786  
FXUS66 KPQR 032331  
AFDPQR  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PORTLAND OR  
331 PM PST WED DEC 3 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
TODAY IS THE LAST DRY DAY BEFORE A SERIES OF FRONTS  
WILL BRING A PERIOD OF WET WEATHER THURSDAY THROUGH AT LEAST THE  
MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK ACROSS SOUTHWEST WASHINGTON AND NORTHWEST  
OREGON. ENSEMBLE GUIDANCE SUGGESTS A POTENTIALLY IMPACTFUL  
ATMOSPHERIC RIVER EVENT NEXT MONDAY INTO MIDWEEK, THOUGH  
UNCERTAINTY IS VERY HIGH.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION...WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH TUESDAY
 
TODAY IS THE  
LAST DRY DAY IN AT LEAST THE NEXT WEEK BEFORE A SERIES OF  
WEATHER SYSTEMS ASSOCIATED WITH PACIFIC MOISTURE PRODUCE  
MULTIPLE ROUNDS OF WIDESPREAD RAIN OVER NW OREGON AND SW  
WASHINGTON. ALTHOUGH TODAY REMAINS DRY, SATELLITE IMAGERY  
INDICATES MID- TO HIGH-LEVEL CLOUDS STREAMING OVER THE REGION  
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON AHEAD OF THE FIRST FRONTAL SYSTEM. THESE  
CLOUDS ARE KEEPING TEMPERATURES ON THE COOLER SIDE WITH 2 PM PST  
TEMPERATURE OBSERVATIONS IN THE LOW TO MID 40S ACROSS MUCH OF  
THE INTERIOR EXCEPT FOR THE 30S OVER THE CASCADES. AREAS OF  
PATCHY FOG AND FROST ARE POSSIBLE FOR INTERIOR VALLEYS ONCE  
AGAIN LATE TONIGHT THROUGH EARLY TOMORROW MORNING BEFORE RAIN  
BEGINS SPREADING INLAND.  
 
UPPER LEVEL HIGH PRESSURE OVER THE REGION AND INTO THE EASTERN  
PACIFIC WILL BECOME MORE ZONAL OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS AS  
THE FIRST WEATHER SYSTEM MOVES OVER THE RIDGE. A WARM FRONT  
ASSOCIATED WITH THIS WEATHER SYSTEM WILL APPROACH THE COAST FROM  
THE NORTHWEST LATE TONIGHT, THEN STALL JUST OFF OF THE COAST  
THROUGH TOMORROW. THIS WILL BRING THE FIRST ROUND OF WIDESPREAD  
RAIN, BEGINNING AROUND MIDNIGHT TO 3AM ALONG THE NORTHERN COAST  
THEN QUICKLY SPREADING INLAND THROUGH THE EARLY MORNING HOURS  
WITH SHOWERS CONTINUING THROUGH THE NIGHT. DUE TO THE NORTHWEST  
ORIENTATION OF WINDS, THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY WILL LIKELY BE RAIN  
SHADOWED AND SEE LOWER RAIN ACCUMULATIONS. BY FRIDAY MORNING,  
THE COLD FRONT BEGINS MOVING CLOSER TO THE COAST, PUSHING THE  
WARM FRONT INLAND. THIS COLD FRONT WILL BRING A STRONGER SURGE  
OF MOISTURE WITH IVT VALUES PEAKING AROUND 500-700 KG/M/S, AND  
ROUND TWO OF WIDESPREAD HEAVIER RAIN IMPACTS THE REGION THROUGH  
FRIDAY AFTERNOON. THE FLOW WILL BE MORE WESTERLY AT THIS POINT,  
ALLOWING MORE PRECIPITATION TO FALL IN THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY.  
THE PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT ARE EXPECTED TO  
BE AROUND 0.4-0.6 INCHES FOR THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN WILLAMETTE  
VALLEY, 0.6-1 INCH FROM THE PORTLAND AREA NORTH THROUGH THE I-5  
CORRIDOR, 0.9-2 INCHES ALONG THE COAST AND COAST RANGE, AND  
0.9-3 INCHES ALONG THE CASCADES. SOME ELEVATED WINDS ARE LIKELY  
AS THE COLD FRONT PASSES THROUGH ON FRIDAY WITH A 20-40% CHANCE  
OF WIND GUSTS OF AT LEAST 30 MPH FOR INLAND VALLEYS AND A 50-75%  
CHANCE ALONG THE COAST. THERE'S A 20-50% CHANCE OF GUSTS OF 40  
MPH OR HIGHER ALONG THE CASCADES.  
 
