432  
FXUS66 KPQR 020555 AAA  
AFDPQR  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PORTLAND OR  
955 PM PST MON DEC 1 2025  
 
UPDATED AVIATION DISCUSSION.  
   
SYNOPSIS  
A SERIES OF FRONTS WILL BRING A WET PERIOD OF  
WEATHER LATER THIS WEEK INTO THE WEEKEND ACROSS SOUTHWEST  
WASHINGTON AND NORTHWEST OREGON WITH POTENTIALLY MORE IMPACTFUL  
RAIN NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
WAVER VAPOR SATELLITE IMAGERY THIS AFTERNOON  
REVEALS A SHORTWAVE RIDGE OF HIGH PRESSURE OVER THE EASTERN  
PACIFIC. A SHORTWAVE TROUGH IS DROPPING SOUTHEASTWARD TOWARDS  
THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST. A MID LEVEL FRONT IS GENERATING A BAND OF  
RAIN MOVING SOUTHEASTWARD ACROSS NORTHWEST WASHINGTON THIS  
AFTERNOON AND COULD BRING A FEW SPRINKLES TO THE NORTHERN  
PORTIONS OF THE CWA LATER THIS EVENING. MEANWHILE, THE LOW  
LEVEL FRONT IS JUST BEGINNING TO PUSH INTO THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA.  
REFS GUIDANCE IS IN GENERAL AGREEMENT IT WILL MOVE ONTO THE  
SOUTH WASHINGTON AND NORTH OREGON COAST LATE THIS EVENING  
TO AROUND MIDNIGHT BEFORE PUSHING INTO THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY  
LATE TONIGHT INTO EARLY TUESDAY MORNING WHILE SIMULTANEOUSLY  
FALLING APART. THE NET RESULT WILL BE A CLOUDY AND IN SPOTS  
DRIZZLY TUESDAY. LIGHT NORTH TO NORTHEASTERLY FLOW SPREADS  
ACROSS THE REGION LATE TUESDAY AFTERNOON INTO TUESDAY NIGHT.  
THIS MAY RESULT IN JUST ENOUGH CLEARING TO ALLOW FOG AND LOW  
CLOUDS TO REDEVELOP OVERNIGHT ACROSS INLAND VALLEYS. THE FLOW  
WILL TURN MORE NORTHWESTERLY WEDNESDAY AND OPEN US TO WEAK  
SHORTWAVE TROUGHS THAT COULD BRING LIGHT PRECIPITATION TO MAINLY  
OUR FAR NORTHERN ZONES AND TERRAIN LATE WEDNESDAY INTO EARLY  
THURSDAY.  
 
MODELS AND THEIR ENSEMBLES ARE IN GOOD AGREEMENT THAT THE UPPER  
LEVEL RIDGE REMAINS OVER THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC ON THURSDAY. WPC  
CLUSTER ANALYSIS DOES INDICATE THERE IS A HIGH PROBABILITY OF  
THE RIDGE FLATTENING OUT, ALLOWING FOR MORE WESTERLY FLOW INTO  
THE PACIFIC NW FRIDAY AND INTO THE WEEKEND. THIS SHOULD ALLOW  
FOR FRONTAL SYSTEMS AND ATTENDANT ATMOSPHERIC RIVERS TO BRING  
INCREASED RAINFALL AND MORE ACTIVE WEATHER TO THE AREA.  
ENSEMBLES ARE IN RELATIVELY GOOD AGREEMENT, A MODERATE STRENGTH  
ATMOSPHERIC RIVER WILL SPREAD INTO THE REGION FRIDAY INTO EARLY  
SATURDAY BRINGING WITH IT MAINLY BENEFICIAL RAINS TO THE REGION.  
THE EC EFI DOES SUGGEST SOME NOTABLE RAINFALL AMOUNTS WILL  
OCCUR ACROSS THE OREGON CASCADES AND FOOTHILLS FRIDAY NIGHT  
INTO SATURDAY RELATIVE TO MODEL CLIMATOLOGY, BUT RAW ENSEMBLE  
RAINFALL AMOUNTS APPEAR UNLIKELY TO PRODUCE IMPACTS WITH THIS  
FIRST ROUND OF RAIN. WITH THAT SAID, THERE ARE HANDFUL OF THE 100  
GLOBAL ENSEMBLE MEMBERS THAT PRODUCE ENOUGH RAIN THAT OUR FLASHIEST  
RIVERS WOULD RISE SHARPLY AND APPROACH MINOR FLOOD STAGE FRIDAY  
INTO SATURDAY, BUT AT THIS POINT, CONFIDENCE REMAINS LOW IN  
THIS SCENARIO PANNING OUT BASED ON AVAILABLE ENSEMBLE GUIDANCE.  
 
