674  
FXUS61 KCLE 301738  
AFDCLE  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CLEVELAND OH  
138 PM EDT MON JUN 30 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
A WARM FRONT WILL CROSS THE AREA EARLY TODAY BEFORE A COLD FRONT  
MOVES THROUGH TONIGHT INTO TUESDAY. HIGH PRESSURE WILL BUILD FROM  
THE WEST FOR TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY. A SURFACE TROUGH WILL  
MOVE THROUGH THE AREA ON THURSDAY. HIGH PRESSURE WILL RETURN FOR  
FRIDAY.  
 

 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY/
 
 
920 AM UPDATE...  
SCATTERED SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDER WORKING ITS WAY THROUGH  
AT THIS HOUR. EXPECT THIS OFF AND ON ACTIVITY TO CONTINUE INTO  
THE AFTERNOON/EVENING HOURS. TOOK A DEGREE OFF THE MAX  
TEMPERATURES TODAY HERE AND THERE WITH THE CLOUD COVER AND  
PRECIPITATION POTENTIAL.  
 
PREVIOUS DISCUSSION...  
A WARM FRONT IS ENTERING THE FORECAST AREA EARLY THIS MORNING AND  
THE MOISTURE ADVECTION WITH THIS FEATURE HAS ALLOWED FOR SOME LIGHT  
RADAR RETURNS ENTERING FROM THE SOUTHWEST WITH THE MID-LEVEL CLOUD  
DECK MOVING IN. OVERALL, SOME VERY LIGHT RAIN IS FALLING OUT OF  
THESE RETURNS BUT NOTHING HAS MEASURED SO FAR ACROSS WEATHER  
OBSERVATION STATIONS IN THE SOUTHWEST COUNTY WARNING AREA. HOWEVER,  
THESE RETURNS ARE A SIGNAL OF THE BETTER MOISTURE ENTERING THE  
REGION AS DEW POINTS ARE RETURNING TO THE LOWER 70S, WHICH WILL HAVE  
LARGER REPERCUSSIONS LATER IN THE DAY. A MORE POTENT BAND OF SHOWERS  
AND SOME EMBEDDED THUNDER HAS ENTERED SOUTHWEST OHIO AND WILL LIFT  
NORTH THROUGH THE MORNING HOURS, BRINGING THE FIRST ROUND OF RAIN  
FOR THE DAY FOR MOST.  
 
AFTER A BRIEF REPRIEVE AND RECOVERY PERIOD, ADDITIONAL SHOWERS AND  
STORMS ARE EXPECTED TO FORM AS THE ATMOSPHERE WILL REACH CONVECTIVE  
TEMPERATURES IN THE MID 80S. SOME STORMS COULD ALSO BE FORMED AS A  
RESULT ANY RESIDUAL BOUNDARIES FROM THIS MORNING'S ROUND OF RAIN.  
THESE WILL THEN MOVE EAST OUT OF THE AREA. A WEAK COLD FRONT/SURFACE  
TROUGH WILL THEN ENTER LATE. THIS FEATURE SHOULD GENERATE STORMS  
FURTHER WEST, WHICH SHOULD TRANSLATE ACROSS THE AREA DURING THE  
EVENING AND OVERNIGHT HOURS. OVERALL, THE SEVERE WEATHER RISK FOR  
TODAY IS FAIRLY TYPICAL OF SUMMER WITH HIGH INSTABILITY AND AMPLE  
MOISTURE ALLOWING FOR STRONG TO LOCALLY SEVERE CONVECTIVE CORES THAT  
WILL BE SUPPORTIVE OF A DAMAGING WIND THREAT. THERE IS VERY LITTLE  
WIND SHEAR OR UPPER LEVEL SUPPORT TO ALLOW FOR AN ORGANIZED SEVERE  
THREAT AND WINDOW, HENCE JUST A MARGINAL RISK FOR SEVERE WEATHER. IN  
ADDITION, THERE IS SOME CONCERN THAT THERE WILL BE A HIGH COVERAGE  
OF STORMS ACROSS THE AREA TODAY AND IF THE ATMOSPHERE CANNOT  
RECHARGE BETWEEN ROUNDS, THERE COULD BE JUST LOTS OF HEAVY RAIN AND  
SUB-SEVERE WIND THAT WOULD BE PRESENT ACROSS THE AREA. SPEAKING OF  
HEAVY RAIN, PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUES OVER 2 INCHES WILL POSE AN  
ISOLATED FLOOD THREAT TODAY - IT WOULD JUST COME DOWN TO THE TYPICAL  
COMBINATION OF POOR DRAINAGE/URBAN LOCATIONS SEEING MULTIPLE STORMS  
TODAY. STORMS SHOULD BE MOVING EAST AT A GOOD CLIP AND THIS ISN'T A  
TRAINING/BACKBUILDING SETUP, SO FLOODING CONCERNS ARE ISOLATED.  
 
