397  
FXUS66 KPQR 210316 AAA  
AFDPQR  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PORTLAND OR  
815 PM PDT MON OCT 20 2025  
 
UPDATED AVIATION DISCUSSION  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
HIGH PRESSURE WILL BRING DRY AND CALM WEATHER WITH  
MILD AFTERNOON TEMPERATURES THROUGH TUESDAY. STARTING ON  
WEDNESDAY, A SERIES OF FRONTAL SYSTEMS STEMMING FROM A BROAD LOW  
IN THE GULF OF ALASKA WILL MOVE OVER THE REGION. WE ARE LOOKING  
AT A PROLONGED PERIOD OF RAIN, WIND AND CASCADE SNOW. A TREND  
TOWARDS A MODERATE ATMOSPHERIC RIVER (AR) ON FRIDAY WILL BE  
ACCOMPANIED BY GUSTY SOUTH TO SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS. SNOW LEVELS  
WILL BEGIN TO DROP OVER THE WEEKEND WITH SNOW POSSIBLE ALONG THE  
PASSES.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM...NOW THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT
 
A WEAKENING AREA OF  
HIGH PRESSURE PERSISTS OVER THE REGION THROUGH TUESDAY AND  
BEGINS TO ERODE ON WEDNESDAY. THIS HIGH WILL MAINTAIN PARTIALLY  
CLOUDY SKIES, DRIER CONDITIONS ASIDE FROM A FEW SHOWERS ALONG  
THE NORTH OREGON AND SOUTH WASHINGTON COASTS. TEMPERATURES WILL  
REMAIN SEASONABLE WITH HIGHS IN THE 60S AND LOWS IN THE 40S.  
 
IN THE SHORT-TERM, FOG IS GOING TO BE A WEATHER FEATURE TO WATCH  
OUT FOR. AS IS TYPICAL FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR, CLEARING SKIES  
WITH LINGERING MOISTURE WILL AID IN DECREASING THE DEWPOINT  
DEPRESSION AND THUS INCREASE CHANCES FOR FOG. WHILE MODELS DO  
NOT NECESSARILY DEPICT THE PRESENCE WELL, THE LIGHT NORTHERLY  
WINDS COMBINED WITH THESE TWO OTHER COMPONENTS WILL SET UP THE  
ATMOSPHERE FOR FOG DEVELOPMENT. THIS WILL MAINLY BE THE CASE IN  
OUR MORE "FOG PRONE" AREAS LIKE EUGENE, ALONG THE I-5 CORRIDOR  
AND HILLSBORO.  
 
SIMILAR CONDITIONS EXPECTED THROUGH TUESDAY AND THEN BEGIN TO  
DETERIORATE ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON AS THE FIRST FRONTAL SYSTEM  
APPROACHES. -27  
 
   
LONG TERM...WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT
 
FALL IS IN FULL  
SWING AS THE FIRST OF MULTIPLE FRONTAL SYSTEMS APPROACH THE  
REGION. THESE SYSTEMS ARE STEMMING FROM A LARGE "PARENT" LOW IN  
THE GULF OF ALASKA. THIS LOW IS COLD WRAPPED AND PRODUCING  
SEVERAL SHORT AND LONG WAVE TROUGHS. THE FIRST TROUGH IS FAIRLY  
ORGANIZED AS OBSERVED IN THE ENSEMBLE LOW CENTERS. THIS SYSTEM  
WILL MOVE OVER NORTHWEST OREGON AND SOUTHWEST WASHINGTON EARLY  
WEDNESDAY MORNING BUT WILL BE SHOWERY AS WE SIT ON THE SOUTHERN  
EDGE OF THE RAIN BAND. AT THIS POINT, THE ATMOSPHERE IS STILL  
FAIRLY WARM SO THERE IS A LOW PROBABILITY OF THUNDERSTORMS, BUT  
ACCUMULATING PRECIPITATION CHANCES ARE INCREASING. ANY RAIN  
THAT DOES ACCUMULATE WILL BE MINIMAL WITH A 35% CHANCE OF 0.1  
INCH OF RAIN IN THE NORTHERN WILLAMETTE VALLEY, AROUND 65% ALONG  
THE COAST NEAR ASTORIA AND LOWERING PROBABILITIES AS YOU MOVE  
SOUTHWARD. AS THIS SYSTEM QUICKLY EXITS, ZONAL FLOW WITH  
ADVANCING COOLER AIR DEVELOPS. THURSDAY WILL SEE MINIMAL IF ANY  
RAIN AND MOSTLY CLOUDY SKIES.  
 
