112  
FXUS62 KJAX 231825  
AFDJAX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JACKSONVILLE FL  
125 PM EST SUN NOV 23 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
FOR THE LATEST NE FL AND SE GA DAILY KEY MESSAGES PLEASE VISIT:  
HTTPS:/WWW.WEATHER.GOV/MEDIA/JAX/BRIEFINGS/NWS-JAX-BRIEFING.PDF  
 
- FOG POTENTIAL EACH MORNING THROUGH WEDNESDAY.  
 
- THE FOG MAY BECOME DENSE TONIGHT.  
 
- NEAR RECORD HIGHS INLAND THROUGH WEDNESDAY  
 
- EXTENDED DRY SPELL CONTINUES THROUGH WEDNESDAY. BE VERY  
CAUTIOUS WITH OUTDOOR FIRES CHECK FOR LOCAL BURN BANS. SEVERE  
TO EXTREME DROUGHT EXPANDING ACROSS INLAND AREAS  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/  
 
THIS AFTERNOON, WEAK FRONTAL BOUNDARY ACROSS THE CENTRAL PARTS  
OF THE AREA WITH SUFFICIENT MOISTURE FOR PLENTY OF CUMULUS CLOUDS  
OVER NORTHEAST FL. MULTIPLE RUNS OF THE HRRR AND OTHER GUIDANCE  
SUGGEST ISOLATED TO POTENTIALLY SCATTERED SHOWERS FORMING OVER  
INLAND NORTHEAST FL ALONG AND AHEAD OF THE FRONT, WITH MAIN FORCING  
LOW LEVEL CONVERGENCE WITH A WEAK AREA OF LOW PRES LIKELY FORMING  
AROUND LAKE CITY FL. MODEL SOUNDING SHOWED MLCAPE OF ABOUT 1000-1200  
J/KG THIS AFTERNOON AND RECENT SPC MESO PAGE INDICATED MLCAPE OF  
1165 J/KG AROUND GAINESVILLE, TRENTON, AND OCALA FL. HOWEVER,  
GIVEN THE AMOUNT OF DRY AIR ALOFT AND RELATIVELY WEAK DYNAMIC  
FORCING, CHANCE OF A THUNDERSTORMS SEEMS LESS THAN ABOUT 10  
PERCENT. MAX TEMPS INTO THE UPPER 70S TO LOWER 80S TODAY WITH  
POSSIBLE RECORD AT CRG WHERE THE CURRENT RECORD IS 83 IN 2013.  
LOW LEVEL WINDS TURN TO THE NORTHEAST ALONG THE COAST THIS  
AFTERNOON WHICH WILL LIKELY RE-PRIME PORTIONS OF THE AREA FOR  
MOISTURE AND THEREBY POTENTIAL FOG DEVELOPMENT LATER TONIGHT.  
 
FOR TONIGHT, A FEW LINGERING SHOWERS OVER OR NEAR NORTH CENTRAL  
FL WILL DISSIPATE BY ABOUT 10 PM. THE FRONT CONTINUE TO DRIFT  
SOUTH OF THE AREA, AND HIGH PRESSURE WILL BUILD TO THE NORTH.  
WE SHOULD SEE THE SURFACE WINDS DECREASE FROM THE NORTHEAST TO 5  
MPH OR LESS. SKIES WILL BE MOSTLY CLEAR, AND WITH THE DRY AIR  
ALOFT AND THE LIGHT TO CALM WINDS, FOG POTENTIAL WILL INCREASE  
AFTER MIDNIGHT. FOR THE INLAND AREAS, AT LEAST AREAS OF FOG ARE  
EXPECTED THROUGH SUNRISE MONDAY MORNING, WITH DENSE FOG ADVISORIES  
POSSIBLE ONCE AGAIN. LOW TEMPS IN THE LOWER 50S ACROSS INLAND  
SE GA AND MID/UPPER 50S ACROSS INLAND NE FL AND LOWER 60S ALONG  
THE ATLANTIC COASTAL AREAS.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/  
 
HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS OVER THE EASTERN SEABOARD OF THE CONUS AT THE  
START OF THE NEW WEEK AS THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY FROM SUNDAY WILL BE  
SOUTH OF THE LOCAL AREA. NORTHEASTERLY FLOW DEVELOPS ACROSS COASTAL  
LOCATIONS WITH AROUND 10 TO 15 MPH. ALONG INLAND LOCATIONS EASTERLY  
FLOW WILL BE PRESENT WITH WINDS AROUND 5 TO 10 MPH, WITH DECREASING  
WINDS THE FURTHER AWAY FROM THE EAST COAST. VERY LOW CHANCES OF  
SHOWERS ACROSS NORTH CENTRAL FL THROUGH THE DAY AS DRY AIR CONTINUES  
TO FILTER IN FROM THE NORTHWEST. DAYTIME HIGHS IN THE UPPER 70S TO  
LOWER 80S, LOWER TEMPS ALONG COASTAL LOCATIONS IN THE MID 70S. BY  
THE OVERNIGHT HOURS LOWS WILL DIP TO THE UPPER 50S ACROSS INLAND  
LOCATIONS AND THE LOWER 60S ALONG THE COAST. SOME OFFSHORE SHOWERS  
MAY BE POSSIBLE DURING THE OVERNIGHT HOURS ALONG THE FRONTAL  
BOUNDARY.  
 
