds this will set the stage for ideal radiational cooling conditions. Temperatures will drop into the 30s to the north and west of I-95, with most of those locations likely having frost. Freeze Watches have been issued for the Alleghenies, Potomac Highlands, and much of the Shenandoah Valley, where confidence is highest for sub-freezing temperatures tomorrow night. Frost Advisories will likely eventually be needed further east.

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.LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... For the extended period, the longwave pattern across the continent remains of high amplitude, but also of high uncertainty. While the global guidance has a decent handle on a deep trough over the western U.S. and ridge across the Southern Plains, the same cannot be said for areas downstream.

Within a split flow regime, the models have begun trending toward more interactions between the two streams this weekend. Most notably, a number of the 18Z/12Z deterministic models favor a closed low barreling from the Great Lakes toward the Mid-Atlantic this weekend. At the same time, a cut-off upper low is expected to meander off the southeastern U.S. coast. This southern stream feature is likely to lift northward in time, but with any interactions still uncertain given such a complex setup. Until an upstream system can influence this array of features, a meandering upper low is likely to persist into early next week. Whatever does materialize should gradually drift offshore by Tuesday.

Looking at the surface, high pressure remains in charge over Quebec into the Canadian Maritime provinces. At the same time, ensembles are fairly consistent in the development of a deep cyclone off the southeastern U.S. to Carolina coast. This is likely aided by sitting over the warm Gulf Stream waters. The path this low pressure system takes on during its northward approach will dictate the impacts across the Mid-Atlantic region.

Below average temperatures are likely through the weekend and into early next week. The combination of Canadian high pressure to the north and coastal low pressure to the south will favor a lengthy period of northerly to easterly flow. Daily highs should remain in the 60s with overnight lows in the 40s to mid 50s. Rainfall chances are generally confined to areas along and east of I-95, and generally capped at 20 to 30 percent. There is certainly room for this to go up and expand westward depending on the low track. Stay tuned and check back at weather.gov/lwx for the latest.

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.AVIATION /12Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... Showers will come to an end from west to east as a strong cold front moves through. Winds will shift to out of the northwest with gusts of 20 to 25 knots this afternoon.

VFR conditions will continue tonight through Thursday and Friday. Winds will be out of the north tonight, northeast tomorrow, go light or calm tomorrow night, and then become east to southeasterly on Friday.

While conditions start off VFR this weekend, expect some reduced ceilings to impact the eastern terminals by Sunday, if not sooner. Of course this is all dependent on the track of a coastal low developing off the southeastern U.S. Restrictions would be more likely on Sunday if rain showers are able to pivot back toward the I- 95 corridor. Expect mainly northeasterly winds with increasing gusts by Sunday. For the D.C. and Baltimore terminals, gusts up to 20 to 25 knots are possible, perhaps higher.

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.MARINE... Following the passage of a strong cold front, gusts of 20 to 30 knots are expected at times today into tonight within north to northwesterly flow. Winds will finally decrease to sub-SCA levels around mid-morning tomorrow. Sub-SCA level conditions are expected within northeasterly flow tomorrow afternoon, and then within easterly flow on Friday.

Prevailing winds this weekend will be out of the northeast as high pressure over Quebec is bounded by low pressure off the southeastern U.S. coast. Small Craft Advisories will likely be needed sometime Saturday, but especially on Sunday. Depending on the strength and position of coastal low pressure, gales would be possible over the southern-most waters. The current forecast package calls for 30 to 40 knot northeasterly gusts by Sunday afternoon/evening.

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.TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... Anomalies will be on the decrease this afternoon into Thursday as northwesterly winds increase behind a cold front. Anomalies will rapidly rebound later Thursday into Friday as northerly winds begin to decrease and turn easterly. Coastal flooding appears possible Friday within onshore flow. While most locations will likely only reach Action or Minor Flood Stage, Annapolis may potentially make a run at Moderate Flood stage with the high tide Friday evening. Additional coastal flooding may be possible this weekend as a coastal low develops to our south and moves up the Eastern Seaboard.

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.LWX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... DC...None. MD...Small Craft Advisory until 1 PM EDT Thursday for MDZ008. Frost Advisory from 2 AM to 9 AM EDT Thursday for MDZ501-509- 510. Freeze Watch from late Thursday night through Friday morning for MDZ501-502-509-510. VA...Frost Advisory from 2 AM to 9 AM EDT Thursday for VAZ503-504. Freeze Watch from late Thursday night through Friday morning for VAZ025>027-029-503-504. WV...Frost Advisory from 2 AM to 9 AM EDT Thursday for WVZ501>503- 505-506. Freeze Watch from late Thursday night through Friday morning for WVZ050-055-501>506. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 1 PM EDT Thursday for ANZ530>534- 537>543. Small Craft Advisory until midnight EDT tonight for ANZ535-536.

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SYNOPSIS...DHOF/KJP NEAR TERM...DHOF/KJP SHORT TERM...DHOF/KJP LONG TERM...BRO AVIATION...BRO/DHOF/KJP MARINE...BRO/DHOF/KJP TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...LWX

NWS LWX Office Area Forecast Discussion

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