National Weather Service Text Product
AFOS product AFDOTX
Dates interpreted at 00:00 UTCDisplaying AFOS PIL: AFDOTX
Product Timestamp: 2013-06-17 22:03 UTC
Bulk Download
Bulk Download Help
This bulk download tool provides the NWS text
in a raw form, hopefully directly usable by your processing system.
You can either provide a complete 6-character PIL/AFOS ID or provide
the 3-character base ID (e.g., AFD). The start and end
dates represent 00 UTC for those dates. The Zip format is useful as
the filenames will have the product timestamp, which is useful for
when the product format has ambiguous timestamps.
567 FXUS66 KOTX 172203 AFDOTX AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SPOKANE WA 303 PM PDT Mon Jun 17 2013 .SYNOPSIS... An increasing chance of showers and thunderstorms comes to the Inland Northwest today through Tuesday. By Wednesday downright wet and cool weather envelopes the region. Showery, cool conditions will continue through the week, with a drying and warming trend by the weekend. && .DISCUSSION... Tonight and Tomorrow...Large area of low pressure off the coast and slowly moving toward the inland with time against higher pressure further inland. This synoptic positioning will allow for a somewhat warm and unstable southerly flow primarily from the south with various shortwave triggers rotating around the periphery of the offshore low coming up through it and passing through Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho in a mostly south to north trajectory. This warm trajectory negates any shadowing off the cascades and in fact pops remaining highest at times over the East Slopes of the Cascades and the vicinity lowlands because of this setup. The small mesoscale shortwaves triggers passing through tonight along with the instability mentioned allow for a prolonged mention of thunderstorms of the elevated nature moving quite quickly with estimated storm motion to the north near 30 mph or so. At the same time the air-mass overhead supports production of surface based showers and thunderstorms as well but those will not move as quickly...they should still move north...but not as fast...more like 5 to 10 mph or so. Due to this above reasoning the forecast for tonight and tomorrow remains cluttered with various mentions of showers and thunderstorms and associated moderate cloud cover. As is typically the case wind will be gusty and erratic near any thunderstorm. /Pelatti ...VERY WET WITH BELOW AVERAGE TEMPERATURES WED AND THUR... Tuesday night through Thursday: Upper level closed low that has been sitting off the Pacific Northwest coast for several days will finally move inland and produce a very wet and cool period. Tuesday night the low will move inland and by Wednesday it will be across northern Oregon...with Thursday it moving up into Northern Idaho. As the low slowly moves across the Pac NW it will produce periods of rain starting Tuesday evening and continuing through Thursday. The best forcing for heavier rain amounts will be mainly north and east of Spokane...across northeast WA and the northern ID Panhandle. The valleys could see 1.00-1.50 inches of rain with the higher terrain possibly seeing two inches of rain. There will be some isolated pockets up in extreme north Idaho and WA...mainly from Northport east towards Porthill that could see 2.50 inches of rain. The northern Cascades will also be another location to see up to an inch of rain or snow as snow levels will lower as the low moves in. Snow levels will generally be 6000 feet or higher through the event. The area which should receive the least amount of rain will be south and west of Moses Lake where they will see a quarter of an inch or less. The heaviest rain will fall Wednesday into Wednesday night. Thunderstorm potential will remain high Tuesday evening as the first strong wave pushes into the area providing a good kicker for thunderstorms to fire off. Generally the threat will be everywhere, but models are showing the best instability across north Idaho. By Wednesday thunderstorms remain a concern, mainly north and east of the low, so over eastern WA and north ID. And by Thursday the our chances lessen even more with the best potential being across north ID. Heavier amounts of rain are possible under any thunderstorm that develops with this system as it moves through, and the precipitation amounts mentioned in the previous paragraph does not include extra rain amounts from thunderstorms. Temperatures Tuesday night will be around average for this time of the year. However by Wednesday, with all the rain and cloud cover we are expecting, do not anticipate temperatures rising that much through the day. Temps Wed will be 15-20 degrees below average for this time of the year. Temperatures will remain below average for Wed night and Thur. /Nisbet Friday and Saturday...The upper level low pressure that will be giving us our chilly temperatures and increased rain chances should begin exiting the Inland Northwest this weekend. This will bring a drying trend from west to east. Friday should be the last day of higher rain chances, as the upper low moves to near the northeast Washington/Idaho panhandle border. The low should begin to accelerate off to the east through Saturday, taking most of the lift and dynamics with it. However, ample low-level moisture will remain after the week's rainfall. Therefore, we did not remove precipitation chances altogether. Low chances will remain, especially over the elevated regions of northeast Washington into the Idaho panhandle. ty Sunday and Monday: The shortwave ridge expected this weekend will be transient. By Sunday night, the GFS, GFS Ensemble Mean, and the ECMWF are in good agreement that the 500mb ridge axis will migrate into western Montana. Sunday should remain dry. By Monday, we should experience increasing mid-upper level southwest flow bringing the increased threat for showers and thunderstorms. /GKoch && .AVIATION... 18z TAFS: Low pressure off the coast next to inland ridge of high pressure will allow a somewhat warm and unstable flow from the south to allow for the possibility of convective showers and thunderstorms for TAF sites. Surface based showers and thunderstorms should occur primarily over the Mountains to the north of Northeast Washington and North Idaho while elevated showers and thunderstorms should occur after 00Z Tuesday and on through the evening and overnight, possibly lingering on as various disturbances move up from the south and on into 18Z Tuesday. /Pelatti && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... Spokane 56 75 52 55 46 59 / 50 50 80 100 90 70 Coeur d'Alene 55 75 53 56 47 60 / 50 50 90 100 90 90 Pullman 50 72 50 56 43 59 / 20 50 80 90 70 50 Lewiston 57 82 55 62 49 66 / 20 40 70 90 70 50 Colville 53 79 51 62 48 61 / 50 60 90 100 100 80 Sandpoint 52 81 50 57 46 59 / 50 50 100 100 100 90 Kellogg 55 77 50 53 43 54 / 20 40 100 100 90 80 Moses Lake 57 75 55 63 50 69 / 50 50 50 60 40 30 Wenatchee 60 74 57 63 52 64 / 40 60 40 60 40 30 Omak 54 77 53 60 49 65 / 40 70 60 100 60 60 && .OTX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ID...None. WA...None. && $$