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Alaska Area Forecast Discussions


712
FXAK69 PAFG 121356
AFDAFG

Northern Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Fairbanks AK
556 AM AKDT Fri Jun 12 2026

.SYNOPSIS...
A stormy day is on tap for the Central and Eastern Interior as a
weak front will bring increasing chances for thunderstorms this
afternoon. These thunderstorms could be accompanied with small
hail, gusty winds, and frequent lightning. Saturday fire weather
concerns will begin to arise as temperatures will continue to
rise and minimum RH values decrease to at or below critical
threshold. A robust low will move into the northern Gulf of Alaska
Sunday. This low will help to alleviate fire weather concerns due
to the amount of moisture that will be brought into the Interior.
Southerly gap winds in the Alaska Range are expected Saturday
through Monday.

&&

.KEY WEATHER MESSAGES...
Central and Eastern Interior...
- Temperatures will slightly cool across the Interior valleys
compared to yesterday, but expect warmer temperatures to return
Saturday. For the Tanana Valley and Yukon Flats, it could be our
first 80 degree day of the year.

- With the temperatures approaching 80 for the valleys tomorrow,
minimum RH values will be near critical threshold. A Fire
Weather Watch has been issued for Delta Junction and Isabell
Pass as southerly gap winds of 20 to 30 mph and gusts near 40
mph will exacerbate the fire concerns.

- Scattered to numerous thunderstorms are anticipated today from
the Alaska Range to the Yukon Flats. The most thunderstorm
activity is expected in the White Mountains to Chicken.
- These thunderstorms could produce small hail, gusty and erratic
winds, lightning, and heavy rain.

West Coast and Western Interior...
- Isolated thunderstorms will be possible today in the Upper
Kuskokwim Valley. Saturday these thunderstorm chances will
spread north and west to the Yukon River.

- Temperatures will continue to rise for the next couple of days.
Widespread 70s in the Western Interior are expected by Saturday,
and 50s/60s along the coastline. Some parts of Norton Sound
could even see 70s. Minimum RH values will drop in the upper
20s/low 30s in the Western Interior on Saturday, but will see
improvement come Sunday afternoon.

- Gusty southwest winds across the Bering Strait will steadily
decrease through today.

North Slope and Brooks Range...
- Temperatures will cool down a few degrees for the next couple
of days, before warming up again on Sunday.

- Isolated showers will be possible today in the Eastern Brooks
Range from Atigun Pass to the AlCan border. Some of these
showers could become thunderstorms. Sunday another round of
thunderstorms will be possible in the Brooks Range.

- Potentially moderate to heavy rainfall is possible in the
Central/Eastern Brooks Range beginning Sunday night, and will
last for 36 to 48 hours. Rain amounts could be 1/2" to 3/4",
with a small chance to be an inch. Most of the precipitation
will fall as rain, as snow levels will be 8000` to 9000`.

&&

.FORECAST ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION...Friday through Sunday Night.
High pressure aloft is continuing in the Southern Interior. This
high pressure is bringing in warmer 850 mb temperatures from
Western Canada. With 850 mb temperatures near 9C, we could see the
Eastern Interior Valleys approach 80F with a dry adiabat layer. A
shortwave trough is moving through the Central Interior this
morning. This trough is not only faster than the models resolved
in their previous runs, but also mid level clouds are blanketed
ahead of the trough. The faster trough will force the higher
thunderstorm chances east, as it will be moving over the Eastern
Interior during peak heating instead of the Central Interior. With
a weak frontal boundary associated with this trough, it may be
able to overcome the reduced surface heating from the cloud, but
it would be reduced compared to clear skies ahead of it.

