756  
FXUS61 KBTV 050633  
AFDBTV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BURLINGTON VT  
233 AM EDT FRI JUN 5 2026  
   
WHAT HAS CHANGED
 
 
AS OF 225 AM EDT FRIDAY...  
 
NO SIGNIFICANT CHANGES WERE MADE TO THE FORECAST.  
 

 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
AS OF 231 AM EDT FRIDAY...  
 
1. ANOTHER WARM AND DRY DAY TODAY BEFORE TEMPERATURES TREND  
COOLER DURING THE WEEKEND WITH SHOWERS AND EMBEDDED THUNDERSTORMS  
EXPECTED. SEVERE CHANCES REMAIN LOW AT THIS TIME.  
 
2. HOT AND DRY WEATHER EXPECTED TO RETURN.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
AS OF 225 AM EDT FRIDAY...  
 
KEY MESSAGE 1: MID TO UPPER LEVEL RIDGING WILL BEGIN TO BREAKDOWN TODAY  
WITH DEVELOPING WEST TO SOUTHWEST FLOW ALOFT HELPING TO SHUNT THE  
RIDGE AXIS SOUTH AND EAST. BEFORE ANY SYSTEMS CANNOT MOVE INTO THE  
REGION, WE WILL SEE ONE MORE WARM AND DRY DAY TODAY. A PERSISTENCE  
FORECAST FROM YESTERDAY IS EXPECTED WITH HIGHS AT OR 1 TO 2 DEGREES  
WARMER THAN YESTERDAY IN THE MID TO UPPER 80S. DEWPOINTS WILL BE IN  
THE 40S WITH GOOD MIXING KEEPING THINGS COMFORTABLE TODAY,  
MINIMIZING THE HEAT RISK. OUTSIDE OF CHANNELED FLOW IN THE ST.  
LAWRENCE VALLEY, WINDS TODAY WILL BE LIGHT 5-10 MPH WITH A LAKE  
BREEZE ON LAKE CHAMPLAIN. SOME MID TO HIGH CLOUDS WILL ALSO BE  
PRESENT INTO THE AFTERNOON, WITH INCREASING CLOUD COVER THIS  
EVENING. RELATIVE HUMIDITIES WILL FOLLOW YESTERDAYS INTO THE 25  
TO 35% RANGE.  
 
SHOWER CHANCES ASSOCIATED WILL INCREASE TONIGHT AS A LONG WAVE  
TROUGH WITH EMBEDDED SHORTWAVES SWINGS THROUGH QUEBEC INTO THE  
WEEKEND. AN INITIAL SHORTWAVE WILL FOCUS PRECIPITATION OVER NORTHERN  
NEW YORK AND INTERNATIONAL BORDER REGIONS FRIDAY NIGHT INTO SATURDAY  
MORNING. STRONG MOISTURE ADVECTION VIA A JET STREAM CONNECTION TO  
THE GULF WITH SURGE PWATS TO 1.5 TO 1.75 INCHES ACROSS THE ENTIRE  
REGION. GIVEN THE HIGH PRECIPITABLE WATER ASSOCIATED WITH THIS  
SYSTEM, LOCALIZED HEAVY RAIN MAY BE POSSIBLE WITH ANY SHOWERS THAT  
DO DEVELOP. THE RAIN LIKELY WONT BE A WIDESPREAD PERSISTENT RAIN,  
BUT RATHER FAVOR ROUNDS OF SHOWERS WHICH WILL REDUCE ANY THREAT OF  
FLOODING CONCERNS.  
 
THE INITIAL SHORTWAVE SHIFTS EAST BY LATE SATURDAY MORNING WITH SOME  
CLEARING POTENTIALLY IN ITS WAKE VIA SUBSIDENCE. SOME PEAKS OF  
SUNSHINE WILL ALLOW FOR AN INCREASE IN INSTABILITY, MAINLY IN  
THE SOUTHERN REGIONS WHERE DISTANCE FROM THE CORE OF THE TROUGH  
WILL BE GREATER. SURFACE INSTABILITY IS PROGGED TO CLIMB TOWARDS  
1200-1800 J/KG ON THE NAM3 AND HRRR MODEL SOUNDINGS, A SUBTLE  
INCREASING TREND FROM PREVIOUS RUNS. LIMITATIONS TO ANY SEVERE  
WEATHER WILL BE A DISCONNECT BETWEEN THE INSTABILITY AND MORE  
FAVORABLE DYNAMICS. HIGHER INSTABILITY IS EXPECTED TO THE SOUTH  
WITH MORE POTENTIAL CLEARING DURING DAY TIME HEATING, HOWEVER,  
STRONGER DYNAMICS AND SHEAR ARE CLOSER TO THE INTERNATIONAL  
BORDER, CLOSER TO THE UPPER LOW. REGARDLESS, THERE IS ENOUGH  
INSTABILITY NEAR THE SHEAR MAXIMUMS WITH ASSOCIATED HEIGHT FALLS  
TO SUPPORT SOME SCATTERED THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY, PARTICULARLY  
ACROSS NORTHERN NEW YORK AND THE INTERNATIONAL BORDER SATURDAY  
MID TO LATE AFTERNOON. SOME MODEL SOUNDINGS DENOTE CAPPING OVER  
THE INSTABILITY MAXIMUMS IN SOUTHERN VERMONT, WHICH MAY INHIBIT  
MORE WIDESPREAD THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY. THE MAIN IMPACTS FROM  
THESE POTENTIAL STORMS WILL BE LOCALIZED HEAVY RAINFALL AND SOME  
SMALL HAIL. HAIL GROWTH ZONE THICKNESS TO AROUND 10,000 WOULD  
SUPPORT SOME SMALL HAIL FORMATION. GIVEN THE DISCONNECTION OF  
THE THERMAL AND DYNAMIC COMPONENTS AND LACK OF TRUE CONVERGENCE,  
SEVERE STORM POTENTIAL IS LOW, HOWEVER, SOME STRONGER  
THUNDERSTORMS WILL BE POSSIBLE.  
 
