Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Caribou, ME

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695 FXUS61 KCAR 191922 AFDCAR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Caribou ME 322 PM EDT Wed Jun 19 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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High pressure will remain to our south tonight. A cold front will cross the area Thursday followed by high pressure on Friday. Low pressure will approach on Saturday and track north of our area Sunday.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY/...
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Anomalously strong upper level high pressure slowly retreats southward tonight into Thursday while a cold front sags southward from Quebec. The strong warming with the high has been responsible for numerous daily high temperatures records being tied today, including a 96F reading at Caribou which also ties the all-time high temperature record. Millinocket did break the daily record with 96F so far. The heat index at Caribou did set an unofficial all- time record at 106F, besting the old mark of 100.7F. However, these figures are not part of the official climate record and not available for other climate sites in the CWA. A weak upper level disturbance and unusually high SBCAPE values will result in isolated thunderstorms this evening moving into northern Somerset County, Piscataquis and Penobscot counties and into eastern Aroostook. While these pulse storms will be short- lived given the lack of shear, they could produce heavy downpours and gusty winds. Storm movement will be very slow and allow storms to dump quite a bit of rainfall. Have mentioned heavy thunderstorms in the forecast. SPC has placed the area in a marginal risk in the convective outlook. The thunderstorms will diminish this evening with the loss of heating. High clouds and warm advection ahead of the cold front will make tonight will be among the warmest nights in memory. Lows will be in the mid 70s for much of the area. Temperatures may still be near 80F as late as midnight for many locations. Based on this expectation, an all-time max minimum temperature record of 71F at Caribou will be tied tonight. That will also be a daily and monthly record. The coast will be cooler with the sea breeze developing this afternoon into the evening. For Thursday, another hot day will be on tap with more heat advisories expected for the southern half of the forecast area. We will maintain the existing advisories and warnings through expiration and issue any headlines for tomorrow later this evening. Thursday is forecast to be even hotter than today for Downeast due to offshore winds. The convective outlook for the cold front shares many of environmental characteristics we see today. Once again, PWs will be nearing 2 inches and SBCAPE may reach the 2000 to 3000 J/kg range. Storms may reach towards the trop at 40 to 45k ft and Corfidi vectors remain generally 10 kt or less. Upper level support and shear looks weak. Thus, heavy localized rainfall will be a threat again. Storms reaching the trop will also bring the risk of gusty winds. Since the front will be moving through northern zones in the morning, the bigger threat for thunderstorms will be in the southern half of the area where the front will be the trigger.
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&& .SHORT TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/...
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Showers and thunderstorms will linger Downeast on Thursday night as the front slowly makes its way offshore. Most importantly, the hottest portion of the air mass will be pushed southward and temperatures will return to more seasonable levels for the northern portion of the forecast area. Lows Thursday night will rand in the mid-60s to upper 50s, and highs will be closer to 80 for both Friday and Saturday. With dewpoints falling back into the 40s to 50s, there will be a noticeable difference in how the temperature feels for the end of the week and the beginning of the weekend.
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&& .LONG TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
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For the second half of the weekend, a strengthening low pressure system will move from the midwest into southern Ontario, bringing a series of fronts across Maine. Sunday day, the warm front will approach from the south and stratiform precipitation will spread across the area. Maine will remain under the warm sector through Monday afternoon, when the cold front will finally cross as the upper level trough shifts eastward, taking the main low with it. PWATs during this time will be above 1.5 inches, and with some upper level instability and the slow movement of the main front, there is the potential for some heavier periods of rainfall. Current forecast is too far out for specifics on amounts, but this bears watching as the system approaches. A shortwave ridge will follow on Tuesday, bringing mostly quiet weather, then the potential of another cold front approaching on Wednesday. The air mass ahead of the cold front on Wednesday will bring warmer temperatures to the region, but these should be more on the order of low to mid 80s vs the 90+ degree temperatures seen this week. There is an increasing potential for showers and thunderstorms on Wednesday, but with uncertainty on timing of the front, nothing more than chance PoPs in the forecast at the moment.
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&& .AVIATION /19Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
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NEAR TERM: Prevailing weather will be VFR with light winds. Isolated thunderstorms are possible this evening with tops to FL400 or greater. A tempo was placed in the BGR TAF to reflect the risk. SHORT TERM: Thu Night through Sat...Other than a few storms Thu evening Downeast, looking VFR Thu night through Sat. Variable winds around 5 kts. Sat Night through Mon...MVFR/IFR developing from the south late Sat/early Sun in rain and low clouds, continuing through Monday. Thunderstorms also possible. S wind increasing to 10 kts.
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&& .MARINE...
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NEAR TERM: Quiet conditions continue with light SW generally 10 kt or less. South swell at around 2 to 3 feet is anticipated into Thursday. Patchy fog is expected to reappear tonight with the warm, humid air moving over the cold waters. SHORT TERM: Winds and seas will remain below small craft criteria Thursday through Saturday night. The next reasonable potential for winds greater than 25kts occurs for a brief period Sunday afternoon and Sunday night. During this period, seas will also build to 6 feet, so a possibility exists for the necessity of a small craft advisory due to seas.
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&& .CLIMATE...
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As of this writing, daily records have been tied at Bangor, Houlton and Caribou. The daily record has been broken at Millinocket. The daily record is also the all-time record for Caribou. Temperatures will soar under an anomalously upper level high pressure system, challenging record high temperatures and record max minimum temperatures thru Thu. June 19th High Temperature Records: (Forecast) Caribou (96)96 in 2020 Bangor (95)95 in 1995 Millinocket (96)95 in 2020 Houlton (95)95 in 2020 June 20th Max Minimum Temperature Records: (Forecast) Caribou (67)68 in 1970 Bangor (72)72 in 1931 Millinocket (71)69 in 1923 Houlton (65)67 in 1976 June 20th High Temperature Records: (Forecast) Caribou (89) 93 in 2020 Bangor (95) 95 in 2020 Millinocket (93) 96 in 2020 Houlton (91) 94 in 2020 All-time Record Highs: (Forecast, Day) Caribou (96 June 19)96 June 2020 Bangor (95 June 19/20)104 August 1935 Millinocket(96 June 19) 101 June 1907 Houlton (95 June 19)99 August 1975 All-time Record Max Minimum Temperature Records: (Forecast, Day) Caribou (69 June 19)71 in July 2018 Bangor (72 June 20) 77 in August 1949 Millinocket(71 June 20) 80 in July 1912 Houlton (65 June 19) 72 in August 2009
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&& .CAR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ME...Heat Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for MEZ001>006-010- 016-017-032. Excessive Heat Warning until 8 PM EDT this evening for MEZ011- 015-031. Air Quality Alert until 11 PM EDT this evening for MEZ029. MARINE...None. && $$ Near Term...MCW Short Term...LF Long Term...LF Aviation...MCW/LF Marine...MCW/LF Climate...MStrauser/Foisy/MCW