777  
FXUS61 KBTV 230653  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
153 AM EST MON FEB 23 2026  
   
WHAT HAS CHANGED  
 
AS OF 153 AM EST MONDAY...  
 
SNOWFALL AMOUNTS HAVE DECREASED ACROSS THE REGION, SO THE WINTER  
WEATHER ADVISORY HAS BEEN CANCELLED.  
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
AS OF 153 AM EST MONDAY...  
 
1. A STRONG NOR'EASTER WILL BRING SNOWFALL AND BREEZY  
CONDITIONS TO THE REGION, WITH THE GREATEST SNOWFALL AMOUNTS  
EXPECTED ACROSS SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL VERMONT.  
 
2. COLD WEATHER IS EXPECTED MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT.  
WITH THE COMBINATION OF LINGERING STRONG NORTHWEST GUSTS, WIND  
CHILLS OF -5 TO -15 ARE POSSIBLE OVER NORTHERN NEW YORK THROUGH  
TUESDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
3. A CLIPPER TYPE SYSTEM IS EXPECTED EARLY WEDNESDAY INTO EARLY  
THURSDAY. SNOW WILL BE POSSIBLE DURING WEDNESDAY'S COMMUTES.  
 
4. INLAND RUNNER TO BRING RAIN AND SNOW TO THE REGION LATE  
THURSDAY INTO FRIDAY.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
AS OF 153 AM EST MONDAY...  
 
