164  
FXUS61 KLWX 160313  
AFDLWX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BALTIMORE MD/WASHINGTON DC  
1013 PM EST SAT FEB 15 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
LOW PRESSURE WILL LIFT FROM THE MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE  
ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY THROUGH SUNDAY. THE TRAILING STRONG COLD  
FRONT WILL CROSS FROM WEST TO EAST SUNDAY AFTERNOON. ARCTIC HIGH  
PRESSURE WILL THEN BUILD TOWARD THE REGION FOR THE FIRST HALF  
OF NEXT WEEK BEFORE A COASTAL LOW POSSIBLY IMPACTS THE AREA  
WEDNESDAY INTO THURSDAY.  
 

 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY/
 
 
VERY CHANGEABLE WEATHER CURRENTLY AND OVER THE NEXT 24 HOURS  
WITH MULTIPLE HAZARDS, SO MAINLY SUMMARIZING THE  
HIGHLIGHTS/CHANGES HERE.  
 
FLOOD WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT. THE LATEST GUIDANCE SUGGESTS THE  
HIGHEST RAIN TOTALS WILL BE ACROSS HIGHLAND, AUGUSTA, NELSON,  
AND ALBEMARLE COUNTIES. AT THIS POINT, SUCH COUNTIES HAVE SEEN  
AROUND 1 TO 1.50 INCHES, LOCALLY NEAR 2 INCHES IN A COUPLE OF  
SPOTS.  
 
THE MOST FAVORABLE AREAS FOR FOG DEVELOPMENT TONIGHT APPEAR TO  
BE EAST OF THE BLUE RIDGE AS RAIN TAPERS TO DRIZZLE OVERNIGHT.  
WEST OF THE BLUE RIDGE MAY REMAIN A BIT MORE MIXED AND WARMER.  
 
THE MAIN CONVECTIVE FINE LINE IS FORECAST TO MOVE THROUGH DURING  
THE LATE MORNING/EARLY AFTERNOON WHEN MUCH OF THE AREA MAY  
REMAIN IN THE STABLE WEDGE AIRMASS. THAT PUTS THE SEVERE WEATHER  
RISK IN QUESTION. EITHER WAY, LIGHTNING WILL BE LIMITED, SO IT  
WILL BE IMPORTANT TO STAY WEATHER AWARE FOR CHANGING CONDITIONS.  
 
WHILE THE HIGHEST CONFIDENCE IN HIGH WIND WARNING CRITERIA (58  
MPH GUSTS) IS IN THE MOUNTAINS, THERE WAS ENOUGH EVIDENCE IN THE  
00Z GUIDANCE TO GO WITH HIGH WIND WARNINGS FOR ALL LOCATIONS  
PREVIOUSLY IN THE HIGH WIND WATCH. VERTICAL MIXING IS RATHER  
IMPRESSIVE BEHIND THE FRONT WITH SOME FORECAST SOUNDINGS  
ATTEMPTING TO MIX DOWN 50 TO 55 KNOT WINDS AT THE TOP OF THE  
MIXED LAYER. MEANWHILE, FROM EARLIER, THE SOUTHERN TIER OF  
COUNTIES IN CENTRAL VIRGINIA REMAIN IN WIND ADVISORIES. EVEN IF  
45-PLUS MILE PER HOUR GUSTS ARE ISOLATED, SATURATED SOILS COULD  
AID IN TREE DAMAGE OCCURRING.  
 
BEHIND THE FRONT, PRECIPITATION WILL CHANGE TO SNOW IN THE  
UPSLOPE AREAS ALONG AND WEST OF THE ALLEGHENY FRONT. THIS SNOW  
MAY BE HEAVY AT TIMES AS STEEP LAPSE RATES COOL INTO THE DGZ.  
THIS SNOW WILL ALSO BE OVERLAPPING WITH THE STRONGEST WINDS.  
THEREFORE, THE FAVORED UPSLOPE ZONES ARE IN BLIZZARD WARNINGS  
IN LIEU OF A HIGH WIND WARNING. THE REMAINDER OF THE WESTERN  
ZONES REMAIN IN A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FOR A COMBINATION OF  
ACCUMULATING AND BLOWING SNOW.  
 
EVEN THOUGH HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL SHOW THE MID 50S TO MID 60S  
ON SUNDAY, EXPECT THIS TO BE A BRIEF SPIKE IN THE VICINITY OF  
THE FRONTAL PASSAGE FOR A LOT OF AREAS.  
 
