Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Ormond-by-the-Sea, FL
February 18, 2025 8:58 PM EST (01:58 UTC) Change Location
![]() | Sunrise 6:58 AM Sunset 6:17 PM Moonrise 11:56 PM Moonset 10:03 AM |
AMZ454 Expires:202502191030;;134205 Fzus52 Kjax 182353 Cwfjax
coastal waters forecast for northeast florida/southeast georgia national weather service jacksonville fl 653 pm est Tue feb 18 2025
atlantic coastal waters from altamaha sound ga to flagler beach fl out to 60 nm.
seas are provided as a range of the average height of the highest 1/3 of the waves, along with the occasional height of the average highest 1/10 of the waves.
amz450-452-454-191030- coastal waters from altamaha sound to fernandina beach fl out 20 nm- coastal waters from fernandina beach to st. Augustine fl out 20 nm- coastal waters from st. Augustine to flagler beach fl out 20 nm- 653 pm est Tue feb 18 2025
Rest of tonight - Northeast winds 10 to 15 knots, diminishing to 5 to 10 knots. Seas around 3 feet. Wave detail: northeast 3 feet at 4 seconds and east 2 feet at 9 seconds. Intracoastal waters a moderate chop. A slight chance of showers.
Wednesday - Northeast winds 10 to 15 knots. Seas 3 to 4 feet, occasionally to 5 feet. Wave detail: northeast 3 feet at 5 seconds and east 2 feet at 9 seconds. Intracoastal waters a moderate chop. Showers.
Wednesday night - North winds 15 to 20 knots. Seas 3 to 5 feet, occasionally to 6 feet. Wave detail: north 4 feet at 5 seconds and southeast 2 feet at 9 seconds. Intracoastal waters choppy. A chance of showers in the evening.
Thursday - Northwest winds 15 to 20 knots. Seas 3 to 5 feet, occasionally to 6 feet. Wave detail: north 4 feet at 5 seconds and southeast 2 feet at 9 seconds. Intracoastal waters choppy.
Thursday night and Friday - Northeast winds 15 to 20 knots. Seas 4 to 6 feet, occasionally to 8 feet. Wave detail: north 6 feet at 6 seconds and east 2 feet at 9 seconds. Intracoastal waters choppy.
Friday night - Northeast winds 10 to 15 knots. Seas 3 to 5 feet, occasionally to 6 feet. Wave detail: northeast 5 feet at 8 seconds. Intracoastal waters a moderate chop.
Saturday - Northeast winds 5 to 10 knots, becoming north. Seas 2 to 4 feet, occasionally to 5 feet. Intracoastal waters light chop.
Sunday - Northwest winds 5 to 10 knots. Seas 2 to 3 feet. Intracoastal waters light chop. A slight chance of showers.
coastal waters forecast for northeast florida/southeast georgia national weather service jacksonville fl 653 pm est Tue feb 18 2025
atlantic coastal waters from altamaha sound ga to flagler beach fl out to 60 nm.
seas are provided as a range of the average height of the highest 1/3 of the waves, along with the occasional height of the average highest 1/10 of the waves.
amz450-452-454-191030- coastal waters from altamaha sound to fernandina beach fl out 20 nm- coastal waters from fernandina beach to st. Augustine fl out 20 nm- coastal waters from st. Augustine to flagler beach fl out 20 nm- 653 pm est Tue feb 18 2025
AMZ400 Synopsis For Altamaha Sound Ga To Flagler Beach Fl Out To 60 Nm- 653 Pm Est Tue Feb 18 2025
Synopsis -
low pressure will develop along the northern gulf coast tonight and then shift across north central florida on Wednesday. This feature will spread rainfall across our local waters beginning Wednesday morning with isolated Thunderstorms possible in the afternoon hours. Rainfall comes to an end on Wednesday night. High pressure then builds into the southeastern states on Thursday. A surge of north- northwesterly winds will bring small craft advisory conditions to the offshore waters by early Thursday morning, and then across all local waters by Thursday night. Winds and waves subside on Friday as high pressure weakens. Another weak low pressure center developing late in the weekend over the southern gulf could spread a few showers over the northeast florida waters by Sunday.
