799  
FXUS61 KBTV 170649  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
149 AM EST MON NOV 17 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
SNOW IS CURRENTLY FALLING ACROSS NORTHERN NEW YORK AND VERMONT EARLY  
THIS MORNING. PERSISTENT NORTHWESTERLY FLOW AND A PROLONGED PERIOD  
OF UPSLOPE SNOW ACROSS THE ADIRONDACKS AND GREENS IS EXPECTED FOR  
THE FIRST HALF OF THE WEEK. MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOW AND GUSTY WINDS  
ARE EXPECTED, ESPECIALLY FOR NORTHWESTERN SLOPES WITH ADDITIONAL  
SNOW ACCUMULATIONS AROUND 2 TO 8 INCHES FORECAST. SNOW SHOWERS WILL  
EVENTUALLY TAPER OFF BY TUESDAY.  
 

 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/
 
 
AS OF 143 AM EST MONDAY...  
 
* WINTER STORM WARNINGS AND WINTER WEATHER ADVISORIES REMAIN IN  
EFFECT THROUGH THIS EVENING FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN NEW YORK  
AND VERMONT, BRINGING AN ADDITIONAL 2 TO 8 INCHES OF SNOW FOR  
A TOTAL OF 7 TO 10 INCHES WITH UP TO 10 TO 16 INCHES POSSIBLE  
ON THE NORTHWESTERN SLOPES OF THE ADIRONDACKS AND GREENS.  
 
SURFACE LOW PRESSURE IS CURRENTLY CROSSING PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND,  
CANADA, EARLY THIS MORNING, KEEPING NORTHERN NEW YORK AND VERMONT  
UNDER PERSISTENT NORTHWESTERLY FLOW. THIS IS RESULTING IN UPSLOPE  
SNOW SHOWERS AND GUSTY WEST AND NORTHWEST WINDS. ADDITIONAL SNOW  
ACCUMULATIONS WILL OCCUR THROUGHOUT THE DAY TODAY, MAINLY ON WESTERN  
AND NORTHWESTERN SLOPES OF THE REGION'S MOUNTAINS. A NOTABLE LACK OF  
MOISTURE IN THE SNOW GROWTH ZONE OF THE ATMOSPHERE WITH DRY LAYERS  
SEEN ON SATELLITE MAY LIMIT US FROM REACHING OUR FULL SNOWFALL  
POTENTIAL TODAY. AN ADDITIONAL TRACE TO THREE INCHES IS POSSIBLE IN  
THE ST. LAWRENCE AND CHAMPLAIN VALLEYS, INCREASING AS YOU GET CLOSER  
TO THE MOUNTAINS.  
 
THE CONNECTICUT RIVER VALLEY AREA WILL LIKELY MISS OUT ON ANY MORE  
SNOW TODAY, WHILE HIGH ELEVATIONS OF THE NORTHERN/CENTRAL GREENS AND  
THE NORTHWESTERN ADIRONDACKS COULD HAVE ABOUT 3 TO 8 INCHES OF NEW  
SNOW BY THE END OF THE DAY, WITH THE MAJORITY OF IT FALLING IN THE  
MORNING HOURS. SNOW SHOWER COVERAGE IS ANTICIPATED TO DECREASE  
THROUGHOUT THE DAY AS LOW PRESSURE SHIFTS NORTHWARDS TOWARDS  
NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR, CANADA. WE HAVE NOT RECEIVED MANY REPORTS  
OVERNIGHT TONIGHT, SO THE STORM TOTAL IS A CHALLENGE TO DEDUCE AT  
THE MOMENT, BUT WE'RE ESTIMATING AROUND 7 TO 10 INCHES WILL BE THE  
TOTAL FOR WARNING AREAS WITH SOME OF THE MORE ROBUST 10 TO 16 INCH  
TOTALS RESERVED FOR HIGH ELEVATION WESTERLY AND NORTHWESTERLY  
SLOPES.  
 
