127  
FXAK67 PAJK 270035  
AFDAJK  
 
SOUTHEAST ALASKA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JUNEAU AK  
335 PM AKST WED NOV 26 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
KEY MESSAGES:  
 
-COLD OUTFLOW WINDS PERSIST THROUGH THURSDAY  
 
-DRIER WEATHER FOR MOST OF THE PANHANDLE THROUGH THE END OF THE  
WEEK WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE NORTHERN GULF (YAKUTAT).  
 
-ANOTHER SYSTEM ARRIVES IN THE PANHANDLE SUNDAY.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
A QUIET WEATHER PATTERN ACROSS MOST OF THE PANHANDLE THROUGH  
FRIDAY, WITH DRIER WEATHER ACROSS MOST OF THE AREA (WITH THE  
EXCEPTION OF YAKUTAT), COOLER TEMPERATURES, AND AT TIMES CLEARER  
SKIES.  
 
THE ACTIVE UPPER LEVEL STEERING FLOW HAS TEMPORARILY BROKEN DOWN, AS  
THE EASTERN FLANK OF THE LONGWAVE TROUGH WHICH HAD BEEN DIRECTING  
SYSTEMS INTO THE PANHANDLE HAS LARGELY DISINTEGRATED. THIS HAS  
ENABLED COLD AIR OUTFLOW WINDS TO ESTABLISH THEMSELVES ACROSS SE AK,  
AS HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS OVER CANADA. WHILE THE COLD AIR OUTFLOW  
WINDS AREN'T ALL THAT STRONG IN MOST LOCATIONS, THEY WILL CONTRIBUTE  
TO COOLER TEMPERATURES AND GREATER BREAKS IN THE CLOUDS OVER THE  
NEXT FEW DAYS.  
 
CONSEQUENTLY, THANKSGIVING DAY LOOKS TO BE LARGELY DRY FOR MUCH OF  
THE AREA. THE ONE LIKELY EXCEPTION IS YAKUTAT, AS A LOW WHICH HAS  
BEEN REDIRECTED OFF TO THE W SENDS A WARM FRONT MOVING INTO THE  
NORTHERN GULF COAST BEGINNING LATE ON THURSDAY AND LASTING  
THROUGH FRIDAY. WHILE THE CHANCE OF SOME POPS FROM THIS FRONT  
REACHING AS FAR AS ELFIN COVE AND PELICAN ON THURSDAY NIGHT CAN'T  
BE RULED OUT, THINK THAT THESE CHANCES ARE ON THE LOW SIDE, AS DRY  
AIR FROM THE COLD AIR OUTFLOW WILL LIKELY ERODE PRECIP BANDS MORE  
AGGRESSIVELY THAN IS CURRENTLY PORTRAYED BY OPERATIONAL GUIDANCE.  
 
COLD AIR OUTFLOW WEAKENS ON FRIDAY AS A RIDGE BUILDS OVER THE  
EASTERN GULF. DRIER WEATHER IS LIKELY TO REMAIN FOR MOST LOCATIONS  
UNTIL SUNDAY, WHEN THE RIDGE IS DISPLACED EAST BY AN ADVANCING  
SYSTEM. FOR ADDITIONAL DETAILS, SEE THE LONG TERM DISCUSSION.  
   
