197  
FXUS61 KBTV 190225  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
925 PM EST WED DEC 18 2024  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
SNOW AND RAIN WILL RESULT IN ELEVATIONALLY DEPENDENT  
ACCUMULATIONS THROUGH TONIGHT. SLIPPERY TRAVEL CAN BE EXPECTED  
THIS EVENING IN AREAS OF HEAVIER SNOW; HOWEVER, OVERALL  
ACCUMULATIONS WILL BE ONLY UP TO 4 INCHES, WITH PERHAPS A FEW  
HIGHER TOTALS OVER 2000 FEET IN ELEVATION. FOLLOWING ANOTHER  
CHANCE OF SNOW SHOWERS ON FRIDAY, VERY COLD CONDITIONS WILL  
SETTLE INTO THE REGION, FEATURING BELOW ZERO TEMPERATURE  
READINGS IN MANY LOCATIONS.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/  
 
AS OF 922 PM EST WEDNESDAY...LIGHT PRECIPITATION IS CONTINUING  
OVER MOST AREAS BUT THERE IS A HEAVIER MESOBAND ACROSS PORTIONS  
OF SOUTHERN VERMONT. THAT BAND WILL BE WHERE THE HEAVIEST SNOW  
ENDS UP AND IN IT RATES OF AN INCH AN HOUR ARE POSSIBLE. THE  
BAND IS EXPECTED TO MOSTLY STAY IN SOUTHERN VERMONT AND IT WILL  
STRUGGLE TO MOVE NORTH. SNOW LEVELS HAVE BEEN A LITTLE HIGHER  
THAN FORECAST. THEY ARE GENERALLY BETWEEN 500-1000 FT BUT THEY  
ARE LOWER IN THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY WHERE ALMOST EVERYWHERE IS  
SEEING SNOW. THEY WILL LOWER SLIGHTLY THIS EVENING BUT WITH A  
LACK OF MEANINGFUL COLD AIR ADVECTION AND WEAK DYNAMICS THERE  
WILL NOT BE ABLE TO BE MUCH COOLING. HOWEVER, THERE WILL BE A  
LITTLE MORE COLD AIR ADVECTION ALOFT WHICH SHOULD HELP BRING  
DOWN SNOW LEVELS A LITTLE. AT THIS POINT, IT LOOKS UNLIKELY THAT  
THE IMMEDIATE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY WILL SEE ANY ACCUMULATION. THE  
BACK END OF THE PRECIPITATION IS ABOUT TO REACH THE ST. LAWRENCE  
VALLEY AND MOST OF THE STEADY SNOW WILL BE DONE NOT LONG AFTER  
MIDNIGHT.  
 
PREVIOUS FORECAST...A MODESTLY STRENGTHENING LOW  
PRESSURE SYSTEM AND ITS ASSOCIATED FRONT TO OUR SOUTH WILL BE  
RESPONSIBLE FOR A SHORT PERIOD OF RAIN AND SNOW FOR THIS  
AFTERNOON AND EVENING. TOTAL PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS LOOK TO  
AVERAGE A QUARTER TO A HALF INCH. WHILE NO WINTER WEATHER  
ADVISORIES ARE ISSUED DUE TO MOST POPULATED AREAS SEEING UNDER 4  
INCHES OF SNOWFALL, LOCALIZED HIGHER AMOUNTS ARE POSSIBLE IN  
HIGHER ELEVATIONS OF SOUTH CENTRAL VERMONT, WHERE MESOSCALE  
BANDING IS FAVORED WITH PERIODS OF HEAVIER PRECIPITATION.  
 
