087  
FXUS61 KBTV 092325  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
725 PM EDT MON MAR 9 2026  
   
WHAT HAS CHANGED
 
 
AS OF 334 PM EDT MONDAY...  
 
A FLOOD WATCH WAS ISSUED FOR ALL OF NORTHERN NEW YORK AND  
NORTHERN/CENTRAL VERMONT THROUGH THURSDAY AFTERNOON. THE WIND  
ADVISORY THAT WAS IN EFFECT IN THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY HAS BEEN  
CANCELED.  
 

 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
AS OF 334 PM EDT MONDAY...  
 
1. RIVER ICE BREAK UP IS EXPECTED TO OCCUR OVER THE NEXT FEW  
DAYS. ICE JAMS AND ASSOCIATED FLOODING ARE POSSIBLE. OPEN WATER  
FLOODING IS ALSO POSSIBLE, MAINLY LATER WEDNESDAY THROUGH THURSDAY.  
 
2. UNSEASONABLE WARMTH WILL PERSIST THROUGH TOMORROW WITH NEAR  
RECORD DAILY HIGH AND LOW TEMPERATURES.  
 
3. A STRONG LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM WILL CREATE A TEMPERATURE  
BATTLEGROUND OVER THE REGION ON WEDNESDAY, RESULTING IN LARGE  
DIFFERENCES OVER SHORT DIFFERENCES. MAIN PRECIPITATION HAZARD WILL  
BE POTENTIAL FOR FREEZING RAIN, WITH GREATEST LIKELIHOOD OF TRAVEL  
IMPACTS OVER THE NORTHERN ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY WEDNESDAY MORNING.  
 
4. MUCH COLDER WEATHER IS EXPECTED ON THURSDAY. DIFFICULT  
TRAVEL COULD RESULT FROM SHARPLY FALLING TEMPERATURES THAT  
COULD FREEZE SOME STANDING WATER, ALONG WITH GUSTY WINDS.  
 
5. SEASONABLE TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED FOR THE LATER HALF OF  
THIS WEEK INTO THE WEEKEND, WITH AN ACTIVE WEATHER PATTERN  
CONTINUING TO BRING SEVERAL CHANCES OF PRECIPITATION TO THE  
REGION.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
AS OF 254 PM EDT MONDAY...  
 
KEY MESSAGE 1: A FLOOD WATCH IS NOW IN EFFECT UNTIL 2 PM THURSDAY, FOR  
BOTH POTENTIAL ICE JAM FLOODING AND OPEN WATER FLOODING. ANYONE WHO  
LIVES, DRIVES, OR WORKS ALONG AREA RIVERS AND STREAMS SHOULD REMAIN  
ALERT FOR RAPIDLY CHANGING WATER LEVELS THROUGH MID WEEK.  
 
WE'VE SEEN A BIT OF A LULL IN RIVER CONDITIONS SO FAR TODAY AS  
RUNOFF SLOWED DUE TO COLDER TEMPERATURES AND LESS SNOWMELT  
OVERNIGHT. HOWEVER, WITH TEMPERATURES WELL INTO THE 50S AND EVEN  
CLOSE TO 60F THIS AFTERNOON, THIS DOWNWARD TREND WILL SOON REVERSE,  
WITH RIVER LEVELS STARTING TO RISE AGAIN BY THIS EVENING. WE'LL  
REMAIN MILD OVERNIGHT AND WILL WARM BACK INTO THE 50S AND 60S ON  
TUESDAY, SO SNOWMELT WILL CONTINUE PRETTY MUCH UNABATED OVER THE  
NEXT 24-36 HOURS. THE RESULTANT RIVER RISES ARE PRETTY MUCH CERTAIN  
TO CAUSE RIVER ICE TO BREAK UP, ESPECIALLY SINCE WE ALREADY SAW  
SEVERAL ICE JAMS ON SUNDAY. WHILE WE CAN PREDICT THE CONDITIONS THAT  
CAUSE ICE JAMS FAIRLY READILY, WHEN OR WHERE JAMS WILL SPECIFICALLY  
FORM AND HOW SIGNIFICANT ANY FLOODING WILL BE ARE NEARLY IMPOSSIBLE  
TO PINPOINT. THAT BEING SAID, THOSE STRETCHES THAT CURRENTLY HAVE  
ICE JAMS IN PLACE, INCLUDING ALONG THE MAD RIVER, THE AUSABLE RIVER,  
AND THE MISSISQUOI RIVER, WILL BE PARTICULARLY SUSCEPTIBLE TO  
ADDITIONAL FLOODING.  
 