BY TUESDAY, THE HIGH PRESSURE TO THE NORTH WILL BEGIN TO SHIFT  
TOWARDS THE ATLANTIC AS ANOTHER FRONTAL BOUNDARY WILL BEGIN TO MOVE  
TOWARDS THE SE CONUS, NEARING SE GA BY THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. THE  
DEPARTING HIGH PRESSURE WILL BRING ABOUT A SHIFT IN THE WIND FLOW  
FROM NORTHEASTERLY TO A MORE SOUTHEAST-SOUTHERLY FLOW AND THEN  
FINALLY SOUTHWESTERLY BY TUESDAY NIGHT. A BIT WARMER TEMPERATURES ON  
TUESDAY AS WINDS SHIFT TO BECOME SOUTHERLY. DAYTIME HIGHS IN THE  
LOWER TO MID 80S OVER INLAND LOCATIONS WITH UPPER 70S TO LOWER 80S  
ALONG THE COAST. OVERNIGHT LOWS WILL BE SIMILAR TO MONDAY NIGHT,  
WITH UPPER 50S FOR INLAND LOCATIONS AND LOWER 60S ALONG THE COAST.  
 
WEAKENING WINDS AND LOW LEVEL MOISTURE WILL LIKELY SEE FOG DEVELOP  
OVER INLAND LOCATIONS DURING THE EARLY HOURS EACH MORNING. THE  
DEVELOPING SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW TUESDAY EVENING WILL LIKELY BRING THE  
HIGHER CHANCES OF FOG DEVELOPMENT OVER NE FL.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/  
 
A COLD FRONT WILL APPROACH THE AREA BY WEDNESDAY. ISOLATED TO  
SCATTERED SHOWERS AND ISOLATED STORMS MAY DEVELOP AHEAD AND ALONG  
THE FRONT AS IT ENTERS SE GA AND TOWARDS THE FL/GA STATE LINE BY THE  
AFTERNOON HOURS INTO EARLY EVENING HOURS. AS MUCH OF THE AREA WILL  
STILL BE IN FRONT OF THE FRONT ON WEDNESDAY, DAYTIME HIGHS WILL  
PRIMARILY BE IN THE LOWER TO MID 80S, WITH UPPER 70S ALONG FAR  
INLAND SE GA. COME THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, TEMPERATURES WILL TOP OUT IN  
THE 60S WITH COOLER TEMPERATURES ON FRIDAY AS A HIGH PRESSURE AND A  
COLD, DRY AIR MASS BUILDS IN BEHIND THE FRONT. BREEZIER CONDITIONS  
DEVELOP ON THURSDAY AND FRIDAY AS NORTHWESTERLY WINDS REACH AROUND  
10 TO 15 MPH ACROSS INLAND LOCATIONS AND GUSTS UP TO 25-30 MPH OVER  
THE LOCAL WATERS. OVERNIGHT LOWS WILL DIP TO NEAR FREEZING ACROSS  
INLAND SE GA THURSDAY NIGHT, BUT FROST DEVELOPMENT WILL LIKELY BE  
LIMITED DUE TO THE LIGHT BREEZE OVER THE AREA. OVERNIGHT LOWS WILL  
'WARM' A BIT ON FRIDAY NIGHT, BUT STILL REMAIN IN THE UPPER 30S  
ALONG INLAND SE GA AND THE 40S ALONG INLAND NE FL. WINDS WILL BEGIN  
SHIFT TO BECOME NORTHEASTERLY TO EASTERLY BY THE UPCOMING WEEKEND  
AS THE HIGH PRESSURE SHIFT AWAY TOWARDS THE ATLANTIC. DRY CONDITIONS  
WILL CONTINUE INTO THE START OF THE UPCOMING WEEKEND.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z SUNDAY THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/  
 
VFR CONDITIONS WILL PERSIST THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING. FOG AND  
STRATUS WILL DEVELOP AGAIN TONIGHT, WITH RESTRICTIONS EXPECTED. THE  
FOG MAY BE SLOW TO LIFT MONDAY MORNING, BUT VFR CONDITIONS  
SHOULD PREVAIL BY LATE MORNING.  
 
