Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Moss Point, MS

December 11, 2023 7:11 AM CST (13:11 UTC)
Sunrise 6:39AM Sunset 4:55PM Moonrise 6:21AM Moonset 4:42PM
GMZ632 Mississippi Sound- 328 Am Cst Mon Dec 11 2023
.small craft should exercise caution early this morning...
Today..North winds 15 to 20 knots early this morning, decreasing to 5 to 10 knots in the afternoon. Waves around 2 feet this morning, then 1 foot or less.
Tonight..Northeast winds 5 to 10 knots, increasing to 10 to 15 knots after midnight. Waves 1 foot or less.
Tuesday..Northeast winds 10 to 15 knots. Waves around 2 feet in the morning, then 1 foot or less.
Tuesday night..Northeast winds 10 to 15 knots with gusts up to 20 knots. Waves around 2 feet.
Wednesday..Northeast winds 15 to 20 knots. Waves around 2 feet.
Wednesday night..Northeast winds 20 to 25 knots, diminishing to 15 to 20 knots after midnight. Waves 2 to 3 feet.
Thursday..Northeast winds 20 to 25 knots. Waves 2 to 3 feet.
Thursday night..East winds 20 to 25 knots. Waves 2 to 4 feet.
Friday..East winds 20 to 25 knots. Waves 2 to 4 feet. A slight chance of showers in the afternoon.
Friday night..Northeast winds around 20 knots. Waves 2 to 4 feet. A slight chance of showers.
.small craft should exercise caution early this morning...
Today..North winds 15 to 20 knots early this morning, decreasing to 5 to 10 knots in the afternoon. Waves around 2 feet this morning, then 1 foot or less.
Tonight..Northeast winds 5 to 10 knots, increasing to 10 to 15 knots after midnight. Waves 1 foot or less.
Tuesday..Northeast winds 10 to 15 knots. Waves around 2 feet in the morning, then 1 foot or less.
Tuesday night..Northeast winds 10 to 15 knots with gusts up to 20 knots. Waves around 2 feet.
Wednesday..Northeast winds 15 to 20 knots. Waves around 2 feet.
Wednesday night..Northeast winds 20 to 25 knots, diminishing to 15 to 20 knots after midnight. Waves 2 to 3 feet.
Thursday..Northeast winds 20 to 25 knots. Waves 2 to 3 feet.
Thursday night..East winds 20 to 25 knots. Waves 2 to 4 feet.
Friday..East winds 20 to 25 knots. Waves 2 to 4 feet. A slight chance of showers in the afternoon.
Friday night..Northeast winds around 20 knots. Waves 2 to 4 feet. A slight chance of showers.
GMZ600 328 Am Cst Mon Dec 11 2023
Synopsis..A moderate to strong offshore flow will continue through the early morning hours before gradually diminishing into this afternoon. A light to moderate northeasterly flow will prevail through Tuesday. A much stronger northeasterly to easterly flow pattern will become established over the marine area with an an increase in seas during the middle to latter part of the week.
Synopsis..A moderate to strong offshore flow will continue through the early morning hours before gradually diminishing into this afternoon. A light to moderate northeasterly flow will prevail through Tuesday. A much stronger northeasterly to easterly flow pattern will become established over the marine area with an an increase in seas during the middle to latter part of the week.

Area Discussion for - New Orleans/Baton Rouge, LA
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FXUS64 KLIX 110826 AFDLIX
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service New Orleans LA 226 AM CST Mon Dec 11 2023
NEW SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, MARINE
SHORT TERM
(Today through Wednesday)
Issued at 225 AM CST Mon Dec 11 2023
Pressure gradient continues to breakdown from west to east across the region this morning. Along with clear skies and calmer winds, temperatures have dropped well into the 30s north of I10/12 with some locations at or winding up just a tad below freezing. A rather cool day is in store, however, with high pressure building in over the lower MS River Valley, expect plenty of sunshine today, so overall pleasant.
