Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Long Beach, WA

November 29, 2023 3:49 AM PST (11:49 UTC)
Sunrise 7:36AM Sunset 4:31PM Moonrise 6:13PM Moonset 10:26AM
PZZ251 Coastal Waters From Cape Shoalwater Wa To Cape Falcon Or Out 10 Nm- 123 Pm Pst Tue Nov 28 2023
Tonight..NE wind 5 to 10 kt. Wind waves ne 1 ft at 4 seconds. SWell W 4 ft at 11 seconds. Patchy dense fog after midnight.
Wed..NE wind 5 to 10 kt, backing to nw in the afternoon. Wind waves ne 1 ft at 4 seconds, shifting to the nw 1 ft at 4 seconds in the afternoon. SWell W 5 ft at 11 seconds. Patchy dense fog in the morning.
Wed night..S wind 5 to 10 kt, rising to 10 to 15 kt after midnight. Wind waves S 1 ft at 4 seconds. SWell W 5 ft at 13 seconds and sw 3 ft at 7 seconds. Rain likely.
Thu..SW wind 10 to 15 kt with gusts to 20 kt. Wind waves sw 2 ft at 5 seconds. SWell W 6 ft at 12 seconds. Rain.
Thu night..W wind 10 to 15 kt with gusts to 20 kt, becoming sw 20 to 25 kt with gusts to 30 kt after midnight. Wind waves sw 5 ft at 5 seconds. SWell W 9 ft at 12 seconds. Rain.
Fri..SW wind 25 to 30 kt, easing to 20 to 25 kt in the afternoon. Gusts to 40 kt, becoming 35 kt late in the afternoon. Combined seas 12 ft with a dominant period of 12 seconds. Showers and a slight chance of tstms.
Fri night..W wind 20 to 25 kt. Gusts to 35 kt, becoming 30 kt overnight. Combined seas 15 ft with a dominant period of 12 seconds. Showers and a slight chance of tstms.
Sat..SW wind 15 to 20 kt. Gusts to 25 kt, becoming 30 kt. Wind waves sw 3 ft at 5 seconds. SWell W 15 ft at 13 seconds.
Sun..SW wind 15 to 20 kt. Gusts to 30 kt, becoming 25 kt. Wind waves sw 4 ft at 6 seconds. SWell W 12 ft at 12 seconds and W 6 ft at 0 seconds.
Tonight..NE wind 5 to 10 kt. Wind waves ne 1 ft at 4 seconds. SWell W 4 ft at 11 seconds. Patchy dense fog after midnight.
Wed..NE wind 5 to 10 kt, backing to nw in the afternoon. Wind waves ne 1 ft at 4 seconds, shifting to the nw 1 ft at 4 seconds in the afternoon. SWell W 5 ft at 11 seconds. Patchy dense fog in the morning.
Wed night..S wind 5 to 10 kt, rising to 10 to 15 kt after midnight. Wind waves S 1 ft at 4 seconds. SWell W 5 ft at 13 seconds and sw 3 ft at 7 seconds. Rain likely.
Thu..SW wind 10 to 15 kt with gusts to 20 kt. Wind waves sw 2 ft at 5 seconds. SWell W 6 ft at 12 seconds. Rain.
Thu night..W wind 10 to 15 kt with gusts to 20 kt, becoming sw 20 to 25 kt with gusts to 30 kt after midnight. Wind waves sw 5 ft at 5 seconds. SWell W 9 ft at 12 seconds. Rain.
Fri..SW wind 25 to 30 kt, easing to 20 to 25 kt in the afternoon. Gusts to 40 kt, becoming 35 kt late in the afternoon. Combined seas 12 ft with a dominant period of 12 seconds. Showers and a slight chance of tstms.
Fri night..W wind 20 to 25 kt. Gusts to 35 kt, becoming 30 kt overnight. Combined seas 15 ft with a dominant period of 12 seconds. Showers and a slight chance of tstms.
Sat..SW wind 15 to 20 kt. Gusts to 25 kt, becoming 30 kt. Wind waves sw 3 ft at 5 seconds. SWell W 15 ft at 13 seconds.
Sun..SW wind 15 to 20 kt. Gusts to 30 kt, becoming 25 kt. Wind waves sw 4 ft at 6 seconds. SWell W 12 ft at 12 seconds and W 6 ft at 0 seconds.