 
   
MARINE  
 
A WEAK FRONTAL BOUNDARY WILL PUSH SOUTH ACROSS THE LOCAL WATERS BY  
TONIGHT. HIGH PRESSURE SYSTEM WILL THEN BUILD NORTH OF THE REGION  
TONIGHT INTO MONDAY, RESULTING IN BREEZY ONSHORE WINDS. THE HIGH  
BUILDS EAST OF THE ATLANTIC COAST TUESDAY AS A STRONGER COLD FRONT  
APPROACHES FROM THE WEST. THE FRONT WILL PRESS SOUTH OF THE LOCAL  
WATERS WEDNESDAY NIGHT INTO THURSDAY, TRAILED BY NORTHWEST  
TO NORTH WINDS NEAR SMALL CRAFT EXERCISE CAUTION CRITERIA.  
 
RIP CURRENTS: LOOKING AT CONDITIONS ALONG THE BEACHES AND SOME  
SURF AND WEBCAMS REPORTING, SURF LOOKS TO BE ABOUT 1 FOOT OR  
LESS SO HAVE LOW RISK REST OF TODAY. NWPS WAVE GUIDANCE HAS LOW  
PROBABILITIES AS WELL. FOR MONDAY, MODERATE RISK FOR AREA  
BEACHES AS THE NORTHEAST FLOW AND A BIT HIGHER SURF MAY BE  
ENOUGH TO PUSH INTO MODERATE CATEGORY.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
PATCHY HIGH DAYTIME DISPERSIONS ALONG AND NORTH OF I-10 MONDAY  
AFTERNOON  
 
AREAS OF HIGH DAYTIME DISPERSIONS ON WEDNESDAY  
 
CRITICALLY LOW MIN RH VALUES RESUME OVER INLAND AREAS THURSDAY  
AND FRIDAY AFTERNOON  
 
COLD FRONT WILL CONTINUE TO PRESS TOWARDS NORTHEAST FLORIDA THIS  
AFTERNOON WITH NORTHWEST WINDS 5-10 MPH AS HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS IN  
FROM THE NORTHWEST. HIGH PRESSURE WILL BE NORTH OF THE AREA MONDAY  
AND SHIFT OFF THE MID ATLANTIC COAST BY MONDAY EVENING, LEADING TO  
THE NORTHEASTERLY WINDS TURNING EASTERLY BY THE AFTERNOON HOURS.  
HIGH PRESSURE WILL EXIT NORTHEAST OF THE REGION TUESDAY WITH A WARM  
FRONT LIFTING NORTH ACROSS THE AREA ALLOWING WINDS TO BECOME  
SOUTHERLY, BUT NO RAIN EXPECTED. A COLD FRONT WILL APPROACH FROM THE  
NORTHWEST ON TUESDAY NIGHT/WEDNESDAY MORNING AND THEN PUSH THROUGH  
THE AREA LATE WEDNESDAY WITH INCREASING CHANCES FOR SHOWERS AND  
ISOLATED T'STORMS OVER SOUTHEAST GA, BUT WITH SWIFT ENOUGH MOVEMENT  
TO PREVENT A WETTING RAINFALL. INCREASING SOUTHWESTERLY SURFACE AND  
TRANSPORT WINDS WILL PRODUCE AREAS OF HIGH DAYTIME DISPERSIONS  
WEDNESDAY.  
 
A MUCH DRIER AIRMASS ARRIVES FOR THE END OF THE WEEK AS STRONG HIGH  
PRESSURE BUILDS IN FROM THE NORTHWEST THAT WILL PLACE CRITICALLY LOW  
MIN RH VALUES OVER THE AREA THURSDAY AND FRIDAY.  
 
FOG POTENTIAL AND OTHER REMARKS...AREAS OF DENSE FOG WILL DEVELOP  
TONIGHT AWAY FROM THE COAST AS THE COLD FRONT SLOWLY SHIFTS SOUTH OF  
THE AREA. PATCHY FOG WILL REMAIN POSSIBLE ACROSS NE FL BOTH TUESDAY  
AND WEDNESDAY MORNINGS.  
 
 
   
CLIMATE  
 
DAILY RECORD HIGH MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES AT LOCAL CLIMATE SITES...  
 
SUN 11/23 MON 11/24 TUE 11/25 WED 11/26  
 
JACKSONVILLE, FL (JAX) 84/1992 86/2014 85/1992 84/1946  
CRAIG EXEC ARPT (CRG) 83/2013 84/2014 83/1992 83/2020  
GAINESVILLE, FL (GNV) 88/1906 86/1948 85/1955 84/1973  
ALMA, GEORGIA (AMG) 84/1941 83/1986 83/1986 84/1973  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
AMG 52 78 56 81 / 0 0 0 0  
SSI 59 74 62 76 / 0 0 10 0  
JAX 57 78 59 83 / 0 0 0 0  
SGJ 63 78 63 81 / 0 0 10 0  
GNV 58 82 58 84 / 10 0 0 0  
OCF 60 81 59 84 / 20 0 0 0  
 
 
   
JAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
FL...NONE.  
GA...NONE.  
MARINE...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
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