634  
FXUS66 KPQR 152340  
AFDPQR  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PORTLAND OR  
340 PM PST MON DEC 15 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
A CONTINUED ACTIVE PATTERN WILL BRING MULTIPLE  
WEATHER HAZARDS THROUGH THE NEXT WEEK INCLUDING HEAVY RAIN,  
URBAN, SMALL STREAM, AND RIVER FLOODING, GUSTY WINDS, CASCADE  
SNOW, AND HAZARDOUS SEAS.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM...NOW THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT
 
THE REGION REMAINS  
BENEATH THE STORM TRACK AS REPEATED SHORTWAVE IMPULSES BRING  
ROUNDS OF RAIN AND WINDS THROUGH THE NEXT TWO DAYS. AN INITIAL  
WAVE APPROACHING THE COAST WAS RESPONSIBLE FOR EARLIER RAINFALL,  
HOWEVER SHOWERS CONTINUE, PARTICULARLY OVER AREAS OF TERRAIN,  
WHERE SUFFICIENT INSTABILITY EXISTS ABOVE THE SURFACE LAYER TO  
SUPPORT NARROW BANDLETS OF RAINFALL. THESE FEATURES SHOULD TREND  
LOWER IN INTENSITY AND COVERAGE FROM NORTH TO SOUTH THROUGH THIS  
EVENING AS THE SHORTWAVE MOVES ONSHORE. A STRONG LOW-LEVEL JET  
REACHING 60-70 KT ONLY A FEW THOUSAND FEET ABOVE THE GROUND  
COUPED WITH THIS CONVECTIVE ENVIRONMENT HAS ALLOWED FOR STRONG  
WIND GUSTS TO REACH THE SURFACE, PARTICULARLY ALONG THE COAST  
AND IN AREAS OF TERRAIN SO FAR TODAY. AS THE JET BOTH WEAKENS  
AND MOVES INLAND, THE RISK FOR FURTHER STRONG WIND GUSTS WILL  
DECREASE INTO THIS EVENING, BUT ISOLATED OCCURRENCES MAY  
CONTINUE IN EXPOSED AREAS OF HIGH TERRAIN. AS SUCH, THE HIGH  
WIND WARNING ALONG THE COAST HAS BEEN ALLOWED TO EXPIRE, BUT THE  
WIND ADVISORY IN EFFECT FOR THE OREGON COAST RANGE AND WILLAPA  
HILLS WILL REMAIN IN PLACE THROUGH 4 PM THIS AFTERNOON.  
 
THE OVERNIGHT PERIOD WILL OFFER A BRIEF RESPITE BEFORE ANOTHER  
WAVE BRINGS RENEWED RAIN AND WIND TO THE REGION TUESDAY INTO  
WEDNESDAY. THIS SYSTEM IS EXPECTED TO BE MORE POTENT THAN THE  
FIRST, WITH A DEEP SURFACE LOW TRACKING INLAND NEAR THE NORTH  
END OF VANCOUVER ISLAND AND A STRONG TRAILING COLD FRONT  
EXTENDING SOUTHWARD TO THE OREGON COAST. ANOTHER SHORTER-  
DURATION PERIOD OF HIGH VAPOR TRANSPORT WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH  
THIS ATMOSPHERIC RIVER, RESULTING IN A RELATIVELY BRIEF PERIOD  
OF RAIN ACROSS THE REGION, BUT ONE THAT COULD NONETHELESS BRING  
HEAVY ENOUGH RAIN RATES TO CONTINUE A RISK OF FLOODING IN POOR  
DRAINAGE AREAS, ESPECIALLY GIVEN CONTINUED HIGH SATURATION  
LEVELS IN SOILS ACROSS THE REGION. AN ADDITIONAL RISK FROM THIS  
NEXT SYSTEM WILL BE FURTHER STRONG WINDS. AGAIN, JUST AHEAD OF  
THE COLD FRONTAL BOUNDARY, A LOW-LEVEL JET REACHING 60-70 KT AT  
925 HPA WILL MOVE ONSHORE THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT. AS TODAY,  
PERIODS OF STRONG WIND GUSTS REACHING DOWN TO THE GROUND APPEAR  
LIKELY, AND THERE IS A 30-50% CHANCE OF WIND GUSTS OF 55 MPH OR  
HIGHER ALONG THE IMMEDIATE COAST, AND SIMILAR OR SLIGHTLY HIGHER  
CHANCES IN HIGHER TERRAIN AND PARTICULARLY ALONG THE CASCADE  
CREST. CHANCES FOR GUSTS REACHING 45 MPH IN VALLEY AREAS REMAINS  
AROUND 10-25%, HOWEVER AN ISOLATED GUST OVER 50 MPH ALSO CANNOT  
BE RULED OUT. ADDITIONAL WIND HAZARDS MAY NEED IF CONFIDENCE IN  
OCCURRENCE OF THESE WINDS INCREASES.  
 