PREVIOUS DISCUSSION:  
 
THE NEXT SYSTEM IS BRINGING A PROLONGED PERIOD OF UNSETTLED  
WEATHER TO THE AREA THROUGH MONDAY, PRODUCING MULTIPLE WEATHER  
HAZARDS LOCALLY. AT UPPER LEVELS, A POTENT SHORTWAVE IS ASSUMING  
A POSITIVE TILT AS IT EJECTS OUT OVER THE SOUTHERN PLAINS, AND  
THEN EVENTUALLY A NEGATIVE TILT AS IT PROGRESSES NORTHEASTWARD  
TOWARD THE OHIO VALLEY/GREAT LAKES ON SUNDAY. SUCH AN EVOLUTION  
IS CAUSING AN AREA OF LOW PRESSURE TO FORM OVER ARKANSAS, AND  
THEN RAPIDLY INTENSIFY AS IT TRACKS NORTHEASTWARD THROUGH THE  
OHIO AND SAINT LAWRENCE RIVER VALLEYS TONIGHT INTO SUNDAY.  
 
A PROLONGED PERIOD OF WARM ADVECTION/OVERRUNNING WILL CONTINUE  
THROUGH THIS EVENING. A BIT OF A LULL (WITH SOME LEFTOVER  
DRIZZLE/FOG) WILL LIKELY OCCUR OVERNIGHT, BEFORE A SECOND ROUND  
OF PRECIPITATION MOVES THROUGH ON SUNDAY IN ASSOCIATION WITH  
STRONG DIFFERENTIAL CYCLONIC VORTICITY ADVECTION DRIVEN ASCENT  
AHEAD OF THE UPPER TROUGH. A STRONG COLD FRONT WILL MOVE THROUGH  
SUNDAY AFTERNOON, WHICH MAY BRING ANOTHER ROUND OF SCATTERED  
SHOWERS, WITH STRONG COLD ADVECTION AND NORTHWESTERLY WINDS  
ENSUING BEHIND THE FRONT.  
 
WARMER AIR SHOULD MOVE IN AT THE SURFACE ACROSS THE ENTIRE AREA  
DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON/EARLY EVENING HOURS. PRECIPITATION  
SHOULD BE RAIN FOR ALL TONIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING EXCEPT  
PERHAPS ON ISOLATED RIDGES.  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORIES REMAIN IN EFFECT FOR FOR THESE AREAS  
UNTIL 7 PM. AGAIN, IT'S WORTH EMPHASIZING THAT THIS WILL BE AN  
ELEVATION DRIVEN EVENT, WITH LITTLE TO NO IMPACT EXPECTED IN THE  
VALLEYS.  
 
HEAVY RAINFALL/FLOODING: THIS SYSTEM IS EXPECTED TO PRODUCE A  
BROAD ONE TO TWO INCHES OF PRECIPITATION ACROSS MUCH OF THE  
AREA. THIS PRECIPITATION WILL BE SPREAD OUT OVER A PROLONGED  
PERIOD OF TIME, SO MOST LOCATIONS AREN'T EXPECTED TO HAVE ISSUES  
WITH FLOODING. THE EXCEPTION WILL BE IN THE ALLEGHENIES, AND  
THEN EASTWARD INTO AUGUSTA COUNTY, WHERE A COMBINATION OF THAT  
RAINFALL AND SNOWMELT COULD LEAD TO ISOLATED INSTANCES OF  
FLOODING. A FLOOD WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT FOR THOSE LOCATIONS  
THIS EVENING THROUGH SUNDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
HIGH WINDS: AS LOW PRESSURE RAPIDLY DEEPENS AND TRACKS OFF TO  
OUR NORTH, STRONG WINDS ARE EXPECTED IN ITS WAKE. THE SYSTEM'S  
COLD FRONT WILL MOVE THROUGH THE AREA SUNDAY AFTERNOON. GIVEN  
EXTREMELY STRONG PRESSURE RISES AND A ROBUST LLJ, GUSTY TO  
DAMAGING WINDS APPEAR INCREASINGLY LIKELY WITHIN NORTHWESTERLY  
FLOW BEHIND THE FRONT SUNDAY AFTERNOON INTO SUNDAY NIGHT ACROSS  
THE ENTIRE AREA. THE STRONGEST GUSTS ARE MOST LIKELY FOR A FEW  
HOURS BEHIND THE INITIAL FRONTAL PASSAGE, THOUGH GUSTY WINDS  
(ADVISORY CALIBER PERHAPS) MAY VERY WELL LINGER INTO SUNDAY  
NIGHT/MONDAY.  
 
