450  
FXUS61 KBTV 191004  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
604 AM EDT SUN APR 19 2026  
   
WHAT HAS CHANGED  
 
AS OF 602 AM EDT SUNDAY...  
 
HAVE ISSUED A MORNING UPDATE TO HOURLY POPS, WEATHER, AND  
TEMPERATURES TO BETTER CAPTURE WHAT WE'RE OBSERVING THIS  
MORNING. WIDESPREAD RAIN IS EXPECTED TO CHANGE OVER TO SNOW OR  
RAIN AND SNOW MIX THIS MORNING IN WESTERN AREAS AND HIGHER  
ELEVATIONS, THEN MOVE EAST IN THE VALLEYS FOR THIS AFTERNOON.  
 
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
AS OF 230 AM EDT SUNDAY...  
 
1. GUSTY WINDS THIS MORNING, THEN WIDESPREAD RAIN WILL CHANGE  
TO SNOW OR RAIN AND SNOW MIX THIS AFTERNOON. MINOR SNOW  
ACCUMULATIONS AND SLUSHY, SLIPPERY TRAVEL IS POSSIBLE THROUGHOUT  
THE DAY TODAY.  
 
2. UNSEASONABLY COLD CONDITIONS SUNDAY NIGHT INTO MONDAY NIGHT  
WILL BE ACCOMPANIED BY A CHANCE OF SNOW SHOWERS, ESPECIALLY MONDAY  
MORNING. ANY STANDING WATER COULD FREEZE AND BECOME BLACK ICE  
EARLY MONDAY MORNING. COLD WEATHER WILL CONTINUE INTO TUESDAY.  
 
3. TEMPERATURES ARE FAVORED TO WARM BACK TO SEASONAL AVERAGES  
THROUGH THE WEEK WITH SOME POTENTIAL FOR SHOWERS LATE NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
AS OF 230 AM EDT SUNDAY...  
 