Soundings are still showing favorable conditions for thunderstorm
development along the front. Areas ahead of the front, will see
~500 J/kg of CAPE, a dry adiabat layer to 750-800 mbs, moisture in
the Dendritic Growth Zone. These would all support thunderstorms
that could produce 1/2" to 3/4" hail, gusty and erratic winds.
With the flow being west to east, expect most of the storms to
initiate along the western aspects of terrain due to upsloping
mechanics. Something that model soundings are hinting at are
higher DCAPE values. DCAPE represents the downward vertical motion
of air when rain enters the dry layer near the surface, and
begins to evaporatively cool. The highest values of DCAPE will be
pre-frontal and they could be as high 600 J/kg. These values
could translate to strong winds from a thunderstorm nearing 50
mph, but it is not a guarantee that they will occur, but the
potential is there.

Moving into Saturday we will finally warm weather continue across
Northern Alaska, but in the evening will finally see the first
influence of the approaching low in the gulf. The first band of
isolated to scattered rain showers will move into the Interior.
With southerly flow, much of the Southern Interior will be
downsloped, and will most likely not see any precipitation. Sunday
the main precipitation band will begin to move into the Interior.
This band is expected to produce light to moderate rain in the
Western Interior, Brooks Range, and potentially the North Slope.
This feature will talked about a bit more in the Extended Forecast
Discussion, as this feature will be a 36 to 48 hour event.

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...
High pressure continues to build over the Bering Sea and Western
Canada allowing for a continuation of warm and dry weather going
into the weekend. Isolated to scattered wet thunderstorms are
expected today across much of the Interior, with numerous wet
thunderstorms possible across the White Mountains and east towards
Eagle/Chicken. These storms may produce periods of frequent
lightning, small hail, and erratic winds at times through the
evening. Isolated thunderstorms will linger through the afternoon
Saturday across the Southern Interior and Alaska Range, with very
isolated pockets of thunderstorms possible across the Brooks Range
and Western Interior Sunday afternoon. High temperatures are
expected to rise into the mid to upper 70s across much of the
Interior through Sunday, with a few spots seeing afternoons highs
reaching near 80F. Winds are expected to remain fairly light
across the Central/Eastern Interior today with periods of gusty
southwest winds possible over the Seward Peninsula and Western
Brooks Range this afternoon. Going into the weekend, winds will
shift towards the east/southeast with gusty southerly winds
possible through Isabel Pass and Delta Junction Saturday
afternoon. Current model guidance suggests winds could gust as
high as 40 mph at times creating the potential for critical fire
weather conditions at Delta Junction. A Fire Weather Watch is out
through Sunday evening. Min RH values will continue to remain dry
between 20% to 30% through Saturday, with the driest spots being
in the Yukon Flats and Interior Valleys. Min RH values are
expected to be on a steady increasing trend going into next week
as a low in the Gulf of Alaska advects anomalously high amounts of
moisture into Northern Alaska. As upper level southeast flow sets
up over the state, increased chances for isolated to scattered
showers are expected for much of Northern Alaska with the
exception of the Southern Interior as strong downsloping effects
keep the area mostly dry. Despite this, areas that do see
persistent showers may experience heavy wetting rains at times,
especially across portions of the Eastern Interior, Western
Interior, and Brooks Range.

&&

.HYDROLOGY...
No updates since the previous discussion. Unless there is a
significant change, the next update for the rivers will come on
Friday 6/12/26.

Satellite imagery indicates the Sag River has broken up close to
the mouth with no updates on the Kuparuk given the lack of clear
satellite imagery. The Colville has broken up near Nuiqsut and
potentially farther downstream but there are 2 ice jams at
Horseshoe Bend and Ocean Point. Even with the ice jams, water has
remained relatively low.

Heading into the end of the week/weekend, we`ll see temperatures
rise into the 50s/60s in the Brooks Range and 40s/50s on the North
Slope. Low temperatures will be above freezing with the Brooks
Range only dropping into the 40s while the North Slope remains in
the 30s. The increase in temperatures along with the recent
snowfall may result in rapid river rises by this weekend but there
is high uncertainty in any potential flooding impacts. On top of
this, we are also monitoring the potential for heavy rain in the
Brooks Range from Sunday night through Tuesday. There is a
potential for over 1 inch of rain across a wide area.