SEVERE THUNDERSTORM THREAT: ALTHOUGH INSTABILITY IS EXPECTED TO  
BE RATHER LIMITED, UP TO A FEW HUNDRED J/KG OF MLCAPE IS PROGGED  
BY SOME HI-RES GUIDANCE NEAR AND EAST OF I-95 AND ESPECIALLY  
INTO SOUTHERN MD RIGHT AHEAD OF THE COLD FRONT SUNDAY AFTERNOON.  
THIS, COMBINED WITH THE VERY STRONG FORCING AND LOW-LEVEL WIND  
FIELDS, RESULTS IN A MARGINAL (LEVEL 1 OF 5) THREAT OF BOTH  
CONVECTIVELY-ENHANCED DAMAGING WIND GUSTS AS WELL AS A BRIEF,  
ISOLATED TORNADO.  
 
UPSLOPE SNOW: UPSLOPE SNOW IS ALSO EXPECTED IN THE ALLEGHENIES  
BEHIND THE FRONT LATE SUNDAY AFTERNOON INTO SUNDAY NIGHT. THE  
CURRENT FORECAST HAS INCREASED TO 4-8 INCHES OF SNOW FROM LATE  
SUNDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH MONDAY MORNING. THE COMBINATION OF HIGH  
WINDS AND SNOW WILL PRODUCE NEAR BLIZZARD CONDITIONS AT TIMES  
LATE SUNDAY AFTERNOON INTO MONDAY.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/
 
 
ON SUNDAY NIGHT, THE EARLIER COLD FRONT WILL CONTINUE TO RACE OFF  
INTO THE WESTERN ATLANTIC AS HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS IN THE WAKE.  
IMPRESSIVE REGIONAL PRESSURE GRADIENTS ARE NOTED WITH A 970-MB LOW  
NEAR NOVA SCOTIA AND A 1030-MB ANTICYCLONE ACROSS THE MISSOURI  
VALLEY. THE NET GRADIENT FORMED BY THESE FEATURES WILL MAINTAIN A  
GUSTY WIND FIELD INTO THE NIGHT. MODEL SOUNDINGS SUPPORT A REDUCTION  
IN THE DEPTH OF VERTICAL MIXING, BUT DO STILL SHOW QUITE A BIT OF  
WIND IN THE LOWEST 1,000 FEET. AS SUCH, EXPECT WESTERLY WINDS TO  
GUST AROUND 30 TO 40 MPH OVERNIGHT, WITH 45 TO 60 MPH GUSTS ACROSS  
HIGHER ELEVATIONS.  
 
THESE WINDS WILL ALSO AID IN A CONTINUED UPSLOPE REGIME WITH  
MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOW SHOWERS ALONG AND WEST OF THE ALLEGHENY  
FRONT. WHITEOUT TO NEAR BLIZZARD CONDITIONS ARE POSSIBLE AT TIMES.  
BLIZZARD WARNINGS WILL BE ISSUED OVER GARRETT AND WESTERN PORTIONS  
OF GRANT AND PENDLETON COUNTIES. AREA WIDE LOW TEMPERATURES ARE  
FORECAST TO FALL INTO THE MID/UPPER 20S, ACCOMPANIED BY TEENS IN THE  
MOUNTAINS. BLUSTERY WINDS WILL AID IN WIND CHILLS FALLING TO NEAR 0  
DEGREES ALONG THE ALLEGHENIES.  
 
