Findlay, OH Marine Weather and Tide Forecast
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Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Findlay, OH

June 2, 2024 5:29 PM EDT (21:29 UTC) Change Location
Sunrise 6:02 AM   Sunset 9:03 PM
Moonrise 2:27 AM   Moonset 3:53 PM 
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NOTE: Some of the data on this page has not been verified and should be used with that in mind. It may and occasionally will, be wrong. The tide reports are by xtide and are NOT FOR NAVIGATION.

Marine Forecasts
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LEZ142 Maumee Bay To Reno Beach Oh-reno Beach To The Islands Oh- The Islands To Vermilion Oh- 412 Am Edt Sun Jun 2 2024

Today - South winds 5 to 15 knots becoming southwest less than 10 knots. Showers this morning, then a chance of showers with a slight chance of Thunderstorms this afternoon. Waves 2 feet or less.

Tonight - East winds less than 10 knots. A slight chance of showers and Thunderstorms in the evening. Waves 1 foot or less.

Monday - Northeast winds 10 knots or less becoming east. Mostly Sunny. Waves 1 foot or less.

Monday night - East winds 5 to 10 knots becoming south. Partly cloudy in the evening, then becoming mostly cloudy. Waves 1 foot or less.
winds and waves higher in and near Thunderstorms.
see lake erie open lakes forecast for Tuesday through Thursday.
the water temperature off toledo is 69 degrees, off cleveland 62 degrees, and off erie 63 degrees.

LEZ100
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7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Findlay, OH
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Area Discussion for - Cleveland, OH
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FXUS61 KCLE 022016 AFDCLE

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 416 PM EDT Sun Jun 2 2024

SYNOPSIS
Low pressure over the Central Great Lakes will weaken overnight as high pressure builds in from the west. A warm front will lift north across the area late Monday. A cold front extending from low pressure north of the Great Lakes will move east across the area late Wednesday.

NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/
Breaks in the clouds across NW Ohio have allowed a minimal amount of instability to develop. Regional radars show scattered showers filling back in ahead of and along the front. Left a slight chance of thunderstorms in the forecast mainly west of a line from Cleveland to Akron but chances of thunder are pretty low given warming in the mid-levels and meager instability. ML CAPE may reach as high as 500 J/kg early this evening though so a slight chance remains. With that said, did raise pops slightly and linger them into the evening an extra hour or two as several 12Z CAMs show these showers holding together to the east through sunset.

Surface low pressure will be overcome by high pressure building in from the west tonight. Winds will be very light or calm and high boundary layer moisture with dewpoints near 60 degrees will result in fog formation. Breaks developing in the clouds will lead to cooling and fog or stratus filling in overnight. Models are in good agreement that the coverage of fog will be pretty good in areas from Mansfield to Akron to Youngstown that have less opportunity to mix out early this evening. Dewpoints are slightly lower behind the front in SW Lower Michigan but is unclear if these will reach the area before winds drop off. A Dense Fog Advisory may be needed overnight or early Monday morning depending on the coverage and extent of the dense fog.

Fog will tend to lift on Monday morning with clouds scattering out through the afternoon. A shortwave ridge will be overhead with a capping inversion in place. Only concern for a brief shower might be along the lake breeze, primarily in NW Pennsylvania where surface convergence looks a little stronger during the early afternoon.
Included a 20 pop in this area but most of the day will be dry.
Southerly flow and warm advection will push temperatures into the upper 70s(east) to low 80s(west) on Monday. Shortwave energy rounds the ridge across the Upper Great Lakes on Monday night. Moisture return is focused across Michigan along the warm front but low levels do not seem to moisten enough in Ohio to need a pop for Monday night. Lows temperatures trend upwards a few more degrees as we head into a warm stretch for first half of this week.

SHORT TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/
Mainly quiet weather on Tuesday will become more active by Wednesday as an upper-level trough moves east through the Great Lakes, bringing widespread showers and thunderstorms across the region, especially in the afternoon and evening hours.

