396  
FXUS66 KSGX 242042  
AFDSGX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SAN DIEGO CA  
142 PM PDT SUN AUG 24 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
DAILY CHANCES FOR SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL CONTINUE THROUGH  
THE MIDDLE OF THE WEEK AS THE MONSOONAL WEATHER PATTERN CONTINUES  
ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS AND DESERTS. VALLEYS WEST OF THE MOUNTAINS  
MAY SEE A STORM OR TWO, BUT OTHERWISE, ALL AREAS WILL REMAIN  
HUMID THROUGH THE EARLY PART OF THE WEEK. COOLER WEATHER WILL  
OCCUR BY TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. A WEAK TROUGH OFFSHORE WILL HELP  
TO LOWER CHANCES FOR MONSOONAL STORM ACTIVITY ACROSS THE  
MOUNTAINS AND DESERTS BY THE END OF THE WEEK WITH LESS HUMID  
CONDITIONS. THE MARINE LAYER WILL BE OF SIMILAR DEPTH OVER THE  
NEXT FEW DAYS WITH PATCHY FOG NEAR THE COAST, PUSHING FURTHER  
INLAND BY THE END OF THE WEEK.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION...FOR EXTREME SOUTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA INCLUDING ORANGE  
 
SAN DIEGO...WESTERN RIVERSIDE AND SOUTHWESTERN SAN BERNARDINO  
COUNTIES...  
 
CLOUDS CONTINUE TO BUILD OVER THE MOUNTAINS THIS AFTERNOON WITH  
WEAK THUNDERSTORMS FORMING ACROSS SOUTHEASTERN SAN DIEGO COUNTY.  
THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY WILL CONTINUE TO INCREASE THIS AFTERNOON  
OVER THE SD/RIV CO MOUNTAINS, LOCALLY UP INTO THE EASTERN SBD MTS.  
RAIN RATES WILL GENERALLY BE UNDER ONE HALF INCH ACROSS THESE  
AREAS WITH DESERT AREAS SEEING ANOTHER CHANCE TO SEE LIGHT  
RAINFALL. AREAS WEST OF THE MOUNTAINS ARE SEEING ANOTHER WARM AND  
STICKY AFTERNOON AS DEW POINTS REACH NEAR 70 DEGREES FOR WESTERN  
SAN DIEGO AND ORANGE COUNTIES. THE MARINE LAYER WILL SLIGHTLY  
DEEPEN TONIGHT, WHERE MOST PLACES ALONG THE COAST WILL SEE MORNING  
CLOUDS AND FOG BY MONDAY.  
 
THE MONSOONAL MOISTURE INFLUX WILL PEAK ON MONDAY AS PWATS SURGE  
ABOVE 1.5 INCHES ACROSS THE LOWER DESERTS. ATMOSPHERIC SOUNDING  
PROFILES SHOW A FAIRLY DEEP LAYER OF MOISTURE BETWEEN 300-700MB  
AND ADEQUATE INSTABILITY TO HAVE SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS OCCUR  
ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS AND DESERTS. HI-RES GUIDANCE SHOWS THE  
GREATEST CHANCE (70-80%) OF STORMS TO OCCUR WILL BE FROM THE  
MEXICAN BORDER NORTH TO BIG BEAR, WITH CHANCES CLOSER TO 40-60%  
ACROSS THE DESERTS. CONFIDENCE IN HOW HEAVY THE RAINFALL WILL BE  
IS MODERATE AS MODELS DEPICT AREAS SEEING RATES NEAR 0.50-0.75  
INCHES PER HOUR BY MONDAY AFTERNOON. THESE STORMS MAY BE  
ACCOMPANIED BY HEAVY DOWNPOURS AND MINOR FLOODING, SMALL HAIL AND  
GUSTY WINDS. THE FLOW ALOFT IS FAIRLY SOUTHERLY, SO STORMS WILL  
NOT DRIFT TOO FAR WEST OFF THE MOUNTAINS, BUT ADJACENT VALLEYS  
HAVE A SMALLER CHANCE (15-30%) TO SEE ANY RAINFALL. THESE SAME  
AREAS WILL SEE ANOTHER CHANCE FOR STORM ACTIVITY BY TUESDAY, BUT  
CHANCES ARE EXPECTED TO BE SLIGHTLY LOWER (50-65%) AS MOISTURE  
DECREASES WITH PWATS CLOSER TO 1.25" ACROSS THE LOWER DESERTS.  
HOURLY RAIN RATES THEREFORE, WILL LOWER CLOSER TO ONE HALF AN INCH  
OR LESS; CHANCES ALSO DECREASE TO SEE RAINFALL ACROSS THE FAR  
WESTERN VALLEYS.  
 
