Raymond, WA Marine Weather and Tide Forecast
L-36.com
Top   Marine   7-Day   NWS   Buoy   Airport   Tide   Map   GEOS   Radar  

Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Raymond, WA

May 19, 2024 4:49 PM PDT (23:49 UTC) Change Location
Sunrise 5:32 AM   Sunset 8:51 PM
Moonrise 4:04 PM   Moonset 2:49 AM 
  Print   HELP   Reset   Save   Recall  New
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
    EDIT      HIDE   Help
PZZ110 Grays Harbor Bar- 230 Pm Pdt Sun May 19 2024
combined seas 4 to 6 ft. Bar conditions light. Maximum ebb currents will occur around 315 am Monday morning, 330 pm Monday afternoon, and 400 am Tuesday morning.

PZZ100 230 Pm Pdt Sun May 19 2024

Synopsis for the northern and central washington coastal and inland waters - Broad surface ridging will remain centered well offshore with low pressure inland and will result in onshore flow for much of this weekend into early next week. A frontal system looks to traverse the area waters on Tuesday. Additional systems may develop and move through the region late this week.


7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Raymond, WA
   Hourly   EDIT   Help   Map   HIDE
NEW! Add second zone forecast


Area Discussion for - Portland, OR
      HIDE   Help   
NOTE: mouseover dotted underlined text for definition
FXUS66 KPQR 192124 AFDPQR

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Portland OR 214 PM PDT Sun May 19 2024

SYNOPSIS
Isolated to scattered showers into this evening, mainly over the higher terrain. Clearing after sunset, with a cool night expect as temperatures drop into mid to upper 30s for many areas.
High pressure will bring a sunny warm day for Monday. But, another front arrives on Tuesday, with clouds and rain. Showery with a thunderstorms possible on Wednesday. Will maintain unsettled with near average temperatures for rest of the week.

SHORT TERM
(Sunday afternoon through Wednesday)...Still have somewhat onshore flow across the region. Air mass still a bit unstable with the cooler air aloft. As such, will maintain isolated to scattered showers across the region, though bulk of those will be over the higher terrain.

Once the sunsets, air mass will gradually stabilize, allowing showers decrease and come to an end later this evening. Mid/low level flow will turn more northerly overnight, allowing for clearing skies.
Models continue to show bit of thermal trough building along the south Oregon coast. As it does, will see low level flow turn bit more northeasterly, or offshore. As such, will see tad enhancement of downslope flow, with cool drainage flow into the lowlands. Many valleys likely to drop back into upper 30s to lower 40s. Current forecasts look on track, but may have to watch. If gets a few deg cooler, could have to worry about patchy frost in mountain valleys and even in the Willamette and Cowlitz Valleys, But, given the clearing expected and dry cooler air mass, highest potential of frost looks to be south of a Corvallis to Albany line. So, will put up a Frost Advisory for the south Willamette Valley and adjoining lowlands. In addition, will include Hood River Valley under the Frost Advisory as well, where likely see areas of frost, mainly to west and south of Middle Mountain.

After a cool start to the day, will see much more sunshine for Monday. Sunny skies and temperatures climbing back to that expected for mid-May, 60s on the coast and 70 throughout the I-5 corridor.

Enjoy the warmer and dryer day on Monday because cooler and wetter conditions return Tuesday. Ensemble guidance indicates good confidence in a closed upper low pushing south along the British Columbia coast Tuesday with a shortwave ahead of this parent low moving through the PacNW. The shortwave will have more of a west to east progression with an associated surface frontal system, which will bring a period of stratiform precipitation to the region from the northwest to southeast. The Willamette Valley will likely be rain shadowed due to the direction of the flow with higher precipitation amounts in SW Washington (including lowlands), the Coast Range, and Cascades.
NBM indicates only a 20-40% probability of 0.25 inch or higher rain amounts in 24 hours in the central and southern Willamette Valley ending 5am Wednesday. These probabilities increase to 50-60% in the Portland/Vancouver metro area, and 75-90% in the lowlands north of Clark County. The Coast Range and Cascades north of a line from Tillamook to Government Camp are forecast to receive the highest QPF, anywhere from 0.75-1.25 inch. NBM indicates 50-70% probability of QPF greater than 0.75 inches for these areas through Tuesday night. Snow levels will remain above 5500-6000 feet through Tuesday, so snow at or below pass level is not expected. /HEC/Rockey

