Technical NOAA Weather Discussion

FXUS66 KMTR 122037
AFDMTR

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service San Francisco CA
137 PM PDT Sun Jul 12 2026

...New SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, FIRE...

.KEY MESSAGES...
Updated at 130 PM PDT Sun Jul 12 2026

 - Showers continue across the region into Tuesday

 - Warming trend through midweek

 - Large tidal swings to bring localized coastal flooding at high 

&&

.SHORT TERM...
Issued at 130 PM PDT Sun Jul 12 2026
(This evening through Monday night)

As you read this remember the word nuance.
The atmosphere is many moving parts in the x, y, and z axis, as well 
as time. Mid to upper level monsoonal moisture has been working its 
way around the western periphery of an area of high pressure 
dominating the center portion of the US. As it does so this moisture 
is encountering an upper trough over the East Pacific. The path 
between the ridge and the trough are providing a road for the 
moisture to travel, while the trough and embedded shortwaves in the 
ridge are allowing for some vertical ascent. Models typically 
struggle with this type of pattern and this scenario is no 
exception. That said, it is all we have to go on as we look out 
beyond about 24 hours. In the short term forecast we can look at 
satellite and upstream soundings and radar. Today's satellite is 
showing a steady stream of moisture from the south cutting across 
Monterey County and extending up to Eastern Santa Clara County 
before exiting out to the NE. The remainder of our service area 
generally has thin clouds or is clear, which is not always good in 
an environment like this, because surface heating provides lift. 
That said, remember this moisture is in the mid to upper levels of 
troposphere. Even so, surface based heating can have an influence on 
the mid levels. A shortwave has shown up nicely in satellite data 
this afternoon over the San Diego and Orange County areas, tracking 
northward while following the coast. This could prove interesting as 
this shortwave is taking on a meso-low look, which simply means that 
it could add a little vertical kick to an already receptive 
environment. As this shortwave embeds within the larger moisture 
flow, we could see a a traveling pulse of increased mid to upper 
level instability this evening and overnight.

This evening and tonight expect bubbly cumulus clouds in the mid 
layers, meaning the base of the clouds starting at about 10000-15000 
feet. This will likely produce virga (rain out of the bottom of the 
cloud that never reaches the ground). The question is, will it cause 
lightning? Models (again, which don't handle these patterns well) 
have been showing a vertical temperature profile that does not 
support a robust hail growth zone. The -10C range doesn't even start 
until around 19000 feet in the Vandenberg sounding from this 
morning. Models do not show a descending hail growth zone during our 
times of peak instability. So at this point the probability of 
squeezing out a lightning strike is probably less than 10%. In all 
likelihood we will probably simply experience virga and an occasional 
drop of water on the ground. All that said, the probability is not 
zero. While odds are low, don't be surprised if you see a flash from 
a cloud or a rumble of thunder.

Monday is looking a little more robust for convective development. 
With warming temperatures and higher humidity levels, we'll start 
the day a little warmer than Sunday, meaning we'll have a little 
jump start on breaking a convective cap. When models do show 
convective parameters in these high based situations, it is 
important to take notice. By Monday afternoon models are all 
showing plenty of moisture across our entire service area with PWAT 
values in the 1-1.5" range. MU CAPE pops in some select area to a 
couple hundred J/kg, Total Totals jump into the mid 40s, and K index 
pulls into the 30s. All the ingredients are there for a convective 
afternoon on Monday, but again, the depth of convection will be the 
limiting factor as to any lightning development. Expect more virga, 
more chances for a few drops to hit the ground, but continued less 
than 10% chance of lightning. If surface heating and/or an embedded 
shortwave gives an afternoon kick to break the mid level cap, we 
could see some solid deep convection. If that occurs these will be 
dry thunderstorms and outflow boundaries could approach 30-40 mph. 
In other words, if thunderstorms do develop, expect lightning and 
locally gusty and erratic winds.

Other things through Monday. Coastal flood advisory remains in place 
due to high astronomical tides with a little anomaly on top. Warming 
trend is beginning and will run through mid week. Cloud cover could 
mute the warming signal, but outside the clouds the warming will be 
strong. Tuesday and Wednesday will bring inland areas into the 90s 
and surpass 100 in a few spots.

