Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Port Huron, MI
![]() | Sunrise 5:50 AM Sunset 9:08 PM Moonrise 1:27 AM Moonset 3:04 PM |
Marine Forecasts
NOTE: Zones updated 4/16/2026. Some zones changed. Use Edit if needed.
LHZ443 Port Sanilac To Port Huron Mi- 1057 Pm Edt Wed Jun 10 2026
Rest of tonight - South winds 5 to 10 knots becoming southwest 10 to 15 knots after midnight. Mostly cloudy with showers likely and a chance of Thunderstorms. Waves 2 feet or less.
Thursday - Southwest winds 10 to 15 knots. Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and a slight chance of Thunderstorms early in the morning. Waves 2 feet or less.
Thursday night - Southeast winds 5 to 10 knots becoming south 15 to 20 knots in the late evening and overnight. Partly cloudy until early morning becoming mostly cloudy. A slight chance of showers and Thunderstorms early in the evening, then a chance of Thunderstorms in the late evening and early morning. A chance of showers in the late evening and overnight. Waves 2 feet or less building to 2 to 4 feet after midnight.
Friday - West winds 15 to 20 knots diminishing to 10 to 15 knots in the late morning and afternoon. Partly cloudy early in the morning then clearing. Waves 1 to 3 feet.
see lake huron open lake forecast for days 3 through 5.
see lake huron open lake forecast for days 3 through 5.
LHZ400
No data
No data
7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Port Huron, MI

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Area Discussion for Detroit/Pontiac, MI
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FXUS63 KDTX 110132 AFDDTX
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Detroit/Pontiac MI 932 PM EDT Wed Jun 10 2026
KEY MESSAGES
- Severe Thunderstorm Watch 307 in effect until Midnight. Damaging winds are the primary hazard.
- There is a Slight to Enhanced Risk for severe thunderstorms Thursday night. Damaging winds, large hail, and spin-up tornadoes are all possible.
- Not as warm and much less humid Friday through the weekend.
UPDATE
The MCS crossing SE Mi at issuance time has benefited considerably from new cell growth on the leading edge of the cold pool fueled by MLCAPE of 2500-3000 J/kg. The new cells continued to grow quickly upscale to reinforce damaging wind within the system, especially north of I-69. Locations to the south will experience more sporadic damaging wind gusts left over from the original cold pool along the less organized south fringe of the system before it exits into Ontario from 11 PM to Midnight.
Farther upstream, late evening hourly mesoanalysis shows a broad pool of rain-cooled air stabilizing conditions back into WI/IL leaving the instability axis aligned more west to east into the Ohio valley. This guides the central IL MCS SEwd and south of the Mi border during the night. As this occurs, instability returning northward through IA/WI feeds elevated moisture transport over the Lower Mi meso-high, and this leads to a new round of showers and thunderstorms developing overhead with scattered to numerous coverage that linger through mid morning. Locally heavy rainfall is the primary hazard with this activity.
PREV DISCUSSION
Issued at 710 PM EDT Wed Jun 10 2026
AVIATION...
Thunderstorm clusters ongoing over central and SE Mi initiated as mid level subsidence weakened ahead of the upstream MCS/MCV. This activity percolates ahead of the MCS itself which is expected to reach central Lower Mi during the 00-01Z timeframe. IR satellite imagery indicates a larger scale warming/weakening trend on the system, however with some renewed stronger updrafts after crossing Lake Mi. It now appears at least segments of the system either maintain or regains strength within MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg in place across southern Lower Mi and we'll see if the weaker wind profile proves to be a limiting factor this far east.
A mixture of rain-cooled VFR/MVFR ceiling and fog linger in the wake of the MCS later tonight. After a few hours of mid level subsidence as well, there remains a model signal showing elevated convection redeveloping but with low spatial predictability.
The terminal corridor is then fully in the warm sector of low pressure spanning from northern Ontario into the Midwest during Thursday. This allows daytime instability to lift ceiling into VFR while heat and humidity build for the next round of thunderstorms currently projected for later Thursday evening.
D21/DTW Convection... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms this evening precede the MCS crossing western Lower Mi at forecast issuance. There is also a chance of renewed storm development later tonight, roughly from 06-09Z.
DTW THRESHOLD PROBABILITIES...
* High for ceiling aob 5000 feet tonight and Thursday morning.
* Moderate for thunderstorms this evening and late tonight.
PREV DISCUSSION...
Issued at 315 PM EDT Wed Jun 10 2026
DISCUSSION...
