157  
FXUS61 KBTV 121837  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
237 PM EDT SAT JUL 12 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
ISOLATED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL REDEVELOP TODAY AS THE  
REGION REMAINS IN A HUMID AND UNSTABLE PATTERN. A WEAK FRONTAL  
PASSAGE WILL INCREASE CHANCES FOR SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS LATER  
SUNDAY INTO MONDAY. DRIER, BUT CONTINUED HOT AND HUMID WEATHER, IS  
EXPECTED FOR THE REMAINDER OF NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/  
 
AS OF 125 PM EDT SATURDAY...SEASONABLY HOT AND HUMID CONDITIONS  
WILL CONTINUE THIS AFTERNOON INTO THE REMAINDER OF THE WEEKEND  
WITH SHOWERS CHANCES INCREASING BY SUNDAY. TEMPERATURES TODAY  
WILL CONTINUE TO BE IN THE UPPER 80S TO LOW 90S WITH HEAT INDEX  
VALUES IN THE LOW TO MID 90S AS A BRIEF SURFACE RIDGE BUILDS  
IN. REMEMBER TO FOLLOW APPROPRIATE HEAT SAFETY PRECAUTIONS.  
ACROSS THE AREA, AGITATED CUMULUS IN THE ADIRONDACKS HAVE  
FAVORED A MORE SOUTHWESTLERY FLOW WITH A SOUTHEASTERLY MARINE  
LAYER TO THE EAST OF THE GREENS, LEADING TO A CONVERGENCE  
BOUNDARY ALONG THE SPINE OF THE GREENS. ISOLATED SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS HAVE DEVELOPED ALONG THIS BOUNDARY ALONG WITH  
SOME TERRAIN DRIVEN SHOWERS ACROSS THE ADIRONDACKS. MOST OF THE  
SHOWER ACTIVITY TODAY WILL BE DIURNALLY TERRAIN DRIVEN AND WILL  
GRADUALLY DRIFT OFF THE MOUNTAINS LATER THIS AFTERNOON MOVING  
EASTWARD. WITH THE HEAT, CURRENT SURFACE CAPE VALUES ARE AROUND  
1500 J/KG, THOUGH WITHOUT ANY REAL FORCING MECHANISM AND MODEST  
SHEAR ONLY 15 TO 20 KTS, WIDESPREAD SHOWERS, AND ANY SEVERE  
POTENTIAL, ARE UNLIKELY. SURFACE FLOW WITH INITIAL STORM MOTIONS  
WILL BE SLOW MOVING LEADING TO POTENTIALLY LOCALIZED HEAVY RAIN  
AND FLOODING. PRECIPITABLE WATER ALSO REMAINS ON THE HIGHER  
SIDE AROUND 1.5" WITH WARM CLOUD DEPTHS NEAR 10000 FT, WHICH  
CONTINUES THE THEME OF THE EXISTING MARGINAL RISK OUTLOOK FOR  
EXCESSIVE RAINFALL TODAY. RAINFALL RATES MAY LOCALLY EXCEED  
0.25"/HR AT TIMES. WHILE THE COVERAGE FOR ANY THUNDERSTORMS WILL  
GENERALLY BE ISOLATED TO SCATTERED, WITH THE POTENTIAL FOR  
HEAVY RAIN, WE WILL CONTINUE TO MONITOR THE TRENDS INTO THE  
AFTERNOON/EVENING. BEYOND SUNSET, MOST OF THE SHOWER ACTIVITY  
SHOULD WANE AS THEY WILL BE DIURNALLY DEPENDENT. A LINGERING  
SHOWER AS THE CONVERGENCE BOUNDARY DECAYS IN EASTERN VERMONT  
WILL BE POSSIBLE INTO THE EVENING. TEMPERATURES OVERNIGHT WILL  
OFFER LITTLE RELIEF FROM THE HEAT THIS AFTERNOON ONLY FALLING TO  
THE UPPER 60S IN THE HIGHER-TERRAIN, TO LOW 70S IN THE  
CHAMPLAIN AND ST. LAWRENCE VALLEYS.  
 