LONG TERM
Wednesday through Friday...Ensemble guidance has been in better agreement of the track of the closed low as it moves south from British Columbia into the PacNW on Wednesday.
85% of the 00Z Sunday WPC 500mb clusters, along with ensemble means, indicate the low will move through NW Washington to the central/east central Washington/Oregon border, then southeast through eastern Oregon. This pattern will continue onshore flow with cooler and more moist conditions. The other 15% of the clusters track the low much farther east through eastern Washington into Idaho in a more "inside slider" pattern. This would bring more of a breezier northerly wind pattern and dryer conditions. NBM is hedging towards the first pattern, as well, with showers continuing into Wednesday with thunderstorm chances as colder air aloft moves over the region.

Ridging builds again over the eastern Pacific Thursday with dry conditions returning. Beyond Thursday, ensemble guidance turns more uncertain. WPC clusters indicate general troughing moving back over the region sometime Friday into Saturday, but timing, location, and strength of the trough are all uncertain. NBM forecast indicates daytime temperatures remaining fairly steady in the 60s across the lowlands and 50s across the coast through the weekend with precipitation chances of 15-30% across the lowlands Friday and Saturday and up to 40-50% across the higher elevations. -HEC

AVIATION
VFR conditions continue at most terminals throughout the TAF period. The northern coastal terminals see 80% confidence in dropping to MVFR cigs around 05z Mon, and will remain MVFR for the rest of the TAF period as some lower marine clouds look to move in at that time. At terminals other than KAST, just VFR conditions persist.

Spotty showers continue throughout the area, but they are light as expected, with no significant chance of showers dropping cigs to MVFR. Winds are gusting out of the north/northwest, but gusts will top out around 20 kt (25 kt at the coast). These end by 04-05z Mon at the coast and 07-09Z inland, and winds will become quite light afterwards for the rest of the TAF period.

PDX AND APPROACHES...VFR conditions through the TAF period. Cloud cover should clear up throughout the rest of Sunday afternoon, moving more towards scattered clouds. Low chance of a few more stray rain showers Sunday afternoon, but these will be brief and non- impactful. Less than 5% chance of MVFR cigs with these showers.
Isolated gusts associated with these showers may reach 20 kt, but only for one-off gusts as they pass through. Vast majority of winds will remain below 10kt. /JLiu

MARINE
Winds continue at low-end Small Craft Advisory level through Sunday evening for most areas, with seas around 8 feet at 8 seconds. NW winds up to 25 kt will turn N over Sunday night, beginning to weaken after midnight. By the end of Sunday night, the inner waters will have decreased down to 15 kt or so, while outer waters could see a few gusts above 20 kt until mid-morning Monday.

The next frontal passage of any significance is set to arrive late Monday night into Tuesday morning, bringing rain and a shift to westerly winds. However, wind gusts look to generally stay below 20 kt as the pressure gradient associated with this frontal passage appears rather weak. The northern outer waters will see slightly stronger gusts, with the possibility for Small Craft Advisory-level gusts up to 23-25 kt. Gusts there likely persist through Wednesday morning. -TK/JLiu

PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

OR...Frost Advisory for late tonight into early Mon am for south Willamette Valley (including Benton, Linn and Lane County lowlands, and nearby lowlands of Cascades foothills), and the Hood River Valley.

WA...None.
PZ...Small Craft Advisory until 5 AM PDT Monday for PZZ251>253.
Small Craft Advisory until 11 AM PDT Monday for PZZ271>273.




