755  
FXUS61 KLWX 161438  
AFDLWX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BALTIMORE MD/WASHINGTON DC  
1038 AM EDT WED JUL 16 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
A FRONT REMAINS STALLED OVERHEAD THIS MORNING BEFORE DISSIPATING  
THROUGHOUT THE DAY. ANOTHER FRONT APPROACHES THE FORECAST AREA AT  
THE END OF THE WEEK BEFORE STALLING OVERHEAD THROUGH THE  
WEEKEND.  
 

 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/
 
 
CURRENT VISIBLE SATELLITE IMAGERY SHOWS LOW CLOUDS IN PLACE FOR  
MOST LOCATIONS TO THE EAST OF THE BLUE RIDGE THIS MORNING,  
ALTHOUGH THERE ARE SOME NOTABLE BREAKS ALONG THE SHORES OF THE  
BAY EXTENDING INTO NORTHEAST MARYLAND. MORE IN THE WAY OF  
SUNSHINE IS PRESENT TO THE WEST OF THE BLUE RIDGE, ALTHOUGH  
THERE ARE SOME PASSING HIGH CLOUDS AND A FEW LOWER CLOUDS ACROSS  
THE CENTRAL SHENANDOAH VALLEY. THICKER HIGH CLOUDS ARE PRESENT  
ACROSS WESTERN WV INTO OH AHEAD OF A SHORTWAVE/MCV-LIKE FEATURE  
CENTERED OVER SOUTHERN IN. THIS FEATURE WILL CONTINUE TO LIFT  
EAST-NORTHEASTWARD OVER THE COURSE OF THE DAY, EVENTUALLY  
REACHING EASTERN OH/WESTERN PA BY THIS EVENING. WEAK MID-LEVEL  
HEIGHT FALLS AND LARGE SCALE ASCENT ATTENDANT TO THIS FEATURE  
SHOULD REACH LOCATIONS TO THE WEST OF THE BLUE RIDGE BY LATER  
THIS AFTERNOON, WITH THE STRONGEST LIFT OCCURRING ACROSS WESTERN  
MD AND THE WV PANHANDLE. THESE LOCATIONS SHOULD ALSO EXPERIENCE  
THE STRONGEST DAYTIME HEATING WITH THE LACK OF LOW CLOUDS IN  
PLACE CURRENTLY.  
 
MOST GUIDANCE SHOWS PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUES INCREASING TO NEAR  
OR IN EXCESS OF TWO INCHES ACROSS THE MAJORITY OF THE FORECAST  
AREA LATER THIS AFTERNOON AS RICH LOW LEVEL MOISTURE IS DRAWN  
NORTHWARD AHEAD OF THE AFOREMENTIONED SHORTWAVE, WHILE DEEPER  
MOISTURE IN THE MID-UPPER LEVELS CURRENTLY OVER OHIO  
SIMULTANEOUSLY ADVECTS EAST- NORTHEASTWARD ATOP THE LOW-LEVEL  
MOISTURE. THE 12Z IAD SOUNDING SHOWS A PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUE  
OF 2.04 INCHES, WHICH IS WELL ABOVE THE 90TH PERCENTILE FOR THIS  
TIME OF YEAR. THE 12Z ILN (WILMINGTON, OH) SOUNDING SHOWS THE  
MUCH DEEPER SATURATION THAT WILL MOVE OVERHEAD LATER TODAY. THE  
00Z HREF MEAN HAS PWATS INCREASING TO IN EXCESS OF 2.2 INCHES TO  
THE EAST OF THE BLUE RIDGE THIS EVENING, WHICH WOULD CHALLENGE  
THE DAILY RECORD AT THE IAD SOUNDING SITE. GFS FORECAST  
PRECIPITABLE WATER STANDARDIZED ANOMALIES EXCEED 2 SIGMA ACROSS  
THE BULK OF THE FORECAST AREA BY LATER THIS EVENING, WHICH  
CONFIRMS THAT A HIGHLY ANOMALOUS LEVEL OF MOISTURE WILL BE  
PRESENT.  
 
