


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Anchorage, AK
Issued by NWS Anchorage, AK
506 FXAK68 PAFC 130103 AFDAFC Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Anchorage AK 503 PM AKDT Sat Jul 12 2025 .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA (Days 1 through 3/Today through Tuesday evening)... Currently, there is a large upper high over Central Alaska. This high is allowing for calm winds and clearer conditions across Southcentral. However, there are some weak shortwaves moving through the region. Showers and thunderstorms are possible in the Talkeetna Mountains and the higher elevations of the Copper River Basin with these waves. The Susitna Valley could see some storms moves in from the Talkeetna Mountains due to easterly storm motion. Sunday is almost the same story as today (Saturday). The high will slowly track eastward, but will still influence the region in the form of light winds and lower rain chances. There will still be instability present in the Talkeetna Mountains and the Copper River Basin, so chances for showers and thunderstorms remain. A pattern shift occurs on Monday. The upper high moves east into Canada while a more troughy pattern moves into Southcentral. A front pushes in from the south, allowing for widespread light rainfall across the interior of Southcentral. Some blocking will occur in the Susitna Valley, but the Anchorage, and Matanuska Valley should see rainfall lasting through Tuesday morning. As with everything, there is uncertainty in how this situation will unfold. Some guidance has the front taking a more eastward track, leaving the Anchorage and Mat-Su Valley regions drier and giving the Prince William Sound region the brunt of the rainfall. Other guidance has the core of rainfall impacting Anchorage and Palmer. The real solution will likely fall somewhere in the middle. Winds will pick up to an extent in the gap regions, but will remain on the weaker side with this shortwave. Temperatures will cool down to the upper 50s and low 60s thanks to the increased cloud cover and rainfall. Afterwards, weaker shortwaves will pass through from the west, keeping rain chances elevated in the higher elevations. Looking ahead to Wednesday shows that model agreement falls off the cliff as a low in the north Pacific tracks eastward. Most guidance has a different scenario with some tracking it into the Gulf of Alaska while others have it take a more northerly track. The only thing that can be deciphered is that some kind of a front will move into Southcentral. -JAR && .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA/BERING SEA/ALEUTIANS (Days 1 through 3: Tonight through Tuesday)... Southwest Alaska and the Bering Sea remain fairly quiet under a weak flow regime. Weak ridging over the Alaska mainland continues to build in today over Southwest Alaska, leading to high temperatures in 70s for most of interior Southwest Alaska. Weak shortwaves rotating around the ridge have combined with these warm temperatures to produce scattered to numerous showers along an axis from the Western Alaska Range over the Kilbuck and Ahklun Mountains. Though none of have been observed yet, embedded within these showers is the potential for some isolated thunderstorms this evening. Showers are forecast to move off the high terrain into the Kuskokwim Delta, bringing thunderstorm potential with them. Showers, and any thunderstorms along with them, diminish tonight with the loss of surface heating. Out west, a weak surface low brings light rain and low stratus to the Bering Sea and Aleutians. The low dips south of the Aleutian Chain tonight, spreading precipitation as far as the eastern Aleutians and southern Alaska Peninsula. Otherwise, a col over the eastern Bering Sea leads to stagnant conditions with stratus and fog. The upper component of the low weakens and elongates, pushing back north on Sunday. This combines with an incoming front off a Kamchatka low that returns southerly winds to the western Bering Sea. Light offshore flow for Southwest Alaska shifts onshore and intensifies as surface high pressure builds to the east over the Gulf of Alaska beginning tonight. This will bring in cooler and more stable conditions, increasing fog and stratus potential along the coast. Additionally, thunderstorms retreat inland for Sunday afternoon/evening, being limited to the Lower Kuskokwim Valley and Western Alaska Range. By Monday, the bulk of the front pushing into the Bering reaches the Pribilof Islands, though winds remain below gale force. A broad shortwave trough lifts across Southwest Alaska, which will continue to promote showers each afternoon and evening. For the beginning of the week, expect high temperatures to cap out around 60 degrees for much of Southwest Alaska. On Tuesday, in addition to the low out west, a second low lifts up around the ridge in the Gulf/Northeast Pacific, bringing steady rainfall to the Alaska Peninsula. && .LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7: Wednesday through Saturday)... The longterm forecast begins on Wednesday with a low in the northwestern Gulf of Alaska and another low in the western Bering Sea. Models are still struggling with the placement and evolution of the low in the Gulf of Alaska. The GFS quickly moves the low to the northeast into Canada by Thursday morning, the Canadian shows the low tracking to the northwest and being absorbed into the aforementioned Bering low, and the ECMWF has the Gulf low moving due east to the Alaska Panhandle by Friday morning. Therefore, confidence on precipitation and sky conditions is still low. Towards the end of the longterm, high pressure builds across the Copper River Basin and should promote a better chance for less clouds and drier conditions. In the Bering Sea, the low pressure system generally remains over the Bering during most of the longterm while high pressure strengthens over the AK Mainland. The main uncertainty with the Bering low is in regards to how it interacts with surrounding shortwaves/lows and the speed of its surface front. The GFS solution would push the front quickly across SW AK and portions of Southcentral (with the bulk of precipitation across SW on Saturday morning), whereas the Canadian front is slower (with the bulk of precipitation across SW on Sunday morning). Nonetheless, expect an active pattern out west during the long term period. && .AVIATION... PANC...Ceilings expected to remain primarily VFR between 5-8 kft through this evening with the potential for scattered showers mainly along the Chugach Mountains. High pressure will build into the region tonight with winds remaining light. This could set the stage for low marine stratus to begin to work up the Cook Inlet towards the terminal by Sunday morning. Confidence is stronger for low clouds for the southern end of Cook Inlet, but less so for the low clouds to work as far north as the PANC terminal Sunday morning. && $$