Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Burlington, VT

Home | Current Version | Previous Version | Graphics & Text | Print | Product List | Glossary On
Versions: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
-- Highlight Changed Discussion --
-- Discussion containing changed information from previous version are highlighted. --
000 FXUS61 KBTV 161945 AFDBTV AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT 345 PM EDT SUN JUN 16 2013 .SYNOPSIS...
-- Changed Discussion --
THE STEADY RAIN WILL COME TO AN END THIS EVENING...HOWEVER CLOUDS AND PATCHY FOG OR DRIZZLE WILL LAST THROUGH THE NIGHT. ANOTHER DISTURBANCE WILL BRING ADDITIONAL CHANCES FOR SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS MONDAY AND MONDAY NIGHT...WITH A FEW SHOWERS EVEN LINGERING INTO TUESDAY. SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE WILL THEN BUILD INTO THE NORTH COUNTRY BRINGING DRY WEATHER FOR TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH THE END OF THE WEEK.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 8 AM MONDAY MORNING/...
-- Changed Discussion --
AS OF 338 PM EDT SUNDAY...THE BACK EDGE OF THE STEADY RAIN WILL CONTINUE TO PUSH EASTWARD THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING WITH RAIN COMING TO AN END LATE THIS AFTERNOON ACROSS NORTHERN NEW YORK...AROUND 5 PM IN THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY...AND 7 PM OR SO IN EASTERN VERMONT. THE HEAVIEST AND STEADIEST RAIN WILL CONTINUE TO BE CONFINED TO NORTHERN NEW YORK AND NORTHERN VERMONT WHERE THE RAIN HAS BECOME FOCUSED ALONG A WEAK FRONTAL BOUNDARY DRAPED ACROSS AND JUST NORTH OF THE INTERNATIONAL BORDER AND THE ANTICIPATED TRACK OF A WEAK SURFACE LOW ACROSS THE REGION. THE RAIN IS MUCH MORE SHOWERY IN NATURE ACROSS SOUTHERN VERMONT. TOTAL RAINFALL AMOUNTS FOR TODAY WILL BE GENERALLY 0.5-0.75" ACROSS FAR NORTHERN NEW YORK...0.25-0.50" ACROSS MUCH OF NORTHERN AND CENTRAL VERMONT AND THE ADIRONDACKS OF NEW YORK...AND 0.10-0.25" IN SOUTHERN VERMONT. EXPECTING PLENTY OF LOW LEVEL MOISTURE TO LINGER THIS EVENING AND OVERNIGHT WITH MOSTLY CLOUDY SKIES CONTINUING ALONG WITH PATCHY FOG AND DRIZZLE...ESPECIALLY IN THE HIGHER TERRAIN. BECAUSE OF THIS...NOT EXPECTING TEMPERATURES TO FALL VERY MUCH...GENERALLY INTO THE 50S.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .SHORT TERM /8 AM MONDAY MORNING THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/...