FOR MONDAY, THE MENTIONED UPSLOPE PATTERN PERSISTS WITH SNOW SHOWERS  
CONTINUING THROUGH THE AFTERNOON HOURS. FROUDE NUMBERS RISE  
CONSIDERABLY WHICH SUGGESTS THERE MAY BE SOME SPILLOVER EFFECT INTO  
DOWNSTREAM LOCATIONS. OTHERWISE, EXPECT MOSTLY SUNNY SKIES FOR  
LOCATIONS EAST OF THE ALLEGHENIES. COMPRESSIONAL WARMING FROM  
DOWNSLOPE EFFECTS SHOULD HELP BRING HIGH TEMPERATURES INTO THE MID  
30S TO LOW 40S (UPPER TEENS TO 20S ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS). SYNOPTIC  
GRADIENTS REMAIN TIGHT ENOUGH TO KEEP A BLUSTERY WIND IN THE PICTURE  
FOR MONDAY. AFTERNOON GUSTS COULD EASILY PUSH INTO THE 25 TO 40 MPH  
RANGE, LOCALLY HIGHER IN THE TERRAIN. RESIDUAL GUSTY WINDS SHOULD  
REDUCE IN STRENGTH AFTER DARK WITH A COLD NIGHT AHEAD. FORECAST LOW  
TEMPERATURES ON MONDAY NIGHT WILL BE IN THE UPPER TEENS TO MID 20S.  
THE USUAL COLD SPOT SHOULD BE ALONG THE ALLEGHENY FRONT WHERE LOWS  
IN THE SINGLE DIGITS TO MID TEENS WILL BE MORE COMMONPLACE.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/
 
 
NORTHWESTERLY FLOW WILL CONTINUE TO TRANSPORT BELOW NORMAL  
TEMPERATURES INTO THE AREA ON TUESDAY. DRY CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED,  
WITH HIGH TEMPERATURES IN THE 30S AND LOWER 40S FOR MOST.  
 
BY WEDNESDAY INTO THURSDAY, ATTENTION WILL TURN TO A POTENTIAL  
WINTER STORM. MOST GUIDANCE HAS THE SYSTEM'S AREA OF LOW PRESSURE  
TRACKING THROUGH THE DEEP SOUTH ON WEDNESDAY BEFORE DEEPENING OFF  
THE CAROLINA COAST WEDNESDAY NIGHT, AND THEN TRACKING OFF TOWARD OUR  
NORTHEAST ON THURSDAY. CONFIDENCE IS INCREASING FOR SNOW ACROSS THE  
AREA SOMEWHERE DURING THE WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY TIME WINDOW, WITH  
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH THURSDAY MORNING CURRENTLY LOOKING LIKE  
THE MOST FAVORABLE TIME PERIOD FOR SNOW. WHAT REMAINS IN QUESTION IS  
JUST HOW MUCH SNOW WILL FALL. WHILE SEVERAL OF THE 12Z DETERMINISTIC  
MODELS DEPICT A SIGNIFICANT SNOWSTORM DURING THAT TIME WINDOW,  
ENSEMBLES CONTINUE TO SHOW CONSIDERABLE SPREAD WITH RESPECT TO SNOW  
TOTALS, WHICH IS TO BE EXPECTED THIS FAR OUT IN TIME. THE FLOW  
PATTERN LEADING UP TO THIS EVENT HAS A LOT OF MOVING PARTS. THIS  
WEEKEND'S SYSTEM, THE LARGE UPPER LOW CURRENTLY IN PLACE OVER  
CANADA, AND AN UPPER TROUGH CURRENTLY LOCATED IN THE GULF OF ALASKA  
WILL ALL INFLUENCE THE UPCOMING EVENT DURING THE MIDDLE OF THE WEEK.  
POSSIBILITIES AT THE MOMENT RANGE FROM A SYSTEM THAT LARGELY REMAINS  
SUPPRESSED TO OUR SOUTH, WITH JUST A COUPLE INCHES OF SNOW, TO A  
MAJOR SNOWSTORM WITH OVER A FOOT OF SNOW. MODEL GUIDANCE SHOULD  
SLOWLY COME INTO BETTER AGREEMENT WITH RESPECT TO WHERE WE'LL LIE  
WITHIN THAT RANGE OF POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS AS WE MOVE CLOSER TO THE  
EVENT.  
 
