North Falmouth, MA Marine Weather and Tide Forecast
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Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for North Falmouth, MA

June 13, 2024 10:58 PM EDT (02:58 UTC) Change Location
Sunrise 5:07 AM   Sunset 8:20 PM
Moonrise 12:04 PM   Moonset 12:45 AM 
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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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ANZ234 Buzzards Bay- 1004 Pm Edt Thu Jun 13 2024

Overnight - SW winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas around 2 ft. Wave detail: sw 2 ft at 4 seconds and se 1 foot at 8 seconds.

Fri - SW winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 25 kt. Seas around 2 ft. Wave detail: sw 2 ft at 4 seconds and se 1 foot at 7 seconds.

Fri night - SW winds 5 to 10 kt, becoming W after midnight. Seas around 2 ft. Wave detail: S 2 ft at 6 seconds. Patchy fog. Showers likely.

Sat - N winds 5 to 10 kt, increasing to 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt in the afternoon. Seas around 2 ft. Wave detail: nw 1 foot at 4 seconds and E 1 foot at 8 seconds. Showers likely, mainly in the morning.

Sat night - N winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas around 2 ft. Wave detail: ne 1 foot at 3 seconds and sw 1 foot at 5 seconds.

Sun and Sun night - SW winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas around 2 ft. Wave detail: ne 1 foot at 5 seconds and W 1 foot at 7 seconds.

Mon through Tue night - SW winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas around 2 ft.
seas are reported as significant wave height, which is the average of the highest third of the waves. Individual wave heights may be more than twice the significant wave height.

ANZ200 1004 Pm Edt Thu Jun 13 2024

Synopsis for massachusetts and rhode island coastal waters - High pressure provides dry weather and southwest winds through Friday. Then very late Fri into Fri night, an approaching cold front will be accompanied by scattered showers and Thunderstorms, possibly accompanied by strong winds, downpours and frequent lightning, especially near shore. Saturday morning a few showers may linger, before the cold front exits offshore Saturday afternoon. Meanwhile, a tropical low will likely track southeast of the 40n/70w benchmark Saturday, then across eastern georges bank Sat night and finally out to sea. High pressure builds over new england Sunday, then offshore Monday. This will yield a prolong period of ssw flow next week along with a very warm airmass.


7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near North Falmouth, MA
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Area Discussion for - Boston, MA
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FXUS61 KBOX 140147 AFDBOX

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Boston/Norton MA 947 PM EDT Thu Jun 13 2024

SYNOPSIS
Warm and muggy Friday with dewpoints in the 60s. Scattered severe thunderstorms possible with the passage of a cold front Friday afternoon and evening. Canadian high pressure will provide a comfortable Father's Day weekend along with dry conditions. Turning unseasonably hot next week as an anomolous mid-level ridge develops across the eastern third of the country. Prolonged period of heat and humidly could linger well into the end of next week.

NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM FRIDAY MORNING/
Pleasant conditions are expected through the overnight with early summer like humidity building into the region on southwest flow. While dewpoints are already in the mid 60s along the south coast and Islands, dews will continue to climb overnight to similar values region wide. Given high dewpoints and SW flow, saw a bit of marine stratus flirt with Nantucket and Block Island around the lunch hour. Low status and fog have been slow to form this evening, thus confidence in it occurring is starting to decrease. Will continue to monitor trends as the night continues. Fog will be hard to come by away from the immediate coast given gusty winds, with 925mb LLJ of around 25-30kt, keeping gusts elevated between ~07-12kt overnight.

Temps have been slow to fall this evening still in the low to mid 70s for most. Still thinking lows reaching the mid 60s is reasonable given clear skies and decreasing winds as the boundary layer decouples from the surface.

SHORT TERM /6 AM FRIDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/
With overnight lows only bottoming out in the mid 60s, temperatures will very quickly warm into the 80s by late morning, which will provide a sounding board for convection driven by a cold front/shortwave crossing the region tomorrow afternoon/evening. As mentioned by previous shifts, we continue to favor a more linear convective line compared to discrete cells given deep layer shear between 30-40kt.

The 12Z HRRR provided a window of greatest certainty regarding when the convective line will begin to impact our northwestern zones, but uncertainty remains between individual members, with the ARW and FV3 firing off storms as early as 16Z and the NAMNest delaying the convective potential until as late at 19Z across western MA and Central CT. While forcing continues to look robust with generous height falls and reasonably strong jet dynamics, tomorrow's convective potential will rely heavily on a narrow band of instability and timing of the line.

