107  
FXUS61 KBTV 090034  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
734 PM EST THU JAN 8 2026  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
GRADUALLY WARMING WEATHER IS EXPECTED OVER THE NEXT FEW DAYS. LIGHT  
RAIN WILL UNFOLD FRIDAY AND FRIDAY EVENING AS TEMPERATURES REACH  
THEIR PEAK. GUSTY SOUTHWEST WINDS ARE ALSO EXPECTED, FOLLOWED BY  
BRIEFLY COLDER CONDITIONS ON SATURDAY. AFTER MOSTLY QUIET CONDITIONS  
MUCH OF THE DAY, SNOW AND A WINTRY MIX WILL LIFT BACK NORTHWARDS  
LATE SATURDAY EVENING INTO EARLY SUNDAY MORNING. A BREEZY DAY ON  
SUNDAY WILL PRECEDE A COLD FRONT WITH SHOWERS DURING THE  
AFTERNOON. THEN, MORE SEASONABLE TO SOMEWHAT ABOVE NORMAL  
TEMPERATURES WILL RETURN WITH SNOW SHOWERS OPENING THE NEW WORK  
WEEK.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/  
 
AS OF 640 PM EST THURSDAY...PATCHY FOG IS FORMING IN VALLEYS  
AFTER TODAY'S SNOWMELT AND CLEARING OF SKIES. SOME LOCATIONS  
HAVE REPORTED LOCALIZED DENSE FOG. THESE CONDITIONS WILL PERSIST  
FOR A FEW HOURS UNTIL MOISTURE REFREEZES COMPLETELY WITH  
POTENTIAL FOR SOME VALLEYS TO HAVE FOG FOR MUCH OF THE NIGHT.  
WITH TEMPERATURES FALLING BELOW FREEZING, FOG MAY DEPOSIT ON  
SURFACES AS A THIN LAYER OF ICE POTENTIALLY CREATING SLICK  
CONDITIONS ON ELEVATIONS SURFACES LIKE BRIDGES AND OVERPASSES.  
 
PREVIOUS DISCUSSION...FOR THE REST OF TODAY, EVER SO SLOWLY  
DECREASING CLOUD COVER WILL GIVE WAY TO SOME BREAKS WITH  
TEMPERATURES GENERALLY ABOVE FREEZING. GUIDANCE INSISTS ON  
ENOUGH CLEARING TO RADIATE OUT, BUT HREF CLOUD COVER PROGS KEEPS  
ME SKEPTICAL. CONTINUED THE THEME OF USING RAW, HOURLY DATA  
AGAINST THE TYPICAL DIURNAL CURVE. SHELTERED HOLLOWS OF THE  
ADIRONDACKS AND THE UPPER VALLEY THAT CLEAR OUT STILL HAVE THE  
POTENTIAL TO FALL INTO THE TEENS TO LOWER 20S, BUT MOST WILL  
REMAIN NEAR FREEZING UNDER CLOUDS BEFORE SOUTH WINDS INITIATE  
THE MORE NOTICEABLE WARM UP. INCREASINGLY DRY LOW-LEVEL  
CONDITIONS EMBEDDED IN THE UPPER RIDGE AXIS WILL SETTLE IN AS  
SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE SLIDES OFF THE MID- ATLANTIC.  
 
FRIDAY WILL BE WARM AND WINDY. GUIDANCE HAS TRENDED UPWARDS WITH  
REGARDS TO THE STRENGTH OF THE LLJ, WITH VALUES BUMPING UP TOWARDS  
65-70 KNOTS. THE CORE OF HIGHEST WINDS REMAINS IN THE INVERSION, BUT  
THERE STILL LOOKS TO BE ABOUT SOUTHWEST WINDS OF 45-50 KNOTS AT  
925MB BENEATH AN INVERSION AROUND 2000 FT. IT'S NOT NECESSARILY  
IDEAL FOR STRONG MIXING, BUT HREF AND REFS GUIDANCE PROBABILITIES OF  
GUSTS GREATER THAN 50 KNOTS ARE HIGHLIGHT THE COMMON TROUBLE SPOTS  
FOR SOUTHWEST WINDS - THE ROUTE 11 CORRIDOR AND THE IMMEDIATE SHORES  
OF LAKE CHAMPLAIN. SO A WIND ADVISORY HAS BEEN ISSUES 10 AM FRI TO 1  
AM SATURDAY WITH GUSTS EARLY IN THE AFTERNOON LIKELY IN THE 35-45  
MPH RANGE WITHIN THE ADVISORY AREA.  
 
