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085
FXAK69 PAFG 112259
AFDAFG
Northern Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Fairbanks AK
259 PM AKDT Thu Jun 11 2026
.SYNOPSIS...
A warming trend continues today over most of Northern Alaska with
highs reaching near/above normal. Scattered showers and isolated
storms are expected from the Western AK Range to Tanana with a
slight chance for a storm near Bettles. Otherwise, a much larger
thunderstorm day is expected on Friday with the possibility that
it`s the most active lightning day of the year so far. This
weekend, we will begin to see a pattern change as chinook flow
brings strong winds through the Alaska Range Passes. Fire weather
concerns exist in Isabel Pass and Delta Junction Saturday and
Sunday afternoon. The pattern does become a bit more wet,
especially away from the Southern Interior as an abundant amount
of moisture moves in from the Gulf of Alaska.
&&
.KEY WEATHER MESSAGES...
Central and Eastern Interior...
- Warm and dry conditions today with showers with isolated storms,
especially in the Alaska Range and near Tanana/Bettles.
- More abundant storms tomorrow across the area. Any storm can
come with small hail, gusty wind, lightning and heavy rain.
- Near Red Flag conditions in the Yukon Flats this afternoon
through Friday afternoon. A Fire Weather Watch for this weekend
in Delta and Isabel Pass.
West Coast and Western Interior...
- Warm and dry with scattered showers and isolated storms, mainly
near or just east of McGrath, towards the Western AK Range and
points north today and tomorrow.
- A few of these thunderstorms could produce small hail,
gusty winds, and frequent lightning.
- Gusty southwest winds up to 45 mph from the Bering Strait
northward today will weaken tomorrow.
- Warm again on Saturday with the warmest temperatures of the year
likely in many spots. Expect low to mid 70s in the Interior
with 50s and 60s along the coast.
- More widespread showers arrive in the Interior Sunday afternoon
as a front moves in from the southeast.
North Slope and Brooks Range..
- Warm weather today with highs near or above seasonal norms. A
weak front moves through tomorrow, cooling temperatures by a few
degrees, otherwise, expect mild temps to continue in the Brooks
Range and Arctic Plain through the weekend with near average
temperatures along the coast.
- Isolated to scattered showers will be possible in the Brooks
Range today and Friday. On Friday a couple of thunderstorms are
possible in the Eastern Brooks Range from Atigun Pass to the
AlCan border.
&&
.FORECAST ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION...
The main story will be thunderstorms today and tomorrow as a front
crosses Northern Alaska from west to east. Otherwise, the pattern
flips giving us chinook flow this weekend with the potential for
moderate rain for portions of the Interior and Brooks Range next
week.
Looking aloft at 500mb, there is predominantly west/southwest flow
across Northern Alaska today. This is coming from a shortwave
trough over the Chukotsk Peninsula, a 566 decameter high over St.
Paul Island and a 567 decameter high over Western Canada. As we
progress through tomorrow, the highs remain nearly stationary, but
the shortwave trough moves over the Interior and Brooks Range.
This will spark scattered to widespread thunderstorms over the
Central/Eastern Interior. Current models and model soundings are
showing several signs that these thunderstorms may be relatively
strong. These factors include mid level dry air, steep low to mid
level lapse rates at 8C-10C/km, nearly 500 J/Kg of CAPE and a
shortwave trough to provide lift. Ideally for strong thunderstorms
we would need more CAPE, a more saturated surface and taller swath
of steep lapse rates. However, this atmosphere is capable of
producing hail around 1/2" or less, and strong outflow wind
gusts. If any storms can become organized along the trough, there
can be 3/4" hail, but any larger than that is not supported.
Nonetheless, the trough continues to drift north and east, out of
Alaska by Saturday afternoon. Mostly dry conditions are left in
its wake on Saturday. As this happens, a 537 decameter low will
move northward over the Alaska Peninsula. For the most part, the
wind and rain will stay south of the Western Interior until
Sunday, but a few showers are possible from Hooper Bay to Galena.