Weak mid-level height rises have promoted scattering of morning stratus allowing for respectable solar insolation from late morning into this afternoon. Weak warm front, that had been confined to southern SE MI, washes north in a downstream response to mid-upper trough digging into the upper Midwest/far western Great Lakes through the rest of the afternoon expanding lower 70 dewpoints into the northern CWA Despite this near-tropical near surface layer, lingering capping inversion is expected to hold through the late afternoon period. As we reach the early evening (~21Z and after), things get murkier wrt to the cap. An EML above 850mb, partially sampled by ILX's 12Z RAOB, is progged to lift into southern lower around roughly 21Z. This feature brings steepening mid-level lapse rates near or in excess of 7.5C/km as well as a ribbon of higher theta-e on its lead nose. While model forecast soundings are still spilt, there is an increasing subset that advertise this in combination with diurnal boundary mixing/growth to weaken our cap sufficiently to allow for at least isolated to widely scattered convective initiation as lift associated with this buoyancy gradient is able to connect thru to the lower level moisture. Should this occur, ample instability is available for convection with an MLCAPE gradient ranging from 1500-2500J/kg and equilibrium levels between 35-40kft. Main limiting factor for strong/severe storms is weaker column wind profiles that will be largely uni-directional shear only 20-25kts at best. That said, given the humid airmass and a well mixed boundary layer, an isolated strong wind gust would be possible. Hail threat, while non-zero, is lesser with freezing levels near 15kft. Additional hazard is torrential rainfall and localized flooding given the aforementioned humid airmass and warm cloud layers exceeding 10kft.
Overnight period brings the next chances for showers and storms as a series of MCS's lift into the Great Lakes. First of these, currently over WI/IL, carries the best shot at any severe potential due to its arrival window latter part of the evening into early tonight. While there is significant uncertainty to what degree this complex holds together all the way into SE MI, dependent on cold pool maintenance, arrival of a SW LLJ strengthens column wind and subsequent shear profiles. As such, severe wind gusts would be possible with any surviving convection through early tonight before the nocturnal boundary layer can attempt to establish itself. A secondary Midwestern MCS looks to then cross or clip the region late tonight- early Thursday morning. Minimal severe chances with this window of showers/storms given the timing falling in the diurnal instability minima. Primary impact instead is clearing out area instability to start Thursday.
Thursday is expected to be similar to today as post-convective subsidence and diurnal mixing promote clearing skies through the morning hours. Airmass remains unchanged with dewpoints hovering in the lower 70s with sunnier skies again allowing temperatures to climb into the low 90s with heat indices rising to the upper 90s to near 100.
Attention then turns to severe potential Thursday evening-night where SPC has the area under a Day 2 Slight/Enhanced risk outlook.
Strong PV core rounding the base of the upper Midwest trough Thursday afternoon sparks convection along the attendant surface cold front over the Midwest/Plains. There is high confidence this convection to organize and grow upscale whilst crossing the Mississippi river region while approaching the Great Lakes/Ohio Valley. Where confidence is still low is in how much instability builds back into SE MI over the course of Thursday. There has been a notable shift in a number of CAM outputs (ie ARW, MPAS, HRDPS) for the main instability to hold near the state line promoting a southward drift in the squall favoring better severe wind potentials over the southern portions of the CWA into IN/OH. That said, still have a set (ie HRRR, NSSL, NAM Nest) that favor better northerly advection and hold a more northerly track towards the central and northern CWA-where the current Day 2 Enhanced Risk is. Regardless, wind gusts to 70mph would be the primary hazard with QLCS tornadoes being a secondary threat given the convective mode.
Cold front crosses the area Friday morning ending any lingering showers and ushering in a more seasonably average airmass for Friday and Saturday. A secondary cold front drops out of northern Ontario and through the central Great Lakes early Sunday bringing the next chances for wider spread showers/storms with cooler air following to start the work week.
MARINE...
Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms are possible this afternoon through Thursday night. A front is currently draped across region which will try to develop some convection this afternoon. A larger complex of severe storms west of Lake Michigan is forecast to track east-northeast across lower MI later this evening bringing the next chance of severe storms to the area. Could be a lull through part of Thursday before a low pressure system tracks from Iowa through the straits Thursday evening into the overnight. This would push a stronger cold front through the region with the next round of storms. Wind gusts in excess of 50 kt and large hail would be the main threats with these storms. This front will pass through early Friday morning, bringing an uptick in westerly winds in its wake as well as a brief period of drier conditions to start the weekend.
HYDROLOGY...
A moisture-rich environment remains in place today and Thursday with multiple opportunities for showers and thunderstorms over the next two days. Progressive nature of expected thunderstorms generally limits widespread flooding concerns, although heavy downpours with rainfall rates over an inch per hour will be possible. Localized flash flooding cannot be ruled out, but is mostly confined to low- lying, urban, or flood prone areas.