THE MID-LEVEL FRONT THAT IS DISPLACED WELL TO THE NORTH OF THE  
LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM, AND THE LIFT AND MOISTURE TIED TO IT, ARE  
ALREADY PRODUCING BANDED STRUCTURES THAT WILL CREATE VARYING  
PRECIPITATION RATES ACROSS OUR REGION. PRECIPITATION WILL TAPER  
OFF FROM WEST TO EAST AS THE SURFACE LOW PASSES TO OUR EAST  
NEAR CAPE COD AROUND MIDNIGHT. TWO ZONES OF WIDESPREAD  
PRECIPITATION ARE EXPECTED. THE MAIN ONE, OCCURRING NOW, IS TIED  
TO A BROAD ZONE OF 700 MILLIBAR FRONTOGENESIS LIFTING  
NORTHEASTWARD INTO NORTHERN NEW YORK AND THE NORTHERN HALF OF  
VERMONT. SNOWFALL RATES WILL GENERALLY BE 0.25" TO 0.5"/HOUR,  
CONSISTENT WITH LIGHT BUT STEADY PRECIPITATION RATES AND ROUGHLY  
10:1 SNOW TO LIQUID RATIOS. WITH TEMPERATURES AT OR SLIGHTLY  
ABOVE FREEZING AND WARM ROAD TEMPERATURES FROM THE SURFACE  
HEATING TODAY, ACCUMULATIONS WILL BE PRIMARILY ON GRASSY  
SURFACES THROUGH THE EARLY EVENING. AFTER DARK, COMBINATION OF  
SLIGHT COOLING OF SURFACES AND AREAS OF HEAVIER PRECIPITATION  
RATES COULD LEAD TO SLIPPERY CONDITIONS AND A SPECIAL WEATHER  
STATEMENT MAY BE NEEDED TO HIGHLIGHT AREAS OF DIFFICULT TRAVEL.  
 
AS THE SURFACE LOW INTENSIFIES THIS EVENING, WE'LL BE WATCHING FOR  
HEAVIER PRECIPITATION RATES TIED TO POTENTIAL WEAK INSTABILITY ALOFT  
ON THE NORTHERN FLANK OF STRONGER FRONTAL FORCING IN SOUTHERN  
VERMONT. THERE REMAIN GOOD SIGNALS FOR HEAVY SNOWFALL RATES IN  
EXCESS OF 1" PER HOUR AT TIMES ACROSS PORTIONS OF RUTLAND AND  
WINDSOR WHERE MODELING SHOWS ROUNDS OF THIS FAVORABLE FORCING IN  
A NARROW AXIS. HOWEVER, PERHAPS ORANGE AND CALEDONIA COUNTIES  
SEE THIS HEAVIER SNOW AS WELL THROUGH THE EVENING, AS MESOSCALE  
BANDS OFTEN ARE DISPLACED A BIT NORTH OF WHERE THE BEST FORCING  
IS MODELED. THIS HEAVIER SNOW IS FAVORED TO BLOSSOM BETWEEN 7  
PM AND 9 PM BEFORE DEPARTING TO THE EAST BEFORE MIDNIGHT.  
 
