Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Sea Isle City, NJ
June 6, 2024 10:59 PM EDT (02:59 UTC) Change Location
Sunrise 5:29 AM Sunset 8:24 PM Moonrise 5:11 AM Moonset 9:08 PM |
ANZ453 Coastal Waters From Great Egg Inlet To Cape May Nj Out 20 Nm- 1003 Pm Edt Thu Jun 6 2024
Overnight - SW winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 3 to 4 ft. Wave detail: S 4 ft at 7 seconds and E 1 foot at 8 seconds. A chance of showers and tstms late this evening, then a slight chance of showers and tstms.
Fri - W winds 5 to 10 kt, becoming sw 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt in the afternoon. Seas 3 to 4 ft. Wave detail: S 4 ft at 7 seconds and E 1 foot at 9 seconds.
Fri night - W winds 10 to 15 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Wave detail: S 3 ft at 7 seconds and W 1 foot at 2 seconds.
Sat - W winds 10 to 15 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft. Wave detail: se 3 ft at 8 seconds and W 2 ft at 3 seconds.
Sat night - SW winds around 10 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Wave detail: W 2 ft at 3 seconds and se 2 ft at 7 seconds.
Sun - SW winds 10 to 15 kt. Seas 3 to 4 ft. Wave detail: S 3 ft at 7 seconds and sw 2 ft at 4 seconds.
Sun night - W winds around 10 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Mon - W winds around 10 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Mon night - NW winds around 10 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Tue - NW winds 5 to 10 kt, becoming sw in the afternoon. Seas around 2 ft.
Tue night - S winds 5 to 10 kt, becoming W after midnight. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
winds and seas higher in and near tstms.
winds and seas higher in and near tstms.
ANZ400 1003 Pm Edt Thu Jun 6 2024
Synopsis for the coastal waters from sandy hook nj to fenwick island de and for delaware bay - Cold front slows/stalls over the region tonight. Very weak high pressure to the southwest begins to build in Friday, holding some influence Friday night through Saturday. Cold front approaches Saturday night and looks to pass through Sunday. Another cold front may pass through Monday. Weak high pressure builds in for Tuesday into Thursday.
Area Discussion for - Philadelphia/Mount Holly, PA
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FXUS61 KPHI 070200 AFDPHI
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Mount Holly NJ 1000 PM EDT Thu Jun 6 2024
SYNOPSIS
Cold front slows/stalls over the region tonight. Very weak high pressure to the southwest begins to build in Friday, holding some influence Friday night through Saturday. Cold front approaches Saturday night and looks to pass through Sunday. Another cold front may pass through Monday. Weak high pressure builds in for Tuesday into Thursday.
NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/
Showers and thunderstorms have tapered off late this evening and the previous Severe Thunderstorm Watch was allowed to expire.
For the rest of tonight, our first of two cold fronts will be moving through the region after midnight tonight. A few isolated showers and perhaps a thunderstorm or two will be possible overnight as the front moves through, but the severe potential will be rather low. Behind the first cold front, dew points will begin to drop into the lower 60s by daybreak. For areas that either get rain this evening or did not dry out from rainfall Wednesday night, patchy fog may develop prior to daybreak Friday.
The second cold front passes through the region Friday afternoon.
The base of an upper trough with strong shortwave energy will pass through northern Pennsylvania and the Hudson Valley in New York state. For the far northern zones of the local forecast area, mainly the southern Poconos, Lehigh Valley, and northern New Jersey, isolated to scattered showers, perhaps a rumble of thunder, may develop in the afternoon. It will be much drier as surface dew points will fall into the 50s, and highs will be in the low to mid 80s.
SHORT TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/
Summary...Fairly benign short term looks to be on tap. Generally no precipitation expected Friday night through Saturday. Showers possible Saturday night. Showers and thunderstorms more possible Sunday with approach and passage of a cold front. Our region is not outlooked for any excessive rainfall by WPC or any severe weather by SPC for the short term.