GUIDANCE SUGGESTS THE COLD FRONT MIGHT STALL AND WEAKEN OVER THE  
PACNW INTO SATURDAY, WITH SHOWERS LINGERING THROUGH SATURDAY.  
THEN, ANOTHER FRONTAL SYSTEM IS SLATED TO MOVE THROUGH THE AREA  
ON SUNDAY. ENSEMBLES INDICATE IVT VALUES COULD PEAK AROUND  
400-500 KG/M/S WITH THIS FRONTAL SYSTEM WHICH WOULD PRODUCE  
ANOTHER SURGE OF WIDESPREAD RAINFALL. A BIT UNCERTAINTY EXISTS  
IN RAIN AMOUNTS DURING THIS 48 HOUR PERIOD. LOOKING AT THE 25TH  
TO 75TH PERCENTILES, THE INTERIOR LOWLANDS COULD RECEIVE  
ANYWHERE FROM 0.3-1 INCH OF RAIN, LOWEST AMOUNTS IN THE SOUTHERN  
WILLAMETTE VALLEY. THE COAST, COAST RANGE, AND CASCADES COULD  
SEE ANYWHERE FROM 0.5-2.5 INCHES, LOWEST IN LANE AND LINCOLN  
COUNTIES. IMPACTS ARE NOT EXPECTED WITH RAIN AMOUNTS THURSDAY  
THROUGH SUNDAY, UNLESS RAIN RATES EXCEED 0.2-0.3 INCHES FOR  
MULTIPLE HOURS OVER CERTAIN WATERSHEDS LEADING TO RIVERS THAT  
ARE PRONE TO FLOODING QUICKLY, SUCH AS THE GRAYS AT ROSBURG AND  
WILLAPA RIVER AT WILLAPA. THIS WILL BE SOMETHING TO MONITOR  
DURING HEAVIEST PERIODS OF RAIN.  
 
