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Alaska Area Forecast Discussions


629
FXAK69 PAFG 222255
AFDAFG

Northern Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Fairbanks AK
255 PM AKDT Mon Jun 22 2026

.SYNOPSIS...
A more active pattern is looking to settle in as the beginning of
the week progresses. Attention turns to a cold front that will be
moving west from the SE portion of the Interior. Areas west of the
front will see the best chances for thunderstorms over the next
couple of days as it continues to shift west. In addition, the
easterly flow will be tapping into a decent source of moisture
that will be distributed across the southern portions of the
Interior through Wednesday morning. Widespread 0.5" to 1" of rain
is expected with higher amount possible along the western portions
of the Alaska Range. High pressure will continue to linger over
the Western portion of the state which will allow for conditions
to be hot and dry through the end of the week.

&&

.KEY WEATHER MESSAGES...

Central and Eastern Interior...
- Warm temperatures continue through Tuesday ahead of a cold front,
with widespread highs in the mid 70s to low 80s. The warmest
temperatures will be across the Yukon Flats with values in the
mid 80s expected.

- Scattered afternoon thunderstorms are expected across the
Southern and Eastern Interior through Tuesday afternoon.
Thunderstorm chances will lessen behind the front as it
continues to move westward

- The front tracking from east to west brings high rain chances
from the White Mountains southward late tonight through Tuesday
night with locally heavy rain and gusty winds possible,
especially near the Alaska Range. Heaviest precipitation
expected along the western portion of the Alaska Range.

- As the front passes through on Tuesday evening, southerly winds
across the Alaska Range will briefly swell, with gusts up to 45
mph through Isabel Pass and up to around 35 mph through Windy
Pass.

West Coast and Western Interior...
- Temperatures remain seasonably cool along the West Coast, with
temperatures in the 50s to 60s. In the Western Interior, highs
in the mid to upper 70s are expected to continue through the
latter half of the week.

- Scattered thunderstorms are expected in the Upper Kuskokwim
Valley today, with isolated thunderstorms in the Middle and
Lower Yukon Valley.

- The frontal boundary is expected to stall around the Central
Interior, allowing isolated thunderstorm chances to continue
across the Western Interior through the end of the week.

North Slope and Brooks Range...
- A frontal boundary brings rain chances to the central Arctic
Coast and widespread clouds, before clearing by Tuesday
morning.

- Temperatures along the North Slope and in the Northern Brooks
Range valleys will see highs in the 60s or low 70s today through
Wednesday. Temperatures begin a cooling trend on Thursday.

- There is a slight chance for isolated thunderstorms over the
Eastern Brooks Range today and Tuesday. Thunderstorm chances
increase for the same area on Wednesday with the stalling cold
front.

&&

.FORECAST ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION...
Satellite imagery this morning shows much of the northern half of
the state clear and calm. This is mostly due to a building E-W
oriented ridge across the central portion of the state. The south
side of the trough axis shows a swath of convective clouds slowly
starting to build ahead of scattered shortwaves that are expected
to move easterly across the southern half of the state, today. The
main driver of this easterly flow is from a prominent low that has
set up south of Kodiak Islands. This low has been able to hold its
strength due to some entrainment of energy from a previous low in
the Bering, who`s energy will be moving across the Interior over
the next couple of days. This shortwave will wrap around the main
low and begin to move over the SE portion of the Interior late
tonight into early Tuesday morning. The shortwave will continue to
progress along the Interior throughout the day while the main low
remains in place just south of Kodiak Island. This will result in
an inverted shortwave moving across the Interior on Tuesday, which
could result in some stronger, longer lived storms on the west
side of the front. Latest model soundings around FNSB show CAPE
potential to be 800-1000 J/kg and sfc-6km shear around 25 knots.

In addition to the stronger thunderstorm potential, this low in
the gulf will be tapping into an anonymously wet atmospheric river
from the North Pacific. This will bring good chances for wetting
rains across the southern portions of the Interior with the
heaviest amounts expected along the Western Alaska Range on
Tuesday. Total rainfall is expected to be between 0.5" to 1.0"
with locally higher amounts around 2" possible through the Alaska
Range. As the front continues to moves east, an upper-level ridge
will remain in place over the western portion of the state. This
will cause the front to become more N-S oriented and stall around
the Central Interior, which will allow for warmer and drier
conditions to continue along the Western Interior through the
later half of the week. In addition, majority of the Interior will
have a chance to see a brief break in thunderstorm chances on
Wednesday, depending on where the front stalls out. Areas on the
west side of this boundary will continue to see chances for
thunderstorms on Wednesday. Latest guidance shows the current
potential to be along a line from Arctic Village to McGrath,
westward toward the YK Delta.

