Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Moss Point, MS
![]() | Sunrise 6:20 AM Sunset 7:25 PM Moonrise 9:36 AM Moonset 12:00 AM |
Marine Forecasts
NOTE: Zones updated 4/16/2026. Some zones changed. Use Edit if needed.
GMZ632 Expires:202604212100;;734493 Fzus54 Kmob 210802 Cwfmob
coastal waters forecast national weather service mobile al 301 am cdt Tue apr 21 2026
gulf coastal waters okaloosa walton county line to pascagoula out 60 nm
seas are given as significant wave height - .which is the average height of the highest 1/3 of the waves. Individual waves may be more than twice the significant wave height.
gmz631-632-212100- southern mobile bay-mississippi sound- 301 am cdt Tue apr 21 2026
Today - East winds around 10 knots with gusts up to 20 knots, becoming southeast late. Waves 1 foot or less. Light chop.
Tonight - Southeast winds 5 to 10 knots, becoming east after midnight. Waves 1 foot or less. Light chop.
Wednesday - Southeast winds 5 to 10 knots. Waves 1 foot or less. Light chop.
Wednesday night - Southeast winds 5 to 10 knots. Waves 1 foot or less. Light chop.
Thursday - Southeast winds 5 to 10 knots, increasing to 10 to 15 knots with gusts up to 20 knots in the afternoon. Waves 1 foot or less, then around 2 feet in the afternoon. A moderate chop.
Thursday night - Southeast winds 5 to 10 knots. Waves 1 foot or less. Light chop.
Friday - Southeast winds 5 to 10 knots. Waves 1 foot or less. Light chop. A slight chance of showers in the morning, then a chance of showers with a slight chance of Thunderstorms in the afternoon.
Friday night - South winds around 10 knots. Waves 1 foot or less. Light chop. A slight chance of Thunderstorms in the evening. A slight chance of showers.
Saturday - South winds 5 to 10 knots. Waves 1 foot or less. Light chop. A chance of showers. A slight chance of Thunderstorms in the morning, then a chance of Thunderstorms in the afternoon.
Saturday night - Southwest winds 5 to 10 knots. Waves 1 foot or less. Light chop. A slight chance of Thunderstorms. A chance of showers, mainly in the evening.
winds and waves higher in and near Thunderstorms.
coastal waters forecast national weather service mobile al 301 am cdt Tue apr 21 2026
gulf coastal waters okaloosa walton county line to pascagoula out 60 nm
seas are given as significant wave height - .which is the average height of the highest 1/3 of the waves. Individual waves may be more than twice the significant wave height.
gmz631-632-212100- southern mobile bay-mississippi sound- 301 am cdt Tue apr 21 2026
winds and waves higher in and near Thunderstorms.
GMZ600 301 Am Cdt Tue Apr 21 2026
Synopsis - Light to moderate easterly to southeasterly into midweek will become predominately southeasterly Wednesday afternoon through Friday, turning more southerly by this weekend.
small craft should exercise caution this morning from 20 to 60 nm.
small craft should exercise caution this morning from 20 to 60 nm.
7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Moss Point, MS

NEW! Add second zone forecast
| Point of Pines Click for Map Tue -- 06:19 AM CDT Sunrise Tue -- 09:36 AM CDT Moonrise Tue -- 01:25 PM CDT 2.29 feet High Tide Tue -- 07:25 PM CDT Sunset Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Point of Pines, Bayou Cumbest, Mississippi, Tide feet
| 12 am |
| -0.6 |
| 1 am |
| -0.5 |
| 2 am |
| -0.4 |
| 3 am |
| -0.2 |
| 4 am |
| 0.1 |
| 5 am |
| 0.3 |
| 6 am |
| 0.6 |
| 7 am |
| 0.9 |
| 8 am |
| 1.3 |
| 9 am |
| 1.6 |
| 10 am |
| 1.8 |
| 11 am |
| 2 |
| 12 pm |
| 2.2 |
| 1 pm |
| 2.3 |
| 2 pm |
| 2.3 |
| 3 pm |
| 2.2 |
| 4 pm |
| 1.9 |
| 5 pm |
| 1.6 |
| 6 pm |
| 1.3 |
| 7 pm |
| 0.9 |
| 8 pm |
| 0.5 |
| 9 pm |
| 0.1 |
| 10 pm |
| -0.2 |
| 11 pm |
| -0.4 |
| Petit Bois Island Click for Map Flood direction 349 true Ebb direction 172 true Tue -- 03:58 AM CDT 0.70 knots Max Flood Tue -- 06:19 AM CDT Sunrise Tue -- 06:24 AM CDT 0.52 knots Min Flood Tue -- 09:28 AM CDT 0.91 knots Max Flood Tue -- 09:36 AM CDT Moonrise Tue -- 12:45 PM CDT -0.00 knots Slack Tue -- 06:52 PM CDT -1.13 knots Max Ebb Tue -- 07:24 PM CDT Sunset Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Petit Bois Island, Dauphin Island, between (depth 5 ft), Alabama Current, knots
| 12 am |
| 0 |
| 1 am |
| 0.2 |
| 2 am |
| 0.4 |
| 3 am |
| 0.6 |
| 4 am |
| 0.7 |
| 5 am |
| 0.6 |
| 6 am |
| 0.5 |
| 7 am |
| 0.5 |
| 8 am |
| 0.7 |
| 9 am |
| 0.9 |
| 10 am |
| 0.9 |
| 11 am |
| 0.6 |
| 12 pm |
| 0.3 |
| 1 pm |
| -0.1 |
| 2 pm |
| -0.4 |
| 3 pm |
| -0.5 |
| 4 pm |
| -0.7 |
| 5 pm |
| -0.9 |
| 6 pm |
| -1.1 |
| 7 pm |
| -1.1 |
| 8 pm |
| -1 |
| 9 pm |
| -0.8 |
| 10 pm |
| -0.5 |
| 11 pm |
| -0.4 |
Area Discussion for New Orleans/Baton Rouge, LA
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FXUS64 KLIX 210609 AFDLIX
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service New Orleans LA 109 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
New SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, AVIATION, MARINE
