Swell Matrix

Area Forecast Discussion

National Weather Service San Diego CA

1106 am PDT Sat may 30 2026

Update

Ation and Marine Discussions,

As our most recent low pressure system departs to the east, low clouds and fog are starting to disperse along coastal slopes and elevated winds along the desert slopes are starting to abate. Satellite imagery shows that marine layer clouds are struggling to develop under a weak inversion tonight. However, a return to quasi-zonal flow will allow the inversion to strengthen by tomorrow. Thus, marine layer clouds should return to coastal areas and western valleys from Saturday night onward. Weakening onshore flow and slowly increasing upper heights may allow the marine layer to become shallow enough for patchy fog for coastal areas by early next week.

Temperatures will rebound to near seasonal averages on Saturday with highs near 70 at the coast, upper 70s to low 80s for inland valleys, and 90s in the lower deserts. A slow warming trend will continue into Sunday. Thereafter, the deserts will continue to warm through early next week while the coastal basin cools a few degrees. Overall, temperatures will hover around 2-7 degrees above seasonal averages across the region through mid-next week with minor fluctuations each day. NBM temperatures reach up to 105 in the lower deserts mid-next week, though a lack of any notable ridging begs the question of whether temps may be slightly overdone.

By late next week, model solutions diverge. An upper trough is expected to pass through the NW CONUS late next week, but the timing, position, and amplitude are all quite uncertain at the moment. The mean of the ensembles leans toward a cooling trend for late next week into the weekend, but not much can be said beyond that at this time.

Synopsis

A warming and drying trend is expected through this weekend as weak zonal flow returns to the region. Thereafter, temperatures will hover slightly above seasonal averages through next week. Marine layer clouds expected for coastal areas and western valleys each night and morning. Clouds may lower and become more confined to coastal areas by early next week.

Discussion

For extreme southwestern California including Orange, San Diego, western Riverside and southwestern San Bernardino counties,

, Updated Aviation and Marine Discussions,

As our most recent low pressure system departs to the east, low clouds and fog are starting to disperse along coastal slopes and elevated winds along the desert slopes are starting to abate. Satellite imagery shows that marine layer clouds are struggling to develop under a weak inversion tonight. However, a return to quasi-zonal flow will allow the inversion to strengthen by tomorrow. Thus, marine layer clouds should return to coastal areas and western valleys from Saturday night onward. Weakening onshore flow and slowly increasing upper heights may allow the marine layer to become shallow enough for patchy fog for coastal areas by early next week.

Temperatures will rebound to near seasonal averages on Saturday with highs near 70 at the coast, upper 70s to low 80s for inland valleys, and 90s in the lower deserts. A slow warming trend will continue into Sunday. Thereafter, the deserts will continue to warm through early next week while the coastal basin cools a few degrees. Overall, temperatures will hover around 2-7 degrees above seasonal averages across the region through mid-next week with minor fluctuations each day. Nbm temperatures reach up to 105 in the lower deserts mid-next week, though a lack of any notable ridging begs the question of whether temps may be slightly overdone.

By late next week, model solutions diverge. An upper trough is expected to pass through the NW CONUS late next week, but the timing, position, and amplitude are all quite uncertain at the moment. The mean of the ensembles leans toward a cooling trend for late next week into the weekend, but not much can be said beyond that at this time.

Aviation

301800z, Coast/Valleys, Mostly clear skies through late this evening. Low confidence on exact timing of cloud formation; most guidance suggests low clouds based 800-1300 ft MSL begin to develop off the coast around 06z Sun, slowly filling into coastal areas (in patchy fashion) through 10z and perhaps as late as 12z for Orange County coastal areas. VIS reductions 0-5SM (and patchy FG) in valleys east of the I-15 corridor in San Diego County. Scatter out 15-17z.

Mountains/Deserts, Mostly clear and VFR conditions through tonight with elevated onshore winds later this afternoon and early evening.

Marine

Northwest wind gusts will approach 20 kts over outer coastal waters this afternoon and evening. Otherwise, no hazardous marine conditions are expected through Tuesday.

Watches, Warnings, Advisories

Ca, None. PZ, None.

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