695  
FXUS61 KBTV 220836  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
336 AM EST SAT FEB 22 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
MOUNTAIN SNOW SHOWERS WILL DEVELOP TONIGHT INTO SUNDAY, WHERE MINOR  
ACCUMULATIONS ARE EXPECTED. ELSEWHERE, THE WEEKEND WILL BE MOSTLY  
DRY AND SEASONABLE, THOUGH A FEW SNOW SHOWERS ARE POSSIBLE SATURDAY  
NIGHT. WHILE NO SIGNIFICANT STORMS ARE ON THE TABLE, ACTIVE AND  
MILDER WEATHER IS ANTICIPATED MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY, WITH MORE  
UNCERTAINTY LATE IN THE WEEK.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY/  
 
AS OF 333 AM EST SATURDAY...LIGHT SNOW SHOWERS CONTINUE ACROSS THE  
HIGHER TERRAIN OF VERMONT, BUT THEY ARE NOT HEAVY ENOUGH TO CAUSE  
ANY NOTABLE ACCUMULATIONS. THE LOW CLOUDS RESPONSIBLE FOR THESE SNOW  
SHOWERS HAVE ERODED ACROSS THE ADIRONDACKS, AND THIS PROCESS IS  
BEGINNING IN VERMONT. THE CLOUDS SHOULD GRADUALLY FALL APART FROM  
WEST TO EAST AND THAT WILL PUT AN END TO THE SNOW SHOWERS. AFTER  
SKIES CLEARED IN NORTHERN NEW YORK, TEMPERATURES HAVE BEEN FALLING  
QUICKLY IN AREAS WHERE THE WINDS HAVE DIED, WITH SARANAC LAKE DOWN  
TO -9 AND EDWARDS DOWN TO -14. HOWEVER, MUCH OF THE ST. LAWRENCE  
VALLEY HAS KEPT WINDS AND IS IN THE SINGLE DIGITS. AS SKIES CLEAR  
OVER VERMONT, TEMPERATURES IN THE PROTECTED HOLLOWS SHOULD FALL  
FAST, WHILE THEY WILL LIKELY STAY ELEVATED ELSEWHERE. SKIES SHOULD  
REMAIN RELATIVELY CLEAR TODAY, THOUGH SOME HIGH CLOUDS WILL MOVE IN  
FROM THE WEST AND FILTER THE SUNSHINE A BIT. TEMPERATURES WILL BE  
PRETTY SEASONABLE, WITH HIGHS IN THE UPPER 20S AND LOW 30S IN MOST  
PLACES.  
 
A WEAK CLIPPER DROPS THROUGH TONIGHT AND INTO THE DAY ON SUNDAY, AND  
IT WILL BRING SOME SNOW SHOWERS. THESE WILL MOSTLY BE CONFINED TO  
THE TYPICAL UPSLOPE AREAS, THOUGH THEY SHOULD BRIEFLY REACH THE  
NORTHERN VALLEYS AS THE STRONGEST DYNAMICS MOVE THROUGH LATE IN THE  
NIGHT. SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW WILL HELP DOWNSLOPE THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY,  
THOUGH IT WILL FAVOR THE HIGHEST ACCUMULATIONS IN THE NORTHERN  
GREENS NEAR JAY PEAK. FLOW BECOMES SLIGHTLY UNBLOCKED DURING THE  
EVENT, SO THE UPSLOPE SNOW SHOWERS WILL BE MOSTLY CONFINED TO THE  
HIGHER TERRAIN. A COUPLE INCHES ARE EXPECTED IN THE MOST FAVORED  
AREAS, WHILE THE REST OF THE REGION SHOULD SEE WELL UNDER AN INCH.  
SLIGHT LAKE ENHANCEMENT SHOULD OCCUR IN ST. LAWRENCE COUNTY. A  
DECENT SIZED DGZ SHOULD ALLOW FOR DENDRITE FORMATION, THOUGH THE  
SNOW WILL LIKELY NOT BE AS FLUFFY AND LIGHT AS THE SNOW WAS THURSDAY  
NIGHT. TEMPERATURES ON SUNDAY WILL RISE ABOVE FREEZING IN THE BROAD  
VALLEYS, WHILE STAYING BELOW IN THE HIGHER TERRAIN, AND THEY WILL BE  
COLD ENOUGH FOR THE PRECIPITATION TO BE ALL SNOW. STRONGER WINDS  
ALOFT AND CHANNELED SOUTHWEST FLOW WILL CAUSE WINDS IN THE ST.  
LAWRENCE VALLEY TO BE PRETTY STRONG ON SUNDAY, WITH GUSTS TO AROUND  
30 MPH EXPECTED.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/  
 