PZZ200 221 Am Pst Wed Nov 29 2023
Synopsis for the southern washington and northern oregon coast.. Weak thermal trough along the oregon coast will maintain offshore winds over the waters Wednesday. A cold front will then move through the waters Wednesday night into Thursday, with winds gradually strengthening and turning southerly. Thursday into the weekend, a series of fronts will maintain southerly to westerly winds with building seas.
Synopsis for the southern washington and northern oregon coast.. Weak thermal trough along the oregon coast will maintain offshore winds over the waters Wednesday. A cold front will then move through the waters Wednesday night into Thursday, with winds gradually strengthening and turning southerly. Thursday into the weekend, a series of fronts will maintain southerly to westerly winds with building seas.

Area Discussion for - Portland, OR
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FXUS66 KPQR 291036 AFDPQR
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Portland OR 235 AM PST Wed Nov 29 2023
SYNOPSIS
A change in the weather pattern will occur Wednesday into Thursday as a series of frontal systems across the NE Pacific send rain and mountain snow across the region through the weekend and into early next week.
DISCUSSION
WEDNESDAY THROUGH TUESDAY...Weak high pressure persists across SW Washington, NW Oregon into Wednesday. Overnight lows will again drop below freezing allowing patchy frost formation on sheltered surfaces. Mostly clear skies with weak winds continue through the afternoon. Flow aloft will become more westerly and upper level clouds will start to fill in ahead of an approaching front. The ridge will continue to break down but there remains enough subsidence and weak transport winds to maintain the the Air Quality Advisory for the central and southern Valley, along with an Air Stagnation Advisory in the Lane County Cascade foothills into Thursday morning. This will continue to produce possibly unhealthy air quality.
The aforementioned front is associated with a Gulf of Alaska low that will send a dying cold front across the Pacific NW Thursday. Hi-res simulated reflectivity from multiple CAMs show widespread rain moving into the area by 5 AM Thursday. Snow levels will be around 3500 ft and there is enough QPF to produce snow accumulations between 4 to 8 inches. Have issued a Winter Weather Advisory from 10 AM Thursday through 4 AM Friday. Diffluent flow across the 700mb layer, MUCAPE around 400 J/kg [according to the NAM] and favorable positioning of the 500 mb jet streak will enhance instability through much of the day Thursday bringing a slight chance of thunderstorms across the coastal waters and along the coast.
The next cold front will be quick to move in late Thursday, early Friday morning which will bring more QPF than the first. Snow levels will be right around 3000 ft early Friday morning and slowly rise to 4000 ft by Saturday afternoon. Postfrontal westerly winds will lead to orographically enhanced snowfall during this time and the resultant snow accumulations continue to be enough to maintain the Winter Storm Watch now from late Thursday night through Saturday afternoon above 3500 ft.
The synoptic setup will change moving into Sunday; high pressure off the coast of California will become more closed and low pressure in the Gulf of Alaska will be in favorable positions relative to each other to transport subtropical moisture from roughly 155W up into the Pacific NW. This warm air mass with ample moisture will send snow levels above 6000-7000 ft by early Sunday and send snow ratios to the floor. The good snow accumulations we will have received Thursday through Saturday will be met by heavy rainfall Sunday. Highest peaks in the Coast Range and parts of the Cascades will see rain accumulations of 3-4 inches from late Saturday night through late Sunday night. During that same time period inland, rain accumulations will be 1-1.5 inches.
A broad area of low pressure will move into the Gulf of Alaska Monday sending another warm front across the region Monday afternoon.
Southwesterly flow with decent moisture will maintain rain into midweek. Probabilistic guidance from the Hydrologic Ensemble Forecast Service (HEFS) indicate nearly every river in the area most likely [25-75% chance] will remain below Action stage during this event.
-BMuhlestein
AVIATION
12z TAFs: Current satellite imagery and observations as of 10z Wed show freezing fog in the southern Willamette Valley, bringing LIFR cigs/vis to KEUG. In addition, some locations in the central Valley and western Portland Metro are having vis reductions to MVFR thresholds due to mist. A shortwave trough aloft is bringing a stratus cloud deck at around 9-10 kft into the region. This could prevent further development of fog in the Valley this morning. VFR conditions prevail across most terminals through the TAF period.
