Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Caribou, ME

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000 FXUS61 KCAR 131331 AFDCAR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Caribou ME 931 AM EDT Sat Apr 13 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Cold front crosses the area later today as an upper level disturbance pivots northeast. The low will dissipate to our north on Sunday. High pressure builds in early next week and remains over the area into midweek. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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930 am update...No changes except removing patchy fog from forecast. Previous Discussion... Sharp 500mb trof will slide overhead during the day today with a rapidly cooling pocket of air aloft. At the surface a trough will pivot northeast under the shortwave which will help generate scattered to numerous showers into the afternoon. Expecting a mostly cloudy day but a few sunny breaks are possible which will aid in the destabilization of the atmosphere. High temperatures will top out in the low 50s across the Downeast coast with the wind off the Gulf of Maine. Across the Highlands including Bangor to Moosehead expecting low to mid 50s. Across the north will be the warmest with upper 50s and even a few 60F readings possible at Caribou, Presque Isle and Houlton. Speaking of destabilization...Cold air aloft over warmer surface temperatures is a recipe for numerous showers to develop so expecting the most showers across the Central Highlands into Northern Maine. There will be a 3-6hr period this afternoon into the early evening where a warm moist airmass will be beneath the cold pocket moving overhead especially in northeastern zones. This as seen in modeled soundings this morning shows a period for 200-400j/kg of SBCAPE and MUCAPE to be present especially in northeast Aroostook County. At the same time low-level lapse rates will be steep on the order of 7.5-8C/km with relatively moist low to mid level RHs. All this combined with modeled convective temperatures 58-60F suggest convective showers are likely. Given a relatively lowering freezing level and inverted "V" signature to the soundings expecting the potential for perhaps some graupel in these showers. Cannot rule out small hail however the best likelihood is graupel. This will be a possibility across much of the Northern 1/3rd of the CWA. At the same time cannot rule out a few lightning strikes as well so will paint Isolated Thunderstorms across Northeastern Aroostook where the best instability develops this afternoon. Tonight, the shortwave going negative begins to consolidate and develops a surface low heading into the Maritimes. As the low develops overhead cannot rule out some gusty winds before they shift westerly behind the departing surface trof. Expecting showers to slowly diminish through the evening into the overnight tonight. Breezy westerly winds are expected to remain below 20mph. Temperatures will fall back into the low to mid 30s across the North Woods & Moosehead Region with upper 30s elsewhere from Eastern Aroostook to the Downeast coast including Bangor.
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&& .SHORT TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/... An upper level long wave trough will continue to sit across the northeast CONUS, keeping a fairly unsettled pattern into the early work week. On Sunday, a weak shortwave will approach out of the Great Lakes region, bringing another round of rain to the area Sunday night into early Monday morning. Guidance is in fairly good agreement that the center of this open wave will pass through the Downeast region, with most precip falling across the southern half of our forecast area. For Monday afternoon, though the bulk of the shortwave will have exited out into the Canadian Maritimes, the 500 mb trough combined with the recent increase in low level moisture will provide the ingredients needed for diurnal convection. There is high (85%) confidence in at least a cumulus field, though with enough moisture in place, scattered showers are possible (20% chance). && .LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... The unsettled pattern continues through the end of the week, after a brief period of high pressure Tuesday night into Wednesday. Mostly clear skies on Wednesday will lead to temperatures reaching into the mid 50s across much of the forecast area, and potentially reaching 60 across the Bangor area. A more robust low pressure system will approach from the west on Wednesday, and begin pushing through the area Wednesday night through the day on Thursday. The precip from this system is likely to be rain. There is still model discrepancy as to storm track, as well as interaction with the narrow ridge of high pressure, which could cause a triple point low to weaken or dodge south of our area. What all these solutions do have in common is an occluded front swinging in from Quebec, which is another potential source for rain through the end of the week. && .AVIATION /14Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... NEAR TERM: MVFR/IFR this AM with low cigs and BR becoming MVFR/VFR today. VCSH or some -SHRA today. VCTS possible but confidence is low to put in TAFs for PQI, CAR & FVE this afternoon. S winds 10-15kt with gusts up to 30kt possible. Tonight, VFR south, MVFR north with W winds 5-15kt with gusts up to 20kt possible. -SHRA early. SHORT TERM: Sun - Sun night: Improving to VFR across all terminals. -SHRA possible late, with cigs dropping to MVFR/IFR Sun night in any rain. W winds 5 to 10 kts gusting to 20 kts, shifting southerly and becoming light Sun night. Mon - Mon night: Improving to VFR across all terminals. Lingering -SHRA possible across northern terminals. W winds 5 to 10 kts gusting to 20 kts. Tues: VFR across all terminals, though brief MVFR/IFR possible over northern terminals in -SHRA. W winds 10 to 15 kts gusting 20 to 25 kts. Tues night - Wed: VFR across all terminals with cigs trending towards SKC. NW winds 5 to 10 kts. && .MARINE... NEAR TERM: Small Craft Advisory extended through the entire near term. S winds today gusting 25-30kt across the waters. Long period southerly swells (11 sec) slowly subsiding but remain 6-10ft across the waters. Winds shift westerly this evening and remain gusty 20-25kt. Seas continue to subside. Southerly long period swells (10-11 sec) generally 5-9ft through the night. SHORT TERM: A small craft advisory continues through the day on Sunday into Sunday evening for wave heights which will remain around 5 to 8 ft, falling to 3 to 5 ft Sunday night into Monday morning. Conditions are expected to remain below SCA levels through the middle of next week. && .CAR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ME...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 8 PM EDT Sunday for ANZ050>052. && $$ Near Term...Sinko Short Term...AStrauser Long Term...AStrauser Aviation...Sinko/AStrauser Marine...Sinko/AStrauser

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