An upper-level low looks to be centered north of the region Friday night. This upper-level low will move eastward with time as another lobe of upper-level low pressure swings down from the northwest and over the Great Lakes region. A new upper-level low looks to be centered just north of the northeastern CONUS for Sunday as a trough-axis approaches our region from the northwest.
At the surface level, very weak surface high pressure looks to be centered over the Mississippi River Valley Friday night. This weak high looks to move eastward with time and be centered more over the southeastern CONUS for Saturday. Meanwhile, a cold front looks to approach from the northwest Saturday/Saturday night. The cold front looks to cross through our region during the Sunday time frame.
Our region will look to feel the influence of that weak surface high Friday night through Saturday. With the surface high being weak to the south, and broad upper-level low pressure and shortwave energy being in place, some isolated pop-up showers should not be ruled out entirely for Friday night or Saturday. Generally though, things should be fairly benign weather wise during these periods; NBM supports no PoPs for this time frame. We will see PoP chances increase from the northwest later Saturday night into Sunday due to the cold front. Timing of cold frontal passage is not very certain at this point given the overall pattern. Chance for showers and thunderstorms should be anticipated for Sunday due to the front.
LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/
An upper-level trough looks to stall over the eastern CONUS Sunday night into Tuesday while weakening. Though a more zonal upper-level pattern looks to take hold over the CONUS Tuesday onwards, this decaying and weak upper trough may continue to linger over the eastern CONUS into Thursday.
The upper-level pattern suggests weak high pressure will mainly influence the region at the surface level through much of the long term; though another cold front may pass through around Monday. However, with surface high pressure remaining weak and an upper-level trough remaining through much of the time frame, a bit of an unsettled long term looks to be on the horizon.
Though unsettled, nothing all that impactful looks to be on tap at this point.
Slight chance for showers and thunderstorms each afternoon and evening (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday) due to lingering upper-level trough, possible shortwave energy, and weak high pressure unable to suppress development. Temperatures right around average through the term.
AVIATION /02Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/
The following discussion is for KPHL, KPNE, KTTN, KABE, KRDG, KILG, KMIV, KACY and surrounding areas.
Tonight...Prevailing VFR. Perhaps an isolated shower, but it will remain mostly dry for the rest of tonight. More confident that fog will not impact terminals since there wasn't much rain earlier in the day, but still cannot completely rule out some patchy, shallow fog. SW winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt, becoming W around 5 kt tonight. Moderate confidence.
Friday...VFR. An isolated SHRA may pass over KABE in the afternoon.
W winds increasing to 15 to 20 kt with gusts up to 25 kt. High confidence overall.
Outlook...
Friday night through Tuesday...Generally VFR. Some sub-VFR conditions possible Sunday/Sunday night. Moderate confidence.
MARINE
Wind gusts are just below 25 kt and seas are just below 5 ft. Will go ahead and cancel the Small Craft Advisory that was in effect for the ocean waters. A pre-frontal trough passes through this evening, followed by a cold front tonight. Another cold front passes through on Friday. Thunderstorms this evening may be strong to severe with damaging wind gusts and heavy rain.
SW winds 15 to 20 kt will turn W 10 to 15 kt tonight. Winds increase back up to 15 to 20 kt on Friday, though gusts should remain just below 25 kt.
Seas will average 3 to 4 ft.
Outlook...
Friday night through Tuesday...No marine headlines anticipated.
Rip Currents...
Gusty west winds will develop on Friday, ranging from 15 to 20 mph with gusts up to 25 mph. With breaking waves of 2 to 3 feet, a medium period swell, and a New Moon, there is a MODERATE risk for the development of dangerous and life threatening rip currents at New Jersey beaches, but a LOW risk at Delaware beaches.
On Saturday, the effects of the New Moon will not be as impactful, and west winds will be much lighter. There will be a LOW risk for the development of dangerous and life threatening rip currents at New Jersey and Delaware beaches.
Rip currents occur often in the vicinities of jetties and piers.
