The trouble hit a little early this year, on July 9, instead of July 10 like we saw in 2023, 2024 and 2025. But yesterday, we had flooding in and around Barre, and thunderstorm wind damage in the Northeast Kingdom.
The core of the wind damage was in Lyndon and East Burke. Video showed numerous trees down along Route 114.
Somebody in the video background suggests it was a tornado. Perhaps, but since all the trees appeared to fall in the same direction, at least as seen in the video clip, I suspect intense straight line winds.
Another batch of thunderstorms nearly stalled over central Vermont. It was enough to flood the streets of Barre, again. This was mostly poor drainage flooding and not quite as serious as in recent years.
In Montpelier, nearly 2.5 inches of rain fell yesterday, including 1.75 inches within two hours.
I guess we should be grateful over a trend line. The worst flooding hit statewide on July 10, 2023. In 2024, most of the destruction was across a broad band through central Vermont. In 2025, destructive flooding was limited to just parts of the Northeast Kingdom. And yesterday, almost all of Vermont escaped unscathed, except in the Barre-Montpelier area and a small part of the Northeast Kingdom.
Even better, we're done with the rough weather for a little while, anyway.
TODAY
It looks like the cold front as of 8 a.m this morning was draped across central Vermont, judging from a line of very light showers drifting southward. The front is too weak to create any dangerous downpours or high winds. We'll have no major weather today.
This morning started humid, but light north breezes will slowly dry the moisture out of the air. The sun will break through where it hasn't already, and we should make into the low 80s this afternoon.
WEEKEND
It's still looking like a terrific weekend if you love summer. The humidity should remain low enough, and afternoon highs will reach the 80s under sunny skies.
Dimmed sun, though. Smoke from wildfires in Quebec near James Bay will probably drift down into Vermont on those north winds. So the Green Mountains of Vermont might well be hidden by haze. I'm not sure whether we'd have enough smoke to trigger any air quality alerts. but we'll wait for more info on that.
NEXT WEEK
A heat dome is setting up in the western United States which will create record high temperatures in places like Montana and North Dakota, and other states.
A storm way up in central and northern Canada will pull a plume of that hot air eastward, arriving here Monday and Tuesday. The National Weather Service in South Burlington is calling it a "jailbreak heat," as it's escaping the heat dome where it originated.
We should see highs near 90 on Monday and as high as the mid-90s Tuesday. Considering where the air is coming from, it will be pretty dry air. The kind that doesn't feel quite as bad as most heat waves, but drains the moisture from your garden plants. You'll need to water.
The heat won't last long. If there's a northward bulge in the jet stream with the heat dome in the West, you need a southward dip in the jet stream in the East.
That will start to set up midweek. A cold front will come through Tuesday night or Wednesday. Probably with little fanfare. It won't get that cold, probably seasonably warm late in the week.
As always, long range forecasts like that are subject to change. At least we have no scary storms or floods in our immediate future.
