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Nevada, Ohio Weather Forecast Discussion

929
FXUS61 KCLE 061935
AFDCLE

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 335 PM EDT Sat Sep 6 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A deep trough of low pressure will persist across the Great Lakes through Sunday before a large dome of Canadian high pressure builds in Sunday night and Monday. This high will remain in control through midweek while gradually shifting offshore of the New England coast.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/... Mid afternoon visible satellite and water vapor loops nicely highlight an unseasonably deep mid/upper longwave trough across central and eastern North America downstream of a strong mid/upper ridge west of the Rockies extending well north through British Columbia. This highly amplified pattern will maintain well below average temperatures and breezy conditions the remainder of the weekend, as well as periods of lake-effect rain showers given the strong cold air advection and well-aligned moist, cyclonic flow across the roughly 70 F lake waters.

In terms of the lake-effect, drier air and subsidence behind an upper jet max and associated surface trough that moved through this morning has slowed the development of lake-effect rain bands. Regional radar as of mid afternoon shows lake-effect showers and instability showers filling in upstream across northern and central Lower Michigan, and these are tied to the colder pool of air beneath the main mid/upper trough axis that will swing through the southern Great Lakes tonight. As this trough axis approaches this evening, deepening synoptic moisture and better aligned WSW boundary layer flow combined with deepening instability and resultant lake induced equilibrium levels will allow a single, dominant band to develop over the lake and affect western NY and perhaps northeast parts of Erie County, PA. As the mid/upper trough axis swings eastward through the night, an associated surface trough will slowly press across the lake, and this combined with boundary layer flow veering W and eventually WNW will slowly push the band inland across the primary snowbelt of eastern Cuyahoga, Lake, Geauga, Ashtabula, and Erie and Crawford Counties in PA. The increasing south shore convergence as the surface trough moves through combined with equilibrium levels rising to around 15,000 feet and lake induced CAPE reaching about 750 J/kg late tonight will support periods of heavy rain within the main band, as well as some thunder and lightning. Utilized a blend of RGEM and WRF-ARW for POPS and QPF tonight and Sunday morning to try and best capture the movement and placement of the main band. After 12Z Sunday, an establishing 290-300 degree boundary layer flow may push the band as far SW as northern Lorain, southern Cuyahoga, northern Medina, Summit, and Portage Counties before weakening and giving way to more scattered lake-effect showers by late morning through the afternoon as drier air and increasing subsidence gradually build in. Most areas of NE Ohio and NW PA should see under 0.25 inches of QPF, but localized amounts of 0.50 to 1 inch cannot be ruled out where the band persists which appears to be most likely from the east suburbs of Cleveland into Geauga County in the roughly 09-13Z timeframe Sunday morning. A large surface high over the Upper Midwest will build in Sunday night, gradually shutting down the remaining lake- effect showers, but kept the trend of hanging onto at least slight chance POPS in far NE Ohio and NW PA longer.

Highs Sunday will be limited to the mid/upper 60s, with low/mid 60s in NE Ohio and NW PA. Lows tonight will fall into the low/mid 40s, except low 50s near the lakeshore. As the high builds in Sunday night, low 40s will be widespread inland from the lake, with a few upper 30s possible along the U.S. 30 corridor and in interior NE Ohio and NW PA, but expect temperatures to remain a few degrees above frost thresholds at this time.

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.SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/... The chilly pattern will gradually relax early in the week as the big Canadian high centered over the southern Great Lakes Monday shifts off the New England coast by Tuesday night, with mid-level heights also rebounding in response to the west coast ridge breaking down and an upper low progressing onshore of Oregon and California. This will set up spectacular early Fall weather, with plenty of sunshine and highs in the upper 60s/low 70s Monday warming into the mid/upper 70s Tuesday. Lows will also be moderating, with generally low/mid 40s Monday night (50s near the lake) increasing to upper 40s/mid 50s Tuesday night.

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.LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... Quiet weather will continue in the extended, but temperatures will cool a few degrees after the mid week warmth behind a cold front and associated mid/upper trough that progresses through the Great Lakes Wednesday night and Thursday. This trough will not be nearly as strong, but guidance suggests troughing and associated NW flow to continue across the Great Lakes and NE CONUS through next weekend along with another Canadian high settling into the region, so slightly cooler and mainly dry conditions will persist. Used NBM POPS at this point, which are completely dry Wednesday through Saturday, but will need to evaluate for possible showers with the front Wednesday night/Thursday depending on the degree of forcing and moisture.

Highs in the upper 70s/low 80s Wednesday will cool into the mid 70s to near 80 Thursday and generally low/mid 70s Friday and Saturday.

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.AVIATION /18Z Saturday THROUGH Thursday/... Cool northwest flow across the Great Lakes region has allowed for mid-level cloud cover to develop this afternoon mainly across Lower Michigan and along the Lake Erie lakeshore. Ceilings remain VFR with SCT/BKN cloud deck between 4-6 kft. Expect for any afternoon cloud cover to erode later this evening. Terminals should vastly remain dry and VFR through the TAF window, but can`t rule out lake effect rain showers to reach KERI and KCLE early Sunday morning. Conditions should remain VFR in lake effect showers, though there remains the potential for MVFR to occur at KERI.

Westerly to northwesterly winds 8-12 knots will occasionally gust to 18-22 knots through sunset tonight. Winds will then turn southwesterly and diminish to 5 knots or less. Winds return westerly to northwesterly Sunday morning generally between 8-10 knots.

Outlook...Non-VFR possible with lake effect rain and clouds in NW PA and NE OH on Sunday.

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.MARINE... Elevated westerly to northwesterly winds 15-25 knots will remain over Lake Erie through Sunday night. Onshore flow will allow for wave heights to build to 3-6 feet through the weekend. A Small Craft Advisory and Beach Hazards Statement remains in effect across the central and eastern basins and corresponding lakeshore counties through Sunday evening. Waterspouts remain possible in any lake effect rain showers tonight into Sunday.

An expansive area of high pressure will build across the Great Lakes region Sunday night and persist across the Northeast into early next week. Winds become light and variable on Monday before favoring an offshore component Tuesday and Wednesday as the high builds overhead.

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.CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...Beach Hazards Statement through Sunday evening for OHZ010>012- 089. PA...Beach Hazards Statement through Sunday evening for PAZ001. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 8 PM EDT Sunday for LEZ145>149.

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SYNOPSIS...Garuckas NEAR TERM...Garuckas SHORT TERM...Garuckas LONG TERM...Garuckas AVIATION...13 MARINE...13

NWS CLE Office Area Forecast Discussion

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