An upper-level ridge will reside across the Eastern Great Lakes on Tuesday which should largely keep precipitation chances at bay. Only exception may be an isolated shower/storm associated with a lake breeze Tuesday afternoon, though even this potential appears low given dry mid-levels. Tuesday will feature the warmest temperatures of the foreseeable future with highs in the upper 80s to near 90.

An upper-level trough will slide east across the Great Lakes on Wednesday and is expected to weaken as it becomes cut-off from the main jet energy. Nonetheless, favorable low-level moisture combined with lift from the trough will result in widespread showers and thunderstorms on Wednesday. Mid-level flow of 25 to 30 knots (0-3 SRH ~100 m2/s2) could support some stronger storms/bowing segments with primarily a wind threat, although we're not looking at anything too widespread or organized at this time given weak mid-level lapse rates <6 C/km in addition to abundant cloud cover which should limit the MLCAPE. Area soundings do favor a heavy rain threat with any stronger storms given PWATs between 1.60 and 1.80 inches, skinny CAPE profiles, and warm cloud depths >10kft.

LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/
The aforementioned upper-level low will become cut-off sometime Wednesday night into Thursday as it slowly meanders across the Eastern Great Lakes through much of the weekend, becoming trapped within an upper-level "Omega Block" pattern. This will allow multiple shortwave disturbances to impact the region through the weekend, with the pattern resembling that more of early Spring versus early Summer. The forecast in the long term will favor slightly below-average temperatures in the upper 60s to lower 70s, periodic rain showers with occasional thunderstorms during the day, and partly to mostly cloudy skies.

AVIATION /18Z Sunday THROUGH Friday/
Light showers are exiting the area to the east while scattered showers are filling back in along the cold front in NW Ohio from roughly PCW to FDY. Given the lingering low level moisture and weak instability expect showers to continue to fill in and move southeast through early evening. Added a tempo for showers to the forecast at FDY and MFD and may need to add to CAK if they hold together and approach the terminal after 22Z. Any shower could produce brief MVFR visibilities. Chances of thunder are too low to include in the terminals but can not entirely rule an isolated storm given the weak instability.

For tonight, low level moisture is expected to remain high with very light winds. Breaks in the clouds are likely to widespread IFR conditions with low stratus and fog. Fog could be dense, especially in the window from 09-13Z. Terminals most likely to experience dense fog are TOL/MFD/CAK/YNG. Light downsloping winds may keep visibilities up closer to a half mile or a mile at CLE/ERI. Ceilings should lift and visibilities improve quickly on Monday morning between 13-15Z. Clouds will gradually scatter out into afternoon.

South to southwest winds of 10 knots or less today will shift to the west or northwest behind the front at TOL/FDY. The front tends to weaken before making it farther east and winds are more likely to go light and variable or calm after 01Z. Winds will return out of the south on Monday morning.

Outlook...Thunderstorms and associated non-VFR possible at times Tuesday through Friday.

MARINE
A mainly quiet marine period is in store through much of the week as winds are expected to be less than 20 knots, favoring an offshore direction. Some patchy fog may develop across the central and eastern basins of the Lake tonight. A few stronger storms with primarily a wind threat are possible on Wednesday afternoon and evening as an upper-level trough swings east across the region. The wind direction will become more westerly by Thursday and Friday, around 15 knots, which could bring some 3 to perhaps 4-footers across the central and eastern basin of Lake Erie.

CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
OH...None.
PA...None.
NY...None.
MARINE...None.




Weather Reporting Stations
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Stations Dist Age Wind Air TempWater Temp WavesinHgDewPt
THRO1 - 9063085 - Toledo, OH 46 mi60 min NW 8G12 74°F 29.8961°F
CMPO1 49 mi120 min W 7G11 73°F


Wind History for Toledo, OH
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Airport Reports
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AirportDistAgeWind ktVisSkyWeatherTempDewPtRHinHg
KFDY FINDLAY,OH 2 sm36 minWNW 0610 smOvercast75°F64°F69%29.93
KOWX PUTNAM COUNTY,OH 17 sm34 minNW 0910 smPartly Cloudy77°F63°F61%29.96
Link to 5 minute data for KFDY


Wind History from FDY
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Cleveland, OH,




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