FRIDAY IS WHEN THINGS REALLY BEGIN TO GET SPICY IN THE WEATHER  
WORLD. AN MODERATE ATMOSPHERIC RIVER (AR) WILL BEGIN TO PUSH  
INLAND FROM THE SOUTHWEST. THIS AR WILL BRING AMPLE  
PRECIPITATION, STRONG SOUTH TO SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS, AND A BURST  
OF WARMER AIR BEFORE TRAILING COOLER AIR MOVES IN. AS OF RIGHT  
NOW THERE IS STILL A WIDE RANGE OF PROBABILITIES FOR BOTH WIND  
AND RAIN. IMPACT WISE, RAIN HAS A LOWER PROBABILITY OF ISSUES AS  
ACCUMULATION RATES ARE NOT HIGH ENOUGH TO PRODUCE SIGNIFICANT  
URBAN FLOODING AT THIS TIME. GLOBAL ENSEMBLES ARE SHOWING AROUND  
1 INCH IN 3 HOURS WHICH IS A LITTLE MORE THAN A QUARTER INCH PER  
HOUR. WITH THESE RAIN RATES, CLEARED DRAINS SHOULDN'T HAVE ANY  
ISSUES RIDDING WATER. HOWEVER, GIVEN THE TIME OF YEAR AND FALLEN  
LEAVES, THOSE CLOGGED DRAINS COULD PRODUCE A PROBLEM CAUSING  
LOCALIZED PONDING THAT COULD CAUSE IMPACTS TO TRAFFIC.  
 
WIND WILL BE ANOTHER CONCERN BUT ONE THAT HAS SIGNIFICANTLY MORE  
VARIABILITY. THE COAST WILL SEE THE HIGHEST WIND SPEEDS,  
ESPECIALLY ALONG THE BEACHES AND HEADLANDS. ALONG COASTAL  
CITIES, WINDS COULD BE AS LOW AS 30 MPH, OR AS HIGH AS 60 MPH  
(THE 10TH TO 90TH PERCENTILE). INLAND, GUSTS COULD RANGE, BASED  
ON THE 10TH TO 90TH, BETWEEN 20 MPH TO NEARLY 50 MPH ON FRIDAY  
AFTERNOON INTO SATURDAY MORNING. THIS SPREAD MAKES NARROWING  
DOWN ON AN EXACT FORECAST DIFFICULT. FOR RAINFALL TOTALS TOO  
WILL BE HIGHER AS THE STRONGER BAND OF PRECIPITATION RUNS OVER  
ON FRIDAY. ULTIMATELY THE RAIN COMBINED WITH WIND AND FULL  
LEAFED TREES COULD LEAD TO DOWNED BRANCHES AND SOME HEAVIER  
TREES.  
 
ALSO WORTH MENTIONING IS LOWERING SNOW LEVELS SATURDAY INTO  
SATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY AS COLDER AIR ALOFT SETTLES OVER THE  
AREA. THE DETERMINISTIC NBM SUGGESTS SNOW LEVELS WILL FALL TO  
3500-4500 FEET BY SATURDAY NIGHT, WHILE THE 10TH PERCENTILE  
SUGGESTS SNOW LEVELS DOWN TO 3000-3500 FEET (10% CHANCE OF  
OCCURRING). IN BOTH CASES, ACCUMULATING SNOW WOULD OCCUR AT PASS  
LEVEL, RESULTING IN TRAVEL IMPACTS.  
 
RAIN WILL CONTINUE INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK. -27  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
WESTERLY FLOW ALOFT WITH WEAK RIDGE OF HIGH PRESSURE  
OVER THE REGION. MOSTLY CLEAR SKIES WITH LIGHT WINDS TONIGHT WILL  
BRING AREAS OF FOG, PARTICULARLY ACROSS THE SOUTHERN WILLAMETTE  
VALLEY. LIKELY LIFR/IFR CONDITIONS BETWEEN 12-18Z TUESDAY MORNING  
WHERE FOG DOES DEVELOP. OTHERWISE, PREDOMINATELY VFR CONDITIONS  
EXPECTED.  
 