RAIN WILL QUICKLY SHIFT EAST WITH A SHARP, NARROW PLUME OF MOISTURE,  
AND IS STILL EXPECTED TO MAKE A HASTY DEPARTURE AFTER DROPPING 0.10-  
0.25" OF RAIN. SNOW WILL EFFICIENTLY GET EATEN UP BY THE WINDS AND  
THE WARM TEMPERATURES, BUT RAINFALL AMOUNTS OF THIS QUANTITY ARE NOT  
LIKELY ENOUGH TO CAUSE SIGNIFICANT ISSUES. COLD AIR QUICKLY RUSHES  
IN, AND UNFORTUNATELY, IT APPEARS THAT IT DOES SO WHILE FAST MID-  
LEVEL FLOW REMAINS IN PLACE. POST-FRONTAL HEIGHT RISES AND  
INCREASINGLY MIXED LOW-LEVEL CONDITIONS WILL PRODUCE A SECOND BOUT  
OF STRONG GUSTS. THIS SHOULD RESULT IN ONE LAST PUSH OF VERY GUSTY  
WINDS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING THE FRONT, WITH VALUES LIKELY REACHING  
50 MPH, PERHAPS APPROACHING 55 MPH FROM MALONE THROUGH ELLENBURG, NY  
DEPENDING ON THE STRENGTH OF THE BOUNDARY. THIS POST FRONTAL AIR  
MASS WILL BRING COOL AIR RUSHING IN, BUT BY SATURDAY MORNING, IT  
WILL STILL PROBABLY RANGE FROM THE MID 20S TO MID 30S.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT/  
 
AS OF 132 PM EST THURSDAY...MUCH OF SATURDAY IS EXPECTED TO BE DRY.  
NORTHWEST FLOW WILL QUICKLY BREAK DOWN, AND SO HOWEVER COLD WE GET  
SATURDAY MORNING WILL BE HOW COLD WE'LL LIKELY BE FOR WHATEVER COMES  
NEXT. TEMPERATURES WILL RISE A FEW DEGREES INTO THE MID TO UPPER 30S  
WITH VERY DRY AIR IN THE REGION OWING TO A BROAD, STRETCHED OUT  
1028-1030MB SURFACE HIGH BUILDING ACROSS EASTERN CANADA.  
PRECIPITATION WILL LIFT NORTH SATURDAY EVENING AFTER FACING SOME  
INITIAL RESISTANCE FROM DRY AIR, BUT IT WILL HELP PROVIDE SOME WET-  
BULB COOLING. P-TYPE SHOULD BE SNOW AT ONSET. A DOUBLE BARREL LOW  
SITUATION WILL EVOLVE WITH LOW PRESSURE DEVELOPING OFF MID-ATLANTIC  
TRACKING TOWARDS THE NEW ENGLAND COASTLINE. SO WARM ADVECTION WILL  
DECREASE SOME, BUT EVENTUALLY BY SATURDAY NIGHT, IT WILL BE FAR  
ENOUGH THAT SOME OF THE WARMER MID-LEVEL CONDITIONS ASSOCIATED WITH  
THE PARENT LOW WILL ENTRAIN. WE'LL SEE HOW MUCH, BUT A MIX WILL  
LIKELY DEVELOP OVER PORTIONS OF THE REGION HEADING INTO SUNDAY  
MORNING.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/  
 
AS OF 132 PM EST THURSDAY...KEY POINTS: * KEY POINT: FROZEN  
PRECIPITATION AREAWIDE, LIKELY IN THE FORM OF SNOW, ANTICIPATED  
SUNDAY, WITH ACCUMULATING SNOW POSSIBLE.  
 
