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Morgan Cemetery West Virginia Weather Forecast Discussion

004
FXUS61 KRLX 141702
AFDRLX

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Charleston WV 102 PM EDT Tue Oct 14 2025

.SYNOPSIS... Dry weather stretches across the work week amid strong upper level ridging. A moisture starved cold frontal passage Wednesday morning will bring cooler weather to close out the work week.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... As of 100 PM Tuesday...

Widespread low stratocumulus and stratus across WV, behind a surge of low level cold advection, will continue to lift and break up into a low cumulus field this afternoon, much like the status quo over the rest of the area. These clouds will become increasingly confined to areas in and near the mountains tonight, only to reaffirm control Wednesday morning, behind a dry cold front. These clouds will again lift and break up into a low cumulus fields Wednesday afternoon, revealing a mid deck associated with a mid/upper-level flat wave driving the morning front through.

Temperatures were suppressed by the low clouds today, but should still bottom out around normal tonight, similar to lows this morning in most locations. Highs Wednesday will again be close to normal and within a few degrees of highs today, the cooler air counteracting some increase in sunshine versus today.

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.SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... As of 100 PM Tuesday...

Canadian high pressure builds over the area this period, with very dry air bringing mainly clear sky. It will also be cooler, with lows below normal Wednesday night and especially Thursday night. Highs Thursday will be a bit below normal, in the mid to upper 60s across the lowlands and 50s to low 60s over the higher terrain.

Lows Wednesday nigh will be in the mid to upper 30s across the north, lowest in the better sheltered mountain valleys, where frost is likely. With the high directly overhead Thursday night, radiational cooling conditions will be most ideal, with lows in the 30s throughout the area, and as low as the low 30s in the better sheltered mountain valleys, where frost will occur and a freeze is even possible. Low spots out across the northern and central lowlands, and valleys within the central and southern mountains, could also have frost come early Friday morning.

Frost and even freeze headlines will most likely be warranted during those time frames if this forecast trend holds, so will continue to monitor the extent of possible affected counties over the next few forecast cycles.

The very dry air will also lead to minimum relative humidity percentages in the 30s Thursday afternoon, even the 20s in spots. However, high pressure just north of the area will keep surface winds light, reducing the risk of fire spread.

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.LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 100 PM Tuesday...

Ridging shifts east of the area at all levels Friday through Saturday, allowing a full-lattitude mid/upper-level trough to approach from the west. That trough will drive a surface cold front through the area on Sunday, before crossing itself Sunday afternoon and night. Models are still divergent on the exodus of this mid/upper-level trough Sunday night and Monday, the more progressive Canadian still allowing mid/upper-level ridging to build from the west on Monday, while the ECMWF and especially the GFS slow the feature down and close off a mid/upper-level low over the northeastern states.

After a continuation of dry weather, with a stout warming trend, Friday and Saturday, the amplified system is likely to pull enough Gulf moisture northward ahead of it for showers Saturday night through Sunday night. This timing is likely to be better resolved in future forecasts, but the showers are most likely during the day on Sunday.

There could be a thunderstorm in the middle Ohio Valley Saturday evening if the front, or at least a lead surface trough, gets close enough. By contrast, there could be a thunderstorm Sunday afternoon if the front is slow enough to allow sufficient diurnal heating ahead of it, the amplified system somewhat offsetting the lowering autumn sun angle. Central guidance seems to split the difference, with the slight chance for a thunderstorm Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon.

The Storm Prediction Center carries a Slick Risk level 15 percent chance for severe thunderstorms within 25 miles of a point well upstream, across the mid Mississippi Valley, for Day 5, Saturday and Saturday night. In tandem, the Weather Prediction center carries a Marginal Risk level 5 percent chance for excessive rainfall within 25 miles of a point well upstream, across a smaller portion of the mid Mississippi River Valley but a bit farther up the lower Ohio River Valley, for Day 5, Saturday and Saturday night. Believe the early timing and progressive nature of the system should mitigate these concerns, respectively, for the forecast area on Day 6, Sunday.

The end of the forecast period vaguely resembles the restoration of dry weather, with Monday bringing drying and clearing given a more progressive solution, or clouds and even the chance for showers given a slower, more amplified mid/upper-level trough and possibly even a secondary cold front. Central guidance portrays a slight chance for showers Monday morning lifting quickly northeast during the day.

Temperatures climb above normal Friday through Saturday night ahead of the incoming system, and then back down to and below behind it early next week. Relative humidity percentages will drop down to the 20s and 30s Friday afternoon. However, flow will again be light, reducing the risk of fire spread. Flow will increase a bit from the south on Saturday, but so should dew points and, albeit to a lesser extent given the higher high temperatures, minimum afternoon relative humidity percentages.

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.AVIATION /14Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 100 PM Tuesday...

Widespread low stratocumulus and stratus will continue to lift and break up into a low cumulus field this afternoon. These clouds will become increasingly confined to areas in and near the mountains tonight, only to reaffirm control Wednesday morning, behind a dry cold front. Low MVFR ceilings are forecast east of the Ohio River Wednesday morning, which could briefly drop to IFR in and near the mountains. These clouds will again lift and break up into a low cumulus fields Wednesday afternoon, revealing a mid deck associated with a mid/upper- level flat wave driving the morning front through.

Northerly surface flow will be a tad gusty at times this afternoon, before becoming calm to light and variable tonight, and then light north again on Wednesday. Light to moderate northerly flow aloft this afternoon will become light north tonight. This flow should be just sufficient enough to once again mitigate fog development overnight into Wednesday morning, but could see some attempt to form in the river valleys near EKN and CRW.

FORECAST CONFIDENCE AND ALTERNATE SCENARIOS THROUGH 12Z WEDNESDAY...

FORECAST CONFIDENCE: Medium.

ALTERNATE SCENARIOS: Improvement on ceilings this afternoon and then renewed restrictions due to stratus and stratocumulus cloud invading from the north again Wednesday morning may vary from the forecast.

EXPERIMENTAL TABLE OF FLIGHT CATEGORY OBJECTIVELY SHOWS CONSISTENCY OF WFO FORECAST TO AVAILABLE MODEL INFORMATION: H = HIGH: TAF CONSISTENT WITH ALL MODELS OR ALL BUT ONE MODEL. M = MEDIUM: TAF HAS VARYING LEVEL OF CONSISTENCY WITH MODELS. L = LOW: TAF INCONSISTENT WITH ALL MODELS OR ALL BUT ONE MODEL.

UTC 1HRLY 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 00 01 02 EDT 1HRLY 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 CRW CONSISTENCY L H H M M M M M M M M M HTS CONSISTENCY M M M M M M M M M H H H BKW CONSISTENCY M M M L L L L M M M M M EKN CONSISTENCY M M H H H M M H H M M M PKB CONSISTENCY M M M M M M M M H H H H CKB CONSISTENCY H H H H H M M M M M M M

AFTER 12Z WEDNESDAY... Patchy IFR river valley fog is possible each morning for the rest of this week.

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.RLX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... WV...None. OH...None. KY...None. VA...None.

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SYNOPSIS...TRM NEAR TERM...TRM SHORT TERM...TRM LONG TERM...TRM AVIATION...TRM

NWS RLX Office Area Forecast Discussion

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