DTX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
MI...None.
Lake Huron...None.
Lake St Clair...None.
Michigan waters of Lake Erie...None.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Detroit/Pontiac MI 932 PM EDT Wed Jun 10 2026
KEY MESSAGES
- Severe Thunderstorm Watch 307 in effect until Midnight. Damaging winds are the primary hazard.
- There is a Slight to Enhanced Risk for severe thunderstorms Thursday night. Damaging winds, large hail, and spin-up tornadoes are all possible.
- Not as warm and much less humid Friday through the weekend.
UPDATE
The MCS crossing SE Mi at issuance time has benefited considerably from new cell growth on the leading edge of the cold pool fueled by MLCAPE of 2500-3000 J/kg. The new cells continued to grow quickly upscale to reinforce damaging wind within the system, especially north of I-69. Locations to the south will experience more sporadic damaging wind gusts left over from the original cold pool along the less organized south fringe of the system before it exits into Ontario from 11 PM to Midnight.
Farther upstream, late evening hourly mesoanalysis shows a broad pool of rain-cooled air stabilizing conditions back into WI/IL leaving the instability axis aligned more west to east into the Ohio valley. This guides the central IL MCS SEwd and south of the Mi border during the night. As this occurs, instability returning northward through IA/WI feeds elevated moisture transport over the Lower Mi meso-high, and this leads to a new round of showers and thunderstorms developing overhead with scattered to numerous coverage that linger through mid morning. Locally heavy rainfall is the primary hazard with this activity.
PREV DISCUSSION
Issued at 710 PM EDT Wed Jun 10 2026
AVIATION...
Thunderstorm clusters ongoing over central and SE Mi initiated as mid level subsidence weakened ahead of the upstream MCS/MCV. This activity percolates ahead of the MCS itself which is expected to reach central Lower Mi during the 00-01Z timeframe. IR satellite imagery indicates a larger scale warming/weakening trend on the system, however with some renewed stronger updrafts after crossing Lake Mi. It now appears at least segments of the system either maintain or regains strength within MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg in place across southern Lower Mi and we'll see if the weaker wind profile proves to be a limiting factor this far east.
A mixture of rain-cooled VFR/MVFR ceiling and fog linger in the wake of the MCS later tonight. After a few hours of mid level subsidence as well, there remains a model signal showing elevated convection redeveloping but with low spatial predictability.
The terminal corridor is then fully in the warm sector of low pressure spanning from northern Ontario into the Midwest during Thursday. This allows daytime instability to lift ceiling into VFR while heat and humidity build for the next round of thunderstorms currently projected for later Thursday evening.
D21/DTW Convection... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms this evening precede the MCS crossing western Lower Mi at forecast issuance. There is also a chance of renewed storm development later tonight, roughly from 06-09Z.
DTW THRESHOLD PROBABILITIES...
* High for ceiling aob 5000 feet tonight and Thursday morning.
* Moderate for thunderstorms this evening and late tonight.
PREV DISCUSSION...
Issued at 315 PM EDT Wed Jun 10 2026
DISCUSSION...
Weak mid-level height rises have promoted scattering of morning stratus allowing for respectable solar insolation from late morning into this afternoon. Weak warm front, that had been confined to southern SE MI, washes north in a downstream response to mid-upper trough digging into the upper Midwest/far western Great Lakes through the rest of the afternoon expanding lower 70 dewpoints into the northern CWA Despite this near-tropical near surface layer, lingering capping inversion is expected to hold through the late afternoon period. As we reach the early evening (~21Z and after), things get murkier wrt to the cap. An EML above 850mb, partially sampled by ILX's 12Z RAOB, is progged to lift into southern lower around roughly 21Z. This feature brings steepening mid-level lapse rates near or in excess of 7.5C/km as well as a ribbon of higher theta-e on its lead nose. While model forecast soundings are still spilt, there is an increasing subset that advertise this in combination with diurnal boundary mixing/growth to weaken our cap sufficiently to allow for at least isolated to widely scattered convective initiation as lift associated with this buoyancy gradient is able to connect thru to the lower level moisture. Should this occur, ample instability is available for convection with an MLCAPE gradient ranging from 1500-2500J/kg and equilibrium levels between 35-40kft. Main limiting factor for strong/severe storms is weaker column wind profiles that will be largely uni-directional shear only 20-25kts at best. That said, given the humid airmass and a well mixed boundary layer, an isolated strong wind gust would be possible. Hail threat, while non-zero, is lesser with freezing levels near 15kft. Additional hazard is torrential rainfall and localized flooding given the aforementioned humid airmass and warm cloud layers exceeding 10kft.
