Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Burlington, VT

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553 FXUS61 KBTV 272325 AFDBTV Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Burlington VT 725 PM EDT Mon May 27 2024 .SYNOPSIS... A storm system will continue to bring showers and a few thunderstorms tonight. Chances of locally damaging winds will diminish through this evening as the main weather impacts will become associated with heavy rainfall, capable of producing ponding on roadways. Additional, less heavy or widespread, showers with a low chance of thunder are expected on Tuesday. Somewhat cooler conditions will follow for Wednesday with some shower chances, and then a gradual warming trend with mainly dry weather is favored through early next week. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/...
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As of 716 PM EDT Monday...After coordination with SPC and latest LAPS showing sfc based CAPE values <500 J/kg have dropped the Svr Thunderstorm Watch for St Lawrence County as of 7 PM. Still anticipating a broken line of showers with a few rumbles of thunder possible as better upper lvl dynamics arrive associated with mid/upper lvl trof acrs the central Great Lakes. In addition, the rain has stabilized the boundary layer conditions over most of the cwa this evening, which has resulted in lighter wind gusts in the 25 to 35 mph range, even thou KCXX VAD is showing 45 to 55 knots between 4500 and 5000 ft agl. Mixing with rain wl be limited so wind advisory has been cancelled with this update. Still watching some heavier pockets of rainfall but given shower motions of 25 to 35 knots and limited vertical development the threat for flash flooding is very very low attm. We will continue to monitor radar for wind and locally heavy rainfall, but activity is trending favorable for no significant impacts. Previous discussion below: Active weather this evening is unfolding, as radar operators monitor fast moving convection near and just west of the northern Adirondacks. Main concern remains a damaging wind gust or two in St. Lawrence County associated with a relatively high amount of storm relative helicity near the ground overlapping modest instability. As of this writing, one severe thunderstorm warning has been issued. Rotating cells just to the south of our area have resulted in a single local storm report of a downed tree so far. Generally the greatest threat of hazardous weather is through about 5 PM, then best effective shear shifts eastward while MLCAPE likely diminishes. We are watching the possible intensification of a line of showers over eastern Lake Ontario that could be a focus of damaging wind gusts. Meanwhile, we have maintained a Wind Advisory for the northern Adirondacks and western slopes of the northern Green Mountains through 8 PM. We have seen sub- advisory level sustained south/southeast winds produce downed trees in portions of northern New York. The persistent and unseasonably strong winds are coinciding with greater leaf area of trees, likely making them more vulnerable to these winds than expected. The uptick in southeasterly winds towards sunset, with near summit level winds boosting to near 55 knots, causes some concern for more utility impacts. Aside from the winds, heavy rainfall still is expected, although excessive rain remains a low risk with relatively short duration of efficient rain. Favorable ingredients for heavy rain include 850 millibar dew points above 50 degrees, excellent moisture convergence along the deep layer flow (south-southwest to north-northeast), and high relative humidity through that deep layer. The surface cold front that these showers will be oriented along tonight will slowly slide through northern New York through early this morning and across Vermont by daybreak. Winds behind the front will be relatively light and more southwesterly. With continued southerly flow, the air mass will remain on the warm side in the 55 to 65 range along with moderately high humidity overnight. Tomorrow a secondary cold front will approach from the west, and aided by another vigorous upper level trough we should see more showers develop by afternoon. Coverage looks more scattered than today, but as temperatures rebound back into the mid to upper 70s with dew points in the mid 50s, enough surface based instability will develop to add at least a slight chance of thunder across the region. Behind this cold front, winds will turn out of the northwest allowing for some notable cooling and drying, with fresh air bringing temperatures back into the upper 40s to mid 50s.
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&& .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... As of 308 PM EDT Monday...A shortwave trough embedded within a larger scale upper trough will slide southeast Wednesday. So with daytime heating, convective showers should develop, but are unlikely to produce lightning with just 100 J/kg of CAPE around due to below normal temperatures. Cool, northwest flow keep highs in the 60s for most, with some lower 70s in southeastern Vermont. A dry airmass shimmies south overnight, and rain chances end. A pleasant evening in the mid 40s to lower 50s is expected. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 308 PM EDT Monday...Although model discrepancies exist, most guidance suggests we`ll be in for dry weather. Given general troughiness, if there`s enough moisture, then a stray pop up shower could take place, but the vast majority of the area will stay dry through the weekend, especially as an amplified upper ridge slides east about next Saturday. So a gradually warming trend from 60s on Thursday reaching back to mid 70s to near 80 by next Monday will take place. Once the upper ridge breaks down or shifts east, then we will observe our next chance for widespread rain sometime next week. So it looks like an overall pleasant weekend. && .AVIATION /23Z MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... Through 18Z Tuesday... Main aviation impacts will be a mix of LLWS and wind gusts. Currently all TAF sites are seeing south/southeast winds gusting above 20 knots with 30 to 35 knots common at BTV, PBG, and SLK. Moderate turbulence and mountain obscurations have been noted this morning via G-AIRMET; low clouds remain stuck over the higher terrain while scattered in the valleys. Thunderstorm chances through 00Z exist primarily in northern New York, with low coverage. Greatest chances are over MSS during this period. Cannot rule out thunder farther east, but other sites mainly will see rain with MVFR conditions expected largely between 21Z and 04Z with gradual progress eastward over time. Rain will help stabilize the air such that gusts will taper off. LLWS will diminish during this period, as well, such that by 06Z it will likely cease as a hazard. From 06Z to 18Z, some MVFR ceilings may linger but generally VFR. Winds will be mainly south or southwest in the 7 to 12 knot range. Outlook... Tuesday Night: VFR. Slight chance SHRA. Wednesday: VFR. Chance SHRA. Wednesday Night: VFR. Chance SHRA. Thursday: Mainly VFR, with local MVFR possible. Slight chance SHRA. Thursday Night: VFR. NO SIG WX. Friday: VFR. Slight chance SHRA. Friday Night: VFR. NO SIG WX. Saturday: VFR. NO SIG WX. && .MARINE... A Lake Wind Advisory continues through at least this evening as strong low level south to southeasterly winds continue ahead of an unseasonably strong low pressure system passing to our northwest. Sustained winds of 20 to 30 knots with some gusts to 35 knots will be possible through about 10 PM before diminishing, remaining out of the south overnight. Waves will continue to build into the 2 to 3 foot range on the broad lake, with seiche action evident. && .BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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VT...None. NY...None.
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&& $$ SYNOPSIS...Kutikoff NEAR TERM...Kutikoff/Taber SHORT TERM...Haynes LONG TERM...Haynes AVIATION...Kutikoff MARINE...Kutikoff