&&

.EXTENDED FORECAST DAYS 4-7...Monday through Thursday.
High confidence continues early next week with ensemble models
favoring a broad upper level trough over Northern Alaska, anchored
by two H5 lows with one in the Gulf of Alaska/Aleutians and another
over the Chukchi Sea. This setup will remain conducive for scattered
to widespread light precipitation chances regionwide, with a focus
on locally heavier totals in the Brooks Range. Here is where we will
see a plume of moisture stall between these two lows over the higher
elevations and as a result, see steadier rainfall rates. The NBM
probability of 0.50" of rain or more from Bettles and Coldfoot
through the Central/Eastern Brooks Range sits at a 50-75% chance
with deterministic totals closer broadly speaking to 0.25-0.75".
Elsewhere, precipitation totals are expected to remain light around
a T-0.25" as snow levels remain confined well into the highest
terrain of the Alaska Range. Following above normal temperatures
regionwide over the weekend, temperatures will turn cooler overall
for Monday before slowly rebounding throughout the week. This is due
to the broad upper level troughing gradually weakening and a ridge
of high pressure moving in to take its place. As a result,
conditions will trend drier Wednesday onwards as precipitation
becomes increasingly isolated.

Coastal Hazard Potential Days 3 and 4...None


&&

.AFG WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
AK...Fire Weather Watch for AKZ937.
PK...Small Craft Advisory for PKZ801.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ806-811.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ807.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ812.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ850.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ856.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ858.
&&

$$

Synopsis..............Dennis
Key Messages..........Dennis
Analysis/Discussion...Dennis
Fire Weather..........Santiago
Hydrology.............Bianco
Extended..............MacKay



374
FXAK68 PAFC 121308
AFDAFC

Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Anchorage AK
508 AM AKDT Fri Jun 12 2026

.SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA (Days 1 through 3)...

Discussion:

Several key features in place today that will come into play over
the next several days. Currently, high pressure remains over the
Bering Sea with another stout ridge entrenched over much of the
western Canadian Territories. Various low pressure systems are
positioned around and in between these areas of high pressure.
Several shortwaves have been transiting across the Bering Strait
and northern Alaska, helping to give a bit of lift to afternoon
convection over the past several days. A weak trough remains
stalled over the Central Chugach this morning but will lift
north through the Copper River Basin today. This feature will help
drive another round of scattered shower and thunderstorm activity
from the foothills of the Talkeetna Mountains through the basin
to the Alaska Range. Much like previous days, the overall steering
flow remains relatively weak so any convective shower will result
in some brief heavy downpours. The nearly saturated marine layer
across Kennedy Entrance and Cook Inlet has resulted in the
redevelopment of widespread low stratus and fog that has advected
as far north as Willow and Palmer overnight. This area of low
clouds and fog will likely linger through mid morning before
slowly eroding.

Further south, a low moving up from the North Pacific into the
southwestern Gulf will bring gale force winds as the front lifts
across the Gulf. Gusty east to northeast winds are expected for
Kodiak Island with periods of moderate to heavy rainfall from Friday
afternoon through late Saturday. The heaviest rainfall will
accompany the front as it quickly lifts through resulting in a
general 1-2 inches for many locations across Kodiak Island, though
some isolated 2-3 inches are possible especially for areas of
enhanced upslope flow. This low will track to the south of Kodiak
Island before stalling and weakening near Sand Point.

For interior locations, southeasterly gap winds will precede the
front as a coastal ridge builds, resulting in a tightening of the
surface pressure gradient between it and a trough over interior
Alaska. Expect gusts 30 to 40 mph for Turnagain Arm, West
Anchorage, and Palmer from late this afternoon through late
tonight.

The eastern Kenai Peninsula and northern Gulf coast will also
widespread rainfall as the front lifts through. Another low will
quickly move up along the eastern periphery of the aforementioned
low...quickly deepening before it lifts towards the eastern Kenai
Peninsula and weakens. This low will bring a modest surge of
moisture north with another round of moderate to heavy
rainfall for the northern Gulf and Prince William Sound.

