Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Dock Junction, GA
![]() | Sunrise 6:20 AM Sunset 8:33 PM Moonrise 12:00 AM Moonset 11:18 AM |
AMZ450 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- 219 Am Edt Tue Jun 17 2025
Today - South winds 5 to 10 knots, becoming southeast 10 to 15 knots this afternoon. Seas 2 to 3 feet. Wave detail: southeast 3 feet at 5 seconds and southeast 2 feet at 8 seconds. Intracoastal waters a moderate chop. A slight chance of showers and Thunderstorms this afternoon.
Tonight - South winds 15 to 20 knots, diminishing to 10 to 15 knots after midnight. Seas 2 to 3 feet. Wave detail: southeast 3 feet at 5 seconds. Intracoastal waters choppy. A slight chance of showers and Thunderstorms in the evening.
Wednesday - South winds 10 to 15 knots. Seas 2 to 3 feet. Wave detail: southeast 3 feet at 5 seconds. Intracoastal waters a moderate chop. A slight chance of showers and Thunderstorms in the afternoon.
Wednesday night - South winds 10 to 15 knots. Seas 2 to 3 feet. Wave detail: southeast 3 feet at 4 seconds. Intracoastal waters a moderate chop.
Thursday - South winds 5 to 10 knots, becoming southeast 10 to 15 knots in the afternoon. Seas around 2 feet. Wave detail: southeast 2 feet at 5 seconds and east 2 feet at 8 seconds. Intracoastal waters a moderate chop. A chance of showers and Thunderstorms in the afternoon.
Thursday night - South winds 10 to 15 knots, becoming southwest 5 to 10 knots after midnight. Seas 2 to 3 feet. Wave detail: southeast 2 feet at 4 seconds. Intracoastal waters a moderate chop. A chance of showers and Thunderstorms.
Friday through Saturday - South winds 10 to 15 knots. Seas around 2 feet. Intracoastal waters a moderate chop. A chance of showers and Thunderstorms.
winds and waves higher in and near Thunderstorms.
winds and waves higher in and near Thunderstorms.
AMZ400 Synopsis For Altamaha Sound Ga To Flagler Beach Fl Out To 60 Nm- 219 Am Edt Tue Jun 17 2025
Synopsis -
the atlantic high pressure ridge will continue to extend its axis westward across the florida peninsula this week, keeping a prevailing south to southwest wind flow across our area. A few Thunderstorms may impact our local waters during the late afternoon and evening hours, with isolated strong storms possible, bringing briefly gusty winds, frequent lightning strikes, and torrential downpours. Rain chances will remain low for the local waters Wednesday and Thursday. A weak front enters the southeast states late this week, resulting in increasing chances for afternoon and evening Thunderstorms by Friday and Saturday.
Gulf stream -
the approximate location of the west wall of the gulf stream as of jun 14, 2025 at 1200 utc - .
64 nautical miles east of flagler beach. 74 nautical miles east of saint augustine beach. 89 nautical miles east of jacksonville beach. 99 nautical miles east of st simons island.
this data courtesy of the naval oceanographic office.
the atlantic high pressure ridge will continue to extend its axis westward across the florida peninsula this week, keeping a prevailing south to southwest wind flow across our area. A few Thunderstorms may impact our local waters during the late afternoon and evening hours, with isolated strong storms possible, bringing briefly gusty winds, frequent lightning strikes, and torrential downpours. Rain chances will remain low for the local waters Wednesday and Thursday. A weak front enters the southeast states late this week, resulting in increasing chances for afternoon and evening Thunderstorms by Friday and Saturday.
the approximate location of the west wall of the gulf stream as of jun 14, 2025 at 1200 utc - .
64 nautical miles east of flagler beach. 74 nautical miles east of saint augustine beach. 89 nautical miles east of jacksonville beach. 99 nautical miles east of st simons island.
this data courtesy of the naval oceanographic office.