AS WE HEAD INTO THE MIDDLE OF THE WEEK, THESE SNOWMELT-INDUCED RIVER  
RISES WILL BE EXACERBATED BY WIDESPREAD RAIN WHICH IS EXPECTED TO  
OCCUR WEDNESDAY INTO THURSDAY. THE RAIN WILL QUICKLY TURN OVER TO  
SNOW FROM WEST TO EAST ON THURSDAY AS A COLD FRONT CROSSES THE  
REGION. SNOWMELT WILL LIKEWISE END AS TEMPERATURES DROP BACK BELOW  
FREEZING. TOTAL LIQUID PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS ARE EXPECTED TO RANGE  
FROM AROUND 0.50 INCH IN THE LOWER CT RIVER VALLEY TO AROUND 1.25  
INCHES ACROSS MUCH OF NORTHERN NEW YORK, THOUGH SOME OF THAT MAY  
WELL FALL AS FROZEN PRECIPITATION. STILL, THE RAIN COMBINED WITH UP  
TO AN ADDITIONAL 2-3 INCHES OF SNOWMELT WILL LIKELY BE ENOUGH TO  
FLUSH OUT MOST OF THE ICE FROM AREA RIVERS. HOWEVER, THERE ARE  
INDICATIONS THAT SOME RIVERS COULD RISE ABOVE FLOOD STAGE EVEN ONCE  
CLEARED OF ICE DUE TO THE COMBINED RUNOFF FROM RAIN AND SNOWMELT.  
OTTER CREEK AND THE AUSABLE, WINOOSKI, LAMOILLE, AND MAD RIVERS HAVE  
THE HIGHEST CHANCES OF EXCEEDING FLOOD STAGE, THOUGH REALLY ANY  
RIVER CAN'T BE RULED OUT AT THIS POINT. REGARDLESS, IF OPEN WATER  
FLOODING WERE TO OCCUR, THE MOST LIKELY CREST TIME WOULD BE SOMETIME  
THURSDAY. AND REMEMBER, THIS IS ONLY APPLICABLE ON RIVERS THAT  
COMPLETELY FLUSH OUT THEIR ICE.  
 
WHETHER IT'S ICE JAM FLOODING OR OPEN WATER FLOODING, WE STRONGLY  
URGE EVERYONE TO REMAIN CAUTIOUS ALONG AREA WATERWAYS. RIVER ICE CAN  
BREAK UP VERY SUDDENLY, AND WATER CAN RISE RAPIDLY IF JAMS DO OCCUR.  
RIVER ICE IS VERY UNSTABLE AND IT IS ABSOLUTELY NOT SAFE TO APPROACH  
ICE JAMS OR WALK ON THE ICE. AND EVEN IF RIVERS AND STREAMS REMAIN  
WITHIN THEIR BANKS, THE WATER WILL BE RUNNING HIGH AND FAST AND IT  
WILL BE VERY COLD, SO PLEASE STAY WELL AWAY FROM RIVER BANKS.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 2: IT HAS BEEN A WARM AND BREEZY DAY AS EXPECTED WITH  
TEMPERATURES IN THE UPPER 50S TO MID 60S THIS AFTERNOON. HOWEVER,  
PERSISTENT, THICKER HIGH CLOUDS IN NORTHERN NEW YORK AND NORTHERN  
PORTIONS OF VERMONT HAVE LIMITED INSOLATION/SUNSHINE. THE REDUCED  
SOLAR RADIATION MAY HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO SLIGHTLY LESS STEEP SURFACE  
LAPSE RATES AND POTENTIAL FOR HIGHER MAGNITUDE GUSTS, AND THE WIND  
ADVISORY THAT HAD BEEN IN EFFECT WAS CANCELED. THE GUSTY  
SOUTH/SOUTHWEST WINDS HAVE STILL HELPED LOWER HUMIDITY TO THE POINT  
THAT IF WE HAD DRY FUELS, FIRE WEATHER WOULD BE A CONCERN AS  
RELATIVE HUMIDITIES ARE 20 TO 30% THIS AFTERNOON IN MUCH OF THE  
REGION.  
 
