Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Burlington, VT

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874 FXUS61 KBTV 230538 AFDBTV Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Burlington VT 138 AM EDT Thu May 23 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Scattered showers and a few thunderstorms are moving through the North Country this morning. A surface boundary will push these showers and thunderstorms eastward into New Hampshire by this afternoon. After a period of drier conditions, chances of showers return late this weekend into early next week. A marked cooling trend begins Sunday with temperatures trending back towards seasonal averages next week. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 115 AM EDT Thursday...Main update was to adjust where showers and thunderstorms are expected. Some showers have formed in the northern Champlain Valley and will track northeastward. Elevated instability remains greater than 250J/kg and will result in mainly isolated thunderstorms with this feature through 6AM. More scattered thunderstorms are evident along the surface boundary in nearing Ottawa as well as south of the Adirondacks along portions of the Mohawk Valley. These areas will bring some thunderstorm chances mainly to northern New York, but cannot rule out a morning storm in southern Vermont as the Mohawk Valley line tracks eastward. Previous Discussion...Initial line of thunderstorms along a prefrontal trough has weakened considerably over our northern NY counties. Expect these showers to continue to dissipate as they head northeastward. Looking further upstream, cold front is moving through southeastern Ontario with a line of thunderstorms along the front. Expect another round of showers with some embedded elevated thunderstorms overnight as this boundary slowly moves through. Previous discussion follows... An extremely warm day across the region this afternoon as temperatures have climb into the 80s, and a few spots climbing into the 90s. With the daytime heating, some isolated garden- variety thunderstorms have tried to develop across northern New York, but they have been very few and far between. Chances of precipitation continue to increase heading into this evening and the overnight hours as a pre-frontal trough ahead of an approaching cold front swings through the region, bringing a line of showers with embedded thunderstorms to the region. The latest guidance shows this system, and any associated thunderstorms that form, to be weaker than previous forecasts as the arrival time does not coincide with the greatest instability. Temperatures overnight will be quite mild and muggy, with lows generally in the 60s and dewpoints nearly the same. By Thursday morning, the surface cold front will be moving across the region, with showers coming to an end Thursday afternoon. Since the frontal passage will occur during the morning hours, the threat for stronger thunderstorms will be low across our area, with better chances to our east (as seen in the SPC Day 2 Convective Outlook), although some thunder cannot be ruled out across our area. Temperatures during the day will be cooler in comparison to today`s warmth, although high temperatures will still climb into the upper 70s to mid 50s. Drier conditions will return behind the cold front, with overnight low temperatures in the 50s. && .SHORT TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT/... As of 342 PM EDT Wednesday...A low pressure system passing well north of the international border will bring a chance for showers to only our very far northern Vermont zones on Friday as a weak surface cold front crosses the area. Ridge of surface high pressure will then build into the region Friday night and drier, cooler conditions for the north country. Maximum temperatures on Friday will range from the lower to upper 70s. Minimum temperatures Friday night will range from the mid 40s to mid 50s. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... As of 342 PM EDT Wednesday...The weather will be more active in the long term portion of the forecast as a persistent surface and upper level trough becomes anchored over the eastern portion of the United States. There will be increasing chances for rain showers Saturday afternoon as a warm front lifts into the area. A surface cold front will cross Northern New York and Vermont early Sunday morning. Yet another low pressure system crossing the Great Lakes area on Monday will bring additional chances for showers Monday and Monday night. This low will be slow to move away from the region, so showers will continue right into Tuesday and Wednesday as the north country remains under cyclonic flow. Models diverge a bit beyond Wednesday. Temperatures will trend cooler through the long term portion of the forecast, partly due to showers and clouds which will linger through most of the period. && .AVIATION /06Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
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Through 06Z Friday...There will be showers and some embedded thunderstorms throughout the night tonight, but there remains an element of variability in coverage and location of these showers/storms. Highest confidence in showers is across the Champlain and St. Lawrence Valleys, and thunderstorms are most likely at MSS and RUT, though not out of the question at any site, including BTV. Chances for precipitation will generally taper off beyond 12-15Z Thursday. In any thunderstorm, visibility and ceiling could lower, but the exact values and timing of this is difficult to ascertain at the moment. We will be sending amendments as the picture becomes clearer over the next few hours. SLK is the site most likely to have ceilings drop to at least MVFR levels around 11-14Z Thursday. Following the precip Thursday morning, sites will experience a lessening of cloud cover throughout the day. Due to efficient atmospheric mixing, wind gusts out of the west-southwest could gust 15-20 knots from 14Z Thursday to around 00Z Friday. Outlook... Friday: VFR. NO SIG WX. Friday Night: VFR. NO SIG WX. Saturday: VFR. Slight chance SHRA. Saturday Night: VFR. Chance SHRA, Slight chance TSRA. Sunday: VFR. Slight chance SHRA. Sunday Night: VFR. Slight chance SHRA. Memorial Day: Mainly MVFR, with areas VFR possible. Chance SHRA, Slight chance TSRA.
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&& .CLIMATE... Record High Temperatures: May 22: KBTV: 93/1977 KMPV: 90/1994 KMSS: 89/1977 KSLK: 91/1911 Record High Minimum Temperatures: May 22: KBTV: 70/1911 KPBG: 65/1975 KSLK: 63/1921 May 23: KPBG: 65/1964 && .BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VT...None. NY...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Boyd/Kremer NEAR TERM...Boyd/Duell/Kremer SHORT TERM...Neiles LONG TERM...Neiles AVIATION...Storm CLIMATE...Team BTV