Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Burlington, VT

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992 FXUS61 KBTV 022300 AFDBTV Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Burlington VT 700 PM EDT Thu May 2 2024 .SYNOPSIS... After lingering showers in far northeastern Vermont wind down, dry conditions in the wake of a cold front will continue overnight. Some low clouds and fog will be possible overnight, then skies should become partly to mostly sunny on Friday. Some rain showers will enter northern New York on Saturday, and the entire region for Sunday. Aside from the cooler and wetter weather on Sunday, largely seasonable weather is expected over the next week. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/...
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As of 656 PM EDT Thursday... No changes were needed to the forecast with this update. Showers have exited the forecast area, with some breaks in the clouds making for a pleasant evening. Fog and/or stratus developing continue to look favorable overnight, although there is still the question of how widespread and how quickly it develops after the sun sets, so this trend will continue to be monitored. Previous Discussion... A cluster of rain showers is currently skirting through far northeastern Vermont late this afternoon. It is associated with a cold pool aloft as heights fall in the base of the upper trough swinging southeastward behind the surface cold front that is now well east of our region. The pressure gradient behind the front is weak such that winds have only been around 10 to 15 MPH, and the northwesterly winds should diminish, as will any lingering light rain showers/sprinkles, after sunset. While anticyclonic flow will lead to continued dry weather overnight, the question remains as to how much fog and/or low stratus develops. Expect our mountains to be obscured by low clouds overnight due to a subsidence inversion and lingering moisture. Otherwise, have offered patchy fog largely where it rained this afternoon/early evening in northern/northeastern Vermont. However, conditionally areas of fog will develop in portions of northern New York where skies clear out. Compared to areas farther east, 925 millibar flow looks particularly light overnight. In contrast, light southeasterly flow suggests stratus will be more prominent east of the Green Mountains. For Friday into Friday night, no significant weather is expected with ridging building into our region. Temperatures have trended a touch warmer, with most likely highs now exceeding 70 in just about all of the Champlain Valley in addition to the St. Lawrence Valley. The aforementioned southeasterly flow will dampen warming in central and eastern Vermont a bit, but it should be a largely pleasant day once morning shallow clouds dissipate. Towards the very end of the period shower chances develop across our western areas, but there is quite a bit of model disagreement on if the upper level forcing is sufficient to get enough lift to support precipitation. The incoming wave looks to peter out as it runs into a strong ridge, so mainly we will see increasing cloud cover and mild temperatures with an increase in southerly wind Friday night. Abundant low-level moisture and light winds could cause fog formation overnight, particularly if some breaks form in the clouds. Temperatures will fall into the 40s across the region. An upper level ridge builds into the region on Friday and it will bring drier and warmer weather. 925 mb temperatures look to rise to between 9-14 degrees but easterly flow will keep the warmest temperatures, up to 20 celsius, just to the southwest over Central New York. Highs should therefore range in the upper 60s and low 70s. Temperatures will depend a bit on how quickly the low clouds from Thursday`s shortwave scour out and how quickly high clouds build in from the west. It looks like there should at least be some filtered sunshine during the day for most areas.
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&& .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 323 PM EDT Thursday...PWATs rise to 2 standard deviations above normal on Sunday as moisture with Gulf of Mexico origin looks to overspread the region. Forecast soundings show a lack of surface- based instability, so showers with brief locally heavy downpours look to be the main risk. While there could be embedded thunder due to elevated instability, no organized thunderstorms are anticipated. It will be quite breezy as well, with persistent southeast winds gusting 30-35 mph at times. Rainfall chances wise, it does look like areas east of the Adirondacks should stay dry for most of Saturday. This is because while a shortwave trough moves eastward from the Great Lakes, it encounters a stout omega block, and therefore the best forcing is diverted north of our region on Saturday. While there should be plenty of cloud cover, have utilized the 75th percentile of model guidance for Champlain Valley and point east. Highs should top out right around 70, or a few degrees above climatological norm for early May across the Champlain Valley. Expect 60s elsewhere, except 50s in the high terrain. Heading into Sunday, the omega block finally moves east, allowing the shortwave trough to approach closer to our CWA albeit in a deamplified state. This means that PoPs increase to the likely category with scattered to perhaps numerous showers on Sunday. While there would likely be widespread wetting rainfall, QPF amounts are quite manageable in the 0.25 to 0.5 inch range. Indeed, the MMEFS shows none of our area rivers going into action stage. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 323 PM EDT Thursday...The overall weather pattern heading into the first full week of May can be described as unsettled with no real significant warm up or impactful weather. Unsurprisingly, the CPC 8-14 day temperature outlook favors near normal temperatures and leans towards above normal rainfall. For reference, typical highs for North Country in early May are in the low to mid 60s, while average overnight lows are in the mid 30s to low 40s. The upper level pattern features a positively tilted omega block sandwiched between an anomalously deep trough across the Rockies/northern Great Plains and another trough over eastern Quebec/Newfoundland. H5 height anomalies favor a period of widespread showers and thunderstorms in the Tuesday/Wednesday time frame, as positive H5 height anomalies give way to near normal values. Depending on the timing of the associated surface cold front, ingredients may exist for a few stronger storms. But with the potential storms being 5 days away, have largely stuck to a blend of guidance for this time frame. && .AVIATION /00Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... Through 18Z Friday... Aside from EFK where ceilings have lowered to near 1000 feet, conditions are VFR this afternoon with a weak cold front having passed east of the region. Some shower activity remains possible primarily at EFK and MPV through the evening but no impacts are expected with rain on the lighter side. As breezy north winds with gusts up to 20 knots taper off by 00Z and breaks in post-frontal clouds develop, fog will become possible, especially in New York terminals based on the lighter low level flow. Farther east, there are some indications of a stratus deck, so across the airspace there is a low to moderate chance of some IFR conditions, while MVFR conditions are much more likely at times during the overnight due to a subsidence inversion. Any fog and low stratus may linger through about 15Z, then any cloud cover will become generally a scattered, high cloud deck. Outlook... Friday Night: VFR. Slight chance SHRA. Saturday: VFR. Chance SHRA. Saturday Night: Mainly VFR, with local MVFR possible. Chance SHRA. Sunday: Mainly MVFR, with areas VFR possible. Likely SHRA. Sunday Night: Mainly MVFR, with areas IFR possible. Chance SHRA. Monday: VFR/MVFR conditions possible. Slight chance SHRA. Monday Night: VFR. NO SIG WX. Tuesday: VFR. Slight chance SHRA. && .BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VT...None. NY...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Kutikoff NEAR TERM...Kremer/Kutikoff SHORT TERM...Chai LONG TERM...Chai AVIATION...Kutikoff