KPDX AND APPROACHES...PREDOMINATELY VFR CONDITIONS EXPECTED. MAIN  
EXCEPTION WILL BE FOR CHANCES OF FOG DEVELOPING BETWEEN 12-18Z  
TUESDAY; 30-40% PROBABILITY OF MVFR OR LOWER. /DH  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
STEEP SEAS, HAZARDOUS TO SMALL CRAFT CONTINUE ACROSS THE  
WATERS INTO THE EVENING. SEAS ARE CURRENTLY AROUND 10-12 FEET AT  
14 SECONDS BUT ARE EXPECTED TO CONTINUE TO SUBSIDE BELOW SMALL  
CRAFT CRITERIA AROUND 8 PM. THE BREAK LATE THIS EVENING AND INTO  
THE OVERNIGHT HOURS IS EXPECTED TO BE SHORT LIVED AS ANOTHER  
POTENT NORTHWESTERLY SWELL THEN ARRIVES EARLY TUESDAY. SEAS WILL  
BE PUSHED TO 15 TO 18 FEET AT 16 TO 18 SECONDS COMING DOWN TO 10  
FEET AROUND 15 SECONDS BY LATE TUESDAY MORNING.  
 
AFTER A BRIEF BREAK WEDNESDAY, AN ACTIVE WEATHER PATTERN IS THEN  
EXPECTED TO CONTINUE THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT WITH A PERIOD  
OF GALE FORCE, POSSIBLY STORM FORCE SOUTHERLY WIND GUSTS THURSDAY  
NIGHT INTO FRIDAY MORNING. PROBABILITIES FOR GALE FORCE GUSTS ARE  
40-70% WHILE THE PROBABILITIES FOR STORM FORCE HAVE COME DOWN TO  
AROUND 20% FOR THE INNER WATERS ONLY. NOTE THAT PROBABILITIES ARE  
HIGHEST OVER THE INNER WATERS DUE TO THE POTENTIAL DEVELOPMENT OF  
A COASTAL JET DURING THAT TIME. THIS SYSTEM WILL LIKELY PUSH SEAS  
UP TO AROUND 20 FT AGAIN, WITH A 10% CHANCE FOR SEAS OVER 20 FT.  
 
SEAS ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN ELEVATED THROUGH THE WEEKEND AS MORE  
STORM SYSTEMS APPROACH THE REGION, PARTICULARLY SATURDAY NIGHT  
INTO SUNDAY.  
-19/23  
 

 
   
BEACH HAZARDS
 
RAZOR CLAM DIGGERS AT THE COAST WILL NEED TO  
EXERCISE CAUTION FOR SNEAKER WAVES THIS WEEK, ESPECIALLY ON  
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY WHEN A LONG PERIOD WESTERLY SWELL WILL BRING  
A HIGH THREAT FOR SNEAKER WAVES. SNEAKER WAVES CAN RUN UP  
SIGNIFICANTLY FARTHER ON A BEACH THAN NORMAL, INCLUDING OVER  
ROCKS, LOGS, AND JETTIES. SNEAKER WAVES CAN SUDDENLY KNOCK PEOPLE  
OFF OF THEIR FEET AND QUICKLY PULL THEM INTO THE OCEAN WHICH MAY  
LEAD TO SERIOUS INJURY OR DROWNING. CAUTION SHOULD BE USED WHEN IN  
OR NEAR THE WATER. ALWAYS KEEP AN EYE ON THE WAVES, AND BE  
ESPECIALLY WATCHFUL OF CHILDREN AND PETS. REMEMBER, NEVER TURN  
YOUR BACK ON THE OCEAN. A BEACH HAZARDS STATEMENT IS IN EFFECT  
ACROSS THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN OREGON COAST AND THE SOUTH  
WASHINGTON COAST TUESDAY MORNING THROUGH WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON TO  
HELP MESSAGE THIS THREAT. -23  
 

 
   
PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
OR...NONE.  
WA...NONE.  
PZ...HAZARDOUS SEAS WARNING FROM 8 AM TUESDAY TO 8 AM PDT WEDNESDAY  
FOR PZZ210.  
 
HAZARDOUS SEAS WARNING FROM 5 AM TUESDAY TO 8 AM PDT WEDNESDAY  
FOR PZZ251>253-271>273.  

 
 

 
 
WWW.WEATHER.GOV/PORTLAND  
 
INTERACT WITH US VIA SOCIAL MEDIA:  
WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/NWSPORTLAND  
X.COM/NWSPORTLAND  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab OR Page
The Nexlab WA Page Main Text Page