&&

.LONG TERM...
Issued at 130 PM PDT Sun Jul 12 2026
(Tuesday through next Saturday)

Convective threat will continue Monday night into Tuesday with the 
overall pattern shifting East through the day Tuesday. This shift 
will bring an end to the threat of high based thunderstorms for the 
Bay Area and Central Coast. The first part of Tuesday will be 
interesting as the warm minimum temperatures will give us a jump 
start on upward buoyancy  in the low levels, potentially impacting the 
upper levels. The question will be, is there enough moisture left 
around as some convective parameters spike again on Tuesday? As it 
stands now, there could be a small window Tuesday afternoon where we 
can see another threat of dry thunderstorms, but those odds are in 
the 5% or less range.

Overall, don't count anything out. With poor model guidance for high 
based convection and the ever present threat of nocturnal 
thunderstorms, the atmosphere can and does surprise us. All it takes 
is one of the parameters breaking from expectation and we could be 
off to the races.

After the warm up into midweek, the pattern takes on a much more 
normal look for the second half of the week.

Early next week (yup, talking about that far out), we could see more 
monsoonal/sub-tropical moisture work its way into the area. Stay 
tuned.

&&

.AVIATION...
(18Z TAFS)
Issued at 1203 PM PDT Sun Jul 12 2026

Monsoonal moisture will continue to surge into the region, leading 
to high clouds, elevated rain showers, and VFR conditions for the 
main terminals. Surrounding the sites, in the terrain, we can expect 
to see bubbling cumulus and elevated convection, which could produce 
brief pockets of rain and gusty winds. Should enough convective 
ingredients come together, which is currently sitting at a less than 
10% chance, we could get an isolated thunderstorm or two. 

Vicinity of SFO...Mid to high based clouds and elevated showers will 
continue to pass over the region. Light winds have started to shift 
and will gradually shift o the southwest for a brief period this 
afternoon. The seabreeze will return bringing 10-15kt winds before 
ease a bit overnight. Some model guidance shows a subtle hint of a 
shallow marine layer late tonight and into early Monday morning. A 
few low clouds could flirt around the Bay, but VFR conditions should 
prevail.

SFO Bridge Approach...Similar to SFO.

Monterey Bay Terminals...Light winds, high clouds, and elevated 
showers will pass over the region today. A mix of light rain showers 
and virga will be possible, with most locations remaining dry until 
the profile moistens up. VFR conditions are expected; however, 
similar to the SF Bay, there is subtle hint for stratus late tonight 
and into tomorrow morning. Opted to hint at it rather than socking 
terminals in. 

&&

.MARINE...
(Today through Friday)
Issued at 922 AM PDT Sun Jul 12 2026

Moderate to fresh northerly winds are outer waters leading to
hazardous conditions. Otherwise, expect light to moderate north-
northwest winds with moderate northwest swell. Winds and seas
build by the middle of next week.

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...
Issued at 130 PM PDT Sun Jul 12 2026

Warming temperatures this week will cause fuel moistures to
plummet. At the same time we are tracking monsoonal moisture
moving across the area and any threat of dry thunderstorms. While
dry thunderstorms have a 10% or less of development, any strike
can start a fire. Not to mention, in and around active
thunderstorms winds can become gusty and erratic. For more
information on the thunderstorm threat, see discussion above.

&&

.MTR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
CA...Coastal Flood Advisory until 4 AM PDT Thursday for CAZ006-506-
     508.

     Coastal Flood Advisory until 4 AM PDT Wednesday for CAZ505-509-
     529-530.

PZ...Small Craft Advisory until 3 PM PDT Wednesday for Pt Arena to Pt 
     Reyes 10-60 NM.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...BFG
LONG TERM....BFG
FIRE...BFG
AVIATION...KR
MARINE...KR

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Prepared by Boulder-Creek.com Weather at: Sun Jul 12 14:30:03 PDT 2026
From the National Weather Service