880  
FXUS66 KPQR 180728 AAA  
AFDPQR  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PORTLAND OR  
1128 PM PST WED DEC 17 2025  
 
UPDATED AVIATION DISCUSSION.  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
A STRONG FRONTAL SYSTEM WITH AN ASSOCIATED  
ATMOSPHERIC RIVER WILL ARRIVE EARLY THURSDAY, PERSISTING THROUGH  
THURSDAY NIGHT. THERE IS INCREASING CONFIDENCE FOR WIDESPREAD  
MINOR TO MODERATE RIVER FLOODING, ALONG WITH PERIODS OF CASCADE  
SNOW, AND ANOTHER ROUND OF GUSTY WINDS. RAIN PERSISTS THROUGH  
EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM...NOW THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT
 
SCATTERED SHOWERS WILL  
GRADUALLY DECREASE ACROSS THE AREA FROM SOUTH TO NORTH THROUGH  
THIS EVENING. THE RELATIVELY CALM WEATHER WILL BE SHORT LIVED,  
HOWEVER, AS THE NEXT SYSTEM ARRIVING EARLY THURSDAY IS EXPECTED  
TO BE RATHER ROBUST. MULTIPLE WEATHER HAZARDS HAVE BEEN ISSUED,  
WITH HIGHEST CONCERNS FOCUSED ON HEAVY RAINFALL, FLOODING, WINDS  
AND POTENTIAL ASSOCIATED IMPACTS.  
 
A STRONG TO POTENTIALLY EXTREME ATMOSPHERIC RIVER IS EXPECTED TO  
BRING HEAVY RAINFALL TO NORTHWEST OREGON AND SOUTHWEST WASHINGTON.  
THE EXACT POSITION OF THE AXIS OF HIGHEST IVT VALUES, AND ASSOCIATED  
HEAVY RAINFALL, WILL CONTINUE TO FLUCTUATE SLIGHTLY NORTH OR SOUTH,  
BUT LATEST MODEL RUNS HAVE REMAINED FAIRLY CONSISTENT. ENSEMBLE IVT  
FORECASTS FROM THE CW3E INDICATE FAIRLY HIGH CONFIDENCE OF THIS  
SYSTEM PERSISTING WITHIN THE STRONG AR CATEGORY (750-1000 KG/M/S)  
DURING A PERIOD OF 12-18 HOURS. AND, ALTHOUGH THE FLOW IS EXPECTED  
TO GENERALLY TURN SOUTHWESTERLY, THERE WILL STILL BE SOME WESTERLY  
COMPONENT INITIALLY ALLOWING FOR THE BAND OF MOISTURE TO REMAIN AN  
AREA FOR AN EXTENDED PERIOD OF TIME. SO, STEADY RAIN WILL BEGIN TO  
SPREAD ACROSS THE AREA EARLY THURSDAY MORNING, WITH HEAVIEST  
PRECIPITATION EXPECTED THURSDAY AFTERNOON INTO THURSDAY NIGHT.  
 
LATEST RAINFALL ACCUMULATION FORECASTS HAVE INCREASED SLIGHTLY, WITH  
HIGHEST QPF VALUES LIKELY SITTING ACROSS THE CENTRAL OREGON COAST  
RANGE INTO THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN OREGON CASCADES AND FOOTHILLS.  
THIS IS HIGHLIGHTED WELL BY THE ECMWF EXTREME FORECAST INDEX (EFI)  
FOR QPF GREATER THAN 0.8. THERE IS ALSO HIGH CONFIDENCE (75-85%  
CHANCE) OF 2+ INCHES OF RAINFALL OCCURRING WITHIN A 24-HR PERIOD  
ACROSS THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN WILLAMETTE VALLEY. TO UNDERSTAND THE  
SPREAD OF UNCERTAINTY THAT EXISTS IN TERMS OF THE RANGE OF POSSIBLE  
RAINFALL AMOUNTS, TAKE AN EXAMPLE AT SALEM, OR: THE REASONABLE LOW  
END AMOUNT IS AROUND 1.5 INCHES, WHILE THE "WORST CASE" SCENARIO  
SHOWS A 10% CHANCE OF EXCEEDING 4 INCHES IN 24-HOURS. TO PUT THAT  
INTO PERSPECTIVE, THE ALL-TIME 24-HR RAINFALL RECORD AT THE SALEM  
AIRPORT WAS 4.44" IN NOVEMBER OF 1996. RAINFALL AMOUNTS OF THESE  
RATES CAN PRODUCE LOCALIZED FLOODING ALONG CREEKS AND URBAN AREAS.  
GREATER RAINFALL AMOUNTS ARE EXPECTED IN THE HIGHER TERRAIN, WITH 2-  
DAY TOTALS POTENTIALLY EXCEEDING 10 INCHES, WITH MOST AREAS WITHIN  
THE HIGHER TERRAIN OF NW OREGON SEEING 5-8 INCHES OF RAINFALL.  
LANDSLIDES ARE POSSIBLE ON STEEP TERRAIN, AND RIVER RISES ARE  
EXPECTED AND IS DISCUSSED IN THE HYDROLOGY SECTION BELOW.  
 