THE SURFACE TROUGH WILL MOVE THROUGH THE FORECAST AREA TONIGHT INTO  
TUESDAY AND WILL END THE RAIN THREAT FROM WEST TO EAST. MOST FOLKS  
SHOULD BE DONE WITH RAIN BY EARLY AFTERNOON ON TUESDAY, IF NOT  
SOONER, AS HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS IN BEHIND THE TROUGH. TEMPERATURES  
WILL BE IN THE MID TO UPPER 80S TODAY, BUT DEW POINTS IN THE 70S  
WILL ALLOW FOR HEAT INDEX VALUES TO REACH THE LOWER 90S. HIGH  
TEMPERATURES ON TUESDAY WILL BE IN THE LOWER 80S.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/
 
 
THE MIDDLE OF THE WEEK FORECAST APPEARS FAIRLY UNEVENTFUL AT THIS  
TIME. FOR TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY, THE AREA WILL BE ON THE BACK  
SIDE OF A FRONT WITH HIGH PRESSURE BUILDING INTO THE REGION FROM THE  
WEST. LOW LEVEL FLOW WILL BE WEST TO NORTHWEST AND NOT ADVECTING TOO  
MUCH MOISTURE INTO THE REGION TO RECOVER BEHIND THE SHOWERS AND  
STORMS IN THE NEAR TERM PERIOD. AN UPPER TROUGH OVER NORTHERN  
ONTARIO WILL DIP SOUTHEAST ON WEDNESDAY NIGHT INTO THURSDAY AND  
ALLOW FOR A WEAK SURFACE TROUGH TO MOVE THROUGH THE GREAT LAKES  
REGION. THIS FEATURE COULD ALLOW FOR SOME SCATTERED SHOWERS AND  
STORMS ON THURSDAY. HOWEVER, NOT OVERLY EXCITED ABOUT STORM COVERAGE  
OR THE SEVERE WEATHER POTENTIAL, AS MOISTURE AND INSTABILITY WILL BE  
MODEST WILL SURFACE DEW POINTS IN THE LOW TO MID 60S. IN ADDITION,  
THE BETTER JET ENERGY TO ORGANIZE STORMS WILL BE WELL TO THE NORTH.  
TEMPERATURES THROUGH THE PERIOD WILL BE NEAR NORMAL FOR EARLY  
JULY.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/
 
 
HIGH PRESSURE SHOULD BE TRAVERSING THE OHIO VALLEY REGION FOR THE  
INDEPENDENCE DAY HOLIDAY AS AN UPPER RIDGE MOVES OVERHEAD. THIS  
SHOULD ALLOW FOR DRY WEATHER WITH NEAR NORMAL TEMPERATURES IN THE  
80S. THE SURFACE HIGH WILL MOVE EAST FRIDAY NIGHT INTO SATURDAY AS  
THE UPPER RIDGE AXIS ALSO PASSES THROUGH THE AREA. THIS WILL ALLOW  
FOR A WARM FRONT TO MOVE THROUGH AND ALLOW FOR THE POTENTIAL FOR  
SCATTERED SHOWERS AND STORMS ON SATURDAY, MAINLY DIURNALLY DRIVEN AS  
TEMPERATURES WILL SURGE BACK TOWARD THE 90 DEGREE MARK IN MANY  
LOCATIONS. FOR SUNDAY, SOME FORM OF AN UPPER TROUGH WILL DIP INTO  
THE GREAT LAKES REGION AND SUPPORT A COLD FRONT ACROSS THE AREA.  
THIS WILL ALLOW FOR SHOWER AND STORM CHANCES TO BE ON THE INCREASE;  
HOWEVER, THE COVERAGE AND INTENSITY WILL BE TIED TO THE STRENGTH OF  
THE UPPER TROUGH AND HOW MUCH MOISTURE AND INSTABILITY CAN BUILD  
AHEAD OF THIS SYSTEM - THESE DETAILS REMAIN VERY UNCERTAIN 7 DAYS  
OUT. SUSPECT THAT MANY AREAS WILL TRY TO EEK OUT A 90 DEGREE HIGH  
TEMPERATURE ON SUNDAY, UNLESS EARLY IN THE DAY CONVECTION HALTS  
THAT.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/
 
