349  
FXAK67 PAJK 291802  
AFDAJK  
 
SOUTHEAST ALASKA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JUNEAU AK  
902 AM AKST SAT NOV 29 2025  
   
UPDATE
 
UPDATE TO INCLUDE THE 18Z TAF ISSUANCE.  
THE FORECAST REMAINS LARGELY ON TRACK THIS MORNING. WINDS HAVE  
REMAINED LIGHT WITH CLEAR SKIES OVER A LARGE MAJORITY OF THE  
PANHANDLE. SOME AREAS OF PATCHY FOG HAVE DEVELOPED, BUT IT IS  
VERY THIN AND OCCURRING ONLY OVER VERY ISOLATED AREAS. THE NEXT  
LARGER SYSTEM ARRIVES LATE TONIGHT INTO SUNDAY.  
 

 
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
KEY MESSAGES:  
 
- RELATIVELY BENIGN WINDS AND PARTLY CLOUDY SKIES CONTINUE UNTIL  
A GALE FORCE SYSTEM ARRIVES OVERNIGHT SATURDAY INTO SUNDAY.  
 
- WIDESPREAD PRECIPITATION AND STRONG WINDS SUNDAY, WITH  
POTENTIAL FOR ACCUMULATING SNOWFALL IN THE NORTHERN PANHANDLE.  
A WINTER STORM WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED FOR THE KLONDIKE HIGHWAY.  
 
- ANOTHER SYSTEM ARRIVES TUESDAY NIGHT.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM.../THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/
 
THE REMNANTS OF THE  
PREVIOUS FRONT HAS MOVED OUT OF YAKUTAT OVERNIGHT, ALLOWING FOR  
LIGHT PATCHES OF FOG TO ATTEMPT TO DEVELOP IN THE EARLY MORNING  
HOURS. THE REST OF THE PANHANDLE IS SEEING PARTLY CLOUDY, DRY  
CONDITIONS THAT WILL PERSIST THROUGH SATURDAY MORNING BEFORE A  
GALE FORCE FRONT MOVES INTO THE EASTERN GULF SATURDAY NIGHT.  
 
AS THE SYSTEM APPROACHES THE PANHANDLE, CLOUD COVER WILL MOVE  
INLAND AND POPS WILL INCREASE ALONG THE NORTHERN GULF COAST.  
SOUTHEAST 10 TO 15 KT WINDS IN THE CENTRAL GULF SATURDAY MORNING  
WILL PICK UP TO 25 TO 30 KTS GOING INTO SUNDAY. WEAK OUTFLOW WINDS  
LESS THAN 5 KTS OVER THE PANHANDLE WILL PERSIST THROUGH SATURDAY  
BEFORE TURNING MORE ONSHORE AND BEGINNING TO INCREASE OVERNIGHT.  
BY SUNDAY MORNING, STRONG GALE FORCE SUSTAINED WINDS IN THE  
COASTAL WATERS OF THE NORTHEASTERN GULF WILL BE PUSHING INLAND,  
PRIMARILY FROM CAPE EDGECUMBE THROUGH CAPE SUCKLING. STORM FORCE  
GUSTS ARE LIKELY ALONG THE NORTHERNMOST GULF COAST WITH THE PEAK  
OF THE SYSTEM MIDDAY SUNDAY. AS THE SYSTEM PUSHES ONSHORE THROUGH  
SUNDAY AFTERNOON, 25 TO 30 KT WINDS WITH GALE FORCE GUSTS WILL  
INCREASE THROUGH THE INNER CHANNELS AND IN UNSHELTERED COASTAL  
COMMUNITIES. STRONG WINDS WILL STEADILY DECREASE OVERNIGHT INTO  
MONDAY.  
 