Meanwhile, the low in the gulf will eventually begin to shift
farther east toward the Alaska Panhandle. This will continue to
allow easterly flow and daily thunderstorm chances across the
Interior through the end of the week. In addition, another low
will be working its way east along the Aleutians and eventually
stall in the Bering with the ridge built up over the western
portion of the state. This will set up a subtle blocking pattern
by the end of the forecast period.

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...
Following yesterday`s active thunderstorms, we have already begun to
see lightning in the SE Interior and Fortymile Country. We are
expecting thunderstorms to continue throughout the southern and
eastern Interior, prompting Red Flag Warnings to be issued for these
areas. Winds are expected to be generally light except around
thunderstorms where they may become gusty and erratic. Widespread
high temperatures in the 70s and lower 80s are expected through
Tuesday with the potential of a slightly cooler day on Wednesday
with upper 60s and 70s expected for the Interior. The driest areas
are expected in the Yukon Flats with min RHs as low as 20%.
Elsewhere should see min RHs as low as the upper 20 to 30% range.

By Tuesday morning, rain showers and embedded thunderstorms
associated with a front are expected to begin for the Eastern
Interior and Alaska Range and spread west by Tuesday afternoon. This
front is expected to bring steadier precipitation throughout the day
for the Interior on Tuesday, especially for the Alaska Range.
Rainfall totals are expected to range up to 1" with locally higher
amounts for the western Alaska Range as high as 2". As the front
passes, this cloud cover, precipitation, and thunderstorms will
limit high temperatures and raise RHs for the area. This front is
expected to stall over the Interior from Arctic Village to McGrath
west towards the YK Delta, allowing for additional rainfall and
thunderstorms Wednesday and Thursday afternoon before weakening,
but the heaviest rainfall is expected on Tuesday. Once the front
weakens, weak ridging will build back into the state, allowing for
high temperatures to reach back into the upper 70s and low 80s
with chances of isolated thunderstorms returning to the Interior.

&&

.HYDROLOGY...
A front will move westward through the state this week. As this
front progresses, it will produce widespread rain showers and
isolated thunderstorms. Showers and thunderstorms are expected to
begin Tuesday morning in the eastern Alaska Range and upper Tanana
Valley and spread northwest through Tuesday night. The heaviest
rainfall is expected to fall throughout the day Tuesday. Widespread
rainfall totals of 0.5" to 1" and locally higher amounts > 2"
possible will combine with glacial runoff to result in rising
mainstream river levels around the Alaska Range for the middle to
end of this week. Rapid rises of smaller rivers are possible with
the heaviest rain on Tuesday into Wednesday.

By Wednesday, this front will be set up over the Western Interior
and become relatively stationary, allowing for more precipitation to
fall through Thursday afternoon. Upwards of 1" or more is expected
in the Upper Kuskokwim area near McGrath and Lake Minchumina for
this event.

Flooding remains unlikely for mainstream rivers in the affected
areas.

&&

.EXTENDED FORECAST DAYS 4-7...
On Thursday June 25th there will be ridging over the West Coast
as well as North East Alaska, with a closed low over the Gulf of
Alaska and troughing over the Western North Slope. As Sunday
approaches the closed low will move eastward towards Alaskas
coastline bringing a series of shortwaves embedded within
southeasterly flow and increasing chances of showers and
thunderstorms throughout the South and Central Region of our
state. The primary feature focusing showers and thunderstorm
chances will be a frontal system that is oriented roughly between
McGrath and Bettles across Interior Alaska this upcoming Thursday
to Friday. Continued warmth, and dry weather is expected west of
the front, with temperatures ranging in the low to mid 70s. East
of the front more cloudy and mild temperatures are expected as
rounds of precipitation brought on by a series of shortwaves
results in a cooler atmosphere. Northerly winds strengthen west of
the front on Friday and Saturday with the strongest winds
reaching about 35 mph between Cape Lisburne and the Bering Strait.
Heavier precipitation is possible as the next closed low moves
east from the Bering Sea to South Central Alaska towards the end
of this weekend or early next week. Farther north across the North
Slope temperatures start warm around 60 degrees Thursday to
Friday and likely to cool as the frontal passes through by
Saturday night.

