Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Buffalo, NY

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FXUS61 KBUF 241745
AFDBUF

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Buffalo NY
145 PM EDT Wed Apr 24 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Lingering showers, that may briefly changeover to a few wet flakes
before ending, will taper off from north to south this afternoon
with lagging cloud cover then slowly clearing out from north to
south through the remainder of the day. An expansive area of
Canadian high pressure will then assure us of fair dry weather
Thursday and Friday. While some showers will be likely this coming
weekend, especially on Saturday, a good amount of dry time will be
built in. Looking further down the road, we can look forward to a
summer-like warm up Sunday and Monday with the mercury surging well
into the 70s and even a few spots into the 80s.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY/...
...Downright Cold Tonight...

Back edge of rain shower activity now working across the Lake
Ontario and the North Country, and will continue to taper off from
north to south through the afternoon. A few wet flakes still
possible across the higher terrain before precipitation ends, mainly
over the Tug Hill.

As we work through the afternoon, notably drier air will work
southwards from Ontario. This in combination with increased
subsidence will lead to slow but pronounced clearing from north to
south. Unfortunately, this could mean that areas closer to the
Pennsylvania border could be fairly cloudy right up to sunset.

In any case, it will be chilly for most areas today, as a gusty
northerly wind will accompany temperatures falling into the low and
mid 40s, and into the upper 30s higher terrain.

A large Canadian surface high over the upper Great Lakes this
evening will then gradually expand across the entire Great Lakes
region overnight and Thursday. This will guarantee fair dry weather
throughout the region, although temperatures will be solidly below
normal. Mins tonight will be solidly in the 20s away from the
immediate lake shores with highs on Thursday only ranging from the
upper 40s to lower 50s. These readings will average some 10 degrees
below typical late April levels.

&&

.SHORT TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/...
Surface high pressure will remain camped over our region Thursday
night and Friday. Subsidence will limit cloud cover, and this lack
of cloud cover and light winds, with a dry lower atmosphere will
make for excellent radiational cooling conditions Thursday night,
with lows near freezing along the lakeshore, to lower 20s inland.

A warm front will near our region Friday night with increasing
clouds and rain showers reaching the western Southern Tier late.
Ahead of the rain, southeast downslope winds could reach 35 mph
along the Lake Erie shoreline.

Warm front enters our region Saturday, and accompanied by a
shortwave aloft a brief period of rain showers is expected. Basin
average rainfall will be on the order of a tenth to a third of an
inch. Some thunder may occur with limited MUCAPE values less than
500 J/KG, especially over Lake Erie and the Niagara Frontier.

A few showers, and perhaps a thunderstorm, may linger behind the
front later Saturday and Saturday night with again limited
instability. Mild Saturday night with lows in the lower 50s inland
and east of Lake Ontario, to near 60 across the favorable downslope
areas of WNY.

&&

.LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
On Sunday the initial surface low will wash out across northern
Quebec...while the second cutter system develops into the northern
Plains States. These developments...coupled with continued building
upper level ridging aloft...will help to stall out the initial
system`s cold front to our north...leaving our area awash in warm
air typical of late spring/early summer with 850 mb temps reaching
the +11C to +13C range by afternoon. Such warmth will be supportive
of highs reaching well into the 70s south of Lake Ontario...and into
the lower 70s across the North Country. The warmest readings overall
will be found across the Genesee Valley and western Finger
Lakes...where it`s appearing increasingly likely that some locations
(for example, Dansville) could crack the 80 degree mark. With
synoptic-scale forcing notably weaker with our region lying within
the warm sector and under the building upper level ridge...any
convective potential will likely be more dependent upon diurnal
heating of our warm and borderline humid airmass...and with this in
mind have focused some chance PoPs across the typical areas inland
from the lakes during the heating of the day...though the day is
also likely to feature a considerable amount of dry time overall.
Any such activity should then tend to fade with the loss of heating
and continued building of the upper ridge Sunday night...leaving
behind mainly dry and unseasonably warm conditions for the bulk of
the night...with lows mostly ranging between 55 and 60.

Expect similar conditions to prevail on Monday as the second cutter
low makes its way northeastward and across Lake Superior...with
temps likely to reach even a few degrees higher than those of Sunday
as 850 mb T`s climb to between +12C and +15C. Better chances for
showers and thunderstorms may then arrive Monday night and Tuesday
as the surface low makes its way to Quebec and slides its trailing
cold front across our region...with somewhat cooler (but still well
above normal) temperatures expected on Tuesday owing to the frontal
passage.

&&

.AVIATION /18Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
Widespread IFR/MVFR CIGS late this morning, along with some
lingering rain or higher terrain wet snow showers, as the southward
bound slow moving cold front now enters the western Southern Tier.
During the course of the afternoon these low CIGS will slowly thin
and clear from north to south, leaving mainly VFR weather for the
latter portion of the day, last to improve toward the NY/PA line
(KJHW). Along with the pronounced clearing, a gusty north to
northwest wind will occasionally gust to 30 knots at times.

High pressure centered over the upper Great Lakes this evening will
then slowly settle over the region tonight and Thursday. This will
guarantee fair dry weather weather with VFR conditions.

Outlook...

Friday...VFR.
Saturday...VFR/MVFR. A chance of showers.
Sunday...Mainly VFR. A chance of showers.

&&

.MARINE...
In the wake of the passing cold front, winds have shifted to the
north and freshened. This has resulted in low-end Small Craft
Advisory conditions on Lake Ontario, while the short fetch and
relative brief duration of the elevated winds will only produce
choppy to occasionally rough waters on Lake Erie.

Expansive high pressure centered over the upper Great Lakes this
evening will then gradually build across the lower Great Lakes
overnight and Thursday. This will significantly lower winds and
waves throughout the region tonight, with only gentle breezes and
negligible wave action expected for Thursday as the surface high
passes overhead.

&&

.BUF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
NY...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 5 PM EDT this afternoon for LOZ042-
         045.
         Small Craft Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for
         LOZ043-044.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...JM/RSH
NEAR TERM...JM/RSH
SHORT TERM...Thomas
LONG TERM...JJR
AVIATION...JM/RSH
MARINE...JM/RSH


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