824 FXUS66 KMFR 062136 AFDMFRArea Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Medford OR 236 PM PDT Mon Oct 6 2025
.DISCUSSION...After a cooler morning in the 30s and 40s, temperatures are still expected to reach near to above normal this afternoon with plentiful sunshine present. There will be another chance tonight for breezier conditions near the Rogue Valley (near Medford and south through Ashland) as the transition between troughing to ridging is around the Pacific Northwest.
Tuesday will be another day with above normal temperatures. On average temperatures will be 5 to 10 degrees above normal, equating to 70s for the coast, upper 70s and low 80s inland west of the Cascades, and 60s to low 70s east. Tuesday night, a cold front will begin passing through. There is a low chance that showers develop near the coast as this passes, but it has been added to the forecast for the Tuesday night timeframe. This front will bring temperatures back to near normal Wednesday afternoon. Breezy southwest winds will be possible east of the Cascades in the afternoon as well.
The next chance for more rain chances will be as the upper trough continues swinging southward later this week. There are still differences for the start time and locations of the rain. The EC is hinting at the low being slightly closer to the coast, bringing a chance into the Cascades Wednesday night into Thursday. The other side of this is the GFS that distances the low farther west, and keeps drier conditions through Thursday. However, because ensembles support the potential for the low to be closer to Southern Oregon and Northern California by Wednesday night, a slight chance to chance of showers has been added to the forecast. PoP chances increase into the weekend with Friday having the best chance for more rainfall across the area. For now, dry conditions could return Tuesday as ridging moves in.
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.AVIATION...06/18Z TAFs...VFR conditions with mostly clear or clear skies will continue across northern California and southern Oregon today. Winds are starting to pick up this morning, and this will continue through the afternoon. Reports of speed shear have been coming near Medford with bumpy approaches from the south this afternoon. Low level wind shear near 10-15 kt will be possible in areas near the Rogue Valley (Medford) through 0-3 Z. Some locations along ridgetops and in the Rogue Valley from Medford south will continue seeing stronger winds tonight. Overall, lighter winds are expected later Tuesday morning.
-DW/Hermansen
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.MARINE...Updated 200 PM PDT Monday, October 6, 2025...A thermal trough will maintain gusty north winds across the outer waters through this evening, resulting in a combination steep seas due to wind wave and fresh swell. A brief period of calmer conditions is expected late tonight into Tuesday afternoon as winds briefly ease.
Gusty north winds and steep seas are expected to return to all areas late Tuesday afternoon into Wednesday night before winds weaken and turn southerly Thursday morning. Conditions will be borderline in terms of advisory level winds and seas, but enough so into the advisory category to move forward with a Small Craft Advisory for Tuesday evening through Wednesday night. The passage of a weak front is expected to bring an increase of northwest swell dominated seas early Thursday. With the weakening of north winds, and seas transitioning to swell dominated, seas will become less steep and less hazardous to small craft.
South winds increase Thursday night and may reach the low end of advisory strength through Friday night as low pressure lingers offshore. The low is expected to move inland over the weekend with marine winds becoming northerly and increasing into early next week. These north winds are likely to be strongest south of Cape Blanco, and may reach advisory strength. /BR-y
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.FIRE WEATHER...Updated 200 PM PDT Monday, October 6, 2025...Offshore (east to northeast) flow will persist into Tuesday morning. The Rogue Valley in particular, is expected to see gusty southeast winds of 10 mph with gusts to 20 mph through Tuesday morning, except for the current uptick where winds are more along the lines of 20 mph with gusts to 30 mph. Daytime humidities will bottom out in the 15-25% range through Tuesday, possibly into Wednesday. Ridge top humidity recoveries will be poorest Tuesday morning, though with weaker easterly wind gusts commonly expected at 15 to 20 mph, so there is less concern for critical conditions tonight into Tuesday. Given that fuels have moderated substantially due to recent wet and cool weather, and many locations have lowered the fire danger to moderate or better, we`ll maintain a headline in the Fire Weather Planning forecast for this easterly flow event.
Weak onshore flow returns later on Tuesday, and daytime humidities will trend somewhat higher with improved recoveries expected Tuesday night. Major improvement, however, will be limited to the coast until Wednesday night. Gusty south to southwest winds return to the region starting Wednesday as an upper level system moves southward just offshore, but daytime humidities will still be trending higher. This is especially so for northern California and south central Oregon where gusts of 30 mph possible will be possible. There`s uncertainty on how far offshore this system traverses, but there could be some light rain along the coast as early as Thursday. While uncertainty in the details remains, confidence is increasing for a return to cooler and wetter weather late in the week and into the weekend. /BR-y
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.MFR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...CA...None.
PACIFIC COASTAL WATERS...Small Craft Advisory from 5 PM Tuesday to 5 AM PDT Thursday for PZZ350-356-370-376.
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NWS MFR Office Area Forecast Discussion