LONG TERM  
WEAK SHORTWAVE WILL MOVE ACROSS THE GULF, BRINGING A  
GALE FORCE FRONT OVER THE NE GULF AND ALONG PARTS OF THE PANHANDLE  
INTO FRIDAY. STEEPER 500 MB RIDGING OVER THE GULF WILL PREVENT THE  
WAVES MOVING THROUGH FRIDAY INTO SATURDAY FROM REACHING AS FAR  
INTO THE PANHANDLE, RATHER FUNNELING MOST OF THE PRECIPITATION UP  
INTO THE NORTHERN GULF COASTLINE FROM YAKUTAT WESTWARD. LARGELY  
SLIGHT CHANCE TO CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION MOVING FURTHER EAST INTO  
THE REST OF THE PANHANDLE, WITH DECREASING POPS INTO SATURDAY  
MORNING AS THE ASSOCIATED LOW WEAKENS FURTHER AND MOVES  
NORTHWESTWARD, BEFORE DISSIPATING AHEAD OF THE NEXT STRONGER  
SYSTEM APPROACHING. THIS FIRST SYSTEM FRIDAY WILL LARGELY BEGIN TO  
BREAK DOWN THE OUTFLOW AND BRING IN WARMER TEMPERATURES IN THE  
PANHANDLE, WITH HIGH TEMPERATURES BETWEEN THE HIGH 30S TO LOW 40S  
EXPECTED FRIDAY AFTER THE WARM FRONT MOVES THROUGH AND BRINGS IN  
WARMER AIR FROM THE SOUTH. THE COOLER AIR MASS LINGERING INTO  
FRIDAY NEAR THE SURFACE AND THE LOWER SNOW LEVELS ACROSS THE  
PANHANDLE WILL ALLOW STILL SOME SNOW IN THE EARLY MORNING FRIDAY  
AND FRIDAY NIGHT WITH SOME MIXING MID DAY, BUT BY THE NEXT MORE  
IMPACTFUL SYSTEM IT APPEARS LIKE THE OUTFLOW PATTERN WILL BE  
DISRUPTED ALREADY.  
 
LARGELY THE FORECAST REMAINS THE SAME FOR THE SUNDAY SYSTEM MOVING  
INTO MONDAY, WITH SOME QUESTIONS STILL REMAINING ON HOW QUICKLY  
THE WARM AIR WILL BEGIN TO ADVECT INTO THE PANHANDLE AND BEGIN TO  
WARM THE SURFACE ON SUNDAY. THIS NEXT SYSTEM WILL BRING ANOTHER  
FRONT ACROSS THE PANHANDLE SUNDAY, ALONG WITH MORE WARMER AIR FROM  
THE SOUTH, BRINGING MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES AT THE SURFACE UP TO THE  
40S ACROSS THE PANHANDLE INTO MONDAY. NOT MANY CHANGES WERE MADE  
TO THE QPF AMOUNTS EXPECTED FOR THIS STRONGER SYSTEM, WITH UP TO 2  
INCHES IN 24 HOURS EXPECTED ALONG THE NE GULF COAST WITH THE  
HEAVIEST RATES OF BETWEEN 0.4 AND 0.6 INCHES IN 6 HOURS EXPECTED  
SUNDAY EVENING INTO SUNDAY NIGHT. THE REST OF THE PANHANDLE IS  
EXPECTED TO SEE BETWEEN 0.5 AND 1.5 INCHES OF QPF, WITH THE ONLY  
SNOW ACCUMULATION BEING FOR THE HIGHWAYS AS SNOW LEVELS RAPIDLY  
RISE AND TEMPERATURES INCREASE INTO THE MID 40S ELSEWHERE DURING  
THE DAY. THE HAINES HIGHWAY NEAR THE BORDER IS EXPECTED TO SEE  
LESS THAN AN INCH IN 24 HOURS, WHILE THE KLONDIKE HIGHWAY IS  
EXPECTED TO SEE BETWEEN 3 AND 5 INCHES OF SNOWFALL DURING THE  
SUNDAY SYSTEM, WITH THE SNOW BECOMING WETTER AND MORE DENSE SUNDAY  
NIGHT INTO MONDAY MORNING AS SNOW LEVELS CONTINUE TO RISE ABOVE  
3000 FT. WHILE THE WARMER TEMPERATURES ARE MOVING INTO THE  
PANHANDLE DURING THE DAY, THE COLDER AND DRIER AIRMASS IN PLACE  
OVERNIGHT WILL STILL ALLOW FOR SOME CHANCES OF SNOW MIXING IN  
SUNDAY MORNING, BEFORE THE MAJORITY OF THE PANHANDLE ASIDE FROM  
THE HIGHER ELEVATION LOCATIONS WILL TRANSITION TO RAIN BY AROUND  
LATE MORNING TO MIDDAY. NO ACCUMULATION IS EXPECTED EVEN WITH THE  
SNOW MIXING IN DURING THE MORNING HOURS, HOWEVER.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
NO BIG CHANGES FROM THIS MORNING'S 18Z TAF UPDATE. STILL  
EXPECTING VFR CONDITIONS FOR MOST OF THE PANHANDLE TONIGHT WITH THE  
ENTIRE PANHANDLE SEEING VFR TOMORROW. THE EXCEPTION IS THE FAR  
SOUTHERN PANHANDLE, WHERE CALM WINDS HAVE KEPT LOW CLOUDS IN PLACE  
LONGER THAN EXPECTED.  
 