A CLASSIC DOUBLE BARREL SYSTEM WILL CONTINUE INTO THE DAY SUNDAY  
WITH AN OCCLUDING PARENT LOW AND A DEVELOPING COASTAL LOW OFF  
SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND. IT CONTINUES TO LOOK MORE LIKELY THAT THE  
COASTAL LOW WILL BECOME THE DOMINANT FEATURE OF THE TWO OVERALL,  
WHICH WILL CONTINUE THE TREND OF A MORE COLDER SOLUTION FOR SUNDAY  
IN TERMS OF PRECIPITATION TYPES. PRECIPITATION IS LIKELY TO FALL AS  
SNOW SUNDAY WITH A SPLIT SNOW CONSISTENCY ACROSS VERMONT AND NEW  
YORK. NEW YORK WILL LARGELY CONTINUE TO BE INFLUENCED BY THE PARENT  
LOW WITH MORE OF A DRY FLUFFIER SNOW AND HIGHER SNOW RATIOS TOWARDS  
10-15:1. HOWEVER IN VERMONT AND THE CPV, SOUTHEASTERLY FLOW FROM THE  
DOMINATING COASTAL LOW WILL LEAD TO LOWER SNOW RATIOS (8-10:1) AND A  
WETTER SNOW IN THE MORNING BEFORE WINDS BECOME WEST/NORTHWEST WITH  
COLDER AND DRIER AIR HELPING TO INCREASE SNOW RATIOS BY SUNDAY  
EVENING. ALTHOUGH TEMPERATURES WILL REACH HIGHS IN THE MID 30S  
SUNDAY, WET-BULBING SHOULD BE ABLE TO ALLOW FOR MOST OF THE REGION  
TO SEE MAINLY SNOW. HOWEVER, LOCATIONS NEAR LAKE CHAMPLAIN, SUCH AS  
GRAND ISLE, ST. ALBANS. AND DOWNTOWN BURLINGTON, COULD SEE A MIX OF  
RAIN AND SNOW AT TIMES, MAINLY NEAR MIDDAY SUNDAY. AS THE COASTAL  
LOW DEPARTS EAST, THE PARENT UPPER LOW WILL SHIFT EAST AS WELL  
LEADING TO PREVAILING WESTERLY FLOW AREAWIDE. WINDS INCREASE IN THE  
DOWNSLOPE REGIONS OF THE EASTERN ADIRONDACKS AND EASTERN GREENS AS  
THE PARENT LOW UPPER LEVEL JET TRAVERSES THE REGION. GUSTY WINDS UP  
TO 20 TO 30 MPH WILL BE POSSIBLE. WITH THE PARENT LOW PASSAGE, AN  
ASSOCIATED VORT MAX CONTINUES TO LOOK PROMISING IN TERMS OF  
AVAILABLE LIFT WITH THE POTENTIAL FOR ISOLATED SNOW SQUALLS SUNDAY  
NIGHT. THE NAM12 SOLUTION DEPICTS UP TO 100J/KG OF CAPE SUNDAY  
AFTERNOON INTO THE EVENING ACROSS NORTHERN NEW YORK AND CENTRAL AND  
NORTHERN VERMONT BEFORE WEAKENING INTO THE NORTHEAST KINGDOM. THERE  
SHOULD BE SOME MOISTURE AROUND WITH MILD ENOUGH TEMPERATURES TO  
SUPPORT SHOWERS AND EMBEDDED SQUALLS SUNDAY EVENING WITH THE  
POTENTIAL FOR ADDITIONAL TRAVEL IMPACTS.  
 
SUBTLE NORTHWESTERLY FLOW LATE SUNDAY NIGHT INTO MONDAY MORNING  
ACROSS THE NORTHERN GREENS COULD LEAD TO SOME LOCALIZED UPSLOPE  
SHOWERS WITH ENHANCEMENT FROM SOME WEAK OROGRAPHIC LIFT. INTO PARTS  
OF NEW YORK, HOWEVER, SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW WILL BE FAVORABLE FOR A  
LAKE EFFECT BAND TO FORM OFF LAKE ONTARIO, LEADING TO LOCALIZED  
LIGHT TO MODERATE SNOW IN SOUTH/SOUTHEASTERN ST. LAWRENCE COUNTY  
SUNDAY INTO SUNDAY NIGHT. HOWEVER, THE BULK OF THE MOISTURE WILL BE  
DRAGGED ALONG WITH THE UPPER LOW, SO EXPECT ONLY A FEW INCHES ACROSS  
THE UPSLOPE HIGHER TERRAIN AND IN REGIONS UNDER THE LAKE EFFECT SNOW  
BAND. THE PATTERN BEYOND THE WEEKEND LOOKS TO BE A BIT UNSETTLED,  
BUT ON THE MILD SIDE WITH A SERIES OF WEAK RIDGES AND TROUGHS.  
TEMPERATURES WILL BE MILD WITH HIGHS INTO THE LOW TO MID 30S FOR  
MUCH OF EARLY NEXT WEEK. THE BULK OF THE WEEKEND PRECIPITATION  
SHOULD TAPER OFF MONDAY, BUT LINGER IN THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY.  
LOCATIONS THAT COULD SEE THE BEST CHANCES FOR PRECIPITATION IN THE  
EXTENDED WILL BE ACROSS THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY AND NORTHERN GREENS  
AS A LONG WAVE TROUGH WILL EJECT SEVERAL SHORTWAVES ALONG THE ST.  
LAWRENCE VALLEY AND INTERNATIONAL BORDER. SHADOWING AND A DRY SLOT  
ACROSS THE CPV AND VERMONT COULD LIMIT THE OVERALL SPATIAL EXTENT OF  
THESE SHOWER CHANCES, BUT EXPECT BROKEN TO OVERCAST SKIES TO  
CONTINUE THROUGH NEXT WEEK. IT IS JANUARY IN NORTHERN NEW YORK AND  
VERMONT AFTER ALL, BUT THE SUN WILL RETURN SOMEDAY.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /00Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/  
 
THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY...SKIES ARE CLEARING ACROSS MUSH OF  
NORTHERN NEW YORK AND VERMONT RESULTING IN FORMATION OF FOG FROM  
TODAY'S SNOWMELT. SLK/MPV/MPV WILL SEE THE WORST OF THIS THROUGH  
03Z BEFORE MOISTURE BEGINS TO REFREEZE. THERE IS ABOUT A 50%  
CHANCE FOG WILL LINGER PAST 03Z HOWEVER WITH SLK SEEING THE  
HIGHEST CHANCE OF IFR THROUGH 06Z. OTHER LOCATIONS COULD SEE  
LIGHTER MIST DOWN TO 3SM INTERMITTENTLY. AT MSS, LOW CLOUD IS  
WRAPPING BACK INTO THE AREA WITH POTENTIAL FOR MORE MVFR CIGS.  
 
OTHERWISE, LLWS WILL BE THE PRIMARY THREAT BEGINNING AFTER 12Z  
WITH SURFACE GUSTS INCREASING THROUGH THE FORECAST PERIOD. A LOW  
LEVEL JET WILL TRANSIT THE REGION WITH SOUTH-SOUTHWEST FLOW UP  
TO 55KTS AT 925MB AND 70KTS AT 850MB SUPPORTING STRONG SHEAR  
ACROSS NORTHERN NEW YORK AND VERMONT. SFC GUSTS ON THE ORDER OF  
35+KTS ARE POSSIBLE, ESPECIALLY FOR PBG/SLK WHERE SOUTHERLY FLOW  
WILL BE CHANNELED IN THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY. TURBULENCE WILL  
CONTINUE TO BE A FACTOR ABOVE 850MB GIVEN THE STRENGTH OF THE  
JET EXTENDING ABOVE RIDGE LEVEL.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
FRIDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. STRONG WINDS  
WITH GUSTS TO 40 KT. CHANCE SHRA.  
SATURDAY: VFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SN.  
SATURDAY NIGHT: MAINLY MVFR, WITH LOCAL IFR POSSIBLE. DEFINITE  
SN.  
SUNDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH LOCAL IFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SN, CHANCE  
RA.  
SUNDAY NIGHT: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS VFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHSN.  
MONDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. SLIGHT CHANCE SHSN.  
MONDAY NIGHT: MVFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SHSN.  
TUESDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS VFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHSN,  
SLIGHT CHANCE SHRA.  
 
 
   
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.  
 
THE COLCHESTER REEF METEOROLOGICAL STATION IS OUT OF SERVICE.  
THIS SITE IS NOT SERVICED BY THE NWS AND THERE ISN'T AN  
ESTIMATED RETURN TO SERVICE AT PRESENT. USE EXTRA CAUTION WHEN  
NAVIGATING THE BROAD WATERS OF LAKE CHAMPLAIN. PLEASE CONTACT US  
IF YOU OBSERVE WINDS SIGNIFICANTLY DEVIATING FROM THE  
RECREATIONAL FORECAST.  
 
 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...WIND ADVISORY FROM 10 AM FRIDAY TO 1 AM EST SATURDAY FOR  
NYZ027-030-031.  
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...HAYNES  
NEAR TERM...BOYD/HAYNES  
SHORT TERM...HAYNES  
LONG TERM...DANZIG  
AVIATION...BOYD/DANZIG  
EQUIPMENT...TEAM BTV  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page
Main Text Page