So, lets talk instability. Hi-res and global sounding continue to portray a rather significant amount of uncertainty regarding how much fuel will be available. The RAP, perhaps one of our most aggressive pieces of guidance, depicts and environment of MUCAPE values exceeding 2000J/kg ahead of the cold front. Conversely, the NAM and GFS show much more modest instability values ranging from about 600-1200J/kg MUCAPE, with greater instability to our north and west across VT and NY. The best lapse rates will also be to our north and west, but model soundings show that MLLR may exceed 6.5C/km across the western half of the CWA tomorrow afternoon (which, for southern New England isn't too shabby).
MLLR wane quickly approaching the I-95 corridor where they fall to about 6C/km along the I-495 corridor and less than 5.5C/km SE of I-95. Given the gradient in both instability and lapse rates, do expect a rather robust line of convection that will reach approximately the Worcester area between 22-00Z tomorrow evening before the line wanes quickly as it progresses eastward. There remains a distinct possibility that storms decay so quickly tomorrow evening that places from Boston to Providence, south and east, see just some light to moderate rain with any convection dissipating before moving into the more stable airmass. DCAPE values climbing to near 700J/kg and robust low level lapse rates continue to pinpoint strong to damaging wind gusts as the primary severe threat with the convective line. Temperatures aloft remain too mild for a substantial hail threat and near zero helicity/0-1km shear quells any tornado concerns.

PWATs have trended downward compared to yesterday, dropping from ~1.7-1.8" to around 1.5", which is a trend that will, combined with the lack of training storms, mitigate widespread flooding. Still, "long skinny CAPE" is supportive of downpours, depicted by the HRRR PMM that highlights pixels of 1.5-2", especially across the CT River Valley, in some convective cells tomorrow afternoon, which could generate urban and poor drainage flooding in places like Springfield and Hartford.

While the primary convective line will wane after sunset, trailing weak surface low/mid level shortwave will allow some showers to backfill across the region tomorrow night through early Saturday.
Models are poorly depicting how robust these lingering showers will be, but ultimately expect them to shift southeast of the region by 12Z. Trough axis clears the region around the same time which will allow much drier airmass to filter into the region.

LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/
Highlights:

* A few showers possible Saturday morning, otherwise a dry and comfortable Father's Day weekend.

* Seasonably warm on Monday, becoming hot and humid Tuesday through the end of next week with heat indicies potentially reaching between 95F and 104F.

* Early summer heat could challenge daily record high temperatures.

Father's Day Weekend...

Few showers linger Saturday morning, mainly across southeastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island as a mid-level trough moves east and away from the region. By no means a washout for Saturday, PWATs fall dramatically as Canadian high pressure moves into the area. This yields a comfortable air mass, dewpoints fall from the 50s into the 40s! As for highs, low to mid 70s near the coast and upper 70s to low 80s inland. Overnight into Sunday morning will be cooler, given the dry atmosphere and weaker wind fields, should have effective radiational cooling for many locations, thus have deviated away from the NBM and favored the cooler MAV and MET blend. Areas like KORE could experience morning lows in the low 40s! Elsewhere, low temperatures are expected to drop to the upper 40s and low 50s along the coast, the exception would be Boston, where lows are generally in the mid 50s. Comfortable conditions follow on Father's Day, with mainly sunny conditions thanks to high pressure, low humidity values and highs in the mid 70s to 80 degrees.

Next Week...

As advertised, we continue to expect well above normal temperatures heading into next week. Starting Monday, mid-level high pressure should be located over the southeast, leading to increasing mid- level heights across the northeast. Could be a rouge shower Monday afternoon with shortwave energy passing to our north, albeit a low chance at this point. Highs warm into the low and middle 80s.

Tuesday into Thursday, the mid-level high expands into the northeast with continued signals this will be an anomolous event. NAEFS ensemble situation table indicates the 500mb heights and surface temperatures could exceed forecast model climatological reference points, in addition to PWATs nearing 97th to 99th percentile!

So, hot and humid conditions are expected with peak intensity around Wednesday and Thursday. Given this is still a week away, there is still time to iron out off the wrinkles/details. Additionally, there are high probabilites, greater than 60 percent, that highs could exceed 90 degrees across northern Connecticut, the majority of Massachusetts (away from the southeastern portion of the state, Cape Cod, and the Island), and northern Rhode Island starting Tuesday, with the peak Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. It is not out of the question a few spots could reach 100F from Wednesday to Friday.
There are low probabilities on DESI, around 20 to 40 percent, for areas such as the northern Connecticut River Valley and Merrimack Valley. Likely will challenge daily record highs, see the climate section for those details.