AS OF 333 AM EST SATURDAY...SUNDAY NIGHT INTO MONDAY, ANY LINGERING  
MOUNTAIN SNOW SHOWERS WILL TAPER OFF GRADUALLY. LOWER ELEVATIONS  
APPEAR TOO DRY FOR MUCH ADDITIONAL STUFF, BUT SUMMIT LEVELS SHOULD  
BE ABLE TO PICK UP A FEW EXTRA TENTHS OF SNOW. COOLEST CONDITIONS  
EARLY MONDAY MORNING WILL BE ACROSS EASTERN VERMONT WHICH WILL STILL  
BE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF HIGH PRESSURE, BUT AREAS WEST OF THE  
GREENS WILL SWITCH TO SOUTH WINDS WITH INCREASING THICKNESSES  
INDICATIVE OF WARMING. COLD HOLLOWS OF THE NORTHEAST KINGDOM MAY  
SETTLE INTO THE UPPER SINGLE DIGITS, BUT MOST SHOULD BE IN THE TEENS  
TO MID 20S.  
 
DURING THE DAY ON MONDAY, SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST WINDS WILL CONTINUE TO  
INCREASE AS A SURFACE LOW AROUND 982MB MOVES ALONG THE HUDSON BAY.  
FORECAST GUIDANCE JUMPED QUITE A BIT WARMER THIS CYCLE WITH SOME  
LOCATIONS WELL INTO THE 40S, BUT DID NOT WANT TO MAKE SUCH A LARGE  
LEAP FROM THE PREVIOUS FORECAST. FOR NOW, WE HAVE INDICATED HIGH  
TEMPERATURES IN THE MID 30S TO UPPER 30S ACROSS THE AREA, BUT WE  
COULD CERTAINLY OBSERVE SEVERAL SITES CLIMB ABOVE 40. A PREFRONTAL  
TROUGH WILL ARRIVE LATE MONDAY EVENING INTO MONDAY NIGHT WITH MODEST  
UPPER LEVEL SUPPORT, BUT LITTLE LOW-LEVEL CONVERGENCE. MID-LEVEL  
FLOW WILL INCREASE TO 45 TO 55 KNOTS, ALLOWING FOR MODEST ISENTROPIC  
UPGLIDE AND CAUSING SOME TERRAIN SHADOWING DOWNWIND OF SOUTHWEST  
FLOW. AS A RESULT, WE CAN ALSO EXPECT BREEZY CONDITIONS WITH GUSTS  
25 TO 35 MPH POSSIBLE. OUTSIDE OF SUMMITS, AMOUNTS WILL GENERALLY BE  
0.10" OR LESS DUE TO LACKING LOW-LEVEL SUPPORT FOR UPWARD MOTION.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/  
 
AS OF 333 AM EST SATURDAY...ACTIVE WEATHER, BUT RELATIVELY LOW  
IMPACT, WILL CONTINUE. ON TUESDAY, A SURFACE CIRCULATION WILL  
ATTEMPT TO SPAWN IN THE GREAT LAKES REGION AT THE TAIL-END OF A  
SURFACE COLD FRONT AS A UPPER STRONG VORT ROUNDS THE BROAD LONGWAVE  
TROUGH. HOWEVER, FAST CHANNELED FLOW WILL LIKELY SHEAR THE SYSTEM AS  
IT MOVES ACROSS NEW ENGLAND. WE WILL NOT HAVE FILTERED OUT WARM AIR  
FROM MONDAY AS THIS SYSTEM CROSSES THROUGH, AND SO A MIX OF RAIN OR  
SNOW IS LIKELY WITH ABOVE FREEZING AIR IN A SHALLOW LAYER OF WARMTH  
AT GROUND LEVEL. COLD AIR WILL MOVE IN BEHIND THE SYSTEM WITH ANY  
RAIN FLIPPING TO SNOW TUESDAY NIGHT AS TEMPERATURES SETTLE INTO THE  
MID 20S TO LOWER 30S.  
 