WHILE WINDS ARE NOT EXPECTED TO BE AS STRONG OR IMPACTFUL AS THE  
STORM THAT OCCURRED LAST NIGHT, DO EXPECT TO SEE AT LEAST BREEZY  
SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST WINDS INCREASING THROUGH THURSDAY AFTERNOON  
ACROSS MUCH OF THE AREA. THERE IS A HIGH WIND WATCH FOR THE CENTRAL  
OREGON COAST AND COAST RANGE FOR WIND GUSTS UP TO 60 MPH POSSIBLE.  
HAVE ALSO ISSUED WIND ADVISORIES THROUGH INTERIOR VALLEYS AND  
CASCADE FOOTHILLS, AS WELL AS NORTHERN PORTIONS OF THE COASTAL  
MOUNTAINS, FOR WINDS GUSTING UP TO 35-45 MPH. WITH VERY SATURATED  
SOILS, COULD SEE A FEW MORE DOWNED TREES AND POWER OUTAGES. HIGHEST  
WINDS ARE EXPECTED ACROSS SOUTHERN PORTIONS OF THE AREA, WHERE THE  
925 MB JET SETS UP AT AROUND 60-70 KT OVER THE CENTRAL OREGON COAST,  
LIKELY DEVELOPING A COASTAL JET BY LATE THURSDAY MORNING. WINDS  
INLAND ARE LESS LIKELY TO MIX DOWN, BUT STILL LIKELY TO BE BREEZY  
THURSDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
THURSDAY MORNING WILL ALSO FEATURE A QUICK BURST OF SNOW FOR THE  
CASCADES, AND POTENTIALLY IN THE HIGHER TERRAIN ABOVE 1500 FT OF THE  
UPPER HOOD RIVER VALLEY. OVERRUNNING PRECIPITATION AHEAD OF THE WARM  
FRONT COULD PRODUCE 3-6 INCHES OF SNOWFALL DURING A 6-HR PERIOD AT  
CASCADE PASS LEVEL, WHILE 1-2 INCHES IS MOST LIKELY NEAR PARKDALE.  
HAVE ISSUED WINTER WEATHER ADVISORIES FOR THESE AREAS THROUGH LATE  
THURSDAY MORNING, UNTIL THE WARM FRONT LIFTS NORTH AND SNOW LEVELS  
QUICKLY RISE BACK TO AROUND 7500-8000 FT.  
 
BY FRIDAY, THE MAIN AXIS OF PRECIPITATION IS EXPECTED TO SLIDE SOUTH  
INTO SOUTHWEST OREGON, THOUGH THERE MAY BE SOME LINGERING HEAVIER  
RAIN OVER THE CENTRAL OR CASCADES. SCATTERED SHOWERS WILL CONTINUE  
WITH LIGHTER RAINFALL ON FRIDAY, BUT RIVERS ARE EXPECTED TO CONTINUE  
TO RISE. SNOW LEVELS WILL DROP AGAIN THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT, LIKELY TO  
AROUND 2000-2500 FT LATE. WILL SEE ANOTHER ROUND OF SNOW SHOWERS FOR  
THE CASCADE PASSES, WITH HIGHEST AMOUNTS EXPECTED ACROSS THE SOUTH  
WASHINGTON CASCADES. /DH  
   
LONG TERM...SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY
 
NO SIGNIFICANT CHANGES TO  
THE LONG TERM DISCUSSION: THE WEEKEND WILL FEEL LIKE THE CALM AFTER  
THE STORM. WE WILL STILL SEE CONTINUED RAINFALL BUT IT WILL BE MORE  
CLIMATOLOGICALLY NORMAL. SOUTH TO SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW WILL ALSO BRING  
BREEZY CONDITIONS TO INTERIOR VALLEYS AND EVEN THE COLUMBIA RIVER  
GORGE. THE COMPONENT ABOUT SATURDAY TO KEEP AN EYE ON IS THAT WE  
WILL SEE CONTINUED FLOODING FROM THE RISING THAT OCCURRED ON  
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. MANY RIVERS ARE FORECAST TO BE IN A FLOOD STAGE  
ON THAT DAY.  
 
