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Hollins College Virginia Weather Forecast Discussion

743
FXUS61 KRNK 071816
AFDRNK

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Blacksburg VA 216 PM EDT Tue Oct 7 2025

.SYNOPSIS... High pressure shifts offshore today while a cold front approaches from the west. Showers will begin this afternoon in the mountains, and spread southeast tonight into Wednesday. Noticeably cooler temperatures are expected Thursday through the weekend. Conditions should remain dry into early next week.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... As of 145 PM EDT Tuesday...

Key Message:

1. Showers of rain will be possible this evening, continuing into Wednesday morning.

Mostly cloudy skies have overspread the region as a cold front continues to shift east through the Midwest. Showers associated with the front are already beginning to move into southwest Virginia and southeast West Virginia. However rain activity will remain spotty through the remainder of this afternoon and evening with perhaps a slight uptick overnight. Trends in model guidance have been showing the bulk of the rainfall moving north and west of the area coinciding with the better forcing associated with the upper tough. In response to this, have lowered storm total rainfall amounts a little, as well as PoPs through this evening. Very low confidence of any thunderstorms with little to no instability. Opted to not add mention of thunder.

Cold front will be in the process of crossing the area Wednesday morning and should be situated along the coastline will east of the area by Wednesday evening. Some lingering showers will be possible through midday Wednesday, but gradual clearing throughout Wednesday can be expected. High pressure will begin building in late Wednesday and a notable change in airmasses will arrive. Temperatures today will be above normal with mild overnight lows. Warm again Wednesday, especially east of the mountains, but a sudden drop in dew points by the evening will have conditions feeling more fall-like.

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.SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/... As of 200 PM EDT Tuesday...

Key Messages:

1) Cold front to bring colder and drier air.

2) Frost possible west of the Blue Ridge Friday morning.

A cold front should be fully through the area by Thursday morning, followed by considerably colder and drier air. A large high pressure system centered over the Great Lakes will move eastward into the New England region and then the Atlantic by this weekend. As it moves east, it will wedge itself considerably into the mountains and cause a change in wind direction from northerly to easterly/northeasterly. A pressure gradient will form with this wedge and bring winds up with gusts between 10-15 mph for parts of the latter half of this week. While high temperatures will generally be in the 60s, Friday morning will have the coldest morning temperatures. On this morning, temperatures will be in the mid-30s along and west of the Blue Ridge and in the lower 40s east of the Blue Ridge. With mostly clear skies expected with this high pressure, this begs the question: will there be frost? Current answer leans on "yes" but its spatial coverage will be heavily dependent on the behavior of the winds. Patchy frost will be possible along and west of the Blue Ridge, where it will be the coldest, but winds may be just subtly strong enough to prevent any widespread frost. Temperatures aloft are also forecast to be relatively warmer in the upper 30s to mid-40s so mixing could put a dagger in frost development. As the wind estimates are narrowed down, confidence on frost and any potential Frost Advisories will be assessed.

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.LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 200 PM EDT Tuesday...

Key Message:

1) Coastal low brings questionable weather pattern next week.

A 500mb shortwave in the Deep South will move into the Atlantic and interact with a cold front to form a coastal low. While model guidance is in strong agreement with the formation of this low, models disagree on its movement. Uncertainties of how the upper level flow will influence the trajectory of this low plague most of this forecast period. The coastal low could go into the mainland, move along the coast, or stay out into the ocean and each of these scenarios have different impacts on precipitation chances, cloud cover, and wind speed for the region. This will be closely monitored for any potential impacts to the area, but at the moment most likely scenario points towards mostly dry conditions.

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.AVIATION /18Z TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 200 PM EDT Tuesday...

Clouds and moisture are increasing this afternoon, resulting in gradually lowering cigs across the mountains. MVFR is noted across the highest elevations from TNB to HLX and this trend is expected to continue for other terminals across the mountains through the evening and overnight. Showers should remain rather spotty, thus low vsby not as a big of a concern. Fog development also appears to be limited owing to cloud cover and continued mixing through the overnight hours.

Cold front will cross through the region Wednesday morning and a wind shift will occur as the front moves through. Winds ahead of the front generally out of the southwest, but should then transitions to the northwest late Wednesday morning. Sustained winds around 10kts behind the front, with perhaps a few stronger gusts nearing 20kts at the highest elevations.

Lingering sub-VFR possible the late in the valid 24 hr TAF period, but conditions begin to improve as drier air works into the region behind the front.

EXTENDED AVIATION OUTLOOK...

Extended period of dry weather becoming more likely. This will result in widespread VFR. With a drier airmass arriving, fog development should become less of a concern.

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.RNK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VA...None. NC...None. WV...None.

&&

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SYNOPSIS...BMG NEAR TERM...BMG SHORT TERM...CG LONG TERM...CG AVIATION...BMG

NWS RNK Office Area Forecast Discussion

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