COLD ADVECTION ON WEDNESDAY QUICKLY GETS REVERSES AS SOUTH TO  
SOUTHWEST FLOW RESUMES. THERE'S NO SHORTAGE OF SHORTWAVES PASSING  
THROUGH IN THE FAST UPPER FLOW, AND IT'S DIFFICULT TO PINPOINT  
TIMING AS A RESULT. PRECIPITATION CHANCES APPEAR HIGHEST EARLY  
WEDNESDAY MORNING AND THEN HEADING INTO WEDNESDAY NIGHT. AGAIN, NEAR  
SURFACE WARMTH OF MID 30S TO NEAR 40 WILL PLACE ELEVATIONALLY  
DEPENDENT RAIN VERSUS SNOW, BUT LIQUID EQUIVALENT WILL CONTINUE TO  
REMAIN BELOW 0.10".  
 
THEN, A PAIR OF SHORTWAVES WILL RIDE IN WEDNESDAY NIGHT INTO  
THURSDAY, BUT APPEAR UNLIKELY TO PHASE. SO YET MORE VALLEY RAIN,  
MOUNTAIN SNOW WITH OVERALL LITTLE ACCUMULATION APPEARS POSSIBLE. IT  
LOOKS LIKE THERE'S A BREAK IN ACTIVITY HEADING INTO THE WEEKEND,  
FOLLOWED BY A MORE SIGNIFICANT SYSTEM SATURDAY NIGHT INTO SUNDAY.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /09Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/  
 
THROUGH 06Z SUNDAY...RELATIVELY BENIGN CONDITIONS WILL EXIST FOR THE  
NEST 24 HOURS. MVFR CEILINGS MAY PERSIST FOR A FEW HOURS AT SLK OR  
RUT BUT ALL TERMINALS SHOULD BE VFR BY DAYBREAK. A LOWER CLOUD DECK  
WILL ARRIVE THIS AFTERNOON AND BRING CEILINGS DOWN TO MVFR AT A FEW  
TERMINALS, BUT THERE IS NO SNOW EXPECTED WITH THESE CLOUDS. SOME  
LIGHT SNOW SHOWERS WILL ARRIVE AT MSS AND SLK AFTER 00Z AND THEY  
WILL LIKLEY BRING VISIBILITIES DOWN TO MVFR AND IFR AT TIMES  
OVERNIGHT. THE SNOW SHOWERS WILL ADVANCE INTO THE VERMONT  
TERMINALS LATER IN THE NIGHT. WINDS WILL GENERALLY BECOME  
SOUTHWESTERLY FOR THE DAY TOMORROW, WITH GUSTS BETWEEN 10-20 KTS  
POSSIBLE AT ANY TERMINAL.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
SUNDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. SLIGHT CHANCE SHSN.  
SUNDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. SLIGHT CHANCE  
SHSN.  
MONDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHSN, CHANCE  
SHRA.  
MONDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL IFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHSN,  
LIKELY SHRA.  
TUESDAY: MAINLY IFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHRA,  
CHANCE SHSN.  
TUESDAY NIGHT: IFR. CHANCE SHSN, CHANCE SHRA.  
WEDNESDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH LOCAL IFR POSSIBLE. SLIGHT CHANCE  
SHSN.  
 
 
   
EQUIPMENT  
 
THE MOUNT ASCUTNEY NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER, SERVING  
PORTIONS OF EASTERN VERMONT, IS CURRENTLY OUT OF SERVICE. THE  
EARLIEST DATE OF RESTORATION IS NOW TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25TH  
FOLLOWING A DELAY. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE.  
 
 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...MYSKOWSKI  
NEAR TERM...MYSKOWSKI  
SHORT TERM...HAYNES  
LONG TERM...HAYNES  
AVIATION...MYSKOWSKI  
EQUIPMENT...WFO BTV  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page
Main Text Page