A SECONDARY SHORTWAVE ON THE BACK OF THE DEPARTING LONG WAVE TROUGH  
SUNDAY WILL BRING ANOTHER CHANCE FOR SHOWERS AND EMBEDDED  
THUNDERSTORMS, MAINLY ACROSS SOUTHERN VERMONT. NORTHERLY FLOW  
WILL BE ADVECTING COOLER AIR FROM THE NORTH WITH INCREASING WAA  
FLOW TO THE SOUTH. ALONG THIS AIR MASS BOUNDARY FROM CENTRAL  
VERMONT TO THE SOUTHEAST, ADDITIONAL SHOWER ACTIVITY WILL BE  
POSSIBLE, THOUGH INSTABILITY WILL BE LOWER, ONLY TO AROUND  
500J/KG ON MODEL SOUNDINGS FOR VSF. CONTINUED CHANCES FOR SMALL  
HAIL WILL BE POSSIBLE, THOUGH HEAVY RAIN WILL BE LESS LIKELY AS  
THE JET STREAK SLIDES SOUTH WILL A DRYING OF THE MID TO UPPER  
LEVELS. TOTAL RAINFALL FROM SATURDAY INTO SUNDAY RANGES BETWEEN  
A TENTH OF AN INCH IN SOUTHERN VERMONT AND THE ADIRONDACKS TO  
AROUND A QUARTER TO HALF AN INCH IN PORTIONS OF THE ST. LAWRENCE  
VALLEY AND NEAR THE INTERNATIONAL BORDER. BEHIND THE WEEKEND  
SYSTEM, TEMPERATURES WILL TREND COOLER ON SUNDAY WITH HIGHS ONLY  
IN THE UPPER 60S TO LOW 70S.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 2: SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE WILL ANCHOR ITSELF JUST OFF THE  
EASTERN SEABOARD AS ANOTHER HIGH AMPLITUDE UPPER LEVEL RIDGE SETTLES  
ACROSS THE EASTERN US. THE PATTERN WILL THUS REPEAT ITSELF WITH SOME  
TOASTY TEMPERATURES IN THE 80S TO NEAR 90, BUT RELATIVELY  
COMFORTABLE HUMIDITY FOR THE MIDWEEK. FORECAST MODEL SCENARIOS BEGIN  
TO DIVERGE BEYOND WEDNESDAY. EMBEDDED WITHIN THE UPPER RIDGE,  
THERE'S A NARROW TROUGH AMBLING EAST, AND THE TIMING OF THIS FEATURE  
IS UP FOR DEBATE. REGARDLESS, A TREND TOWARDS MORE HUMID CONDITIONS  
WILL COINCIDE WITH THIS FEATURE, AS WELL AS THE POTENTIAL FOR SOME  
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/
 
 
THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY...VFR CONDITIONS WILL PREVAIL WITH PATCHY HIGH  
CLOUDS. DRY AIR WILL LIMIT FAIR WEATHER CUMULUS, BUT SOME COULD  
DEVELOP AROUND 7000-8000 FT AGL ABOUT 16Z-22Z. SOUTHWEST WINDS ARE  
EXPECTED AT KSLK AND KMSS AT 5 TO 10 KNOTS WITH A FEW GUSTS 15-19  
KNOTS, BUT REMAINING TERMINALS WILL EXPERIENCE TERRAIN DRIVEN FLOWS  
AROUND 5 KNOTS. CEILINGS WILL BEGIN TO LOWER FROM WEST TO EAST AS A  
SURFACE TROUGH APPROACHES THE ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY AFTER 06Z  
SATURDAY, BUT CONDITIONS WILL LIKELY REMAIN VFR WITH PRECIPITATION  
TRANSLATING EAST AFTER 06Z SATURDAY AS WELL.  
 
OUTLOOK...  
 
SATURDAY: MAINLY VFR, WITH LOCAL MVFR POSSIBLE. LIKELY SHRA,  
SLIGHT CHANCE TSRA.  
SATURDAY NIGHT: MAINLY VFR, WITH AREAS MVFR POSSIBLE. LIKELY  
SHRA.  
SUNDAY: MAINLY MVFR, WITH AREAS VFR POSSIBLE. CHANCE SHRA, CHANCE  
TSRA.  
SUNDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
MONDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
MONDAY NIGHT: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
TUESDAY: VFR. NO SIG WX.  
 

 
   
CLIMATE
 
 
TEMPERATURES WILL BE APPROACHING DAILY RECORD WARM VALUES TODAY,  
JUNE 5TH. AT THIS TIME, PLATTSBURGH (PBG) AND MONTPELIER (MPV)  
HAVE THE GREATEST CHANCES OF SETTING A NEW RECORD.  
 
RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES:  
 
JUNE 5:  
KMPV: 86/2025  
KPBG: 90/2020  
 
RECORD HIGH MINIMUM TEMPERATURES:  
 
JUNE 5:  
KPBG: 65/1963  
 
JUNE 6:  
KPBG: 67/1973  
 

 
   
BTV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
VT...NONE.  
NY...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
WHAT HAS CHANGED...DANZIG  
DISCUSSION...HAYNES/DANZIG  
AVIATION...HAYNES  
CLIMATE...NWS BTV  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab VT Page
The Nexlab NY Page Main Text Page