Areas of frost are expected to form on exposed surfaces again this morning for any given terminal. Significant accumulation is not expected. For locations with freezing fog, expect improvement to VFR thresholds after 18-19z Wed. Winds at every terminal will be light and offshore. By Wednesday evening, mid to high level clouds will move in associated with the incoming frontal system.
** The new Aviation Weather Center website is live. The new website can be found at aviationweather.gov **
KPDX AND APPROACHES...VFR thresholds throughout the TAF period.
Frost is expected to form again this morning, especially in shaded areas. Winds will be light and variable. Broken to overcast cigs return today ahead of the next system. -Alviz
MARINE
Models show a weak thermal trough along the Oregon coast Wednesday which will maintain light, offshore winds.
Relatively quiet conditions over the waters continue today as a low pressure system shifts far south of our area toward California. The only marine hazard currently issued is a Small Craft Advisory for the Columbia River Bar for a strong ebb Wednesday afternoon. Seas are forecast between 4 to 6 ft.
Wednesday night to Thursday, a cold front will move through the waters, turning winds southerly and gradually strengthening winds near Small Craft criteria. Seas will gradually build to 8-10 ft by Thursday evening. Friday into the weekend, a series of systems will move through the waters, increasing winds to Gale-force criteria. NBM guidance shows a 60-80% chance of wind gusts reaching Gales between Friday night to Sunday night. In addition, swells will amplify and bring significantly higher seas. Current NBM 10th percentile guidance show wave heights between 12-14 ft. Considering that there will be both Gale-force winds and increased swell heights, the current forecast reflects combined seas up to 15-17 ft this weekend.
As a result, there is the potential for a sneaker wave threat this weekend. The primary swell peaks on Saturday around 14-15 ft at 13-14 seconds. -Alviz
PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
OR...Winter Weather Advisory from 10 AM Thursday to 4 AM PST Friday for Cascades in Lane County-Northern Oregon Cascades.
Winter Storm Watch from late Thursday night through Saturday afternoon for Cascades in Lane County-Northern Oregon Cascades.
Air Stagnation Advisory until 10 AM PST Thursday for Cascade Foothills in Lane County.
WA...Winter Weather Advisory from 10 AM Thursday to 4 AM PST Friday for South Washington Cascades.
Winter Storm Watch from late Thursday night through Saturday afternoon for South Washington Cascades.
PZ...Small Craft Advisory from 4 PM this afternoon to 9 PM PST this evening for Columbia River Bar.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Portland OR 235 AM PST Wed Nov 29 2023
SYNOPSIS
A change in the weather pattern will occur Wednesday into Thursday as a series of frontal systems across the NE Pacific send rain and mountain snow across the region through the weekend and into early next week.
DISCUSSION
WEDNESDAY THROUGH TUESDAY...Weak high pressure persists across SW Washington, NW Oregon into Wednesday. Overnight lows will again drop below freezing allowing patchy frost formation on sheltered surfaces. Mostly clear skies with weak winds continue through the afternoon. Flow aloft will become more westerly and upper level clouds will start to fill in ahead of an approaching front. The ridge will continue to break down but there remains enough subsidence and weak transport winds to maintain the the Air Quality Advisory for the central and southern Valley, along with an Air Stagnation Advisory in the Lane County Cascade foothills into Thursday morning. This will continue to produce possibly unhealthy air quality.
The aforementioned front is associated with a Gulf of Alaska low that will send a dying cold front across the Pacific NW Thursday. Hi-res simulated reflectivity from multiple CAMs show widespread rain moving into the area by 5 AM Thursday. Snow levels will be around 3500 ft and there is enough QPF to produce snow accumulations between 4 to 8 inches. Have issued a Winter Weather Advisory from 10 AM Thursday through 4 AM Friday. Diffluent flow across the 700mb layer, MUCAPE around 400 J/kg [according to the NAM] and favorable positioning of the 500 mb jet streak will enhance instability through much of the day Thursday bringing a slight chance of thunderstorms across the coastal waters and along the coast.
The next cold front will be quick to move in late Thursday, early Friday morning which will bring more QPF than the first. Snow levels will be right around 3000 ft early Friday morning and slowly rise to 4000 ft by Saturday afternoon. Postfrontal westerly winds will lead to orographically enhanced snowfall during this time and the resultant snow accumulations continue to be enough to maintain the Winter Storm Watch now from late Thursday night through Saturday afternoon above 3500 ft.
