848  
FXUS61 KLWX 182003  
AFDLWX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BALTIMORE MD/WASHINGTON DC  
403 PM EDT FRI JUL 18 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
A STATIONARY FRONT OVER THE AREA TODAY WILL RETURN NORTHWARD AS A  
WARM FRONT TOMORROW. A COLD FRONT WILL MOVE THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT.  
HIGH PRESSURE WILL BUILD TO OUR NORTH EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM SATURDAY MORNING/  
 
CURRENT SURFACE ANALYSIS SHOWS A STATIONARY FRONT EXTENDING  
WEST-NORTHWESTWARD FROM JUST NORTH OF RICHMOND TOWARD  
CHARLOTTESVILLE, STAUNTON, AND HARRISONBURG, AND THEN EVENTUALLY  
INTO CENTRAL WEST VIRGINIA. STORMS ARE IN THE PROCESS OF  
DEVELOPING IN THE VICINITY OF AND SOUTH OF THIS BOUNDARY, BUT  
ACTIVITY HAS STRUGGLE TO DEVELOP NORTH OF ROUGHLY HARRISONBURG,  
AS EARLIER CLOUD COVER/SHOWER ACTIVITY HAS LIMITED DAYTIME  
SURFACE HEATING. MODEL GUIDANCE HAS STRUGGLED MIGHTILY WITH THE  
EVOLUTION OF STORMS THUS FAR TODAY, AND THERE IS A GROWING  
AMOUNT OF SKEPTICISM REGARDING WHETHER STRONGER STORMS WILL MAKE  
IT INTO THE FAR NORTHERN REACHES OF THE FLOOD WATCH THAT IS IN  
EFFECT. BASED ON THE CURRENT EVOLUTION OF THE CUMULUS FIELD, IT  
APPEARS AS THOUGH THE GREATEST THREAT FOR STRONGER STORMS AND  
RESULTANT RISK FOR FLASH FLOODING WILL BE FROM THE  
HARRISONBURG/STAUNTON/WAYNESBORO/CHARLOTTESVILLE VICINITY  
EASTWARD TOWARD FREDERICKSBURG. WHILE CONFIDENCE ISN'T QUITE  
THERE TO CANCEL THE WATCH FURTHER NORTH, CONFIDENCE IN FLOODING  
OCCURRING NORTH OF THOSE LOCATIONS IS DECREASING. ANY STRONGER  
STORMS TODAY WILL STILL BE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING VERY HEAVY  
RAINFALL, GIVEN HIGH PWAT VALUES, DEEP SATURATED PROFILES AND  
AMPLE INSTABILITY. THE BACKGROUND ENVIRONMENT ISN'T OVERLY  
FAVORABLE FOR DAMAGING WINDS WITH LOW DCAPE VALUES (300-600  
J/KG) AND SUBPAR LOW-LEVEL LAPSE RATES (AROUND 7 C/KM), BUT A  
FEW INSTANCES OF DAMAGING WINDS MAY STILL BE POSSIBLE,  
ESPECIALLY IF STORMS START TO EXHIBIT WEAK SUPERCELLULAR  
CHARACTERISTICS (AS SOME OF THE STORMS NEAR ROANOKE HAVE STARTED  
TO DO).  
 
FURTHER NORTH TOWARD THE DC/BALTIMORE METROS, MOST OF THE  
PRECIPITATION IS EXPECTED TO OCCUR AS SHOWERS, BUT A FEW  
THUNDERSTORMS MAY TRY TO DRIFT NORTHEASTWARD TOWARD THE DC METRO  
LATE THIS EVENING. THE THREAT FOR FLASH FLOODING LOOKS TO BE  
LOW IN THE DC METRO, BUT NOT ZERO, WITH ANY POTENTIAL CHANCE  
COMING IF STORMS APPROACH FROM THE SOUTHWEST DURING THE LATE  
EVENING HOURS. ANY ACTIVITY WILL WIND DOWN BY AROUND OR SHORTLY  
AFTER MIDNIGHT, WITH DRY CONDITIONS EXPECTED DURING THE SECOND  
HALF OF THE NIGHT. LOW CLOUDS MAY TRY TO DEVELOP LATER TONIGHT,  
AND FOG MAY FORM IN LOCATIONS THAT DON'T GET THE LOW CLOUDS.  
OVERNIGHT LOWS ARE EXPECTED TO BE IN THE UPPER 60S AND LOWER  
70S.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /6 AM SATURDAY MORNING THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/  
 
