406  
FXUS61 KBTV 020510  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
110 AM EDT FRI MAY 2 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
WIDESPREAD SHOWERS AND POTENTIAL FOR A RUMBLE OF THUNDER ARE  
EXPECTED OVERNIGHT AS A FRONT MOVES THROUGH THE REGION. A  
FAIRLY UNSETTLED PATTERN ENSUES FOR THE END OF THE WORK WEEK AND  
INTO THE WEEKEND WITH MULTIPLE ROUNDS OF SHOWERS EXPECTED.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/  
 
AS OF 1256 AM EDT FRIDAY...LIGHT SHOWERS CONTINUE TO CROSS THE  
FORECAST AREA EARLY THIS MORNING. THERE'S A LOW LEVEL JET  
OVERHEAD AS WELL MAKING CONDITIONS ON THE MOUNTAINTOPS FAIRLY  
WINDY, SO INCREASED THE WIND FORECAST THERE OVER THE NEXT  
SEVERAL HOURS. TEMPERATURES ARE FALLING SLIGHTLY FASTER THAN  
HOURLY FORECAST INDICATES, BUT OVERALL THE FORECAST IS ON TRACK  
WITH LOWS IN THE MID 40S TO LOWER 50S AND RAIN RECEDING LATER IN  
THE MORNING.  
 
PREVIOUS DISCUSSION...SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE SURROUNDS THE  
FORECAST AREA THIS AFTERNOON WITH A PRIMARY ANTICYCLONE JUST OFF  
THE COAST OF CAPE COD AND A SECONDARY ONE OVERHEAD. ALOFT,  
UPPER- TO MID-LEVEL RIDGING HAS CRESTED OVER THE NORTHEAST,  
MAKING FOR A LOVELY SPRING DAY WITH TEMPERATURES WIDELY IN THE  
60S AND SKIES MOSTLY CLEAR.  
 
UNFORTUNATELY, THE HOURS OF THESE FAVORED CONDITIONS ARE  
NUMBERED. LATEST VISIBLE SATELLITE IMAGES INDICATE HIGH-LEVEL  
CLOUDS APPROACHING THE FORECAST AREA WELL AHEAD OF A SURFACE LOW  
TRACKING NORTH AND EAST INTO THE GREAT LAKES REGION FROM THE  
MIDWEST. ALOFT, A WEAK SHORTWAVE DISTURBANCE ATTENDS THE TRACK  
OF THIS CYCLONE, PROVIDING MID- TO UPPER-LEVEL SUPPORT FOR  
ASCENT TO THAT IN THE LOW LEVELS SUPPLIED BY WARM AIR ADVECTION  
AHEAD OF THE SOUTHEAST-EXTENDING, LOW-LEVEL WARM FRONT. AS THE  
SURFACE CYCLONE AND ASSOCIATED SHORTWAVE CONTINUE TO TRACK NORTH  
AND EAST TOWARDS THE NORTHEAST GREAT LAKES TONIGHT, LIGHT SHOWERS  
WILL SPREAD INTO NORTHERN NEW YORK AND NORTHERN VERMONT WITH  
SOUTHERLY FLOW PROMOTING OROGRAPHIC ENHANCEMENT AND SUBSEQUENT  
EMBEDDED HEAVIER SHOWERS AT HIGHER ELEVATIONS. BY TOMORROW  
MORNING, ACCUMULATED PRECIPITATION LOOKS TO REACH VALUES OF  
ABOUT 0.10" TO 0.25" WITH LOCALLY HIGHER AMOUNTS UP TO 0.35". LOW  
TEMPERATURES TONIGHT WILL FALL TO THE MID/UPPER 40S TO LOW 50S.  
 