The synoptic setup will change moving into Sunday; high pressure off the coast of California will become more closed and low pressure in the Gulf of Alaska will be in favorable positions relative to each other to transport subtropical moisture from roughly 155W up into the Pacific NW. This warm air mass with ample moisture will send snow levels above 6000-7000 ft by early Sunday and send snow ratios to the floor. The good snow accumulations we will have received Thursday through Saturday will be met by heavy rainfall Sunday. Highest peaks in the Coast Range and parts of the Cascades will see rain accumulations of 3-4 inches from late Saturday night through late Sunday night. During that same time period inland, rain accumulations will be 1-1.5 inches.
A broad area of low pressure will move into the Gulf of Alaska Monday sending another warm front across the region Monday afternoon.
Southwesterly flow with decent moisture will maintain rain into midweek. Probabilistic guidance from the Hydrologic Ensemble Forecast Service (HEFS) indicate nearly every river in the area most likely [25-75% chance] will remain below Action stage during this event.
-BMuhlestein
AVIATION
12z TAFs: Current satellite imagery and observations as of 10z Wed show freezing fog in the southern Willamette Valley, bringing LIFR cigs/vis to KEUG. In addition, some locations in the central Valley and western Portland Metro are having vis reductions to MVFR thresholds due to mist. A shortwave trough aloft is bringing a stratus cloud deck at around 9-10 kft into the region. This could prevent further development of fog in the Valley this morning. VFR conditions prevail across most terminals through the TAF period.
Areas of frost are expected to form on exposed surfaces again this morning for any given terminal. Significant accumulation is not expected. For locations with freezing fog, expect improvement to VFR thresholds after 18-19z Wed. Winds at every terminal will be light and offshore. By Wednesday evening, mid to high level clouds will move in associated with the incoming frontal system.
** The new Aviation Weather Center website is live. The new website can be found at aviationweather.gov **
KPDX AND APPROACHES...VFR thresholds throughout the TAF period.
Frost is expected to form again this morning, especially in shaded areas. Winds will be light and variable. Broken to overcast cigs return today ahead of the next system. -Alviz
MARINE
Models show a weak thermal trough along the Oregon coast Wednesday which will maintain light, offshore winds.
Relatively quiet conditions over the waters continue today as a low pressure system shifts far south of our area toward California. The only marine hazard currently issued is a Small Craft Advisory for the Columbia River Bar for a strong ebb Wednesday afternoon. Seas are forecast between 4 to 6 ft.
Wednesday night to Thursday, a cold front will move through the waters, turning winds southerly and gradually strengthening winds near Small Craft criteria. Seas will gradually build to 8-10 ft by Thursday evening. Friday into the weekend, a series of systems will move through the waters, increasing winds to Gale-force criteria. NBM guidance shows a 60-80% chance of wind gusts reaching Gales between Friday night to Sunday night. In addition, swells will amplify and bring significantly higher seas. Current NBM 10th percentile guidance show wave heights between 12-14 ft. Considering that there will be both Gale-force winds and increased swell heights, the current forecast reflects combined seas up to 15-17 ft this weekend.
As a result, there is the potential for a sneaker wave threat this weekend. The primary swell peaks on Saturday around 14-15 ft at 13-14 seconds. -Alviz
PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
OR...Winter Weather Advisory from 10 AM Thursday to 4 AM PST Friday for Cascades in Lane County-Northern Oregon Cascades.
Winter Storm Watch from late Thursday night through Saturday afternoon for Cascades in Lane County-Northern Oregon Cascades.
Air Stagnation Advisory until 10 AM PST Thursday for Cascade Foothills in Lane County.
WA...Winter Weather Advisory from 10 AM Thursday to 4 AM PST Friday for South Washington Cascades.
Winter Storm Watch from late Thursday night through Saturday afternoon for South Washington Cascades.
PZ...Small Craft Advisory from 4 PM this afternoon to 9 PM PST this evening for Columbia River Bar.
Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air Temp | Water Temp | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
46243 - Clatsop Spit, OR - 162 | 11 mi | 113 min | 51°F | 4 ft | ||||
TOKW1 - 9440910 - Toke Point, WA | 24 mi | 49 min | E 7G | 35°F | 49°F | 30.17 | ||
46211 - Grays Harbor, WA (036) | 35 mi | 53 min | 50°F | 4 ft | ||||
46248 - Astoria Canyon, OR (179) | 35 mi | 53 min | 53°F | 4 ft | ||||
WPTW1 - 9441102 - Westport, WA | 37 mi | 73 min | E 8.9G | 35°F | 51°F | 30.14 |
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No data
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 |
KAST ASTORIA RGNL,OR | 17 sm | 54 min | calm | 9 sm | Clear | 32°F | 28°F | 86% | 30.12 |
Wind History from AST
(wind in knots)Tide / Current for Tarlatt Slough, Willapa Bay, Washington
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Tarlatt Slough
Click for Map
Wed -- 03:18 AM PST 8.49 feet High Tide
Wed -- 07:36 AM PST Sunrise
Wed -- 09:05 AM PST 3.75 feet Low Tide
Wed -- 10:26 AM PST Moonset
Wed -- 02:19 PM PST 10.01 feet High Tide
Wed -- 04:32 PM PST Sunset
Wed -- 06:13 PM PST Moonrise
Wed -- 09:50 PM PST -0.75 feet Low Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Click for Map
Wed -- 03:18 AM PST 8.49 feet High Tide
Wed -- 07:36 AM PST Sunrise
Wed -- 09:05 AM PST 3.75 feet Low Tide
Wed -- 10:26 AM PST Moonset
Wed -- 02:19 PM PST 10.01 feet High Tide
Wed -- 04:32 PM PST Sunset
Wed -- 06:13 PM PST Moonrise
Wed -- 09:50 PM PST -0.75 feet Low Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Tarlatt Slough, Willapa Bay, Washington, Tide feet
12 am |
3.6 |
1 am |
5.8 |
2 am |
7.6 |
3 am |
8.4 |
4 am |
8.3 |
5 am |
7.6 |
6 am |
6.6 |
7 am |
5.4 |
8 am |
4.3 |
9 am |
3.8 |
10 am |
4.4 |
11 am |
6.1 |
12 pm |
7.8 |
1 pm |
9.2 |
2 pm |
10 |
3 pm |
9.8 |
4 pm |
8.9 |
5 pm |
7.4 |
6 pm |
5.4 |
7 pm |
3.4 |
8 pm |
1.3 |
9 pm |
-0.3 |
10 pm |
-0.7 |
11 pm |
0.3 |
Columbia River entrance (N. Jetty)
Click for Map
Wed -- 02:12 AM PST 6.55 feet High Tide
Wed -- 07:08 AM PST 3.48 feet Low Tide
Wed -- 07:36 AM PST Sunrise
Wed -- 10:26 AM PST Moonset
Wed -- 01:03 PM PST 8.30 feet High Tide
Wed -- 04:32 PM PST Sunset
Wed -- 06:14 PM PST Moonrise
Wed -- 08:08 PM PST -0.75 feet Low Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Click for Map
Wed -- 02:12 AM PST 6.55 feet High Tide
Wed -- 07:08 AM PST 3.48 feet Low Tide
Wed -- 07:36 AM PST Sunrise
Wed -- 10:26 AM PST Moonset
Wed -- 01:03 PM PST 8.30 feet High Tide
Wed -- 04:32 PM PST Sunset
Wed -- 06:14 PM PST Moonrise
Wed -- 08:08 PM PST -0.75 feet Low Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Columbia River entrance (N. Jetty), Washington, Tide feet
12 am |
4.8 |
1 am |
6 |
2 am |
6.5 |
3 am |
6.3 |
4 am |
5.6 |
5 am |
4.6 |
6 am |
3.9 |
7 am |
3.5 |
8 am |
3.7 |
9 am |
4.6 |
10 am |
5.8 |
11 am |
7 |
12 pm |
7.9 |
1 pm |
8.3 |
2 pm |
7.9 |
3 pm |
6.6 |
4 pm |
4.8 |
5 pm |
2.8 |
6 pm |
1.1 |
7 pm |
-0.2 |
8 pm |
-0.7 |
9 pm |
-0.5 |
10 pm |
0.6 |
11 pm |
2 |
Langley,Hill/Gray,Harbor,WA

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