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTED TO FORM LATER THIS  
AFTERNOON TO THE WEST OF THE BLUE RIDGE AS LARGE SCALE ASCENT  
AHEAD OF THE AFOREMENTIONED SHORTWAVE OVERSPREADS A HIGHLY  
UNSTABLE AND UNCAPPED ATMOSPHERE. WITH SUCH ANOMALOUS LEVELS OF  
MOISTURE AND AMPLE INSTABILITY IN PLACE TODAY, ANY THUNDERSTORMS  
WILL BE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING VERY HEAVY RAINFALL. FLOW IN THE  
850-500 HPA LAYER WILL INCREASE TO AROUND 20-25 KNOTS BY LATER  
THIS AFTERNOON, WHICH SUGGESTS THAT STORMS SHOULD HAVE SOME  
DECENT FORWARD MOTION. HOWEVER, WITH THE LLJ SPEED BEING  
COMPARABLE TO THE MAIN STEERING FLOW, LOCALIZED BACKBUILDING MAY  
BE POSSIBLE. WITH THE POTENTIAL FOR VERY HEAVY RAINFALL  
PRODUCING, BACKBUILDING STORMS THERE IS SOME FLASH FLOODING  
CONCERN LATER TODAY, ESPECIALLY TO THE WEST OF THE BLUE RIDGE,  
WHERE THE DAYTIME HEATING AND LARGE SCALE FORCING SHOULD BE  
GREATEST. A FLOOD WATCH FOR FLASH FLOODING MAY NEED TO BE  
CONSIDERED, ESPECIALLY TO THE WEST OF THE BLUE RIDGE. OVERALL  
STORM COVERAGE IS EXPECTED TO BE LOWER FURTHER EAST, WHERE LOW  
CLOUDS ARE INHIBITING DAYTIME HEATING AND SYNOPTIC SCALE FORCING  
FOR ASCENT WILL BE A BIT WEAKER. THAT ISN'T TO SAY THAT THERE  
COULDN'T BE LOCALIZED ISSUES WITH FLASH FLOODING FURTHER EAST,  
AS THE HIGHEST PWAT VALUES WILL ACTUALLY BE IN PLACE TO THE EAST  
OF THE BLUE RIDGE. THE MODEL SIGNAL FOR HIGH RAINFALL TOTALS IS  
LOWER TO THE EAST OF THE BLUE RIDGE, BUT A FEW CAMS INDICATE  
THAT HEAVY RAINFALL PRODUCING STORMS COULD FORM ALONG THE BAY  
BREEZE NEAR BALTIMORE. WPC HAS THE NORTHERN HALF OF THE FORECAST  
AREA OUTLOOKED IN A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL.  
 
MODEL SOUNDINGS SHOW STRONG INSTABILITY, WITH AROUND 2000-3000  
J/KG OF MLCAPE. DCAPE IS ONLY AROUND 500-600 J/KG, AND LOW-LEVEL  
LAPSE RATES ARE ONLY AROUND 7-8 C/KM, WHICH COULD LIMIT  
DOWNDRAFT STRENGTH AND WIND PRODUCTION A BIT. THE INCREASING  
WINDS IN THE 850-500 HPA LAYER COULD BE A FACTOR THAT WOULD  
WORK IN FAVOR OF WIND PRODUCTION. SOME CAMS (NOTABLY THE HRRR)  
SHOW STORMS PRODUCING STRONG WINDS LATER THIS AFTERNOON. SPC  
CURRENTLY HAS MOST OF THE AREA OUTLOOKED IN A MARGINAL RISK FOR  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS, DRIVEN BY DAMAGING WIND POTENTIAL.  
 