The high pressure begins to lift north and east later tonight and into the day on Tuesday. Still with calmer winds and clear skies temperatures will likely drop into the 30s across the northern tier again by Tuesday morning...as always the cooler locations look to be in the typical drainage areas around the Pascagoula and Pearl River Basins. That said, guidance does have the surface high pressure moving north and eastward away, which may help allow pressure gradient to tighten once again, especially for the southern tier or closer to the immediate coast. These areas may see overnight lows held up just a bit, especially when compared to Monday morning. A strong easterly fetch will begin to develop by late Tuesday, which will help increase boundary layer moisture at least slightly despite the somewhat unfavorable fetch. The previous frontal boundary that recently moved through our region in the last day or two will get stuck over the southern Gulf under the strong surface high pressure. This will again help increase surface winds just a bit by Wednesday. That said, the forecast area should continue to remain dry as the remnant/passive front to our south will be just out of reach for any type of isentropic upglide that would be needed for the development of showers.
(Frye)
LONG TERM
(Wednesday night through Sunday)
Issued at 225 AM CST Mon Dec 11 2023
The long term begins dry for the most part, but a tad on the breezy side as pressure gradient between a strong 1040mb+ high pressure system near the Great Lakes and lower pressures over the Gulf tighten across the local area. The easterly fetch will bring in some low level moisture, however, any moist return will be slow to occur given the direction of the fetch. A passive surface front will reside to our south over the southern Gulf Wednesday night into Thursday. Globals show some light QPF signal across the far Gulf waters, however, the region appears to remain dry at least going into the start of late week with little in the way of lift. Temperatures by this time will have started to rebound again with a slight increase in heights and thicknesses across the CWFA. That said, this appears to be rather modest again without much of a return flow to speak of help really bring in the warmer and moist conditions south of the aforementioned front.
From here things get more...we'll say interesting. Globals generally start to diverge significantly (so from Thursday beyond the overall forecast confidence is VERY LOW). The synoptic pattern starts off in decent agreement we'll say, but the evolution of the pattern leaves much to be questioned. First, the GFS has an inverted surface trough sharpen over the Gulf. This feature begins to lift northward on Thursday and eventually closes off a surface low late Thursday and into Friday. The ECM shows a weak surface trough at the same time, but appears to be lagging slightly. Eyes then focus up stream over the Texas high plains as surface cyclogenesis takes shape and continues to move south and eastward toward the northwest Gulf by this weekend. Both GFS and ECM depict this feature "somewhat" well. However, the ECM doesn't really develop an initial low in the Gulf instead holds on to a surface trough or the old frontal boundary through this timeframe. The GFS takes the initial low and pushes it eastward over the Florida Peninsula and tends to be a bit more on the progressive side with the pattern.
As the system over Texas moves into the Gulf, the GFS indicates that the parent trough will help push the earlier low downstream generally north and east along the east coast helping strengthen this system over the Gulf Stream as it lifts quickly north and east away from our CWFA. However, the ECMWF doesn't agree. In fact, the ECM actually further develops the surface feature over the northern and central Gulf and beyond holds the low over the gulf through the end of the period. The concern here is of course with a slower moving system more opportunity for rainfall...which of course is shown in the ECM. However, the GFS is quite a bit drier with most of the precipitation remaining offshore and the fact that the solution there is a bit faster. The CMC tends to take a more middle of the two route adding very little in terms of helping add long range confidence. EPS and GEFS respectively show a deepening surface low move across florida, but once again the respective ensemble means follow the parental deterministic guidance fairly closely. So, all that said, the bottom line again is low confidence. We do have POPs respectively for the best overlap and since the region should remain mostly in the cool sector think thunder probs will be a bit lower, unless the front across the Gulf finds its ways closer to our area prior to the eventual evolution of the system(s). Otherwise, regardless of the solution, breezy to windy conditions will be possible along with perhaps coastal flooding concerns, especially if the ECMWF materializes over the GFS. However, at this juncture it would be tough to even speculate specifics with such variations in the solutions in both globals and their ensembles. (Frye)
AVIATION
(06Z TAFS)
Issued at 1118 PM CST Sun Dec 10 2023
As high pressure settles into the area, very light to calm winds are expected to prevail through the period with no significant cloud cover. The only real exception is KNEW where winds will be a little stronger (but still generally 10 kts or less) due to proximity to the lake. (DM)
MARINE
Issued at 225 AM CST Mon Dec 11 2023
Winds and seas will continue to decrease through the morning and into the afternoon hours as pressure gradient begins to relax across the local waters. Moderate winds and seas can be anticipated early this week, however, the break from hazardous marine conditions will be short-lived as easterly flow strengthens over the local waters by midweek. From this point on, a potentially prolonged period of hazardous to even dangerous marine conditions is forecast from midweek through the next weekend.