 
MIXED-BAG OF VFR, MVFR, AND EVEN POCKETS OF IFR ASSOCIATED WITH  
HEAVIER BURSTS OF RAIN AND/OR THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON.  
ANTICIPATE INCREASED COVERAGE OF IFR VSBYS RESULTING FROM HEAVY  
RAIN AND/OR THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING,  
ESPECIALLY ALONG AND EAST OF THE I-71 CORRIDOR AS A CLUSTER OF  
SHOWERS AND STORMS SLOWLY PUSHES EAST. THIS CLUSTER WILL BE THE  
MAIN FOCUS FOR NON-VFR CONDITIONS THROUGH THIS EVENING. WINDS  
MAY GUST IN THE 40 TO 50 MPH RANGE WITH ANY HEAVIER  
THUNDERSTORMS. COVERAGE OF SHOWERS AND STORMS WILL GRADUALLY  
DIMINISH AFTER SUNSET, THOUGH SOME SPORADIC NON- VFR WILL REMAIN  
POSSIBLE IN ISOLATED TO SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS.  
LIGHT, MAINLY VFR RAIN IS POSSIBLE ACROSS THE SOUTHERN TAF SITES  
LATE TUESDAY MORNING AND AFTERNOON.  
 
WINDS ARE GENERALLY OUT OF THE SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST EARLY THIS  
AFTERNOON, AROUND 10 KNOTS. WINDS WILL GRADUALLY FAVOR A  
WESTERLY DIRECTION LATE THIS EVENING AND OVERNIGHT, 5 TO 10  
KNOTS AS A WEAK COLD FRONT ATTEMPTS TO DROP SOUTHEAST ACROSS THE  
AREA. THE SOUTHERN TAF SITES MAY CONTINUE TO HOLD ON TO A  
SOUTHWEST WIND DIRECTION INTO TUESDAY AFTERNOON AS THE FRONT  
SLOWS ITS PROGRESSION.  
 
OUTLOOK...NON-VFR POSSIBLE IN SCATTERED SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS THURSDAY. OTHERWISE, MAINLY VFR EXPECTED THROUGH  
SATURDAY.  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
 
A WARM FRONT HAS LIFTED NORTH OF THE LAKE THIS MORNING, ALLOWING  
FOR WINDS TO SHIFT AND BECOME SOUTHWEST AT 5-10 KNOTS. THESE  
CONDITIONS WILL PERSIST TODAY UNTIL A COLD FRONT MOVES EAST  
TONIGHT INTO TUESDAY. DURING THE SHIFT FROM SOUTHWEST TO MORE  
WEST-NORTHWESTERLY, WINDS WILL BRIEFLY INCREASE UP TO 15 KNOTS.  
BY TUESDAY MORNING, THESE WINDS WILL PERSIST WITH ONSHORE FLOW  
RESULTING IN WAVES BUILDING TO 1-3 FEET ACROSS THE CENTRAL AND  
EASTERN LAKESHORES. HIGH PRESSURE BUILDING IN BEHIND THE  
DEPARTING FRONT WILL ALLOW FOR WINDS TO GRADUALLY WEAKEN ONCE  
AGAIN TO 5-10 KNOTS THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT. ANOTHER COLD FRONT  
IS EXPECTED TO ARRIVE ON THURSDAY, ONCE AGAIN SHIFTING WINDS TO  
HAVE A MORE NORTHERLY COMPONENT. NO MARINE HEADLINES ARE  
ANTICIPATED THROUGH THE NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
OH...NONE.  
PA...FLOOD WATCH UNTIL 10 PM EDT THIS EVENING FOR PAZ001>003.  
MARINE...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
SYNOPSIS...SEFCOVIC  
NEAR TERM...26/SEFCOVIC  
SHORT TERM...SEFCOVIC  
LONG TERM...SEFCOVIC  
AVIATION...KAHN  
MARINE...04  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab OH Page
The Nexlab PA Page Main Text Page