WEDNESDAY WILL BRING ANOTHER RELATIVE LULL IN THE PATTERN, WITH  
BRIEF DRYING AND A BREAK FROM STRONG WINDS THROUGH MUCH OF THE  
DAY. AS THE FRONT SAGS SOUTHWARD, A COOLER AIR MASS WILL ARRIVE  
IN ITS WAKE WITH TEMPERATURES CLOSER TO SEASONAL NORMS BUT  
STILL ABOUT 5 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL. SNOW LEVELS FALLING TO 3000  
FT OR EVEN SLIGHTLY LOWER WILL ALLOW FOR SOME SNOW TO ACCUMULATE  
AS PASS LEVEL THROUGH WEDNESDAY AND WEDNESDAY NIGHT. THIS COLDER  
PERIOD IS WHEN PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS WILL BE REDUCED BETWEEN  
SYSTEMS, SO SNOW AMOUNTS REMAIN UNREMARKABLE, WITH A 40-60%  
CHANCE OF 6" OF MORE OF ACCUMULATION AT CASCADE PASSES. THERE IS  
A 10% CHANCE OF SNOW LEVELS FALLING TO 2000-2500 FT. -36  
 
   
LONG TERM...THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY
 
ANOTHER MODERATE TO  
STRONG ATMOSPHERIC RIVER TAKES AIM AT THE REGION THURSDAY INTO  
FRIDAY, BRINGING ADDITIONAL RAIN ON TOP OF ELEVATED RIVERS AND  
SATURATED SOILS. INITIALLY, HEAVY RAIN RATES RAISE THE RISK FOR  
URBAN OR SMALL CREEK AND STREAM FLOODING ON THURSDAY, WHILE THE  
RISK FOR RIVER FLOODING INCREASES LATE THURSDAY INTO FRIDAY AS  
THE ABUNDANT RUNOFF MAKES ITS WAY DOWNSTREAM. AS IS TYPICAL WITH  
ARS, THE HIGHEST PRECIPITATION TOTALS ARE LIKELY TO BE OVER THE  
COASTAL TERRAIN AND ACROSS THE CASCADES, AND THE WARM DYNAMICS  
WILL ALSO FAVOR INCREASING SNOW LEVELS DURING THE HEAVIEST  
PRECIPITATION. RAINFALL FORECASTS HAVE TENDED TO SHIFT SLIGHTLY  
BETWEEN FORECAST UPDATES, BUT GUIDANCE REMAINS IN GOOD AGREEMENT  
THAT THE AR WILL IMPINGE ON THE NORTHERN OR COAST BEFORE  
TRACKING SOUTHWARD TOWARD THE SOUTHERN OR COAST BY THURSDAY  
NIGHT. UNLIKE RECENT ARS WHICH HAVE BEEN DIRECTED MORESO AT THE  
WASHINGTON COAST, THE HIGHEST RAIN TOTALS ARE CURRENTLY FOCUSED  
ACROSS THE SOUTHERN HALF OF THE REGION, GENERALLY SOUTH OF  
US-26. CHANCES TO EXCEED 2" OF RAINFALL THURSDAY AND THURSDAY  
NIGHT INCREASE FROM 30% TO 50% SOUTH ALONG THE I-5 CORRIDOR FROM  
KELSO/LONGVIEW TO EUGENE, AND FROM 50% TO 75% IN THE COAST RANGE  
AND CASCADES. CHANCES TO EXCEED 4" OF RAINFALL ARE 5-15% ACROSS  
INLAND VALLEYS AND 20-40% IN AREAS OF HIGHER TERRAIN.  
 
