718  
FXUS61 KBTV 160643  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
243 AM EDT THU APR 16 2026  
   
WHAT HAS CHANGED  
 
AS OF 242 AM EDT THURSDAY...  
 
WHILE HIGH-RES MODELED INGREDIENTS FOR SEVERE STORMS LOOK MORE  
FAVORABLE TODAY, THE STATIONARY FRONTAL BOUNDARY IS LOCATED  
FARTHER SOUTH THAN ANTICIPATED, WHICH COULD MAKE IT DIFFICULT  
FOR THE EXPECTED INSTABILITY AND WARMTH TO MATERIALIZE THIS  
AFTERNOON FOR CENTRAL VERMONT. BASED ON THIS, NO MAJOR CHANGES  
TO THE THUNDERSTORM FORECAST THIS AFTERNOON, BUT HAVE INCLUDED  
THE MENTION OF GUSTY WINDS IN THE FORECAST WITH STRONGER STORMS.  
CONFIDENCE HAS ALSO INCREASED FOR SOME FOG, MIST, AND/OR  
DRIZZLE TONIGHT, SIMILAR TO LAST NIGHT.  
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
AS OF 242 AM EDT THURSDAY...  
 
1. ROUNDS OF SHOWERS EXPECTED TODAY AFTER FOG AND LOW CLOUDS  
LIFT THIS MORNING, WITH HEIGHTENED THUNDERSTORM CHANCES ACROSS  
SOUTHERN VERMONT THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING. PLEASE STAY WEATHER-  
AWARE AND HAVE A METHOD OF RECEIVING WATCHES AND WARNINGS.  
 
2. ADDITIONAL SHOWERS, MIST, DRIZZLE, AND FOG MAY MAKE FOR  
HAZARDOUS TRAVEL AGAIN TONIGHT, THEN THE BOUNDARY FINALLY CLEARS OUT  
OF OUR AREA FRIDAY. PLEASE USE CAUTION WHEN DRIVING IN LOW  
VISIBILITIES.  
 
3. RAINY AND WINDY WEATHER IS EXPECTED FOR THE LATTER HALF OF  
THE WEEKEND AS ANOTHER FRONTAL SYSTEM IMPACTS THE REGION.  
BRIEF MOUNTAIN SNOW IS POSSIBLE LATE SUNDAY INTO SUNDAY NIGHT  
WITH A COLD FRONTAL PASSAGE.  
 
4. MUCH COLDER BUT DRY TO START NEXT WEEK, THOUGH TRENDING  
WARMER WITH CHANCES OF RAIN BY MID WEEK.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
AS OF 242 AM EDT THURSDAY...  
 
