538  
FXUS61 KBTV 080543  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
1243 AM EST SUN MAR 8 2026  
   
WHAT HAS CHANGED  
 
AS OF 131 PM EST SATURDAY...  
 
CONFIDENCE HAS INCREASED IN WIDESPREAD RIVER RISES DUE TO  
SNOWMELT THIS UPCOMING WEEK.  
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
AS OF 131 PM EST SATURDAY...  
 
1. WARM, WINDY AND WET WEATHER THROUGH TONIGHT. HOWEVER, NO  
SIGNIFICANT IMPACTS EXPECTED.  
 
2. UNSEASONABLE WARMTH WILL CONTINUE EARLY NEXT WEEK,  
ESPECIALLY ON MONDAY AND TUESDAY. LITTLE TO NO SNOW WILL BE LEFT  
AT ELEVATIONS BELOW 1000 FEET.  
 
3. CONFIDENCE IN WIDESPREAD RIVER RISES DUE TO SNOWMELT HAS  
INCREASED, PARTICULARLY FOR EARLY TO THE MIDDLE PART OF NEXT  
WEEK. RIVERS WILL NEED TO BE MONITORED CLOSELY FOR RIVER ICE  
MOVEMENT AND POTENTIAL ICE JAMS AND ASSOCIATED FLOODING.  
 
4. AFTER A STRETCH OF SPRING-LIKE WEATHER, MORE WIDESPREAD  
PRECIPITATION IS EXPECTED TO ARRIVE FOR THE MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
AS OF 131 PM EST SATURDAY...  
 
KEY MESSAGE 1: A SURGE OF UNUSUALLY WARM AND MOIST AIR IS  
MAKING ITS WAY NORTHWARD ACROSS MUCH OF THE EASTERN US TODAY  
AHEAD OF A HIGH AMPLITUDE TROUGH. AT THE SURFACE, A WARM FRONT  
IS EXPECTED TO STAY HUNG UP JUST TO OUR SOUTHWEST TODAY AS  
SURFACE TEMPERATURES, ESPECIALLY IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN VERMONT,  
ARE RELATIVELY SLOW TO RISE. ALSO, LOCALIZED COLDER SPOTS NEAR  
LAKE CHAMPLAIN IN CONTRAST, MUCH OF NORTHERN NEW YORK IS SEEING  
TEMPERATURES EARLY THIS AFTERNOON WELL INTO THE 50S AND EVEN LOW  
60S WITH DEWPOINTS CLIMBING INTO THE UPPER 40S AND LOW 50S.  
EVENTUALLY, EXTREME WARMTH WILL BE SEEN ACROSS OUR REGION BY  
THIS EVENING AS WE MIX OUT A STUBBORN SURFACE INVERSION WITH  
INCREASING SOUTH-SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW AHEAD OF A SLOW MOVING COLD  
FRONT. SURFACE TEMPERATURES UPSTREAM AHEAD OF THIS FRONT IN  
WESTERN NEW YORK HAVE RISEN INTO THE UPPER 60S AND LOW 70S WITH  
DEW POINTS APPROACHING 60. THE WARMTH IS IMPRESSIVE,  
PARTICULARLY IN THE 850-700 MILLIBAR LAYER. TEMPERATURES AT 850  
MILLIBARS, INDICATIVE OF OUR HIGHER MOUNTAIN SUMMIT WEATHER,  
WILL LIKELY BE AS HIGH AS 13 DEGREES CELSIUS (55 F) LATER TODAY  
INTO THIS EVENING. NOTE THE OBSERVED UPPER AIR DATA (RADIOSONDE)  
FROM ALBANY, NY AT 7 AM TODAY SHOWS THIS EXTREME WARM LAYER  
WITH EXACTLY 13 DEGREES AT 850 MILLIBARS, WHICH APPEARS TO BE A  
RECORD THROUGH THIS POINT IN THE CALENDAR YEAR (BACK TO 1948).  
 
