Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Buffalo, NY

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715
FXUS61 KBUF 220233
AFDBUF

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Buffalo NY
1033 PM EDT Sat Sep 21 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
An upper level disturbance will exit the area with showers and
isolated thunderstorms tapering off overnight. A narrow ridge
of high pressure will then bring a return to dry weather Sunday.
The weather will then turn unsettled, as a cold front moves
into the area Monday and stalls out, with several areas of low
pressure moving northeast along it through the course of next
week, with numerous rounds of showers and a few thunderstorms.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY/...
A mid level shortwave will move southeast of the area overnight,
as a mid level ridge approaches from the west. Widely scattered
showers and thunderstorms will continue to taper off through the
early morning hours. Some clearing along with light winds
overnight will promote areas of fog, especially across the
Southern Tier and western New York where locally dense fog is
possible.

Any morning fog and low stratus will burn off by mid morning,
leaving a mix of sun and clouds for the rest of the day with dry
weather prevailing as a narrow ridge builds into the eastern Great
Lakes. Temperatures will remain above normal with most highs in the
mid 70s to around 80.

&&

.SHORT TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/...
By Sunday night, two upper level shortwaves embedded within the
northern and southern branches of the jet streak will initially be
located across the northern Rocky Mountains and over the central
Plains respectively. These features will move east through Monday,
then begin to more deeply phase over the nation`s midsection Monday
night into Tuesday as a strong ridge amplifies over the western
CONUS. The northern stream wave is then progged to peel away and
begin traversing the Great Lakes Tuesday night, as the southern
stream wave closes off and stalls out over the southern Plains or
lower Mississippi Valley. While the exact nature of how the
longwave pattern will evolve as a result of this phasing
remains a bit uncertain, the overall amplification and deep
upstream troughing will bring the eastern Great Lakes a much
more unsettled stretch of weather this period (and likely
beyond).

While Sunday night should be mainly dry, a weakening mid-level warm
front and the nose of a 90-100kt 250mb jet rounding the base of the
southern stream trough will enter the eastern Great Lakes by early
Monday morning. This will provide ample large scale lift to support
a round of scattered to widespread showers from west to east through
the day Monday. As the jet weakens and lifts northward, the
attendant surface low will slow to a crawl just west of the forecast
area, leaving the washed out frontal boundary stalled over western
NY. This should lower overall coverage and intensity of
showers/storms as they move towards the central Finger Lakes and
North Country. While more frequent breaks in the precip should also
be found across far western NY by Monday afternoon, with the low
just to the west cannot rule out additional showers through Tuesday
morning. Basin averaged rainfall amounts through Monday night are
expected to be between 0.1-0.25".

The next round of widespread showers and a few embedded
thunderstorms will then move through the region from southwest to
northeast late Tuesday afternoon through Tuesday night. With greater
upper level support from the poleward exit region of the southern
jet streak, this batch looks more impressive in regards to rainfall
potential than the one on Monday. Where exactly the heaviest
rainfall will occur remains uncertain, though additional
amounts of 0.5-1" across much of the area seems likely, with
locally higher totals plausible.

In regards to temperatures...Monday should be fairly seasonable with
highs ranging in the 60s across the higher elevations and low 70s
elsewhere. Owed to the stalled boundary in the area, a larger range
of temps is expected Tuesday, with highs in the low 70s across far
western NY and a range of 60s further east. Some spots on the
hilltops could remain in the upper 50s. Lows Sunday night will be
quite warm across the Lake Plains of WNY in the low to mid 60s, owed
to a stiff southerly breeze and increased cloud cover. Lows further
south and east will mostly be in the upper 50s, though the Tug
Hill/Western Dacks could dip back into the 40s. Lows Monday and
Tuesday nights should then fall back into the 50s in most areas,
though a few readings in the low 60s and upper 40s are likely in the
typical warm/cold spots.

&&

.LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
A northern stream trough will cross the Great Lakes through
Wednesday night as additional robust shortwave energy peels
northeastward from the upper level closed low over the southern
Plains/lower Mississippi Valley. This will cause the northern stream
trough to also slowly close off in the vicinity of New England by
Thursday night, then quickly shift off the East Coast and into the
western Atlantic by Saturday. Meanwhile, a strong ridge of high
pressure across the western CONUS will ride over the southern stream
closed low across the Upper Midwest.

Much of how this pattern ultimately evolves will hinge upon how the
northern/southern stream branches of the jet stream phase earlier in
the week, the details of which remain murky at this range. In
general, with the northern trough moving across the lakes, expect
unsettled weather with periods of rain and possibly a few
thunderstorms through at least Wednesday. The aforementioned ridge
cresting over the southern stream low should then bring a gradual
drying trend from west to east Wednesday night through early
Thursday night, though low-end chances (15-25%) for precip linger
through Saturday as there could be diurnal, wrap-around, or even
possibly some lake enhanced showers during this period. As the
details come into better focus however, could see much of this
period ultimately being dry.

As cooler air pooled within the northern stream low pulls away from
New England, areas mainly east of the Genesee Valley will see a
gradual, day-to-day warming trend through the end of the week. Temps
may be a touch on the cool side in these areas Wednesday/Thursday,
though will otherwise average near to a few degrees above normal
across the forecast area.

&&

.AVIATION /03Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
The main concern will be the potential for fog to develop
tonight. This will be tricky, depending on how light winds are,
and where mid level clouds are located. Have relatively high
confidence that KJHW will fog in. KBUF and KIAG are also likely
to get fog, with lower chances at KROC and KART due to less
moisture and some wind. At all sites there`s a potential for
dense ground fog, with vsby less than a half mile possible.

Any fog and stratus will dissipate during Sunday morning, with
widespread VFR flight conditions by 15Z.

Outlook...

Sunday...Patchy IFR fog and low stratus through mid morning, then
mainly VFR.
Monday through Thursday...VFR/MVFR with showers likely and a chance
of thunderstorms at times.

&&

.MARINE...
Negligible wind and waves overnight as a weak ridge builds in.
Low pressure and a cold front will approach from the west late
Sunday night and Monday, with increasing south to southeast
winds on both lakes. This wind direction will once again keep
the greater wave action well offshore and in Canadian waters.

&&

.BUF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
NY...None.
MARINE...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...Apffel/Hitchcock/TMA
NEAR TERM...Apffel/TMA
SHORT TERM...PP
LONG TERM...PP
AVIATION...Apffel/Hitchcock/TMA
MARINE...Apffel/Hitchcock