OUTSIDE OF STORMS IT WILL BE ANOTHER HOT AND HUMID DAY, WITH  
HIGHS IN THE UPPER 80S TO LOWER 90S, AND DEWPOINTS HOLDING IN  
THE 70S. STORMS SHOULD GRADUALLY WIND DOWN THROUGH THE EVENING  
HOURS, GIVING WAY TO DRY CONDITIONS DURING THE SECOND HALF OF  
THE NIGHT.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/
 
 
THURSDAY WILL BE THE DRIEST DAY OF THE SHORT TERM PERIOD WITH  
AFTERNOON SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES PEAKING BETWEEN 20 AND  
40%. THOSE ALONG THE ALLEGHENY RIDGE WILL HAVE PRECIPITATION  
CHANCES AROUND 50% IN THE AFTERNOON DUE TO A COLD FRONT  
APPROACHING FROM THE WEST. IN ADDITION TO THE DRIER CONDITIONS,  
THURSDAY WILL BE THE WARMEST DAY OF THE WEEK WITH HIGH  
TEMPERATURES FORECAST IN THE UPPER 80S TO MID 90S. GIVEN THE  
WARM AND HUMID AIRMASS, DEWPOINTS IN THE 70S ON THURSDAY WILL  
YIELD HEAT INDICES IN THE UPPER 90S TO LOW 100S. ISOLATED  
LOCATIONS ALONG AND EAST OF I-95 MAY BRIEFLY REACH HEAT INDICES  
OF 105, WITH CONFIDENCE ON DURATION AND COVERAGE BEING TO LOW TO  
ISSUE HEAT ADVISORIES AT THIS TIME.  
 
SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES INCREASE ON FRIDAY AS A COLD  
FRONT SLOWLY APPROACHES AND STALLS OVER THE REGION.  
PRECIPITATION CHANCES INCREASE TO 50 TO 60% ACROSS THE WESTERN  
PORTIONS OF THE FORECAST AREA WITH THE I-95 CORRIDOR STAYING  
AROUND 30-50%. HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL BE IN THE 80S TO 90S ON  
FRIDAY WITH HIGHER ELEVATIONS STAYING IN THE 70S. OVERNIGHT LOW  
TEMPERATURES WILL BE IN THE 60S TO 70S.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/
 
 
HIGH PRESSURE WILL HOLD ONTO THE EASTERN HALF OF THE REGION ON  
SATURDAY. MOST AREAS TO THE EAST OF THE BLUE RIDGE WILL BE  
EITHER DRY OR THERE COULD BE AN ISOLATED SHOWER OR TWO. TO THE  
WEST AND INTO THE MOUNTAINS, SCATTERED SHOWERS AND A FEW  
THUNDERSTORMS COULD DEVELOP SATURDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. A  
DEVELOPING WARM FRONT WILL SHIFT NORTHWARD SATURDAY NIGHT INTO  
SUNDAY. THIS WARM FRONT WILL PAVE THE WAY FOR EXTRA HUMIDITY AND  
MOISTURE. MORE WIDESPREAD SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ARE  
EXPECTED TO DEVELOP FROM MIDDAY SUNDAY THROUGH LATE SUNDAY  
EVENING. HIGHS ON SATURDAY WILL BE IN THE UPPER 80S TO NEAR 90.  
HIGHS SUNDAY COULD REACH THE LOWER 90S.  
 
ADDITIONAL SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS COULD DEVELOP MONDAY AFTERNOON  
AND EVENING WITH THE ADDED INSTABILITY, A WARM FRONT PUSHING  
NORTHEAST AND AN APPROACHING TROUGH OF LOW PRESSURE. HIGHS IN THE  
UPPER 80S TO LOWER 90S.  
 
THE CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS IS LESS ON TUESDAY INTO  
TUESDAY EVENING, BUT NOT ZERO. THIS TIME OF YEAR AND WITH A TROUGH  
OF LOW PRESSURE NEARBY, A FEW SHOWERS AND A THUNDERSTORM MAY STILL  
DEVELOP IN PARTS OF THE REGION. HIGHS IN THE UPPER 80S.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /13Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/
 