THIS AMOUNT OF PRECIPITATION OVER ONLY 24 HOURS WOULD SUPPORT  
RIVER FLOODING AS SATURATED SOILS WILL ALLOW MOST OF THE RAIN TO  
MAKE ITS WAY INTO AREA RIVERS AS RUNOFF. CHANCES FOR MINOR TO  
MODERATE RIVER FLOODING CONTINUE TO INCREASE, WITH THE HIGHEST  
CONFIDENCE IN FLOODING FOR RIVERS DRAINING THE CENTRAL OR COAST  
RANGE, BOTH TOWARD THE COAST AND INTO THE WILLAMETTE RIVER.  
THOSE WHO LIVE NEAR AREAS PRONE TO RIVER FLOODING SHOULD KEEP A  
CLOSE EYE ON THE FORECAST MOVING FORWARD, AND ADDITIONAL  
INFORMATION CAN BE FOUND IN THE HYDROLOGY DISCUSSION BELOW.  
 
THE VERITABLE PARADE OF WEATHER SYSTEMS DOES NOT LOOK TO LET UP  
THIS WEEKEND AND INTO NEXT WEEK. WHILE CONFIDENCE IN FORECAST  
DETAILS IS LOW AT THIS LEAD TIME, THE ACTIVE PATTERN AND  
PERSISTENT CHANCES FOR RAIN WILL MOST LIKELY CONTINUE. -36  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
RADAR IMAGERY AS OF EARLY MONDAY AFTERNOON DEPICTS  
LINGERING SHOWERS AS A SYSTEM MOVED THROUGH THE AREA. THIS IS  
BRINGING A MIX OF MVFR AND LOW-END VFR CIGS ACROSS ALL  
TERMINALS, WITH SOME IFR/LIFR CIGS ALONG THE COAST. EXPECT  
THIS TREND TO CONTINUE THROUGH 03Z TUE, WITH CIGS BRIEFLY  
IMPROVING TO PREDOMINATELY VFR THIS EVENING. HIGH CONFIDENCE  
(80% CHANCE OR GREATER) CIGS DROP BACK DOWN TO IFR OR LOWER  
ALONG THE COAST AFTER 12-15Z TUE AS THE NEXT SYSTEM MOVES IN.  
DURING THIS SAME TIME FRAME, INLAND TERMINALS ALSO HAVE A 20-40%  
CHANCE OF DROPPING BACK DOWN TO MVFR.  
 
SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS ARE GUSTING TO 25-30 KT ALONG THE COAST AND  
20-25 KT ACROSS THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY AS OF EARLY MONDAY  
AFTERNOON. WINDS AROUND 2000 FT ARE AROUND 40-50 KT, WHICH WILL  
CREATE A STRONG CROSSWIND ESPECIALLY FOR E-W ALIGNED RUNWAYS AND  
SOME LOW LEVEL SPEED SHEAR RESULTING IN TURBULENCE. WINDS ACROSS  
THE AREA WEAKEN OVERNIGHT, AND BECOME BREEZY AGAIN AFTER 12-15Z  
TUE WITH THE NEXT SYSTEM WITH GUSTS TO 20-25 KT ACROSS THE  
REGION.  
 
KPDX AND APPROACHES...MIX OF HIGH-END MVFR AND LOW-END VFR CIGS,  
WITH CIGS TRENDING MORE VFR THIS EVENING. SOUTH-SOUTHWESTERLY  
WINDS GUSTING UP TO 25 KT THROUGH THE AFTERNOON. LOW LEVEL SPEED  
SHEAR IS POSSIBLE DUE TO 40-50 KT WINDS AROUND 2000 FT. WINDS  
WEAKEN BELOW 10 KT AFTER 00-03Z TUE, WITH BREEZY SOUTHERLY WINDS  
RETURNING AFTER 12-15Z TUE. -10  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
OBSERVATIONS AT BUOY 46029 AND 46050 AS OF EARLY  
MONDAY AFTERNOON SHOW SOUTHERLY WINDS WITH GUSTS TO 30-35 KT  
AND SEAS HOVERING AROUND 14-16 FT AT 9-10 SEC. SHOULD BE SEEING  
SEAS PEAK AROUND 16-18 FT THIS AFTERNOON WITH SEAS UNLIKELY  
RISING ABOVE 20 FT (ONLY A 1-2% CHANCE OF EXCEEDING 20 FT). HIGH  
CONFIDENCE THAT WINDS WILL GRADUALLY WEAKEN THIS AFTERNOON,  
DECREASING TO 10-15 KT WITH GUSTS UP TO 20 KT LATE THIS EVENING.  
SEAS MAY REMAIN STEEP AND CHOPPY DURING THIS BRIEF LULL;  
THEREFORE, A HAZARDOUS SEAS WARNING IS IN EFFECT ACROSS ALL  
WATERS INCLUDING THE COLUMBIA RIVER BAR FROM 4 PM THIS AFTERNOON  
TO 4 AM TUESDAY. SEAS FALL TO 10-13 FT BY LATE TUESDAY MORNING.  
 