DRY CONDITIONS AND BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED WITHIN  
NORTHWESTERLY FLOW ON FRIDAY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /03Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/
 
 
CEILINGS ARE EXPECTED TO LOWER FURTHER TO IFR/LIFR THROUGH THE  
TONIGHT HOURS. THERE MAY BE A BIT OF A LULL IN RAIN OVERNIGHT,  
WHICH COULD ALLOW FOG TO DEVELOP, ESPECIALLY ACROSS THE METRO  
TERMINALS. ANOTHER ROUND OF RAIN MOVES THROUGH ON SUNDAY  
MORNING, WHICH COULD BE ACCOMPANIED BY HEAVIER CONVECTIVE  
ELEMENTS AND POSSIBLY GUSTIER WINDS. BEHIND THIS BAND OF  
SHOWERS, SOUTHERLY WINDS MAY INCREASE. CEILINGS ARE ALSO LIKELY  
TO IMPROVE DURING THIS TIME. MORE SCATTERED SHOWERS COULD OCCUR  
ALONG THE COLD FRONT, BUT THE BIGGER STORY WILL BE THE WIND  
SHIFT AND INCREASE IN GUSTS. GUSTS TO NEAR 45 KNOTS OR EVEN A  
LITTLE HIGHER MAY BE POSSIBLE SUNDAY AFTERNOON INTO SUNDAY  
EVENING, WITH GUSTS OF 30-35 KNOTS POSSIBLY LINGERING OVERNIGHT.  
TIMING FOR SUNDAY WAS SOMEWHAT GENERALIZED IN THE 18Z TAFS AND  
MAY BE ADJUSTED/REFINED IN LATER ISSUANCES.  
 
VFR CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED FROM LATE SUNDAY INTO MONDAY/MONDAY  
NIGHT. THE STRONG WIND GUSTS BEHIND THE COLD FRONT PERSIST INTO THE  
NIGHT WITH WESTERLY GUSTS AROUND 25 TO 35 KNOTS POSSIBLE. WINDS TURN  
A BIT MORE WEST-NORTHWESTERLY ON MONDAY WITH AFTERNOON GUSTS UP TO  
AROUND 35 KNOTS. SOME SPILLOVER SNOW SHOWERS COULD PUSH EAST OF THE  
ALLEGHENIES, BUT IT REMAINS TO BE SEEN IF THESE IMPACT KMRB.  
EVENTUALLY WINDS SLOWLY DECREASE INTO MONDAY EVENING/NIGHT.  
 
VFR CONDITIONS AND NORTHWESTERLY WINDS ARE EXPECTED ON TUESDAY. SUB-  
VFR CONDITIONS AND SNOW ARE EXPECTED ON WEDNESDAY, ALONG WITH NORTH  
TO NORTHEASTERLY WINDS.  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
 
WINDS WILL REMAIN EAST TO SOUTHEASTERLY THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING.  
WITH LIGHT WINDS AND WARM/MOIST AIR MOVING OVER THE COLD WATERS,  
LOCALLY DENSE MARINE FOG COULD DEVELOP OVERNIGHT INTO SUNDAY  
MORNING. WINDS WILL INCREASE TO SCA STRENGTH OR PERHAPS EVEN  
BRIEF GALE SUNDAY MORNING PARTICULARLY OVER THE MID BAY. A LINE  
OF STRONG SHOWERS AND PERHAPS A THUNDERSTORM COULD ALSO PRODUCE  
STRONG WIND GUSTS DURING THE LATE MORNING TO EARLY AFTERNOON.  
THEN, A STRONG COLD FRONT WILL MOVE THROUGH SUNDAY AFTERNOON.  
STORM FORCE GUSTS APPEAR LIKELY BEHIND THAT FRONT SUNDAY  
AFTERNOON INTO SUNDAY NIGHT. A FEW OF THE CONVECTIVE ELEMENTS IN  
THE PRE-FRONTAL ENVIRONMENT MAY ALSO PUSH TO AROUND GALE TO  
STORM FORCE LEVELS.  
 
GALE CONDITIONS CONTINUE SUNDAY NIGHT INTO MUCH OF MONDAY ACROSS THE  
AREA WATERWAYS WITH GUSTS UP TO 35 TO 40 KNOTS POSSIBLE. CURRENT  
GALE WARNINGS ARE IN EFFECT UNTIL 4 PM MONDAY. THOSE WITH PLANS TO  
BE ON THE WATER SHOULD RECONSIDER GIVEN DANGEROUS CONDITIONS  
EXPECTED. THE STRENGTH OF WEST-NORTHWESTERLY WINDS DROP OFF INTO  
MONDAY EVENING AND NIGHT, BUT THERE WILL LIKELY BE A NEED FOR SMALL  
CRAFT ADVISORIES DURING THIS TRANSITION PERIOD.  
 
