Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Burlington, VT

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891
FXUS61 KBTV 271327
AFDBTV

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Burlington VT
927 AM EDT Mon May 27 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A storm system will move through today and tonight, bringing rounds
of rain, gusty winds, and embedded heavy thunderstorms. There is the
potential for severe storms over northern New York with hail and
gusty winds. Steady rain will move out by the end of the night
tonight, but shower chances and cool weather will continue for most
of the rest of the week. Warm and dry weather will follow into the
weekend.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
As of 927 AM EDT Monday...A decaying cluster of showers is
holding together enough to produce brief rain this morning into
the Champlain Valley, so upped PoPs a bit with this update. Also
removed thunder chances areawide through midday. The strongest
storm cores moving through the Adirondack high peaks are not
likely to climb high enough to produce lightning with meager
elevated instability. Otherwise, the forecast for this afternoon
has been left intact. The severe weather outlook looks
reasonable for western portions of northern New York, and gusty
non-thunderstorm winds will be common in most spots, strongest
in the Wind Advisory area especially between 2 and 5 PM.

Previous discussion...A Wind Advisory has been issued for
Franklin and western Clinton counties of New York this afternoon and
evening due to forecast winds 25-35 mph gusting up to 50 mph. Gusty
winds will blow around unsecured objects. Tree limbs could be blown
down and a few power outages may result.

Wind: A low level jet and tight pressure gradient will be passing
overhead today and tonight, which should result in gusty winds
mixing from the 925mb level to the surface, particularly during any
breaks in rain this afternoon. Surface winds will be out of the
southeast, resulting in the potential for downslope winds on western
and northern slopes of the Greens and Adirondacks. Gusts 40+ mph are
likely on mountaintops, portions of Lake Champlain, and areas of St.
Lawrence, northern Franklin, and northern Clinton counties of New
York. Wind gusts of this speed are also possible for places like
northern Vermont along the north/western slopes of the Greens and in
gusty thunderstorms.

Severe Thunderstorms: Surface based and Mixed Layer CAPE via high
resolution models are predicted to reach 500-1200 J/kg across
portions of northern New York today, with highest values centered
over the St. Lawrence Valley. Low level and 0-6km shear continues to
look like the stronger ingredient today, with highest values
coinciding with highest CAPE in the St. Lawrence Valley. There
should be two rounds of precipitation today, one early this morning,
mostly before any heating gets underway to assist in instability,
and another this afternoon. Conditions look more favorable for this
afternoon in terms of severe storms, but that could depend on how
much energy is used up in this first round. Overall, the second
round looks more potent in terms of rain and thunderstorms. Forecast
high temperatures have increased slightly with this forecast update,
which could provide extra fuel for storms. Rotating storms remain
possible and will need to be watched closely.

Flash Flooding: Modeled precipitable water values are up to 1.90"
for the forecast area today and tonight, indicating some heavy rain
is possible. Fortunately, showers and thunderstorms will be moving
rather quickly and are not expected to train. That being said, there
remains the potential for flash flooding where strong convection
sets up, about 5% chance of flash flooding/excessive rainfall. Total
rainfall amounts of 0.50-2.00" are expected, with highest amounts in
northern New York where storms produce increased rainfall rates.

Temperatures: Highs today are expected to reach into the upper 60s
to upper 70s as breaks in between waves of showers and thunderstorms
allow temperatures to increase. Lows tonight will be mild in the
upper 50s to mid 60s, about 10-15 degrees above seasonal averages
under a cloudy to mostly cloudy sky.

&&

.SHORT TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
As of 401 AM EDT Monday...The upper level trough will settle over the
North Country Tuesday through early Wednesday with another couple of
troughs expected to move through. The more potent trough will move
through Tuesday afternoon bringing some breezy southwesterly winds
to the St Lawrence Valley and showers and potentially isolated
thunderstorms. However, upper level support will be ejecting
northward orphaning the surface boundary as it tracks northwest to
southeast. The result will be an initial round of numerous showers
over northern New York decreasing to isolated/scattered for most
location Tuesday afternoon. Southerly flow will continue to favor
highs in the 70s with seasonal overnight lows. The second trough
swings through Wednesday with more scattered coverage of showers and
cooler temperatures mainly in the 60s except for southern southern
Vermont where highs could reach low 70s.

&&

.LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/...
As of 401 AM EDT Monday...General troughing will likely continue into
Friday with a few isolated showers possible with cyclonic flow over
the North Country. Overnight lows Thursday night into Friday will be
the coolest of the period with potential for a few upper 30s in
portions of the Adirondacks and northeastern Vermont while the rest
of the North Country likely remains in the 40s. High temperatures
are favored to remain a little below seasonal averages mainly in the
60s. Model guidance for next weekend features higher likelihood of
ridging with temperatures warming above seasonal averages by early
next week. Conditions will be dry at least until the axis shifts
eastward. Consensus currently has ridging shifting eastward Sunday
afternoon and Monday, but models may be too fast with this feature.
Kept isolated chances of showers late Sunday into Monday, but could
see these evaporate in later guidance.

&&

.AVIATION /13Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/...
Through 12Z Tuesday...Showers and thunderstorms are beginning to
pop up around the forecast area this morning. There`s a cluster
of showers moving into our northern New York zones towards SLK,
but at the time there is no lightning associated with it and
visibilities associated are only 5-6 miles. That being said, we
will continue to monitor this cluster as it moves into the
forecast area. For most of this morning`s precip wave, it is
scattered enough to warrant only VCSH for many sites. The next
wave of precip will be starting around 20-23Z Monday and have
SHRA in TAFs. There is the potential for thunderstorms as
well this afternoon, particularly at MSS. Wind gusts are already
picking up across several sites this morning and will continue
to gust 15-35 knots out of the southeast through around 02-06Z
Tuesday. Ceilings are also beginning to drop to MVFR levels this
morning at some sites and the other sites should follow suit
over the next several hours. The site most likely to drop to IFR
ceilings over the next 6 hours is RUT, with MPV and EFK
potentially following suit with the second precip wave later in
the day. LLWS from the low level jet is expected for much of the
next 24 hours.

Outlook...

Tuesday: Mainly VFR, with local MVFR possible. Chance SHRA.
Tuesday Night: Mainly VFR, with areas MVFR possible. Slight
chance SHRA.
Wednesday: Mainly VFR, with areas MVFR possible. Chance SHRA.
Wednesday Night: VFR. Chance SHRA.
Thursday: VFR. Slight chance SHRA.
Thursday Night: VFR. NO SIG WX.
Friday: VFR. Slight chance SHRA.

&&

.MARINE...
A Lake Wind Advisory is in effect with southeasterly winds 15-25
knots, increasing to 30 knots, and gusts up to 40-45 knots
today. Waves will be 1 to 3 feet. Winds are expected to
diminish late tonight into early tomorrow.

&&

.BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
VT...None.
NY...Wind Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for NYZ027-030-031.

&&

$$
SYNOPSIS...Storm
NEAR TERM...Kutikoff/Storm
SHORT TERM...Boyd
LONG TERM...Boyd
AVIATION...Storm
MARINE...Storm