IN TERMS OF WINDS, WE'RE FORECASTING GUSTS TO BE HIGHEST THROUGH  
NOON, AS HIGH AS 20 TO 35 MPH, CLOSER TO 35 TO 40 MPH ON LAKE  
CHAMPLAIN, MOUNTAINTOPS, AND EASTERLY/SOUTHEASTERLY SLOPES. WINDS  
SHOULD BEGIN TO RELENT IN THE AFTERNOON, BUT REMAIN BREEZY WITH THE  
POTENTIAL TO BLOW SNOW AROUND AND LOWER VISIBILITIES. HIGHS WILL BE  
CHILLY IN THE UPPER 20S AND 30S IN THE AFTERNOON, ABOUT 5 TO 15  
DEGREES BELOW SEASONAL NORMALS.  
 
TONIGHT, LOW PRESSURE WILL CONTINUE TO CIRCULATE AROUND  
NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR, CANADA, RESULTING IN THE 20-50%  
CHANCE FOR SOME ADDITIONAL SNOW SHOWERS IN THE ADIRONDACKS,  
NORTHERN GREENS, AND NORTHEAST KINGDOM. ADDITIONAL SNOW OF UP TO  
2-4 INCHES IS POSSIBLE THROUGHOUT THE NIGHT IN THESE AREAS.  
BREEZY WINDS WILL CONTINUE OUT OF THE WEST AND NORTHWEST WITH  
GUSTS 15 TO 25 MPH, HIGHER ON SUMMITS AND LIKELY BLOWING SNOW  
AROUND. THESE WINDS, COMBINED WITH LOWS IN THE UPPER TEENS AND  
20S, WILL RESULT IN WIND CHILLS AS LOW AS THE SINGLE DIGITS TO  
LOWER 20S.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
 
 
AS OF 143 AM EST MONDAY...SOME LINGERING UPSLOPE SNOW SHOWERS  
WILL CONTINUE TO BE POSSIBLE TOMORROW, BUT COVERAGE WILL BE  
LIMITED TO TERRAIN IN NORTHERN VERMONT, AND SNOW WILL NOT  
ACCUMULATING AS MUCH AS HIGH PRESSURE NOSES INTO THE REGION.  
OVERALL FLOW WILL REMAIN NORTHWESTERLY AND IT MAY TAKE SOME TIME  
FOR THE LOWER LEVELS TO DRY OUT. TEMPERATURES ON TUESDAY  
AFTERNOON WILL RANGE FROM THE 30S TO LOWER 40S, THEN FALLING TO  
THE TEENS AND 20S TUESDAY NIGHT. WEDNESDAY LOOKS TO BE A DRY DAY  
OF INCREASING SUNSHINE AND HIGHS IN THE MID 30S TO MID 40S AS  
HIGH PRESSURE IS FINALLY STRETCHED ACROSS THE AREA.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/
 
 
AS OF 143 AM EST MONDAY...THE LONGWAVE PATTERN PROGRESSION IS  
OVERWHELMINGLY ANTICIPATED TO BECOME MORE ZONAL MID/LATE WEEK WITH  
NORTHERN NEW YORK AND VERMONT. THE REGION IS FAVORED TO BE UNDER  
HIGH PRESSURE THROUGH LATE THURSDAY BEFORE ANOTHER SYSTEM MOVES  
THROUGH FRIDAY WITH THE 540DM THICKNESS LINE LIKELY SHIFTING  
NORTHWARD INTO CANADA BY SATURDAY. THIS POINTS TO A RELATIVE WARMING  
TREND WITH COLDEST AIR LOCKED MORE NORTHWARD IN CANADA. DESPITE A  
FRONTAL SYSTEM EXPECTED TO PASS NORTH OF THE REGION FRIDAY, MODEL  
TEMPERATURES CONTINUE TO WARM WITH HIGHS MID WEEK IN THE 30S WARMING  
INTO THE LOW/MID 40S BY SATURDAY. STILL, ELEVATION DEPENDENT  
SNOWFALL IS PROBABLE GIVEN RESIDENT COLD AIR, AND CAN'T RULE OUT  
SOME ICE AND EVENTUAL RAIN FOR HIGHER ELEVATIONS AS RELATIVELY  
WARMER AIR DISPLACES COLDER AIRMASS. FARTHER AFIELD, SUNDAY INTO  
NEXT WEEK, LONGER RANGE GUIDANCE SHOWS POTENTIAL FOR LONGWAVE  
PATTERN AMPLIFICATION SUGGESTING MORE CHANGEABLE WEATHER ON THE WAY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /07Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/
 
