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Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Huron, OH


May 8, 2026 11:00 PM EDT (03:00 UTC)
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Sunrise 6:18 AM   Sunset 8:35 PM
Moonrise 1:04 AM   Moonset 10:29 AM 
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NOTE: Some of the data on this page has not been verified and should be used with that in mind. It may and occasionally will, be wrong. The tide reports are by xtide and are NOT FOR NAVIGATION.

Marine Forecasts
   
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NOTE: Zones updated 4/16/2026. Some zones changed. Use Edit if needed.
LEZ144 Expires:202605082015;;219290 Fzus51 Kcle 081322 Nshcle
nearshore marine forecast national weather service cleveland oh 922 am edt Fri may 8 2026
for waters within five nautical miles of shore
waves are the significant wave height - the average of the highest 1/3 of the wave spectrum. Occasional wave height is the average of the highest 1/10 of the wave spectrum.
lez142>144-082015- maumee bay to reno beach oh-reno beach to the islands oh- the islands to vermilion oh- 922 am edt Fri may 8 2026

Rest of today - West winds 5 to 10 knots becoming southwest. Sunny late this morning, then becoming partly Sunny. Waves 1 foot or less.

Tonight - Southwest winds 5 to 10 knots becoming south. A chance of showers. Waves 1 foot or less.

Saturday - Southwest winds 5 to 10 knots becoming west and increasing to 15 to 20 knots. A chance of showers and Thunderstorms in the afternoon. Waves 1 to 3 feet.

Saturday night - West winds 15 to 20 knots becoming northwest 5 to 15 knots. A chance of showers. Waves 1 to 3 feet.
winds and waves higher in and near Thunderstorms.
see lake erie open lakes forecast for Sunday through Tuesday.
the water temperature off toledo is 57 degrees, off cleveland 53 degrees, and off erie 52 degrees.
LEZ100
No data

7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Huron, OH
   
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Area Discussion for Cleveland, OH
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FXUS61 KCLE 082322 AFDCLE

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 722 PM EDT Fri May 8 2026

WHAT HAS CHANGED
A Marginal Risk for severe thunderstorms has been introduced for Saturday afternoon and evening across much of the area.

KEY MESSAGES
1) Cool and rainy late this afternoon through tonight across much of the area, with the least rain across Toledo and along the lakeshore.

2) After a drier and warmer morning and early afternoon, showers and thunderstorms move across the area later Saturday afternoon and evening. There is a Marginal Risk (level 1 of 5) for isolated severe weather in the form of damaging winds and hail up to quarter-sized.

3) Drier weather works in from the northwest Sunday and Sunday night, with cooler, dry weather expected to start next week. Some frost is possible Sunday and Monday nights.

DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE #1:

A warm front is currently pushing into our far southwestern counties this afternoon and will slowly lift across the area this evening into tonight. A flat shortwave will move through the region tonight and early Saturday morning, which will combine with the front and a band of moisture advection to squeeze out a round of mainly stratiform rain. Already seeing some rain across interior portions of our area this afternoon (though some low-level dry air is keeping it quite light for now), and expect rain to gradually expand and turn steadier through the first half of tonight. Rain will then gradually exit to the east and southeast late tonight/early Saturday. There will be a sharp cut-off to the rain this evening, with the Toledo area and even northern Erie County PA quite possibly staying dry. The heavier rain amounts will be just south of Cleveland this evening, though there are decent odds (80%) for lighter (but still measurable) rain in Cleveland this evening. The swath of better QPF across our inland counties will produce 0.30-0.75" through tonight, dropping off to the north. This will be another soaking rain with minor river rises, though shouldn't be more significant than that.
Lows will generally be in the upper 40s and lower 50s tonight.

KEY MESSAGE #2:

The forecast for Saturday has trended more impactful, especially during the later afternoon and early evening hours. We are still looking at a window of warmer and dry weather to start, with tonight's rain expected to exit by early Saturday. Once we dry out early Saturday, rain chances don't ramp back up until closer to 2-6 PM from northwest to southeast. Highs should push to near or a bit better than 70 in the well-mixed warm sector ahead of the approaching cold front and showers/storms later in the afternoon. Synoptically elevated southwest breezes may gust up to 30 MPH in the warm sector.

Turning our attention to the more active weather, a flat shortwave will zip across the southern Great Lakes Saturday afternoon and evening as low pressure tracks across the northern Great Lakes. This will push a cold front into the local area. The lift associated with the shortwave and front coinciding with peak daytime heating leads to higher confidence in a round of showers and storms with good coverage, particularly across Lake Erie and adjacent Northeast OH and Northwest PA where the forcing from the shortwave will be most favorable. Storms may begin developing across southeastern Michigan around midday, with activity then expected to develop and/or spread into the local area after 2 or 3 PM from the west-northwest.

With dew points ahead of the front struggling to push above the lower 50s, the amount of moisture and resultant instability will be marginal for severe weather. However, strong surface heating beneath chilly air aloft should yield steep low-level lapse rates and 500-1000 J/KG of low-topped MLCAPE during the afternoon. This, along with moderate deep-layer shear as flow above 600mb increases to 50-60kt, may be enough for a few strong to severe storms. While the strong forcing does argue for a more linear mode, shear vectors are favorable for a more cellular mode. Most hi-res models suggest an initial mix of cells and short line segments gradually congealing into a more linear mode. The moderate to strong flow aloft and resultant fast storm motions, when combined with the expectation of well-mixed low- levels, suggests strong to locally severe wind gusts are the main severe weather risk...particularly with more organized linear convection. With colder air aloft and sufficient deep-layer shear, a few more robust cells may also pose a risk for marginally severe hail. The tornado risk is not truly zero, but marginally high LCL heights, unidirectional low-level flow, and a likely messy/mixed storm mode should keep the tornado threat rather minimal.