KEY MESSAGE 1: A STALLED FRONTAL BOUNDARY LOCATED ACROSS THE SOUTHERN  
PORTION OF OUR FORECAST AREA THIS MORNING IS BRINGING LIGHT SHOWERS,  
MIST, DRIZZLE, LOW CLOUDS, AND PATCHY DENSE FOG THIS MORNING IN  
LIGHT WINDS AND ABUNDANT MOISTURE. VISIBILITIES ARE POOREST (1/4 TO  
2 MILES) ACROSS THE NORTHERN TIER OF OUR FORECAST AREA, NORTH OF THE  
BOUNDARY. LATER THIS MORNING, AFTER SHOWERS MOVE OUT OF THE REGION  
AND FOG GRADUALLY MIXES OUT, WE ANTICIPATE A DRY PERIOD AHEAD OF OUR  
NEXT LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM, AND THE STATIONARY BOUNDARY IS EXPECTED TO  
SHIFT NORTHWARD, DRAWING WARMER AIR INTO THE NORTHERN NEW YORK AND  
VERMONT. IN SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL VERMONT, AS WELL AS PORTIONS OF THE  
ADIRONDACKS AND SOUTHERN CHAMPLAIN VALLEY, THERE SHOULD BE SOME  
AREAS OF CLEARING, ALLOWING TEMPERATURES TO RISE INTO THE 70S (WELL  
ABOVE SEASONAL AVERAGES), WITH HIGHS IN THE 60S REMAINING CLOSER TO  
THE INTERNATIONAL BORDER AND ON MOUNTAINS. AN AREA OF LOW PRESSURE  
WILL RIDE ALONG THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING,  
BRINGING MULTIPLE ROUNDS OF SHOWERS. THE HREF CONTINUES TO BE  
AGGRESSIVE WITH INSTABILITY IN THE SOUTHERN CHAMPLAIN VALLEY AND  
SOUTHERN VERMONT WITH ABOUT 65-85% CHANCE OF 500+ J/KG CAPE AND 45-  
65% CHANCE OF 1000+ J/KG CAPE AS DEW POINTS ARE EXPECTED TO RISE TO  
AROUND 60 F. NAM3K ALSO SHOWS MOST UNSTABLE CAPE/MUCAPE AT AROUND  
1600-1800 J/KG, WHICH COULD ASSIST IN THE PRODUCTION OF HAIL. ONE  
FLY IN THE OINTMENT FOR SEVERE DEVELOPMENT IS THAT THE STATIONARY  
BOUNDARY MAY NOT MAKE IT VERY FAR NORTH IN TIME FOR THE MAIN FORCING  
TO COME THROUGH THIS AFTERNOON, WHICH COULD HAVE US UNDERPERFORM IN  
WARMTH AND INSTABILITY. HOWEVER, HREF MEAN 0-6 KM SHEAR CONTINUES TO  
LOOK DYNAMIC WITH 45-60 KNOTS, AND 0-1 KM SRH BETWEEN 70-220 M2/S2  
AND 0-3 KM SRH BETWEEN 180-310 M2/S2 ALSO SUPPORT THIS. NAM3K  
SUGGESTS EFFECTIVE BULK WIND DIFFERENCE AROUND 55-60 KNOTS. DUE TO  
THE FAVORABLE INGREDIENTS, ISOLATED TO SCATTERED SEVERE STORMS ARE  
POSSIBLE ACROSS SOUTHERN VERMONT. THE MAIN THREAT WOULD BE DAMAGING  
WINDS, THOUGH LARGE HAIL IS POSSIBLE AS WELL. DUE TO THE RELATIVELY  
FAST MOTION OF THE STORMS, FLASH FLOODING IS NOT EXPECTED DESPITE  
MODEST PROJECTED PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUES AROUND 1.20-1.40".  
 