KEY MESSAGE 1: THE ONGOING NOR'EASTER CONTINUES TO BRING HEAVY SNOW  
AND BLIZZARD CONDITIONS TO SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND, WHILE OUR REGION  
REMAINS ON THE NORTHERN PERIPHERY OF THE SYSTEM. COMPARED TO THE  
PREVIOUS FORECASTS, SNOWFALL AMOUNTS HAVE DECREASED WITH A TIGHTER  
SNOWFALL GRADIENT, WITH ABOUT 2 TO 4 INCHES OF SNOW EXPECTED ACROSS  
SOUTH CENTRAL VERMONT, WITH INCREASING SNOW TOTALS AS YOU HEAD  
TOWARDS THE MASSACHUSETTS BORDER. GIVEN THE LOWER SNOWFALL AMOUNTS,  
THE WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY HAS BEEN CANCELLED. AS OF NOW, THE BULK  
OF THE SNOWFALL LOOKS TO FALL THIS MORNING, BEFORE GRADUALLY WINDING  
DOWN THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING AS THE COASTAL LOW PULLS AWAY. IN  
ADDITION TO THE SNOWFALL, GUSTY WINDS ARE ALSO EXPECTED WITH THIS  
SYSTEM, WITH GUSTS IN THE 25 TO 35 MPH RANGE INCREASINGLY LIKELY  
ACROSS SOUTHERN VERMONT, PEAKING AROUND THE EARLY AFTERNOON WITH  
EVEN HIGHER GUSTS POSSIBLE IN THE HIGHER TERRAIN. THESE WINDS COULD  
LEAD TO BLOWING SNOW, MAKING FOR HAZARDOUS TRAVEL CONDITIONS AND  
REDUCED VISIBILITIES, ESPECIALLY IN ANY MOUNTAIN PASSES, SO BE SURE  
BE ALERT AND USE CAUTION IF TRAVELING THROUGH CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN  
VERMONT ON MONDAY.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 2: AS THE COASTAL LOW PULLS NORTHEASTWARD TOWARDS THE  
CANADIAN MARITIMES, COLD CONDITIONS WILL MOVE INTO THE REGION.  
OVERNIGHT LOW TEMPERATURES LOOK TO DROP INTO THE SINGLE DIGITS ABOVE  
AND BELOW ZERO ACROSS NORTHERN NEW YORK, WHILE VERMONT REMAINS A BUT  
WARMER IN THE SINGLE DIGITS AND TEENS. THESE COLD TEMPERATURES  
COMBINED WITH BRISK NORTHWESTERLY WINDS WILL MAKE FOR WIND CHILLS  
IN THE -5 TO -15 RANGE ACROSS NORTHERN NEW YORK, WITH COLDER  
CONDITIONS POSSIBLE AT HIGHER ELEVATIONS. THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY AND  
REST OF VERMONT IS LIKELY TO REMAIN A BIT WARMER, AS THE CORE OF  
COLDEST AIR DOESN'T ARRIVE IN VERMONT UNTIL MIDDAY AND WILL STRUGGLE  
TO MAKE IT PAST THE MOUNTAINS. HIGHS ON TUESDAY WILL CREEP INTO THE  
TEENS OVER NORTHERN NEW YORK AND FAR NORTHERN VERMONT, WHILE THE  
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN CHAMPLAIN VALLEY AND UPPER VALLEY WARM INTO THE  
20S. IN ADDITION TO THE COLD TEMPERATURES, SOME ADDITIONAL LIGHT  
UPSLOPE SNOW SHOWERS WILL BE POSSIBLE NIGHT INTO TUESDAY MORNING DUE  
TO SOME WRAP AROUND MOISTURE, BUT ANY ACCUMULATIONS LOOK TO BE AT  
THIS TIME. TEMPERATURES TUESDAY NIGHT WILL CONTINUE TO BE ON THE  
COLD SIDE, WITH FORECAST LOW TEMPERATURES IN THE SINGLE DIGITS,  
HOWEVER LIGHTER WINDS AND INCREASING CLOUD COVER WILL PLAY A ROLE IN  
ACTUAL TEMPERATURES OVERNIGHT.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 3: DURING THE PRE-DAWN HOURS TUESDAY NIGHT AND WEDNESDAY, A  
WEAK WARM FRONT WILL SHIFT EAST ACROSS THE AREA AS A DECAYING  
CLIPPER LOW TRACKS ACROSS THE CANADIAN BORDER AND GREAT LAKES  
REGION. THIS IS WILL BRING LIGHT, POWDERY SNOW OF A FEW TENTHS TO  
MAYBE AN INCH. AFTER THAT CLEARS, WE'LL SEE OUR INITIALLY COOL  
SINGLE DIGITS START TO CLIMB. SHALLOW WARM ADVECTION WILL WARM MOST  
OF THE REGION INTO THE UPPER 20S TO MID 30S. HOWEVER, ABOVE FREEZING  
AIR IS CONFINED TO THE LOWEST 500 FEET OF THE ATMOSPHERE. IN THE  
"WARM SECTOR" OF THE CLIPPER, MARGINALLY FAVORABLE LOW-LEVEL LAPSE  
RATES OF 7 C/KM WITH THE COOL CONDITIONS ALOFT SHOULD RESULT IN  
ROUGHLY 100 J/KG OF CAPE, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. A PREFRONTAL TROUGH  
WILL MOVE ACROSS THE REGION BY EVENING. THIS SHOULD INITIATE SOME  
CONVECTIVE SNOW SHOWERS. WINDS ALOFT ARE LACKING, BUT A FEW EMBEDDED  
MODERATE SNOW SHOWERS MAY TAKE PLACE WEDNESDAY EVENING DUE TO  
MARGINAL INSTABILITY AND THE WEAK TROUGH. AFTER THIS ROUND OF  
ACTIVITY, ONE LAST OCCLUDED BOUNDARY WILL SHIFT EAST AS THE UPPER  
TROUGH DEPARTS THE REGION. INCREASINGLY DRY AIR WILL LIKELY LIMIT  
THIS LAST BATCH OF SNOW TO WESTERN SLOPES. ALL TOGETHER, NONE OF  
THESE ROUND OF PRECIPITATION WILL PRODUCE MUCH SNOW. ABOUT 0.5-2.0",  
AND 3-4" AT MOUNTAIN TOPS IS THE GENERAL EXPECTATION. THIS LIKELY  
WON'T WARRANT HEADLINES, BUT WE'LL MONITOR WEDNESDAY EVENING  
ACTIVITY FOR ANY POSSIBLE TRAVEL IMPACTS.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 4: DETERMINISTIC AND ENSEMBLE MODELS ARE STARTING TO KEY IN  
ON AREA OF LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM THAT IS EXPECTED TO TRACK OUT OF THE  
OHIO RIVER VALLEY AND NORTHEAST THROUGH THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY LATE  
THURSDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. THE MODEL CONSENSUS ON PRECIPITATION TYPE  
AT THIS TIME IS PREDOMINANTLY SNOW, BUT LOWS THAT TRACK THROUGH THE  
ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY INHERENTLY HAVE WARM AIR ADVECTION ASSOCIATED  
WITH THEM. THIS SHOULD ALLOW FOR SOME MIX FROM SNOW TO RAIN AS  
PRECIPITATION TAPERS OFF FRIDAY MORNING. THE NBM IS CURRENTLY  
SHOWING BETWEEN 30-50% CHANCE OF SNOWFALL EXCEEDING 4 INCHES LATE  
THURSDAY THROUGH EARLY FRIDAY WITH THE MAIN PORTION OF THE EVEN  
OCCURRING DURING THE OVERNIGHT HOURS WHICH COULD LESSEN POTENTIAL  
IMPACTS FROM THE HEAVIER WET SNOW THIS SYSTEM WOULD LIKELY BRING. IN  
ADDITION TO THE SNOW, STRONG SOUTHERLY WINDS BETWEEN 30-40 MPH CANNOT  
BE RULED OUT IN THE CHAMPLAIN AND ST. LAWRENCE VALLEYS AS WINDS  
CHANNEL UP THE VALLEY. SOME UPSLOPE SNOW SHOWERS ARE EXPECTED ACROSS  
THE HIGH TERRAIN IN THE WAKE OF THE LOW AS IT APPEARS THE UPPER  
LEVEL TROUGH WILL LAG ABOUT 12 HOURS BEHIND THE INITIAL SURFACE LOW  
WITH STEEP LAPSE RATES AND PLENTY OF COLD AIR MOVING BACK ACROSS THE  
REGION. THE LONGWAVE PATTERN WILL SHIFT FROM AMPLIFIED TO ZONAL OVER  
THE WEEKEND WITH THE POTENTIAL FOR A FEW QUICK SNOW SHOWERS BUT NO  
BIG SYSTEMS ARE EXPECTED NEXT WEEKEND AT THIS TIME.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /06Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/  
 
THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY...RELATIVELY QUIET AVIATION CONDITIONS ARE  
EXPECTED WHILE POWERFUL LOW PRESSURE REMAINS WELL OFFSHORE. SNOW IS  
EDGING VERY SLOWLY TO RUTLAND. RECENT OBSERVATIONS SUGGEST THAT SNOW  
WILL NOT MAKE IT QUITE AS FAR NORTH. SO ANY IFR VISIBILITY FROM SNOW  
HAS BEEN REMOVED IN FAVOR OF 4SM FOR A SHORT DURATION AT KRUT, WITH  
SOME TEMPOS OR PROB30S WHERE ANY UNCERTAINTY EXISTS. THE MAIN IMPACT  
WILL THEN BE INCREASING NORTH WINDS TO 8 TO 14 KNOTS SUSTAINED WITH  
GUSTS 16 TO 25 KNOTS, MAINLY ACROSS VERMONT TERMINALS AND KPBG WITH  
THE FASTEST GUSTS LIKELY BETWEEN ABOUT 18Z AND 00Z TUESDAY. AFTER  
00Z TUESDAY, WINDS WILL REMAIN ELEVATED, BUT START TO DECREASE. LLWS  
WILL BE POSSIBLE BEFORE SURFACE WINDS INCREASE THIS MORNING AND AS  
THEY TAPER OFF TONIGHT, MAINLY FOR KRUT, KMPV, AND KEFK WITH  
NORTHEAST TO NORTH WINDS AT 2000 FT AGL RANGING BETWEEN 35 AND 40  
KNOTS.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
TUESDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
TUESDAY NIGHT: VFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SN.  
WEDNESDAY: MAINLY MVFR AND IFR, WITH AREAS VFR POSSIBLE. LIKELY  
SN.  
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. SLIGHT  
CHANCE SN.  
THURSDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SN.  
THURSDAY NIGHT: VFR. CHANCE SN.  
FRIDAY: VFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SN.  
 
 
   
EQUIPMENT  
 
THE KMPV ASOS HAS SUFFERED A COMMUNICATIONS FAILURE. THE ISSUE  
HAS BEEN DIAGNOSED, BUT THERE IS CURRENTLY NO ESTIMATED TIME OF  
RETURN TO SERVICE. TERMINAL AERODROME FORECASTS WILL CONTINUE,  
BUT AMENDMENTS TO THOSE FORECASTS WILL BE SUSPENDED.  
 
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. PLEASE CONTACT US IF YOU  
OBSERVE WINDS SIGNIFICANTLY DEVIATING FROM THE RECREATIONAL  
FORECAST.  
 
 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
WHAT HAS CHANGED...KREMER  
DISCUSSION...KREMER/CLAY/HAYNES  
AVIATION...HAYNES  
EQUIPMENT...NWS BTV  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page
Main Text Page