Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Caribou, ME

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756 FXUS61 KCAR 040447 AFDCAR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Caribou ME 1247 AM EDT Tue Jun 4 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Weak high pressure builds in through Tuesday night, before slowly drifting east Wednesday and Wednesday night. A complex storm system then slowly approaches from the west Thursday through Saturday. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TODAY/...
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1 am update: Reduced sky cover for the duration of tonight and Tuesday. Still expect some stratocu fields in eastern Maine to drift westward from New Brunswick this morning. Previous discussion: Tonight... Isolated showers should dissipate this evening. Looking at mostly cloudy skies tonight with relative moist low-level easterly flow from the Canadian Maritimes. Expect a general lowering trend to cloud heights through the night, but not expecting fog. Not expecting much if any radiational cooling/decoupling tonight (unlike previous nights), so although the airmass overall will be cooler behind the backdoor cold front, low temperatures will be a bit warmer than last night, with lows around 50. Light winds tonight. Tuesday... High pressure rebuilds over the area Tuesday. Early morning low to mid level clouds may be a bit slow to dissipate thanks to light winds. Expecting mostly cloudy skies in the morning, with partly cloudy skies in the afternoon. Highs in the low to mid 70s. While we can`t totally rule out an isolated afternoon shower, kept PoPs below 15%, as think that subsidence with the high pressure will cap any developing cumulus and keep them pretty shallow. Winds light Tuesday and generally from the NE.
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&& .SHORT TERM /TONIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... The region remains in between a closed low over the eastern Maritimes and another closed low slowly moving east across south central Canada with ridging in between them, as this pattern slowly translates to the east Tuesday night through Thursday. Tuesday night should be dry, but should see some cloud cover until drier air works in late at night. A northern stream shortwave pushes south Wednesday and Wednesday night, and could bring some isolated showers across areas mainly North of Coastal Downeast Maine Wednesday afternoon and evening, with possibly a rumble of thunder over portions of the Central Highlands as well. The showers should be of a hit and miss nature, with more areas dry than wet at any given moment in time. The ECMWF is the most progressive with the closed low to the west, and so have opted not to favor it, especially with the high resolution models going out through Thursday backing the majority slower solution. As a result, have limited pops on Thursday to slight chance to roughly the SW 1/2 of the CWA, and also mostly in the afternoon. Once again, the showers should be of a hit and miss nature - more likely to miss than to hit any given location. There also should be some patchy fog especially late night/early morning, with the best chance near the coast. Temperatures should be a few degrees above normal Tuesday night, about 5-10 degrees above normal Wednesday, around 5 degrees above normal Wednesday night, and 5-10 degrees above normal across the North and near to slightly above normal elsewhere on Thursday due to strengthening onshore flow. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/... The models continue to show a closed or cutoff low slowly moving from near the Great Lakes Thursday night moving easterly towards the east coast of the NE US/SE Canada into early next week. The models still differ as to the exact strength, track and timing of this system. The weather should be unsettled during this time frame across the Northeast, but not necessarily over the entire area all at once. So have limited pops to chance in this time frame. It won`t be raining the whole time, and might end up more dry than wet over the Thursday night through Monday time frame as a whole, but it does appear that most if not all locations should get a wetting rain at some point. A track over or to the south of us will generally bring more precipitation than a track to the north of us. Temperatures Thursday night-Monday are currently forecast to be above normal. However, confidence in this decreases later in the forecast period as the track/timing of the storm system will greatly impact the actual temperature. If the system goes directly over the region, it could end up quite a bit cooler than currently forecast as it passes. && .AVIATION /06Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... NEAR TERM: VFR late this evening with light wind. Most forecast terminals drop to MVFR or low VFR ceilings somewhere around 5-8z, but confidence on the MVFR ceilings is a bit lower than previous forecasts. CAR/PQI have the best staying at staying low VFR all night. All other TAF sites have a 30-50% chance of MVFR ceilings. The MVFR ceilings should lift to VFR by 15z Tuesday, leaving a VFR afternoon with light winds. SHORT TERM: Tuesday night-Wednesday evening...VFR, with possible exception of a brief period of MVFR in any shower and MVFR or lower being possible in any patchy fog late Tuesday night/early Wednesday morning - with the best chance of the latter at southern terminals. Late Wednesday night-Thursday...VFR, with the exception of MVFR or lower possible to probable late at night/early morning in any stratus or fog, with the highest chance at southern terminals. Thursday night-Saturday...VFR, with possible exception of a brief period of MVFR in any shower and MVFR or lower probable in any patchy fog late at night/early in the morning - with the best chance of the latter at southern terminals. LLWS possible at southern terminals Friday night and Saturday. && .MARINE... NEAR TERM: Conditions remaining well below small craft levels with no marine fog. SHORT TERM: A relaxed pressure gradient over the waters Tuesday night-Saturday should limit winds to 10 kt or less. Seas should be 2 ft or less Tuesday night-Thursday, then an increasing swell could gradually build seas to 4 or 5 ft Thursday night through Saturday. Patchy to areas of marine fog are possible late Tuesday night into Wednesday morning, and then again from Wednesday night into the later part of the week. There is still quite a bit of uncertainty on the exact extent, if any, of marine fog later in the week. && .CAR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ME...None. MARINE...None. && $$ Near Term...CB/Foisy/MCW Short Term...Maloit Long Term...Maloit Aviation...CB/Foisy/MCW/Maloit Marine...CB/Foisy/MCW/Maloit