KEY MESSAGE 2: ANOTHER NIGHT OF SHOWERS, MIST, DRIZZLE, AND FOG IS  
LIKELY TONIGHT AS THE FRONT SINKS BACK SOUTHWARD ACROSS THE FORECAST  
AREA. ONE THING WE'RE NOT SEEING AS MUCH OF TONIGHT IS A STRONG  
ATMOSPHERIC INVERSION TRAPPING MOISTURE THAT WAS PRESENT THIS  
MORNING. HOWEVER, THE MOISTURE (PRECIPITABLE WATER VALUES 1.00-  
1.50") LOOKS TO LINGER, AND MODELS CONTINUE TO SUGGEST AT LEAST A  
MINOR INVERSION SETTING UP FOR A PORTION OF TONIGHT. TEMPERATURES  
TONIGHT WILL ALSO BE LARGELY SIMILAR TO LAST NIGHT, WITH LOWS IN THE  
UPPER 40S AND 50S, FAIRLY MILD FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. ON FRIDAY, THE  
FRONTAL BOUNDARY HAUNTING THE REGION WITH MOISTURE LOOKS TO FINALLY  
SHIFT SOUTHWARDS AND INTO THE ATLANTIC OCEAN BY THE END OF THE DAY.  
THIS MEANS DRAMATICALLY DECREASING CHANCES OF SHOWERS AND  
TEMPERATURES REMAINING ABOVE NORMAL WITH HIGHS IN THE 60S AND LOWER  
70S.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 3: LOW PRESSURE WILL SLIDE BY WELL TO OUR NORTH SATURDAY  
AND SATURDAY NIGHT, DRAGGING A COLD FRONT ALONG IN ITS WAKE.  
TEMPERATURES WILL WARM ON A 50-55 KNOT SOUTHERLY 850 MB JET AHEAD OF  
THE FRONT, ALLOWING HIGHS TO RISE INTO THE 60S AND LOWER 70S.  
EFFICIENT MIXING WILL BRING WINDY CONDITIONS SATURDAY AFTERNOON INTO  
THE OVERNIGHT AS THE CORE OF THE JET MOVES OVERHEAD. SOUTHERLY GUSTS  
OF 20 TO 30 MPH ARE LIKELY SATURDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT, WITH LOCALLY  
HIGHER GUSTS POSSIBLE IN THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY DUE TO CHANNELING AND  
ALONG THE NORTHERN SLOPES OF THE ADIRONDACKS DUE TO DOWNSLOPING. THE  
COLD FRONT IS EXPECTED TO MOVE THROUGH LATE SATURDAY NIGHT INTO  
EARLY SUNDAY, RESULTING IN TEMPERATURES AT THEIR WARMEST SATURDAY  
EVENING, THEN FALLING SLOWLY THROUGHOUT THE DAY SUNDAY IN BRISK  
WESTERLY WINDS AFTER THE FRONTAL PASSAGE. RAIN SHOWERS ARE MOST  
LIKELY SATURDAY EVENING THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING, COMING TO AN END  
FROM WEST TO EAST SUNDAY EVENING AND NIGHT AS DRIER AIR FLOWS IN  
FOLLOWING THE FRONTAL PASSAGE. AS THE SHOWERS END, THEY MAY CHANGE  
OVER BRIEFLY TO SNOW SHOWERS AS TEMPERATURES FALL INTO THE 20S AND  
LOWER 30S SUNDAY NIGHT. LITTLE TO NO SNOW ACCUMULATION IS EXPECTED,  
PARTICULARLY BELOW SUMMIT LEVELS, AS THE ATMOSPHERE SHOULD DRY OUT  
QUICKLY BEFORE TEMPERATURES FALL TOO LOW.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 4: FOLLOWING A COLD FRONT ON SUNDAY, A COOLER AND DRIER AIR  
MASS WILL FILTER INTO THE REGION FOR THE START OF NEXT WEEK WITH  
PERHAPS SOME SNOW SHOWER CHANCES ON MONDAY. BRISK NORTHWEST FLOW  
WILL DRAW COOLER AND DRIER CANADIAN AIR AS HIGH PRESSURE BEGINS TO  
SHIFT EAST OUT OF THE GREAT LAKES. A TRAILING SHORTWAVE ON THE  
BACKSIDE OF A DEPARTING TROUGH WILL SHIFT SOUTH ON THE LEADING EDGE  
OF THE HIGH WITH A FEW CHANCES FOR SNOW SHOWERS IN THE HIGHER  
TERRAIN. WITH 925MB TEMPERATURES MONDAY TO -5C TO -9C, SFC HIGHS  
WILL STRUGGLE TO REACH 40 AREAWIDE, WITH THE HIGHER TERRAIN HUGGING  
THE FREEZING MARK. THE GFS MODEL PROGS THE 520DAM LINE TO SAG SOUTH  
INTO THE MOHAWK VALLEY OF NEW YORK AND SOUTHERN VERMONT FURTHER  
SUPPORTING COLD SURFACE TEMPERATURES AND COOL ENOUGH MID LEVEL  
ATMOSPHERIC PROFILES TO SUPPORT A SATURATED THIN DGZ. SNOW GROWTH  
WILL BE LIMITED, HOWEVER, DUE TO A LOW EQUILIBRIUM LEVEL TO 700MB  
AND A SIGNIFICANTLY DRY LOW LEVEL. ANY SNOW SHOWERS THAT DO FORM  
WILL LIKELY FALL AS VIRGA FOR MOST OF THE REGION, OUTSIDE OF THE  
HIGHER SUMMITS.  
 
