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Lackey Virginia Weather Forecast Discussion

629
FXUS61 KAKQ 071759
AFDAKQ

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Wakefield VA 159 PM EDT Tue Oct 7 2025

.SYNOPSIS... Seasonably warm and dry conditions continue today 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 /THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 630 AM EDT Tuesday...

Key Messages:

- Continued mild and pleasant through this afternoon.

- Scattered rain showers move into western and northwestern portions of the area tonight.

High pressure becomes situated further offshore and a cold front will continue to approach from the NW as we head through the day. Skies will start off sunny to mostly sunny, with mid and high level clouds gradually thickening (especially by this evening) from west to east. Any AM patchy fog dissipates quickly with dry weather expected through sunset. Another mild day with highs in the lower 80s (locally mid 80s).

As we head into tonight, the front approaches the region from the west with skies becoming mostly cloudy to overcast. The night starts off dry, but showers begin to quickly move in from the west, likely overspreading the NW half of the area by sunrise Wednesday AM. Total QPF will range from ~0.10" to 0.35" across the NW through tonight. Lows remain mild due to the increase in cloud cover/moisture, with widespread readings in the lower to mid 60s.

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.SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... As of 240 AM EDT Tuesday...

Key Messages:

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

- Much cooler weather arrives Thursday, with 30s across our NW counties Thursday night/Friday AM.

A strong cold front crosses the area later Wednesday morning into Wednesday afternoon. Scattered showers (and isolated thunderstorms) develop along and ahead of the front, with the highest rain chances for much of the area during the first half of the day. Rainfall totals have remained consistent with 0.25-0.75" of rain (most around 0.5") expected. Locally higher totals around 1" are possible. Due to the precipitation and the front moving into the area, temperatures will be cooler Wednesday, generally ranging from around 70 NW to around 80 SE. Any rain chances come to an end later Wednesday evening into the first part of Wednesday night, with much cooler and drier air filtering into the area behind the front. It will also become breezy near/along the immediate coast with NNE winds gusting to 25 to 30 mph (potentially up to 35 mph in spots). Temperatures fall back into the 40s inland and 50s across the SE and along the coast.

High pressure builds N/NW of the region on Thursday. Much cooler on Thursday with temperatures only in the low to mid 60s for most of the area. Skies will range from sunny to mostly sunny, but it will remain breezy out of the NE (especially closer to the coast). It will be a chilly night Thursday night, with low temperatures dropping back into the upper 30s across our NW counties to the low to mid 50s across the SE. The latest NBM 25th percentile has trended cooler, with mid 30s across much of the NW Piedmont and the NBM 10th now showing some lower 30s. Given this, will have to watch for the potential for patchy frost across portions of Louisa and Fluvanna counties. Will note that this is on track with the fall median (50%) first potential frost for Louisa which is ironically 10/10 (10/12 for Palmyra). See the "Fall First Frost and Freeze Dates" on our website for more specifics.

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.LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 240 AM EDT Tuesday...

Key Message:

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

Aloft, a trough remains across the Southeast into early next 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 continued cooler weather with highs in the mid-upper 60s inland (lower 70s across far SE VA/NE NC) on Friday. Highs have trended cooler for the weekend with temps expected to remain in the 60s to lower 70s SE for highs each day. Lows will be quite cool as well, upper 40s NW to upper 50s SE (around 60F along the coast) Friday and Saturday nights, and low-mid 50s (upper 50s along the coast) Monday night.

There remains a lot of uncertainty in the extended forecast, with a possible coastal low developing off the Carolinas this weekend. Confidence is increasing that this low will develop given strong ensemble support, but the exact track of the low is a little more uncertain as some guidance brings it along our coast, while others have it displaced further offshore. Pending the track of this coastal low, there is potential that we could see widespread rainfall and breezy to windy conditions, especially along the coast, this weekend. We will continue to monitor any model trends in the track and strength of this developing low closely over the next few days and adjust the forecast as necessary.

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.AVIATION /18Z TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 155 PM EDT Tuesday...

VFR conditions prevail across the terminals this afternoon as high pressure remains in control. This changes later tonight, though, when a cold front sweeps across the area. Partly cloudy skies this afternoon give way to overcast skies tonight. Showers associated with the front move into the area late this evening and likely do not impact terminals (RIC and SBY first) until early tomorrow morning. Kept the mention of showers in the RIC TAF, but will mention that morning high-res models trended down in precip coverage for central VA. Meanwhile, SBY could see moderate to heavy rainfall, which could impact vsbys. Expecting CIGs to drop to MVFR from NW to SE late tonight/early tomorrow morning. ECG does not look to drop to MVFR within the 18z TAF period, though. Did see some signal for IFR CIGs, but want to see some more consistency in the guidance before going too low with those. Winds switch around to the N behind the front, becoming breezy with gusts around 15kt tomorrow afternoon.

