Friday, October 17, 2025

Chilly, Dry, Windy In Vermont To Yield To Warmer, Dry, Windy, But Rain Chances Sunday Night??

Ice in the bird feeder here in St. Albans, Vermont
today. Time to take that in with everything else,
as we are in the hunker down for winter season.
Thursday was a delightful, if cool and gusty day in western and southern Vermont, while the Northeast Kingdom stayed socked in with the clouds. 

My husband and I spent much of our bright, gusty day Thursday dismantling our summer setup and starting to hunker down for winter.  

Frost sensitive plants are safely indoors, hoses are emptied of water, rolled up and stored away, some of the perennials are cut back, (I'm working on that), and deck furniture is put away.

It's a little sad to say this final goodbye to the warm season. But, the cycle goes on, and we'll be enjoying cocktails and mocktails on warm sunny summer evenings in the comfortable deck furniture, surrounded by flowers in no time, right?

The gusty winds felt like they were adding urgency to the fall tasks, which aren't nearly fully completed yet. There's so much work to do to prepare for winter, isn't there? .We'll get there. 

The weather will cooperate with this work, for now. Today will be another great day to do more of those tasks. The sunshine will be back, the wind by and large will not be. 

We're starting off cold again this morning, with most everyone west of the Green Mountains below freezing. Clouds east of the Greens kept some normally cold spots above 32 degrees. 

The sunshine will spread into the Northeast Kingdom today as well, so everybody will get to enjoy it. We'll stay sort of on the cool side, with highs in the 50s today. Another frost will come in tonight. Nothing odd for mid-October. 

Saturday still looks like the pick of the week. The sun will stay out, temperatures will warm to near 60 degrees and a south breeze will start to pick up in the afternoon. 

The wind will be back Sunday, especially in the Champlain Valley. Winds there could gust to 40 mph as temperature rebound to 70 degrees or so. 

Despite the expected warmth on Sunday, those gusty south winds are another sign of winter's approach, Storm and cold fronts become stronger in the late fall and winter, so they're able to stir up more wind. From now until spring, you'll notice strong south winds, mostly in the Champlain Valley, anytime a cold front or storm lies to our west. 

RAIN CHANCES

Sure enough, Sunday's winds are signs of a solid cold front approaching, and that will come through Sunday night and Monday. 

This will introduce a fairly brief, but welcome spell of unsettled, cloudy, and occasionally rainy weather much of next week.  

The first band of rain should be in and out of here Monday, with lingering showers going into Tuesday. Hot on the heels of the cold front will be a modest storm that should spread more rain across the Green Mountain State Wednesday and Thursday. 

This won't be by any stretch of the imagination be a drought buster, but any precipitation will be welcome. 

I don't have a good bead on how much rain we'll get but it should be a moderate amount.  The drought won't go away, but we're hoping the rain will prevent the drought from getting worse. If we get lucky, the rain might very marginally improve things. 

Remember how I said we're hunkering down for winter?  Well, there's uncertain signs that we could get chilly enough to see some snow flurries in Vermont about a week from now, maybe next Friday. If it does snow, it won't amount to anything. 

But it is a reminder to get moving on your autumn chores. 


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