Weather Reporting Stations
   EDIT       HIDE   Help
Stations Dist Age Wind Air TempWater Temp WavesinHgDewPt
TOKW1 - 9440910 - Toke Point, WA 11 mi49 min WNW 17G20 59°F
WPTW1 - 9441102 - Westport, WA 24 mi73 min NW 18G20 52°F 56°F30.29
46211 - Grays Harbor, WA (036) 28 mi53 min 51°F5 ft
46243 - Clatsop Spit, OR - 162 38 mi53 min 55°F5 ft
46099 48 mi179 min NW 9.7 51°F 51°F30.30


Wind History for Toke Point, WA
(wind in knots)    EDIT      HIDE   Help
toggle option: (graph/table)



Airport Reports
    EDIT      HIDE   Help   Click EDIT to display multiple airports. Follow links for more data.
AirportDistAgeWind ktVisSkyWeatherTempDewPtRHinHg
KHQM BOWERMAN,WA 22 sm56 minWNW 15G2410 smClear55°F43°F62%30.28
Link to 5 minute data for KHQM


Wind History from HQM
(wind in knots)
toggle option: (graph/table)


Tide / Current for Raymond, Washington
   
EDIT   Weekend mode (on/off)   HIDE   Help
Raymond
Click for Map
Sun -- 03:49 AM PDT     Moonset
Sun -- 05:32 AM PDT     1.17 feet Low Tide
Sun -- 05:35 AM PDT     Sunrise
Sun -- 11:44 AM PDT     7.29 feet High Tide
Sun -- 05:03 PM PDT     Moonrise
Sun -- 05:22 PM PDT     2.16 feet Low Tide
Sun -- 08:48 PM PDT     Sunset
Sun -- 11:46 PM PDT     9.25 feet High Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Sorry tide depth graphs only, please select another station.

Raymond, Washington, Tide feet
12
am
8.5
1
am
7.4
2
am
6
3
am
4.3
4
am
2.5
5
am
1.3
6
am
1.3
7
am
2
8
am
3.2
9
am
4.6
10
am
6.1
11
am
7.1
12
pm
7.3
1
pm
6.7
2
pm
5.6
3
pm
4.4
4
pm
3.1
5
pm
2.2
6
pm
2.4
7
pm
3.4
8
pm
4.8
9
pm
6.4
10
pm
7.9
11
pm
9


Tide / Current for Palix River, south fork, Willapa Bay, Washington
   EDIT      HIDE   Help
Palix River
Click for Map
Sun -- 03:50 AM PDT     Moonset
Sun -- 05:36 AM PDT     Sunrise
Sun -- 05:46 AM PDT     1.07 feet Low Tide
Sun -- 11:42 AM PDT     6.70 feet High Tide
Sun -- 05:04 PM PDT     Moonrise
Sun -- 05:36 PM PDT     1.98 feet Low Tide
Sun -- 08:48 PM PDT     Sunset
Sun -- 11:44 PM PDT     8.51 feet High Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Sorry tide depth graphs only, please select another station.

Palix River, south fork, Willapa Bay, Washington, Tide feet
12
am
7.8
1
am
6.9
2
am
5.6
3
am
4.2
4
am
2.6
5
am
1.4
6
am
1.1
7
am
1.7
8
am
2.7
9
am
4.1
10
am
5.5
11
am
6.5
12
pm
6.7
1
pm
6.1
2
pm
5.2
3
pm
4.2
4
pm
3.1
5
pm
2.2
6
pm
2.1
7
pm
2.9
8
pm
4.3
9
pm
5.8
10
pm
7.2
11
pm
8.3


Weather Map
      HIDE   Help


GEOS Local Image of Pacific Northwest   
EDIT   HIDE



Langley,Hill/Gray,Harbor,WA




NOTICE: Some pages have affiliate links to Amazon. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Please read website Cookie, Privacy, and Disclamers by clicking HERE. To contact me click HERE. For my YouTube page click HERE