KEY MESSAGE 1: A LARGE, HIGHLY AMPLIFIED LONGWAVE TROUGH IS SUPPORTING  
A LARGE AREA OF PRECIPITATION ALONG A SLOWING COLD FRONT THAT IS  
CROSSING THE FORECAST AREA THIS MORNING. TEMPERATURES HAVE FALLEN 15-  
25 DEGREES SINCE THIS TIME YESTERDAY IN SEVERAL LOCATIONS, AND WE  
ANTICIPATE TEMPERATURES WILL CONTINUE TO FALL THIS MORNING AND INTO  
THE AFTERNOON, REACHING THE 30S (HIGHS OF THE DAY HAVE LIKELY  
ALREADY OCCURRED THIS MORNING), WELL BELOW SEASONAL AVERAGES.  
THE UPPER LEVEL JET CONFIGURATION, WITH JET STREAKS TO OUR NORTH  
AND SOUTH BY MIDDAY TODAY, WILL BE FAVORABLE FOR WIDESPREAD  
PRECIPITATION BEHIND THE SURFACE FRONT. CONFIDENCE OF  
PRECIPITATION IS HIGH TODAY, THOUGH CONFIDENCE OF PRECIPITATION  
TYPE IS A BIT MORE CHALLENGING BASED ON THE WIDE SPREAD OF  
MODELED TEMPERATURES THROUGHOUT THE DAY TODAY ACROSS NORTHERN  
NEW YORK AND VERMONT. HIGHEST CONFIDENCE OF SNOW EXISTS AT  
HIGHER ELEVATIONS, WHICH SHOULD SEE A QUICK CHANGEOVER TO SNOW  
FROM WEST (THE ADIRONDACKS EARLY MORNING) TO EAST (GREENS LATER  
IN THE MORNING). PROBABILITY OF GREATER THAN A TENTH OF AN INCH  
OF SNOW ACCUMULATION INCREASES SHARPLY IN THE ADIRONDACKS AROUND  
8 AM, THEN IN THE GREENS AROUND 11 AM. CONFIDENCE OF THIS SAME  
AMOUNT IN THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY THIS MORNING IS AROUND 30-40%,  
SIMILAR IN THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY AROUND MIDDAY WHERE WET BULB  
AND DYNAMIC COOLING MAY INFLUENCE TEMPERATURES. CONFIDENCE IS A  
LITTLE HIGHER IN THE STONE VALLEY (RUTLAND AREA) AND EAST OF THE  
GREEN MOUNTAINS WHERE COLDER AIR IS LIKELY TO COLLECT. ABOUT  
85-95% CHANCE OF HIGHER THAN A TENTH OF AN INCH IN AREAS EAST OF  
THE GREENS LIKE NEWPORT, THE NORTHEAST KINGDOM, AND  
MONTPELIER/BARRE AREA THIS AFTERNOON, THEN 50- 60% CHANCE IN  
RUTLAND IN THE AFTERNOON-EVENING HOURS. THE CONNECTICUT RIVER  
VALLEY TYPICALLY HOLDS ONTO MILDER TEMPERATURES, SO  
PROBABILITIES THERE ARE CLOSER TO 10-30% THIS EVENING. OVERALL,  
SNOW ACCUMULATIONS ARE NOT EXPECTED TO BE EXTREMELY IMPACTFUL OR  
NOTEWORTHY, WITH PERHAPS 4-7 INCHES AT THE HIGHEST ELEVATIONS  
AND A DUSTING TO A COUPLE TENTHS OF AN INCH IN VALLEYS. THE  
GROUND IS STARTING QUITE WARM, AND THE SUN IN APRIL IS STRONGER  
THAN IT WAS JUST A MONTH AGO, SO ANY SNOW AT LOWER ELEVATIONS  
MAY NOT STICK OR MAY MELT SHORTLY AFTER ACCUMULATING. IT'LL BE  
DIFFICULT TO GET A SENSE OF HOW MUCH SNOW ACTUALLY FELL IN MANY  
SPOTS. THE MAIN IMPACTS WOULD BE SOME SLUSHY, SLICK TRAVEL WHILE  
SNOW IS ACTIVELY FALLING, AND THIS SHOULD BE A NARROW WINDOW OF  
TIME FOR MOST AREAS WHERE PEOPLE LIVE AND DRIVE. EXTRA CAUTION  
SHOULD BE USED, THOUGH, IF TRAVELING THROUGH MOUNTAIN PASSES OR  
IN HIGH ELEVATION AREAS. SNOW MAY TAKE SPRINGTIME DRIVERS OFF  
GUARD, PARTICULARLY SINCE MOST CARS HAVE REMOVED SNOW TIRES AT  
THIS POINT IN THE SEASON. PRECIPITATION IS EXPECTED TO TAPER OFF  
TONIGHT AS DRIER AIR FLOWS IN.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 2: COLD AIR WILL CONTINUE TO FLOW INTO NORTHERN NEW YORK  
AND VERMONT SUNDAY EVENING AND SUNDAY NIGHT, WITH 850MB TEMPERATURES  