KEY MESSAGES
Updated at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
- A warming trend will bring the area back to the mid 80s for highs by the end of the week along with the next chance of rainfall.
SHORT TERM
(Now through Friday)
Issued at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
A deep upper trough was off the Atlantic Coast this evening, with ridging over the Rockies. A shortwave was dropping down the east side of the ridge over the Great Plains. A southern stream shortwave was moving eastward across west Texas, sending high clouds our way. A deep upper low was off the northern California coast. At the surface, high pressure was centered over Alabama, while low pressure was moving out of Canada into the Dakotas.
Temperatures at 1 AM CDT ranged from 46 at Pascagoula to 61 at Lakefront Airport in New Orleans, with only some high cirrus clouds moving across the area. The local airmass was very dry (precipitable water 0.44 inches), with essentially no moisture below 500 mb.
The shortwave over Texas will continue eastward, and be over Alabama Wednesday morning, and off the Atlantic coast by Thursday.
Shortwave ridging will build into the area for Thursday and Friday. However, with the surface high to our east continuing to shift eastward, winds will turn southerly, increasing moisture across the area. Precipitable water values finally get back to "average" Wednesday afternoon, at around an inch. Moisture will continue to increase to about 1.2 inches Thursday and 1.4 inches Friday. That should be sufficient for at least isolated convection west of Interstate 55 on Wednesday and Thursday, and across the entire area on Friday. Not expecting showers/storms to become widespread, but most areas probably wouldn't complain too much if they got a little rain.
High temperatures should creep up a degree or two each day, getting into the lower and middle 80s by Friday. Overnight lows will gradually warm as well, with most areas into the 60s by Thursday morning. We'll be about 5 degrees above normal by the end of the week.
LONG TERM
(Friday night through Monday)
Issued at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
As brought up last night there was a slight trend towards a drier scenario heading into the weekend but there are still some decent discrepancies between the operational runs and ensemble means with the sensible weather. The ensemble means from the GFES/ECS/CMCE are all a little more optimistic with respect to rain this weekend while the operational runs of each aren't. That said the GFS is still the driest with little to no rain over the area while the GDPS(Canadian) is the most optimistic of the operational runs. The ECM is a little odd as it had a rather solid line of convection moving south out of central MS and then almost dissipates it completely. It has another MCS like system sliding into the area Sunday. NBM is still in that 40-50% range but that is a slight trend down from yesterday however like we mentioned last night, the models all season have had this too wet bias in the medium range and then back off as we get closer to the day the rain was supposed to occur. Combine that with the old trusty saying "when in drought leave it out". Yeah it sounds crazy but it tends to workout. At this point I would be leaning to back off on the PoPs Friday night and through the weekend but will reluctantly just stick with the high end chance PoPs from NBM.
Looking at the weekend, that ridging over the southeastern CONUS will have flattened out already by Friday night thanks to the increase and arrival of the subtropical jet. This will lead to mostly zonal flow however, heights don't drop and may actually rise even though the the ridge will have been suppressed. This is occurring because the ridge will likely be building over the southwestern Gulf and into Mexico and southern TX. So the steady to rising mid lvl heights won't help rain chances much. There is some indication that there could be a line of convection along the cold front which will be slowly moving into the Lower MS Valley Friday night. If that is the case the question is will it have enough momentum to continue to surge south-southeast into the area before finally dissipating. Not sure how much to buy into that as the ECMWF is the only model really indicating that and it appears it may be suffering from convective feedback. There isn't a noticeable s/w in the hght contours but it shows up at the same time the large area of convection develops in the model so there is either something there and it just becomes more evident as the convection develops making it more legit or something causes the convection to develop in the model and the hghts fall in response and because of that the convection feeds back off of that and continues to push south-southeast, so leaning towards the feedback issue and thus not trusting the big blowup of convection.