On Sunday the main push of moisture from this low arrives in the
Interior with showers blossoming during the afternoon. The bulk of
the showers will be in the Northern/Eastern Interior, southern AK
Range, and Brooks Range while the Southern Interior gets chinook
flow. Rain showers will continue in these locations through early
next week with the heaviest being in the Brooks Range. In the
Southern Interior, given the chinook flow, south wind gusts will
increase to around 45 mph in Isabel/Windy Pass. Min RHs will be as
low as 15% to 20% Saturday afternoon in Isabel Pass and Delta
Junction resulting in possible Red Flag conditions. After the
initial front passes through Saturday evening, there will be a
lull in the winds Saturday night before a ramp up again on Sunday.
These winds look stronger, potentially up to 60 mph. There is an
abundance of moisture moving from south to north which will try to
push through the AK Range Passes, so higher RHs are possible on
Sunday resulting in near Red Flag conditions again. Elsewhere,
there aren`t major concerns for fire weather and with the increase
in moisture moving into Northern Alaska, this should keep the
fire season at bay for now. The rain for early next week will be
spoken about more in the extended discussion.
&&
.FIRE WEATHER...
Near Red Flag conditions in the Yukon Flats this afternoon and
tomorrow afternoon. Temperatures will be in the low 70s with
southwest wind gusts around 15 to 20 mph and min RHs as low as 15%
to 20%. The other area of concern is Isabel Pass and Delta
Junction Saturday and Sunday afternoons. Southerly chinook winds
increase to 45 mph Saturday afternoon and 60 mph Sunday afternoon.
RHs will be as low as 15 to 20% Saturday afternoon and 30% Sunday
afternoon. A Red Flag Warning may be warranted for Saturday and
potentially Sunday. The Western Interior will have dry and warm
conditions with isolated showers and thunderstorms, mainly near
the Western AK Range and north to Tanana and potentially Bettles.
The Central and Eastern Interior will have more robust
thunderstorm activity on Friday as a shortwave moves across the
area from the afternoon through the night. Most of the area is
covered by isolated to scattered thunderstorms with widespread
storms expected from the White Mountains to Eagle/Chicken. This
may end up being the largest lightning day of the year so far.
Moving into Sunday afternoon and early next week, a wetter
pattern is expected but with chinook flow, the southern Interior
may remain predominantly dry while most other spots receive rain,
potentially heavy wetting rain from the Eastern Interior to the
Brooks Range as well as the Western Interior.
&&
.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...
Next week, the overall pattern is expected to transition toward
increasing ridging across mainland Alaska as a weakening low
pressure system near the Aleutians interacts with an Arctic low
tracking across the northwest Arctic coast. Moisture wrapping around
the departing low and periodic disturbances moving through the flow
will maintain unsettled conditions through Tuesday with the greatest
shower coverage focused across the Northern and Eastern Interior,
Brooks Range, and portions of the North Slope. Recent guidance
has trended wetter across portions of the Eastern Interior,
however considerable uncertainty remains regarding how far the
deeper moisture spreads and where the heaviest rainfall ultimately
develops. Thunderstorm potential appears limited due to
widespread cloud cover and modest instability, though an isolated
storm near the Alcan border cannot be ruled out.
By midweek, strengthening high pressure building in the Bering Sea
and western Canada is expected to become the dominant weather
feature across much of the state. This should promote a gradual
drying trend, decreasing shower coverage, and more stable conditions
across the state. However, lingering moisture and weak disturbances
may continue to support scattered showers across portions of the YK
Delta, Brooks Range, and North Slope. Model guidance remains in good
agreement regarding the development of the ridge, resulting in
moderate confidence in the overall trend towards drier weather.
Uncertainty remains in the strength and placement of the ridge axis
and any embedded shortwaves moving around it, which will ultimately
determine how quickly precipitation diminishes and whether isolated
thunderstorms can redevelop over higher terrain later in the week.
Coastal Hazard Potential Days 3 and 4...None
&&
.AFG WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
AK...Fire Weather Watch for AKZ937.
PK...Small Craft Advisory for PKZ804.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ806.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ807.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ811.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ812.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ817.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ854.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ856.
&&
$$
Bianco
Cruz - Extended Discussion
786
FXAK68 PAFC 120105
AFDAFC
Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Anchorage AK
505 PM AKDT Thu Jun 11 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 has stalled
over the Copper Basin where convection was able to initiate rather
early today resulting in numerous pulse-type showers and isolated
thunderstorms. A shortwave moving in from the west may help to
initiate a bit more convection across the Northern Susitna Valley
and along the western slopes of the Chugach and Kenai Mountains this
afternoon. Steering flow remains weak so any convective shower will
result in some brief heavy downpours. The low stratus and fog that
worked its way up the Cook Inlet and Prince William Sound overnight
and early this morning is starting to mix out this afternoon.