TOWARDS MID WEEK, MODEL AGREEMENT DECREASES RAPIDLY WITH THE  
PLACEMENT OF SEVERAL TROUGHS ASSOCIATED WITH AN UPPER LOW. THOUGH,  
DO ANTICIPATE SOME INCREASING PRECIPITATION CHANCES AS MOISTURE  
RETURNS TO THE AREA WITH TEMPERATURES ON THE COOL SIDE.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /06Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/  
 
THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY...CHANGEABLE CONDITIONS WILL CONTINUE TONIGHT WITH  
WINDS LIGHT AND VARIABLE WITH A STATIONARY BOUNDARY JUST TO THE  
SOUTH OF THE REGION. AREAS OF LOW CLOUDS NORTH OF THE BOUNDARY ARE  
LEADING TO POCKETS OF IFR TO LIFR WITH SOME LIGHT SHOWERS MOVING  
EASTWARD. VISIBILITIES ARE NOT QUITE AS LOW AS LAST NIGHT VARYING AT  
TIMES BETWEEN 1/2SM TO 4SM. TO THE SOUTH AND EAST, LOW CLOUDS HAVE  
NOT MATERIALIZED AT RUT/MPV, BUT ARE EXPECTED TO TREND TOWARDS MVFR,  
WITH PERHAPS SOME BRIEF IFR CLOSER TO SUNRISE. ALL IN ALL,  
CONFIDENCE IS HIGHEST IN IFR CLOSER TO THE INTERNATIONAL BORDER  
WHERE DETACHMENT FROM THE BOUNDARY IS LARGEST WITH SATURATED LOW  
LEVELS. MSS/EFK/BTV WILL BE THE MOST LIKELY TO SEE PERIODS OF  
IFR/LIFR TONIGHT, HOWEVER, CURRENT OBSERVATIONS DENOTE AN AREA OF  
VFR ACROSS THE ADIRONDACKS AND CPV. WHILE THE GLAMP DENOTES  
PROLONGED IFR, TRENDS UPSTREAM SHOW INCREASING CEILING FROM THE  
SOUTHWEST IN THE AFOREMENTIONED AREAS. ONCE THE DRIZZLE AND RAIN  
CLEARS CLOSER TO SUNRISE BETWEEN 10-13Z, THE EXPECTATION REMAINS FOR  
MOST TERMINALS TO RETURN TO AT LEAST MVFR WITH BRIEF IFR, BEFORE  
TRENDING BACK TO VFR BETWEEN 14-16Z. SIMILAR TO YESTERDAY,  
SOUTH/SOUTHWEST WINDS WILL DEVELOP LATE THIS MORNING WITH IMPROVING  
AVIATION CONDITIONS. SOME LIGHT SHOWERS MAY BE POSSIBLE CLOSER TO  
16-18Z ACROSS NORTHERN NEW YORK, BUT THE MAIN TERMINAL IMPACTS THIS  
AFTERNOON WILL BE POSSIBLE THUNDERSTORMS, TIMING DETAILS FOR THESE  
STORMS WILL BECOME BETTER FOR THE 12Z TAF PACKAGE.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
FRIDAY: MVFR/IFR CONDITIONS POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHRA.  
FRIDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
SATURDAY: VFR. WINDY WITH GUSTS TO 30 KT. NO SIG WX.  
SATURDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. LIKELY  
SHRA.  
SUNDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH LOCAL IFR POSSIBLE. LIKELY SHRA.  
SUNDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHRA,  
SLIGHT CHANCE SHSN.  
MONDAY: VFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SHRA, SLIGHT CHANCE SHSN.  
 
 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
WHAT HAS CHANGED...STORM  
DISCUSSION...DANZIG/STORM  
AVIATION...DANZIG  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page
Main Text Page