Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Albany, NY

Current Version |  Previous Version |  Graphics & Text |  Print | Product List |  Glossary Off
Versions: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
-- Remove Highlighting --
-- Discussion containing changed information from previous version are highlighted. --
711 FXUS61 KALY 231046 AFDALY AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Albany NY 646 AM EDT Sun Jun 23 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Today will be hot and muggy with showers and thunderstorms this afternoon, some of which may be severe. Tomorrow is much cooler although we will still have scattered showers around, especially for northern areas. We warm up again towards the middle of the week with additional chances for showers and storms with a mid-week cold frontal passage. && .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 PM THIS EVENING/...
-- Changed Discussion --
.Update...As of 6:45 AM EDT...Most of our region is now dry albeit overcast, although stratiform rain with embedded thunderstorms is ongoing along our CWA border with BTV near the warm front that continues to lift north of our region. This should continue to lift north through the next couple hours, with a lull in the precip from early this morning through early afternoon. Temperatures are in the 70s for most areas with dew points in the upper 60s to around 70. Temperatures and dew points should rise this morning as we break out into the warm sector. Current satellite imagery shows some breaks in the clouds to our west that should help us to destabilize this morning. We are already seeing the low-level wind field start to increase. Albany already has a southeasterly wind, and the channeled flow up the Hudson and CT River Valleys later today will help to locally increase the risk for severe storms in these areas. Overall, adjustments to the forecast with this update were relatively minor. Please see the previous discussion below for more details on the heat and severe weather threats today... .Previous...Today looks like quite an active weather day across eastern NY and western New England. The 999 mb low currently located over the Great Lakes region will intensify today as it tracks in tandem with a potent upper shortwave along the International Border. This will help to lift the warm front north of our region this morning. This will put our region in the system`s warm sector, with temperatures in the upper 80s to low 90s for some valley areas along with oppressive humidity. For the Hudson Valley from the Capital District southwards, and for Litchfield County, a Heat Advisory remains in effect through 8 pm this evening as heat index values are expected to reach 95-100 degrees. This afternoon, a pre-frontal trough ahead of the system`s cold front will track through the region, helping to spark scattered showers and storms, some of which will likely become severe... CAMs are suggesting an impressive parameter space of cape and shear across our region today. There are some questions as to just how much instability we see with lots of morning cloud cover, but the HREF mean suggests that most of our area should see around 1500 J/kg of MLCAPE with pockets of 1500-2000 J/kg in the Hudson and CT River Valleys. Low-level and deep-layer shear look quite impressive with the southwesterly LLJ at 850 mb increasing to 30-40 kts this afternoon, with 45-50 kt of W/SW flow at 500 mb. This will set the stage for all modes of severe weather today. SPC has placed our region in a slight to enhanced risk for severe weather. Damaging winds will be the primary threat, and are possible with any stronger storms. While SPC has the highest wind probs in VT and the Berkshires, more breaks of sun and deeper mixing in the Mid Hudson Valley suggests there could be a higher threat for damaging winds there as well which is supported by machine learning guidance. With impressive shear in place, we will likely see some supercell structures, especially with any discrete cells. The highest chance is in the enhanced risk area, closer to the warm front. This is also the most likely area where there could be a couple of tornadoes, as LCLs are lower here and SRH is higher, on the order of 100 to 200 m2/s2. Some low-level curvature to the hodographs indicates the presence of streamwise vorticity in the low-levels of the atmosphere, and 0-3 km MLCAPE values of 100 to 200 J/kg all indicate an environment supportive of a few tornadoes. Any stronger storms and certainly supercells will also be capable of producing large hail. Heavy rain leading to isolated flash flooding will also be an issue, as PWAT values remain quite high at 1.8-2". Most areas have seen rain over the past few days so the ground is not as dry as it was earlier in the week. However, storms will be moving faster than the last few days which will help mitigate a more widespread hydro threat. Timing for severe storms looks to be primarily from early this afternoon through this evening. There is some question about the coverage of storms given that the best upper and lower-level forcing remains to our west until after dark, but CAM simulated radar reflectivity may be underdone as CAMs can sometimes underestimate coverage of storms in the warm sector. Overall ,greatest threat window for severe weather is from early afternoon through this evening. A second round of storms is possible late this evening/early tonight ahead of the true cold front, and while a few of these may remain on the strong side the severe threat should begin to subside by sunset.