WITH REGARDS TO PRECIPITATION, THE GOES-16 WATER VAPOR CHANNELS  
SHOW A MESSY SCENARIO. WIDELY SCATTERED SHOWERS ARE PRESENT OUT  
AHEAD OF BATCH OF SOMEWHAT ORGANIZED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS  
OVER SOUTHERN ONTARIO AND WESTERN NEW YORK, WHERE CLUSTERS OF  
COLDER CLOUD TOPS CAN BE SEEN WITHIN THE WARM SECTOR OF THE  
FRONTAL SYSTEM. WHILE AMPLE WARMTH AND HUMIDITY WILL BE PRESENT,  
IT IS QUESTIONABLE IF ELEVATED INSTABILITY WILL BE SUFFICIENT  
FOR THUNDER IN NORTHERN NEW YORK AND VERMONT. CONSISTENT WITH  
THE STORM PREDICTION CENTER ANALYSIS, RISK OF THUNDER GENERALLY  
IS HIGHER AS YOU GO WEST. SIGNALS FOR WHETHER ANY OF THIS  
UPSTREAM CONVECTION, PARTICULARLY THUNDERSTORMS, SURVIVE INTO  
OUR RELATIVELY COOL/STABLE AIR MASS ARE A BIT MIXED. PROGGED  
MUCAPE (MOST UNSTABLE CAPE) WILL POSSIBLY SURGE TO NEAR 100-200  
J/KG AS MID-LEVELS SATURATE IN THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY AND  
WESTERN ADIRONDACKS. THESE AREAS REMAIN MOST LIKELY TO SEE  
HEAVIER RAINFALL AMOUNTS THAN AREAS TO THE EAST GIVEN RICHER LOW  
LEVEL MOISTURE AND CONVERGENCE. HOWEVER, WHILE PWAT  
(PRECIPITABLE WATER) WILL BE ANOMALOUSLY HIGH, LACK OF  
INSTABILITY, FAST CELL MOTIONS, AND MODEST WARM CLOUD DEPTHS  
REDUCE RISK OF HEAVY RAINFALL. MOST LIKELY AMOUNTS THROUGH  
TONIGHT WILL BE ABOUT A THIRD TO THREE QUARTERS OF AN INCH, WITH  
VERY LOCALIZED SPOTS POSSIBLY NEAR 1", TAPERING OFF TO A TENTH  
TO A THIRD OF AN INCH IN MUCH OF VERMONT, AGAIN WITH LOCALIZED  
HIGHER AMOUNTS EXCEEDING A HALF INCH ESPECIALLY IN NORTHEASTERN  
AREAS AND HIGH TERRAIN.  
 
MOST CAMS (CONVECTIVE ALLOWING MODELS) AND TIME OF ARRIVAL  
TOOLS SUGGEST THESE SHOWERS WILL BEGIN AFTER 5 PM WITH COVERAGE  
INCREASING FROM 6 TO 9 PM ACROSS THE REGION. THEY WILL MAKE IT  
INTO VERMONT RELATIVELY SLOWLY GIVEN DEEP LAYER SOUTHWEST FLOW  
CLOSE TO PARALLEL WITH THE FRONT. THE ACTUAL COLD FRONT WILL LAG  
BEHIND THIS AREA OF SHOWERS, SO MOIST AND MILD SOUTHERLY FLOW  
WILL PERSIST FOR MUCH OF THE NIGHT. A FINAL ROUND OF SCATTERED  
SHOWERS JUST AHEAD OF THE COLD FRONT WILL LIKELY MOVE ACROSS THE  
AREA IN THE EARLY MORNING HOURS, WITH PRECIPITATION CHANCES  
RAPIDLY DECREASING FROM WEST TO EAST TOWARDS DAYBREAK AS DRIER  
AIR FILTERS IN. UNSEASONABLY WARM AND BREEZY CONDITIONS TONIGHT  
WILL SUPPORT RAPID SNOWMELT (MORE ON THIS IN KEY MESSAGE 3) AND  
RIPENING OF HIGHER ELEVATION SNOW. TYPICALLY THIS COULD BE A  
FOGGY OVER SNOW SCENARIO WITH HIGH DEWPOINTS IN THE 40S AND EVEN  
LOW 50S, BUT THINK THERE MAY BE ENOUGH WIND TO REDUCE  
PREVALENCE OF FOG TONIGHT; THIS MAY NEED TO BE RE-EVALUATED THIS  
EVENING. WHILE THE SOUTHERLY CHANNELED FLOW IN THE NORTHERN  
CHAMPLAIN VALLEY WILL BE RELAXING TONIGHT, A BELT OF 50 TO 60  
KNOT WEST-SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW IN THE 700 TO 850 MILLIBAR LAYER  
WILL BE COINCIDENT WITH THE SHOWERS OVERNIGHT. STABILITY SHOULD  
KEEP THESE STRONG WINDS FROM MIXING EFFECTIVELY. HOWEVER,  
TOWARDS DAYBREAK AS FLOW BECOMES WESTERLY BEHIND THE FRONT, SOME  
LOCALIZED DOWNSLOPE WINDS WILL DEVELOP RESULTING IN POSSIBLE 45  
TO 50 MPH GUSTS. THESE WILL INITIALLY BE EAST OF THE ADIRONDACK  
HIGH PEAKS AND THEN EXPAND INTO THE EASTERN SLOPES OF THE GREEN  
MOUNTAINS, ESPECIALLY FAVORING WESTERN WINDSOR COUNTY WITH  
EXPECTED MAGNITUDE AND ORIENTATION OF THE LOW LEVEL JET.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 2: LARGE SCALE WEST-SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW AND A STORM  
TRACK WELL TO OUR NORTH WILL KEEP US IN A WARM AND DRY WEATHER  
PATTERN. TEMPERATURES TOMORROW BEHIND TONIGHT'S COLD FRONT WILL  
STILL BE RATHER MILD IN THE 40S IN MOST LOCATIONS, AND THEN AS  
WINDS TURN SOUTHERLY AGAIN TOMORROW NIGHT INTO MONDAY, WE'LL SEE  
WARM AIR ADVECTION SUPPORT TEMPERATURES SURGING INTO THE MID  
AND UPPER 50S IN MOST LOCATIONS. DESPITE SOME MODEST SOUTHERLY  
WINDS WITH GUSTS OF 15 TO 25 MPH, AMPLE SUNSHINE ALONGSIDE THESE  
TEMPERATURES SHOULD MAKE THIS A REALLY PLEASANT DAY FOR OUTDOOR  
ACTIVITIES SUCH AS CORN SNOW SKIING AND WALKING WITH A SINGLE  
LAYER OF CLOTHING.  
 