Gulf stream -
the approximate location of the west wall of the gulf stream as of feb 15, 2025 at 1200 utc - .
57 nautical miles east of flagler beach. 66 nautical miles east of saint augustine beach. 75 nautical miles east of jacksonville beach. 95 nautical miles east southeast of st simons island.
this data courtesy of the naval oceanographic office.
low pressure will develop along the northern gulf coast tonight and then shift across north central florida on Wednesday. This feature will spread rainfall across our local waters beginning Wednesday morning with isolated Thunderstorms possible in the afternoon hours. Rainfall comes to an end on Wednesday night. High pressure then builds into the southeastern states on Thursday. A surge of north- northwesterly winds will bring small craft advisory conditions to the offshore waters by early Thursday morning, and then across all local waters by Thursday night. Winds and waves subside on Friday as high pressure weakens. Another weak low pressure center developing late in the weekend over the southern gulf could spread a few showers over the northeast florida waters by Sunday.
the approximate location of the west wall of the gulf stream as of feb 15, 2025 at 1200 utc - .
57 nautical miles east of flagler beach. 66 nautical miles east of saint augustine beach. 75 nautical miles east of jacksonville beach. 95 nautical miles east southeast of st simons island.
this data courtesy of the naval oceanographic office.

NEW! Add second zone forecast
Smith Creek Click for Map Tue -- 04:40 AM EST 0.88 feet High Tide Tue -- 07:00 AM EST Sunrise Tue -- 10:03 AM EST Moonset Tue -- 11:11 AM EST 0.28 feet Low Tide Tue -- 04:52 PM EST 0.82 feet High Tide Tue -- 06:16 PM EST Sunset Tue -- 11:09 PM EST 0.22 feet Low Tide Tue -- 11:55 PM EST Moonrise Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Smith Creek, Flagler Beach, Florida, Tide feet
12 am |
0.3 |
1 am |
0.4 |
2 am |
0.6 |
3 am |
0.8 |
4 am |
0.9 |
5 am |
0.9 |
6 am |
0.8 |
7 am |
0.7 |
8 am |
0.6 |
9 am |
0.4 |
10 am |
0.3 |
11 am |
0.3 |
12 pm |
0.3 |
1 pm |
0.4 |
2 pm |
0.5 |
3 pm |
0.7 |
4 pm |
0.8 |
5 pm |
0.8 |
6 pm |
0.8 |
7 pm |
0.7 |
8 pm |
0.5 |
9 pm |
0.4 |
10 pm |
0.3 |
11 pm |
0.2 |
Ormond Beach Click for Map Tue -- 03:24 AM EST 0.64 feet High Tide Tue -- 07:00 AM EST Sunrise Tue -- 10:03 AM EST Moonset Tue -- 10:42 AM EST 0.42 feet Low Tide Tue -- 03:36 PM EST 0.60 feet High Tide Tue -- 06:16 PM EST Sunset Tue -- 10:40 PM EST 0.34 feet Low Tide Tue -- 11:54 PM EST Moonrise Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Ormond Beach, Halifax River, Florida, Tide feet
12 am |
0.4 |
1 am |
0.5 |
2 am |
0.6 |
3 am |
0.6 |
4 am |
0.6 |
5 am |
0.6 |
6 am |
0.6 |
7 am |
0.5 |
8 am |
0.5 |
9 am |
0.5 |
10 am |
0.4 |
11 am |
0.4 |
12 pm |
0.5 |
1 pm |
0.5 |
2 pm |
0.6 |
3 pm |
0.6 |
4 pm |
0.6 |
5 pm |
0.6 |
6 pm |
0.5 |
7 pm |
0.5 |
8 pm |
0.4 |
9 pm |
0.4 |
10 pm |
0.3 |
11 pm |
0.3 |
Area Discussion for Jacksonville, FL
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FXUS62 KJAX 182356 AFDJAX
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Jacksonville FL 656 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
BENEFICIAL RAINFALL ARRIVES EARLY WED MORNING
UPDATE
Issued at 656 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
For the latest NE FL and SE GA Daily Key Messages please visit: https:// www.weather.gov/media/jax/briefings/nws-jax-briefing.pdf
No major changes with the evening update. Forecast remains on track for a wet Wednesday.
