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Rutherford, Pennsylvania Weather Forecast Discussion

353
FXUS61 KCTP 060620
AFDCTP

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service State College PA 220 AM EDT Mon Oct 6 2025

.SYNOPSIS... * Dry conditions with well above normal daytime temperatures will continue on Monday under the influence of high pressure centered off the Delmarva Coast. * Increased rain chances Tuesday through Wednesday morning with an approaching cold front. * Dry and notably cooler conditions return for the second half of the week with overnight low temperatures pushing closer to the freezing mark.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TODAY/... Patchy Valley fog and some small areas of low clouds in the Lower Susq Valley is the only forecast concern for later tonight/early Monday. Even with respect to fog, forecast min temps will create an air/water temp diff of less than 15 deg F, which greatly minimizes the extent of fog in the larger stream and river valleys.

Temps are going to be a deg or two milder tonight vs last night, the wind will be calm again and dewpoints may be a few deg F higher. Rule of thumb that says "If your temp reaches the aftn dewpoint overnight, you`ll fog in" and is valid tonight.

That seems to fit over the SE half of the area. But, it probably won`t be a solid/wide patch of fog/low clouds. Will call it patchy fog for the time being and let the overnight shift refine that IF NEEDED. Otherwise, temps dip into the m40s-m50s.

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.SHORT TERM /TONIGHT THROUGH 6 PM TUESDAY/... Still looks great (dry and warmer than normal) Monday after any patchy morning fog burns away. Wind should pick up a little, and mainly from the S/SW. But, the wide gradient will mean the direction may be just as dependent on local effects than the gradient. The hill-top sites (BFD/JST) should be a little better bet to follow the gradient-based guidance. A bit more moisture starts to stream in from the west aloft. So, not another sunny day, rather mostly sunny with just mid-high clouds in the warm sector.

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.LONG TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/... The aforementioned (short-term) surface low pressure system continues to shift northeastward into northern Ontario/Quebec in the beginning stages of the long-term forecast period. This track allows for a cold frontal passage to occur across central Pennsylvania Tuesday into Wednesday morning. Rain chances start to increase Tuesday late morning/early afternoon generally in a northwest-to-southeast across the forecast area with the bulk of precipitation expected to occur through Wednesday afternoon based on recent GEFS plumes. There remains some model disparity in timing; however, with the best chances of precipitation across the northwestern half of the CWA mainly in the Tuesday afternoon/evening timeframe. QPF returns continue to look overall unimpressive in terms of a "drought-busting" with current QPF form this system generally under one inch across the entire forecast area, in fair agreement with recent deterministic model guidance, outside of the ECMWF that does outlines spot amounts just above one inch. At this time, have leaned towards the GFS solution, as instability remains to appear weak, thus general thought is that it will be harder to come by those spot amounts reaching over one inch.

Dry conditions (once again) seem to be in play as the cold front clears the region by Wednesday afternoon/evening as high pressure builds into the region. Recent model guidance shows fair agreement with regards to the aforementioned 1032mb high pressure setting up directly over the region, allowing for clear skies and ample radiational cooling across central Pennsylvania Wednesday night and Thursday night. Freeze concerns are becoming increasing likely across the northern tier of Pennsylvania on Wednesday night, with recent NBM guidance outlining near-to-sub 32 degree temperatures across portions of McKean and Potter Counties for multiple cycles. Frost concerns appear increasingly likely for the bulk of the area Wednesday and Thursday nights outside of the south-central and Lower Susquehanna Valley zones; however, less confidence on the southeastward extent at this time.

Fair amount of uncertainty resolves towards the end of the long-term forecast period with recent deterministic model guidance outlining two separate solutions for the Friday and Saturday forecast periods. Main source of uncertainty comes with respect to the upper-level pattern. First solution outlines an amplified trough at 500mb bringing some rain chances to central Pennsylvania later on in the afternoon/evening Friday and into Saturday morning. While the second solution outlines a slightly less amplified upper-level trough potentially leading to less rainfall chances. Given the spread in model guidance, have decided to roll with NBM this cycle.

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.AVIATION /06Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... VFR conditions are currently being observed across central Pennsylvania with valley fog progged to begin forming in the 07-09Z timeframe across central Pennsylvania. At this time, bulk of model guidance continues to keep restrictions out of all airfields; however, cannot rule out some restrictions at IPT/LNS given lower dew point depressions as of 06Z. Restrictions would likely be limited to the 09-11Z timeframe before VFR prevails areawide though the 06Z Tuesday with very high (~90%) confidence.

Outlook...

Tue...Sct SHRA. TSRA poss W & S late.

Tue PM...CFROPA. SHRA/TSRA. IFR fog poss mainly NW.

Wed...Sct AM SHRA SE. Otherwise becoming VFR.

Thu...AM fog then VFR.

Fri...AM fog, otherwise clear with VFR conditions.

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.CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

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$$

SYNOPSIS...Lambert/Dangelo NEAR TERM...Lambert/Dangelo SHORT TERM...Lambert/Dangelo LONG TERM...NPB AVIATION...NPB

NWS CTP Office Area Forecast Discussion

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