7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Dock Junction, GA

NEW! Add second zone forecast
Crispen Island Click for Map Tue -- 12:42 AM EDT Moonrise Tue -- 02:22 AM EDT 8.09 feet High Tide Tue -- 06:21 AM EDT Sunrise Tue -- 08:12 AM EDT 0.24 feet Low Tide Tue -- 12:18 PM EDT Moonset Tue -- 02:56 PM EDT 7.59 feet High Tide Tue -- 08:24 PM EDT 0.80 feet Low Tide Tue -- 08:32 PM EDT Sunset Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Crispen Island, Turtle River, Georgia, Tide feet
12 am |
6.5 |
1 am |
7.5 |
2 am |
8.1 |
3 am |
7.9 |
4 am |
6.9 |
5 am |
5.1 |
6 am |
3 |
7 am |
1.2 |
8 am |
0.3 |
9 am |
0.5 |
10 am |
1.7 |
11 am |
3.3 |
12 pm |
5 |
1 pm |
6.4 |
2 pm |
7.3 |
3 pm |
7.6 |
4 pm |
7 |
5 pm |
5.5 |
6 pm |
3.7 |
7 pm |
1.9 |
8 pm |
0.9 |
9 pm |
0.9 |
10 pm |
1.8 |
11 pm |
3.3 |
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Mackay River (Daymark %23239), Georgia, Tide feet
Area Discussion for Jacksonville, FL
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FXUS62 KJAX 170630 AFDJAX
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Jacksonville FL 230 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
New NEAR TERM, SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, AVIATION, MARINE
NEAR TERM
(Today through Tonight)
Issued at 220 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 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
Mean 500 mb ridge will be off the east coast of the FL peninsula initially and will shift slowly to the northeast through tonight.
Sfc high pressure ridge will remain over the central FL area.
This will maintain the deep south and southwest flow over the region through tonight near 10 kt. The mean flow is a bit more southerly today compared to past days, which will likely allow the east coast sea breeze to push further inland. So, with PWATs of close to 2 inches again and the daytime heating, scattered convection is expected to form once again mainly for the inland zones. Temps aloft at 500 mb will be near average at about -7C and may warm slightly tonight as strong subsidence and warming aloft move as the mid level ridge moves in overhead. Main threats will be locally heavy rainfall, frequent lightning, and strong gusty winds.
Tonight, isolated to scattered evening showers and storms will be focused over inland areas from about I-75 to I-95 for northeast FL, and from U.S. 1 to I-95 for southeast GA. Still could be a strong storm or two in the 6 PM-9 PM time frame, similar to past evenings. Convection should dissipate by about midnight. Based HRRR guidance, included some patchy fog over the west zones toward the early morning hours where some low stratus is also expected.
For temps, highs in the lower to mid 90s expected and lows in the lower to mid 70s. Max heat indices of about 100-106 expected today.
SHORT TERM
(Wednesday through Thursday night)
Issued at 220 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
As deep layer ridging over the FL peninsula centers to the east of the the SE US coast, drier air will be over the area with near normal moisture levels about 1.50-1.8 inches. Underneath the ridge, the associated surface high ridge axis will stretch across NE FL from the Atlantic waters and promote southerly flow aloft. This pattern will allow both the Atlantic and Gulf seabreezes to move inland and merge near highway 301 Wednesday, but allow the Gulf seabreeze to progress further on Thursday as a trough approaches from the northwest and brings more southwest flow over the area.
Still expect scattered showers and T'storms developing in the afternoon each day given aforementioned drier air involved.
Daytime highs will be in the mid 90s for most areas and low 90s at the beaches due to an increase in heights with the lifting ridge just to the east. Overnight lows will be a little above normal in the mid 70s along the coast and low to mid 70s inland.
LONG TERM
(Friday through Monday)
Issued at 220 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
Friday, a progressive mid/upper level trough north of the region will move eastward off the Eastern seaboard with an associated surface cold front dragging southward from the southern Appalachians into the coastal plains of the Carolinas. On Saturday, the mid/upper level trough axis will exit into the Atlantic and remove support from the front, causing it to stall and slowly dissipate near the Altamaha river basin as high pressure moves from the OH and TN valley into the central and southern Appalachians. This pattern will support numerous showers and T'storms as moisture pools along and ahead of the front as it slows and stalls over southern GA.