TUESDAY WILL BE SUBTLY DIFFERENT AS A BACKDOOR COLD FRONT MAY  
SETTLE FAR ENOUGH SOUTH TO FLIP WINDS TO NORTHERLY DURING THE  
AFTERNOON IN OUR NORTHERNMOST AREAS WHILE SOUTHERN AREAS SEE  
FURTHER WARMING OF THE AIR MASS TO SUPPORT HIGHS IN THE LOW TO  
MID 60S. THEREFORE, THE FORECAST FOR MONDAY IS A BIT MORE  
CERTAIN THAN TUESDAY WITH REGARDS TO HIGH TEMPERATURES,  
ESPECIALLY IN THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY AND NORTHERN COUNTIES IN  
VERMONT. THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY MORE DEFINITELY LOOKS TO SEE  
SOMEWHAT COOLER CONDITIONS ON TUESDAY THAN MONDAY. AS OF NOW,  
ACROSS SOUTHERN COUNTIES OF NORTHERN NEW YORK AND VERMONT,  
TUESDAY WILL BE ANOTHER WARM AND SUNNY DAY, WHILE INCREASING  
CLOUDS AND SLIGHTLY COOLER WEATHER IS POSSIBLE FARTHER NORTH.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 3: WITH A PROLONGED PERIOD OF ABOVE FREEZING  
TEMPERATURES EXPECTED THROUGH THE FIRST HALF OF NEXT WEEK, RIVER  
RESPONSE IS LIKELY AREAWIDE DUE TO RUNOFF FROM SNOWMELT. THIS  
WEEKEND'S WARMER WEATHER IS A PREVIEW OF WHAT'S TO COME, AND  
WILL LIKELY SERVE AS A PRIMER FOR MORE RIVER RISES LATER IN THE  
WEEK.  
 
SNOWMELT IS JUST STARTING IN EARNEST THIS AFTERNOON AS  
TEMPERATURES HAVE WARMED WELL INTO THE 40S AND EVEN 50S FROM THE  
CHAMPLAIN VALLEY WESTWARD. IN ADDITION, NOTE DEW POINTS HAVE  
LIKEWISE RISEN ABOVE FREEZING (OR WILL BY LATER TODAY IN THE  
CASE OF EASTERN VT). ADD IN GUSTY SOUTH/SOUTHWEST WINDS, AND  
IT'S THE PERFECT RECIPE FOR SNOWMELT. WHILE RIVERS HAVEN'T SHOW  
A WHOLE LOT OF RESPONSE JUST YET, WE DO ANTICIPATE WATERWAYS  
WILL START TO RISE THIS EVENING AND CONTINUE OVERNIGHT. THE  
LATEST RIVER FORECASTS FROM THE NORTHEAST RFC DO SHOW A FEW OF  
OUR RIVER GAGES (AUSABLE R NEAR AUSABLE FORKS, OTTER CREEK NEAR  
CENTER RUTLAND, AND MAD RIVER NEAR MORETOWN) APPROACHING OR JUST  
EXCEEDING ACTION STAGE AT SOME POINT SUNDAY. THERE COULD BE  
SOME NUISANCE-TYPE FLOODING OF LOW-LYING AREAS ALONG THESE  
WATERWAYS, BUT NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACTS ARE EXPECTED.  
 