THIS SYSTEM IS EXPECTED TO BRING MODERATE TO HEAVY PRECIPITATION  
SUNDAY, WITH HEAVIEST RATES OF BETWEEN 0.4 AND 0.6 INCHES IN 6  
HOURS EXPECTED SUNDAY EVENING. YAKUTAT WILL BE HIT FIRST AND THE  
HARDEST, WITH AROUND 2.5 INCHES EXPECTED IN 24 HOURS. THE REST OF  
THE NORTHERN AND OUTER COAST OF THE PANHANDLE WILL SEE BETWEEN 1  
AND 1.5 INCHES IN 24 HOURS WHILE THE SOUTHERN PANHANDLE WILL SEE  
BETWEEN HALF AND 1 INCH. COOLER OVERNIGHT TEMPERATURES GOING INTO  
SUNDAY WILL INCREASE POTENTIAL FOR PRECIPITATION TO START AS SNOW  
FOR MUCH OF THE NORTHERN PANHANDLE, TURNING INTO A MIX THROUGH THE  
MORNING. SNOW MELT COOLING SHOULD HELP TO KEEP TEMPERATURES NEAR  
FREEZING THROUGH THE MORNING, ALLOWING SNOW ACCUMULATIONS FOR  
LOCATIONS NEAR SEA LEVEL. COMMUNITIES ALONG THE ICY STRAIT  
CORRIDOR MAY SEE 1.5 TO 2 INCHES OF ACCUMULATING SNOW, BEGINNING  
TO MIX WITH RAIN TOWARD THE LATTER HALF OF THE MORNING. UP NORTH,  
HAINES AND SKAGWAY ARE EXPECTED TO SEE BETWEEN 2 TO 4 INCHES OF  
ACCUMULATING SNOW, MIXING BEFORE TRANSITIONING OVER TO RAIN BY  
SUNDAY EVENING. ACCUMULATING SNOW IS EXPECTED TO STICK AROUND FOR  
THE KLONDIKE AND HAINES HIGHWAYS INTO MONDAY MORNING BEFORE  
TRANSITIONING INTO RAIN, WITH THE KLONDIKE HIGHWAY SET TO RECEIVE  
6 TO 10 INCHES OF SNOW FROM THIS SYSTEM. THE HAINES HIGHWAY WILL  
LIKELY SEE CLOSER 4 INCHES. A WINTER STORM WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED  
FOR THE KLONDIKE HIGHWAY PAST MILE POST 6 THROUGH LATE SUNDAY  
NIGHT.  
   
LONG TERM.../MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
 
ONSHORE FLOW  
LARGELY CONTINUES THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT AS ANOTHER WAVE OF  
PRECIPITATION MOVES THROUGH CLOSELY BEHIND THE REMNANTS OF THE  
FRONTAL SYSTEM FROM SUNDAY, BEFORE CHANCES BEGIN TO DIMINISH ACROSS  
THE PANHANDLE MONDAY NIGHT INTO TUESDAY MORNING. THE WARMING ACROSS  
THE PANHANDLE FOLLOWING THE SUNDAY SYSTEM WILL KEEP THE AREA  
TRANSITIONED TO RAIN BY MONDAY, WITH THE EXCEPTIONS OF THE HIGHWAYS.  
THE HEAVIEST RAIN FROM SUNDAY WILL HAVE PASSED, WITH MUCH LOWER QPF  
AMOUNTS EXPECTED INTO MONDAY, DIMINISHING INTO MONDAY MORNING. THE  
ONLY AREA THAT IS EXPECTED TO SEE SNOW IS ALONG THE HIGHWAYS, WITH  
MORE OF A MIX ON THE HAINES HIGHWAY AND WET, DENSE SNOW ALONG THE  
KLONDIKE HIGHWAY MONDAY, WITH ACCUMULATION OF LESS THAN AN INCH  
MONDAY. TUESDAY CONTINUES TO SHOW CONFIDENCE ON A LOW LEVEL RIDGE  
FORMING OVER THE PANHANDLE, AS WELL AS 500 MB RIDGING REBUILDING  
OVER THE GULF AGAIN AFTER THE PRIOR UPPER LEVEL SHORTWAVE MOVED  
THROUGH BY MONDAY, ALLOWING FOR A BRIEF LULL ON TUESDAY. THIS  
HOWEVER WILL MAINLY BE FOR THE SOUTHERN HALF OF THE PANHANDLE, AS  
THE POSITION OF THE RIDGE WILL ALLOW FOR SOME ONSHORE FLOW TO REMAIN  
MOVING INTO THE NE GULF COAST AND KEEPING POPS HIGHER ICY STRAIT  
CORRIDOR NORTHWARD AND SOME LIGHT PRECIPITATION OVER THE AREA. THE  
SOUTHERN PANHANDLE WILL STILL SEE SOME CLOUD COVER EVEN WITH THE  
RIDGING SETTING UP, THOUGH PRECIPITATION CHANCES WILL DECREASE TO 20  
TO 40% MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH MIDDAY TUESDAY.  
 