AS LOW AS 12-14 C. BY EARLY MONDAY MORNING, SURFACE TEMPERATURES ARE  
EXPECTED TO BE IN THE 20S AND LOWER 30S, WELL BELOW SEASONAL  
AVERAGES, WHICH COULD RESULT IN AREAS OF BLACK ICE FROM ANY  
LINGERING STANDING WATER. ANOTHER COLD FRONT WILL SWING THROUGH  
THE REGION AS WELL, BRINGING THE POTENTIAL OF SOME SNOW SHOWERS  
BACK UP TO AROUND 30-50% MONDAY MORNING THEN DECREASE THROUGHOUT  
THE AFTERNOON. THERE WILL BE SOME INSTABILITY, LINGERING LOW  
LEVEL MOISTURE, AND CONVERGENCE ALONG THIS FRONT TO SUPPORT AT  
LEAST SOME SHOWER ACTIVITY. ATMOSPHERE WILL STILL BE FAIRLY DRY  
MONDAY, SO ADDITIONAL ACCUMULATIONS LIKELY STAY MINIMAL. HIGHS  
MONDAY WILL LIKELY STRUGGLE TO REACH INTO THE 30S AND LOWER 40S,  
QUITE CHILLY FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. THE COLDEST NIGHT WILL BE  
MONDAY NIGHT, WHEN HIGH PRESSURE NOSES IN FROM THE MID- ATLANTIC  
AND OPTIMAL RADIATIONAL COOLING CONDITIONS ARRIVE. LOWS ARE  
FORECAST IN THE MID TEENS TO MID 20S UNDER CLEARING SKIES.  
TUESDAY WE'LL LIKELY HAVE A SLIGHT RECOVERY IN TEMPERATURES AS  
LIGHT SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST FLOW INCREASES AGAIN AND SUNSHINE  
DOMINATES AT LEAST THE MORNING HOURS. HIGHS COULD REACH INTO THE  
40S AND LOWER 50S BUT REMAIN BELOW TYPICAL TEMPERATURES FOR LATE  
APRIL. A BACKDOOR COLD FRONT COULD BRING SOME ADDITIONAL CHANCES  
OF PRECIPITATION TUESDAY NIGHT, 15-35% CHANCE.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 3: LONG WAVE RIDGING IS EXPECTED TO DISPLACE TROUGHING  
THROUGH NEXT WEEK, SHUNTING THE POLAR FRONT JET AND MAIN STORM TRACK  
NORTHEASTWARD INTO EASTERN CANADA. THIS PATTERN FAVORS SLOWLY  
WARMING TEMPERATURES DESPITE A CONTINUED NORTHWEST FLOW PATTERN.  
HIGHS ARE PROJECTED TO WARM FROM LOW/MID 50S MIDWEEK INTO THE 60S  
HEADING INTO THE WEEKEND WHILE LOWS CORRESPONDINGLY WARM FROM THE  
30S INTO THE 40S. A WEAK SHORTWAVE MAY PROVIDE SOME LIGHT SHOWER  
CHANCES INTO EXTREME NORTHEAST VERMONT WEDNESDAY NIGHT FROM A  
TRANSIENT CLIPPER SYSTEM, BUT BY AND LARGE MOST OF MID TO LATE NEXT  
WEEK LOOKS TO DRY. MODELS BEGIN TO DIVERGE LATE FRIDAY INTO THE  
WEEKEND AS THE EVOLUTION OF A LARGE SCALE UPPER LOW OVER THE  
CANADIAN MARITIMES DEVELOPS. A BACK DOOR COLD FRONT MAY LEAD TO SOME  
SHOWER CHANCES LATE FRIDAY INTO SATURDAY, BUT SHOWER CHANCES BECOME  
UNCERTAIN FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE WEEKEND. THE GFS ENSEMBLES DENOTE  
STRONGER UPPER LEVEL FLOW WHICH WILL KICK THE SYSTEM INTO THE  
ATLANTIC, ALLOWING FOR A CONNECTION OF A SOUTHERN STREAM OF ENERGY  
WITH ENERGY FROM AN UPPER LOW IN CENTRAL CANADA, RESULTING IN A  
DOUBLE BARREL LIKE PATTERN. THE EURO ENSEMBLES, HOWEVER, SHOW A MORE  
BLOCKED FLOW PATTERN WITH THE CANADIAN MARITIME SYSTEM POISED TO  
REMAIN STATIONARY THIS WEEKEND, LIMITING ANY MOISTURE ADVECTION INTO  
OUR REGION, WITH POTENTIALLY A DRIER END TO THE WEEKEND. THE  
EVOLUTION OF THIS NORTHERN ATLANTIC UPPER LOW WILL SET THE STAGE FOR  
OUR WEATHER PATTERN THIS WEEKEND AND NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /06Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/  
 