THE MAIN PERIOD OF CONCERN FOR THE FORECAST PERIOD IS NEXT WEEK  
AS ENSEMBLE GUIDANCE CONTINUES TO INDICATE THE POTENTIAL FOR AN  
IMPACTFUL ATMOSPHERIC RIVER EVENT MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY.  
SIGNIFICANT UNCERTAINTY STILL REMAINS IN THE LENGTH OF ELEVATED  
IVT VALUES, LOCATION OF THE MOISTURE ALONG THE WA AND OR COAST,  
AND EXACT PEAK OF IVT VALUES (THE 12Z GEFS MEAN IS AROUND 550  
KG/M/S WITH +1 STANDARD DEVIATION AROUND 800 KG/M/S AND THE 12Z  
EURO EPS MEAN IS AROUND 700 KG/M/S WITH +1 STANDARD DEVIATION  
AROUND 900 KG/M/S). THESE FACTORS HAVE JUMPED AROUND BETWEEN  
FORECAST RUNS OVER THE PAST 24 HOURS AND WILL LIKELY CONTINUE TO  
FLUCTUATE UNTIL WE GET CLOSER TO THE EVENT. THERE IS THE  
POTENTIAL THAT THIS ENDS UP BEING ANOTHER MODERATE ATMOSPHERIC  
RIVER EVENT, SIMILAR TO THE PRECEDING EVENTS. IF THIS IS THE  
CASE, IMPACTS ARE LIKELY TO BE MINIMAL ONCE AGAIN. HOWEVER, IF A  
STRONG TO EXTREME ATMOSPHERIC RIVER EVENT MATERIALIZES, THERE  
IS THE POTENTIAL FOR WIDESPREAD RIVER FLOODING AND/OR WIND  
DAMAGE AS SOILS WILL ALREADY BE SATURATED AND RIVER LEVELS  
HIGHER FROM THE RAIN FROM THE 4 DAYS PRIOR. THE MAIN PERIOD FOR  
RIVER FLOOD CONCERNS IS TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY AS IT TAKES TIME  
AFTER RAIN BEGINS FOR RIVERS TO RISE. HEFS GUIDANCE INDICATES A  
10-25% CHANCE OF RIVERS REACHING MINOR FLOODING FOR COAST RANGE  
AND COASTAL RIVERS AND 5-20% CHANCE FOR WILLAMETTE RIVER  
TRIBUTARIES, MAINLY FOCUSED ON TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY, POSSIBLY  
BEYOND DEPENDING ON THE RAIN FORECAST AND/OR RESPONSE TIMES OF  
THE RIVERS. ADDITIONALLY, THERE ARE SIGNALS FOR BREEZY WINDS  
WITH THE FRONTAL PASSAGE, ALTHOUGH THE ENSEMBLE SPREAD REMAINS  
VERY WIDE LEADING TO LOW CERTAINTY. IF WINDS DO END UP EVEN  
AROUND 30-40 MPH, SATURATED SOILS COULD CAUSE SOME LOCALIZED  
IMPACTS DUE TO DOWNED TREES. KEEP AN EYE ON THIS FORECAST,  
ESPECIALLY IF YOU LIVE IN FLOOD PRONE REGIONS. -03  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
TERMINAL OBSERVATIONS AS OF EARLY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON  
DEPICT A MIX OF MVFR AND VFR CIGS ACROSS THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY  
WHILE THE COAST MAINTAINS VFR CONDITIONS DUE TO LIGHT OFFSHORE  
FLOW. EXPECT THESE CIG TRENDS TO CONTINUE THROUGH THE REST OF THE  
AFTERNOON AND EVENING. TONIGHT, LIGHT WINDS AND A MOIST LOW-LEVEL  
ATMOSPHERE WILL BRING A 40-60% CHANCE OF IFR/MVFR STRATUS RE-  
DEVELOPING IN THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY AFTER 06-09Z THU. THERE IS  
ALSO MODERATE TO HIGH CONFIDENCE (60-80% CHANCE) FOR LIFR  
CONDITIONS DUE TO FOG POTENTIAL IN THE SOUTH VALLEY INCLUDING  
KEUG, AND THE TUALATIN VALLEY INCLUDING KHIO.  
 
AFTER 12-15Z THU, ANY LIFR/IFR CIGS OR VIS IN THE VALLEY WILL  
TREND TOWARD MVFR AS THE NEXT SYSTEM APPROACHES THE AREA AND  
RETURNS RAIN AND INCREASED MIXING. MEANWHILE, CIGS ALONG THE COAST  
WILL BEGIN TO LOWER, WITH HIGH CONFIDENCE IN IFR AND LOW-END MVFR  
CIGS (>80% CHANCE) BY 21Z THU. WINDS GENERALLY REMAIN VARIABLE AND  
UNDER 5 KT THROUGH TONIGHT, TURNING MORE SOUTHERLY IN THE VALLEY  
AFTER 12Z THU WITH THE NEXT SYSTEM.  
 
KPDX AND APPROACHES...MIX OF MVFR AND VFR CIGS THIS AFTERNOON AND  
EVENING. RAIN AND A 30-50% CHANCE FOR MVFR CIGS RETURN AFTER  
10-12Z THU AS THE NEXT SYSTEM APPROACHES. HIGH CONFIDENCE FOR MVFR  
CIGS AFTER 18-21Z THU. VARIABLE WINDS AROUND 5 KT OR LESS THROUGH  
THE TAF PERIOD, BECOMING MORE SOUTHEASTERLY THURSDAY AFTERNOON.  
-10  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
HIGH PRESSURE OVER THE WATERS TODAY WILL MAINTAIN  
NORTHERLY WINDS 10 KT OR LESS THROUGH TONIGHT. SEAS AROUND 6 TO 7  
FT CONTINUE TO SUBSIDE AS WELL.  
 