- PP/TM

&&


.SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA/BERING SEA/ALEUTIANS
(Days 1 through 3: Today through Sunday afternoon)...

The pattern of fog in the Bering, and convective systems over
Southwest Alaska is expected to continue today and tonight, but
will be changing as a new low pressure system makes it`s approach
Saturday. In the Southwest interior, warmer weather and rain
showers/thunderstorms continue this afternoon and tomorrow
afternoon, then conditions cool and stabilize under increasing
cloud cover this weekend. Along the Southwest coast, fog this
morning will retreat into the Bering by the afternoon, and
continue to weaken/lift into the weekend.

Ample surface heating over the Southwest Alaska interior will
continue to promote afternoon convective activity, with isolated
wet thunderstorms possible this, and Friday afternoon. Similarly
isolated thunderstorms are possible Saturday, however will likely
be consolidated to northern extent of the Lower Kuskokwim Valley
if they develop. Drier and hotter conditions over the interior of
Southwest will continue to be a forecast focus today and tomorrow,
and how the uptick in winds from the incoming low pressure system
plays a role. For now, this is fringing on ideal fire weather
conditions, with temperatures expected in the low 70s, RHs near
30, and wind speeds near 10 mph this afternoon.

The new low pressure system poised to approach the southern
Alaska Peninsula by late this afternoon will bring the
aforementioned uptick in easterly offshore winds to the Bristol
Bay area and portions of interior Southwest Alaska. This system`s
rainfall and movement in the overall air column will bring a
reprieve in the fog over the area, but replace it with continued
low stratus and light rain. Easterly gale-force winds are expected
to establish over the southern side of the Peninsula, including
for communities such as Sand Point, persisting into Saturday
morning. Dillingham may see winds gusting as strong as 40 to 50
mph peaking late Saturday afternoon. The highest rain amounts will
be along the Pacific side of the Alaska Peninsula (including
Chignik) at around 1 to 1.5 inches of rain from Friday into the
weekend. Rain amounts outside of this area will be much lower, as
the bulk of moisture will remain limited to the Pacific and Gulf
coasts.

-CL

&&
.LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7/Monday through Thursday)...

Starting early next week, there will be an upper level trough over
mainland Alaska and the Gulf of Alaska/Kodiak Island, with a ridge
upstream over the Bering Sea/Aleutians. This will be the tail end
of wet and windy weather across much of southern AK and bordering
coastal waters, with showers and clouds lingering across much of
the region. As we continue through the week, the high amplitude
trough will exit eastward to Canada, leaving a weak flow regime
with weak embedded features. The subtropical jetstream over the
North Pacific will also weaken through the week, with a noted
absence of strong storm systems. Thus, the pattern looks very
"summer-like", with daily afternoon/evening showers and
thunderstorms over southern AK driven by surface heating and
resulting instability and generally light winds across much of the
Aleutian, Gulf and southern AK coastal waters. While the week
will start out cloudy, expect increasing sunshine and warming
temperatures through the week. High pressure will remain centered
across the southern Bering and Aleutians, so widespread low clouds
and fog will be common.

-SEB

&&


.AVIATION...

PANC...A light up-inlet flow will persist this morning, allowing
another marine stratus layer to return over the Terminal through
around noon. Expect LIFR or IFR conditions through mid-morning due
to both the low stratus and areas of fog moving in and out of the
terminal. Similar to yesterday, IFR to MVFR conditions may persist
through late morning or around noon before the marine layer
retreats back over Cook Inlet and VFR conditions prevail. Once the
marine layer advects back over the inlet, VFR conditions are
expected through Saturday. Another reason for the improved cigs
and vis later today will be the development of a southeasterly
Turnagain Arm wind that is expected to clip West Anchorage and
the terminal by late afternoon or early evening. Wind gusts of 30
to 40 mph are possible this evening before the the pressure
gradient shifts and the Turnagain Arm bends away from the terminal
and down Cook Inlet, likely between 1 AM and 3 AM. LLWS will be
possible early Saturday morning as the surface winds become
northerly while winds aloft remain southeasterly. The
southeasterly winds off Turnagain Arm are expected to move back
over the terminal Saturday afternoon.