THE AFOREMENTIONED LOW AND ITS ATTENDANT WARM FRONT WILL SLOWLY  
TRACK NORTH AND EAST TOMORROW WITH ADDITIONAL ROUNDS OF LIGHT  
SHOWERS EXPECTED THROUGHOUT THE MORNING. AS THE LOW BEGINS TO  
MOVE OVERHEAD TOMORROW AFTERNOON, THE WARM FRONT WILL MAKE ITS  
PASSAGE THROUGH THE REGION, PLACING US IN THE WARM SECTOR AHEAD  
OF THE PROGRESSION OF THE SYSTEM'S TRAILING COLD FRONT. WITH DRY  
AIR ENTRAINING INTO THE SOUTHERN PERIPHERY OF THE LOW, A BRIEF  
BREAK IN SHOWERS AND SOME BREAKS OF SUN WILL LEAD TO A  
REGIONWIDE INCREASE IN INSTABILITY TOMORROW AFTERNOON INTO EARLY  
TOMORROW EVENING. HIGHEST SBCAPE VALUES RANGE FROM AROUND  
300-800 J/KG WITH LOW-LEVEL LAPSE RATES ON THE ORDER OF 7.5-8  
C/KM. THIS IS ESPECIALLY TRUE WITHIN NORTHERN VERMONT, WHERE  
SOME SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS WILL BE POSSIBLE LATE TOMORROW  
AFTERNOON INTO TOMORROW EVENING. AT THIS TIME, SEVERE  
THUNDERSTORMS ARE NOT EXPECTED, THOUGH GUSTY TO STRONG WINDS  
COULD OCCUR AS A RESULT OF ANY THUNDERSTORMS THAT DEVELOP,  
ESPECIALLY THOSE WITH EMBEDDED HEAVIER DOWNPOURS. HIGH  
TEMPERATURES TOMORROW WILL RISE INTO THE LOW 60S TO LOW/MID 70S.  
AND, AS DAYTIME HEATING IS LOST, THE CHANCE FOR THUNDER WILL  
DIMINISH AND A BRIEF RETURN TO MAINLY DRY CONDITIONS RETURNS  
AFTER 2 AM.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT/  
 
SHOWERS ONCE AGAIN INCREASE ACROSS THE REGION SATURDAY AS THE  
COLD FRONT SLOWLY TRACKS SOUTH AND EAST. THESE SHOWERS MAY  
BECOME A BIT MORE SCATTERED IN NATURE AS A WEAK SURFACE HIGH  
SLIDES EASTWARD FROM THE UPPER-MIDWEST AND PROVIDES  
COUNTERACTING SUBSIDENCE TO LINGERING ASCENT WITHIN CYCLONIC  
FLOW. HIGHS SATURDAY WILL BE A BIT COOLER THAN FRIDAY WITH  
VALUES IN THE 50S AND 60S. UPON THE PASSAGE OF THE COLD FRONT  
SATURDAY NIGHT, LOW TEMPERATURES WILL FALL PRIMARILY TO THE  
UPPER 30S TO UPPER 40S WITH SHOWER COVERAGE GRADUALLY DWINDLING  
TO THE SOUTH AND EAST.  
 
SUNDAY'S FORECAST IS ALMOST A RINSE AND REPEAT OF SATURDAY WITH  
A BRIEF BREAK IN PRECIPITATION THROUGHOUT THE MORNING AND A  
GRADUAL SPREAD OF ADDITIONAL SHOWERS IN THE AFTERNOON. THIS  
TIME, SHOWERS LOOK TO SPREAD NORTHWARD AS THE AFOREMENTIONED  
COLD FRONT STALLS TO OUR SOUTH AND A CUTOFF LOW DEVELOPS IN THE  
OHIO AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS. A SOUTHERLY MOISTURE FETCH OFF THE  
SOUTHEAST COAST WILL REINFORCE MOISTURE ACROSS THE REGION WITH A  
SURFACE WAVE PROVIDING ENHANCED CONVERGENCE AND SUBSEQUENT  
ASCENT TO GENERATE AND SUSTAIN ADDITIONAL SHOWERS. HOWEVER, THE  
SPATIAL EXTENT OF RAIN IS UNCERTAIN ON SUNDAY GIVEN THE  
UNCERTAINTY IN THE POSITION AND PROROGATION OF THE CUTOFF LOW  
TO OUT SOUTH AND WEST. SO FOR NOW, MAINTAINED SLIGHT CHANCE TO  
CHANCE POPS ACROSS MUCH OF THE REGION. WITH LITTLE IN THE WAY OF  
INSTABILITY, HOWEVER, THUNDERSTORMS SHOULD BE MITIGATED SUNDAY.  
HIGHS WILL BE IN THE MID/UPPER 40S ACROSS HIGHER TERRAIN TO LOW  
60S IN VALLEY AREAS.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/  
 
