Your favorites:

Junction City, Oregon Weather Forecast Discussion

798
FXUS66 KPQR 092253
AFDPQR

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Portland OR 353 PM PDT Tue Sep 9 2025

.SYNOPSIS...Showers and thunderstorms continue this afternoon and evening, mainly focused over the southern Willamette Valley and Oregon Cascades where activity occurred yesterday. Areas that stayed dry on Monday are likely to stay dry today. Thunder chances persist into Wednesday, primarily along the Cascades, before conditions trend warmer and drier late this week. Confidence has dropped for widespread rain late in the weekend, though it still remains a possibility.

&&

.SHORT TERM...Now through Thursday night...Around 2 PM, convection had begun to build over the southwest Washington Cascades and most of the northwest Oregon Cascades, which is consistent with guidance. These storms will remain the main focus for the remainder of the afternoon and evening, with much of the Washington and Oregon coast expected to stay dry. While thunderstorms may drift westward into the southern Willamette Valley this evening, expect lesser chances to see showers and thunderstorms in the Valley north of Salem, OR. Locally heavy rainfall and remains possible in stronger cores, but activity will stay hit or miss, so precipitation totals will be quite variable.

High-resolution guidance continues to highlight a 20-40% chance of hourly rainfall rates exceeding 0.75 inches, particularly over the Lane County Cascades this afternoon and evening. Should this materialize, there would be an elevated risk for debris flows on vulnerable burn scars, though overall confidence in such high-end rain rates remains low, especially around the Emigrant Fire. For this reason, no watches have been issues, but the potential for impacts is worth noting.

Thunderstorm chances appear weaker on Wednesday and more confined to the Oregon Cascade crests itself. Forecast soundings show reduced CAPE and a somewhat stronger inversion, which should limit both updraft strength and storm coverage. Still, a few isolated storms cannot be ruled out, especially during peak heating hours. By Thursday, shower activity becomes increasingly confined to the high Cascades before tapering off altogether Thursday night as a shortwave ridge approaches the coast.

.LONG TERM...Friday through Monday night...A more stable pattern arrives Friday and Saturday as a shortwave ridge builds overhead. Dry conditions and warmer afternoons are expected, with inland highs climbing into the upper 70s to near 80, and coastal highs in the 60s.

Forecast confidence decreases late Saturday into Sunday as ensemble solutions diverge on the track of the next upper trough. Some keep the system intact, favoring widespread rain, while most of the other models split it south into northern California and leave our region a bit drier. Current chances for at least a quarter inch of rain stand near 40-50% for Saturday and 40-60% for Sunday for much of northwest Oregon and southwest Washington, highest along the Oregon Cascades. Temperatures Sunday will hinge on rainfall coverage - low to mid 70s if wet, upper 70s to low 80s if dry. Uncertainty lingers into early next week with low-end (20-30%) shower chances continuing through Monday and highs ranging from the 60s at the coast to the 70s inland. ~Hall

&&

.AVIATION...An upper level low pressure system continues to drift eastward over the PacNW and northern California. This is supporting scattered showers and thunderstorms across the Cascades and Cascade foothills. Precipitation is drifting westward towards the valley but confidence any precipitation impacts the inland terminals is low, though Prob30s at KSLE and KEUG remain warranted. Lightning, erratic winds, and heavy rain are the main threats with the thunderstorms. Higher pressure aloft is expected to build tonight along with moistening conditions will support a more robust marine layer with IFR/MVFR CIGs along the coast and possibly inland. Probs for MVFR or lower CIGs along the coast increase after 00-02z Wed to 60-80% and persist through 18-20z. MVFR cloud cover may develop inland as well between 10-12z but probabilities jump around a bit more 20-50% through 18-20z.

KPDX AND APPROACHES...Predominately VFR. Intermittent showers and possibly a thunderstorm with light west-northwesterly winds under 10 kt will continue through the evening. Any heavy rain may lead to brief MVFR CIGs and/or VIS. 40-60% chance for MVFR/IFR CIGs to develop 10-12z Wed, mainly around KTTD and KPDX. -Batz

&&

.MARINE...High pressure over the waters will maintain northerly to northwesterly winds with gusts less than 15 kt through Friday. Seas remain around 2-4 ft at 10-12 sec through Wednesday, building to 5-7 ft at 11-12 sec by Friday with a west-northwesterly swell.

Heading into the weekend, guidance is suggesting another low pressure system approaching the Pacific Northwest. A front associated with this low will weaken as it moves across the waters Saturday and Sunday. The winds will shift southerly ahead of the front on Saturday, then northerly with and behind the front on Sunday. Probabilities for wind gusts of 21 kt or greater (small craft conditions) across the waters Saturday range from 30-50%, highest across the outer waters. Probabilities increase Sunday to 50-70% for all marine zones. Given the lead time will hold off on issuing any products but this will be something to keep in mind for the coming weekend. Seas are forecast around 5-7 feet at 10-12 sec through the weekend. -Batz/Alviz

&&

.PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...None. WA...None. PZ...None. &&

$$

www.weather.gov/portland

Interact with us via social media: www.facebook.com/NWSPortland x.com/NWSPortland

NWS PQR Office Area Forecast Discussion

WeatherForYou.com, LLC is not responsible for any damages or problems caused by this service. Current weather conditions are obtained from the closest government operated station, a personal station contributing to the PWSweather.com network or from the Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System (MADIS). Some weather information is powered by XWeather. WeatherForYou.com, NOAA, AerisWeather and their data providers disclaim liability of any kind whatsoever, including, without limitation, liability for quality, performance, merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose arising out of the use or inability to use the data. Like all things, this site belongs to Jesus Christ ... He just trusts us to maintain it. If you have any questions or comments please use the suggestion box.

Copyright © 1999 - 2025, WeatherForYou.com LLC. All rights reserved.