THROUGH 06Z MONDAY...AVIATION IMPACTS OVER THE NEXT 6 HOURS WILL BE  
DOMINATED BY A SLOWING COLD FRONT OVER NORTHERN NEW YORK, WITH THE  
PROCEEDING 18 HOURS BECOMING MORE COMPLEX WITH COLD AIR AND  
PRECIPITATION TYPE UNCERTAINTY. A LINE OF LIGHT SHOWERS IS CURRENTLY  
STALLING AROUND SLK WITH HIGH MVFR CEILINGS AS THE MAIN IMPACT. THIS  
FRONT WILL SLOWLY DRIFT EAST TOWARDS 10Z FOR PBG/BTV, WHERE LIGHT  
5-6SM RAIN SHOWERS ARE EXPECTED. FURTHER EAST TO MPV/EFK, A MARINE  
LAYER OFF THE ATLANTIC IS ADVECTING LOW MVFR CEILINGS WHICH SHOULD  
CONTINUE THROUGH THE NEXT 6 HOURS. WINDS WILL ALSO REMAIN GUSTY  
BEFORE RAIN SETS IN AT EACH TERMINAL. SOUTH/SOUTHWEST WINDS 10-15  
KNOTS WITH GUSTS BETWEEN 20-30 KNOTS (HIGHEST AT PBG/BTV) WILL  
CONTINUE UNTIL RAINFALL BEGINS. MSS SITS JUST WEST OF THE BOUNDARY  
AND SHOULD TREND TOWARDS VFR BY 08Z, WITH MEDIUM TO HIGH CONFIDENCE  
OF PREVAILING VFR THROUGH THE TAF PERIOD. A MORE CHALLENGING  
FORECAST EXISTS BEYOND 12Z AS A REINFORCING COLD FRONT WILL  
DRASTICALLY LOWER TEMPERATURES THROUGHOUT THE DAYTIME HOURS. COLD  
AIR WILL LEAD TO A MIX OF RAIN AND SNOW DURING THE MID TO LATE  
MORNING INTO THIS AFTERNOON. RAIN CHANGING TO SNOW WILL BEGIN AT SLK  
FIRST BETWEEN 12-13Z, WITH THIS SNOW BECOMING HEAVY AT TIMES AT THE  
ONSET, AND LIGHTENING BY 17Z. PRECIPITATION TYPE BECOMES CHALLENGING  
AT PBG/BTV WHERE TEMPERATURES MAY DYNAMICALLY COOL TO ALLOW FOR SOME  
SNOW WHICH MAY LEAD TO IFR VISIBILITIES THIS MORNING. HOWEVER, THERE  
IS STILL A CHANCE THAT PRECIPITATION MAY REMAIN AS JUST MODERATE  
RAIN WHICH WOULD LIMIT VISIBILITIES TO MVFR; BETTER GUIDANCE WILL BE  
PROVIDED IN THE 12Z TAF PACKAGE. REGARDLESS, RAIN MIXED WITH SNOW IS  
EXPECTED AT ALL TERMINALS OUTSIDE OF RUT/MSS, UNTIL 20-22Z WHEN THE  
BOUNDARY WILL CLEAR THE REGION TO THE EAST. MORE SCATTERED RAIN/SNOW  
SHOWERS MAY BE POSSIBLE THIS AFTERNOON, DRYING BY TONIGHT WITH WEST  
WINDS.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
MONDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
MONDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
TUESDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
TUESDAY NIGHT: VFR. SLIGHT CHANCE SHRA, SLIGHT CHANCE SHSN.  
WEDNESDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. SLIGHT CHANCE  
SHRA.  
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS VFR POSSIBLE. NO SIG WX.  
THURSDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
 
 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
WHAT HAS CHANGED...STORM  
DISCUSSION...STORM/DANZIG  
AVIATION...DANZIG  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page
Main Text Page