THE STATIONARY BOUNDARY LOCATED OVER THE AREA TODAY WILL MAKE  
SLIGHT NORTHWARD PROGRESS AS A WARM FRONT TOMORROW. FLOW ALOFT  
WILL REMAIN PRIMARILY ZONAL. A WEAK CONVECTIVELY GENERATED  
DISTURBANCE MAY APPROACH FROM THE WEST DURING PEAK HEATING. THE  
COMBINATION OF DAYTIME HEATING AND WEAK ASCENT ASSOCIATED WITH  
THIS FEATURE WILL RESULT IN ANOTHER ROUND OF SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS TOMORROW AFTERNOON INTO TOMORROW EVENING.  
CURRENTLY IT APPEARS AS THOUGH THE HIGHEST COVERAGE OF THESE  
STORMS (MUCH LIKE TODAY) WILL BE IN THE CENTRAL SHENANDOAH  
VALLEY AND CENTRAL VIRGINIA. HOWEVER, A BRIEF AFTERNOON OR  
EVENING THUNDERSTORM MAY BE POSSIBLE ANYWHERE IN THE FORECAST  
AREA. STORMS MAY BE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING ISOLATED TO SCATTERED  
INSTANCES OF FLOODING, AS WELL AS A DAMAGING WIND GUST OR TWO.  
HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL BE IN THE MID-UPPER 80S FOR MOST, WITH  
DEWPOINTS HOLDING IN THE 70S.  
 
UPPER TROUGHING WILL START TO DIG TO OUR NORTH ACROSS NORTHERN  
NEW ENGLAND ON SUNDAY, WHILE LOW PRESSURE TRACKS THROUGH THE  
CANADIAN MARITIMES. THIS WILL CAUSE A COLD FRONT TO DROP  
SOUTHWARD ACROSS NY, NEW ENGLAND AND PA OVER THE COURSE OF THE  
DAY. STORMS MAY TRY TO FORM ALONG A PRE-FRONTAL TROUGH SUNDAY  
AFTERNOON. SOME OF THESE STORMS MAY BE STRONG TO SEVERE. SPC  
CURRENTLY HAS THE ENTIRE AREA OUTLOOKED IN A MARGINAL RISK FOR  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/  
 
CHARACTERIZED BY 500-MB HEIGHT ANOMALIES RUNNING AROUND 1.5 TO 2  
STANDARD DEVIATIONS BELOW AVERAGE, A FORMIDABLE UPPER TROUGH IS  
FORECAST TO CONTINUE TRACKING EASTWARD ACROSS THE CANADIAN  
MARITIMES. THIS PATTERN SHIFT ALLOWS FOR A BROAD DOME OF CANADIAN  
HIGH PRESSURE THAT SETTLES OVER QUEBEC INTO NEW ENGLAND THROUGH MID-  
WEEK. ON MONDAY, A STEADY NORTHERLY COMPONENT TO THE SURFACE WINDS  
WILL SUFFICIENTLY LOWER DEW POINTS OVER THE AREA. THIS ULTIMATELY  
RESULTS IN A MULTI-DAY REPRIEVE FROM THE 2 TO 3 WEEKS OF CONTINUED  
HEAT AND HUMIDITY. ALTHOUGH THE CURRENT FORECAST PACKAGE SHOWS DEW  
POINTS IN THE UPPER 50S TO MID 60S, PLENTY OF SOLUTIONS CARRY  
READINGS INTO THE MID 50S. THIS IS ACCOMPANIED BY DAILY HIGH  
TEMPERATURES IN THE LOW/MID 80S (UPPER 60S TO 70S IN THE MOUNTAINS).  
WIDESPREAD OVERNIGHT LOWS WILL BE IN THE 60S, WITH SOME UPPER 50S  
ALONG THE MOUNTAIN RIDGES. ANY SHOWER CHANCES THROUGH TUESDAY ARE  
TIED TO THE POTOMAC HIGHLANDS INTO THE CENTRAL SHENANDOAH VALLEY.  
SOME PERTURBATIONS CIRCULATING CLOCKWISE AROUND A RIDGE ACROSS THE  
LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY COULD INVIGORATE SOME LOCALIZED LIFT.  
 
