Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Mar. 31 21

 Area Forecast Discussion

Issued by NWS Houston/Galveston, TX

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000
FXUS64 KHGX 312318
AFDHGX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Houston/Galveston TX
618 PM CDT Wed Mar 31 2021

.AVIATION [00Z TAF Issuance]...

A gradual clearing is underway with this afternoon`s cold front
having cleared the coast. A few showers continue to linger around
the barrier islands, though activity is expected to diminish
within the next couple of hours. All sites aside from LBX now
report VFR cigs, which should continue to lift and eventually give
way to clear skies as a drier airmass continues to move into the
area. Winds will remain elevated overnight, with gusts reaching
near 30 knots near the coast and around 20 knots inland. Tomorrow,
expect clear conditions with northerly winds of around 10 to 15
knots.

Cady

&&

.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 334 PM CDT Wed Mar 31 2021/

SHORT TERM [Tonight through Thursday Night]...

A cold front located along the coastal counties as of around 3 PM
CDT will continue southward into the coastal waters late this
afternoon and evening, resulting in scattered showers and isolated
thunderstorms mainly along the frontal boundary. Rain chances
inland will cease this evening/early tonight as the front moves
further into the Gulf waters. Behind the front, surface
temperatures have only dropped about 5 to 10 degrees. However,
as colder and drier air comes through and skies slowly scatter
out tonight, temperatures will have a more pronounced dip, with
lows decreasing into the upper 30s to lower 40s along areas north
of I-10, the mid to upper 40s along areas south of I-10, and the
low 50s along the coastal areas. Post-frontal northerly winds
will continue to be a concern, with moderate to strong gusty winds
affecting most of the CWA through late tonight, except the
coastal areas where hazardous wind conditions are expected along
the Barrier Islands and surrounding waters due to winds of 20 to
30 MPH with gusts of up to 40 MPH through Thursday morning.

For the rest of the day Thursday, breezy conditions will prevail
for most of the morning. Mostly sunny skies along with high
temperatures in the mid 60s areawide will result in a pleasant and
soon to be rare SE TX day. Winds will relax late afternoon into
Thursday night, becoming calm to light, and shifting more
easterly as high pressure moves across TX. 24

LONG TERM [Friday Through Wednesday]...

There is...not much to speak of in the long term. By Friday
morning, the deep upper trough will have made its way to the
Eastern Seaboard, and a ridge will be building over Texas. Down at
the surface, high pressure will be making its way from the Ohio
Valley into the Mid-South. And beyond that...it`ll just be
tracking these high pressure features as they drift around and
generally dominate our weather through the first half of next
week.

The only really notable deviation from this will be Sunday into
Monday, as a weak shortwave trough rounds the building ridge and
drives over the area. As it passes overhead, I certainly can`t
tell your the rain chances will be nil, but when I say this is
where the highest PoPs of the long term are, this is very much in
the relative sense. There was not a very coherent signal for rain,
increasing temps just above the deck will increase capping, and
precipitable water values are only progged to be just high of one
inch, so I capped PoPs just under the "slight chance" wording for
now. If there becomes a broader consensus for some weak showers,
we can always nudge those PoPs up a bit.

Really, the main story for the long term will boil down to the
warming trend expected as we get deeper into next week. With
ridging aloft and a surface high to the east feeding us low level
flow from the Gulf, an increase in temperatures is virtually
certain - the question becomes how hot will we get? The
statistically post-processed deterministic NBM temps have been on
the cool side, though it did trend up today. Looking at the
distribution of this consensus, however, we may want to be on the
lookout for temps drifting even higher. For example, on Wednesday,
the deterministic high at KIAH is 85 degrees, while the median of
the NBM distribution is 89. The 75th percentile is 92 degrees, so
there`s even an outside shot we could see our first 90s of the
year next week.

I did not really look to overshoot the post-processed guidance
just yet - while the pattern is very high confidence for a warmup,
it`s also not a terribly beefy ridge we`re looking at, either. I
don`t know that I want to get real carried away with trying to
deviate from a fairly reliable model consensus just yet.
But...it`s something to be on the lookout for, and if confidence
increases in abnormally warm temps, we may start to cheat those
forecast values upwards in the coming days.

Luchs

MARINE...

A cold front is nearly to the coast, and as it finally pushes out
over the waters, it will turn winds to northwesterly and drier air
will put an end to the sea fog threat. However, webcams on the
coast are showing that visibility is starting to degrade again,
and sea fog will be trying to make its way back towards shore in
its short remaining time. Think the front will move quickly enough
to keep it from being a big deal, but we may see a very brief
window of some more dense fog late this afternoon/early evening
before it gets scoured out for good.

Once the front is through, of course, look for strong northerly
winds to build, continuing into tomorrow morning. Have stayed with
the gale warning in place, as winds - particularly beyond 20 nm
out should be good sustained gale, along with frequent gale-level
gusts across the waters.

Beyond that, high pressure behind the front will settle down from
the Mid-South to over the Gulf of Mexico over the next several
days, which will turn northerlies to more northeasterly, and
return to onshore flow by early next week.

Luchs

FIRE WEATHER...

With drier air surging in behind today`s cold front, we can look
for very dry conditions tomorrow and Friday, with relative
humidity bottoming out around or below 25 percent each day. Winds
by tomorrow afternoon will be diminishing, but we could still see
some sustained winds to up around 15 mph at the coast, and gusts
to that level further inland. This overlap shouldn`t be for a
significant period of time and mitigate the threat of severe fire
weather conditions, but things will definitely be more conducive
for fire spread than a `typical` spring day. While RH will be
similarly low on Friday, winds will be lighter and beginning to
turn increasingly onshore. With onshore flow firmly established by
Saturday, expect RH to be higher for the weekend and beyond.

Luchs

&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
College Station (CLL)      40  65  39  69  45 /   0   0   0   0   0
Houston (IAH)              46  68  43  67  47 /  10   0   0   0   0
Galveston (GLS)            52  66  53  63  56 /  20   0   0   0   0

&&

.HGX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
TX...Wind Advisory until 9 AM CDT Thursday for the following zones:
     Bolivar Peninsula...Brazoria Islands...Galveston Island...
     Matagorda Islands.

GM...Gale Warning until 10 AM CDT Thursday for the following zones:
     Coastal waters from Freeport to Matagorda Ship Channel TX
     out 20 NM...Coastal waters from High Island to Freeport TX
     out 20 NM...Galveston Bay...Matagorda Bay...Waters from
     Freeport to Matagorda Ship Channel TX from 20 to 60 NM...
     Waters from High Island to Freeport TX from 20 to 60 NM.

&&

$$

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