ACTIVE WEATHER RETURNS AS WINDS TURN SOUTHERLY ON THURSDAY AHEAD  
OF THE FIRST IN A SERIES OF FRONTS. CHANCES FOR FREQUENT WIND GUSTS  
GREATER THAN 21 KT REMAIN BELOW 15% ON THURSDAY, WITH WINDS  
TURNING MORE WESTERLY BEHIND THE FRONT. HOWEVER, ANOTHER SLIGHTLY  
STRONGER FRONT MOVING THROUGH ON FRIDAY WILL BRING A 50-70% CHANCE  
FOR WIND GUSTS GREATER THAN 21 KT, WITH THE HIGHEST CHANCES NORTH  
OF CAPE FOULWEATHER. WILL LIKELY NEED TO ISSUE A SMALL CRAFT  
ADVISORY FOR FRIDAY WITH THE UPCOMING FORECAST PACKAGE. THE ONLY  
SMALL CRAFT ADVISORIES IN EFFECT RIGHT NOW ARE FOR THE COLUMBIA  
RIVER BAR THIS AFTERNOON AND THURSDAY AFTERNOON DUE TO VERY STRONG  
EBBS BRINGING SEAS IN THE MAIN CHANNEL UP TO 9-10 FT.  
 
A SERIES OF FRONTS CONTINUE THROUGH THE WEEKEND AND INTO EARLY  
NEXT WEEK. THERE IS A 50-60% CHANCE FOR ISOLATED GALE FORCE WIND  
GUSTS ON MONDAY, BUT CHANCES FOR FREQUENT AND WIDESPREAD GALES ARE  
ONLY 15-30%. SEAS REMAIN AROUND 6-8 FT AT 11-12 SECONDS THROUGH  
FRIDAY, BUILDING ON SATURDAY DUE TO AN INCREASING WEST-NORTHWESTERLY  
SWELL. THERE IS A 60-80% CHANCE OF SEAS EXCEEDING 10 FEET BY LATE  
FRIDAY NIGHT INTO SATURDAY MORNING. -10  
 

 
   
BEACH HAZARDS
 
A LONG-PERIOD WESTERLY SWELL IS EXPECTED TO  
CONTINUE ALONG THE NORTHWESTERN OREGON AND SOUTHWESTERN WASHINGTON  
COASTS THROUGH TONIGHT, BRINGING A MODERATE RISK FOR SNEAKER WAVES.  
WAVES MAY RUN UP FARTHER THAN NORMAL ON BEACHES, INCLUDING OVER  
ROCKS, LOGS, 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 THEREFORE REMAINS  
IN EFFECT THROUGH 10 PM TONIGHT. SNEAKER WAVES CAN CREATE  
POTENTIALLY LIFE-THREATENING CONDITIONS IN THE SURF ZONE WHERE  
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.  
 
ADDITIONALLY, THERE IS A COASTAL FLOOD ADVISORY FOR MINOR TIDAL  
OVERFLOW FLOODING DURING HIGH TIDE FROM 9 AM TO 3 PM THURSDAY AND  
FRIDAY FOR THE SOUTH WASHINGTON COAST AND THE CLATSOP COUNTY  
COAST IN OREGON. MINOR FLOODING UP TO 1 FOOT ABOVE GROUND LEVEL IS  
POSSIBLE DURING HIGH TIDE IN LOW LYING AREAS NEAR BAYS, SLOUGHS,  
AND THE LOW REACHES OF THE COASTAL RIVERS. COASTAL RESIDENTS IN  
THE WARNED AREA SHOULD REMAIN ALERT FOR RISING WATER AND TAKE  
APPROPRIATE ACTION TO PROTECT LIFE AND PROPERTY. REMAIN OUT OF THE  
WATER TO AVOID HAZARDOUS SWIMMING CONDITIONS. -10  
 

 
   
PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
OR...COASTAL FLOOD ADVISORY FROM 9 AM TO 3 PM PST THURSDAY FOR ORZ101.  
 
COASTAL FLOOD ADVISORY FROM 9 AM TO 3 PM PST FRIDAY FOR ORZ101.  
 
WA...COASTAL FLOOD ADVISORY FROM 9 AM TO 3 PM PST THURSDAY FOR WAZ201.  
 
COASTAL FLOOD ADVISORY FROM 9 AM TO 3 PM PST FRIDAY FOR WAZ201.  
 
PZ...SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY UNTIL 5 PM PST THIS AFTERNOON FOR PZZ210.  
 
SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY FROM 2 PM TO 6 PM PST THURSDAY FOR PZZ210.  

 
 

 
 
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