OUR BIGGER CONCERN IS HEADING FORWARD TOWARD THE MIDDLE OF NEXT  
WEEK. THIS WEEKEND'S SNOWMELT SHOULD SLOW OR EVEN STOP SUNDAY  
NIGHT AS TEMPERATURES DROP BACK CLOSE TO OR BELOW FREEZING,  
ALLOWING RIVERS TO RECEDE A BIT. HOWEVER, THIS WILL BE SHORT  
LIVED AS WE'LL WARM WELL INTO THE 50S AND EVEN 60S MONDAY,  
TUESDAY, AND WEDNESDAY. LIKE TODAY, WE'LL SEE WARMING DEW POINTS  
AS WELL, ALONG WITH PERIODS OF GUSTY WINDS. OVERNIGHT  
TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED TO MAINLY STAY NEAR OR ABOVE FREEZING,  
SO THERE WON'T BE A WHOLE LOT OF RECOVERY BETWEEN PEAK SNOWMELT  
TIMES. THE SNOWPACK WILL LIKELY TAKE A PRETTY GOOD HIT; NOTE  
THAT THE LATEST NOHRSC ANALYSIS SHOWS EVERYTHING MELTED OUT  
BELOW 1000 FT OR SO BY EARLY TUESDAY MORNING. HIGHER ELEVATIONS  
WILL ALSO SEE SUBSTANTIAL LOSS OF THE PACK, THOUGH HOW MUCH  
EXACTLY IS STILL HARD TO DETERMINE AT THIS POINT. LOOKING AT THE  
LATEST GEFS/NAEFS ENSEMBLE RUNS, A GENERAL 2-4 INCHES OF SWE  
LOSS SEEMS REASONABLE THROUGH THURSDAY. WHILE RAINFALL ISN'T  
EXPECTED TO BE OVERLY HEAVY DURING THIS TIME FRAME, IT WILL BE  
ENOUGH TO ADD TO THE RUNOFF. GIVEN THE PROLONGED PERIOD OF MILD  
TEMPERATURES, WE'RE GROWING MORE CONFIDENT THAT THERE WILL BE  
ICE MOVEMENT ON AREA RIVERS NEXT WEEK, PARTICULARLY ON SOUTHERN  
WATERWAYS THAT HAVE A BETTER CHANCE OF SEEING PERSISTENT MILD  
CONDITIONS. OF COURSE, RIVER ICE BREAK UP AND RESULTANT ICE JAMS  
AND ANY FLOODING ARE FAIRLY UNPREDICTABLE, ESPECIALLY THIS FAR  
OUT IN TIME. WITH THAT IN MIND, WE URGE ANYONE WITH INTERESTS  
ALONG AREA WATERWAYS TO MONITOR FUTURE FORECASTS CLOSELY. AS FAR  
AS OPEN WATER FLOODING, IT REALLY TAKES BOTH SNOWMELT AND HEAVY  
RAINFALL TO CREATE SIGNIFICANT PROBLEMS, BUT SOME ENSEMBLE  
GUIDANCE SHOWS RIVERS SUCH AS THE MAD RIVER, AUSABLE, AND OTTER  
CREEK POTENTIALLY EXCEEDING MINOR FLOOD STAGE. AND AT THE LEAST,  
WATERWAYS WILL BE RUNNING HIGH, EVEN SMALLER TRIBUTARIES AND  
STREAMS.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 4: A LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM CENTERED OVER THE GREAT  
LAKES WILL TRACK NORTHEASTWARD TOWARDS THE MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK,  
BRINGING WIDESPREAD PRECIPITATION CHANCES TO THE REGION  
WEDNESDAY INTO THURSDAY. THERE IS STILL A LOT OF UNCERTAINTY IN  
REGARDS TO PRECIPITATION TYPE AT THIS POINT, BOTH DUE TO  
TEMPERATURES AND LOW TRACK. THE CURRENT FORECAST SUPPORTS MOSTLY  
RAIN, WITH A BRIEF TRANSITION TO SNOW DURING THE DAY THURSDAY  
AS A COLD FRONT PUSHES ACROSS THE REGION, ALTHOUGH THERE IS SOME  
GUIDANCE THAT SUPPORTS THE POSSIBILITY OF A WINTRY MIX AND SOME  
FREEZING RAIN. AT THIS POINT IS IS STILL TOO TRICKY TO TELL FOR  
SURE, AS SMALL DIFFERENCES IN THERMAL PROFILES AND SURFACE  
TEMPERATURE CAN PLAY A LARGE ROLE IN THE PRECIPITATION TYPE, BUT  
IS SOMETHING TO MONITOR OVER THE NEXT FEW DAYS AS WE GET  
CLOSER. AFTER THE COLD FRONT THURSDAY, TEMPERATURES FOR THE END  
OF THE WEEK LOOK TO TREND CLOSER TO SEASONAL NORMALS FOR EARLY  
MARCH, WITH HIGHS IN THE MID 30S TO LOW 40S.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /06Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/  
 