Well, that moves through and we move into more zonal to possible weak west-northwest flow. There will be additional impulses moving through the mid lvl flow and if we are under a west-northwest flow it would allow a subtle disturbance to slide into the area Saturday night/Sunday. If we remain under more zonal flow then we will likely not see much in the way of impacts from any subtle impulse. Again leaning more towards a drier solution which would also favor a hotter weekend. Highs now are expected to be in the mid to possibly upper 80s this weekend but MOS and the NBM haven't quite started to trend that warm yet. /CAB/
AVIATION
(06Z TAFS)
Issued at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
VFR conditions in place, and expected to continue through the forecast period. Mainly thin cirrus moving across the area this morning, and don't see much change in that today. Forecast soundings don't show much moisture below 550 mb this morning. This may eventually change tonight or Wednesday, with a thick enough layer of moisture to produce some mid-level clouds between FL060 and FL100.
MARINE
Issued at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
Winds have been abating somewhat over the open waters, with most observations below 20 knots. Will allow Small Craft Advisory to expire, and have replaced it with Small Craft Exercise Caution headlines for most of the open waters through the afternoon. That headline may need extended into the overnight hours for some of the zones. Winds will gradually regain a southerly component today, and remain southerly through the end of the week. There will likely be multiple periods over the next 5 days where sustained winds get a little above 15 knots, potentially requiring Small Craft Exercise Caution headlines on a few occasions.
LIX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
LA...None.
GM...None.
MS...None.
GM...None.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service New Orleans LA 109 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
New SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, AVIATION, MARINE
KEY MESSAGES
Updated at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
- A warming trend will bring the area back to the mid 80s for highs by the end of the week along with the next chance of rainfall.
SHORT TERM
(Now through Friday)
Issued at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
A deep upper trough was off the Atlantic Coast this evening, with ridging over the Rockies. A shortwave was dropping down the east side of the ridge over the Great Plains. A southern stream shortwave was moving eastward across west Texas, sending high clouds our way. A deep upper low was off the northern California coast. At the surface, high pressure was centered over Alabama, while low pressure was moving out of Canada into the Dakotas.
Temperatures at 1 AM CDT ranged from 46 at Pascagoula to 61 at Lakefront Airport in New Orleans, with only some high cirrus clouds moving across the area. The local airmass was very dry (precipitable water 0.44 inches), with essentially no moisture below 500 mb.
The shortwave over Texas will continue eastward, and be over Alabama Wednesday morning, and off the Atlantic coast by Thursday.
Shortwave ridging will build into the area for Thursday and Friday. However, with the surface high to our east continuing to shift eastward, winds will turn southerly, increasing moisture across the area. Precipitable water values finally get back to "average" Wednesday afternoon, at around an inch. Moisture will continue to increase to about 1.2 inches Thursday and 1.4 inches Friday. That should be sufficient for at least isolated convection west of Interstate 55 on Wednesday and Thursday, and across the entire area on Friday. Not expecting showers/storms to become widespread, but most areas probably wouldn't complain too much if they got a little rain.
High temperatures should creep up a degree or two each day, getting into the lower and middle 80s by Friday. Overnight lows will gradually warm as well, with most areas into the 60s by Thursday morning. We'll be about 5 degrees above normal by the end of the week.
LONG TERM
(Friday night through Monday)
Issued at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
As brought up last night there was a slight trend towards a drier scenario heading into the weekend but there are still some decent discrepancies between the operational runs and ensemble means with the sensible weather. The ensemble means from the GFES/ECS/CMCE are all a little more optimistic with respect to rain this weekend while the operational runs of each aren't. That said the GFS is still the driest with little to no rain over the area while the GDPS(Canadian) is the most optimistic of the operational runs. The ECM is a little odd as it had a rather solid line of convection moving south out of central MS and then almost dissipates it completely. It has another MCS like system sliding into the area Sunday. NBM is still in that 40-50% range but that is a slight trend down from yesterday however like we mentioned last night, the models all season have had this too wet bias in the medium range and then back off as we get closer to the day the rain was supposed to occur. Combine that with the old trusty saying "when in drought leave it out". Yeah it sounds crazy but it tends to workout. At this point I would be leaning to back off on the PoPs Friday night and through the weekend but will reluctantly just stick with the high end chance PoPs from NBM.