SUNDAY WILL FEATURE CONTINUED HEAT AND HUMIDITY VALUES AHEAD OF  
AN APPROACHING FRONTAL BOUNDARY SUNDAY AFTERNOON WITH THE  
CHANCES FOR MORE WIDESPREAD SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS, SOME  
COULD BE SEVERE. 925MB TEMPERATURES TOMORROW WILL CONTINUE TO BE  
IN THE +24-26C RANGE WITH SURFACE HIGHS IN THE UPPER 80S TO LOW  
90S AS THE RIDGE AXIS CRESTS OVERHEAD. HEAT INDEX VALUES WILL  
BE IN THE LOW TO MID 90S, THOUGH WITH APPROACHING CLOUD COVER  
FROM THE WEST, CHANCES OF HIGHER HEAT INDEX VALUES WILL BE LOWER  
THAN TODAY. WITH THE HEAT, SBCAPE WILL ONCE AGAIN BE AROUND  
1000-2000 J/KG WITH SLIGHTLY BETTER SHEAR AROUND 20-25KTS. AN  
850MB INVERSION, ASSOCIATED WITH A MARINE LAYER OVER EASTERN  
VERMONT, WILL GENERALLY KEEP A LID ON ANY CONVECTION IN VERMONT  
FOR MOST OF THE DAY BEFORE BETTER FORCING ARRIVES IN THE EVENING  
FROM A COLD FRONT. PWATS AROUND 1.5-1.75"+ ALONG WITH CONTINUED  
SLOW SURFACE FLOW WILL CREATE CONDITIONS FOR LOCALIZED FLASH  
FLOODING ACROSS PARTS OF NEW YORK. WPC AGAIN HAS A MARGINAL RISK  
OUTLOOK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL TOMORROW IN NORTHERN NEW YORK  
AND NORTHERN VERMONT, WITH A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL  
IN PARTS OF THE ADIRONDACKS. IN ADDITION TO THE HEAVY RAINFALL,  
LAKE WINDS WILL GUST TO NEAR 25 KTS WITH CHANNELED SOUTHERLY  
FLOW, AND NEAR 15 KTS ELSEWHERE.  
 
WHILE THE BOUNDARY IS TECHNICALLY A COLD FRONT, IT WILL BE FAR  
FROM COOLING THINGS OFF. TEMPERATURES WILL REMAIN WARM WITH  
OVERNIGHT LOWS BARELY MAKING IT INTO THE UPPER 60S TO LOW 70S.  
THE FRONT WILL CONTINUE ITS SLOW MOVE ACROSS THE AREA ONLY  
REACHING THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY OVERNIGHT.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/  
 
AS OF 125 PM EDT SATURDAY...OUR OVERARCHING FRONTAL SYSTEM FROM  
THE WEEKEND WILL CONTINUE TO SLOWLY MOVE EASTWARD MONDAY  
REACHING EASTERN VERMONT BY THE LATE MORNING/EARLY AFTERNOON.  
HEAVY RAIN WITH CONTINUED POOLING MOISTURE WILL BE THE MAIN  
THREAT. PWATS WILL REMAIN ON THE HIGHER SIDE NEAR 2" ON THE GFS,  
AND 1.5-2" INDICATED ON THE NAM3K. CONTINUED SLOW SURFACE FLOW  
COULD LEAD TO SOME TORRENTIAL DOWNPOURS AND ISOLATED FLASH  
FLOODING IN EASTERN VERMONT. THE FRONT WILL CLEAR OUT MONDAY  
EVENING WITH NOTICEABLY COOLER TEMPERATURES AND LESS MUGGY AIR.  
DAYTIME TEMPERATURES WILL BE IN THE UPPER 80S ACROSS NORTHERN  
NEW YORK AND THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY, AND IN THE 70S ACROSS EASTERN  
VERMONT WHERE SHOWERS WILL BE LOCATED. OVERNIGHT TEMPERATURES  
WILL FINALLY FALL INTO THE 60S AREAWIDE WITH DEWPOINTS IN THE  
50S.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/  
 