 
THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY...A MIX OF VFR TO IFR CONDITIONS ARE OCCURRING  
WITH SCATTERED TO NUMEROUS SNOW SHOWERS ONGOING. BIGGEST IMPACTS  
REMAIN AT SLK WHERE UPSLOPING HAS KEPT CONDITIONS MORE IFR IN  
RESPECT TO VIS WHEREAS OTHER LOCATIONS LIKE MSS/EFK HAVE BEEN  
OSCILLATING AS SHOWERS MOVE THROUGH MORE INTERMITTENTLY. FOR BTV/PBG  
SHOWERS ARE MORE SPARSE SINCE FLOW REMAINS UNBLOCKED ALLOWING FOR  
UPSLOPING SHOWERS TO CONTINUE OVER TERRAIN RATHER THAN BACKING UP  
OVER THESE TERMINALS. MPV HAS BEEN MAINLY MVFR, BUT SOME PERIODS OF  
IFR SHOWERS ARE PROBABLE FOR THE NEXT 6-12HRS. RUT CONTINUES TO  
MAINTAIN MAINLY VFR CONDITIONS WITH SHOWERS BEING MORE ISOLATED.  
WESTERLY FLOW HAS TAPERED DOWN FROM YESTERDAY'S HIGHER GUSTS, BUT  
REMAIN BREEZY OUT OF THE WEST-NORTHWEST. GRADIENT WINDS WILL  
CONTINUE THROUGH THE REMAINDER OF THE PERIOD EVEN AFTER SHOWERS  
TAPER OFF 18-00Z.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
TUESDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. NO SIG WX.  
TUESDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. NO SIG WX.  
WEDNESDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
THURSDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
THURSDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE RA,  
SLIGHT CHANCE SN.  
FRIDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS IFR POSSIBLE. DEFINITE RA.  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
 
A LAKE WIND ADVISORY IS IN EFFECT FOR ALL AREAS OF LAKE  
CHAMPLAIN WITH NORTHWESTERLY WINDS 15 TO 30 KNOTS, BECOMING  
WESTERLY THIS AFTERNOON WITH GUSTS AS HIGH AS 35 TO 40 KNOTS  
POSSIBLE. WAVES WILL BE AROUND 2 TO 5 FEET, SUBSIDING SLIGHTLY  
TO 1 TO 4 FEET IN THE AFTERNOON. STRONG WINDS AS HIGH AS 20 TO  
25 KNOTS ARE FORECAST TO CONTINUE TONIGHT.  
 

 
   
EQUIPMENT
 
 
NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION WXM-44, TRANSMITTING FROM MT.  
ASCUTNEY, VERMONT, ON FREQUENCY 162.475 MHZ IS NON-OPERATIONAL  
AT THIS TIME. NWS TECHNICIANS HAVE DIAGNOSED THE PROBLEM, BUT  
REPAIRS WILL LIKELY NOT BE ABLE TO OCCUR FOR QUITE SOME TIME DUE  
TO CIRCUMSTANCES BEYOND OUR CONTROL. THEREFORE, THE TIME OF  
RETURN TO SERVICE IS CURRENTLY UNKNOWN. THE FOLLOWING NOAA  
WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTERS MAY BE ABLE TO PROVIDE SERVICE DURING  
THIS OUTAGE: WWG 50 FROM BURKE MTN, VT AT 162.425 MHZ AND WNG  
546 FROM HANOVER, NH AT 162.525 MHZ.  
 

 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
VT...WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL 7 PM EST THIS EVENING FOR VTZ002-  
004-018-019.  
WINTER STORM WARNING UNTIL 7 PM EST THIS EVENING FOR VTZ003-  
006-008-016-017.  
NY...WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL 7 PM EST THIS EVENING FOR NYZ027-  
034.  
WINTER STORM WARNING UNTIL 7 PM EST THIS EVENING FOR  
NYZ029>031.  
 

 
 

 
SYNOPSIS...STORM  
NEAR TERM...STORM  
SHORT TERM...STORM  
LONG TERM...BOYD  
AVIATION...BOYD  
MARINE...STORM  
EQUIPMENT...TEAM BTV  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page Main Text Page