Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Albany, NY

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FXUS61 KALY 240050
AFDALY

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION
National Weather Service Albany NY
850 PM EDT Tue Apr 23 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Breezy and mild conditions continue this evening as clouds
increase across the region. Light rain showers develop late
tonight into Wednesday morning before gusty winds and cooler
temperatures arrive behind the cold front late tomorrow
afternoon into Wednesday night. Surface high pressure brings a
return to mild and dry weather to end the workweek.

&&

.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM WEDNESDAY MORNING/...
As of 830pm...Main changes for this update were to trim back
POPs a bit as the 00 UTC ALY sounding shows plenty of dry air in
the mid and low levels; thus, reflectivities seen on regional
radars tracking into the western Adirondacks are struggling to
reach the ground. Most of the area will remain dry through at
least Midnight before chance and likely POPs creep eastward. Held
off widespread chance POPs until 06 - 12 UTC when guidance is
in better agreement that the low and mid-levels become saturated
enough for rain to reach the ground. Otherwise, we also adjusted
temperatures upwards a few degrees tonight thanks to increasing
clouds and southerly winds remaining breezy. Temperatures this
evening gradually cool with overnight lows reaching into the
mid to upper 40s.

Previous discussion...Weak surface high pressure squeezed
between an approaching frontal low to the west and a cut-off low
drifting northward to the east over the Atlantic will be
steadily nudged out of the region this evening. Under its
influence, temperatures have risen well above normal, reaching
highs mostly in the 60s across the region, and some pockets near
70 along the Hudson and Mohawk Valleys. A surface low moving
over the Great Lakes while surface high pressure remains
centered to the south has allowed for breezy south to southeast
winds to develop for this afternoon, with gusts of around 25 mph
possible for much of the region through this evening. In
collaboration with state environment and forestry agencies, a
Special Weather Statement for enhanced risk of fire spread
remains in place across southern Vermont and east-central New
York thanks to these gusty winds combined with low surface
humidity.

Clear skies continue across much of the Northeast, however high
clouds will initially increase from the west this afternoon and
evening before lower clouds arrive overnight. A positively-
tilted trough and associated frontal system will bring overcast
skies and scattered rain showers beginning overnight.
Precipitation is expected to remain light, with rainfall
accumulations of less than 0.25 inches expected for most.
Beneath overcast skies and with ongoing precipitation, overnight
temperatures remain mild with lows only dipping into the upper
30s to mid 40s across the region.

&&

.SHORT TERM /6 AM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/...
The aforementioned surface low will make its nearest approach
Wednesday morning, passing over the Adirondacks and continuing
to the northeast through the day. Rain shower coverage will
likely be higher in the vicinity of the low, with more scattered
coverage elsewhere, particularly to the south and east of the
Capital District, where there may be some breaks of sun into the
afternoon. These breaks may allow for enough additional surface
heating to result in sufficient destabilization for a few
rumbles of thunder within any convective rain shower, although
confidence in any occurrences of thunder remains low.

Precipitation will taper from west to east through the
afternoon, although it may linger longer in favored upslope
areas as surface flow turns out of the west. Much of the region
will see gusts reaching 20-25 mph behind the cold frontal
passage, while the arrival of cooler air may yield some wet snow
in the highest terrain of the southern Greens and Adirondacks,
however little to no accumulation is expected.

As surface high pressure quickly builds in behind the cold
front, dry weather, clear skies, and cooler temperatures will
persist Wednesday night through Thursday night. Afternoon highs
each day may only reach the 40s in high terrain, with 50s at
lower elevations. Cold overnight lows in the upper 10s to upper
20s on Wednesday night will moderate slightly by Thursday night,
when temperatures will reach the mid 20s to low 30s.

&&

.LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
Low level ridging builds into the region Friday with sunny weather.
Highs Friday in the mid 50s to lower 60s. Warm advection begins
later Friday as high pressure builds east and south.

Upper ridging builds into our region from the west Saturday through
Monday and as the upper ridge axis shifts east of our region Monday
and beyond, increasing warm advection and moisture advection will
support increasing clouds and eventually chances for showers.

Clouds and showers will gradually build into our region from the
west and north each day, with scattered showers reaching western and
northern areas Saturday as weak upper energy tries to track around
the northern periphery of the upper ridging. More clouds than sun by
Saturday afternoon and that trend will continue through Monday but
there will be some periods of sun along with increasing warm
advection to help temperatures warm each day, especially Monday.
Highs Saturday in the mid 50s to lower 60s. Highs Sunday in the
upper 60s to mid 70s. Highs Monday in the 70s to around 80.

By Tuesday, the upper ridge axis shifts well to the east and
southwest boundary layer winds increase along with low level
forcing/convergence, instability and moisture, supporting better
chances for showers. An isolated thunderstorm is possible, with the
warm airmass in the region and associated instability. Highs Tuesday
in the 70s with some mid 60s to around 70 higher terrain.

&&

.AVIATION /01Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
Through 00Z Thursday...VFR conditions continue through 06 UTC
Thursday. Rain showers spread from northwest to southeast by 09
to 12 UTC and while rain will mainly be light, we included a
TEMPO for MVFR vis and cigs by 12 to 16 UTC at GFL, ALB, and
PSF when periods of steadier rain and lower ceilings may occur.
Rain become scattered and light after 16 UTC as an upper level
low gradually moves overhead. MVFR ceilings may linger at PSF
through the afternoon. POU looks to remain mainly south of the
steadier rain so kept VFR conditions at this site. Ceilings
skies ensue by 21 - 00 UTC at all TAF sites which will support
improvement to VFR at all terminals by the end of the TAF
cycle.

Southerly winds remain breezy tonight sustained 5-15 kt with
gusts up 15-25 kt through Midnight before winds gusts subside.
Sustained southerly winds remain a bit elevated ranging 5-12kts
through 16 UTC. A sharp wind shift to the west-northwest occurs
by 16-17 UTC at all terminals with winds becoming gusty as they
continue shifting to the north-northwest through the afternoon.
Expect gusts up to 25-30kts at ALB and PSF with gusts a bit
weaker at GFL and POU, only gusting up to 20-25kts.

Outlook...

Wednesday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Thursday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Thursday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Friday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Friday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Saturday: Low Operational Impact. Breezy. Slight Chance of SHRA.
Saturday Night: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA.
Sunday: Low Operational Impact. Slight Chance of SHRA.

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...
High pressure will shift eastward today bringing partly to
mostly sunny, breezy and milder weather with temperatures rising
into the 60s with some upper 50s across the higher elevations. RH
values will lower to 25 to 35 percent during the afternoon hours
with southerly winds gusting to around 25 mph.

A period of rainfall is expected tonight through Wednesday and
may mix with or end as a brief period of snow across portions of
the Adirondacks and southern Greens before ending. Dry weather
then returns for Thursday and Friday with winds generally 5 to
15 mph both days.

&&

.ALY WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
CT...None.
NY...None.
MA...None.
VT...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...Picard/Speciale
NEAR TERM...Picard/Speciale
SHORT TERM...Picard
LONG TERM...NAS
AVIATION...Speciale
FIRE WEATHER...Rathbun


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