SYNOPSIS
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Afternoon surface analysis depicts high pressure (1027 millibars)
situated along the Carolina coast, with a coastal trough developing over our local Atlantic waters. Meanwhile, an Arctic high pressure center (1051 millibars) was spilling southward through the Plains states from the Canadian Prairies. Otherwise, weak low pressure was developing along a frontal boundary that was situated over the Texas Hill Country
Aloft
fast zonal flow prevails across the southern tier of the nation to the south of deep troughing that was digging over the northern third of the nation. Otherwise, a shortwave trough embedded within the zonal flow pattern was emerging over the Southern Plains states. The fast zonal flow was transporting mostly thin high altitude cloudiness across our skies, with low and mid-level cloud cover advancing northward across north central FL. Temperatures at 20Z were mostly in the 60s, except around 70 degrees in north central FL. Dewpoints at 20Z were crashing into the 20s across inland southeast GA, with values in the 30s across the Suwannee Valley and the 40s elsewhere, except around 50 for north central and coastal northeast FL.
NEAR TERM
(through Tonight)
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Mid level cloud cover will gradually increase from south to north through this evening as coastal troughing sharpens over our coastal waters later today. Meanwhile, the aforementioned shortwave trough migrating across the Southern Plains states this evening will migrate quickly across the Ozarks overnight, reaching the Tennessee Valley by sunrise on Wednesday. This system will result in cyclogenesis over the western Gulf this evening, with this weak low pressure center migrating quickly eastward to the south of the northern Gulf coast after midnight. This weather pattern will result in warm frontogenesis near the I-4 corridor in central FL towards sunrise, with isentropic lift strengthening in tandem with a sharpening coastal trough over our near shore waters after midnight. Light rainfall will quickly spread eastward along the I-10 corridor after midnight, reaching the Suwannee Valley and portions of inland southeast GA during the predawn hours, with rainfall potentially approaching the I-95 corridor in northeast FL right around sunrise as steadier rainfall approaches the Suwannee Valley. Fair skies early this evening will allow low temperatures to fall to the mid and upper 40s for inland locations along and north of I-10 by midnight, while thickening multi- layered cloud cover after midnight keeps lows in the low to mid 50s elsewhere. Temperatures will remain steady or slowly rising area-wide towards sunrise as warm air advection develops from south to north overnight.
SHORT TERM
(Wednesday and Thursday)
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
A cold front will bring widespread heavy showers on Wednesday across the area, with rainfall starting in the early morning.
Overall, high PWATs for February will promote rainfall totals near 1-1.5" with locally higher amounts along the I-10 corridor, reaching near 2.0". The main band of showers will exit southeast Georgia in the afternoon, with areas south of Jacksonville getting the bulk of their rainfall totals in the afternoon and evening hours. Ahead of the heavier showers, north central Florida will be able to heat up into the lower 70s, allowing enough instability to create a low thunderstorm chance, primarily in the early evening.
Colder air will filter in with the help of breezy northwesterly winds behind the frontal passage on Thursday. Highs will stay in the upper 40s north of Waycross, with only a few areas in north central Florida reaching the 60s despite cloud cover decreasing throughout the day. North and west of the St. Johns river basin will see below freezing temperatures Thursday night, with only the northeast Florida coast staying in the mid to upper 30s. With the breezier winds lingering overnight, wind chills will dip into the teens to 20s across most of SE GA and NE FL.
Reminder of local Wind Chill Advisory criteria, given an advisory will likely be needed for much of the area Thursday night:
SE GA: wind chills 15-20F NE FL: wind chills 20-25F
LONG TERM
(Friday through next Tuesday)
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Mainly cooler and dry conditions are expected this weekend through early next week as high pressure builds to the north. The only rain potential will be some isolated coastal showers on Sunday and Sunday night as weak frontal boundary lifts from central Florida off the Atlantic coast.