Utilize any guarded beaches if venturing out into the water. For specific beach forecasts, visit weather.gov/beach/phi
TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING
Largely spotty minor coastal flooding, but could see more widespread minor coastal flooding across Cape May and Cumberland counties in NJ and Sussex county in DE. A Coastal Flood Advisory was hoisted for those locations. Astronomical tides will be lowering, so the threat for widespread minor coastal flooding will continue to diminish with the next several high tide cycles.
PHI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
PA...None.
NJ...Coastal Flood Advisory until 1 AM EDT Friday for NJZ021-023- 024.
DE...Coastal Flood Advisory until 1 AM EDT Friday for DEZ003-004.
MD...None.
MARINE...None.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Mount Holly NJ 1000 PM EDT Thu Jun 6 2024
SYNOPSIS
Cold front slows/stalls over the region tonight. Very weak high pressure to the southwest begins to build in Friday, holding some influence Friday night through Saturday. Cold front approaches Saturday night and looks to pass through Sunday. Another cold front may pass through Monday. Weak high pressure builds in for Tuesday into Thursday.
NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/
Showers and thunderstorms have tapered off late this evening and the previous Severe Thunderstorm Watch was allowed to expire.
For the rest of tonight, our first of two cold fronts will be moving through the region after midnight tonight. A few isolated showers and perhaps a thunderstorm or two will be possible overnight as the front moves through, but the severe potential will be rather low. Behind the first cold front, dew points will begin to drop into the lower 60s by daybreak. For areas that either get rain this evening or did not dry out from rainfall Wednesday night, patchy fog may develop prior to daybreak Friday.
The second cold front passes through the region Friday afternoon.
The base of an upper trough with strong shortwave energy will pass through northern Pennsylvania and the Hudson Valley in New York state. For the far northern zones of the local forecast area, mainly the southern Poconos, Lehigh Valley, and northern New Jersey, isolated to scattered showers, perhaps a rumble of thunder, may develop in the afternoon. It will be much drier as surface dew points will fall into the 50s, and highs will be in the low to mid 80s.
SHORT TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/
Summary...Fairly benign short term looks to be on tap. Generally no precipitation expected Friday night through Saturday. Showers possible Saturday night. Showers and thunderstorms more possible Sunday with approach and passage of a cold front. Our region is not outlooked for any excessive rainfall by WPC or any severe weather by SPC for the short term.
An upper-level low looks to be centered north of the region Friday night. This upper-level low will move eastward with time as another lobe of upper-level low pressure swings down from the northwest and over the Great Lakes region. A new upper-level low looks to be centered just north of the northeastern CONUS for Sunday as a trough-axis approaches our region from the northwest.
At the surface level, very weak surface high pressure looks to be centered over the Mississippi River Valley Friday night. This weak high looks to move eastward with time and be centered more over the southeastern CONUS for Saturday. Meanwhile, a cold front looks to approach from the northwest Saturday/Saturday night. The cold front looks to cross through our region during the Sunday time frame.
Our region will look to feel the influence of that weak surface high Friday night through Saturday. With the surface high being weak to the south, and broad upper-level low pressure and shortwave energy being in place, some isolated pop-up showers should not be ruled out entirely for Friday night or Saturday. Generally though, things should be fairly benign weather wise during these periods; NBM supports no PoPs for this time frame. We will see PoP chances increase from the northwest later Saturday night into Sunday due to the cold front. Timing of cold frontal passage is not very certain at this point given the overall pattern. Chance for showers and thunderstorms should be anticipated for Sunday due to the front.
LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/
An upper-level trough looks to stall over the eastern CONUS Sunday night into Tuesday while weakening. Though a more zonal upper-level pattern looks to take hold over the CONUS Tuesday onwards, this decaying and weak upper trough may continue to linger over the eastern CONUS into Thursday.
The upper-level pattern suggests weak high pressure will mainly influence the region at the surface level through much of the long term; though another cold front may pass through around Monday. However, with surface high pressure remaining weak and an upper-level trough remaining through much of the time frame, a bit of an unsettled long term looks to be on the horizon.
Though unsettled, nothing all that impactful looks to be on tap at this point.
Slight chance for showers and thunderstorms each afternoon and evening (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday) due to lingering upper-level trough, possible shortwave energy, and weak high pressure unable to suppress development. Temperatures right around average through the term.