THE NEXT FRONT MOVING THROUGH WILL BEGIN TO IMPACT THE NE GULF COAST  
AND YAKUTAT AREAS INTO TUESDAY NIGHT, BEFORE MOVING EASTWARD ACROSS  
THE PANHANDLE. THIS FRONT WILL MOVE ACROSS THE PANHANDLE THROUGH  
WEDNESDAY, BRINGING ANOTHER ROUND OF RAIN AND CONTINUED WARMER  
TEMPERATURES TO THE PANHANDLE. HIGHS FOR THE NORTHERN HALF OF THE  
PANHANDLE WILL BE IN THE MID TO HIGH 40S, WHILE THE SOUTHERN  
PANHANDLE WILL SEE TEMPERATURES AROUND 50 DEGREES, BRINGING US CLOSE  
TO SOME RECORD TEMPERATURES FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR IF THESE WARMER  
TEMPERATURES PAN OUT. IN TERMS OF PRECIPITATION, THE MAJORITY OF THE  
PANHANDLE WILL SEE 850 MB TEMPERATURES WARMING TO AROUND 0 DEGREES  
C, AND SNOW LEVELS BETWEEN 3000 AND 5000 FT ALONGSIDE THE WARMER  
TEMPERATURES AND WET BULBS AT THE SURFACE, BRINGING LIGHT TO  
MODERATE RAIN ACROSS THE AREA AND SNOW MIXING IN ONLY AT HIGHER  
ELEVATIONS. THE ONLY AREA NOT EXPECTING RAIN WILL BE THE KLONDIKE  
HIGHWAY, WITH SNOW LEVELS REMAINING JUST AROUND 3000 FT ALLOWING FOR  
WETTER SNOW TO CONTINUE, BUT WITH LITTLE TO NO ACCUMULATION  
EXPECTED. OVERALL THE NE GULF COASTLINE WILL SEE BETWEEN 1 AND 2  
INCHES OF RAIN IN 24 HOURS FROM THIS SYSTEM TUESDAY NIGHT INTO  
WEDNESDAY, AND GENERALLY LESS THAN 1 INCH IN 24 HOURS FOR THE REST  
OF THE PANHANDLE.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
WIDESPREAD VFR CONDITIONS CONTINUE ACROSS THE PANHANDLE WITH CLEAR  
SKIES OVER MOST OF THE AREA. ALONG WITH SCATTERED TO CLEAR SKIES,  
LOW WINDS WILL PERSIST WELL INTO TONIGHT BEFORE THE NEXT FRONT  
STARTS TO MAKE ITS WAY OVER THE PANHANDLE. THIS FRONT WILL FIRST  
IMPACT COASTAL AREAS STARTING LATE TONIGHT INTO SUNDAY MORNING. THIS  
SYSTEM WILL BRING LOWERED CEILINGS AND VISIBILITIES INTO MVFR FLYING  
CONDITIONS, WITH TIMES OF IFR POSSIBLE, AS MODERATE TO HEAVY  
PRECIPITATION SPREADS ACROSS THE PANHANDLE. PRECIPITATION WILL  
MAINLY BE RAIN, WITH AREAS OF SNOW OR WINTRY MIX FROM THE ICY  
STRAIT CORRIDOR NORTHWARD SUNDAY MORNING. WINDS WILL ALSO INCREASE  
WITH LLWS AROUND 2000 FT RETURNING. LLWS WILL FIRST RETURN NEAR  
THE NORTHEAST COAST BEFORE SPREADING INLAND AFFECTING ALMOST ALL  
OF THE PANHANDLE.  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
 