By the end of the weekend and into early next week, ridging aloft will build over the OH valley into the Mid Atlantic states, with surface high pressure reforming east the Southeast US coast and promoting easterly flow over the area. This will allow for a great reduction in pops with isolated T'storms confined to areas well inland.
Temperatures will begin the period above normal with highs in the mid 90s away from the coast and low 90s at the beaches and slightly lower into the low to mid 90s inland this weekend.
Lows will be near to slightly above normal in the low to mid 70s inland and mid 70s along the coast.
AVIATION
(06Z TAFS)
Issued at 140 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
VFR expected through the morning with possible MVFR vsby occurring at VQQ soon. Light southwest winds near 5-10 kt expected by mid morning with transition to the southeast in the aftn for the coastal TAFs with the Atlantic sea breeze. Generally scattered convection this afternoon and early evening so have PROB30 groups for storms with details and refinement expected later as confidence increases on t-storm affects at the terminals.
MARINE
Issued at 220 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
The Atlantic ridge axis will remain across the FL peninsula the rest of the week with prevailing flow from the south and southwest each morning and shifting to more south and southeast in the aftn with the sea breeze circulation. Winds may reach up to small craft exercise caution criteria in the evening hours for mainly offshore waters. The ridge will lift up into the region over the weekend with a lighter wind flow anticipated. Overall, lower rain chances over area waters through Thursday, and then increasing Fri into the weekend as a weak front enters the southeast states and moisture increases again. Seas mainly in the 2-4 ft range with short period wind waves and some long period swells showing mainly 8-10 seconds, and weak energy at 14-15 seconds.
Rip Currents: Moderate risk of rip currents indicated again in the surf zone outlook, with surf of about 2+ ft and a moderately strong longshore current flowing northward. This is likely again on Wednesday.
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
AMG 93 72 93 73 / 20 10 20 10 SSI 90 76 90 77 / 30 20 20 10 JAX 94 74 94 74 / 40 20 40 10 SGJ 92 75 92 75 / 40 10 20 10 GNV 94 73 95 73 / 50 20 40 10 OCF 94 73 94 73 / 40 20 30 20
JAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
FL...None.
GA...None.
AM...None.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Jacksonville FL 230 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
New NEAR TERM, SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, AVIATION, MARINE
NEAR TERM
(Today through Tonight)
Issued at 220 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 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
Mean 500 mb ridge will be off the east coast of the FL peninsula initially and will shift slowly to the northeast through tonight.
Sfc high pressure ridge will remain over the central FL area.
This will maintain the deep south and southwest flow over the region through tonight near 10 kt. The mean flow is a bit more southerly today compared to past days, which will likely allow the east coast sea breeze to push further inland. So, with PWATs of close to 2 inches again and the daytime heating, scattered convection is expected to form once again mainly for the inland zones. Temps aloft at 500 mb will be near average at about -7C and may warm slightly tonight as strong subsidence and warming aloft move as the mid level ridge moves in overhead. Main threats will be locally heavy rainfall, frequent lightning, and strong gusty winds.
Tonight, isolated to scattered evening showers and storms will be focused over inland areas from about I-75 to I-95 for northeast FL, and from U.S. 1 to I-95 for southeast GA. Still could be a strong storm or two in the 6 PM-9 PM time frame, similar to past evenings. Convection should dissipate by about midnight. Based HRRR guidance, included some patchy fog over the west zones toward the early morning hours where some low stratus is also expected.
For temps, highs in the lower to mid 90s expected and lows in the lower to mid 70s. Max heat indices of about 100-106 expected today.
SHORT TERM
(Wednesday through Thursday night)
Issued at 220 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
As deep layer ridging over the FL peninsula centers to the east of the the SE US coast, drier air will be over the area with near normal moisture levels about 1.50-1.8 inches. Underneath the ridge, the associated surface high ridge axis will stretch across NE FL from the Atlantic waters and promote southerly flow aloft. This pattern will allow both the Atlantic and Gulf seabreezes to move inland and merge near highway 301 Wednesday, but allow the Gulf seabreeze to progress further on Thursday as a trough approaches from the northwest and brings more southwest flow over the area.