THE FORECAST FOR WET SNOW AT ELEVATIONS ABOVE 1000 FEET IS  
STRAIGHTFORWARD. GIVEN RELATIVELY WARM SURFACE TEMPERATURES  
NEAR OR ABOVE FREEZING ALONG WITH SNOW GROWTH TEMPERATURES BEING  
LARGELY 10 TO 15 THOUSAND FEET ABOVE GROUND LEVEL, SNOW  
CHARACTER IS FAVORED TO BE WET AND POSSIBLY HEAVY, ESPECIALLY IN  
HIGHER ELEVATIONS IN SOUTH CENTRAL VERMONT. CRUCIALLY, BECAUSE  
OF THESE MILD SURFACE TEMPERATURES AND LACK OF COLD AIR  
ADVECTION DUE TO SOUTHERLY FLOW AHEAD OF ANOTHER SURFACE TROUGH  
TO OUR NORTHWEST, ONLY WHEN HEAVIER SNOW FALLS WILL RAIN CHANGE  
OVER TO SNOW IN THE LOWER ELEVATIONS. WHILE THE HRRR HAS PROVEN  
A LITTLE SLOW AT CHANGING RAIN TO SNOW IN THE ST. LAWRENCE  
VALLEY, HAVE LEANED TOWARDS ITS DEPICTION OF PRECIPITATION TYPE  
SHOWN IN RECENT RUN, WHICH HAS BEEN CONSISTENT WITH ITSELF AND  
OBSERVATIONS TODAY OF MILDER BOUNDARY LAYER CONDITIONS IN THE  
CHAMPLAIN VALLEY. AS SUCH, MOST OF THE RAIN WILL REMAIN LIQUID  
IN THIS REGION, WITH A RAIN/SNOW MIX IN THE WINOOSKI VALLEY AND  
OTHER LOW ELEVATIONS IN VERMONT, THROUGH MOST OF THE EVENT. IN  
THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY, THE LOW LEVEL AIR MASS WAS JUST ENOUGH  
COLDER THAT RAIN HAS ALREADY MIXED WITH OR CHANGED TO WET SNOW  
WITH TEMPERATURES IN THE MID 30S, AND THESE AREAS LOOK ON TRACK  
TO SEE MAINLY SNOW THIS EVENING AND ACCUMULATIONS OF 1 TO 2  
INCHES. MUCH OF VERMONT ABOVE 1000 FEET ELEVATIONS SHOULD SEE 2  
TO 4 INCHES, WITH LOWER ELEVATIONS GENERALLY A COATING TO AN  
INCH, THROUGH TONIGHT.  
 
OVERNIGHT, THE AFOREMENTIONED TROUGH TO OUR NORTHWEST WILL SWEEP  
EASTWARD AND ALLOW WINDS TO TURN WESTERLY AND INCREASE IN SPEED  
AS PRESSURES RISE FAIRLY QUICKLY AND COLDER AIR FILTERS IN. 850  
MILLIBAR TEMPERATURES LOOK TO FALL FROM -4 TO -10 DEGREES  
OVERNIGHT WHILE 700 MILLIBAR MOISTURE REMAINS ELEVATED THROUGH  
MOST OF THE NIGHT. WITH ONLY MODESTLY STRONG WINDS IN THE 20 TO  
25 MPH RANGE IN THE HIGH TERRAIN, THIS PATTERN OF BLOCKED FLOW  
SUPPORTS UPSLOPE SNOW SHOWERS AND FLURRIES, WITH LIGHT  
ACCUMULATIONS IN THE MOUNTAINS AND WESTERN SLOPES. THE  
BREEZINESS WILL HELP REDUCE CHANCES OF ANY ICE CONDITIONS  
DEVELOPING FOR THE MORNING COMMUTE, AS THE MIXING WILL BOTH KEEP  
TEMPERATURES NEAR OR ABOVE FREEZING IN MANY AREAS, BUT ALSO  
HELP TO DRY OUT WET SURFACES. DURING THE DAY ON THURSDAY, WE  
CONTINUE TO ADVERTISE NON-DIURNAL TEMPERATURE TRENDS WITH STEADY  
COLD AIR ADVECTION. TEMPERATURES WILL GENERALLY BE STEADY OR  
FALL DURING THE DAY. ASIDE FROM LINGERING MORNING SNOW  
SHOWERS/FLURRIES, IT WILL BE A DRY DAY. A BRIEF BIT OF CLEARING  
IS FAVORED BEFORE THE NEXT SYSTEM SPREADS SOME HIGH CLOUDS  
TOMORROW NIGHT FROM THE WEST, WITH SKIES BECOMING OVERCAST  
OVERNIGHT. NO PRECIPITATION IS ANTICIPATED THROUGH DAYBREAK  
FRIDAY.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/  
 