GIVEN HOW DRY THE AIR IS, WHERE WINDS DIE OFF TEMPERATURES TONIGHT  
WILL FALL QUITE A BIT, WITH SUB-FREEZING VALUES POSSIBLE IN  
SHELTERED PORTIONS OF THE ADIRONDACKS AND EASTERN VERMONT.  
OTHERWISE, CONTINUED THAWING WILL PERSIST AND WITH CLEAR SKIES,  
TEMPERATURES WILL QUICKLY RISE TOMORROW BACK INTO THE 50S AND  
60S BY AFTERNOON. STILL EXPECTING WINDS TO SHIFT FAIRLY ABRUPTLY  
TO NORTHERLY AS A COLD FRONT SLIPS SOUTHWARD DURING THE DAY;  
NORTH OF THE FRONT WE'LL SEE TEMPERATURE STABILIZE OR EVEN FALL  
DURING THE AFTERNOON. THERE IS SOME UNCERTAINTY ON THE  
TIMING/LOCATION OF THIS WIND SHIFT SUCH THAT HIGH TEMPERATURES  
ARE A BIT TRICKY. THINK SOUTHERN PORTIONS OF VERMONT WILL EASILY  
BE ABOUT AS WARM AS TODAY, WHILE MOST OTHER AREAS COULD BE UP TO  
SEVERAL DEGREES COOLER. THAT BEING SAID, RECORD HIGH  
TEMPERATURES FOR THE DAY AT LONG TERM OBSERVING SITES ARE  
SEVERAL DEGREES LOWER THAN THEY WERE TODAY, SO RECORD HIGHS  
WILL BE POSSIBLE (SEE CLIMATE SECTION FOR DETAILS).  
 
KEY MESSAGE 3: OF PRIMARY CONCERN FOR WINTER WEATHER ON WEDNESDAY WILL  
BE STRONG COLD AIR DRAINAGE FROM SOUTHERN CANADA, WITH A VERY COLD,  
SHALLOW AIR MASS BEING DRAWN DOWN OUR VALLEYS TOMORROW NIGHT. THINK  
THE ENSEMBLE GUIDANCE THAT GOES INTO OUR DEFAULT MODEL BLEND IS A  
LITTLE MISLEADING AT THIS TIME WITH REGARDS TO TEMPERATURES, SO WE  
HAVE HEAVILY USED SOME OF THE MORE SKILLFUL, HIGHER  
RESOLUTION/MESOSCALE DATA FOR THE FORECAST AT THIS TIME. THIS  
RESULTS IN MUCH LOWER TEMPERATURES IN SOME AREAS, ESPECIALLY VALLEYS  
IN NORTHERN NEW YORK, THE NORTHERN CHAMPLAIN VALLEY, AND EAST OF THE  
GREEN MOUNTAINS. THOSE EASTERN AREAS IN PARTICULAR ARE MUCH COLDER  
DURING THE DAY AS IT WILL BE HARD TO DISLODGE THE COLD AIR WITH  
HEAVILY INVERTED TEMPERATURES EXPECTED. FREEZING RAIN ACCUMULATIONS  
ARE COMPLICATED WITH ANTECEDENT WARMTH AND DAYTIME HEATING  
MAKING IT HARDER FOR ICE TO ACCUMULATE, PARTICULARLY LIGHT  
PRECIPITATION AND AFTER SUNRISE. THEREFORE, THE HIGHEST  
CONFIDENCE IN IMPACTFUL FREEZING RAIN IS IN NORTHERNMOST  
PORTIONS OF NEW YORK.  
 
AMONG THE 12Z GEFS, THE STORM TRACK LOOKS PRETTY WELL  
CLUSTERED NEAR OR JUST NORTH OF THE INTERNATIONAL BORDER WEDNESDAY  
NIGHT, WHICH WAS A SHIFT NORTHWARD FROM THE 00Z GUIDANCE. BY  
COMPARISON, THE 12Z ENS MEMBERS SHIFTED LESS BUT TRENDED DEEPER  
WITH LOW PRESSURE. A TRACK FARTHER NORTH/WEST WILL TEND TO  
LIMIT POTENTIAL FOR WIDESPREAD HEAVY RAIN, AND ERODE THE SHALLOW  
COLD AIR A BIT FASTER IN NORTHERN NEW YORK, BUT A STRONGER  
SYSTEM COULD HELP MAINTAIN THE COLD AIR DAMMING/NORTHEASTERLY  
FLOW.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 4: WHILE THERE ARE TYPICAL TIMING DIFFERENCES FOR  
THE PASSAGE OF A STRONG COLD FRONT, THERE APPEARS TO BE A  
CONSENSUS THAT TEMPERATURES WILL TUMBLE THURSDAY MORNING FROM  
WEST TO EAST. TEMPERATURES FALLING BELOW FREEZING, ESPECIALLY IN  
HIGHER ELEVATIONS, WILL LEAD TO STANDING WATER TO FREEZE. GIVEN  
WIDESPREAD RAIN WEDNESDAY NIGHT AND THE POTENTIAL FOR QUICKLY  
FALLING TEMPERATURES, THINK THAT GUSTY WESTERLY WINDS 30 TO 40  
MPH WILL NOT PREVENT POTENTIAL TRAVEL CONCERNS FOR BLACK ICE  
CONCURRENT WITH THE FLOOD CONCERNS DISCUSSED IN KEY MESSAGE 1.  
AT THIS TIME PRECIPITATION, WHICH WOULD BE IN THE FORM OF SNOW,  
LOOKS MINIMAL WITH UNBLOCKED FLOW AND A LOT OF DRY AIR DIRECTLY  
BEHIND THE FRONT.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 5: SEASONABLE TEMPERATURES AND AN ACTIVE WEATHER  
PATTERN ARE EXPECTED ACROSS THE REGION LATE THIS WEEK INTO THE  
WEEKEND. AFTER THE WARMTH EARLIER IN THE WEEK, HIGH TEMPERATURES  
FOR FRIDAY INTO THE WEEKEND WILL BE IN THE UPPER 30S AND LOW  
40S, WHICH IS MORE TYPICAL FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. A CLIPPER  
SYSTEM LOOKS TO BRING WIDESPREAD LIGHT SNOWFALL LATE FRIDAY INTO  
SATURDAY, ESPECIALLY ACROSS THE ADIRONDACKS, WITH OVERNIGHT LOW  
TEMPERATURES DROPPING INTO THE TEENS AND 20S AREAWIDE. AFTER  
THE CLIPPER SYSTEM EXITS ON SATURDAY, ANOTHER SYSTEM LOOKS TO  
IMPACT THE REGION ON SUNDAY INTO THE BEGINNING OF NEXT WEEK,  
WITH THE ASSOCIATED WARM FRONT LIFTING ACROSS THE REIGN ON  
SUNDAY AND THEN THE TRAILING COLD FRONT PUSHING ACROSS LATE  
SUNDAY INTO MONDAY. AT THIS TIME PERIOD, THERE IS STILL PLENTY  
OF UNCERTAINTY REGARDING THIS SYSTEM, ESPECIALLY IN REGARDS TO  
PRECIPITATION TYPE, WITH MORE DETAILS EXPECTED AS WE GET CLOSER.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /00Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/
 
