211  
FXUS61 KBTV 062340  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
740 PM EDT MON OCT 6 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS WILL CONTINUE TOMORROW, ESPECIALLY IN VERMONT  
WHERE RELATIVE HUMIDITIES WILL BE THE LOWEST. A SLOW MOVING COLD  
FRONT PASSES THROUGH TOMORROW AFTERNOON AND EVENING, BRINGING A  
ROUND OF WIDESPREAD SHOWERS AND AN END TO THE RECORD HEAT. FROSTS  
AND FREEZES ARE EXPECTED IN MANY PLACES WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH  
FRIDAY NIGHT.  
 

 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/
 
 
AS OF 225 PM EDT MONDAY...DAILY RECORDS HAVE BEEN BROKEN AGAIN TODAY,  
AND TEMPERATURES WILL STILL CLIMB A LITTLE MORE DURING THE REST OF  
THE AFTERNOON. HOWEVER, 925 MB TEMPERATURES ARE SLIGHTLY LOWER TODAY  
SO HIGHS WILL LIKELY BE A LITTLE BELOW YESTERDAY. AT BTV, WE ARE  
RUNNING TWO DEGREES BELOW YESTERDAY AT THIS TIME SO THE MONTHLY  
RECORD OF 86 WILL LIKELY REMAIN JUST OUT OF REACH. BOUNDARY LAYER  
WINDS WILL REMAIN ELEVATED TONIGHT, SO FOG IS UNLIKELY IN MOST  
PLACES. HOWEVER, WITH INCREASED DEW POINTS, IT CANNOT BE RULED OUT  
IN SOME OF THE PROTECTED VALLEYS OF EASTERN VERMONT. A SOUTHERLY LOW  
LEVEL JET MOVES OVERHEAD TOMORROW. A COLD FRONT WILL BRING A LINE OF  
SHOWERS THROUGH THE REGION FORM NORTHWEST TO SOUTHEAST, REACHING THE  
ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY IN THE MORNING AND VERMONT IN THE MID-AFTERNOON.  
AHEAD OF THE FRONT, EFFICIENT MIXING WILL CAUSE STRONG WIND GUSTS  
AND LOW HUMIDITIES. GUSTS IN THE 20 TO 30 MPH RANGE ARE EXPECTED IN  
MOST PLACES, AND RELATIVE HUMIDITIES SHOULD DROP INTO THE 30S ACROSS  
PARTS OF VERMONT, SO FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS WILL CONTINUE. THE FRONT  
WILL BRING A WIDESPREAD WETTING RAINFALL, WITH TOTALS OVER AN INCH  
IN PLACES. THE COLD FRONT WILL BRING AN END TO THE RECORD HEAT AND  
WHILE TEMPERATURES WILL REMAIN ABOVE CLIMATOLOGICAL NORMALS TOMORROW  
NIGHT, IT WILL BEGIN TO FEEL MORE LIKE FALL.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/
 
 
AS OF 225 PM EDT MONDAY...HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS DOWN INTO THE REGION  
WEDNESDAY AND WEDNESDAY NIGHT, BRINGING A DAY OF STRONG COLD AIR  
ADVECTION. NORTHERLY WINDS WILL GUSTS IN THE 15 TO 25 MPH RANGE. A  
FEW SHOWERS WILL LINGER IN SOUTHERN AREAS EARLY WEDNESDAY MORNING  
BUT CONDITIONS WILL DRY OUT QUICKLY. SOME ADVECTION WILL CONTINUE  
DURING THE NIGHT SO IT SHOULD PREVENT IDEAL RADIATIONAL COOLING, BUT  
TEMPERATURES WILL STILL FALL INTO THE THIRTIES FOR MOST PLACES.  
WIDESPREAD FROST SHOULD OCCUR IN THE PROTECTED AREAS OUTSIDE THE  
IMMEDIATE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/
 
 
AS OF 247 PM EDT MONDAY...LOW TEMPERATURES CONTINUE TO BE THE MOST  
NOTEWORTHY ASPECT OF THE WEATHER IN THE THURSDAY-FRIDAY TIMEFRAME AS  
A SEASONABLY CHILLY AIR MASS GRADUALLY EXITS THE AREA. HIGH PRESSURE  
WILL BE ABOVE THE 99TH CLIMATOLOGICAL PERCENTILE, AS READINGS WILL  
BE IN THE RANGE OF 1033 TO 1036 MILLIBARS. THE HIGHEST PRESSURE IN  
OUR REGION SHOULD OCCUR ROUGHLY THURSDAY EVENING PER ENSEMBLE MEAN  
DATA. THE LATEST FORECAST REMAINS ON TRACK FOR NEAR FREEZING  
TEMPERATURES IN MUCH OF THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY AND CENTRAL VERMONT  
THURSDAY MORNING WHERE HEADLINES WILL BE NEEDED IN OUR FROST/FREEZE  
PROGRAM. GIVEN IDEAL RADIATIONAL COOLING CONDITIONS AND THE STRONG  
HIGH PRESSURE SYSTEM, FRIDAY MORNING MINIMUMS HAVE TRENDED EVEN  
LOWER. IN COORDINATION WITH NEIGHBORING OFFICES, WE HAVE LOWERED  
TEMPERATURES CLOSER TO WHAT THE COLDEST, STATISTICALLY-BASED MODELS  
INDICATE, SUGGESTING A HARD FREEZE MAY OCCUR AT MOST LOCATIONS ASIDE  
FROM THE ST. LAWRENCE AND CHAMPLAIN VALLEYS. PERENNIAL COLD SPOT AT  
THE ADIRONDACK REGIONAL AIRPORT WILL LIKELY SEE A TEMPERATURE IN THE  
TEENS FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE APRIL 18TH.  
 