OUTSIDE: SOUTHEASTERLY WINDS IN THE CENTRAL GULF HAVE DECREASED  
TO 10 TO 15 KTS OVERNIGHT, SEEING ONLY A BRIEF BREAK BEFORE THE  
NEXT SYSTEM MOVES INTO THE EASTERN GULF THROUGH SATURDAY. A LARGE  
SWATH OF 25 TO 30 KT WINDS MOVING TOWARDS THE NORTHEASTERN OUTER  
COAST OF THE GULF THROUGH SATURDAY EVENING WILL CONTINUE TO  
INTENSIFY OVERNIGHT. BY SUNDAY MORNING, STRONG SOUTHEASTERLY GALE  
FORCE WINDS (41 TO 47 KTS) WITH POTENTIAL FOR STORM FORCE GUSTS  
(48 TO 55 KTS) WILL BE PUSHING INLAND THE COAST FROM CAPE OMMANEY  
TO CAPE SUCKLING. STRONGEST WINDS FROM CAPE SPENCER TO CAPE  
SUCKLING ARE EXPECTED TO PEAK THROUGH MIDDAY SUNDAY. GULF WINDS  
LARGELY DECREASE TO FRESH TO STRONG BREEZES (17 TO 27 KTS)  
OVERNIGHT WITH SOUTHWESTERLY ONSHORE FLOW CONTINUING THROUGH  
MONDAY. ANOTHER SYSTEM IS SET TO MOVE INTO THE EASTERN GULF  
TUESDAY.  
 
WAVE HEIGHTS HAVE DECREASED TO AROUND 5 TO 7 FT THROUGH SUNDAY  
MORNING, AND ARE EXPECTED TO STEADILY INCREASE THROUGH SATURDAY  
AFTERNOON TO EVENTUALLY RETURN TO 10 TO 15 FT AT A PERIOD OF 10  
SECONDS BY SUNDAY MORNING. HEIGHTS WILL INCREASE TO 15 TO 22 FT  
ALONG THE NORTHEASTERN GULF COAST WHERE WINDS ARE STRONGEST MIDDAY  
SUNDAY. THE GULF WILL RETURN TO A MORE UNIFORM 10 TO 15 FT WITH A  
LONGER PERIOD OF 15 TO 18 SECONDS BY SUNDAY NIGHT. SOUTH TO  
SOUTHWESTERLY 5 FT SWELL WILL BE OVERTAKEN BY 10 TO 15 FT OF  
SOUTHERLY SWELL FOLLOWING THE FRONT SUNDAY MORNING BEFORE TURNING  
SOUTHWESTERLY AND DECREASING TO 8 TO 10 FT.  
 
INSIDE: VERY WEAK OUTFLOW WINDS AROUND 5 KTS THROUGH THE INNER  
CHANNELS WILL REMAIN LIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY BEFORE THE GALE FORCE  
FRONT MOVES INTO THE EASTERN GULF OVERNIGHT INTO SUNDAY. WINDS  
AHEAD OF THE FRONT WILL TURN ONSHORE AND PROCEED TO LARGELY  
INCREASE TO STRONG BREEZES TO NEAR GALES (22 TO 33 KTS) EARLY  
SUNDAY MORNING. ICY STRAIT WINDS WILL REMAIN EASTERLY THROUGH  
SUNDAY. AS THE FRONT CONTINUES TO PUSH ONSHORE THROUGH THE DAY,  
GALE FORCE GUSTS (34 TO 40 KTS) WILL INCREASE THROUGH THE  
CHANNELS. WAVE HEIGHTS AROUND 1 TO 2 FT WILL INCREASE TO AROUND 4  
TO 6 FT FOLLOWING THE STRONGER WINDS, WITH CHANNEL ENTRANCES  
SEEING UP TO 10 FT THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT. WINDS AND WAVES WILL  
STEADILY DECREASE THROUGH MONDAY BEFORE ANOTHER SYSTEM MOVES INTO  
THE EASTERN GULF TUESDAY.  
 

 
   
AJK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
PUBLIC...WINTER STORM WATCH FROM SUNDAY MORNING THROUGH LATE SUNDAY NIGHT  
FOR AKZ318.  
MARINE...SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY FOR PKZ642>644-651-652-662>664-671-672.  
 

 
 

 
 
UPDATE...EAB  
SHORT TERM...ZTK  
LONG TERM...CONTINO  
AVIATION...EAB  
MARINE...ZTK  
 
VISIT US AT HTTP://WWW.WEATHER.GOV/JUNEAU  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab AK Page Main Text Page