Outlook: Skies will clear out in the wake of the front Wednesday night, with a breezy NNE wind at the coast continuing into Thursday as a drier airmass moves in. Another period of sub-VFR CIGs are possible as we head into this weekend.

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.MARINE... As of 305 AM EDT Monday...

Key Messages:

- A Small Craft Advisory has been issued for the Chesapeake Bay north of Windmill Point this evening into tonight.

- A cold front crosses the waters Wednesday, brining elevated north to northeast winds and building seas. Elevated winds and seas linger through most of the week.

- Low pressure develops south of the area this weekend. While uncertainty remains high, dangerous marine conditions may develop later Saturday into early next week.

High pressure is centered offshore and northeast of Bermuda this morning, but it extends well westward into the Mid-Atlantic and Carolinas. S-SSE winds are generally 5-10 kt in the Chesapeake Bay and in the coastal waters, but 5 kt or less near the coast and in the rivers. These lighter winds will prevail through the rest of this morning into the early afternoon. SSE winds are forecast to increase some later this afternoon as the synoptic pressure gradient begins to tighten in response to an approaching cold front to our NW. A southwesterly low-level jet will also overspread the waters tonight. The wind is expected to become 15-20 kt for the central and northern Chesapeake Bay and coastal waters, with 10-15 kt S of New Point Comfort in the bay and S of Cape Charles in the coastal waters. A period of marginal Small Craft Advisory conditions is likely in the northern Chesapeake Bay after 00z/8 PM this evening and have raised a headlines from 00z/8 PM through 11z/7 AM Wednesday. Local wind probabilities for >18 kt sustained winds are 60-80% in this zone (ANZ630), dropping off considerably further S. Despite occasional gusts to 20-25 kt likely in the northern coastal waters, will hold off on SCAs for now with the expectation that seas remain in the 3-4 ft range (as reflected by numerical wave guidance).

The potent cold front will drop southward through the waters Wednesday. An abrupt shift in the wind direction to the N is expected Wednesday afternoon, along with a wind surge by the evening as cooler air quickly filters in and strong high pressure builds southward from the eastern Great Lakes vicinity. Strong Small Craft Advisory winds are currently anticipated, with some potential for a short period of gale-force gusts in the midnight-6 AM time frame Thursday. Probabilities and confidence are too low for Gale Watches, but this potential will be monitored over the next 12-24 hrs. In the wake of the cold front, a compressed pressure gradient will prevail over our local waters with anomalously strong high pressure to our north and lower pressures offshore of the Carolinas. Therefore, there is high confidence in SCA conditions continuing through most of this week. Seas are forecast to build to 5-7 ft by Wednesday night and then 6-9 ft (locally 10 ft in the NC waters) by Thursday.

Forecast uncertainty continues to remain high this weekend. However, there is agreement across most deterministic and ensemble model guidance that low pressure develops along a stalled coastal trough Saturday, drifting north or northeast near or just offshore of our coastline Sunday into Monday of next week. The track and strength of the low are the aspects of the forecast with the lowest confidence, with a closer and slower low track likely to lead to a prolonged period of significant marine impacts. Oppositely, more offshore track would limit the severity of impacts. At this time, will advertise strong Gale conditions in the marine forecast, but some model guidance illustrates higher- end scenarios with wind gusts of storm force. Additionally, seas are forecast to build to at least 8-12+ ft.

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.TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... As of 305 AM EDT Monday...

No coastal flooding is expected through Wednesday night, other than nuisance flooding near Bishop`s Head, MD this afternoon and again tonight. Given the very high astronomical tides combined with moderately strong NE winds, minor flooding is possible in areas adjacent to the lower Ches Bay and tidal York/James on Thursday and Friday. Additional coastal flooding is possible this weekend.

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.AKQ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MD...None. NC...None. VA...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 8 PM this evening to 7 AM EDT Wednesday for ANZ630.

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SYNOPSIS...AJB NEAR TERM...AJB SHORT TERM...AJB/RMM LONG TERM...AJB/RMM AVIATION...AC MARINE...SW TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...

NWS AKQ Office Area Forecast Discussion

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