Coastal Hazard Potential Days 3 and 4...None

&&

.AFG WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
AK...Red Flag Warning for AKZ935>945-947-951>953.
PK...None.

&&

$$

Twombly
Lewis - Fire Wx
Donner - Extended



923
FXAK68 PAFC 230107
AFDAFC

Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Anchorage AK
507 PM AKDT Mon Jun 22 2026

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

A complex low is moving through the Gulf of Alaska and is
currently near Kodiak Island. Rain is being pushed into Kodiak
and along the coast of Southcentral from shortwaves moving around
the low. These shortwaves near the low are also creating a
coastal ridge over the Chugach Range, allowing for elevated
southeasterly winds (10 to 15 mph, with gusts around 25 mph) in
Palmer, South Anchorage, and the Copper River Basin through
Tuesday. Isolated thunderstorms will have a 10 to 20% chance of
forming, mostly over the foothills of the the Talkeetna Mountains
and Alaska Range. Southeasterly flow along the coast will allow
for downslope drying on the lee of the mountain ranges, but light
rain showers will still have a 20 to 30% chance of occurring.

By Tuesday, a more robust trough from the low will move across
Southcentral from east to west and reaching well into the Copper
River Basin and Susitna Valley. This wave will produce steadier
rainfall, which will cause moderate to heavy rain over the
northern and western Susitna Valley. Upslope enhancement will
promote higher rainfall amounts farther inland, near the Talkeetna
Mountains and the Alaska Range. Lower elevations (including
Anchorage) will see less rainfall due to downsloping, but the
sheer amount of moisture making it in will allow at least 0.05 to
0.10 inches of rain to fall. The band of moderate to heavy
rainfall will linger over the Susitna Valley through Wednesday.
Between Tuesday and Wednesday, 1 to 2 inches of rain will fall
between Cantwell, through Talkeetna and Skwentna toward the west
Alaska Range. Confidence is higher today, but there is still some
uncertainty regarding how long the band of rain lasts over the
Susitna Valley. By Wednesday evening, rainfall will decrease in
intensity as the low moves more to the east and the strong
shortwave inland dissipates. Additional shortwaves will move
through, but rainfall associated with them will be lighter.
Thursday will see moisture move into the Copper River Basin. This,
combined with continued easterly waves will allow chances (50 to
60%) for showers.

-JAR/Rux

&&

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

The forecast remains largely on track, though there continues to
be lower confidence with the timing and placement of
afternoon/evening thunderstorms across Southwest Alaska in the
coming days. Still, the expectation is for thunderstorm activity
to be less vigorous than we`ve seen in the past week, as
increasing cloud cover will likely keep storms weaker. Otherwise,
generally expect a trend towards cloudier skies and breezier and
wetter conditions as lows progress into the region and displace
the ridge over the Bering Sea.

Diving into the details... robust upper level lows approaching
the Western Aleutians/Bering and moving in the Gulf of Alaska (as
well as their attendant surface lows) will bring a trend towards
gloomier conditions. These upper lows will also be a major source
of forecast uncertainty in the coming days, as guidance is showing
poor consistency and poor agreement regarding how these lows
interact with embedded shortwaves and other waves moving through
the upper level flow. The biggest impact of this uncertainty will
be on the convective/thunderstorm forecast, especially as upper
level energy will play a larger role in thunderstorm development
given cloudier skies and limited surface heating. The other major
area of impact will be rain amounts along the Western Alaska Range
as a particularly robust and wet trough moves eastward through
the interior. Right now, the area from Lime Village to Iliamna has
a 40% chance of seeing 0.5 inches of rain or greater from Tuesday
evening through Wednesday afternoon, with near-certain likelihood
over the Alaska Range. Still, models continue to show shifts in
the placement and timing of this feature, which will affect
overall rain amounts.

For Southwest Alaska and the Bering Sea, low clouds and fog linger
for another night, but should gradually retreat as two surface
lows approach through tomorrow. Generally expect steady rain along
the Aleutians late Tuesday and Wednesday, with sustained winds
as high as 20-35 kt. How these two surface lows interact and merge
will affect the timing, duration, and intensity of winds and
rain along the front. Fortunately, this low complex looks fairly
middling in terms of strength, so it`ll be more likely to be a
nuisance storm than an overly impactful one.

-KC

&&

.LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7: Friday through Monday)...

