Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Buffalo, NY

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687 FXUS61 KBUF 051740 AFDBUF Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Buffalo NY 140 PM EDT Wed Jun 5 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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A slow moving cold front will press through the region later tonight and Thursday...and while this will lead to increasingly widespread showers and possibly some drenching thunderstorms...it will also bring an end to our stretch of summery weather. In fact... temperatures are slated to average below normal from Friday through Monday of next week. The cooler weather will be accompanied by fairly frequent shower activity.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/...
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It will be warm and humid across the region this afternoon...as a deepening southerly flow ahead of an approaching cold front will allow a sub tropical airmass to move in from the Ohio valley. Td`s will climb to the mid and even upper 60s for much of the forecast area...and this will set the stage for some potentially drenching thunderstorms. As of midday...an area of nuisance showers was in the process of moving across the far western counties. This activity is in the vcnty of an elevated warm front. During the course of the afternoon...the showers will continue to move northeast while spreading over much of the rest of the western counties. The environment is already unstable to the tune of 1500-2000 j/kg of SBCAPE...so its only a matter of having any weak boundaries from the aforementioned area of showers being able to initiate the convection. If this were to occur...it would be over the Genesee valley and Finger Lakes after 2 PM. DCAPE values in the vcnty of 1000 j/kg would then promote the risk for gusty storms for those areas. Otherwise...locally heavy rain would be the only real concern. Meanwhile...areas east of Lake Ontario will continue to enjoy sun filled skies with only some cirrus to contend with. This area will be the warmest with highs in the upper 80s to near 90...which would once again be record territory for Watertown (87 in 1973). The deep plume of sub tropical moisture will be situated over our region tonight...while a cold front will SLOWLY move through. Given the moisture rich airmass that will be in place...the forcing from the front will generate numerous showers and thunderstorms...some of which will include pockets of heavy rain. The activity will be scattered in nature through much of the evening...then it will become more focused along and just ahead of a cold front over the western counties after midnight. This timing is a little slower than previous forecasts. Along with the `heavy rainers`...there will still be the risk for localized gusty winds with some of the storms. As we move through the wee hours of the morning towards daybreak... the most concentrated areas of showers and possible thunderstorms will make their way to the Eastern Lake Ontario region. The risk for gusty winds with the convection should drop off by this point. Otherwise...tonight will be a warm and muggy night with mins in the more populated regions not falling below 65. Thursday...the slow moving cold front will make its way across the Eastern Lake Ontario during the morning hours. This will continue to support cat pops for that area along with the potential for locally heavy rain. The scenario will be far more convoluted over the western counties. While a negatively tilted mid level trough will continue to dig over the Lower Great Lakes on Thursday...weak sfc based ridging will develop over the western counties. This combination will work against organized shower activity...except within a pronounced area of low level convergence that will become established from KIAG past KROC...basically just north of the NYS Thruway. Showers will be likely in this particular corridor. For the immediate BUF area to near KGVQ...a lake shadow is expected with gusts to near 30 mph. The real airmass change though will take place Thursday night in the wake of a secondary cold frontal passage. This will bring a temporary end to the scattered shower activity...as Tds will drop into the 50s. Towards daybreak though...deeper moisture on the backside of a deep mid level low in the vcnty of the SOO will start to circulate across the Lower Great Lakes. Lift underneath the front left exit region of an 80-90kt H25 jet should be enough to restart at least scattered shower activity over the far western counties... and particularly across Chautauqua county and srn Erie co.
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&& .SHORT TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/...
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A closed low will become centered over central Ontario and central Quebec Friday. A stretch of cooler weather (compared to earlier this week) will begin Friday with 850mb temperatures falling to +4C by Friday afternoon. A sharpening shortwave trough will move across the region during peak heating hours Friday. Showers will blossom with a slight chance of thunderstorms Friday afternoon. In fact, based off the lake temperature at Buffalo (63F/17C,) lake enhancement is possible, however the open water on Lake Erie and Lake Ontario is much cooler. A moist, cyclonic flow will continue across the region Friday night and with some lake enhancement, rain showers will continue overnight.
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&& .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... A large closed low pressure system aloft will wobble about the eastern Great Lakes through at least the weekend before slowly transitioning to New England early next week. This will maintain the cool, unsettled pattern across the region with chances for showers and thunderstorms. There are differences in shortwave troughs and timing of showers even though the overall synoptic pattern is in agreement. Coverage and intensity will mainly follow the diurnal insulation trend each day, generally being greatest in the afternoon hours and away from any stabilizing influence from the lakes. There is considerable disagreement with timing of waves of shortwave energy around the low aloft. PWATs don`t look to become anomalously elevated at any point which should preclude the develop of more widespread impactful storm complexes. The one possible exception to this may come as the system`s main trough axis and cold front drop southward and generate some heavy rain across the region sometime in the second half of the weekend, but at this juncture uncertainty is high in this occurring. As alluded to previously, temperatures will run below normal this period. Highs Saturday and Sunday will only manage to top out in the 60s for most, though warm a few degrees for Monday and Tuesday with low 70s becoming more common. Lows each night will mainly be in the low/mid 50s, with upper 40s possible further inland away from the influence of the lakes. && .AVIATION /18Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
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Some showers will be found over the western counties during the remainder of the afternoon...along with a few heavy rain producing thunderstorms. While VFR conditions will persist...MVFR cigs will be possible in the vcnty of the convection. Meanwhile...fair VFR weather will be found east of Lake Ontario. As a cold front approaches and moves through tonight...more widespread showers can be expected...along with some gusty thunderstorms. The onset of the more widespread pcpn will include a change to MVFR Cigs. IFR conditions will set up across the Srn Tier. MVFR to IFR cigs Thursday morning will then gradually give way to VFR weather. The most widespread showers and possible thunderstorms will be east of Lake Ontario through 15z. Outlook... Thursday night...Mainly VFR weather. Friday through Monday...VFR/MVFR with mainly daytime showers likely with possible thunderstorms.
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&& .MARINE... A southerly flow will strengthen today into tonight ahead of a slow moving cold front approaching from the west. With the flow being mainly offshore, the main impact will just be a bit of an uptick in light chop toward the open waters. The cold front will cross the lower Great Lakes late tonight and Thursday morning, however expect a threat for thunderstorms this afternoon through Thursday. SW to WSW winds will freshen on both Lakes Thursday and Friday in the wake of the cold frontal passage with choppy waters developing. Conditions may possibly near Small Craft Advisory criteria for a couple of brief periods Thursday and Friday afternoon, especially across eastern Lake Erie. && .BUF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NY...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...RSH NEAR TERM...RSH SHORT TERM...HSK LONG TERM...HSK/PP AVIATION...RSH MARINE...JM/TMA