 
THROUGH 00Z WEDNESDAY...VFR CONDITIONS PREVAIL. SOUTH TO  
SOUTHWEST WINDS ARE BEGINNING TO SLOW, BUT A FEW REPORTS WITH  
GUSTS 12-17 KNOTS AND GUSTS AROUND 20-27 KNOTS ARE STILL  
OCCURRING AT KBTV AND KMSS. LLWS REMAINS WITH WEST-SOUTHWEST  
WINDS AT 35-45 KNOTS, AND IT WILL DIMINISH BETWEEN 03Z-08Z. A  
FRONT WILL MOVE NORTH TO SOUTH BETWEEN 12Z AND 20Z, WITH A FAST  
SWITCH TO NORTH WINDS. MOISTURE WILL OVERRUN THE BOUNDARY AFTER  
21Z, WITH SOME SHOWERS OR DRIZZLE APPROACHING KMSS OR KSLK NEAR  
OR AFTER 00Z WEDNESDAY. SO CEILINGS WILL BE TRENDING TOWARDS  
2500-5000 FT AGL TOWARDS THE END OF THE NEXT 24 HOURS.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
TUESDAY NIGHT: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS VFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHRA,  
DEFINITE FZRA.  
WEDNESDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS IFR POSSIBLE. DEFINITE SHRA,  
DEFINITE FZRA.  
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS IFR POSSIBLE. WINDY WITH  
GUSTS TO 30 KT. DEFINITE SHRA.  
THURSDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. WINDY WITH GUSTS  
TO 30 KT. CHANCE RA, SLIGHT CHANCE SN.  
THURSDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
FRIDAY: VFR. CHANCE RA, CHANCE SN.  
FRIDAY NIGHT: MAINLY MVFR, WITH LOCAL IFR POSSIBLE. LIKELY SN.  
SATURDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS VFR POSSIBLE. SLIGHT CHANCE SN.  
 

 
   
CLIMATE
 
 
RECORD HIGH MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES ARE POSSIBLE TUESDAY. AS OF  
NOW, THIS IS FAVORED AT MONTPELIER (MPV) WHERE THE CURRENT  
FORECAST MATCHES THE DAILY RECORD:  
 
MPV: 60/2016  
 

 
   
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 PLAN TO RESTORE ITS FUNCTIONALITY  
TOMORROW, MARCH 10TH. THE FOLLOWING NOAA WEATHER RADIO  
TRANSMITTERS MAY BE ABLE TO PROVIDE SERVICE DURING THE 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...FLOOD WATCH THROUGH THURSDAY AFTERNOON FOR VTZ001>011-016>021.  
NY...FLOOD WATCH THROUGH THURSDAY AFTERNOON FOR NYZ026>031-034-035-  
087.  
 

 
 

 
 
WHAT HAS CHANGED...KUTIKOFF  
DISCUSSION...HASTINGS/KREMER/KUTIKOFF  
AVIATION...HAYNES  
CLIMATE...NWS BTV  
EQUIPMENT...NWS BTV  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page Main Text Page