857  
FXUS62 KTAE 221025  
AFDTAE  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TALLAHASSEE FL  
625 AM EDT MON JUN 22 2026  
   
..NEW AVIATION  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
ISSUED AT 624 AM EDT MON JUN 22 2026  
 
- SEASONABLE SUMMER THUNDERSTORMS WILL CONTINUE THROUGH AT LEAST  
MID-WEEK. BE READY TO HEAD INDOORS WHEN STORMS APPROACH.  
 
- THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF DANGEROUS RIP CURRENTS AT WALTON, BAY,  
AND GULF COUNTY BEACHES TODAY. HEED THE ADVICE OF BEACH FLAGS  
AND LOCAL OFFICIALS.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
(TODAY AND TONIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 121 AM EDT MON JUN 22 2026  
 
THE 500 MB SUBTROPICAL RIDGE AXIS OVER SOUTH FLORIDA AND THE  
SOUTHEAST GULF ON SUNDAY EVENING WILL STRENGTHEN TODAY WHILE  
EXTENDING WEST THROUGH THE GULF AND EXPANDING NORTH TOWARD CENTRAL  
FLORIDA. MEANWHILE, OUR 1000-700 MB LAYER FLOW WILL TURN FROM  
WESTERLY TO SOUTHWESTERLY, TAPPING INTO THE LESS MOIST AIR THAT IS  
EVIDENT FURTHER OFFSHORE IN SATELLITE IMAGERY. OVERALL, THE BUILDING  
HEIGHTS AND LESS MOIST MID-LEVEL AIR WILL REDUCE CONVECTIVE COVERAGE  
A NOTCH TODAY FROM SUNDAY. FOR THE TALLAHASSEE AREA, KEEP IN MIND  
THAT SOUTHWEST STEERING FLOW PULLS FORGOTTEN COAST SEABREEZE  
THUNDERSTORMS TOWARD TALLAHASSEE. SO WHILE CONVECTIVE COVERAGE WILL  
BE DOWN FOR THE TRI-STATE FORECAST AREA AS A WHOLE, THE SOUTHWEST  
FLOW WILL KEEP TALLAHASSEE MOST PRONE TO CONVECTION, FROM MIDDAY  
THROUGH THE AFTERNOON.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM  
 
(TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY)  
ISSUED AT 121 AM EDT MON JUN 22 2026  
 
MID-UPPER LEVEL FLOW WILL BECOME NORTHWESTERLY STARTING LATE  
TONIGHT, THANKS TO THE TEMPORARY STRENGTHENING OF A STRONG UPPER  
HIGH OVER THE CHIHUAHUAN DESERT REGION NEAR EL PASO. THE NORTHWEST  
FLOW WILL PUSH A COLD FRONT SOUTH INTO OUR REGION ON TUESDAY AND  
TUESDAY NIGHT. IN ADVANCE OF THE FRONT, THE DECAYING REMNANTS OF  
AN MCS COULD REACH THE ALABAMA WIREGRASS DURING THE PRE-DAWN HOURS  
EARLY TUESDAY MORNING. OTHERWISE, THE FRONT WILL BE AN ADDED  
FOCUS FOR RENEWED AFTERNOON CONVECTION ON TUESDAY, ESPECIALLY  
ALONG AND SOUTH OF THE U.S. 84 CORRIDOR.  
 
BEHIND THE FRONT, A DRIER AIR MASS WILL SPREAD SOUTHEAST,  
PARTICULARLY THROUGH GEORGIA. THE DRIER AIR WILL STRUGGLE TO REACH  
FLORIDA AND LOWER ALABAMA, THOUGH THE SOUTHERNMOST EXTENT OF THE DRY  
AIR IS A POINT OF DISAGREEMENT AMONG SOME GUIDANCE MEMBERS.  
WITHIN THE DRIER AIR, CONVECTION WILL GET SHUT DOWN FOR THE DAY.  
WHERE DRIER AIR FAILS TO ARRIVE, SCATTERED AFTERNOON CONVECTION IS  
EXPECTED, MOST CONFIDENTLY ALONG THE PANHANDLE SEABREEZE.  
 
WE WILL LOSE THE NORTHWEST FLOW ALOFT ON WED NIGHT AND THURSDAY,  
BECOMING MORE WESTERLY AS THE CHIHUAHUAN UPPER HIGH WEAKENS AND  
DEAMPLIFIES. SEASONABLY MOIST PW VALUES IN THE 1.6 TO 2.0 INCH RANGE  
WILL THEREFORE RETURN AND OVERSPREAD THE ENTIRE FORECAST AREA,  
SUPPORTING SCATTERED AFTERNOON CONVECTION AREAWIDE ON THURSDAY.  
 
THE NICE, NEAT LATITUDINAL ORIENTATION OF THE SUBTROPICAL RIDGE WILL  
START TO FALL APART ON FRIDAY. A LOBE OF MID-LEVEL HIGH PRESSURE  
WILL BREAK OFF ACROSS FLORIDA ON FRIDAY, THEN EXPAND ACROSS THE  
SOUTHEAST U.S. ON SATURDAY, THEN AMPLIFY OVER THE EASTERN U.S. ON  
SUNDAY. WITH 500 MB HEIGHTS HOVERING IN THE 5920-5940 METER RANGE,  
LARGE-SCALE SUBSIDENCE AND ONLY MARGINALLY FAVORABLE PW VALUES IN  
THE 1.5 TO 1.7 INCH RANGE, CONVECTION WILL BECOME CONFINED MOSTLY TO  
THE MOST FAVORABLE SEABREEZE ZONES IN FLORIDA. THE LOSS OF FLOW  
ALOFT MEANS INDIVIDUAL CONVECTIVE CELLS WILL COVER LESS GROUND AND  
BECOME SHORTER-LIVED.  
 
UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF MID-UPPER RIDGING FROM FRIDAY THROUGH SUNDAY,  
HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL HEAD UPWARD TO THE MID 90S AND BEYOND OVER  
INLAND AREAS.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(12Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 624 AM EDT MON JUN 22 2026  
 
A BLEND OF MVFR AND IFR CONDITIONS THIS MORNING. VSBYS SHOULD  
IMPROVE FOLLOWING SUNRISE WITH CEILINGS GRADUALLY LIFTING THROUGH  
THE MORNING. VFR CONDITIONS CAN BE EXPECTED FOR THE AFTERNOON.  
ISOLATED TO SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS MAY DEVELOP THIS  
AFTERNOON, BUT THE COVERAGE WILL BE LESS THAN WHAT WE'VE HAD OVER  
THE PAST FEW DAYS. GENERALLY EXPECT LIGHT SOUTH/SOUTHWESTERLY  
WINDS THROUGH THE TAF PERIOD.  
 
 
   
MARINE  
 
ISSUED AT 121 AM EDT MON JUN 22 2026  
 
THROUGH WEDNESDAY, A SUBTROPICAL RIDGE AXIS WILL EXTEND ACROSS  
CENTRAL FLORIDA AND INTO THE EASTERN GULF, SUPPORTING GENTLE TO  
OCCASIONALLY MODERATE WESTERLY BREEZES ALONG THE NORTHEAST GULF  
COAST. ON THURSDAY, HIGH PRESSURE WILL EXPAND INTO THE NORTHEAST  
GULF, DECREASING GENERAL BACKGROUND WINDS AND MAKING THE NEARSHORE  
AFTERNOON SEABREEZE THE DOMINANT WIND REGIME.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 121 AM EDT MON JUN 22 2026  
 
FOR TODAY AND TUESDAY, A SEASONABLY HOT, MUGGY AND UNSTABLE AIR MASS  
WILL COVER THE DISTRICTS. THE MAIN FIRE WEATHER CONCERN WILL BE  
GUSTY AND ERRATIC WINDS NEAR SCATTERED AFTERNOON THUNDERSTORMS.  
STORM COVERAGE WILL BE GREATER ON TUESDAY THAN TODAY.  
 
ON WEDNESDAY, DRIER AIR WILL SPREAD ACROSS THE REGION, PARTICULARLY  
OVER OUR GEORGIA DISTRICTS. HUMIDITY WILL TREND LOWER, AND AFTERNOON  
THUNDERSTORMS WILL BE MORE CONFINED TO THE PANHANDLE SEABREEZE ZONE.  
THE DRIER AIR MASS WILL BE SHORT-LIVED, WITH A SEASONABLY MOIST AIR  
MASS RETURNING REGIONWIDE ON THURSDAY.  
 
 
   
HYDROLOGY  
 
ISSUED AT 121 AM EDT MON JUN 22 2026  
 
THE MAIN CONCERN THROUGH THIS WORK WEEK WILL BE WITH SHORT-LIVED  
NUISANCE RUNOFF ISSUES BENEATH THE CORE OF STRONGER THUNDERSTORMS.  
 
ON THE RIVER SIDE, RUNOFF FROM RECENT HEAVY RAINS IS ROUTING  
DOWNSTREAM THROUGH OUR RIVER SYSTEMS. THE BIGGEST RISES HAVE BEEN IN  
THE PEA/CHOCTAWHATCHEE BASIN. THE LATEST RIVER FORECAST STILL BRINGS  
THE CHOCTAWHATCHEE AT BRUCE INTO MINOR FLOOD STARTING WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON.  
 
 
   
SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT  
 
SPOTTER ACTIVATION IS NOT REQUESTED. HOWEVER, SPOTTERS ARE ALWAYS  
ENCOURAGED TO SAFELY REPORT SIGNIFICANT WEATHER CONDITIONS WHEN THEY  
OCCUR BY CALLING THE OFFICE OR TWEETING US @NWSTALLAHASSEE.  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
TALLAHASSEE 92 76 93 75 / 50 0 40 20  
PANAMA CITY 89 80 89 78 / 10 10 20 10  
DOTHAN 91 75 90 73 / 40 30 40 20  
ALBANY 91 75 90 73 / 30 30 50 20  
VALDOSTA 92 75 92 74 / 40 10 30 20  
CROSS CITY 93 77 94 76 / 10 10 10 20  
APALACHICOLA 89 80 90 79 / 10 0 10 10  
 
 
   
TAE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
FL...NONE.  
GA...NONE.  
AL...NONE.  
GM...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...HANER  
LONG TERM....HANER  
AVIATION...MONTGOMERY  
MARINE...HANER  
FIRE WEATHER...HANER  
HYDROLOGY...HANER  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab FL Page
The Nexlab GA Page
The Nexlab AL Page
Main Text Page