This period appear more dry than not, but with a juiced up atmosphere and a few bouts of shortwave energy passing through, can't rule out pop-up showers during this period as well.

AVIATION /02Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/
Forecast Confidence Levels:

Low - less than 30 percent.
Moderate - 30 to 60 percent.
High - greater than 60 percent.

20z TAF Update...

Through tonight: High Confidence

VFR. SW flow taking hold overnight. Gusts will remain between 10-15kt. Saw some stratus and fog flirt with the islands around lunchtime on Thursday, and with dewpoints surging into the mid 60s and strong SW, do expect it to redevelop tonight at least at Nantucket, with greater uncertainty for Cape terminals. Fog unlikely across the interior.

Friday... Moderate Confidence

VFR and dry in the morning with southwesterly flow.
Thunderstorms will develop across eastern NY and Western MA and CT in the mid to late afternoon. Thunderstorms then move east and begin to weaken in the evening. Some storms may have strong winds and torrential rainfall. High confidence in impact to western terminals, low confidence in thunder at BOS and PVD as storms will wane very quickly as they approach the coast around sunset. Winds shift the W/NW behind frontal passage.

Friday Night... Moderate Confidence

Convection dissipates quickly after 00Z, but lingering shower activity will backfill across the region, pulling east from about ORH to the Cape between 06-12Z. Will see a period of lower cigs associated with these showers but do not expected tremendous vsby reductions. VFR redevelops from west to east early Saturday morning.

KBOS TAF...Moderate confidence in TAF.

High confidence in VFR through 16Z tomorrow, lesser confidence in convective potential tomorrow evening as storms weaken. SW winds tonight into Friday, 10-20kt head of cold front. Winds shift to the W/NW behind the frontal passage tomorrow evening.
MVFR to possible IFR in showers and potential thunderstorms.

KBDL TAF...High confidence in TAF.

VFR through tomorrow morning, with strong line of thunderstorms impacting the terminal between 17-21Z, though confidence is moderate on exact timing. Winds SW around 10 kt until frontal passage when winds become more W/NW. MVFR to even IFR possible in passing storms.

Outlook /Saturday through Tuesday/...

Saturday: VFR. Slight chance SHRA.

Saturday Night through Tuesday: VFR.

MARINE
Forecaster Confidence Levels:

Low - less than 30 percent.
Medium - 30 to 60 percent.
High - greater than 60 percent.

Tonight through Friday Night...

Areas of marine stratus and fog are possible overnight into Friday morning, this likely will reduce visibilities to less than one-half mile at times. Surface high pressure moves off shore Friday afternoon with the approach of a strong cold front. Ahead of the front, periods of gusty south/southwest winds produce locally stronger gusts, around 25 knots, for the northeast waters off the coast of Cape Ann. Have held off on issuing a SCA at this time, do think the window for this to occur is during the early afternoon, if confidence in stronger gusts increases a SCA may become needed.
Showers and thunderstorms possible Friday afternoon and evening, with rain lingering into Saturday morning. Seas tonight into Friday are between 2 and 3 ft, but building to 3 to 4 ft for northeast waters, with potential to reach 5 ft on the outermost waters. Seas diminish Friday night into Saturday to around 2 to 3 ft.
Outlook /Saturday through Tuesday/...

Saturday: Winds less than 25 kt. Seas locally approaching 5 ft.
Chance of rain showers.

Saturday Night: Winds less than 25 kt. Areas of seas approaching 5 ft.

Sunday: Winds less than 25 kt. Seas locally approaching 5 ft.

Sunday Night through Tuesday: Winds less than 25 kt.

BOX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
CT...None.
MA...None.
RI...None.
MARINE...None.