However, the nearly saturated marine layer is expected to fill back
in later tonight through tomorrow morning.
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.
The eastern Kenai Peninsula and northern Gulf coast will also see
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
&&
.SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA/BERING SEA/ALEUTIANS
(Days 1 through 3: Today through Sunday afternoon)...
Generally expect one more night of low clouds and fog along the
Bering Sea, then an incoming North Pacific low displaces the
Bering ridge and brings much windier and wetter conditions. 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. For
mariners, beware of gusty winds to gale force in Bristol Bay and
along the Alaska Peninsula. Gusts in interior Bristol Bay could
also reach as high as 40-50 mph on Saturday.
Diving into the details... ample surface heating over the
Southwest Alaska interior will continue to promote afternoon
convective activity, with isolated wet thunderstorms possible
this and Friday afternoons. As of around 3:30 PM today, two
robust storms forming along the Western Alaska Range have produced
about 10-20 lightning strikes. Any thunderstorms tomorrow will
likely form in a similar area and then move west to southwestwards
through the afternoon due to southwesterly steering flow ahead of
the North Pacific low. Compared to the previous forecast package,
instability looks much more limited after today, so have trimmed
back on forecast thunderstorm coverage for Friday and Saturday
afternoons.
For tomorrow and into the weekend, a low moving towards the Alaska
Peninsula from the North Pacific will become increasingly
influential for the forecast. Confidence is increasing for gales
in the marine zones along the Pacific side of the Alaska
Peninsula, with the potential for gusts to storm force. Winds will
be weaker north of the Alaska Peninsula, but easterly winds could
gust up to 40-50 mph through Kamishak Bay and into interior
Bristol Bay, while the marine waters of Bristol Bay will likely
see sustained northeasterly winds to 30 kt. 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.
-KC
&&
.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...Up inlet winds will continue to bring a marine layer to the
Terminal for the next 18 hours or so. The stratus has burned off
but is expected again early Friday morning and will return
conditions to IFR. Showers are likely again over the mountains but
with no steering flow they will remain over the Front Range.
&&
$$
656
FXAK67 PAJK 120540 AAA
AFDAJK
Southeast Alaska Forecast Discussion...UPDATED
National Weather Service Juneau AK
940 PM AKDT Thu Jun 11 2026
.UPDATE...Aviation section updated for 6z taf issuance.
&&
SYNOPSIS...
Key Messages:
- Drier weather and warmer temperatures for Friday.
- A front arriving on Saturday brings periods of rain and wind,
especially to the northern and central panhandle.
- Periods of moderate to heavy rain expected for Sunday and Monday
as a strong system pushes through.
SHORT TERM...Quiet weather is returning to the panhandle through
the end of the week, ahead of a strong system which will bring
widespread rain and wind for the weekend.
Satellite imagery as of the time of writing shows areas of clear
skies and areas of clouds across most of the panhandle this
Thursday evening, as a ridge begins to build over the area. While
the cloud deck could partially rebuild Thursday night, anticipate
it to retreat back offshore on Friday. The one noteworthy
exception to the improving trend has been Yakutat, where a
decaying backdoor trough is bringing periods of rain. This is not
a permanent state of affairs, and rainfall will eventually
diminish overnight. By Friday morning, drier weather should be in
store for the northern gulf as well. Some patchy fog could develop
late tonight for Yakutat, as well as for the southern panhandle
(for areas south of Frederick Sound), but any fog that forms will
swiftly dissipate Friday morning under the mid- June sun.
Saturday will be a tale of two weather regimes, as drier weather
early Saturday morning gives way to rain and windy conditions. An
advancing warm front will overrun the NE Gulf Coast early in the
morning. Expect rain could also impact the outer coast from Cape
Ommaney northwards, although 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 and into Monday across
the rest of the panhandle. The exact placement of the plume of
moisture initially will depend on the strength of a low developing
along it, and how far west said low veers as it arrives in the
northern Gulf. Upwards of 2-4 inches of rain are likely to fall
for Yakutat proper over 48 hours, with 1-2 inches of rain for the
northern and central panhandle, and up to 1 inch 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). For additional information,
see the long term forecast discussion.