UNSETTLED CONDITIONS PERSIST THROUGH THE LONG TERM FORECAST  
PERIOD DUE TO THE STATIONARY, VERTICALLY STACKING CUTOFF LOW IN  
THE OHIO AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS. ADDITIONAL ROUNDS OF SHOWERS ARE  
THEREFORE EXPECTED ACROSS THE FORECAST AREA THROUGH AT LEAST  
WEDNESDAY NIGHT AS THE LOW SLOWLY MAKES PROGRESS NORTH AND EAST.  
HOWEVER, MUCH LIKE IN THE SHORT TERM, THERE IS STILL UNCERTAINTY  
IN THE TRACK AND EVOLUTION OF THIS SYSTEM, SO THERE ARE  
DIFFERENCES IN THE RUN TO RUN GUIDANCE PERTAINING TO WHEN WE CAN  
EXPECT A RETURN TO DRY CONDITIONS. THEREFORE, FOR MUCH OF THE  
LONG TERM PERIOD, SLIGHT CHANCE TO CHANCE POPS WERE MAINTAINED  
WITH THE GREATEST CONFIDENCE IN MORE WIDESPREAD SHOWERS TUESDAY  
INTO TUESDAY NIGHT. HERE, LIKELY POPS WERE INCLUDED TO CONVEY  
THIS CONFIDENCE. HIGH TEMPERATURES THROUGHOUT THE EXTENDED  
PERIOD WILL PRIMARILY BE IN THE 50S AND 60S WITH 40S AT HIGHER  
ELEVATIONS, BUT WEDNESDAY WILL BE THE WARMEST OF THE PERIOD WITH  
50S TO LOW 70S. LOW TEMPERATURES WILL BE IN THE 40S AND 50S.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /06Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/  
 
THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY...LLWS CONTINUES TO BE A CONCERN TONIGHT AS  
A SOUTHERLY LOW LEVEL JET SITS OVER OUR FORECAST AREA. SURFACE  
WINDS WILL BE LIGHT OUT OF THE NORTHEAST OR SOUTHEAST TONIGHT,  
IN SHARP CONTRAST WITH WINDS JUST ALOFT. THE LOW LEVEL JET LOOKS  
TO MOVE AWAY FROM THE AREA DURING THE DAY FRIDAY, SO HAVE LLWS  
IN THE TAFS THROUGH ABOUT 12Z-18Z. SURFACE WINDS ARE EXPECTED TO  
PICK UP FRIDAY MORNING OUT OF THE SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST, GUSTING UP  
TO 20-25 KNOTS IN THE AFTERNOON. THE RAIN SHOWERS TONIGHT SHOULD  
BE LIGHT ENOUGH TO KEEP VISIBILITIES 4 MILES OR HIGHER, AND WE  
ANTICIPATE A BREAK IN PRECIPITATION SOMETIME TOMORROW BEFORE  
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS RETURN IN THE AFTERNOON. CEILINGS WILL  
ALSO DECREASE THROUGHOUT THE NIGHT INTO TOMORROW, BUT SHOULD  
ONLY REACH ABOUT 1500 FEET ABOVE GROUND LEVEL OR HIGHER,  
BRIEFLY. CONDITIONS WILL LIKELY RETURN TO VFR BY ABOUT 15Z-19Z  
OUTSIDE OF ANY HEAVIER SHOWERS/THUNDERSTORMS THAT OCCUR TO  
RESTRICT VISIBILITIES.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
FRIDAY NIGHT: VFR. CHANCE SHRA.  
SATURDAY: VFR. LIKELY SHRA.  
SATURDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE  
SHRA.  
SUNDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. SLIGHT CHANCE SHRA.  
SUNDAY NIGHT: VFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SHRA.  
MONDAY: VFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SHRA.  
MONDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHRA.  
TUESDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH LOCAL VFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHRA.  
 
 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...NWS ALY  
NEAR TERM...BOYD/STORM/NWS ALY  
SHORT TERM...NWS ALY  
LONG TERM...NWS ALY  
AVIATION...STORM  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page
Main Text Page