High temperatures Friday will be chilly, only reaching the 50s area-wide, with Friday night being another freezing night, with lows dipping into the upper 20s to 30s for inland locations and upper 30s to 40s along the coast. Winds will calm enough overnight to allow for frost formation for SE GA and the Suwannee valley. A slow, gradual warm up is expected each day from Saturday through Tuesday, with highs in the 60s to finally reaching the 70s again early next week. Low temperatures from Saturday night onward will be above freezing.
AVIATION
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 622 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
VFR conditions will prevail at the regional terminals through about 10Z Wednesday. Multi-layered cloud cover will thicken from west to east after midnight tonight, with light rainfall and MVFR ceilings expanding eastward along the Interstate 10 corridor and inland southeast GA during the predawn hours. MVFR conditions prevail for all terminals by 13Z. Ceilings will then lower to IFR by 16Z at SSI, the Duval County terminals, and GNV as heavier rainfall arrives from the west. IFR conditions should prevail at SGJ by 18Z Wednesday. Winds subside later this evening. Northerly winds increase after 14Z and shift to northeasterly between 5-10 kts after 18Z.
MARINE
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Weak low pressure will develop along the northern Gulf coast tonight, with this feature moving quickly eastward on Wednesday, crossing north central Florida during the afternoon hours and then strengthening as it pivots off the southeastern seaboard on Wednesday night. This feature will spread rainfall across our local waters on Wednesday morning, with isolated embedded thunderstorms possible during the afternoon hours, mainly for the waters south of St. Augustine. Seas of 2 to 4 feet will prevail both near shore and offshore through Wednesday.
Rainfall will then exit our local waters on Wednesday night, followed by Arctic high pressure building into the southeastern states on Thursday and Thursday night. A surge of north- northwesterly winds will bring Small Craft Advisory conditions to the offshore waters by late Wednesday night or early Thursday morning, with speeds increasing to near Small Craft Advisory conditions near shore through early Friday. Seas of 3 to 5 feet near shore on Wednesday night and Thursday will build to 4 to 6 feet from Thursday evening through Friday evening. Seas of 4 to 5 feet offshore on Wednesday night will build to 5 to 7 feet from Thursday through Friday evening. High pressure will then weaken over the southeastern states on Friday night and Saturday, allowing winds and seas to diminish. Another weak low pressure center developing late in the weekend over the southern Gulf could spread a few showers over the northeast Florida waters by Sunday.
Rip Currents: A longer period easterly ocean swell will combine with northeasterly winds to keep a moderate risk of rip currents in place at all area beaches through Thursday. Strengthening northeasterly winds on Friday could raise the risk to high.
FIRE WEATHER
Issued at 1223 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Generally light northeasterly transport winds will combine with low mixing heights to create poor daytime dispersion values at most locations this afternoon. A dry air mass will prevail inland, where minimum relative humidity values will fall to around 30 percent for locations west of the Interstate 95 corridor this afternoon. Rainfall will then overspread most of our area early on Wednesday morning, with a few embedded thunderstorms expected across north central FL, where transport winds will shift to southwesterly and will become breezy by early afternoon. North to northeasterly surface and transport winds will prevail across southeast GA and northeast FL, with speeds gradually increasing during the afternoon hours. Clouds and rainfall will result in low daytime dispersion values for all but north central FL, where poor values are forecast. Surface and transport winds will then shift to northwesterly on Wednesday night and Thursday, with breezy conditions ushering in a colder and drier air mass and creating good daytime dispersion values nearly area-wide.
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
AMG 45 54 37 49 / 40 90 30 0 SSI 51 59 41 53 / 40 90 30 0 JAX 49 61 42 56 / 30 90 40 0 SGJ 54 66 45 58 / 20 80 30 0 GNV 51 65 44 58 / 20 70 40 0 OCF 54 71 48 61 / 20 60 30 0
JAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
FL...None.
GA...None.
AM...None.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Jacksonville FL 656 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
BENEFICIAL RAINFALL ARRIVES EARLY WED MORNING
UPDATE
Issued at 656 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
For the latest NE FL and SE GA Daily Key Messages please visit: https:// www.weather.gov/media/jax/briefings/nws-jax-briefing.pdf
No major changes with the evening update. Forecast remains on track for a wet Wednesday.