-- Changed Discussion --
AS OF 338 PM EDT SUNDAY...FOR MONDAY THE MAIN CONCERN WILL BE THE AMOUNT OF INSTABILITY THAT CAN DEVELOP AND THE POTENTIAL FOR SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. WILL LIKELY BE STUCK WITH SOME EARLY MORNING LOW CLOUDS AND PATCHY FOG. IF WE CAN BREAK OUT EARLY ENOUGH AND THE ATMOSPHERE CAN DESTABILIZE...SOME SHOWERS/THUNDERSTORMS CAN DEVELOP ALONG A PRE-FRONTAL TROUGH THAT IS HINTED AT IN SOME OF THE LOCAL WRF AND HI-RES NAM GUIDANCE IN THE EARLY AFTERNOON HOURS. OTHERWISE...WILL HAVE TO WAIT FOR THE MAIN COLD FRONT (ALTHOUGH WEAK) TO PUSH INTO THE REGION LATE IN THE DAY AND INTO THE EARLY OVERNIGHT HOURS. INSTABILITY IS CURRENTLY PROJECTED TO BE LIMITED WITH CAPE VALUES FROM AROUND 500 J/KG NORTH TO PERHAPS 1000 J/KG ACROSS SOUTHERN VERMONT...WITH GREATER AMOUNTS FURTHER SOUTH. CAPE PROFILE IS NOT IMPRESSIVE WITH TALL AND SKINNY CAPE THROUGHOUT THE DAY. THAT BEING SAID...SHEAR PROFILE IS DECENT (40 KNOTS OF 0-6KM SHEAR)...SO IF ENOUGH INSTABILITY IS AVAILABLE SOME STORMS CAN BE BECOME STRONG WITH SMALL HAIL AND GUSTY WINDS. HOWEVER OVERALL NOT MUCH IN THE WAY OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTED. BEST UPPER LEVEL FORCING IS ALSO LAGGING BEHIND WITH THE MAIN UPPER TROUGH STILL ACROSS THE GREAT LAKES. SOME SCATTERED SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS CONTINUE INTO MONDAY NIGHT AS FRONT GRADUALLY PRESSES EASTWARD AND UPPER LOW APPROACHES FROM THE NORTHWEST. EXPECTING PRETTY WIDESPREAD CLOUD COVER SO LOWS IN THE 50S AGAIN APPEAR REASONABLE. CYCLONIC FLOW ASSOCIATED WITH THE CLOSED LOW OFF TO THE NORTH WILL CONTINUE ON TUESDAY WITH LIGHT NORTHWEST FLOW AND WEAK COLD AIR ADVECTION DEVELOPING THROUGH THE DAY. THIS WILL LEAD TO THE CHANCE OF A FEW SCATTERED RAIN SHOWERS CONTINUING DURING THE DAY...ESPECIALLY IN THE HIGHER ELEVATIONS AND IN NORTHEAST VERMONT. SHOULD BE SOME SUN AROUND AS WELL WHICH WILL ALLOW TEMPERATURES TO REACH THE UPPER 60S AND LOWER 70S FOR HIGHS. THE UPPER LOW GRADUALLY PULLS AWAY TUESDAY NIGHT WITH SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE STARTING TO BUILD IN. THIS WILL LEAD TO CLEARING SKIES AND FALLING TEMPERATURES WITH LOWS EXPECTED GENERALLY IN THE 40S TO NEAR 50 DEGREES.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
-- Changed Discussion --
AS OF 338 PM EDT SUNDAY...THE FORECAST FOR THE MIDDLE TO LATER PORTIONS OF NEXT WEEK STILL APPEARS MORE OR LESS ON TRACK AFTER PERUSAL OF THE 12Z MEDIUM RANGE GUIDANCE/ENSEMBLE SUITE. SENSIBLE WEATHER HIGHLIGHTS EARLY IN THE PERIOD (WED/THU) WILL FEATURE SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE BRIDGED ALOFT BY WEAK TO MODEST CYCLONIC FLOW AS WE REMAIN EMBEDDED WITHIN THE WESTERLIES. BY FRIDAY EVIDENCE STILL SUPPORTS THE IDEA THAT A WEAK FRONT WILL SAG SOUTHWARD INTO THE REGION AND DISSIPATE BY SATURDAY AS PRIMARY ENERGY PASSES WELL NORTH AND EAST OF THE REGION. MODELS DIFFER SLIGHTLY IN THEIR ORIENTATION