BY WEDNESDAY, SOME RETURN FLOW PICKS UP AS THE SURFACE ANTICYCLONE  
EXITS THE NEW ENGLAND COAST. THE GLOBAL ENSEMBLE CONSENSUS SHOWS  
THIS SCENARIO UNFOLDING WHICH HELPS INCREASE DEW POINTS ACROSS THE  
MID-ATLANTIC REGION. AT THE SAME TIME, A BROAD UPPER RIDGE INITIALLY  
OVER THE SOUTH-CENTRAL U.S. WILL EXPAND BOTH NORTH AND EAST IN TIME.  
ITS INFLUENCE ON THE LOCAL AREA IS EXPECTED TO COME WITH RISING  
DAILY TEMPERATURES, ESPECIALLY BY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. A RETURN OF  
TEMPERATURES IN THE LOW/MID 90S IS LOOKING MORE LIKELY, BUT ENSEMBLE  
SPREAD DOES INCREASE AS NOTED BY SIZEABLE BOX-AND-WHISKER PLOTS.  
WHILE THUNDERSTORMS DO NOT COME BACK IMMEDIATELY, EXPECT A BETTER  
CHANCE FOR SUCH STORMS BY LATE IN THE WEEK. THIS IS IN RESPONSE TO  
SOME NORTHERN STREAM AMPLIFICATION NOTED IN A NUMBER OF MODELS.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /19Z FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/  
 
THE MAIN CONCERN THROUGH THE REST OF THE DAY WILL BE THUNDERSTORM  
POTENTIAL, WITH OTHERWISE PREVAILING VFR CONDITIONS. THE BEST CHANCE  
FOR STORMS LOOKS TO BE AROUND CHO, WHICH IS LOCATED IN THE VICINITY  
OF A STATIONARY FRONT. FURTHER NORTH AND EAST, CONDITIONS ARE A BIT  
MORE STABLE, SO CHANCES FOR THUNDERSTORMS APPEAR TO BE LOWER, ALBEIT  
NON-ZERO. AT THE MOMENT, LIGHT RAIN IS MOVING EASTWARD FROM THE  
VICINITY OF MRB TOWARD THE DC/BALTIMORE METROS. THIS ACTIVITY IS  
EXPECTED TO CONTINUE ON AS JUST SHOWERS. ANY POTENTIAL THUNDERSTORMS  
WOULD LIKELY DEVELOP OFF TO THE SOUTHWEST IN MORE UNSTABLE AIR AND  
MOVE NORTHEASTWARD TOWARD THE METRO TERMINALS LATER THIS EVENING. AS  
A RESULT, THE PROB30S FOR DCA AND IAD HAVE BEEN PUSHED BACK A COUPLE  
HOURS. THE PROB30 HAS BEEN REMOVED AT BWI, WHERE CONFIDENCE IS  
INCREASING THAT STORMS WILL REMAIN OFF TO THEIR SOUTH AND WEST.  
 