AS OF 125 PM EDT SATURDAY...THE REPRIEVE IN TEMPERATURES AND  
DEWPOINTS MONDAY EVENING INTO TUESDAY MORNING WILL BE SHORT-  
LIVED AS A SURFACE RIDGE WILL BUILD IN ACROSS THE EASTERN CONUS  
BY MID WEEK. 925MB TEMPERATURES WILL REACH INTO THE +23-25C  
RANGE, PEAKING ON WEDNESDAY. MOIST AIR WILL RETURN BY MID WEEK  
AS WELL WITH DEWPOINTS LIKELY IN THE 60S. PROBABILITIES OF  
EXCEEDING HEAT ADVISORY CRITERIA WILL PEAK ON WEDNESDAY AROUND  
40%. THE RIDGE WILL BREAK DOWN BETWEEN MID TO LATE WEEK WITH  
TEMPERATURES FALLING CLOSER TO SEASONABLE NORMS, THOUGH STILL  
ABOVE AVERAGE, AHEAD OF A FRONTAL SYSTEM.  
 
ANOTHER SLOW-MOVING FRONTAL SYSTEM WILL WORK ITS WAY INTO THE  
REGION BY WEDNESDAY NIGHT. TIMING OF THIS SYSTEM REMAINS IN  
QUESTION AMONGST THE ENSEMBLES, BUT CURRENT THINKING IS THAT THE  
FRONT BECOMES HELD UP IN THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY, BASED ON LOW  
HEIGHT FALLS, WEDNESDAY INTO THURSDAY AND SLOWLY MOVES ACROSS  
THE AREA THURSDAY INTO FRIDAY. GIVEN THE POTENTIAL SLOWNESS OF  
THE SYSTEM AND PERSISTENCE THINKING FROM SIMILAR EVENTS  
RECENTLY, THERE IS A POTENTIAL FOR HEAVY RAIN, SO WE'LL NEED TO  
MONITOR THIS CLOSELY.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/  
 
THROUGH 18Z SUNDAY...LOWER CEILINGS THIS MORNING HAVE GIVEN WAY  
TO SCATTERED CUMULUS WITH BASES AROUND 3000-5000 FT AGL. WINDS  
ARE MOSTLY OUT OF THE SOUTH TO SOUTHEAST AT VARIABLE SPEEDS  
RANGING FROM 3 KTS AT KMSS TO 12 KNOTS AT KPBG. LITTLE CHANGE TO  
CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED OVER THE NEXT 6 HOURS, BUT ISOLATED TO  
SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS COULD BRIEFLY REDUCE  
CEILINGS TO 2500 FT AGL OR VISIBILITIES BETWEEN 1 AND 5SM IN  
HEAVIER ACTIVITY. CONVECTION WILL WANE AFTER 00Z. WINDS WILL  
REMAIN ELEVATED OVERNIGHT AT 5 TO 10 KNOTS OUT OF THE SOUTH.  
THIS SHOULD PRECLUDE FOG, BUT IF WINDS DECREASE ENOUGH, THERE  
COULD BE BRIEF PATCHY FOG FROM ABOUT 06Z TO 12Z. EVEN ABSENT ANY  
FOG, SOME LOWER STRATUS WILL SHIFT INTO THE REGION, ESPECIALLY  
IN EASTERN VERMONT, WHICH WILL REDUCE CEILINGS TOWARDS 1500-5000  
FT AGL, LOCALLY BELOW 1000 FT FROM ABOUT KMPV SOUTHWARDS,  
THROUGH ABOUT 15Z. BEYOND 12Z, A TROUGH WILL APPROACH, WHICH  
WILL LIKELY BE PRODUCING SHOWERS AND STORMS ALREADY THAT WILL  
SHIFT EAST.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
SUNDAY NIGHT: VFR. LIKELY SHRA, CHANCE TSRA.  
MONDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. LIKELY SHRA, CHANCE  
TSRA.  
MONDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
TUESDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
TUESDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
WEDNESDAY: VFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SHRA, SLIGHT CHANCE TSRA.  
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE  
SHRA.  
THURSDAY: VFR. CHANCE SHRA, SLIGHT CHANCE TSRA.  
 
 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...DANZIG  
NEAR TERM...DANZIG  
SHORT TERM...DANZIG  
LONG TERM...DANZIG  
AVIATION...HAYNES  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page
Main Text Page