&&


$$



684
FXAK67 PAJK 122318
AFDAJK

Southeast Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Juneau AK
318 PM AKDT Fri Jun 12 2026

.SYNOPSIS...

Key Messages:

- Dry weather continues through the remainder of Friday.

- A front arriving on Saturday brings periods of rain and wind,
especially to the northern and central panhandle. Drier weather
will linger in the south.

- Periods of moderate to heavy rain expected for Sunday and Monday
as a stronger system pushes across the entire panhandle.

- Slow drying trend from N to S next week; with widespread warm
weather and drier conditions possible as we approach the
weekend.

&&

.SHORT TERM...
Quiet weather comes to an end through the day on Saturday as a gale
force front arrives in the northern gulf, ahead of a plume of
moisture arriving on Sunday and Monday which will bring periods of
widespread rainfall across SE AK.

Skies have largely cleared across the area, as offshore flow has
eroded away what was left of a marine layer earlier this morning.
Aside from scattered cumulus clouds, along with a few broken decks
for locations like Gastineau Channel. Expect the remainder of Friday
to be similarly pleasant.

This situation will come to an end through Saturday as a gale
force front moves into the northern gulf. Already, satellite
imagery depicts the front and its associated low strengthening
south of Kodiak, even as they swiftly move north. ASCAT wind
passes are indicating the ongoing development of a band of gale
force winds, which will impact the northern gulf Saturday evening.
As the front moves up, drier weather early Saturday morning gives
way to rain and windy conditions, mainly for areas north of Sumner
Strait with rain and wind especially prevalent along the NE Gulf
Coast. The front will rapidly weaken as it tries to push inland,
and think that much of the south/central panhandle will see little
to no rain from this initial push. A significantly stronger plume
of moisture will take aim Saturday night into Sunday at the
northern Gulf Coast (specifically Yakutat), before moving E
through the day on Monday across the panhandle. Operational
guidance has fallen into better agreement on the the plume of
moisture, bringing it initially into Yakutat late Saturday night
before veering east into the rest of SE AK on Monday. Upwards of
2-4 inches of rain are likely to fall for Yakutat proper, with 1-2
inches of rain for the northern and central panhandle, and up to
1-1.5 inches inches for the south. While rainfall amounts are
impressive for the dry season, they remain relatively lackluster
when compared to stronger fall systems, and most locations are
unlikely to break even 1 year Atmospheric Return Intervals (ARIs).
Beyond Sunday, the jet stream looks set to take up a relatively
zonal flow across the far southern panhandle through the first
half of the week, paving the way for additional shortwaves to
bring in more precipitation. For additional information, see the
long term forecast discussion.

Temperatures beyond Friday are likely to remain on the moderate
side for the central and northern panhandle through early next
week, with highs in the 50s and 60s for most locations.
Temperatures in the southern panhandle by contrast will be in the
60s and 70s, as drier weather and the potential for continuing
breaks in the clouds remain until the second system sweeps
eastward Sunday and Monday.

.LONG TERM.../Monday through Friday/... After the heaviest rain
passes through the area with the front Sunday, rain chances will
decrease through the day Monday for the Northern Panhandle. With
onshore flow across Southeast Alaska, there will be at least some
rain chances for the area through next Friday.

Monday, high pressure will develop in the Gulf, and it will begin a
drying and warming trend. By Friday, high temperatures look to
approach 70 for the Northern Panhandle.