ADDITIONAL ROUNDS OF RAIN WILL CONTINUE FOR THE REMAINDER OF  
THE WEEKEND AS ENSEMBLES ARE IN GENERAL AGREEMENT WE WILL REMAIN  
UNDER ZONAL FLOW IN THE VICINITY OF THE BAROCLINIC ZONE. GIVEN  
THE WESTERLY FLOW THERE WILL LIKELY BE PERIODS WHERE THE  
WILLAMETTE VALLEY RAIN-SHADOWS OUT, BUT IT MAY BE RAINING, AT  
LEAST LIGHTLY, FOR A SIGNIFICANT PORTION OF THE WEEKEND ACROSS  
THE TERRAIN, PARTICULARLY AREAS FARTHER NORTH IN THE CWA.  
UNCERTAINTY IN THE FORECAST DETAILS GROW SIGNIFICANTLY EARLY  
NEXT WEEK AND MAINLY REVOLVE AROUND WHETHER OR NOT A STRONGER  
ATMOSPHERIC RIVER WITH POTENTIAL IMPACTS TO AREA RIVERS WILL  
IMPACT THE REGION OR NOT. HEFS GUIDANCE DOES SUGGEST A ~10-15%  
CHANCE FOR RIVERS LIKE THE WILLAPA, NASELLE AND WILSON RIVERS  
TO REACH MINOR FLOOD STAGE AT SOME POINT IN THE NEXT 10 DAYS  
WITH THAT DAY 8-10 TIMEFRAME BEING THE MAIN DRIVER OF THOSE  
PROBABILITIES.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
AT 0530Z TUESDAY, SATELLITE AND SURFACE WEATHER  
OBSERVATIONS DEPICTED MOSTLY CLOUDY SKIES ACROSS NORTHWEST OR AND  
SOUTHWEST WA, WITH CIGS RANGING BETWEEN 5000-8000 FT. EXPECT CIGS  
TO LOWER TO AROUND 3000 FT FROM NORTH TO SOUTH BETWEEN 06-12Z  
TUESDAY, IMPACTING KAST FIRST AND KEUG LAST. WHILE MVFR CIGS WILL  
BE MOST PREDOMINANT TONIGHT THROUGH TOMORROW MORNING, CANNOT  
COMPLETELY RULE OUT A PERIOD OF IFR CIGS BELOW 1000 FT WITH THE  
PASSAGE OF AN INCOMING COLD FRONT TONIGHT. THIS IS ESPECIALLY TRUE  
AT KAST BETWEEN 09-12Z TUESDAY WHEN PROBABILITIES FOR CIGS BELOW  
1000 FT INCREASE TO 50-70% WITH THE FRONTAL PASSAGE.  
PROBABILITIES FOR CIGS BELOW 1000 FT INCREASE TO 40-50% AT KONP  
AND TO AROUND 20% AT KEUG BETWEEN 13-16Z TUESDAY, ALSO WITH THE  
FRONTAL PASSAGE. LIGHT RAIN SHOWERS WILL ALSO ACCOMPANY THIS  
FRONTAL PASSAGE, ALBEIT WITH MINIMAL FLIGHT IMPACTS.  
 
EXPECTING PREDOMINATELY MVFR CIGS TO GIVE WAY TO A MIX OF HIGH-END  
MVFR TO LOW-END VFR CIGS TOWARDS 22Z TUESDAY-00Z WEDNESDAY. CLOUD  
COVER WILL LIKELY BECOME MORE SCATTERED BETWEEN 03-06Z WEDNESDAY  
AS SKIES ATTEMPT TO CLEAR OUT. THIS WILL SET THE STAGE FOR  
WIDESPREAD FOG AND LOW STRATUS DEVELOPMENT TUESDAY NIGHT.  
PROBABILITIES FOR SURFACE VISIBILITIES BELOW 1/2 SM INCREASE TO  
50-70% AT ALL INLAND TERMINALS BY 10-13Z WEDNESDAY. FOG IS MUCH  
LESS LIKELY TO OCCUR AT THE COAST WHERE LIGHT OFFSHORE WINDS WILL  
HELP PREVENT FOG DEVELOPMENT.  
 