 
LOW CLOUDS AT IAD, DCA, BWI, AND CHO ARE SLOWLY STARTING TO LIFT  
AND SHOULD GRADUALLY TRANSITION FROM IFR TO MVFR TO VFR OVER THE  
REMAINDER OF THE MORNING. SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL LIKELY  
IMPACT TERMINALS THIS AFTERNOON WITH REDUCED VISIBILITIES AND  
CEILINGS POSSIBLE DURING PRECIPITATION. THE GREATEST COVERAGE OF  
STORMS TODAY IS EXPECTED IN THE VICINITY OF MRB, BUT  
THUNDERSTORMS ARE MENTIONED AT ALL TAF SITES. AFTER AN INITIAL  
ROUND OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS TRACK ACROSS THE FORECAST  
AREA, STRATIFORM RAIN AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS REMAIN POSSIBLE  
THROUGH THE EVENING. CONDITIONS DRY OUT OVERNIGHT WITH  
PREVAILING VFR CONDITIONS EXPECTED ON THURSDAY. A BRIEF  
THUNDERSTORM MAY STILL BE POSSIBLE AT ANY OF THE TERMINALS  
TOMORROW AFTERNOON. SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES INCREASE  
AGAIN ON FRIDAY WITH FLIGHT RESTRICTIONS POSSIBLE.  
 
VFR CONDITIONS SATURDAY FOR THE MOST PART. SOME SCATTERED SHOWERS  
AND THUNDERSTORMS COULD BRING MVFR CONDITIONS TO CHO AND MRB  
SATURDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. WINDS LIGHT AND VARIABLE EXCEPT FOR  
ANY GUSTY THUNDERSTORMS. MVFR CONDITIONS IN SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS ON SUNDAY INTO SUNDAY EVENING WITH AN ADVANCING WARM  
FRONT. WINDS GENERALLY SOUTHWEST 5 TO 10 KNOTS, BUT HIGHER IN  
THUNDERSTORMS.  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
 
WINDS REMAIN BELOW SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY CRITERIA THROUGH THIS  
AFTERNOON, BLOWING OUT OF THE SOUTH/SOUTHWEST. WINDS SHIFT TO  
SOUTHERLY THIS EVENING WITH SOUTHERLY CHANNELING LEADING TO SCA  
CRITERIA WINDS, ESPECIALLY IN THE SOUTHERN PORTIONS OF THE  
WATERS, THROUGH THURSDAY MORNING. SMALL CRAFT ADVISORIES MAY BE  
NEEDED LATE THIS EVENING AND INTO THURSDAY AS WINDS GUST 15 TO  
20 KNOTS. WINDS DROP BELOW SCA CRITERIA THURSDAY AFTERNOON AND  
WILL REMAIN LIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY.  
 
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS MAY IMPACT THE NORTHERN PORTIONS OF  
THE WATERS THIS AFTERNOON AND INTO THIS EVENING, WITH SMWS  
POSSIBLE. SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES DECREASE THURSDAY  
BEFORE RETURNING ON FRIDAY.  
 
NO MARINE HAZARDS SATURDAY INTO SATURDAY EVENING. SPECIAL MARINE  
WARNINGS MAY BE WARRANTED SUNDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING WITH  
DEVELOPING SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ALONG AND AHEAD OF A WARM  
FRONT. WINDS SATURDAY LIGHT AND VARIABLE. WINDS BECOMING SOUTHWEST  
10 KNOTS SUNDAY INTO SUNDAY EVENING.  
 

 
   
TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING
 
 
SOUTHERLY WINDS WILL LEAD TO ELEVATED TIDAL ANOMALIES THROUGH  
THE END OF THE WEEK. ANNAPOLIS IS FORECAST TO REACH ACTION  
STAGE DURING HIGH TIDE THROUGH TOMORROW MORNING. HOWEVER,  
OUTSIDE OF FRESHWATER INFLUENCES FROM HEAVY RAINFALL, THE THREAT  
FOR TIDAL FLOODING APPEARS LOW.  
 

 
   
LWX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
DC...NONE.  
MD...NONE.  
VA...NONE.  
WV...NONE.  
MARINE...SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY FROM MIDNIGHT TONIGHT TO 1 PM EDT  
THURSDAY FOR ANZ533-534-537-541-543.  
 

 
 

 
 
SYNOPSIS...AVS  
NEAR TERM...KJP  
SHORT TERM...AVS  
LONG TERM...KLW  
AVIATION...AVS/KLW  
MARINE...AVS/KLW  
TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...LWX  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

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