textproduct: Medford
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DISCUSSION
There are plenty of showers on radar this afternoon with rain falling over most of the forecast area under warm air advection. Coastal locations are reporting 0.5 inches of rain with lower totals <0.1 inches around the westside valleys and even lower totals east of the Cascades. We'll see a cold front eventually hit the coast later tonight and bring one last shot of rain mainly to coastal locations.
With the relatively cooler air moving in, we'll see the showers persist along the coast during Tuesday. Thermodynamic profiles haven't changed with very little convective available potential energy(CAPE) around the boundary layer. This hints at just plain old showers with no electrification of the cloud. The air aloft is relatively stable and drier above 9000 feet, so these showers will be fairly shallow and likely lighter with little or no rain falling.
Conditions begin to dry out by Tuesday night with some relatively cooler air already in place. There is a threat of frost over populated areas east of the Cascades early Wednesday morning as skies will begin to clear out with the trough moving east. Therefore, we put some frost in the weather wording for locations east of the Cascades Wednesday morning.
Conditions trend warmer heading into Wednesday as high pressure continues to build across the region and highs move about 4 to 5 degrees warmer and meet climatological normals for this time of year. No weather concerns on Wednesday with deeper northerly flow and a short wave flying through eastern Oregon. This departing shortwave will build a healthy north east to south west pressure gradient across the state of Oregon By Thursday morning, a thermal trough begins to set up over south western Oregon and north western California. One can see this in the inverted 850mb heights and 1000-500 mb thickness values in the GFS. Temperatures will further increase as a result with some broader northeast to east flow across the region. Net result of these winds should be temperatures moving warmer. The 500 mb ridge is still situated west, although temperatures will move warmer without much change in the 500 mb heights.
From Friday into the weekend, heat risk will gradually increase as temperatures continue to trend warmer. Heat peaks on Sunday as the ridge axis likely settles over our area with 592dm heights. Right now, we're forecasting a high temperature of 105 in Medford on Sunday with a low of 65 Sunday night. The extreme forecast index(EFI) is hinting at an unusually strong heat event with max temps and min temps right around 0.8 to 0.85, which is fairly strong for early June, yet not extreme. Confidence is pretty high with the placement of this ridge based as well, so this heat is definitely on the way for southwest Oregon and northern California. Finally, it looks like this ridge flattens out around Wednesday of next week(16th-17th) based on analysis of the GEFS 500 mb heights. Therefore, this heat wave should be of the shorter variety.
-Smith
AVIATION...08/18Z TAFS
A late season system is bringing a variety of conditions to the region today. Generally, MVFR mixed with low end VFR and widespread terrain obscurations is occurring along and west of the Cascades with higher ceilings/VFR prevailing east of the Cascades and across northern California. Widespread precipitation will generally maintain these conditions through the afternoon and into the evening. Have introduced some low level wind shear along the coast north of Cape Blanco, including KOTH, where surface winds are currently from the southeast while winds about 2000 ft are from the southwest at about 50 kts. This concern eases later this afternoon as gusty winds surface. Breezy winds are expected for the remainder of the area as well, but will be strongest along the coast.
Showers/precipitation will generally decrease later this evening, but low clouds will linger well into Tuesday morning. Overall, conditions should be a mix of MVFR/low end VFR with general clearing expected after 18z Tuesday. /BR-y
MARINE...Updated 1200 AM PDT Monday, June 8, 2026
A cold front is moving through the region today, bringing gusty south winds and steep to very steep seas. The steepest seas are expected north of Cape Blanco where south gales will persist through the afternoon. Winds ease late this afternoon, but seas will remain steep for all areas into Tuesday morning, with very steep seas lingering north of Bandon through tonight.
MFR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
OR...CA...None.
PACIFIC COASTAL WATERS...Small Craft Advisory until 11 AM PDT Tuesday for PZZ356-376.
Gale Warning until 8 PM PDT this evening for PZZ350-370.
Small Craft Advisory from 8 PM this evening to 11 AM PDT Tuesday for PZZ350-370.
Hazardous Seas Warning from 8 PM this evening to 5 AM PDT Tuesday for PZZ350-370.
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