THE BRIEF LULL ENDS EARLY TUESDAY MORNING WHEN ANOTHER FRONTAL  
SYSTEM APPROACHES THE WATERS. THIS WILL RETURN BREEZY SOUTH-  
SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS WITH WIDESPREAD GUSTS RAMPING UP TO 25-30 KT  
BETWEEN 4 AM-10 AM TUE, THEN 35-40 KT BETWEEN 10 AM-4 PM TUE,  
AND STRONG GALES WITH GUSTS UP TO 48 KT ARRIVING AFTER 4-7 PM  
TUE. FOR THE INNER WATERS OUT 10 NM INCLUDING THE COLUMBIA RIVER  
BAR, THERE IS A 20-30% CHANCE FOR ISOLATED STORM FORCE WIND  
GUSTS UP TO 55 KT DUE TO THE POTENTIAL FOR A COASTAL JET. IT'S A  
MARGINAL SET-UP FOR A COASTAL JET SINCE GUIDANCE ISN'T REALLY  
SHOWING MUCH OF AN INVERSION IN THE LOW-LEVEL ATMOSPHERE TO  
SQUEEZE THE STRONG WINDS TOWARD THE SURFACE. EITHER WAY, IT WILL  
STILL BE VERY WINDY. BEHIND THE FRONT, WINDS TURN WESTERLY  
AROUND 1-4 AM WEDNESDAY. SEAS WILL ALSO RE-BUILD TO 14-16 FT  
TUESDAY EVENING, AND PEAKING AND HOLDING AROUND 18-20 FT AT  
10-11 SEC BETWEEN 1 AM-1 PM WEDNESDAY. ANOTHER GALE WARNING WILL  
LIKELY BE ISSUED FOR THIS SYSTEM THIS AFTERNOON.  
 
GOING FORWARD, AN ACTIVE WEATHER PATTERN CONTINUES THROUGH THE  
WEEK BRINGING ADDITIONAL WINDS AND WAVE HAZARDS TO THE COASTAL  
WATERS. SEAS ARE VERY LIKELY TO REMAIN ELEVATED ABOVE 10 FT  
(GREATER THAN 90% CONFIDENCE) FROM WEDNESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY AS  
ADDITIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS MOVE ONSHORE. AT LEAST MODELS ARE  
BEGINNING TO HINT AS SOME LARGER BREAKS BETWEEN WEATHER  
DISTURBANCES NEXT WEEKEND INTO THE FOLLOWING WEEK, BUT AT THIS  
7-8 DAY TIME-SCALE, THE CONFIDENCE IN THIS SLOWDOWN  
MATERIALIZING IS ONLY LOW TO MODERATE AT THIS TIME. -10/27  
 

 
   