Overall, feel the broad SPC Marginal Risk (level 1 of 5) for severe weather across the area in the new Day 2 outlook captures the threat well. While a small corridor of more focused severe potential could play out with a more linear storm mode, particularly across Northeast OH and Northwest PA, the marginal overall thermodynamics and some model disagreement on where the most organized convection will occur currently precludes anything more than the Marginal Risk. As mentioned above, these showers/storms and attendant severe risk begin spreading in as early as 2-3 PM from the west-northwest. Any severe risk should subside by about 9 PM as forcing shifts off to the east and as the low-levels become worked over and more stable.

The front will slowly push southeast through Saturday night, though may not completely clear our area until early Sunday. Another weak shortwave will bring an uptick in shower potential late Saturday night/early Sunday across the area. Lows Saturday night will generally range from the mid 40s to near 50.

KEY MESSAGE #3:

Drier weather should continue working in from the northwest on Sunday as high pressure approaches and the front exits. High pressure builds overhead to start next week, keeping us dry through at least much of Tuesday. There's decent agreement in a system of some kind around midweek, bringing our next potential for rain.

A cooler airmass is expected to start next week, with highs likely stuck in the 50s for most of the area on Monday before a gradual warm up starts on Tuesday. Overnight lows in the 30s and 40s are expected, bringing frost concerns on any nights with more favorable radiational cooling conditions. Some frost is possible as early as Sunday night if clear/calm conditions develop quickly enough, with perhaps better potential Monday night with high pressure overhead.

AVIATION /00Z Saturday THROUGH Wednesday/
A mixed bag of flight conditions are expected early in the TAF period with patchy non-VFR conditions possible in moderate areas of rain through this evening. Guidance suggests that ceilings will fall to MVFR/IFR (with a small chance of isolated LIFR) on the back edge of the rain late tonight and early Saturday morning with skies likely clearing by late morning or early afternoon. There's some potential for patchy fog primarily at inland NE OH terminals, but generally think that most restrictions will occur due to low stratus. A period of VFR is expected before scattered showers and thunderstorms move southeast into the local area towards the end of the TAF period.
There's still some uncertainty in the timing/placement of precipitation, but currently thinking that the best chance of rain on Saturday will be 20Z onwards. Have PROB30 groups for storms given the timing uncertainty, but the forecast will likely be adjusted as confidence increases in subsequent updates. Storms may produce gusty winds.

Winds will generally be light and out of the south tonight with southwest winds increasing to 10 to 15 knots with gusts to 25 knots during the day Saturday. Winds will be slightly higher at KTOL/KFDY where sustained winds to 20 knots and gusts to 30 knots can't be ruled out.

Outlook...Non-VFR expected this with scattered showers through Sunday morning. A few scattered thunderstorms are possible into Saturday night. Non-VFR possible with showers and isolated thunderstorms Tuesday night into Wednesday.

MARINE
Overall marine weather and the conditions on Lake Erie will be somewhat quiet this weekend into early next week. There will be a couple weather systems moving through the Great Lakes over the next several days that will bring wind shifts and some rain chances. Winds are rather light and variable this afternoon with a weak low level flow over the lake at this time. A weak area of low pressure will skirt south of Lake Erie tonight with a round of showers and possible isolated thunder. Winds will resume a southerly flow late this afternoon into tonight 5 to 12 knots and waves 1 to 2 feet. A cold front will approach the area late Saturday and southwesterly winds will increase 15 to 20 knots during the day. Waves will increase 1 to 3 feet mainly in the open waters of the basin. The front will push across the lake Saturday night and a northwesterly will follow behind it 10 to 15 knots into Sunday. Waves will continue 1 to 2 feet on Sunday.

Another secondary surface trough or cold front will move through the eastern Great Lakes Sunday night into early Monday with a slight reinforcing push of northerly to northwesterly winds 10 to 15 knots and waves 2 feet or less. High pressure builds in with lighter winds Monday night and early Tuesday. A light southerly flow 5 to 12 knots will return by Tuesday.

CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
OH...None.
PA...None.
MARINE...None.


Weather Reporting Stations
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Stations Dist Age Wind AirWater WavesinHgDewPt
HHLO1 - Huron Light, OH 1 mi60 minSSW 6G8.9 54°F
45203 3 mi30 minSW 9.7G16 56°F0 ft
OWXO1 - Old Woman Creek, OH 3 mi75 minS 1.9 53°F 29.8050°F
VRMO1 11 mi50 minSSW 11G15
OWMO1 12 mi60 minSW 6 53°F 49°F
MRHO1 - 9063079 - Marblehead, OH 13 mi42 minSSW 5.1G8.9 29.79
SBIO1 - South Bass Island, OH 22 mi60 minSW 15G17 56°F 29.78
45196 37 mi30 minS 14G18 54°F 54°F1 ft29.7852°F
TWCO1 42 mi30 min 55°F 51°F
45176 43 mi30 minSSW 12G14 54°F 52°F1 ft29.7750°F
THLO1 - Toledo Light No. 2 OH 45 mi60 minSSW 14G16 55°F 29.7651°F


Wind History for Marblehead, OH
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Airport Reports
   
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AirportDistAgeWind ktVisSkyWeatherAirDewPtRHinHg
KPCW ErieOttawa International Airport US18 sm5 minSW 0710 smOvercast55°F52°F88%29.78
KLPR Lorain County Regional Airport US21 sm7 minSW 1110 smOvercast54°F50°F88%29.82

Weather Map
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GEOS Local Image of great lakes  
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Cleveland, OH,





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