Looking at the weekend, that ridging over the southeastern CONUS will have flattened out already by Friday night thanks to the increase and arrival of the subtropical jet. This will lead to mostly zonal flow however, heights don't drop and may actually rise even though the the ridge will have been suppressed. This is occurring because the ridge will likely be building over the southwestern Gulf and into Mexico and southern TX. So the steady to rising mid lvl heights won't help rain chances much. There is some indication that there could be a line of convection along the cold front which will be slowly moving into the Lower MS Valley Friday night. If that is the case the question is will it have enough momentum to continue to surge south-southeast into the area before finally dissipating. Not sure how much to buy into that as the ECMWF is the only model really indicating that and it appears it may be suffering from convective feedback. There isn't a noticeable s/w in the hght contours but it shows up at the same time the large area of convection develops in the model so there is either something there and it just becomes more evident as the convection develops making it more legit or something causes the convection to develop in the model and the hghts fall in response and because of that the convection feeds back off of that and continues to push south-southeast, so leaning towards the feedback issue and thus not trusting the big blowup of convection.
Well, that moves through and we move into more zonal to possible weak west-northwest flow. There will be additional impulses moving through the mid lvl flow and if we are under a west-northwest flow it would allow a subtle disturbance to slide into the area Saturday night/Sunday. If we remain under more zonal flow then we will likely not see much in the way of impacts from any subtle impulse. Again leaning more towards a drier solution which would also favor a hotter weekend. Highs now are expected to be in the mid to possibly upper 80s this weekend but MOS and the NBM haven't quite started to trend that warm yet. /CAB/
AVIATION
(06Z TAFS)
Issued at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
VFR conditions in place, and expected to continue through the forecast period. Mainly thin cirrus moving across the area this morning, and don't see much change in that today. Forecast soundings don't show much moisture below 550 mb this morning. This may eventually change tonight or Wednesday, with a thick enough layer of moisture to produce some mid-level clouds between FL060 and FL100.
MARINE
Issued at 105 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026
Winds have been abating somewhat over the open waters, with most observations below 20 knots. Will allow Small Craft Advisory to expire, and have replaced it with Small Craft Exercise Caution headlines for most of the open waters through the afternoon. That headline may need extended into the overnight hours for some of the zones. Winds will gradually regain a southerly component today, and remain southerly through the end of the week. There will likely be multiple periods over the next 5 days where sustained winds get a little above 15 knots, potentially requiring Small Craft Exercise Caution headlines on a few occasions.
LIX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
LA...None.
GM...None.
MS...None.
GM...None.
| Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air | Water | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
| GDXM6 - Grand Bay Reserve, MS | 2 mi | 61 min | NNW 5.1 | 55°F | 30.24 | 51°F | ||
| PNLM6 - 8741533 - Pascagoula NOAA Lab, MS | 7 mi | 46 min | 73°F | |||||
| PTBM6 - 8741003 - Petit Bois Island, MS | 13 mi | 46 min | N 6G | 64°F | 30.26 | |||
| DPHA1 | 21 mi | 106 min | 5.1 | 65°F | 70°F | 30.23 | ||
| MBPA1 | 21 mi | 46 min | 55°F | |||||
| DILA1 | 22 mi | 46 min | N 6G | 65°F | 69°F | 30.21 | ||
| EFLA1 | 23 mi | 46 min | 64°F | 55°F | ||||
| 42357 | 24 mi | 76 min | 70°F | 1 ft | 30.31 | |||
| 42067 - USM3M02 | 25 mi | 106 min | 5.8G | 68°F | 71°F | 30.24 | 55°F | |
| FRMA1 | 26 mi | 46 min | N 6G | 67°F | 30.24 | 59°F | ||
| MCGA1 - 8736897 - Coast Guard Sector Mobile, AL | 27 mi | 46 min | NW 4.1G | 55°F | 73°F | 30.25 | ||
| PTOA1 | 29 mi | 46 min | 61°F | 49°F | ||||
| OBLA1 - 8737048 - Mobile State Docks, AL | 30 mi | 46 min | 56°F | 73°F | 30.23 | |||
| WKXA1 - Weeks Bay Reserve, AL | 33 mi | 61 min | 0 | 48°F | 30.24 | 48°F | ||
| WYCM6 - 8747437 - Bay Waveland Yacht Club, MS | 47 mi | 46 min | N 4.1G | 61°F | 68°F | 30.21 |
Wind History for Petit Bois Island, Port of Pascagoula, MS
toggle option: (graph/table)
Airport Reports
Link to 1 hour of 5 minute data for KPQL
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) for KPQL
Wind History Graph: PQL
(wind in knots)GEOS Local Image of Southern Mississippi Valley
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