AREAS WEST OF THE MOUNTAINS WILL REMAIN ON THE HUMID SIDE THROUGH  
TUESDAY AS MONSOONAL MOISTURE HANGS ON. THE GOOD NEWS WILL BE A  
WEAK TROUGH OFF THE CALIFORNIA COAST WILL BEGIN TO FORM AS THE  
HIGH ALOFT WEAKENS. THIS WILL ALLOW FOR HIGH TEMPERATURES TO COOL  
A FEW MORE DEGREES CLOSER TO AVERAGE. HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL  
REMAIN VERY SIMILAR TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. BY WEDNESDAY,  
MONSOONAL MOISTURE AND INSTABILITY WILL CONTINUE TO DECREASE,  
LEAVING AROUND A 15-30% CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE  
MOUNTAINS AND DESERTS. THE TROUGH'S INFLUENCE BECOMES MORE  
PRONOUNCED AS 500 MB WINDS, THAT ARE NOW SOUTHERLY, BEGIN TO TURN  
WESTERLY. THIS WILL HELP TO BRING IN DRIER AIR ALOFT AND  
STABILIZE THE ATMOSPHERE BY THURSDAY INTO THE WEEKEND. STORM  
CHANCES ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS WILL BE MINIMAL BY THIS TIME PERIOD,  
WITH LESS HUMID WEATHER EXPECTED FOR ALL AREAS.  
 
ENSEMBLE MODELS SHOW THE HIGH ACROSS THE DESERT SOUTHWEST MAY  
RESTRENGTHEN SOME BY NEXT WEEKEND, WHICH MAY BRING SLIGHTLY  
WARMER WEATHER. LOOKING FURTHER OUT INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK, A TROUGH  
ACROSS THE PACIFIC MAY BEGIN TO INFLUENCE THE WEATHER ACROSS  
CALIFORNIA, WHICH WOULD BRING NEAR TO BELOW AVERAGE TEMPERATURES  
AND DRY WEATHER FOR OUR AREA.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
242100Z...COAST/VALLEYS...VFR CONDITIONS WITH SOME MID AND HIGH  
CLOUDS AT/ABOVE 15,000 FT MSL THROUGH THIS EVENING. PATCHY LOW  
CLOUDS BASED 500-800 FT WILL SLOWLY DEVELOP OVERNIGHT TONIGHT, AFTER  
08Z MONDAY. FOG WILL REDEVELOP IN INLAND VALLEYS AND HIGHER COASTAL  
TERRAIN UP TO 10 MILES INLAND WITH VIS LOCALLY BELOW 1SM. VIS  
IMPROVES AROUND 15Z AND CLEARING 16-17Z.  
 
MOUNTAINS/DESERTS...SHRA/TSRA HAVE DEVELOPED OVER THE MOUNTAINS. CB  
BASES NEAR 12 KFT WITH TOPS TO 35 KFT. SHRA/TSRA MAY PRODUCE LOCAL  
VIS OF 1-3 SM, GUSTY AND ERRATIC WINDS, CLOUD-TO-GROUND LIGHTNING,  
AND SMALL HAIL. 25-35% CHANCE A SHRA/TSRA COULD DRIFT OVER OR  
DEVELOP OVER THE LOW DESERTS THROUGH 02Z THIS EVENING.  
 
HIGHER CHANCE AND GREATER COVERAGE OF +SHRA/TSRA OVER THE MOUNTAINS  
AND DESERTS MONDAY AFTERNOON AFTER 19Z. 45-55% CHANCE OF SHRA/TSRA  
OVER THE LOWER DESERTS WITH MORE WIDESPREAD IMPACTFUL CONDITIONS -  
ERRATIC WINDS, HAIL AND CG LIGHTNING - MONDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
 
   
MARINE  
 
NO HAZARDOUS MARINE CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED THROUGH THURSDAY.  
 
   
SKYWARN  
 
SKYWARN ACTIVATION IS NOT REQUESTED. HOWEVER WEATHER SPOTTERS ARE  
ENCOURAGED TO REPORT SIGNIFICANT WEATHER CONDITIONS.  
 
 
   
SGX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
CA...NONE.  
PZ...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
PUBLIC...APR  
AVIATION/MARINE...WESTERINK  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab CA Page
Main Text Page