ANY THUNDERSTORMS SHOULD WIND DOWN DURING THE FIRST HALF OF THE  
NIGHT, BUT LOW CLOUDS MAY MOVE IN LATER DURING THE NIGHT. IFR  
CEILINGS APPEAR POSSIBLE FOR A TIME LATER TONIGHT INTO EARLY  
TOMORROW MORNING, BUT GRADUAL IMPROVEMENT BACK TO VFR CEILINGS  
IS EXPECTED OVER THE COURSE OF THE MORNING TOMORROW.  
THUNDERSTORMS WILL FORM AGAIN TOMORROW AFTERNOON, WITH MOST OF  
THE ACTIVITY FOCUSED OVER CENTRAL VA. CONFIDENCE IS CURRENTLY  
TOO LOW TO INTRODUCE PROB30S IN THE DC/BALTIMORE METRO  
TERMINALS, BUT AT LEAST A PROB30, IF NOT A TEMPO WILL EVENTUALLY  
BE NEEDED FOR CHO. ADDITIONAL THUNDERSTORMS MAY BE POSSIBLE ON  
SUNDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
WITH PRECIPITATION CHANCES LOOKING PRETTY LOW ON MONDAY THROUGH  
WEDNESDAY, EXPECT VFR CONDITIONS AT ALL TERMINALS. THE SHIFT IN THE  
PATTERN USHERS IN A NORTHERLY WIND ON MONDAY BEFORE TURNING MORE  
EAST-SOUTHEASTERLY BY TUESDAY. ONCE CANADIAN HIGH PRESSURE EXITS THE  
NEW ENGLAND COAST ON WEDNESDAY, A RETURN SOUTHERLY FLOW IS  
EXPECTED.  
 
 
   
MARINE  
 
LIGHT AND VARIABLE WINDS ARE EXPECTED OVER THE WATERS THIS  
AFTERNOON. AN SMW FOR THUNDERSTORMS MAY BE NEEDED LATER THIS  
EVENING, PARTICULARLY OVER THE MIDDLE TO LOWER TIDAL POTOMAC. LIGHT  
SOUTH TO SOUTHEASTERLY WINDS ARE EXPECTED TOMORROW, AND THEN LIGHT  
WESTERLY WINDS ON SUNDAY. WINDS WILL SHIFT TO OUT OF THE NORTH  
BEHIND A COLD FRONT SUNDAY NIGHT, AND POTENTIALLY COULD NEAR LOW-END  
SCA LEVELS DURING THAT TIME. SMWS MAY POTENTIALLY BE NEEDED FOR  
THUNDERSTORMS DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING HOURS BOTH DAYS THIS  
WEEKEND.  
 
WINDS ACROSS THE MARINE WATERS SHOULD STAY BELOW ADVISORY LEVELS  
THROUGH TUESDAY. A NORTHERLY WIND MAY GUST AROUND 10 TO 15 KNOTS ON  
MONDAY BEFORE SHIFTING TO EAST TO NORTHEASTERLY ON TUESDAY. THERE IS  
NO THREAT FOR THUNDERSTORMS AS CANADIAN HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS TO THE  
NORTH.  
 
 
   
LWX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
DC...NONE.  
MD...FLOOD WATCH UNTIL MIDNIGHT EDT TONIGHT FOR MDZ016-501-509-510.  
VA...FLOOD WATCH UNTIL MIDNIGHT EDT TONIGHT FOR VAZ025>031-036>040-  
050-051-055>057-501>504-507-508-526-527.  
WV...FLOOD WATCH UNTIL MIDNIGHT EDT TONIGHT FOR WVZ050-055-501>506.  
MARINE...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...KJP  
NEAR TERM...KJP  
SHORT TERM...KJP  
LONG TERM...BRO  
AVIATION...BRO/KJP  
MARINE...BRO/KJP  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab VA Page
The Nexlab MD Page
The Nexlab WV Page
Main Text Page