AS MOIST ZONAL FLOW THEN CONTINUES THROUGH THE WEEKEND,  
PERSISTENT LOWLAND RAIN AND HIGH ELEVATIONS SNOW CHANCES ALSO  
CONTINUE. WHILE THE DETAILS REMAIN RELATIVE LOW CONFIDENCE,  
CURRENT LONG-RANGE GUIDANCE DOES NOT FAVOR ANOTHER HIGH-END  
RAINFALL EVENT THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK. BUT DON'T LET  
THAT CATCH YOU OFF OF YOUR FEET. 500 MB HEIGHTS AND OTHER  
SYNOPTIC FEATURES ARE SUGGESTING A BROAD TROUGH TAKING OVER  
MUCH OF THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC. THIS TROUGH IS ASSOCIATED WITH A  
COLD WRAPPED LOW THAT WILL PRODUCE WEAK IMPULSES. THESE  
DISTURBANCES WILL THEN PUSH OVER THE REGION. WHILE NOT WELL  
REALIZED AT THIS TIME, RAIN WILL PERSIST THROUGH TUESDAY. -27/36  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
VFR CONDITIONS CONTINUE ACROSS THE AREA BUT WON'T HOLD  
ON THROUGH THE NIGHT. WINDS ARE GENERALLY SOUTHEASTERLY AT LESS  
THAN 10 KTS. CONDITIONS BEGIN TO DEGRADE AFTER 08-12Z THURSDAY AS  
A STRONG ATMOSPHERIC RIVER APPROACHES, BRINGING HEAVY RAIN AND  
INCREASED WINDS FROM THE SOUTHWEST. CIGS AND VIS WILL FALL TO  
MVFR CONDITIONS INLAND AND IFR/LIFR CONDITIONS ALONG THE COAST AS  
THE HEAVY RAIN REACHES EACH TERMINAL. SOUTH WINDS INCREASE 15-19Z  
THURSDAY WITH GUSTS UP TO 35-45 KT ALONG THE COAST, EXCEPT UP TO  
50 KTS AT KONP, AND 30-40 KTS INLAND.  
 
KPDX AND APPROACHES...VFR CONDITIONS WILL BEGIN DETERIORATING  
AFTER 12-14Z THU AS HEAVY RAIN SPREADS TO THE AREA. MVFR CIGS AND  
VIS LIKELY WITH HEAVY RAIN WITH A 60-80% CHANCE OF IFR CIGS AFTER  
18Z THU. WINDS ALSO INCREASE AFTER 16-18Z THU, BECOMING SOUTH TO  
SOUTHEAST WITH GUSTS UP TO 25-30 KTS, SLIGHTLY HIGHER TO AROUND 35  
KTS AROUND KTTD. -19/03  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
WIND GUSTS HAVE DECREASED BY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON WITH  
GUSTS BELOW 20 KTS. SEAS STILL REMAIN ELEVATED AROUND 13 TO 15  
FT AT 10 TO 11 SECONDS BUT ARE EXPECTED TO DECREASE TO AROUND 11  
TO 13 FEET OVERNIGHT. A HAZARDOUS SEAS WARNING REMAINS IN  
EFFECT THROUGH 4 AM THURSDAY. THESE CONDITIONS WON'T LAST LONG  
AS THE NEXT WEATHER SYSTEM BEGINS IMPACTING THE WATERS EARLY  
THURSDAY MORNING. WINDS WILL QUICKLY RAMP UP AFTER 4 TO 6 AM  
WITH WIDESPREAD SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST GALE FORCE WIND GUSTS THROUGH  
THE DAY, DECREASING AFTER 7 TO 10 PM. A COASTAL JET IS FORECAST  
TO DEVELOP SOUTH OF ROCKAWAY BEACH WITH GUSTS UP TO 55 KTS  
POSSIBLE UP TO 10-20 NM WEST OF THE COASTLINE. A GALE WATCH HAS  
BEEN ISSUED FOR ALL MARINE ZONES EXCEPT FOR PZZ252 AND 253, FOR  
WHICH A STORM WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED. BOTH WATCHES ARE FROM 4 AM  
THROUGH 10 PM ON THURSDAY. SEAS WILL ALSO REBUILD TO AROUND 15  
TO 16 FT AT 10 TO 11 SECONDS, EXCEPT LOCALLY UP TO 17 TO 19 FEET  
IN VICINITY OF THE COASTAL JET. THERE'S ALSO A 15-25% CHANCE OF  
SEAS REACHING OR EXCEEDING 20 FEET IN THE VICINITY OF THE  
COASTAL JET. -03  
 