SCA CONDITIONS WILL LIKELY LINGER THROUGH MUCH OF TUESDAY IN  
NORTHWESTERLY FLOW. WINDS MAY NEAR LOW-END SCA LEVELS IN NORTH TO  
NORTHEASTERLY FLOW ON WEDNESDAY.  
 

 
   
HYDROLOGY
 
 
REMAINING SNOW PACK COMBINED WITH TEMPS RISING TO 45-55, DEW  
POINTS INTO THE 40S, AND RAINFALL OF ONE TO LOCALLY TWO INCHES  
TONIGHT INTO SUNDAY RESULTS IN A RISK FOR FLOODING. SCATTERED  
INSTANCES OF FLOODING MAY RESULT. OVERALL, THE QPF TREND HAS  
BEEN DOWN THE PAST SEVERAL CYCLES, BUT INDIVIDUAL CAMS HAVE  
STRIPES OF HIGHER 2-3 INCH VALUES WHICH COULD STILL PLAUSIBLY  
CAUSE FLOODING, ESPECIALLY ACROSS HIGHLAND AND AUGUSTA COUNTIES.  
 

 
   
LWX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
DC...HIGH WIND WARNING FROM 10 AM TO 10 PM EST SUNDAY FOR DCZ001.  
MD...HIGH WIND WARNING FROM 10 AM TO 10 PM EST SUNDAY FOR  
MDZ004>006-008-011-013-014-016>018-503>508.  
STORM WARNING FROM 10 AM TO 10 PM EST SUNDAY FOR MDZ008.  
GALE WARNING FROM 10 PM SUNDAY TO 4 PM EST MONDAY FOR MDZ008.  
FLOOD WATCH THROUGH SUNDAY AFTERNOON FOR MDZ001-501.  
BLIZZARD WARNING FROM 1 PM SUNDAY TO 3 PM EST MONDAY FOR  
MDZ001.  
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM NOON SUNDAY TO 1 AM EST MONDAY FOR  
MDZ003.  
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM NOON SUNDAY TO NOON EST MONDAY FOR  
MDZ501-502.  
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FROM 1 PM SUNDAY TO 3 PM EST MONDAY  
FOR MDZ501.  
VA...HIGH WIND WARNING FROM 10 AM TO 10 PM EST SUNDAY FOR VAZ040-  
053-054-501-505-506-526-527.  
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM NOON SUNDAY TO 1 AM EST MONDAY FOR  
VAZ025>031.  
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM NOON SUNDAY TO NOON EST MONDAY FOR  
VAZ503-504-507-508.  
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FROM 1 PM SUNDAY TO 3 PM EST MONDAY  
FOR VAZ503.  
FLOOD WATCH THROUGH SUNDAY AFTERNOON FOR VAZ025-503-504.  
WIND ADVISORY FROM 10 AM TO 10 PM EST SUNDAY FOR VAZ036>039-  
050-051-055>057-502.  
WV...FLOOD WATCH THROUGH SUNDAY AFTERNOON FOR WVZ503.  
BLIZZARD WARNING FROM 1 PM SUNDAY TO 3 PM EST MONDAY FOR  
WVZ501-505.  
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM NOON SUNDAY TO 1 AM EST MONDAY FOR  
WVZ050>053-055.  
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM NOON SUNDAY TO NOON EST MONDAY FOR  
WVZ502>504-506.  
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FROM 1 PM SUNDAY TO 3 PM EST MONDAY  
FOR WVZ503.  
FLOOD WATCH THROUGH SUNDAY AFTERNOON FOR WVZ501-502-505-506.  
MARINE...HIGH WIND WARNING FROM 10 AM TO 10 PM EST SUNDAY FOR ANZ530.  
STORM WARNING FROM 10 AM TO 10 PM EST SUNDAY FOR ANZ530>543.  
GALE WARNING FROM 10 PM SUNDAY TO 4 PM EST MONDAY FOR  
ANZ530>543.  
 

 
 

 
 
SYNOPSIS...ADS  
NEAR TERM...ADS/BRO/DHOF/KJP  
SHORT TERM...BRO  
LONG TERM...KJP  
AVIATION...ADS/BRO/KJP  
MARINE...ADS/BRO/KJP  
HYDROLOGY...LWX  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab VA Page
The Nexlab MD Page
The Nexlab WV Page Main Text Page