Temperatures will remain heavily independent on cloud cover, with
areas where the cloud deck breaks likely to see high temperatures in
the 60s, or even 70s, on Friday. Conversely, the 50s or low 60s
remain likely for any location where the cloud deck manages to
linger.
LONG TERM.../Sunday through Tuesday/... Sunday looks to be the
wettest day across the panhandle due to the front sweeping across
the area. Rain will continue in the northern and central part of
the panhandle, and based on the speed of the front from current
model runs, the southern panhandle is expected to see rain by
Sunday afternoon. The heaviest rain the Yakutat area could see is
expected overnight Saturday into late morning Sunday, still with a
90% confidence that no more than 1.5 inches will fall in a 6 hour
period during this time. Moderate rain is expected on Sunday in
the northern and central panhandle, with light rain in the
southern panhandle once it starts. With the front passing through
Sunday, most locations across the panhandle could see shifting
winds with speeds between 10-15 mph. Yakutat could see higher
winds, up to 20 mph with strong gusts winds get funneled along the
coast line.
The upper level jet aimed at the panhandle through the day Sunday
looks to continue to fall south by Monday morning. This will
bring calmer onshore flow later in the day Monday that is likely
to cause consistent rain to turn to a showery pattern across the
panhandle. A very flat upper level ridge looks to take place over
the panhandle Tuesday morning, causing some drops in precipitation
chances across the area, however the possibility of rain remains
present.
Models are picking up on an upper level low that looks to move
across the panhandle at the end of next week. This is likely to
bring drier and warmer conditions with the offshore flow
associated with this pattern.
AVIATION...Mostly MVFR or better conditions with light winds
across the panhandle this evening. The exception continues to be
the NE gulf coast near Yakutat where ceilings have been anywhere
from 600 to 800 ft for most of the evening. These conditions are
expected to continue over night and into Friday for the inner
channels though there could be some patchy fog after 1 am tonight
bringing isolated lower ceilings and vis down to IFR. Any fog is
expected to diminish by mid morning. NE gulf coast will likely
stay in the clouds with some parts of the outer coast farther SE
joining in the lower ceilings overnight due to marine layer cloud
redevelopment. These areas should improve to MVFR at least by
midday Friday.
MARINE...Outside (Gulf and Coastal Waters): A ridge of high
pressure will continue to build over the central and eastern Gulf
Thursday night. This will keep winds and seas relatively on the
light side with strongest NWLY winds of 15 kt along the outer
coast on the lee side of the ridge axis tonight. On Friday, the
ridge will shift eastward over the inner channels causing light
winds to back around to the S-SE as a low pressure system and
associated from moves into the western gulf. Winds with that front
will increase over the northern outside waters to 30kt near the
typical barrier jet near Cape St. Elias early Saturday and seas
building to around 12 feet. Another stronger low pressure system
will develop and track northward along the front through Saturday
night, causing wind speeds, again in the barrier jet area, to
increase to gale force 35-45kt and seas building 14-17 feet going
into Sunday. The second front will slowly shift eastward on
Sunday with winds over the gulf trending down.
Inside (Inner Channels): Afternoon sea breezes are starting to
diminish this evening but are expected to rebuild Friday with
lighter drainage winds during the overnight hours. The central and
southern inner channels should see wind directions turn out of
the NW as the ridge of high pressure sits just offshore through
Friday, then slowly back out of the south late Friday as the ridge
axis shifts eastward. Once the ridge has passed and the larger
frontal system is over the gulf through the weekend, prevailing
winds through the inner channels should be influenced by the
synoptic flow and remain southerly. Wind speeds have been
increased through the inner channels on Sunday when the front is
expected to move through. There is potential that wind gusts could
be stronger with that front as well.
&&
.AJK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
PUBLIC...None.
MARINE...Gale Warning for PKZ652-663-664-671-672.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ053-642>644-651-661-662.
&&
$$
SHORT TERM...GFS
LONG TERM...AGP
AVIATION...EAL
MARINE...Ferrin
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