OF THE SFC BOUNDARY...NONETHELESS ONLY LIMITED MOISTURE CONVERGENCE AND NEGLIGIBLE H5 HEIGHT FALLS SUPPORT RUNNING IDEA OF CAPPING ANY POPS AND THREAT OF SHOWERS/STORMS TO SLIGHT CHANCE (15-25%). PER AVERAGED 18-00Z 925 MB THERMAL PROFILES...KEPT WITH PRIOR IDEA OF NEAR OR SLIGHTLY BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES ON WEDNESDAY...WARMING GRADUALLY BY 2-3 DEGREES EACH DAY AS WE APPROACH THE WEEKEND BY WHICH TIME MAX TEMPS IN THE 75 TO 80 RANGE WILL BE COMMON. LOWS TO FOLLOW A SIMILAR TREND...THOUGH WITH HIGHER THAN NORMAL VARIABILITY OVERNIGHT WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY GIVEN EXPECTED NOCTURNAL RADIATIVE EFFECTS. BY SUNDAY FORECAST TRENDS MORE UNCERTAIN AS WEAK UPPER CYCLONIC FLOW BEGINS LIFTING OUT AND IS REPLACED BY BUILDING HEIGHTS AND ANTICYCLONIC FLOW ALOFT. THERE COULD BE A SCATTERED CONVECTIVE CLUSTER OR TWO AFFECT THE REGION AS DEEPER MOISTURE AND HUMIDITY ENCROACH TO OUR SOUTH AND WEST. NEARLY IMPOSSIBLE TO DETERMINE ANY SPECIFICS AT THIS TIME RANGE HOWEVER AND HAVE INTRODUCED A NOMINAL 30 POP TO COVER ANY POTENTIAL ACTIVITY AT THIS DISTANT TIME RANGE. MAX TEMPERATURES TO CONTINUE MILD TO WARM...77 TO 83.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .AVIATION /20Z SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... THROUGH 18Z MONDAY...WIDESPREAD LIGHT TO OCCASIONALLY MODERATE RAINFALL TO TAPER OFF OVER THE NEXT 2 TO 5 HOURS AND ESSENTIALLY END BY 00Z. STILL COULD SEE SOME PATCHY VERY LIGHT RAIN OR DRIZZLE OVERNIGHT...ESPECIALLY AT KMPV/KSLK. WINDS VARIABLE BUT GENERALLY LIGHT AND LESS THAN 10 KNOTS THROUGH 12Z MONDAY. CIGS A MIXTURE OF VFR/MVFR/IFR THROUGH 00Z...THEN LOWERING TO WIDESPREAD MVFR/IFR 00Z-12Z AS MOIST LOWER LEVELS AND WARMING/SUBSIDENCE ALOFT ACT IN CONCERT. AFTER 12Z...WINDS SOUTH TO SOUTHWESTERLY 6 TO 12 KNOTS AND BECOMING OCCASIONALLY GUSTY TOWARD THE END OF THE FORECAST CYCLE. MAINLY DRY WX EXPECTED THOUGH SCT/BKN MVFR/VFR CIGS REMAIN LIKELY. OUTLOOK 18Z MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY... 18Z MONDAY THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY...SCATTERED TO NUMEROUS SHOWERS WITH PASSAGE OF COLD FRONT. THUNDER POSSIBLE 16-00Z. CIGS GENERALLY VFR WITH OCCNL MVFR/IFR IN HEAVIER SHOWERS. 06Z TUESDAY THROUGH 12Z FRIDAY...MAINLY VFR AS HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS INTO THE REGION. PATCHY LATE NIGHT/EARLY MORNING FOG POSSIBLE 06-12Z EACH DAY...WITH MOST POTENTIAL AT KSLK/KMPV. 12Z FRIDAY ONWARD...GENERALLY VFR. WEAK FRONT SAGGING SOUTHWARD TOWARD INTL BORDER MAY SPARK A FEW/WIDELY SCT SHOWERS/STORMS AFTER 18Z AT NORTHERN TERMINALS. && .BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VT...NONE. NY...NONE. && $$ SYNOPSIS...MUCCILLI NEAR TERM...MUCCILLI SHORT TERM...MUCCILLI LONG TERM...JMG AVIATION...JMG

USA.gov is the U.S. government's official web portal to all federal, state and local government web resources and services.