HYDROLOGY
 
ABUNDANT RAINFALL IS A RELATIVELY SHORT PERIOD FROM  
THURSDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT ATOP SATURATED SOILS WHILE AREA  
RIVERS REMAIN HIGH FOLLOWING WELL ABOVE NORMAL RAINFALL THUS  
FAR IN DECEMBER HAS RESULTED IN AN ELEVATED RISK FOR FLOODING  
LATE THIS WEEK. AS IS TYPICAL IN ATMOSPHERIC RIVERS, THE HIGHEST  
RAINFALL TOTALS ARE LIKELY TO BE OVER AREAS OF TERRAIN INCLUDING  
THE COAST RANGE AND CASCADES, WHILE LESSER TOTALS CAN BE  
EXPECTED ACROSS INLAND VALLEYS. NONETHELESS, RAINFALL IS LIKELY  
TO BE MEASURED IN INCHES ACROSS MOST OF THE REGION. UNLIKE  
RECENT OTHER ARS, THIS SYSTEM LOOKS TO FAVOR A MORE SOUTHERN  
PLACEMENT ALONG THE CENTRAL OR COAST OF THESE HIGHEST RAINFALL  
TOTALS, WHICH MAY ALLOW SOME RIVER BASINS TO BETTER HANDLE THESE  
RAINFALL AMOUNTS WITHOUT YIELDING FLOODING. OTHER AREAS TO THE  
NORTH WITHIN THE COAST RANGE IN LINCOLN, TILLAMOOK, BENTON, POLK,  
YAMHILL, AND WASHINGTON COUNTIES MAY SEE MORE OVERLAP BETWEEN  
RECENTLY OBSERVED HEAVY RAINFALL AND ADDITIONAL HEAVY RAINFALL  
WITH THIS UPCOMING SYSTEM. SIMILARLY, RIVER BASINS COVERING THE  
CENTRAL OR CASCADES IN LANE AND LINN COUNTIES HAVE A SLIGHTLY  
MORE OPTIMISTIC OUTLOOK THAN NORTH INTO MARION AND CLACKAMAS  
COUNTIES, BUT THAT DOES NOT MEAN FLOODING CANNOT HAPPEN IN ALL  
OF THE AFOREMENTIONED AREAS. LUCKILY, WHERE RAINFALL HAS SO FAR  
BEEN THE HEAVIEST ACROSS SOUTHWESTERN WASHINGTON AND FAR  
NORTHWESTERN OREGON MAY SEE THE LOWEST TOTALS FROM THIS SYSTEM,  
ALTHOUGH EVEN 1-2 INCHES OF RAIN OVER 24 HOURS MAY BE ENOUGH TO  
CAUSE ADDITIONAL FLOODING IN THESE VERY SATURATED AREAS.  
 
AT THIS POINT, THE RIVERS WITH THE HIGHEST CONFIDENCE OF  
REACHING FLOOD STAGE ARE THOSE WHICH DRAIN THE CENTRAL OREGON  
COAST RANGE, INCLUDING THE WILSON, TRASK, SILETZ, AND SIUSLAW  
DRAINING TOWARD THE COAST, AND THE MARYS, LUCKIAMUTE, YAMHILL,  
AND TUALATIN DRAINING TOWARD THE WILLAMETTE. THE CHANCES FOR  
THESE RIVERS TO REACH AT LEAST MINOR FLOOD STAGE ARE 25-55% AT  
THIS LEAD TIME. RIVERS DRAINING THE CASCADES, INCLUDING THE  
MOHAWK, SANTIAM, PUDDING, MOLALLA, CLACKAMAS, AND SANDY, HAVE  
SLIGHTLY LOWER BUT STILL SIGNIFICANT CHANCES OF 15-45%. THESE  
RIVERS WILL BEGIN TO RISE LATER ON THURSDAY AS HEAVY RAIN  
CONTINUES, NOT CRESTING UNTIL FRIDAY IN MOST CASES. THE  
WILLAMETTE RIVER MAIN STEM ITSELF ALSO HAS A 5-10% CHANCE OF  
REACHING FLOOD STAGE ABOVE WILLAMETTE FALLS, AND SLIGHTLY HIGHER  
CHANCES IN TIDALLY-INFLUENCED PORTIONS DOWNSTREAM OF OREGON  
CITY, HOWEVER RUNOFF WILL TAKE LONGER TO REACH THE WILLAMETTE  
AND FLOODING WOULD BE DELAYED LATER THAN IN ITS TRIBUTARIES. A  
FLOOD WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUES ACROSS ALL OF NORTHWESTERN OREGON  
AND SOUTHWESTERN WASHINGTON FROM 4 AM THURSDAY THROUGH 4 AM  
SATURDAY TO HIGHLIGHT THESE RISKS.  
 
THESE RIVER FORECASTS REMAIN VERY SENSITIVE TO RAINFALL  
FORECASTS, AND INTERESTED PARTIES SHOULD EXPECT CHANGES AS THE  
EVENT NEARS. THE LATEST RIVER FORECASTS ACROSS THE REGION CAN BE  
FOUND AT WWW.WATER.NOAA.GOV/WFO/PQR. -36  
 

 
   
PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
OR...NONE.  
 
WA...NONE.  
 
PZ...HAZARDOUS SEAS WARNING UNTIL 4 AM PST TUESDAY FOR PZZ210-251>253-  
271>273.  
 
SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY FROM 4 AM TO 4 PM PST TUESDAY FOR PZZ210-  
251>253-271>273.  
 
GALE WARNING FROM 4 PM TUESDAY TO 10 AM PST WEDNESDAY FOR PZZ210-  
251>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