Tuesday, with the jet stream across southern portions of the area,
there is potential for a low pressure system to develop. If this low
can develop, it will increase wind speeds and rain chances for areas
generally south of Fredrick Sound. As of now, ensembles keep rain
chances fairly low for the Southern Panhandle. Confidence in this
low pressure forming is fairly low, but it is a situation worth
monitoring.

.AVIATION.../Through 00z Sunday/...
Widespread VFR conditions continue over the panhandle, with
relatively clear skies and light winds persisting through the
afternoon. Upper level clouds begin to move in from the southwest
overnight, blanketing the panhandle in overcast CIGs through
Saturday. The associated frontal band will move into the outer
coast of the panhandle through the early morning hours, and is
mainly expected to impact the northern outer coast and parts of
the central outer coast. Communities in the Icy Strait Corridor
also have a chance of seeing some light rainfall with this front,
but it may have difficulty reaching all the way to Juneau. CIGs
will drop to MVFR at times, mainly in Yakutat, where the majority
of impacts are expected. Winds will pick up with the initial onset
of the front, but aren`t expected to reach much higher than 10 to
15 knots and will mainly impact the northern panhandle. Another,
stronger front is expected to jump into the gulf just after the
period, and will continue lowered conditions through Saturday
night and into Sunday.

&&

.MARINE...
Outside (Eastern Gulf): For the weekend, gale force winds along
the northern coast, fresh seas as high as 20 ft, and heavy rain
are the main threats.

Further detail: For Friday afternoon, winds are light across the
coast, with sea state dominated by southerly swell 17 seconds at 3
feet. Winds will continue to turn southeast in response to an
approaching low; the mighty tug Arctic Titan is always showing SE
winds near Cape St. Elias Friday morning. Currently, this system
of interest is near 50N 152W and moving north, with ASCAT/OSCAT
Satellite wind passes highlighting gale force easterly winds on
the northern flank. Southeast winds continue to build along our
coast; anticipate near-gale force to strong breezes by Saturday
morning with seas building to 10 to 14 ft.

These winds will ebb a bit Saturday afternoon, don`t let this
lull you into a false sense of security. Winds will ramp up
quickly Saturday night, with gale force winds expected to start
sometime near 12 AM to 6 AM Sunday morning, with the heaviest
winds west of the Fairweather Grounds to Cape St. Elias. There
could be localized areas of storm force conditions for a brief
period of time just south of Cape Suckling. Wave guidance has
struggled with significant wave heights Sunday; keeping things
simple, expect short period fresh seas of at least 17 ft to as
high as 20 ft near Cape St. Elias. Again, the heaviest conditions
will be near Cape St. Elias and east toward the Fairweather
Grounds. For folks south of Cross Sound, especially along the
coast of PoW, expect winds of fresh to strong breezes and seas of
9 to 12 ft. Winds and seas begin to relax Monday.

Inside (Inner Channels): Winds slowly ramp up Saturday, reaching
peak intensity Sunday.

Further detail: For the inside, sea breezes are the main threat
Friday afternoon, but winds look lighter than what we have seen
the previous few days. Moving through the weekend, winds will
become southerly as a gale force low moves into the gulf, pulling
the winds up and out of the Panhandle. For this surface pressure
regime, the main problem areas Saturday look to be Chatham Strait,
Peril Strait, and Icy Strait, with the potential to see winds of
at least moderate breezes by Saturday afternoon. For the remainder
of the region, there will likely be much less wind until Sunday
as the low begins to jump ashore, bringing widespread winds of
moderate to fresh breezes across the inside.

A note on Glacier Bay for Sunday: Mariners navigating the upper
arms of Glacier Bay Sunday should be aware of an occluding front
moving over the region. Anticipate southeasterly to build Sunday
before this front moves over, which could bring pretty intense
southerly winds to inlets exposed to the south like Reid Inlet.

&&

.AJK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
PUBLIC...None.
MARINE...Gale Warning for PKZ651-652-664-671-672.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ022-053-641>644-661>663.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...GFS
LONG TERM...Musall
AVIATION...ZTK
MARINE...AP

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