Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Albany, NY

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449 FXUS61 KALY 221502 AFDALY AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Albany NY Issued by National Weather Service Binghamton NY 1102 AM EDT Wed May 22 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Today will be hot and a little muggy with some afternoon and evening showers and thunderstorms. Tomorrow, a cold front will usher in cooler temperatures and lower humidity, but will be accompanied by some additional showers and thunderstorms especially along the interstate 84 corridor. Temperatures will remain above normal with several chances for showers through the weekend into early next week. && .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 PM THIS EVENING/... 1000 AM Update: The forecast remains on track and no changes were necessary. Not much has changed with the expectations for showers and thunderstorms later on this afternoon and evening, and will continue to monitor with future updates. .Update...As of 6:30 AM EDT...Skies have become mostly clear over the past few hours, aside from a few patches of clouds over the Capital District and southern VT. This has allowed temperatures to drop into the 50s for high terrain areas to mid 60s for the valleys, and current satellite imagery shows some patchy fog for some of the areas that received rain yesterday, especially across the ADKs and western New England. ASOS obs show that fog is locally dense in a few places, but the fog should mix out within the next couple of hours. Otherwise, partly to mostly clear skies and hot temperatures expected today with some afternoon/evening showers and thunderstorms. A couple storms could be strong to severe this evening. Will note that local CAMs study done in collaboration with SUNY Albany reveled that some CAMs tend to be too slow with CI especially in weakly forced environments, so slight chance to chance PoPs were included this afternoon for a few hours earlier than if taken verbatim from the guidance. Otherwise, just minor updates to the previous forecast with more details below... .Previous...Our area remains under flat upper ridging with surface high pressure located off to our southeast over the Atlantic. Today, we remain under the influence of the upper ridge with southwesterly return flow around the periphery of the surface anticyclone advecting warm air into the region. Initially, subsidence will lead to partly to mostly clear skies, which should help temperatures climb into the upper 80s to around 90 for valley areas. Heat index values will likely reach the low 90s, falling just short of heat advisory criteria today. While most of the day remains dry, an occluded low and associated upper low will be located to the north west of the Great Lakes. A pre-frontal trough ahead of the system`s cold front and associated upper shortwave energy approach from the west late this afternoon and evening, which should result in scattered showers and thunderstorms tracking through our region. Timing looks to be late afternoon for the western Mohawk Valley and ADKs, and early evening to early in the overnight period for most of the rest of the region. While shear looks to be lacking again today, some of these storms could be on the stronger side with SBCAPE values approaching 2000 J/kg in some areas. Similar to yesterday, this will be a "thick" cape profile with NCAPE values approaching 0.2 this evening. So, this combined with steep low- level lapse rates and mid-level dry air means that some of the stronger storms could contain damaging wind gusts and marginally severe hail. WBZ values near 10k ft also suggests that some of these storms could have hail despite the warm and muggy airmass. SPC has placed most of eastern NY in a marginal risk for severe weather today, which aligns with our thinking given this setup. && .SHORT TERM /6 PM THIS EVENING THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/... The threat for strong to severe storms diminishes overnight tonight. Storms may track through much of eastern NY and into western New England through the first half of tonight, but the best chance for stronger storms will be mainly in the evening before the sun sets. Storms should diminish after midnight, with just a few lingering showers around. Tonight will be mild and muggy with most areas seeing low temperatures only in the 60s. Tomorrow, the system`s cold front will track through the region. It now looks like the cold front will be more diffuse and slightly faster compared to yesterday`s forecast. In fact, the front looks to come through the Capital District between 12-15z and should make it to our southern areas by mid afternoon, although its forward progression looks to slow the further south and east it gets. Still expecting some showers and storms with the frontal passage, although timing looks to be more in the morning for these showers/storms from albany north and west. For our southeastern areas, especially Dutchess and Litchfield Counties, there should be plenty of time before the front arrives for instability to build to 1500 J/kg or more. Shear is also more impressive than the last few days at over 30 kt for the 0-6 km layer, some strong to severe storms remain possible further south and east of the Capital District. The primary threats with any stronger storms would be damaging wins and hail. Highs Thursday will range from the 70s in the high terrain areas to mid to upper 80s along the I-84 corridor. We may see some showers and thunderstorms linger into Thursday night across portions of Ulster, Dutchess, and Litchfield Counties, although the threat for stronger storms should diminish with the loss of daytime heating and diminishing instability. W/NW winds will advect cooler and drier air into the region behind the front, so lows will be mainly in the 50s and it will not be as muggy as the previous few nights. Friday and Friday night...Upper low ejects eastwards and track north of our area Friday, before upper ridging and associated surface high pressure build in Friday night. So, mainly dry conditions are expected during this timeframe. We may get a glancing shot of cooler air Friday, especially for northern areas, as the core of the colder air aloft passes by to our north, but due to the lack of moisture we are not anticipating much in the way of showers or storms with this secondary cold front. Highs will be cooler, but still above normal with 70s for the high elevations and 80s for valley areas. Lows Friday night drop into the 50s for most areas, with some upper 40s in the high terrain. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... An upper level shortwave will cross the region from southwest to northeast on Saturday as a surface warm front also approaches. Some showers and thunderstorms could accompany the front especially during the afternoon hours. Highs should run similar to previous days in the mid-70s to mid-80s. The system`s cold front looks to cross the region on Sunday as weak upper ridging builds overhead. This should result in a drier day but a few showers could still occur along the front. Highs Sunday will be in the lower 80s along the Hudson Valley and the 70s to around 80 elsewhere. A complex upper level pattern looks to set up for early next week with multiple pieces of upper-level energy rotating around one another. Eventually, an upper level trough or upper level low looks to form over the region. Another surface low pressure system approaches from the Ohio Valley or Great Lakes and brings additional rounds of showers and thunderstorms, possibly more widespread than over the weekend. The extra clouds and greater coverage of precipitation may hold temperatures into the 60s and 70s both days. && .AVIATION /15Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... Through 12z/Thu...Morning fog will lift at KGFL/KPSF by 13z/Wed, then VFR conditions will be in place for the rest of the daytime hours. Some weakening showers and embedded rumbles of thunder are expected to cross the TAF sites between 02z-08z/Thu. Will maintain VCSH for now. Cigs may remain VFR within these showers with mixed vsbys based on the intensity of these showers. In the wake of these showers, some partial clearing may take place and result in some patchy fog late. Wind will become south to southwesterly at around 10 today decreasing to less than 10 kt tonight. Outlook... Thursday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX. Friday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX. Friday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX. Saturday: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA...TSRA. Saturday Night: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA...TSRA. Sunday: Low Operational Impact. Slight Chance of SHRA. Sunday Night: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA. Memorial Day: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA...TSRA. && .ALY WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. MA...None. VT...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Main NEAR TERM...Main/BJG SHORT TERM...Main LONG TERM...Rathbun AVIATION...Rathbun