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Mink Creek Lake, Alaska Weather Forecast Discussion

317
FXAK68 PAFC 091352
AFDAFC

Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Anchorage AK 552 AM AKDT Tue Sep 9 2025

.SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA (Days 1 through 3)...

The forecast remains on track for a strong low near the Alaska Peninsula this morning to move into the Gulf of Alaska. Its front is currently over the western Gulf of Alaska and Kodiak Island this morning. Winds will gradually increase throughout the day for most places across Southcentral as the front continues north and east. As the low approaches the Gulf later today, northerly winds will gradually strengthen throughout Cook Inlet. Northeasterly winds will become gusty through the Matanuska Valley, to around 20 to 30 mph. As the northerly winds bend down the Inlet, Anchorage Bowl could have a share of the breeziness, peaking late this evening into tonight. As the front lifts along the northern Gulf coast, a barrier jet develops a strong easterly wind, parallel to the northern Gulf of Alaska and Prince William Sound coastlines, with gusts ranging from 55 to 65 mph tonight into Wednesday morning.

Accompanying the winds will be plenty of rainfall. Streams and rivers across the area have already experienced higher water levels due to recent rainfall events. Additional rainfall with this upcoming storm would lead to a quicker response from vulnerable streams and rivers. A hydrological outlook has been issued for additional details. Rainfall amounts through Wednesday evening range from 1 to 3 inches for most coastal locations along the Gulf and Prince William Sound. The highest rainfall totals are expected to be for the western Prince William Sound coastline to eastern Kenai Peninsula north of Seward where locally higher amounts around 4 inches is possible. Amounts from a few tenths to an inch can be expected at interior locations including the Copper River Basin, the Mat-Su valleys south to the western Kenai Peninsula. Multiple waves of precipitation will keep conditions wet for the rest of this week.

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.SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA/BERING SEA/ALEUTIANS (Days 1 through 3: Today through Thursday)...

The main feature of interest this morning is a large low currently centered to the south of Cold Bay. This low is beginning to steadily weaken as it becomes increasingly stacked/occluded, and the maximum winds enveloping the low have now diminished from Storm force to gale force. The strongest winds are now situated mainly to the west of the center across the southern Bering Sea, where a tight pressure gradient combined with cold air streaming south into the low is yielding northerly winds gusting as high as 50 to 60 mph from the Pribilofs south to the eastern Aleutians. Farther northeast, the low`s occluded front is making headway into Southwest this morning. Gusty easterly winds have already picked up from the northern AKPen into Bristol Bay, while bands of light to moderate rain also begin to lift north into Bristol Bay along and ahead of the front. Out to the west of the low, much calmer conditions are already making a return to the western Bering and Aleutian Chain as a high pressure ridge builds into place.

Forecast confidence and most of the details remain in good shape through the next two to three days. By tonight, the low will approach the western Gulf near or just south of Kodiak Island, while the corridor of strong northerly flow between the low and the high out over the western Bering advances east into the AKPen and much of Southwest Alaska. Winds will be particularly intense where flow funnels through gaps across the southern AKPen, where gusts through bays and passes on the Pacific side to around 45 to 55 mph will be possible from this evening into Wednesday night. Areas of rain associated with the front bending north will push up into the Kuskokwim Valley and Delta region through tonight as strong offshore winds also pick up.

Between Wednesday and Thursday, the most inclement conditions across the eastern parts of the outlook area will slowly ramp down as the low drifts farther out into the Gulf. Rain and low clouds will clear from west to east as the upper level portion of the Gulf low begins to open back up into a trough and partially merge with a separate Arctic trough drifting south over the western Interior. In fact, this interaction will favor quite a long fetch of northerly flow extending all the way up to the Chukchi Sea, allowing some of the coldest air we`ve seen in Southwest since the springtime months to make it down into the region on Thursday. Morning lows for Thursday will likely dip into the mid 30s to low 40s, and possibly even a few degrees colder for any places that see persisting northwest winds decouple from the surface. Meanwhile, out across the Bering, a weak low will push another round of rain showers across the western and central Aleutians through Thursday evening.

AS

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.LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7 - Friday through Monday)...

Model agreement by Friday is loose, however generally a low is expected to be situated in the northern Gulf of Alaska bringing rain to the Southcentral Coastline. Inland precipitation is expected to be lighter and primarily confined to higher elevations. Valleys and the lee side of the mountain ranges will remain mostly dry. Out west, agreement is worse with weak features moving through the region and models not coming together on placement or timing, however a generally unsettled pattern is likely due to the lack of any major features such as a low or ridge.

By Saturday, there is moderate confidence towards a low pressure system developing in the northern Pacific and advancing towards the southwestern Gulf of Alaska by late Sunday. Agreement on the track of this low is poor, with some solutions bringing it up near the southern Alaska Peninsula and others toward Southeast Alaska. Either way, this would likely result in easterly flow across the northern Gulf coast and an increased rain potential early next week for Southern Alaska.

-CL

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.AVIATION...

PANC...Low level wind shear is expected with lighter northerly flow at the surface and strengthening southeasterly winds above 1000 feet late this afternoon/evening. Conditions otherwise are anticipated to remain primarily VFR. Precipitation is expected to begin late this morning, but increasing southeasterly flow over the mountains will help keep any rainfall relatively light. However, ceilings could dip to MVFR levels during periods of heavier rain.

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NWS AFC Office Area Forecast Discussion

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