


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Anchorage, AK
Issued by NWS Anchorage, AK
247 FXAK68 PAFC 020316 AFDAFC Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Anchorage AK 716 PM AKDT Mon Sep 1 2025 .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA (Days 1 through 3)... Discussion: The synoptic pattern persists. A ridge of high pressure remains over the Gulf, a long wave trough and associated upper low over the Bering, and continued jet level support flows up the Alaska Peninsula and across the mainland interior. A good fetch of moisture is still being pulled northwards between the Gulf high and the Bering low. Since Sunday, several shortwave troughs have moved around the base of the low and lifted north across western Alaska. Light rain will continue along the western side of Cook Inlet and Susitna Valley overnight into Tuesday. Gusty winds are possible for the areas through Tuesday morning when the pressure gradient is set to relax. The quasi-stationary front over Bristol Bay and the AKPen will receive an additional reinforcing nudge as the parent low opens into a wave as it moves over Alaska. This will shift showers eastwards through Tuesday morning. Models are honing in on the next feature that lifts across the AKPen Wednesday morning, bringing additional wind and rain that takes a track along the western side of Cook Inlet and into the Susitna Valley. By Wednesday afternoon, widespread rain is expected across Southcentral with 0.25 to 0.50 inch for most areas, and 1 to 2 inches of additional rain across Talkeetna and Denali State Park. - PP/ER && .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA / BERING SEA / ALEUTIANS (Monday to Wednesday)... Widespread rainfall continues to taper off this evening. A short- lived ridge of high pressure builds in overnight and lasts through tomorrow afternoon bringing dry conditions. Rain and gusty winds return tomorrow evening continuing into Wednesday evening. Rainfall ends within the next few hours in Bristol Bay and Southwest Alaska. In its wake, dry conditions, areas of fog and calm winds can be expected through tomorrow afternoon for all of Southwest Alaska, the Bering Sea and the Aleutians. Model disagreement remains over the next low pressure system pushing northward from the North Pacific. Its associated front brings rain and gusty gap winds to the Eastern Aleutians, Alaska Peninsula and Southwest Alaska coast beginning tomorrow afternoon and lasting through late Wednesday evening. Forecasted wind gusts with this storm in the Eastern Aleutians` gaps and passes are trending higher and, the highest speeds are expected in Cold Bay and portions of the Alaska Peninsula. Rainfall amounts across the models range from 0.50" to 1.00" during the event though if the ECMWF model comes to verify, rainfall amounts region wide would be measured on the lower end of this range. -DJ && .LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7 - Friday through Monday)... True to early September, the weather will remain active for much of Southwest and Southcentral Alaska through the weekend into early next week. For the period beginning on Thursday night, the pattern will be characterized by a ridge across the eastern Bering Sea into the North Pacific and western Gulf of Alaska, with a strong low across the Aleutians, likely centered somewhere near the Rat Islands, and moving northeastward in the direction of the Pribilof Islands. Meanwhile, Southcentral Alaska will be under the influence of a departing trough. Rain will likely be diminishing across Southcentral AK Thursday night into early Friday, with the greatest uncertainty in how quickly it clears up depending on the low timing. Attention turns towards the gale-force low in the Bering Sea Friday and Saturday as it treks northeast towards the Pribilofs and then Southwest Alaska. The Aleutian Chain gets the worst of the weather from this system as the attendant fronts draw northward an atmospheric river from the North Pacific which will bring heavy rain and strong gale-force winds to the chain as it sweeps across. Model agreement is surprisingly good with this system, suggesting a `landfall` of the low near Nunivak Island Saturday evening, weakening to somewhere in the vicinity of 995mb as it does so. There`s also decent agreement that, while the first half of the weekend might be dry for Anchorage and the rest of Southcentral, precipitation then overspreads SC AK late Saturday and Sunday as moisture is drawn northward from the North Pacific. At this time, this looks like a widespread wetting rainfall, but the good news is that the numbers/probabilities aren`t quite lighting up as an anomalously heavy rain as we experienced at the end of last week. What reasonable model agreement we had before is lost by the start of next week. There are some signals of another strong low marching across the Bering, while some models signal at a lower- amplitude wave train. Either way, it`s September in Alaska- be prepared for rains to glisten the yellowing foliage. -Brown && .AVIATION... PANC...VFR conditions are expected to persist through the TAF period. Ceilings of 5,000 feet with a scattered lower deck are also possible through this evening and again early Tuesday morning when chances for light rain also increase this evening with periods of showers lasting into Tuesday morning. Winds will turn southeasterly and increase as the Turnagain Arm winds bend into the terminal this evening through Tuesday morning. Peak winds look to occur this afternoon through tonight with gusts up to 25 kts at times. Southeast winds remain Tuesday morning but gusts should be below 20 kts before diminishing further Tuesday afternoon. && $$