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Litchfield Ohio Weather Forecast Discussion

179
FXUS61 KCLE 070000
AFDCLE

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 800 PM EDT Mon Oct 6 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A cold front will approach from the west tonight before gliding east across the local area on Tuesday. Canadian high pressure will quickly build across the Great Lakes region Wednesday into Friday.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/... High pressure will exit to the east tonight as an upper level trough and surface cold front push east across the Great Lakes region. Some prefrontal showers are possible across the western half of the forecast area overnight tonight. Showers will overspread the region by Tuesday as the cold front tracks across the local area. Some isolated thunderstorms, sub-severe, will be possible with the frontal passage as surface based CAPE increases to 500-750 J/kg. Most if not all of the local area should receive at least 0.50 inches of rain with this system with localized pockets of 0.75-1.00 inches possible mainly along and east of I-71. The Weather Prediction Center continues to highlight the eastern half of the forecast area in a Marginal Risk (Level 1 of 4) for excessive rainfall in their Day 2 ERO. The cold front will exit to the southeast Tuesday night with any lingering showers and cloud cover diminishing during the overnight hours.

Warm overnight lows tonight in the low to mid 60s, upper 50s across Northwest Pennsylvania. High temperatures on Tuesday are expected to be roughly 10-15 degrees cooler. Low temperatures will fall into the mid to upper 40s Tuesday night behind the cold front.

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.SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... Canadian high pressure is expected to quickly build across the Great Lakes region behind the aforementioned cold front. The combination of these features will allow for a significant airmass change and below normal temperatures expected through the short term. High temperatures in the upper 50s to lower 60s are expected each afternoon. Low temperatures fall into the 30s areawide. Confidence in areas of frost developing continues Wednesday and Thursday night with widespread areas of minimum temperatures less than 36 degrees across inland locations across much of North Central and Northeast Ohio and typical cold spots in Erie and Crawford Counties in Pennsylvania.

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.LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... High pressure will generally remain overhead across much of the Great Lakes and Northeast regions through the long term leading to mainly dry conditions. Some uncertainty as we head into the weekend on the exact track of an upper level low moving across the Great Lakes region. If the low moves in the vicinity of the region expect for precipitation chances to increased. For now, maintained a dry forecast for now given the uncertainty.

Highs will return to near normal values in the upper 60s through the long term with overnight in the low to mid 40s.

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.AVIATION /00Z Tuesday THROUGH Saturday/... VFR across the TAF sites this evening with deterioration to MVFR and IFR ceilings/vsbys late tonight into Tuesday ahead and along of a cold front. Already beginning to see pre-frontal rain and periodic embedded thunder developing upstream across the Lower Ohio Valley this evening. This area of precipitation will arrive northeast into the area later tonight, resulting in widespread MVFR to perhaps brief IFR vsbys across the TAF sites. Did introduce some thunder chances across the central sites (FDY/MFD/CLE). Otherwise, attention turns towards Tuesday afternoon where showers and thunderstorms may re-develop along a cold front. Thunder chances appear more likely within the line and have reflected this with tempo tsra groups Tuesday afternoon and evening as the cold front sweeps west to east through the area.

South to southwest winds are between 7 and 10 knots this evening. Wind speeds will maintain around 7 to 10 knots on Tuesday, gradually favoring a southwest to west direction by late morning and early afternoon. Winds will then abruptly shift towards the northwest and north behind a cold front late Tuesday afternoon and evening, around 10 knots.

Outlook...Non-VFR possible in periodic lake effect clouds on Wednesday.

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.MARINE... High pressure will be departing to the east through the evening as low pressure moves into the Great Lakes region late tonight through Tuesday night. Winds this evening will be light at 5-10 knots out of the southwest and increase overnight to 10-20 knots. Frontal passage should occur Tuesday afternoon into the evening and winds will shift to be out of the north to northwest. The winds will also increase to 15-25 knots with the strongest winds expected in the central basin. A Small Craft Advisory will most likely be needed late Tuesday night through midday Wednesday across the central basin. Waves will also build to 3-6 feet during the period of increased winds. High pressure will build in with winds and waves subsiding late Wednesday into early Thursday with the waves response being later into Thursday than the winds. From Thursday through the end of the week, winds will be out of the east to northeast at 10-15 knots and decrease to 5-10 by Friday.

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

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SYNOPSIS...13 NEAR TERM...13 SHORT TERM...13 LONG TERM...13 AVIATION...Kahn MARINE...23

NWS CLE Office Area Forecast Discussion

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