Here is the latest Area Forecast Discussion for Central PA
This text statement is the latest forecast reasoning from the NWS in State College, PA
See the links at the bottom of the page for previous issuances/versions of the statement as well as our other text statements.
746 FXUS61 KCTP 220349 AFDCTP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service State College PA 1049 PM EST Fri Feb 21 2025 .SYNOPSIS... * Dry conditions prevail this weekend with high pressure building in and temperatures trending up. * Fast-moving and moisture-poor systems could bring some rain and snow showers at times during the last week in February. && .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM SATURDAY MORNING/... Clouds are holding tough over the western half of the forecast area while clearing inches its way westward alomost to central PA. Expect the upslope flow to continue over the west and northwest so the clouds may not go away by morning. Elsewhere clearing will help the temps get into the teens everywhere. The wind only drops off late tonight in the SE half of the area. So, the temps may stay up in the 20s for much of the night there before dipping into the teens. && .SHORT TERM /6 AM SATURDAY MORNING THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/... High pressure and subsidence rule for a couple of days as the center of the high settles to our south and blocks off all Gulf moisture. A couple of nrn stream short wave troughs pass through during the weekend, but it will remain dry with little moisture available and the wind won`t veer enough to bring lake effect into the CWA. Maxes rise 5-10F on Sat vs Fri, and another 3-5F for Sun aftn. Mins stay mainly in the 20s then both Sat and Sun nights. Expect the skies to not be clear for too long during any stretch of the short term period due to the repeated shots of lift and meager moisture aloft as those troughs pass. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... Late evening update. Main changes was to trend a bit drier early next week, and also temperatures a bit warmer later next week. Not seeing any large storms at this point. Overall pattern still shows a trend toward colder conditions again as we head out late February. Earlier discussion below. Low pressure stationed to the north of central Pennsylvania on Monday had recently kept mentions of precipitation; however, drier air and slightly further north progression in model guidance has nixed precipitation mentions on Monday. If any precipitation is to make way into central Pennsylvania, it would be limited to the northern tier in the form of a rain/snow mix to rain and any accumulations would be light. Slightly better chance of precipitation comes on Tuesday with a shortwave bringing enhanced lift with slightly better (but still not optimal) moisture, thus have kept chances on Tuesday. Mild temperatures for the end of February are expected on Tuesday, which will promote mainly rain showers; however, model guidance (and soundings) have outlined some potential for wet snow especially early Tuesday morning and Tuesday evening. Dry conditions are expected to prevail early Wednesday morning and last through much of the day as the best forcing/moisture moves further away from the forecast area. Latest model guidance continues to outline potential for a larger storm system impacting the region in the Thursday/Friday timeframe with the potential for rain and snow, and potentially even a wintry mix (although confidence remains too low at this time to mention anything outside of rain/snow) across portions of the area. Rain at onset Thursday seems to be very plausible with the transition into a wintry mix coming Thursday evening into Friday. Timing/confidence on measurable precipitation remains fairly close to previous forecast cycles. && .AVIATION /04Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... Late evening update. CIGS at UNV and AOO down to MVFR levels. More in the way of clouds into IPT now. Minor changes made to the TAFS this evening. 00Z TAFS sent. Looking at a north to northwest flow of cold air overnight, which will keep lower CIGS over the mountains at sites like BFD and JST. Further east at sites like UNV and AOO, CIGS will be close to MVFR levels, but will likely stay just above 3000 ft. Across the east at sites IPT, MDT, and LNS will be mainly clear overnight. For Saturday, looking at winds becoming more from the southwest, which will help bring and end to lower CIGS at BFD and JST by late morning. As winds shift more to the west and northwest Saturday night, lower CIGS could work back into BFD and perhaps JST after 00Z Sunday. Outlook... Sun...VFR/no sig wx. Mon...Rain and snow showers developing in the afternoon NW. Tue...Rain and snow showers continue and become area wide. Wed...VFR/no sig wx. && .CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Dangelo/Martin NEAR TERM...Tyburski SHORT TERM...Tyburski LONG TERM...Martin/NPB AVIATION...Martin |
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