KPDX AND APPROACHES...CIGS AROUND 5000 FT SHOULD LOWER TO AROUND  
3000 FT BY 10-12Z TUESDAY AS A COLD FRONT MOVES THROUGH THE AREA,  
BRINGING SCATTERED LIGHT RAIN SHOWERS WITH IT. CIGS ARE EXPECTED  
TO TREND TOWARDS HIGH-END MVFR TO LOW-END VFR THRESHOLDS TOWARDS  
22-23Z TUESDAY BEFORE CLOUD COVER ATTEMPTS SCATTERING OUT TOWARDS  
06Z WEDNESDAY. ASSUMING CLOUD COVER DOES CLEAR OUT, FOG AND LOW  
STRATUS WILL BECOME INCREASINGLY LIKELY TUESDAY NIGHT INTO  
WEDNESDAY MORNING. PROBABILITIES FOR VISIBILITIES UNDER 1/2 SM  
INCREASE TO AROUND 70% BY 10-13Z WEDNESDAY AT THE TERMINAL. -23  
 
 
   
MARINE  
LIGHT NORTHEAST WINDS AROUND 10 KT WILL TURN  
NORTHWESTERLY AS A FRONTAL BOUNDARY APPROACHES FROM THE  
NORTHWEST. THIS WILL INCREASE WINDS ACROSS THE WATERS, MAINLY THE  
OUTER ZONES NORTH OF CAPE FOULWEATHER WHERE WINDS ARE EXPECTED TO  
REACH LOW END SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY CONDITIONS. WINDS 15-20 KT WITH  
GUSTS TO 25 KT WILL BE POSSIBLE FROM 4 AM TO 10 PM ON TUESDAY.  
ELSEWHERE, WINDS WILL INCREASE TO 10-15 KT WITH GUSTS TO AROUND 20  
KT, STAYING BELOW SMALL CRAFT CRITERIA. A LONG PERIOD, WESTERLY  
SWELL IS ALSO EXPECTED TO MOVE INTO THE WATERS WITH HEIGHTS  
INCREASING TOWARDS 10 FEET AT 15-18 SECONDS.  
 
WINDS AND SEAS EASE MIDWEEK AS HIGH PRESSURE RETURNS. A MORE  
ACTIVE WEATHER PATTERN DEVELOPS LATE IN THE WEEK AS A SERIES OF  
FRONTAL SYSTEMS IS EXPECTED TO MOVES ACROSS THE WATERS FROM  
THURSDAY INTO THE WEEKEND. THERE IS A 30-60% CHANCE OF SEAS  
RISING ABOVE 10 FT AGAIN SATURDAY INTO SUNDAY. /19  
 
 
   
BEACH HAZARDS  
A LONG-PERIOD WESTERLY SWELL IS EXPECTED ALONG  
THE NORTHWESTERN OREGON AND SOUTHWESTERN WASHINGTON COASTS FROM  
LATE MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NEXT WEEK. WAVE HEIGHTS INCREASING  
TO 8 TO 10 FT ON TUESDAY MAY NOT APPEAR TO PRESENT A SAFETY RISK  
TO THOSE ON AREA BEACHES, BUT THESE ENERGETIC WAVES WILL PRESENT A  
MODERATE TO HIGH RISK FOR SNEAKER WAVES, WAVES WHICH CAN RUN  
SIGNIFICANTLY FARTHER UP A BEACH THAN NORMAL, INCLUDING OVER ROCKS  
AND JETTIES. IN ADDITION, A PERIOD OF PERIGEAN SPRING OR "KING"  
TIDES MEANS THESE WAVES WILL HAVE AN EVEN EASIER TIME REACHING  
HIGH UP ONTO BEACHES, LIMITING THE AREAS WHICH MAY BE SAFE FROM  
WAVE ACTION.  
 
A BEACH HAZARDS STATEMENT HAS THEREFORE BEEN ISSUED FROM 7 AM  
TUESDAY TO 10 PM WEDNESDAY. SNEAKER WAVES CAN CREATE POTENTIALLY  
LIFE-THREATENING CONDITIONS IN THE SURF ZONE WHEN BEACHGOERS CAN  
BE UNEXPECTEDLY KNOCKED OFF THEIR FEET AND PULLED OUT INTO COLD  
OCEAN WATERS. CAUTION SHOULD BE USED WHEN IN OR NEAR THE WATER,  
AND THOSE WITH CHILDREN SHOULD BE ESPECIALLY WATCHFUL. NEVER TURN  
YOUR BACK ON THE OCEAN, AND BE SURE TO KEEP AN EYE ON THE WAVES.  
THOSE PARTICIPATING IN RAZOR CLAM DIGS SHOULD ADDITIONALLY  
EXERCISE CAUTION. -36  
 
 
   
PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
OR...NONE.  
WA...NONE.  
PZ...SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY FROM 4 AM TO 10 PM PST TUESDAY FOR PZZ271-  
272.  
 
 
 
 
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