FXUS66 KMFR 150336 AFDMFR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Medford OR 836 PM PDT Mon Oct 14 2024 .DISCUSSION...Satellite imagery shows higher clouds associated with a frontal boundary beginning to push toward southern Oregon and northern California with some marine stratus occurring underneath these clouds. This is the front that will be arriving at some point tomorrow and could produce a little bit of rainfall across the area. Winds will be a bit breezier tomorrow ahead of the front. In all, the forecast looks well enough along. Please see the previous discussion below for more details. -Schaaf && .PREV DISCUSSION... /Issued 429 PM PDT Mon Oct 14 2024/ Updated AVIATION Discussion... DISCUSSION...Warm and stable weather continues today across northern California and southern Oregon under the back side of an upper ridge. Temperatures across the area will remain about 10 degrees above seasonal averages today. Areas west of the Cascades will see similar temperatures to Sunday, and areas to the east will warm by no more than 5 degrees as the ridge axis over that area. On Tuesday, an upper trough will approach in the wake of the ridge and bring cooler conditions. Temperatures will remain about 5 degrees above normal on Tuesday afternoon under this shifting pattern, with more cooling possible if cloud cover moves over the area earlier than expected. An initial cold front may bring precipitation to coastal counties during the day Tuesday (10-30% chances), with chances increasing in the evening. This first front will support elevated precipitation chances (50-100%) through the day Wednesday as it moves eastward, with the highest rainfall totals expected the Cascades and over Modoc and southern Lake counties. Temperatures on Wednesday will fallow just below seasonal averages. A second cold front will follow on Thursday, bringing another round of precipitation across the area. Coastal ranges, especially at and north of Cape Blanco, are expected to see more rainfall with this front. Colder air will move over the area, lowering snow levels to 4500-5000 feet during the day Thursday. This could bring 1 to 4 inches of rainfall over the Cascades on Thursday morning and afternoon. Residual surface warmth makes any accumulation on roads unlikely. This cold air will also bring widespread below freezing temperatures to areas east of the Cascades on Wednesday and Thursday nights, with chances of frost-making temperatures reaching into west side valleys. Winter weather hazards are not expected to be needed with these fronts. However, extra caution is encouraged during travels through this period. Initial precipitation may lift accumulated oils to road surfaces, further reducing traction on rain-wet roads. Debris on roads may accumulate along areas where water flows. Lingering water on roads and sidewalks may freeze overnight on Wednesday and Thursday night. Temperatures will hover around seasonal norms as conditions dry out on Friday and Saturday. Deterministic guidance for both the GFS and ECMWF models suggest another round of rainfall on Sunday into Monday morning, although uncertainty follows. Ensemble guidance for both models show frequent but unorganized precipitation chances beyond next Monday, with the most agreement appearing late next week. While the timing will continue to develop, the meteograms for both models suggest that precipitation will stay in the forecast through the end of October. -TAD AVIATION...15/00Z TAFs...A frontal system is bringing another round of cloud cover to coastal areas this afternoon. Initially, at North Bend, it will be a mix of VFR/MVFR, then conditions lower to IFR/LIFR this evening with a little light rain/drizzle around or after 09z. The low conditions probably last through Tuesday morning. Farther inland, VFR this afternoon and evening will give way to some clouds with MVFR likely developing in the Umpqua Basin, including Roseburg, by around sunrise. Precipitation with the front will fall apart as it heads inland, so while there's a 20% chance of rain at Roseburg Tuesday morning, probabilities were not high enough to include in the TAF. Medford and Klamath Falls will be VFR with some high cirrus at times and mostly light winds through Tuesday morning. An approaching front at the end of the current TAF period will bring some stronger winds to areas east of the Cascades Tuesday afternoon, as well as increasing cloud cover. -Spilde/BR-y MARINE...Updated 200 PM PDT Monday, October 14, 2024...South winds will shift to northerly tonight into Tuesday, but remain generally light as a weak front moves onshore. Even so, a long period moderate west swell will bring high, steep and hazardous seas tonight that will gradually subside through Tuesday. Another front will move through late Tuesday night into Wednesday with some rain. Moderate south winds in advance of the front will once again shift to northerly by morning. A third front will move through Wednesday night into Thursday with breezy north-northwest winds followed by a moderate northwest swell. -Spilde BEACH HAZARDS...Updated 200 PM PDT Monday, October 14, 2024...Long period westerly swell and an existing long period southerly swell will combine to bring a moderate risk of sneaker waves to area waters through this evening. As such, a beach hazards statement remains in effect until 8 pm PDT. Sneaker waves are an unpredictable wave that can surge farther onto the beach than expected. These waves can roll logs and carry large debris as they move up the beach. The wave itself or the objects caught in it can knock beachgoers off their feet and sweep them out into the cold open water. Cold water immersion can be dangerous, even deadly. -Spilde FIRE WEATHER...Updated 200 PM Monday October 14, 2024...Increased west to southwest winds are on tap Tuesday in advance of the week's first cold front. There are some fair uncertainties as to how much rain will fall, but confidence is 50-65% that the Cascades north of highway 140 will receive wetting rain. Thereafter through Thursday, lowering snow levels with additional frontal passages will bring periodic rain and mountain snow showers, most abundant across the Cascades westward. Wetting rains should impact the majority of this area with several inches of snow for the Cascades above 4000 feet by Thursday mooning. A pattern change is on tap for the weekend. Stavish && .MFR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...CA...None. PACIFIC COASTAL WATERS...Small Craft Advisory until 2 AM PDT Tuesday for PZZ350-356-370-376. && $$