NORTH PANHANDLE TAF SITES: ICY STRAIT CORRIDOR AND NORTHWARD, VFR  
CONDITIONS WILL CONTINUE. FOR THE MOST PART, WINDS WILL BE LIGHT  
OVER LAND AREAS. THE EXCEPTION IS HAINES AND SKAGWAY WHERE NORTHERLY  
WINDS WILL REMAIN AROUND 15 KTS WITH GUSTS TO 25 KTS. AND AREAS  
PRONE TO GAP WINDS WILL CONTINUE THE LOCALIZED HIGHER WIND SPEEDS,  
LIKE OUT OF TAKU INLET AND NEAR POINT COUVERDEN.  
 
SOUTH PANHANDLE TAF SITES: THE AREA FROM SITKA TO PETERSBURG TO  
WRANGELL IS REPORTING VFR. THESE CONDITIONS WILL CONTINUE INTO  
TOMORROW. FARTHER SOUTH, NEAR KETCHIKAN TO METLAKATLA TO SOUTHERN  
PRINCE OF WALES ISLAND, IS REPORTING LOW CLOUDS DOWN TO NEAR 1000  
FEET. THESE CONDITIONS WILL IMPROVE FROM WEST TO EAST OVER THE NEXT  
FEW HOURS. ONCE THE CLOUDS IMPROVE TO VFR, EXPECTING VFR TO LAST  
INTO TOMORROW.  
 
 
   
MARINE  
 
OUTSIDE WATERS: WAVEHEIGHTS OF 6-10 FEET REMAIN THROUGH WEDNESDAY  
NIGHT, AS OUTFLOW WINDS CONTINUE TO FUNNEL OUT OF THE INNER CHANNELS  
AND INTO THE GULF. WINDS BROADLY REMAIN BETWEEN MODERATE TO FRESH  
BREEZE, THOUGH SOME FAVORED OUTFLOW CHANNELS COULD SEE WINDIER  
CONDITIONS. THURSDAY WILL SEE WINDS STRENGTHEN OVER THE NORTHERN  
AND CENTRAL GULF WATERS AS STRONG BREEZE TO NEAR GALE WINDS  
DEVELOP AS A FRONT MOVES THROUGH. WAVEHEIGHTS WILL ALSO INCREASE  
THURSDAY, RISING TO 10-14 FT FOR THE NORTHERN GULF AND CENTRAL  
GULF, AND 6-8 FT FOR MORE OUTER COASTAL WATERS CLOSER TO THE  
SHORELINE SOUTH OF CAPE SPENCER.  
 
INSIDE WATERS: A WEAK COLD AIR OUTFLOW EVENT REMAINS UNDERWAY  
THROUGH THURSDAY, WITH NORTHERLY WINDS OF 15-20 KT FOR MANY OF  
THE INNER CHANNELS, WHILE MORE OUTFLOW IMPACTED AREAS LIKE POINT  
COUVERDEN AND TAKU INLET SEE 25-30 KT, AND SEAS OF 3-5 FEET. BY  
THURSDAY NIGHT, OUTFLOW WINDS WILL BE WEAKENING AS THE PRESSURE  
GRADIENT BECOMES MORE PARALLEL TO THE PANHANDLE, WITH WINDS  
DROPPING TO 10 - 15 KT, POTENTIALLY LESS IN SOME LOCATIONS, FOR  
THE INNER CHANNELS.  
 
 
   
AJK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
PUBLIC...NONE.  
MARINE...GALE WARNING FOR PKZ652.  
SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY FOR PKZ641>644-651-661>664-671-672.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...GFS  
LONG TERM...CONTINO  
AVIATION...GJS  
MARINE...GFS  
 
VISIT US AT HTTP://WWW.WEATHER.GOV/JUNEAU  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab AK Page
Main Text Page