QUIET WEATHER AND MODERATING TEMPERATURES STILL ARE ON TRACK FOR THE  
WEEKEND, WITH NEAR NORMAL CONDITIONS. THE DETAILS DO DIVERGE A BIT  
SUNDAY THROUGH MONDAY IN A COMPLEX UPPER LEVEL PATTERN, LEADING TO A  
LARGE SPREAD IN CLOUD COVER GUIDANCE RANGING FROM SUNNY TO CLOUDY BY  
MONDAY. SOME MODEL CAMPS SHOW SOME KIND OF CLOSED LOW NEAR THE  
CAROLINAS LIFTING NORTHWARD WHILE OTHERS DO NOT, SUCH THAT A  
REBUILDING RIDGE TO OUR WEST KEEPS US DRY AND MILD. THE LATEST FULL  
ENSEMBLE DATASET SHOWS ROUGHLY EQUAL CHANCE OF THESE SCENARIOS.  
HOWEVER, SINCE THE CLOSED LOW SCENARIO DOES NOT GUARANTEE RAINFALL  
REACHING OUR REGION, POPS LOOK REASONABLE AT THIS TIME THROUGH  
MONDAY, REMAINING 20% OR LESS FOR A GIVEN 12 HOUR PERIOD.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /00Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/
 
 
THROUGH 00Z WEDNESDAY...VFR CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED TO CONTINUE  
THROUGH THE NEXT 12 HOURS AT ALL TERMINALS WITH INCREASED FLOW  
ALOFT AND A LESSER CHANCE AT FOG THAN NIGHTS PRIOR. WHILE SURFACE  
FLOW TONIGHT WILL LARGELY BE SOUTHERLY AND TERRAIN-DRIVEN AT 5  
TO 10 KNOTS, ALOFT, A LOW-LEVEL JET WILL CONTINUE TO SUPPORT 30  
KNOT WINDS, ESPECIALLY AT MSS/SLK, AND THEN VERMONT TERMINALS BY  
EARLY TOMORROW MORNING. A FEW POCKETS OF LLWS AND BREEZY  
CONDITIONS COULD BE POSSIBLE WITH THE WINDS ALOFT OVERNIGHT,  
BUT NOT ENOUGH CONFIDENCE OR SPATIAL COVERAGE TO INCLUDE IN THIS  
TAF.  
 
A COLD FRONT WILL BEGIN TO ENTER THE AREA FROM THE WEST  
EARLY TOMORROW MORNING WHICH WILL BEGIN TO RAPIDLY INCREASE  
WINDS AHEAD OF IT AT ALL TERMINALS. SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS WILL  
INCREASE TO NEAR 25 KNOTS FROM 12Z TO 15Z AT MSS/SLK, AND 20 TO  
25 KNOTS AT ALL VERMONT TERMINALS BY 18Z. SCATTERED TO STEADY  
PRECIPITATION ARRIVES AT MSS BY 14Z, AND BEYOND 20Z AT THE  
VERMONT TERMINALS. EMBEDDED THUNDERSTORMS CANNOT BE RULED OUT  
BEYOND 18Z TOMORROW WITH SOME INSTABILITY ASSOCIATED WITH FRONT.  
THERE IS A SMALL CHANCE (20-30%) OF MVFR CONDITIONS ASSOCIATED  
WITH THE INITIAL ROUND OF RAIN, BUT MOST TERMINALS SHOULD SEE  
PREVAILING VFR WITH LOW RAINFALL RATES OUTSIDE OF ANY POSSIBLE  
THUNDERSTORMS. HIGHER CONFIDENCE IN MVFR OR LOWER CEILINGS  
EXISTS AT MSS NEAR THE END OF THE TAF PERIOD, AS THE COLD FRONT  
ARRIVES THERE FIRST. OVERALL, CEILINGS WILL GRADUALLY LOWER AS  
THE MAIN FRONT ARRIVES BY 00Z TOMORROW.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
TUESDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. DEFINITE  
SHRA.  
WEDNESDAY: VFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SHRA.  
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: VFR. PATCHY FROST.  
THURSDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
THURSDAY NIGHT: VFR. AREAS FROST.  
FRIDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
FRIDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
SATURDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
 

 
   
CLIMATE
 
 
THE HEAT CONTINUES TODAY AND MANY RECORDS ARE IN JEOPARDY.  
BELOW ARE SOME OF THE DAILY RECORDS IN JEOPARDY OF BEING BROKEN  
(CURRENT FORECAST AT OR WITHIN 3 DEGREES OF THE RECORD).  
 
RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES:  
 
OCTOBER 6:  
KBTV: 82/1990 (BROKEN)  
KMPV: 79/1990 (BROKEN)  
KMSS: 81/2005 (BROKEN)  
KSLK: 80/1946  
 
RECORD HIGH MINIMUM TEMPERATURES:  
 
OCTOBER 6:  
KBTV: 64/1937  
 
OCTOBER 7:  
KBTV: 62/1947  
 

 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
SYNOPSIS...MYSKOWSKI  
NEAR TERM...MYSKOWSKI  
SHORT TERM...MYSKOWSKI  
LONG TERM...KUTIKOFF  
AVIATION...DANZIG  
CLIMATE...BTV  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page Main Text Page