The long-term pattern continues to feature an unsettled pattern
across the Southern Mainland. A low pressure system in the Bering
Sea will continue to bring showery conditions across the Central
Aleutians, Eastern Aleutians, and Pribilof Islands Friday and
Saturday before the rain moves to the Southern Alaska Peninsula
(AKPEN) for Sunday. A ridge builds in behind this system with
likely low stratus and misty conditions filling in across the
central Bering Sea and Central Aleutians Saturday evening into
Sunday. This ridge and the associated low stratus will move
eastward through Monday across the rest of the Aleutians and
Southern AKPEN while the Western Aleutians and western Bering will
contend with North Pacific fronts.

Southcentral and Southwest Alaska will also remain unsettled as a
series of easterly waves moves across the Southern Mainland from
Yukon, Canada and shortwaves lift from the North Pacific, the the
Gulf of Alaska, and over Southcentral Alaska. Most steady
precipitation with these disturbances between Friday and Monday
will look to fall across interior portions of the Southwest Alaska
with scattered rain showers across Southcentral Alaska. The one
challenge with the long-term forecast, with regards to the
interior locations, will be assessing how much instability will be
available. This will determine how much of a threat lightning
strikes could become. Right now, Friday afternoon looks to be the
most unstable day across Southwest Alaska with Sunday afternoon
across the Copper River Basin of Southcentral Alaska.

&&
.AVIATION...

PANC...VFR conditions are expected to persist. A southeasterly Turnagain
Arm wind will strengthen this afternoon/evening and has a chance
of producing gusts up to 25 kts before diminishing by around 09Z
Tuesday morning.

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...

Key Message:

Wetting rain chances increase for Tuesday and Wednesday across
interior Southcentral Alaska and interior Southwest Alaska.

Discussion:

A strong easterly to southeasterly shortwave will lift across the
Gulf of Alaska through Monday night and spread wetting rains
beginning Tuesday morning across the Copper River Basin. The
airmass this upper-level disturbance is moving over will be
stable, so lightning should be little threat. Steady wetting rains
will move to the Susitna Valley by late Tuesday morning. Wetting
rains then shift to interior of Southwest Alaska by Tuesday
afternoon to Tuesday evening with areas along the Western Alaska
Range as well as Port Alsworth and northward seeing steady rain.
This steady rain will last across interior Southwest Alaska will
last through Wednesday morning before tapering off. Southeast flow
behind the upper-level disturbance, now over Southwest Alaska by
Wednesday afternoon, will allow for more moisture to wring out
across the Western Susitna Valley along the Alaska Range through
Wednesday evening which will result in more wetting rain for that
area.

&&

$$



338
FXAK67 PAJK 230659
AFDAJK

Southeast Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Juneau AK
1059 PM AKDT Mon Jun 22 2026

.UPDATE.../to add the 06z aviation discussion/...

&&

.SYNOPSIS...

Key Messages:

- Periods of rain return to the northern and central panhandle as
a low lingers in the Gulf of Alaska, sending a series of weak
fronts inland through mid-week.

- Drier conditions are expected to continue for the S Panhandle
communities through at least Tuesday. Rain chances increase
through Thursday as a stronger system moves out of the N
Pacific towards Haida Gwaii.

&&

.SHORT TERM.../Through Wednesday/...A low pressure system
centered just SE of Kodiak will gradually weaken and move NE,
bringing multiple rounds of precipitation into the panhandle
Monday evening through Tuesday morning. These weak fronts will
bring showers across the northern half of the panhandle, from
Sitka northward, with rainfall totals remaining largely below 0.5
inches in 24 hours. Localized higher rates and rainfall
accumulations are possible due to interactions with terrain as the
fronts push northward, with Juneau having potential to see up to
0.10 inch per hour rates at times tonight.

Shower chances will diminish from S to N into Tuesday, though
some potential will remain along the outer coastline from the
decaying low lingering in the western Gulf. This will be more of a
break however for most of the panhandle. A surface trough will
soon bring more precipitation back to the northern panhandle
overnight into Wednesday, though like the last system, will be a
weak wave of showers that will not bring much in terms of rainfall
totals.

Another system does begin to develop in the N Pacific midweek,
moving in just behind this weak disturbance Wednesday night as it
approaches Haida Gwaii, bringing in more widespread rain chances
across the coastline Wednesday night. For more information on this
next system, read the long term discussion below.