Weather Reporting Stations
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Stations Dist Age Wind AirWater WavesinHgDewPt
BZBM3 - 8447930 - Woods Hole, MA 8 mi58 min 65°F 66°F30.00
NBGM3 13 mi58 minWSW 11G14 67°F 30.00
44020 - NANTUCKET SOUND 22 mi48 minSSW 12G16 66°F 67°F29.9964°F
44090 22 mi58 min 62°F1 ft
44085 26 mi58 min 63°F 61°F3 ft
BUZM3 - Buzzards Bay, MA 26 mi58 minSW 14G15 65°F 30.00
FRVM3 - 8447386 - Fall River, MA 27 mi58 min 70°F 71°F30.00
BLTM3 - 8447387 - Borden Flats Light at Fall River, MA 28 mi58 minSW 8.9G11 70°F 29.98
FRXM3 28 mi58 min 70°F 61°F
PRUR1 34 mi58 min 66°F 63°F
NAXR1 - Narragansett Bay Reserve, RI 36 mi73 minWNW 5.1 67°F 29.9862°F
PTCR1 - 8452951 - Potter Cove, Prudence Island, RI 36 mi58 minWSW 6G8.9 68°F 30.00
CPTR1 - 8452944 - Conimicut Light, RI 37 mi58 minS 13G15 68°F 71°F29.98
NWPR1 - 8452660 - Newport, RI 37 mi58 minSSW 11G12 65°F 68°F29.99
CHTM3 38 mi58 min 66°F 30.00
NTKM3 - 8449130 - Nantucket Island, MA 39 mi58 minS 6G9.9 64°F 69°F30.03
PDVR1 40 mi58 minSSW 1.9G6 69°F 29.9761°F
PVDR1 40 mi58 minS 7G11 73°F 29.9960°F
QPTR1 - 8454049 - Quonset Point, RI 40 mi58 minSW 12G13 68°F 29.98
FOXR1 - 8454000 - Providence, RI 41 mi58 minS 5.1G8 73°F 65°F29.98
44018 - SE Cape Cod 30NM East of Nantucket, MA 47 mi78 min 62°F2 ft
44013 - BOSTON 16 NM East of Boston, MA 49 mi48 minS 7.8G9.7 67°F 64°F29.9562°F


Wind History for Borden Flats Light at Fall River, MA
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Airport Reports
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Tide / Current for Chappaquoit Point, West Falmouth Harbor, Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts
   
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Chappaquoit Point
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Thu -- 12:44 AM EDT     Moonset
Thu -- 01:35 AM EDT     3.46 feet High Tide
Thu -- 05:07 AM EDT     Sunrise
Thu -- 07:15 AM EDT     0.76 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 12:03 PM EDT     Moonrise
Thu -- 02:11 PM EDT     3.50 feet High Tide
Thu -- 07:45 PM EDT     1.10 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 08:17 PM EDT     Sunset
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Sorry tide depth graphs only, please select another station.

Chappaquoit Point, West Falmouth Harbor, Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, Tide feet
12
am
2.9
1
am
3.4
2
am
3.4
3
am
3
4
am
2.3
5
am
1.5
6
am
1
7
am
0.8
8
am
0.8
9
am
1
10
am
1.4
11
am
1.9
12
pm
2.5
1
pm
3.2
2
pm
3.5
3
pm
3.4
4
pm
2.8
5
pm
2.1
6
pm
1.5
7
pm
1.2
8
pm
1.1
9
pm
1.2
10
pm
1.4
11
pm
1.8


Tide / Current for Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Current
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Cape Cod Canal
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Thu -- 12:45 AM EDT     Moonset
Thu -- 03:05 AM EDT     -0.04 knots Slack
Thu -- 05:07 AM EDT     Sunrise
Thu -- 06:05 AM EDT     -4.03 knots Max Ebb
Thu -- 09:17 AM EDT     0.17 knots Slack
Thu -- 12:03 PM EDT     Moonrise
Thu -- 12:26 PM EDT     3.78 knots Max Flood
Thu -- 04:00 PM EDT     -0.01 knots Slack
Thu -- 06:40 PM EDT     -3.69 knots Max Ebb
Thu -- 08:18 PM EDT     Sunset
Thu -- 09:46 PM EDT     0.16 knots Slack
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Sorry tide depth graphs only, please select another station.

Cape Cod Canal, Massachusetts Current, knots
12
am
3.5
1
am
3.2
2
am
2.5
3
am
0.8
4
am
-2.6
5
am
-3.7
6
am
-4
7
am
-3.8
8
am
-3
9
am
-1.4
10
am
2.3
11
am
3.3
12
pm
3.7
1
pm
3.7
2
pm
3.4
3
pm
2.6
4
pm
0.3
5
pm
-2.7
6
pm
-3.5
7
pm
-3.7
8
pm
-3.2
9
pm
-2.2
10
pm
1.2
11
pm
2.7


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Boston, MA,




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