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Marietta, Washington Weather Forecast Discussion

642
FXUS66 KSEW 050339
AFDSEW

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Seattle WA 839 PM PDT Thu Sep 4 2025

.SYNOPSIS...An upper level ridge will continue to keep conditions warm and dry through tomorrow. Hazy conditions will continue with the present pattern through at least this weekend due to smoke being put out by fires in the region. The ridge will shift further inland Friday night, which will give way to a couple disturbances from an upper level low this weekend into next week. Besides cooler temperatures, there is a chance of showers and a slight chance of thunderstorms with these disturbances, with the thunder threat including the entire coverage area on Saturday.

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.SHORT TERM /TONIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/...The Red Flag Warning for the west slopes of the Cascades will expire at 9 PM this evening as planned. Still lots of wildfire smoke over the region with Moderate air quality in the Seattle metro and Whatcom County. 33

Previous discussion...Current synoptic pattern depicts an upper level ridge over the Pacific Northwest region, with a couple of lows on both sides of the ridge helping to amplify it somewhat. A surface trough also sits to the east in eastern WA. Satellite shows some high clouds and quite a bit of smoke aloft due to fires in the area, giving the sky a hazy appearance. Only areas near fires will see the smoke/haze mix down to near the surface during the day. A red flag warning continues for the Cascades through tonight due to hot, dry and unstable conditions (see fire discussion below). Temperatures remain on the climb this afternoon, and despite some of the haze, there`s already been some areas reaching the 80s (particularly the Cascade Foothills). Otherwise, due to increasing smoke aloft, it may be difficult for additional interior areas to break 80 today (except for southern interior and Puget Sound areas).

On Friday the upper level ridge will move inland, and an upper level low will dig southward off the coast of the Pacific. It will remain offshore through early next week, with a few shortwave troughs swinging around the low affecting much of the northwestern CONUS. The first disturbance Friday evening will bring a 20% chance of thunder in the south Cascades, and a 20-30% chance of showers extending into the lowlands.

Saturday and Sunday will increased chances of showers across the region with up to a 50-60% of PoPs. There is also a more widespread area included in the threat of thunder on Saturday, with the lowlands and Olympics/coast seeing a 20% chance of thunder, and the Cascades seeing a 30-35% chance. The threat Sunday of thunder is more confined to the Cascades (30%), and the north interior and Olympics (15-20% chance). Saturday will have the most instability across the region with mean NBM CAPE up to 1500 J/kg in the mountains, and lapse rates up to 7.5 deg/km, so will need to watch for the potential of a couple stronger storms producing localized small hail, gusty winds, and downpours (possibly affecting burn scars, though it will not be possible to predict exact areas affected this far out).

Temperatures will drop considerably this weekend, with highs only reaching the mid/upper 70s (Saturday), and low 70s (Sunday). Lows however will stay in the upper 50s to low 60s (due to cloud coverage). Winds will remain light, and switch from northwest tonight/Friday, to southwest this weekend. Dew points will still remain slightly muggy (upper 50s to low 60s in the interior/coast).

.LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...Ensembles are in good agreement with the low moving inland early next week. Monday will see the last chance of thunderstorms into next week (Cascades and most of the interior lowlands), with showers lingering regionwide through midweek. Highs will remain cool with temperatures in the 60s to low 70s, and lows cooling into the 50s.

HPR

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.AVIATION...Southerly flow aloft will continue an upper ridge axis east of the Cascades gradually weakens and an upper trough remains offshore. The low level flow is weakly onshore. Shallow marine stratus producing areas of LIFR/IFR ceilings and reduced surface visibility will spread partially inland once again on Friday morning.

KSEA...Hazy conditions and variable amounts of high and mid clouds will continue tonight. A shallow marine layer producing LIFR ceilings is expected to reach the terminal for a short period once again on Friday morning. Surface winds west to northwest 4 to 7 knots this afternoon becoming light and variable again tonight.

27/McMillian

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.MARINE...A weak surface ridge will remain over the coastal and offshore waters into Friday with lower pressure over the interior producing light onshore flow. A weak trough will gradually move into the coastal waters over the weekend into early next week, but will produce little in the way of impacts. 27

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.FIRE WEATHER...Warm, dry, and unstable conditions continuing into Friday. The very dry conditions and increasing instability in the afternoon hours today will keep the Red Flag Warning for fire weather zones 658 and 659 in effect through tonight but the RH improvements for Friday will lower the fire weather conditions from critical to elevated Friday. Shallow marine layer in the late night and morning will continue to give excellent RH recoveries in the lowlands. Even with more onshore flow, the layer will not be deep enough tonight to improve RH recoveries in the mid-slopes and ridges in the Cascades and Olympics. Cooler conditions over the weekend with a deeper marine layer will bring about an end to the threat. There is even a chance of showers over the weekend but also with possible widespread thunderstorms (20-35+%) in the afternoons and evenings. there is a slight chance for thunderstorms as early as Friday afternoon for the very southern end of the west slopes of the WA Cascades. Confidence remains low with exact coverage and intensity of the convective activity, though fire weather conditions will remain elevated through the weekend due to the threat of lightning. Felton/JBB

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.SEW WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... WA...Red Flag Warning until 9 PM PDT this evening for West Slopes of the Central Cascades Generally above 1500 Feet-West Slopes of the North Cascades Generally above 1500 Feet.

PZ...None. &&

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NWS SEW Office Area Forecast Discussion

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