Small Craft Advisories are expected and gale products are becoming increasingly likely, especially over the open waters late week and into this weekend as the easterly flow around a strong high pressure centered to our northeast remains strong. (Frye)
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
MCB 57 32 60 35 / 0 0 0 0 BTR 61 37 64 40 / 0 0 0 0 ASD 60 34 63 38 / 0 0 0 0 MSY 57 45 60 47 / 0 0 0 0 GPT 58 38 60 40 / 0 0 0 0 PQL 60 33 63 38 / 0 0 0 0
LIX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
LA...None.
GM...Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM CST early this morning for GMZ575-577.
MS...None.
GM...Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM CST early this morning for GMZ577.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service New Orleans LA 226 AM CST Mon Dec 11 2023
NEW SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, MARINE
SHORT TERM
(Today through Wednesday)
Issued at 225 AM CST Mon Dec 11 2023
Pressure gradient continues to breakdown from west to east across the region this morning. Along with clear skies and calmer winds, temperatures have dropped well into the 30s north of I10/12 with some locations at or winding up just a tad below freezing. A rather cool day is in store, however, with high pressure building in over the lower MS River Valley, expect plenty of sunshine today, so overall pleasant.
The high pressure begins to lift north and east later tonight and into the day on Tuesday. Still with calmer winds and clear skies temperatures will likely drop into the 30s across the northern tier again by Tuesday morning...as always the cooler locations look to be in the typical drainage areas around the Pascagoula and Pearl River Basins. That said, guidance does have the surface high pressure moving north and eastward away, which may help allow pressure gradient to tighten once again, especially for the southern tier or closer to the immediate coast. These areas may see overnight lows held up just a bit, especially when compared to Monday morning. A strong easterly fetch will begin to develop by late Tuesday, which will help increase boundary layer moisture at least slightly despite the somewhat unfavorable fetch. The previous frontal boundary that recently moved through our region in the last day or two will get stuck over the southern Gulf under the strong surface high pressure. This will again help increase surface winds just a bit by Wednesday. That said, the forecast area should continue to remain dry as the remnant/passive front to our south will be just out of reach for any type of isentropic upglide that would be needed for the development of showers.
(Frye)
LONG TERM
(Wednesday night through Sunday)
Issued at 225 AM CST Mon Dec 11 2023
The long term begins dry for the most part, but a tad on the breezy side as pressure gradient between a strong 1040mb+ high pressure system near the Great Lakes and lower pressures over the Gulf tighten across the local area. The easterly fetch will bring in some low level moisture, however, any moist return will be slow to occur given the direction of the fetch. A passive surface front will reside to our south over the southern Gulf Wednesday night into Thursday. Globals show some light QPF signal across the far Gulf waters, however, the region appears to remain dry at least going into the start of late week with little in the way of lift. Temperatures by this time will have started to rebound again with a slight increase in heights and thicknesses across the CWFA. That said, this appears to be rather modest again without much of a return flow to speak of help really bring in the warmer and moist conditions south of the aforementioned front.
From here things get more...we'll say interesting. Globals generally start to diverge significantly (so from Thursday beyond the overall forecast confidence is VERY LOW). The synoptic pattern starts off in decent agreement we'll say, but the evolution of the pattern leaves much to be questioned. First, the GFS has an inverted surface trough sharpen over the Gulf. This feature begins to lift northward on Thursday and eventually closes off a surface low late Thursday and into Friday. The ECM shows a weak surface trough at the same time, but appears to be lagging slightly. Eyes then focus up stream over the Texas high plains as surface cyclogenesis takes shape and continues to move south and eastward toward the northwest Gulf by this weekend. Both GFS and ECM depict this feature "somewhat" well. However, the ECM doesn't really develop an initial low in the Gulf instead holds on to a surface trough or the old frontal boundary through this timeframe. The GFS takes the initial low and pushes it eastward over the Florida Peninsula and tends to be a bit more on the progressive side with the pattern.