.LONG TERM.../Thursday through Monday/...A stronger low will
develop in the north Pacific during the week, moving into the
eastern Gulf towards Haida Gwaii by Wednesday night. This system
will bring more widespread rainfall across the panhandle starting
with the southern panhandle and south/central outer coastline late
Wednesday night, before moving eastward through the day Thursday.
There is higher confidence on this system bringing rainfall the
southern panhandle up to Icy Strait Corridor, with less confidence
on extending into the far northern panhandle from Yakutat over to
Skagway and Haines. It will move onshore just around Haida Gwaii
into BC by Friday, but there is potential for a meso low connected
to this main system that may move in closer to the panhandle
rather than stay just southward. The strength and location of this
feature may result in rainfall pushing further northward into
Skagway and Haines. Overall the precipitation will be heaviest
across the southern coastline, with between 0.5 and 1.0 inches
expected from Sitka along the coast down to PoW and 1 to 1.5
inches expected for Ketchikan / Annette Island.

Behind the low pressure system Friday, on shore flow is expected
to develop with a ridge of high pressure. While on shore will keep
showers in the forecast, the overall rain chances will be lower
for the Alaska Panhandle.

As the ridge builds Saturday, some stronger winds are possible from
the eastern Gulf Coast toward Haida Gwaii and Dixon Entrance. In the
inner channels, winds look fairly benign, other than some sea breeze
formations Saturday, but that will depend on skies clearing which
seems unlikely at this time with showers around.

By early next week, another low pressure system looks to form in the
Gulf of Alaska and potentially increase shower chances. However,
there is model disagreement on this exact timing and placement of
the low pressure system early next week, so confidence is low in
this system.

&&

.AVIATION.../Until 06Z Wednesday/...A weak front will continue to
push its way northeastward into the northern Panhandle through
tonight & into Tuesday morning while continuing to weaken. Light
rain showers over that area will weaken & taper off into the
morning hours. CIG & VIS conditions will improve from the current
MVFR/IFR range to the VFR category by late Tuesday morning. The
remainder of the Panhandle should stay in the VFR flight category
through the entire TAF-period. The only exception may turn out to
be PAKW late overnight as the marine layer may advance back into
that area before retreating during the mid-to-late morning hours.
SFC winds will remain rather benign for most places. Afternoon
sea breezes will likely occur on Tuesday. PAGY looks to become
breezy/gusty out of the south, once again, from late Tuesday
morning into the evening hours. LLWS values remain benign through
the forecast period.

&&

.MARINE...
Outside (Gulf and Coastal Waters): A swath of moderate to fresh
southeasterly breezes is moving northeastward into the
northeastern gulf coast this afternoon, bringing periods of
showers for the northern panhandle and gusty winds along the coast
overnight. Winds along the coast will diminish through Tuesday,
with the exception of Dixon Entrance seeing westerly fresh breezes
continue through the period. 5 to 6 ft wave heights will persist
along the coast as the swath of winds moves inland, diminishing
overnight to a more consistent 4 ft across the gulf. Southerly 3
ft swell at a period of around 14 seconds will decrease to 2 ft
through Tuesday. On Wednesday, gulf winds will begin to turn from
predominately southerly to northerly by Thursday as a more
organized low tracks across the N Pacific towards Haida Gwaii.

Inside (Inner Channels): Much of the inner channel winds are
still relatively benign today as a swath of moderate to fresh
breezes moves onshore in the northern panhandle. Many interior
communities have developed 8 to 12 knot sea breezes this morning,
though with a band of showers currently moving into the panhandle,
sea breezes in the northern panhandle have been slightly
dampened. The exception to this is Taiya inlet, where increased
southerly winds to near 20 kts will continue through Monday
evening. Overall, a decreasing trend is expected through Tuesday
as a low tracks towards the panhandle through the southern gulf
and continued shower potential limits sea breeze potential. 1 to 2
ft wave heights are prevailing through the channels, with channel
entrances seeing 3 to 4 ft.

&&

.HYDROLOGY...

Snow melt and a string of above normal temperature days across the
Chilkat Valley have resulted in elevated stream flow in rivers
and streams across the area. While temperatures will cool somewhat
through the week, snow levels in excess of 5000 feet will
continue to support these elevated stream flows through the time
frame.

&&

.AJK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
PUBLIC...None.
MARINE...None.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...Contino
LONG TERM...Contino/Musall
AVIATION...JLC
MARINE...ZTK
HYDROLOGY...GFS

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