AS OF 354 PM EST WEDNESDAY...THE END TO THE WORK WEEK WILL TURN  
RATHER COLD AND CALM FOLLOWING A BRIEF WEAK SHORTWAVE. A  
CLIPPER SYSTEM WILL TRACK OUT OF THE GREAT LAKES INTO THE REGION  
FRIDAY AFTERNOON ENCOUNTERING DRY AND COLD AIR. FURTHERMORE, A  
DEVELOPING COASTAL LOW OFF NEW JERSEY WILL TAKE MOST OF THE  
AVAILABLE MOISTURE WITH IT FRIDAY EVENING. WHILE NO IMPACTS ARE  
EXPECTED FROM THE COASTAL LOW, REMNANT SCATTERED SNOW SHOWERS  
ARE FORECASTED FRIDAY EVENING THROUGH SATURDAY AFTERNOON. MODELS  
INDICATE WIDESPREAD LIGHT FLURRIES AND SNOW SHOWERS ACROSS THE  
REGION, WITH HIGHER ELEVATIONS SEEING BETTER PRECIPITATION  
CHANCES. MODEL TRENDS SHOW INCREASING PROBABILITIES OF  
PRECIPITATION IN THE NORTHEAST KINGDOM AS COMPARED TO PREVIOUS  
RUNS. WITH MOISTURE LEVELS LOW, HOWEVER, MOST PLACES WILL ONLY  
SEE BETWEEN A 0.25" AND 1" OF SNOW, WITH 1-2" POSSIBLE IN THE  
ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY. TEMPERATURES FRIDAY BE SLIGHTLY BELOW  
AVERAGE IN THE UPPER 20S ACROSS MUCH OF THE REGION AND TEENS  
NEAR THE SUMMITS.  
 
BEHIND THE CLIPPER, COLD POLAR AIR 10-15 DEGREES BELOW AVERAGE WILL  
FILTER INTO THE AREA SATURDAY NIGHT AS HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS IN FOR  
THE WEEKEND. BELOW ZERO TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED ACROSS MOST OF THE  
ADIRONDACKS AND PARTS OF NORTHEAST VERMONT. THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY  
WILL SEE TEMPERATURES IN THE SINGLE DIGITS. EXACTLY HOW COLD THE  
REGION GETS WILL BE PARTIALLY DEPENDENT ON HOW MUCH SNOWFALL THE  
REGION GETS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, AS WELL AS HOW MUCH CLOUD COVER IS  
PRESENT OVERNIGHT. AREAS WITH MORE SNOWFALL WILL BE COOLER THAN  
THOSE WITHOUT DUE TO STRONGER RADIATIVE COOLING.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/  
 
AS OF 354 PM EST WEDNESDAY...HIGH PRESSURE WILL CONTINUE TO  
DOMINATE SUNDAY AND MONDAY WITH COLD POLAR AIR REMAINING IN  
PLACE DURING THE OVERNIGHTS. TEMPERATURES WILL STRUGGLE TO REACH  
THE MID-TEENS IN THE CHAMPLAIN AND ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY, WITH  
NEAR ZERO HIGHS IN THE HIGHER ELEVATIONS ON SUNDAY. OVERNIGHT  
TEMPERATURES IN THE ADIRONDACKS WILL REMAIN BELOW ZERO WITH  
SINGLE DIGITS IN THE VALLEYS. WITH THE POLAR AIR IN PLACE OVER  
THE WEEKEND, LAKE CHAMPLAIN MAY EXPERIENCE SOME STEAMING AS THE  
LAKE WILL BE CONSIDERABLY WARMER THAN THE AIR TEMPERATURE. SOME  
FLURRIES FROM THE POTENTIAL ADDED CLOUD COVER IN THE CHAMPLAIN  
VALLEY ARE POSSIBLE SUNDAY NIGHT.  
 
MANY WILL BE TRAVELING FOR THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY MONDAY AND TUESDAY,  
AND WHILE NO PRECIPITATION IS EXPECTED MONDAY, TEMPERATURES WILL  
REMAIN ON THE COLD SIDE WITH HIGHS IN THE UPPER-TEENS IN THE VALLEYS  
AND SINGLE DIGITS IN THE MOUNTAINS MONDAY. TRAVEL IS EXPECTED TO BE  
THE BEST SUNDAY AND MONDAY, AS A PAIR OF SHORTWAVES MOVE INTO THE  
AREA TUESDAY MORNING. MODELS HAVE COME INTO BETTER AGREEMENT WITH  
LESS PHASING BETWEEN THE WAVES, INDICATING TWO SEPARATE SYSTEMS  
TUESDAY AND THEN WEDNESDAY. PRECIPITATION CHANCES INCREASE TUESDAY  
MORNING INTO TUESDAY NIGHT, AND ARE EXPECTED TO CONTINUE THROUGH  
CHRISTMAS DAY.  
 