SYNOPSIS
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Afternoon surface analysis depicts high pressure (1027 millibars)
situated along the Carolina coast, with a coastal trough developing over our local Atlantic waters. Meanwhile, an Arctic high pressure center (1051 millibars) was spilling southward through the Plains states from the Canadian Prairies. Otherwise, weak low pressure was developing along a frontal boundary that was situated over the Texas Hill Country
Aloft
fast zonal flow prevails across the southern tier of the nation to the south of deep troughing that was digging over the northern third of the nation. Otherwise, a shortwave trough embedded within the zonal flow pattern was emerging over the Southern Plains states. The fast zonal flow was transporting mostly thin high altitude cloudiness across our skies, with low and mid-level cloud cover advancing northward across north central FL. Temperatures at 20Z were mostly in the 60s, except around 70 degrees in north central FL. Dewpoints at 20Z were crashing into the 20s across inland southeast GA, with values in the 30s across the Suwannee Valley and the 40s elsewhere, except around 50 for north central and coastal northeast FL.
NEAR TERM
(through Tonight)
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Mid level cloud cover will gradually increase from south to north through this evening as coastal troughing sharpens over our coastal waters later today. Meanwhile, the aforementioned shortwave trough migrating across the Southern Plains states this evening will migrate quickly across the Ozarks overnight, reaching the Tennessee Valley by sunrise on Wednesday. This system will result in cyclogenesis over the western Gulf this evening, with this weak low pressure center migrating quickly eastward to the south of the northern Gulf coast after midnight. This weather pattern will result in warm frontogenesis near the I-4 corridor in central FL towards sunrise, with isentropic lift strengthening in tandem with a sharpening coastal trough over our near shore waters after midnight. Light rainfall will quickly spread eastward along the I-10 corridor after midnight, reaching the Suwannee Valley and portions of inland southeast GA during the predawn hours, with rainfall potentially approaching the I-95 corridor in northeast FL right around sunrise as steadier rainfall approaches the Suwannee Valley. Fair skies early this evening will allow low temperatures to fall to the mid and upper 40s for inland locations along and north of I-10 by midnight, while thickening multi- layered cloud cover after midnight keeps lows in the low to mid 50s elsewhere. Temperatures will remain steady or slowly rising area-wide towards sunrise as warm air advection develops from south to north overnight.
SHORT TERM
(Wednesday and Thursday)
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
A cold front will bring widespread heavy showers on Wednesday across the area, with rainfall starting in the early morning.
Overall, high PWATs for February will promote rainfall totals near 1-1.5" with locally higher amounts along the I-10 corridor, reaching near 2.0". The main band of showers will exit southeast Georgia in the afternoon, with areas south of Jacksonville getting the bulk of their rainfall totals in the afternoon and evening hours. Ahead of the heavier showers, north central Florida will be able to heat up into the lower 70s, allowing enough instability to create a low thunderstorm chance, primarily in the early evening.
Colder air will filter in with the help of breezy northwesterly winds behind the frontal passage on Thursday. Highs will stay in the upper 40s north of Waycross, with only a few areas in north central Florida reaching the 60s despite cloud cover decreasing throughout the day. North and west of the St. Johns river basin will see below freezing temperatures Thursday night, with only the northeast Florida coast staying in the mid to upper 30s. With the breezier winds lingering overnight, wind chills will dip into the teens to 20s across most of SE GA and NE FL.
Reminder of local Wind Chill Advisory criteria, given an advisory will likely be needed for much of the area Thursday night:
SE GA: wind chills 15-20F NE FL: wind chills 20-25F
LONG TERM
(Friday through next Tuesday)
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Mainly cooler and dry conditions are expected this weekend through early next week as high pressure builds to the north. The only rain potential will be some isolated coastal showers on Sunday and Sunday night as weak frontal boundary lifts from central Florida off the Atlantic coast.