AVIATION /02Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/
The following discussion is for KPHL, KPNE, KTTN, KABE, KRDG, KILG, KMIV, KACY and surrounding areas.
Tonight...Prevailing VFR. Perhaps an isolated shower, but it will remain mostly dry for the rest of tonight. More confident that fog will not impact terminals since there wasn't much rain earlier in the day, but still cannot completely rule out some patchy, shallow fog. SW winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt, becoming W around 5 kt tonight. Moderate confidence.
Friday...VFR. An isolated SHRA may pass over KABE in the afternoon.
W winds increasing to 15 to 20 kt with gusts up to 25 kt. High confidence overall.
Outlook...
Friday night through Tuesday...Generally VFR. Some sub-VFR conditions possible Sunday/Sunday night. Moderate confidence.
MARINE
Wind gusts are just below 25 kt and seas are just below 5 ft. Will go ahead and cancel the Small Craft Advisory that was in effect for the ocean waters. A pre-frontal trough passes through this evening, followed by a cold front tonight. Another cold front passes through on Friday. Thunderstorms this evening may be strong to severe with damaging wind gusts and heavy rain.
SW winds 15 to 20 kt will turn W 10 to 15 kt tonight. Winds increase back up to 15 to 20 kt on Friday, though gusts should remain just below 25 kt.
Seas will average 3 to 4 ft.
Outlook...
Friday night through Tuesday...No marine headlines anticipated.
Rip Currents...
Gusty west winds will develop on Friday, ranging from 15 to 20 mph with gusts up to 25 mph. With breaking waves of 2 to 3 feet, a medium period swell, and a New Moon, there is a MODERATE risk for the development of dangerous and life threatening rip currents at New Jersey beaches, but a LOW risk at Delaware beaches.
On Saturday, the effects of the New Moon will not be as impactful, and west winds will be much lighter. There will be a LOW risk for the development of dangerous and life threatening rip currents at New Jersey and Delaware beaches.
Rip currents occur often in the vicinities of jetties and piers.
Utilize any guarded beaches if venturing out into the water. For specific beach forecasts, visit weather.gov/beach/phi
TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING
Largely spotty minor coastal flooding, but could see more widespread minor coastal flooding across Cape May and Cumberland counties in NJ and Sussex county in DE. A Coastal Flood Advisory was hoisted for those locations. Astronomical tides will be lowering, so the threat for widespread minor coastal flooding will continue to diminish with the next several high tide cycles.
PHI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
PA...None.
NJ...Coastal Flood Advisory until 1 AM EDT Friday for NJZ021-023- 024.
DE...Coastal Flood Advisory until 1 AM EDT Friday for DEZ003-004.
MD...None.
MARINE...None.
Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air Temp | Water Temp | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
ACYN4 - 8534720 - Atlantic City, NJ | 20 mi | 59 min | 67°F | 59°F | 29.53 | |||
CMAN4 - 8536110 - Cape May, NJ | 20 mi | 59 min | SSW 9.9G | 75°F | 68°F | 29.58 | ||
BRND1 - 8555889 - Brandywine Shoal Light, DE | 25 mi | 59 min | SW 16G | 77°F | 29.58 | |||