Overnight period brings the next chances for showers and storms as a series of MCS's lift into the Great Lakes. First of these, currently over WI/IL, carries the best shot at any severe potential due to its arrival window latter part of the evening into early tonight. While there is significant uncertainty to what degree this complex holds together all the way into SE MI, dependent on cold pool maintenance, arrival of a SW LLJ strengthens column wind and subsequent shear profiles. As such, severe wind gusts would be possible with any surviving convection through early tonight before the nocturnal boundary layer can attempt to establish itself. A secondary Midwestern MCS looks to then cross or clip the region late tonight- early Thursday morning. Minimal severe chances with this window of showers/storms given the timing falling in the diurnal instability minima. Primary impact instead is clearing out area instability to start Thursday.
Thursday is expected to be similar to today as post-convective subsidence and diurnal mixing promote clearing skies through the morning hours. Airmass remains unchanged with dewpoints hovering in the lower 70s with sunnier skies again allowing temperatures to climb into the low 90s with heat indices rising to the upper 90s to near 100.
Attention then turns to severe potential Thursday evening-night where SPC has the area under a Day 2 Slight/Enhanced risk outlook.
Strong PV core rounding the base of the upper Midwest trough Thursday afternoon sparks convection along the attendant surface cold front over the Midwest/Plains. There is high confidence this convection to organize and grow upscale whilst crossing the Mississippi river region while approaching the Great Lakes/Ohio Valley. Where confidence is still low is in how much instability builds back into SE MI over the course of Thursday. There has been a notable shift in a number of CAM outputs (ie ARW, MPAS, HRDPS) for the main instability to hold near the state line promoting a southward drift in the squall favoring better severe wind potentials over the southern portions of the CWA into IN/OH. That said, still have a set (ie HRRR, NSSL, NAM Nest) that favor better northerly advection and hold a more northerly track towards the central and northern CWA-where the current Day 2 Enhanced Risk is. Regardless, wind gusts to 70mph would be the primary hazard with QLCS tornadoes being a secondary threat given the convective mode.
Cold front crosses the area Friday morning ending any lingering showers and ushering in a more seasonably average airmass for Friday and Saturday. A secondary cold front drops out of northern Ontario and through the central Great Lakes early Sunday bringing the next chances for wider spread showers/storms with cooler air following to start the work week.
MARINE...
Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms are possible this afternoon through Thursday night. A front is currently draped across region which will try to develop some convection this afternoon. A larger complex of severe storms west of Lake Michigan is forecast to track east-northeast across lower MI later this evening bringing the next chance of severe storms to the area. Could be a lull through part of Thursday before a low pressure system tracks from Iowa through the straits Thursday evening into the overnight. This would push a stronger cold front through the region with the next round of storms. Wind gusts in excess of 50 kt and large hail would be the main threats with these storms. This front will pass through early Friday morning, bringing an uptick in westerly winds in its wake as well as a brief period of drier conditions to start the weekend.
HYDROLOGY...
A moisture-rich environment remains in place today and Thursday with multiple opportunities for showers and thunderstorms over the next two days. Progressive nature of expected thunderstorms generally limits widespread flooding concerns, although heavy downpours with rainfall rates over an inch per hour will be possible. Localized flash flooding cannot be ruled out, but is mostly confined to low- lying, urban, or flood prone areas.
DTX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
MI...None.
Lake Huron...None.
Lake St Clair...None.
Michigan waters of Lake Erie...None.
| Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air | Water | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
| FTGM4 - 9014098 - Fort Gratiot, MI | 4 mi | 50 min | SSW 9.9G | 79°F | 29.72 | 66°F | ||
| MBRM4 - 9014090 - Mouth of the Black River, MI | 6 mi | 50 min | 80°F | 29.70 | ||||
| 45209 | 7 mi | 30 min | 5.8G | 69°F | 65°F | 0 ft | 68°F | |
| AGCM4 | 30 mi | 50 min | 76°F | 61°F | 29.73 | |||
| 45149 - Southern Lake Huron | 37 mi | 80 min | SE 5.8 | 65°F | 58°F | 0 ft | 29.71 | |
| 45147 - Lake St Clair | 46 mi | 80 min | SSW 9.7 | 73°F | 69°F | 1 ft | 29.73 | |
| CLSM4 - St. Clair Shores, MI | 48 mi | 80 min | SSW 4.1G | 78°F | 29.76 |
Wind History for Fort Gratiot, MI
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