High temperatures Friday will be chilly, only reaching the 50s area-wide, with Friday night being another freezing night, with lows dipping into the upper 20s to 30s for inland locations and upper 30s to 40s along the coast. Winds will calm enough overnight to allow for frost formation for SE GA and the Suwannee valley. A slow, gradual warm up is expected each day from Saturday through Tuesday, with highs in the 60s to finally reaching the 70s again early next week. Low temperatures from Saturday night onward will be above freezing.
AVIATION
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 622 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
VFR conditions will prevail at the regional terminals through about 10Z Wednesday. Multi-layered cloud cover will thicken from west to east after midnight tonight, with light rainfall and MVFR ceilings expanding eastward along the Interstate 10 corridor and inland southeast GA during the predawn hours. MVFR conditions prevail for all terminals by 13Z. Ceilings will then lower to IFR by 16Z at SSI, the Duval County terminals, and GNV as heavier rainfall arrives from the west. IFR conditions should prevail at SGJ by 18Z Wednesday. Winds subside later this evening. Northerly winds increase after 14Z and shift to northeasterly between 5-10 kts after 18Z.
MARINE
Issued at 253 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Weak low pressure will develop along the northern Gulf coast tonight, with this feature moving quickly eastward on Wednesday, crossing north central Florida during the afternoon hours and then strengthening as it pivots off the southeastern seaboard on Wednesday night. This feature will spread rainfall across our local waters on Wednesday morning, with isolated embedded thunderstorms possible during the afternoon hours, mainly for the waters south of St. Augustine. Seas of 2 to 4 feet will prevail both near shore and offshore through Wednesday.
Rainfall will then exit our local waters on Wednesday night, followed by Arctic high pressure building into the southeastern states on Thursday and Thursday night. A surge of north- northwesterly winds will bring Small Craft Advisory conditions to the offshore waters by late Wednesday night or early Thursday morning, with speeds increasing to near Small Craft Advisory conditions near shore through early Friday. Seas of 3 to 5 feet near shore on Wednesday night and Thursday will build to 4 to 6 feet from Thursday evening through Friday evening. Seas of 4 to 5 feet offshore on Wednesday night will build to 5 to 7 feet from Thursday through Friday evening. High pressure will then weaken over the southeastern states on Friday night and Saturday, allowing winds and seas to diminish. Another weak low pressure center developing late in the weekend over the southern Gulf could spread a few showers over the northeast Florida waters by Sunday.
Rip Currents: A longer period easterly ocean swell will combine with northeasterly winds to keep a moderate risk of rip currents in place at all area beaches through Thursday. Strengthening northeasterly winds on Friday could raise the risk to high.
FIRE WEATHER
Issued at 1223 PM EST Tue Feb 18 2025
Generally light northeasterly transport winds will combine with low mixing heights to create poor daytime dispersion values at most locations this afternoon. A dry air mass will prevail inland, where minimum relative humidity values will fall to around 30 percent for locations west of the Interstate 95 corridor this afternoon. Rainfall will then overspread most of our area early on Wednesday morning, with a few embedded thunderstorms expected across north central FL, where transport winds will shift to southwesterly and will become breezy by early afternoon. North to northeasterly surface and transport winds will prevail across southeast GA and northeast FL, with speeds gradually increasing during the afternoon hours. Clouds and rainfall will result in low daytime dispersion values for all but north central FL, where poor values are forecast. Surface and transport winds will then shift to northwesterly on Wednesday night and Thursday, with breezy conditions ushering in a colder and drier air mass and creating good daytime dispersion values nearly area-wide.
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
AMG 45 54 37 49 / 40 90 30 0 SSI 51 59 41 53 / 40 90 30 0 JAX 49 61 42 56 / 30 90 40 0 SGJ 54 66 45 58 / 20 80 30 0 GNV 51 65 44 58 / 20 70 40 0 OCF 54 71 48 61 / 20 60 30 0
JAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
FL...None.
GA...None.
AM...None.
Wind History for I-295 Bridge, St Johns River, FL
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Airport Reports
Link to 1 hour of 5 minute data for KXFL
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) for KXFL
Wind History Graph: XFL
(wind in knots)GEOS Local Image of southeast
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Jacksonville, FL,

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