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .SHORT TERM /6 PM THIS EVENING THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/... Tonight, there will likely be some lingering showers and thunderstorms into the overnight period. Coverage of showers and storms should diminish after midnight with the passage of the cold front. Temperatures remain on the warm and muggy side as the cooler air won`t arrive until closer to daybreak, with lows mainly in the 60s. Tomorrow, the upper trough and cold pool aloft moves overhead. We will likely have some scattered showers and a few thunderstorms, especially across norther areas closer to the upper deformation, although we are not expecting severe weather or hydro concerns at this time. It will be much cooler and less humid with highs in the 60s(terrain) to 70s (valleys) and dew points in the lower 60s. We dry out Monday night as surface high pressure builds in from the southwest with lows dropping mostly into the 50s with a few 40s in the high terrain. We warm up Tuesday as the high slides to our southeast and we get into a warm advection regime, but the humidity remains at bay. Dry conditions are expected Tuesday and Tuesday night, although overnight lows will be warmer again, with 60s for most areas. && .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... The extended forecast period opens with nearly zonal flow aloft with a mid and upper level trough approaching from the Great Lakes Region and southern Ontario. The air mass over the forecast area becomes more humid and unstable with sfc dewpoints well into the 60s. A pre frontal trough and a cold front will bring scattered showers and thunderstorms to the region. Depending on the amount of instability and sfc heating, some of the storms may be on the stronger side. PWATs rise 1 to 2 STDEVs above normal based on the latest NAEFS. Some locally heavy rain will be possible. Max temps will range from the mid 80s to lower 90s in many of the valley areas with the best chance of lower 90s in the mid Hudson Valley. Some apparent temps/heat indices may reach the mid and upper 90s from the Capital District south down the Hudson River Valley and the southern Taconics. Heat Advisories may be needed later in time. Temps will be in the 70s to lower 80s over the higher terrain. The showers and thunderstorms continue into the overnight and begin to taper between 06Z-12Z/THU. The cold front will each eastern New England. Lows will fall back into the 50s to lower 60s over the higher terrain and lower to upper 60s in the valleys. Thu through Fri night...A few showers are possible with the upper trough passage and in the wake of the cold front from the Taconics eastward into western New England early Thu. A cooler and drier air mass will be ridging in during the afternoon from the Great Lakes Region. Temps will be near seasonal levels with upper 70s to lower 80s below 1000 ft in elevation and 60s to mid 70s above it. A cool and pleasant night is expected Thu night with lows mainly in the mid 40s to mid 50s over the region. A 1020 hPa or so sfc anticyclone settles over southern Quebec, NY and New England on Friday with fair and dry weather continuing to close the week. Max temps will be near seasonal normal for late June with comfortable humidity levels. The sfc high moves east of Maine Fri night. Some mid and high clouds may increase overnight with lows in the 50s to lower 60s. The weekend opens with a warm front approaching from lower Great Lakes Region and Pennsylvania which will increase clouds and humidity levels with isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms moving in during the day. Temps rise back slightly above normal with mid 70s to mid 80s across the forecast area. CPC is predicting temperatures above normal for Days 8-14 (June 30th to July 6th) with precipitation slightly above normal for eastern NY and western New England. && .AVIATION /12Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... Through 06Z MON...a warm front will move across the region this morning with isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms. A prefrontal trough and cold front will move across eastern NY and western New England this afternoon through tonight with some strong to severe thunderstorms and scattered showers. Conditions vary from IFR levels at KGFL/KPSF this morning with cigs 500-900 ft AGL with vsbys MVFR to MVFR/VFR levels at KALB/KPOU. Expecting widespread IFR/low MVFR cigs to continue this morning as the warm front slowly lifts northward. Some showers or isolated thunderstorm can not be ruled out. The vsbys may briefly dip to IFR levels at KGFL/KPSF. The mist/stratus should burn off between 12Z-14Z/SUN at the majority of the TAF sites with it perhaps lingering at KPSF with MVFR cigs until 16Z/noon. A pre frontal disturbance may quickly fire some strong to severe thunderstorms between 16Z-19Z near KGFL/KALB and then 18Z-21Z for KPSF/KPOU. We used 5 or 6 hour PROB40 groups to focus on these potential strong to severe thunderstorms with wind gusts to 35 KT and IFR vsbys and MVFR cigs. VFR/MVFR conditions may return 22Z/SUN to 01Z/MON in the wake of the first disturbance. A cold front will approach for the nighttime period and we placed VCSH groups to later refine the shower/thunderstorm threat tonight with later TAF issuances. Winds will be light and variable in direction at 6 KT or less or calm. The winds become south at 10 to 15 KT in the late morning into the afternoon with some gusts 20-25 KT. Winds veer to the south/southwest tonight at 8-15 KT. The winds may vary in direction or be gusty to 25-40 KT with any thunderstorm. Outlook... Monday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX. Tuesday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX. Tuesday Night: Low Operational Impact. Slight Chance of SHRA. Wednesday: Moderate Operational Impact. Likely SHRA...TSRA. Wednesday Night: Moderate Operational Impact. Likely SHRA...TSRA. Thursday: Low Operational Impact. NO SIG WX. Thursday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX. Friday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX. && .ALY WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...Heat Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for CTZ001-013. NY...Heat Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for NYZ064>066. Heat Advisory from 11 AM this morning to 8 PM EDT this evening for NYZ049-050-052-053-059-060. MA...None. VT...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Main NEAR TERM...Main SHORT TERM...Main LONG TERM...Wasula AVIATION...Wasula