JCRN4 - Jacques Cousteau Reserve, NJ | 28 mi | 89 min | S 8 | 79°F | 29.59 | 76°F | ||
LWSD1 - 8557380 - Lewes, DE | 35 mi | 59 min | SW 5.1G | 79°F | 67°F | 29.59 | ||
SJSN4 - 8537121 - Ship John Shoal, NJ | 36 mi | 59 min | SW 8G | 77°F | 29.58 | |||
44084 | 48 mi | 59 min | 70°F | 64°F | 3 ft |
toggle option: (graph/table)
Airport Reports
EDIT HIDE  Help Click EDIT to display multiple airports. Follow links for more data.Airport | Dist | Age | Wind kt | Vis | Sky | Weather | Temp | DewPt | RH | inHg |
KWWD CAPE MAY COUNTY,NJ | 16 sm | 63 min | SW 07 | 10 sm | Overcast | 79°F | 73°F | 84% | 29.59 | |
KACY ATLANTIC CITY INTL,NJ | 21 sm | 65 min | SW 06 | 10 sm | Clear | 81°F | 70°F | 70% | 29.56 | |
KMIV MILLVILLE MUNI,NJ | 23 sm | 65 min | calm | 10 sm | Clear | 77°F | 70°F | 78% | 29.56 |
Ludlam Bay
Click for Map
Thu -- 03:10 AM EDT -0.31 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 05:10 AM EDT Moonrise
Thu -- 05:32 AM EDT Sunrise
Thu -- 08:40 AM EDT New Moon
Thu -- 08:52 AM EDT 4.19 feet High Tide
Thu -- 03:03 PM EDT -0.03 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 08:22 PM EDT Sunset
Thu -- 09:07 PM EDT 5.26 feet High Tide
Thu -- 09:07 PM EDT Moonset
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Click for Map
Thu -- 03:10 AM EDT -0.31 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 05:10 AM EDT Moonrise
Thu -- 05:32 AM EDT Sunrise
Thu -- 08:40 AM EDT New Moon
Thu -- 08:52 AM EDT 4.19 feet High Tide
Thu -- 03:03 PM EDT -0.03 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 08:22 PM EDT Sunset
Thu -- 09:07 PM EDT 5.26 feet High Tide
Thu -- 09:07 PM EDT Moonset
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Ludlam Bay, west side, New Jersey, Tide feet
12 am |
2.2 |
1 am |
1.1 |
2 am |
0.2 |
3 am |
-0.3 |
4 am |
-0 |
5 am |
0.8 |
6 am |
2 |
7 am |
3.1 |
8 am |
3.9 |
9 am |
4.2 |
10 am |
3.8 |
11 am |
3 |
12 pm |
2 |
1 pm |
1 |
2 pm |
0.3 |
3 pm |
-0 |
4 pm |
0.3 |
5 pm |
1.3 |
6 pm |
2.6 |
7 pm |
3.9 |
8 pm |
4.8 |
9 pm |
5.3 |
10 pm |
5 |
11 pm |
4.2 |
Dennis Creek
Click for Map
Thu -- 04:37 AM EDT -0.30 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 05:10 AM EDT Moonrise
Thu -- 05:33 AM EDT Sunrise
Thu -- 08:40 AM EDT New Moon
Thu -- 11:13 AM EDT 4.61 feet High Tide
Thu -- 04:22 PM EDT -0.18 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 08:23 PM EDT Sunset
Thu -- 09:07 PM EDT Moonset
Thu -- 11:34 PM EDT 6.56 feet High Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Click for Map
Thu -- 04:37 AM EDT -0.30 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 05:10 AM EDT Moonrise
Thu -- 05:33 AM EDT Sunrise
Thu -- 08:40 AM EDT New Moon
Thu -- 11:13 AM EDT 4.61 feet High Tide
Thu -- 04:22 PM EDT -0.18 feet Low Tide
Thu -- 08:23 PM EDT Sunset
Thu -- 09:07 PM EDT Moonset
Thu -- 11:34 PM EDT 6.56 feet High Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Dennis Creek, Route 47 bridge, Delaware Bay, New Jersey, Tide feet
12 am |
5.9 |
1 am |
4.5 |
2 am |
2.6 |
3 am |
0.9 |
4 am |
-0.1 |
5 am |
-0.3 |
6 am |
0.2 |
7 am |
1.2 |
8 am |
2.3 |
9 am |
3.4 |
10 am |
4.2 |
11 am |
4.6 |
12 pm |
4.4 |
1 pm |
3.5 |
2 pm |
2.1 |
3 pm |
0.7 |
4 pm |
-0.1 |
5 pm |
-0.1 |
6 pm |
0.6 |
7 pm |
1.8 |
8 pm |
3.2 |
9 pm |
4.7 |
10 pm |
5.8 |
11 pm |
6.5 |
Philadelphia, PA,
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