 
   
HYDROLOGY
 
POTENTIAL FOR RIVER FLOODING IS HIGHEST ON  
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY DUE TO THE ABUNDANT RAINFALL FROM AN  
ATMOSPHERIC RIVER. HEAVIEST RAINFALL OCCURS FOR A RELATIVELY  
SHORT PERIOD OF TIME FROM THURSDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT. THE  
ALREADY SATURATED SOILS AND HIGH RIVERS COMBINED WITH THE  
INCOMING WELL ABOVE NORMAL RAINFALL 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. ONE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE LAST SERIES OF ARS AND THE  
ONE ARRIVING ON THURSDAY IS THE PLACEMENT OF HIGHEST RAINFALL  
TOTALS. THIS NEXT SYSTEM FAVORS A MORE SOUTHERN MAXIMUM, AND  
THUS AREAS THAT PREVIOUSLY MISSED THE HEAVIEST RAIN WILL SEE THE  
HIGHER ACCUMULATIONS THIS TIME AROUND.  
 
DUE TO THE LACK OF OBSERVED RAIN, PARTICULARLY IN LANE COUNTY,  
SOME BASINS WILL BE MORE CAPABLE OF HANDLING HEAVY RAINFALL  
WITHOUT EXPERIENCING 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 HIGH TOTALS WITH THIS  
UPCOMING SYSTEM. SIMILARLY, RIVER BASINS COVERING THE CENTRAL OR  
CASCADES IN LANE AND LINN COUNTIES MAY 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 CHANCES 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 35-75% AT THIS TIME.  
THOSE DRAINING TOWARD THE COAST, PARTICULARLY IN LINCOLN AND LANE  
COUNTIES WHERE RAINFALL IS LIKELY TO CONTINUE LATER INTO FRIDAY MAY  
SEE MINOR TIDAL OVERFLOW AS RIVERS CRESTS COINCIDE WITH HIGH TIDE ON  
FRIDAY, THOUGH THIS OCCURRENCE REMAINS LOWER CONFIDENCE. RIVERS  
DRAINING THE CASCADES, INCLUDING THE MOHAWK, SANTIAM, PUDDING,  
MOLALLA, CLACKAMAS, AND SANDY, HAVE INCREASED WITH CHANCES OF 25-  
90%. THESE RIVERS WILL BEGIN TO RISE LATER ON THURSDAY AS HEAVY RAIN  
CONTINUES, NOT CRESTING UNTIL FRIDAY IN MOST CASES. LATEST FORECASTS  
HAVE INTRODUCED MULTIPLE FLOODS REACHING MODERATE TO MAJOR FLOOD  
STAGE, INCLUDING THE MOLALLA RIVER NEAR CANBY, CLACKAMAS RIVER NEAR  
ESTACADA, AND THE JOHNSON CREEK NEAR SYCAMORE. THERE IS ALSO  
POTENTIAL FOR THE CLACKAMAS NEAR RIVER NEAR OREGON CITY TO REACH  
RECORD STAGES IF LATEST RAINFALL FORECASTS REMAIN ON TRACK.  
 
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  
REMAINS IN EFFECT 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.  
 

 
   
PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
OR...HIGH WIND WARNING FROM 8 AM TO 7 PM PST THURSDAY FOR ORZ103-107.  
 
WIND ADVISORY FROM 8 AM TO 7 PM PST THURSDAY FOR ORZ104>106-  
108>118-123>125.  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FROM 4 AM TO 10 AM PST THURSDAY FOR  
ORZ121-126-127.  
 
WA...WIND ADVISORY FROM 8 AM TO 7 PM PST THURSDAY FOR WAZ202>208.  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL 10 AM PST THURSDAY FOR WAZ211.  
 
PZ...HAZARDOUS SEAS WARNING UNTIL 4 AM PST THURSDAY FOR PZZ210-  
251>253-271>273.  
 
GALE WARNING FROM 4 AM TO 10 PM PST THURSDAY FOR PZZ210-251-271.  
 
STORM WARNING FROM 4 AM TO 10 PM PST THURSDAY FOR PZZ252-253-272-  
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