Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Charleston, WV

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786 FXUS61 KRLX 150752 AFDRLX AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Charleston WV 352 AM EDT Wed May 15 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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Rounds of showers give way to more widespread rain and embedded thunderstorms today as a slow moving system crosses the area. Mainly dry Thursday, then unsettled and wet to end the week.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 230 AM Wednesday... Rounds of showers will continue this morning as a slow moving low pressure system and a warm front sit to our southwest, pushing multiple shortwave disturbances through the area today. Showers will be light to moderate overnight with most of the convective activity staying to our south until after daybreak. Very stagnant air flow is occurring with surface high pressure sitting to our east and subsidence from departing shortwave perturbations. As a result, low stratus and some fog will develop this morning affecting the mountains, coalfields, and the Tri-State Area with low visibilities at times. Confidence is low in widespread convective/thunderstorm activity associated with this system. HiRes CAMs are also leaning to the pessimistic side, keeping the greatest potential across the southern coalfields, greater SE Ohio and the Tri-State Area of WV/KY/OH. These areas will be closest to the low which will be the source of greatest lift. Thinking that more intense showers will contain embedded lightning and thunder mid-morning into late afternoon. SPC does have the area outlooked for general thunderstorms to cover the possibility. As the low pressure center crosses the area later today, showers will become more widespread in coverage. The air column will fairly saturated as this system passes with some decent amounts manifesting from some heavier showers. WPC as a result has our area outlooked for a marginal risk as the combination of slow moving cells and favorable terrain could lead to some localized flooding today into tonight. Long-term FFG suggests that we will be able to handle most if not all of what we receive today and tonight, especially with the full greenup across the forecast area. Short-term 1hr/3hr FFG is lower between 1" to 1.5", but this is manageable unless more intense cells train over the same areas throughout the day. && .SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/...
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As of 255 AM Wednesday... Most convective shower activity should have come to an end by Thursday morning. We could see a some diurnally driven terrain- based showers and t-storms in the afternoon and evening hours. That will quickly shut off after dark, and Thursday night looks dry across the CWA. Given the recent rains, we`ll have to monitor sky cover and winds for fog potential overnight, at least in the valleys. With the potential for some patchy sunshine, we have highs forecast in the mid-70s to near 80 degrees in lower elevations, and 60s to lower 70s in the mountains. Thursday night lows, like the fog, will depend a lot on the cloud cover and winds. For now, we`re forecasting lows in the 50s to near 60 degrees across the area, but some valleys could drop lower if they decouple.
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&& .LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
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As of 315 AM Wednesday... Another slow-moving system looks to move east from the Plains towards the Ohio Valley and Midwest to end the week. The speed at which showers and perhaps a few thunderstorms make it into the CWA remains a bit uncertain based on the latest guidance, but we can expect isolated to scattered activity to move fully into the area by around sunset on Friday. The vertically stacked surface and upper-level lows will slowly move across the region between later Friday night and Saturday night, with widespread showers and embedded thunderstorms expected. We`ll have to keep an eye out for potential hydro issues Friday and Saturday, especially for any areas that receive higher rain totals from the current event. Models are a bit split on whether the base of the trough will pass to the east Saturday night or Sunday, but the balance of guidance would point towards it being by daybreak on Sunday, with a general decrease in shower and storm chances that day. However, some showers and storms may linger in the NW`ly flow, specially in the mountains courtesy of some orographic lift. There seems to be reasonably good agreement on Monday likely being dry under ridging, but solutions diverge on whether the next rain chances move in on Tuesday or hold off until mid-week. High temps in the extended period are forecast to waver between near normal and several degrees above normal. Given the frequent cloud cover, increased dew points, and frequent rain chances, lows will tend to run milder than normal.
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&& .AVIATION /07Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
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As of 110 AM Wednesday... Conditions are variable right now due to low stratus and scattered showers, but most sites are reporting VFR, except for HTS which is experiencing LIFR conditions due to fog and low stratus. CRW is hinting at the same conditions as well and will likely see IFR and LIFR restrictions in the next few hours. VIS restrictions will bounce this morning at most sites as fog, light winds, and showers will all vary through the morning. BKW, CRW and HTS will see the worst restrictions this morning though. CIGs will drop to low-end MVFR and IFR due to low stratus and scattered showers with gradual improvement to mostly MVFR expected through the day today; VFR expected by ~00Z tonight except across the mountains. Rounds of scattered showers will continue to move through this morning due to a slow moving low pressure system and warm front to our southwest. Allowed TEMPO groups at multiple sites to cover the uncertainty with timing for showers as well as cover variable VIS restrictions. There remains a chance for thunderstorms by mid-morning into early afternoon, but confidence is low in widespread thunderstorm activity so allowed VCTS at BKW, CRW and HTS as these sites will be closest to greatest forcing. Winds light and variable this morning, especially across the lowlands where directions will vary between north and southeasterly. The mountains will remain light and mostly southeasterly with breezy gusts at times. Expecting much more variability this afternoon as a low pressure center tracks across the area. FORECAST CONFIDENCE AND ALTERNATE SCENARIOS THROUGH 06Z THURSDAY... FORECAST CONFIDENCE: Low ALTERNATE SCENARIOS: VIS and CIG will vary overnight. Fog may be more dense than advertised at BKW, CRW and HTS. Thunderstorms could be more scattered than forecasted. 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. DATE WED 05/15/24 UTC 1HRLY 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 EDT 1HRLY 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 CRW CONSISTENCY M L M L L H M H H H H H HTS CONSISTENCY L L L L L L M M H M H H BKW CONSISTENCY L L L L M L M H H H H H EKN CONSISTENCY M M M M H L L H H H H H PKB CONSISTENCY L M H H H H H H H H H H CKB CONSISTENCY H H H H H H H H H H H H AFTER 06Z THURSDAY... Scattered IFR visibilities and ceilings are possible in low stratus and remnant rain showers Wednesday night into Thursday morning.
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&& .RLX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... WV...None. OH...None. KY...None. VA...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...FK/LTC NEAR TERM...LTC SHORT TERM...FK LONG TERM...FK AVIATION...LTC