THROUGH 06Z MONDAY...GUSTS IN THE 20 KT RANGE CONTINUE OUT OF  
THE SOUTH. ANOTHER AREA OF RAIN IS PUSHING ACROSS NORTHERN NEW  
YORK, BRIEFLY LOWERING VISIBILITIES AND CEILINGS AS IT MOVES  
THROUGH. LOW LEVEL WIND SHEAR REMAINS PREVALENT AS WINDS AT 2000  
FT AGL RANGE BETWEEN 45-55 KNOTS OUT OF THE SOUTHWEST. CEILINGS  
WILL LOWER AND KSLK COULD OBSERVE SOME 700-1000 FT AGL CLOUD  
BASES AHEAD OF THE INCOMING FRONT. THE MAIN AXIS OF THE FRONT  
WILL SHIFT EAST ABOUT 10Z-16Z. IT WILL CORRESPOND WITH A TREND  
TO SOUTHWEST WINDS, A DECREASE IN LLWS, AND ONE LAST ROUND OF  
LIGHT RAIN SHOWERS. HOWEVER, AFTER 16Z, IMPROVING CONDITIONS ARE  
EXPECTED FOR ALL TERMINALS. WINDS WILL REMAIN ELEVATED, TOWARDS  
7-13 KNOTS SUSTAINED WITH GUSTS 16-21 KNOTS, LOCALLY INCREASING  
TOWARDS 30 KNOTS AT KMSS ABOUT 22Z SUNDAY.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
MONDAY: VFR. WINDY WITH GUSTS TO 30 KT. NO SIG WX.  
MONDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
TUESDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. NO SIG WX.  
TUESDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE RA.  
WEDNESDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS IFR POSSIBLE. DEFINITE RA.  
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS IFR POSSIBLE. DEFINITE  
RA.  
THURSDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH LOCAL IFR POSSIBLE. LIKELY RA, CHANCE  
SN.  
 
 
   
CLIMATE  
 
TEMPERATURES TODAY HAVE BECOME QUITE WARM, PARTICULARLY IN  
NORTHERN NEW YORK. POSSIBLE DAILY RECORDS FOR 3/7 INCLUDE:  
 
MASSENA (MSS)  
RECORD HIGH: 60|1973  
 
SARANAC LAKE (SLK)  
RECORD HIGH: 58|1946  
 
 
   
EQUIPMENT  
 
THE KBTV ASOS HAS SUFFERED A COMMUNICATIONS FAILURE. THE ISSUE  
HAS BEEN DIAGNOSED, BUT THERE IS CURRENTLY NO ESTIMATED TIME OF  
RETURN TO SERVICE. THE AFFECTED COMMUNICATIONS LINE IS NOT  
SERVICED BY THE NWS. TERMINAL AERODROME FORECASTS WILL CONTINUE,  
BUT REGULAR OBSERVATIONS MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE.  
 
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...KUTIKOFF  
DISCUSSION...KREMER/HASTINGS/KUTIKOFF  
AVIATION...NEILES  
CLIMATE...NWS BTV  
EQUIPMENT...NWS BTV  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page
Main Text Page