As the system over Texas moves into the Gulf, the GFS indicates that the parent trough will help push the earlier low downstream generally north and east along the east coast helping strengthen this system over the Gulf Stream as it lifts quickly north and east away from our CWFA. However, the ECMWF doesn't agree. In fact, the ECM actually further develops the surface feature over the northern and central Gulf and beyond holds the low over the gulf through the end of the period. The concern here is of course with a slower moving system more opportunity for rainfall...which of course is shown in the ECM. However, the GFS is quite a bit drier with most of the precipitation remaining offshore and the fact that the solution there is a bit faster. The CMC tends to take a more middle of the two route adding very little in terms of helping add long range confidence. EPS and GEFS respectively show a deepening surface low move across florida, but once again the respective ensemble means follow the parental deterministic guidance fairly closely. So, all that said, the bottom line again is low confidence. We do have POPs respectively for the best overlap and since the region should remain mostly in the cool sector think thunder probs will be a bit lower, unless the front across the Gulf finds its ways closer to our area prior to the eventual evolution of the system(s). Otherwise, regardless of the solution, breezy to windy conditions will be possible along with perhaps coastal flooding concerns, especially if the ECMWF materializes over the GFS. However, at this juncture it would be tough to even speculate specifics with such variations in the solutions in both globals and their ensembles. (Frye)
AVIATION
(06Z TAFS)
Issued at 1118 PM CST Sun Dec 10 2023
As high pressure settles into the area, very light to calm winds are expected to prevail through the period with no significant cloud cover. The only real exception is KNEW where winds will be a little stronger (but still generally 10 kts or less) due to proximity to the lake. (DM)
MARINE
Issued at 225 AM CST Mon Dec 11 2023
Winds and seas will continue to decrease through the morning and into the afternoon hours as pressure gradient begins to relax across the local waters. Moderate winds and seas can be anticipated early this week, however, the break from hazardous marine conditions will be short-lived as easterly flow strengthens over the local waters by midweek. From this point on, a potentially prolonged period of hazardous to even dangerous marine conditions is forecast from midweek through the next weekend.
Small Craft Advisories are expected and gale products are becoming increasingly likely, especially over the open waters late week and into this weekend as the easterly flow around a strong high pressure centered to our northeast remains strong. (Frye)
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
MCB 57 32 60 35 / 0 0 0 0 BTR 61 37 64 40 / 0 0 0 0 ASD 60 34 63 38 / 0 0 0 0 MSY 57 45 60 47 / 0 0 0 0 GPT 58 38 60 40 / 0 0 0 0 PQL 60 33 63 38 / 0 0 0 0
LIX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
LA...None.
GM...Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM CST early this morning for GMZ575-577.
MS...None.
GM...Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM CST early this morning for GMZ577.
Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air Temp | Water Temp | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