Still expect scattered showers and T'storms developing in the afternoon each day given aforementioned drier air involved.
Daytime highs will be in the mid 90s for most areas and low 90s at the beaches due to an increase in heights with the lifting ridge just to the east. Overnight lows will be a little above normal in the mid 70s along the coast and low to mid 70s inland.
LONG TERM
(Friday through Monday)
Issued at 220 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
Friday, a progressive mid/upper level trough north of the region will move eastward off the Eastern seaboard with an associated surface cold front dragging southward from the southern Appalachians into the coastal plains of the Carolinas. On Saturday, the mid/upper level trough axis will exit into the Atlantic and remove support from the front, causing it to stall and slowly dissipate near the Altamaha river basin as high pressure moves from the OH and TN valley into the central and southern Appalachians. This pattern will support numerous showers and T'storms as moisture pools along and ahead of the front as it slows and stalls over southern GA.
By the end of the weekend and into early next week, ridging aloft will build over the OH valley into the Mid Atlantic states, with surface high pressure reforming east the Southeast US coast and promoting easterly flow over the area. This will allow for a great reduction in pops with isolated T'storms confined to areas well inland.
Temperatures will begin the period above normal with highs in the mid 90s away from the coast and low 90s at the beaches and slightly lower into the low to mid 90s inland this weekend.
Lows will be near to slightly above normal in the low to mid 70s inland and mid 70s along the coast.
AVIATION
(06Z TAFS)
Issued at 140 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
VFR expected through the morning with possible MVFR vsby occurring at VQQ soon. Light southwest winds near 5-10 kt expected by mid morning with transition to the southeast in the aftn for the coastal TAFs with the Atlantic sea breeze. Generally scattered convection this afternoon and early evening so have PROB30 groups for storms with details and refinement expected later as confidence increases on t-storm affects at the terminals.
MARINE
Issued at 220 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025
The Atlantic ridge axis will remain across the FL peninsula the rest of the week with prevailing flow from the south and southwest each morning and shifting to more south and southeast in the aftn with the sea breeze circulation. Winds may reach up to small craft exercise caution criteria in the evening hours for mainly offshore waters. The ridge will lift up into the region over the weekend with a lighter wind flow anticipated. Overall, lower rain chances over area waters through Thursday, and then increasing Fri into the weekend as a weak front enters the southeast states and moisture increases again. Seas mainly in the 2-4 ft range with short period wind waves and some long period swells showing mainly 8-10 seconds, and weak energy at 14-15 seconds.
Rip Currents: Moderate risk of rip currents indicated again in the surf zone outlook, with surf of about 2+ ft and a moderately strong longshore current flowing northward. This is likely again on Wednesday.
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
AMG 93 72 93 73 / 20 10 20 10 SSI 90 76 90 77 / 30 20 20 10 JAX 94 74 94 74 / 40 20 40 10 SGJ 92 75 92 75 / 40 10 20 10 GNV 94 73 95 73 / 50 20 40 10 OCF 94 73 94 73 / 40 20 30 20
JAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
FL...None.
GA...None.
AM...None.
Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air | Water | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
SAXG1 - Sapelo Island Reserve, GA | 20 mi | 66 min | S 7 | 78°F | 30.06 | 75°F | ||
KBMG1 | 30 mi | 66 min | 80°F | 30.07 | ||||
41112 - Offshore Fernandina Beach, FL (132) | 37 mi | 40 min | 79°F | 2 ft | ||||
FRDF1 - 8720030 - Fernandina Beach, FL | 37 mi | 66 min | SSE 1.9G | 81°F | 80°F | 30.06 | ||
41008 - GRAYS REEF - 40 NM Southeast of Savannah, GA | 39 mi | 46 min | SSW 14G | 81°F | 30.05 | 79°F |
Wind History for Fernandina Beach, FL
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Airport Reports
Link to 1 hour of 5 minute data for KBQK
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) for KBQK
Wind History Graph: BQK
(wind in knots)GEOS Local Image of Southeast
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Jacksonville, FL,

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