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Powers, Oregon Weather Forecast Discussion

165
FXUS66 KMFR 060003
AFDMFR

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Medford OR 503 PM PDT Fri Sep 5 2025

.DISCUSSION...Updated Aviation Section...

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.AVIATION...06/00Z TAFs...There are brief periods of MVFR to VFR right now while ceilings are breaking. The layer will solidify and remain at IFR/LIFR tonight into Saturday morning.

Inland areas look to remain VFR through the TAF period. Smoke from area fires may periodically impact visibilities for inland terminals, but any lower flight levels would be brief. Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected across Lake and northern Klamath counties as well as over the Cascades this afternoon and evening. While terminals are not expected to be directly affected, thunderstorms may produce gusty and erratic outflows that could move across inland areas. The next TAF update will have information on shower/thunderstorm potential west of the Cascades for Saturday afternoon. -TAD/Hermansen

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.PREV DISCUSSION... /Issued 225 PM PDT Fri Sep 5 2025/

DISCUSSION...A few storms are just starting to pop up on radar this afternoon over Lake and northern Klamath counties. More on that below. Meanwhile, a deep marine layer with fog, low stratus, and drizzle lies firmly entrenched along the coast and over the coastal waters. This marine layer is likely to stay in place for a while, and some locations along the immediate coast may not fully break out of the clouds for several days.

A cooling trend has started today and will continue into next week, with high temperatures eventually reaching 10-15 degrees below normal by Monday/Tuesday. Highs today will be around 5 degrees cooler than yesterday for West Side Valleys with similar temperatures for the rest of the area. Our daily thunderstorm chances will continue this afternoon and into the weekend, with the focus of activity today expected to be in the northern Cascades, and southeastward into portions of Klamath/Lake/eastern Modoc counties. Later this evening and overnight into Saturday morning, guidance shows the potential for some overnight thunderstorms again west of the Cascades. While none of the CAMs are showing activity tonight, they also didn`t show the storms last night over Douglas and Coos counties. Considering this morning`s activity lined up with model indicated elevated instability, and models again show this for tonight combined with a negatively tilted shortwave approaching and moving through the region, it`s reasonable to believe that there could be thunderstorms during the overnight period tonight. Isolated showers/thunderstorms will be possible just about anywhere west of the Cascades, including the coast and over the marine waters.

Thunderstorm chances continue into the daytime Saturday, focused along and east of the I-5 corridor, and some guidance is really honing in on the area between I-5/US-199 and the Cascade crest as the most likely location for development, which includes Medford, Roseburg, and Grants Pass. Expect another 5 degrees or so of cooling for afternoon temperatures, including areas east of the Cascades and in northern California, which will bring the area down to temperatures more in line with what we typically see this time of year. Sunday is expected to be very similar to Saturday, aside from a further few degrees of cooling.

Late Sunday, the parent trough that has drifted around over the eastern Pacific firing shortwaves at us this week will finally move onshore and stick around through early next week. This pattern change will result in below normal temperatures and several days (roughly Sunday night through Wednesday) of light, but beneficial, showery precipitation (with some embedded thunderstorms possible) that would make the area feel more like October than early September. We are confident that healthy measurable rainfall will occur across the area over the first half of next week, which would definitely be helpful with local firefighting efforts, and would put a large dent in fire weather concerns. /BR-y/BPN

MARINE...Updated 200 PM PDT Friday, September 5, 2025...North winds will turn south through today, with marine fog and low clouds persisting for the next several days. An upper level low will pass over the area late today into Saturday, with showers and drizzle likely, and a stray thunderstorm or two possible. Outside of potential showers/thunderstorms, expect generally calm conditions with no significant swell, light winds, and widespread showers ahead of an area of low pressure moving onshore early next week. -BPN

FIRE WEATHER...Updated 200 PM PDT Friday, September 5, 2025... A Red Flag Warning is in place for Fire Weather Zones 617/623/624/625/285 from 1 PM through 9 PM tonight. An upper trough moving over the area looks to provide instability for isolated to scattered thunderstorms this afternoon and evening. Lake County is expected to see the most activity, with storms also possible over eastern Modoc, northern Klamath, and eastern Douglas counties. Isolated storms may also develop west of the Cascades. Lesser chances for activity are also in the forecast for areas west of the Cascades. While winds aloft go from south to north and should guide most storm motion, some models show isolated west side cells moving to the southwest. This movement may result from outflow crossing the Cascades and continuing westward. The early morning thunderstorms over Roseburg and North Bend today were caused by outflow from Thursday night`s activity. Outflow is tough to predict and dependent on individual storm characteristics, so seeing the possibility in modeling may be significant. Other areas not mentioned so far (eastern Siskiyou, western Modoc, and southern Klamath counties) look to avoid activity tonight due to drier air aloft. Isolated activity may continue into Saturday morning.

For Saturday and Sunday, drier air aloft looks to limit thunderstorm chances east of the Cascades. Northernmost Lake and Klamath counties may see isolated activity. For Saturday, slight chances (15-25%) for thunderstorms are present along the Cascades and into western Siskiyou County as well as Jackson, eastern Josephine, and eastern Douglas counties. Models show good agreement on the area. While isolated coverage is generally expected, some models show borderline scattered coverage. A Red Flag Warning is not needed as of this afternoon, but any significant increase in forecast activity may support a warning being issued on Saturday morning. On Sunday, thunderstorm chances along and west of the Cascades continue but decrease (10-15%), with the highest chances limited to easternmost Douglas county. Beyond thunderstorm chances, gusty southerly winds may develop over east side terrain and into the southern Shasta Valley in the afternoon and evening of both Saturday and Sunday. The combination of these winds and forecast RH values does not reach critical conditions, but the winds are worth acknowledging.

A pattern change remains in the forecast for Monday, bringing cooler temperatures and widespread rain shower chances that may continue into midweek. Occasional embedded thunderstorms are possible, but reliable signals are not yet present in guidance. -TAD

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.MFR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...Red Flag Warning until 9 PM PDT this evening for ORZ617-623>625.

CA...Red Flag Warning until 9 PM PDT this evening for CAZ285.

PACIFIC COASTAL WATERS...None.

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NWS MFR Office Area Forecast Discussion

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