GDXM6 - Grand Bay Reserve, MS | 2 mi | 87 min | N 8 | 37°F | 30.24 | 33°F | ||
PNLM6 - 8741533 - Pascagoula NOAA Lab, MS | 7 mi | 72 min | 59°F | |||||
PTBM6 - 8741003 - Petit Bois Island, MS | 13 mi | 72 min | NNE 19G | 42°F | 30.20 | |||
MBPA1 | 21 mi | 72 min | 39°F | 33°F | ||||
DILA1 | 22 mi | 72 min | NNE 19G | 46°F | 30.21 | |||
EFLA1 | 23 mi | 72 min | 45°F | 41°F | ||||
FRMA1 | 26 mi | 72 min | NNE 18G | 47°F | 30.20 | 46°F | ||
MCGA1 - 8736897 - Coast Guard Sector Mobile, AL | 27 mi | 72 min | N 7G | 39°F | 62°F | 30.23 | ||
PTOA1 | 29 mi | 72 min | 38°F | 33°F | ||||
OBLA1 - 8737048 - Mobile State Docks, AL | 30 mi | 72 min | 39°F | 61°F | 30.25 | |||
WKXA1 - Weeks Bay Reserve, AL | 33 mi | 87 min | N 4.1 | 40°F | 30.24 | 35°F | ||
WYCM6 - 8747437 - Bay Waveland Yacht Club, MS | 47 mi | 72 min | NNE 8.9G | 41°F | 56°F | 30.24 |
toggle option: (graph/table)
Airport Reports
EDIT (on/off)  Help Click EDIT to display multiple airports. Follow links for more data.Airport | Dist | Age | Wind kt | Vis | Sky | Weather | Temp | DewPt | RH | inHg |
KPQL TRENT LOTT INTL,MS | 7 sm | 18 min | N 06 | 10 sm | Clear | 36°F | 30°F | 81% | 30.25 | |
KMOB MOBILE RGNL,AL | 23 sm | 15 min | N 08 | 10 sm | A Few Clouds | 37°F | 30°F | 75% | 30.25 |
Wind History from PQL
(wind in knots)Tide / Current for Pascagoula, Mississippi Sound, Mississippi
EDIT Weekend mode (on/off) (on/off)  Help
Pascagoula
Click for Map
Mon -- 05:21 AM CST Moonrise
Mon -- 06:40 AM CST Sunrise
Mon -- 06:52 AM CST -0.55 feet Low Tide
Mon -- 03:43 PM CST Moonset
Mon -- 04:54 PM CST Sunset
Mon -- 08:36 PM CST 1.70 feet High Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Click for Map
Mon -- 05:21 AM CST Moonrise
Mon -- 06:40 AM CST Sunrise
Mon -- 06:52 AM CST -0.55 feet Low Tide
Mon -- 03:43 PM CST Moonset
Mon -- 04:54 PM CST Sunset
Mon -- 08:36 PM CST 1.70 feet High Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Pascagoula, Mississippi Sound, Mississippi, Tide feet
12 am |
0.9 |
1 am |
0.6 |
2 am |
0.3 |
3 am |
0 |
4 am |
-0.2 |
5 am |
-0.4 |
6 am |
-0.5 |
7 am |
-0.6 |
8 am |
-0.5 |
9 am |
-0.4 |
10 am |
-0.3 |
11 am |
-0.1 |
12 pm |
0.1 |
1 pm |
0.4 |
2 pm |
0.6 |
3 pm |
0.8 |
4 pm |
1.1 |
5 pm |
1.3 |
6 pm |
1.5 |
7 pm |
1.6 |
8 pm |
1.7 |
9 pm |
1.7 |
10 pm |
1.6 |
11 pm |
1.4 |
Mobile Bay Entrance
Click for Map
Mon -- 03:01 AM CST -2.12 knots Max Ebb
Mon -- 05:19 AM CST Moonrise
Mon -- 06:38 AM CST Sunrise
Mon -- 08:58 AM CST 0.00 knots Slack
Mon -- 03:31 PM CST 2.16 knots Max Flood
Mon -- 03:41 PM CST Moonset
Mon -- 04:52 PM CST Sunset
Mon -- 09:37 PM CST -0.00 knots Slack
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Click for Map
Mon -- 03:01 AM CST -2.12 knots Max Ebb
Mon -- 05:19 AM CST Moonrise
Mon -- 06:38 AM CST Sunrise
Mon -- 08:58 AM CST 0.00 knots Slack
Mon -- 03:31 PM CST 2.16 knots Max Flood
Mon -- 03:41 PM CST Moonset
Mon -- 04:52 PM CST Sunset
Mon -- 09:37 PM CST -0.00 knots Slack
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Mobile Bay Entrance, Alabama Current, knots
12 am |
-1.5 |
1 am |
-1.8 |
2 am |
-2 |
3 am |
-2.1 |
4 am |
-2 |
5 am |
-1.8 |
6 am |
-1.5 |
7 am |
-1 |
8 am |
-0.5 |
9 am |
0 |
10 am |
0.5 |
11 am |
1 |
12 pm |
1.4 |
1 pm |
1.8 |
2 pm |
2 |
3 pm |
2.1 |
4 pm |
2.1 |
5 pm |
2 |
6 pm |
1.8 |
7 pm |
1.4 |
8 pm |
0.9 |
9 pm |
0.4 |
10 pm |
-0.2 |
11 pm |
-0.8 |
Mobile, AL,

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