IF YOU ARE HOPING FOR A WHITE CHRISTMAS, THE INGREDIENTS ARE SLOWLY  
COMING TOGETHER FOR SOME FROZEN PRECIPITATION BOTH CHRISTMAS EVE AND  
CHRISTMAS DAY. WHILE STILL UNCERTAIN ON THE EXACT TIMING AND  
INTENSITY OF THE SHORTWAVES, COOL AIR LOOKS TO BE IN PLACE AT THE  
ONSET OF THE EVENT. HOWEVER, MODEL UNCERTAINTY ON THE TEMPERATURES  
DURING THE EVENT LINGER. THE GFS INDICATES SOME WARM ADVECTION WITH  
A MORE POSITIVELY TILTED TROUGH AXIS, WHEREAS THE EUROPEAN INDICATES  
A MORE BROAD TROUGH WHICH WOULD KEEP THE COLD AIR IN PLACE  
THROUGHOUT THE EVENT. HOW THE SHORTWAVES INTERACT WILL ULTIMATELY  
DETERMINE HOW MUCH COLD AIR IS AVAILABLE AND HOW MUCH PRECIPITATION  
THE REGION RECEIVES. A FASTER PHASING WILL INCREASE THE  
PRECIPITATION CHANCES, BUT INCREASE THE CHANCE FOR A RAIN/SNOW  
MIX. HOWEVER, LESS PHASING, AND A FASTER MOVING INITIAL  
SHORTWAVE, WILL KEEP THE COLD AIR LOCKED IN, BUT LESSEN THE  
CHANCES OF PRECIPITATION ON CHRISTMAS.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /03Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/  
 
THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY...WIDESPREAD RAIN AND SNOW MAKE FOR A  
CHALLENGING 24 HOUR TAF PERIOD TONIGHT. FLIGHT CONDITIONS WILL  
BE A MIX OF ANYTHING FROM VFR TO LIFR AT TIMES, LARGELY CHANGING  
DUE TO VISIBILITY CHANGES IN RAIN/SNOW, BUT THERE ARE ALSO AREAS  
OF 700-900 FOOT CLOUD CEILINGS COMING IN AND OUT OF MANY SITES.  
BTV, PBG, MPV, AND RUT ARE ALL RAIN AT THE MOMENT, GRADUALLY  
CHANGING TO RAIN/SNOW AND THEN FINALLY TO SNOW BY TOMORROW  
MORNING. OTHER SITES ARE ALREADY REPORTING SNOW AND SHOULD  
REMAIN SO AS TEMPERATURES FALL TONIGHT. PRECIPITATION WILL  
LIKELY COME TO AN END TOMORROW, THOUGH SLK AND EFK WILL HAVE  
THE HIGHEST POTENTIAL OF SNOW SHOWERS LINGERING UNTIL AT LEAST  
18Z WITH UPSLOPE FLOW. WINDS SOUTHERLY TONIGHT WILL TURN MORE  
NORTHWESTERLY TOMORROW FOLLOWING THE STORM. CEILINGS SHOULD  
RETURN TO MOSTLY VFR BY THE END OF THE 24 HOUR PERIOD.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
THURSDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
FRIDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHSN.  
FRIDAY NIGHT: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS VFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHSN.  
SATURDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS VFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHSN.  
SATURDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
SUNDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
SUNDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
MONDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
 
 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...KUTIKOFF  
NEAR TERM...KUTIKOFF/MYSKOWSKI  
SHORT TERM...DANZIG  
LONG TERM...DANZIG  
AVIATION...STORM  
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