The U.S. Drought Monitor in their report issued Thursday. downgraded drought in southeast Vermont to an area labeled "abnormally dry." That means conditions are still on the cusp of a drought, but it's still not quite there.
It looks like the soaking rain we had on May 14-15 made a difference and moistened things up a bit. That left Vermont with no areas of drought in the state since the August 21, 2025 edition of the U.S. Drought Monitor was released.
The question is whether the drought will come back. After this weekend, what appears to be a fairly long, relatively dry spell will arrive. Depending upon how long mostly dry weather lasts, at least parts of Vermont could end up in drought trouble again.
Sure, it's going to rain this weekend, and the most rain will fall in southeast Vermont, where it's most needed.
But the expected rainfall isn't a tremendous amount.
Total rainfall late tonight through Monday looks like it might range between a quarter inch north and three quarters of an inch far south. Central Vermont would get a third to a half inch of the forecast holds.
SPECIFIC FORECAST
I'll get into the specifics of this weekend, and the outlook into next week further explains why drought might come back.
Today
High overcast has spread across all of Vermont's skies. It'll remain that way all day, but tend to thicken up later in the day. Weak sunshine getting through in the north should allow temperatures to reach 70 degrees or so. Temperatures should hold in the 60s south.
Sunday
| NOAA's 8 to 14 day outlook has our area on the dry side at least through June 5 |
Since the rain will be steadier and somewhat heavier south, and the clouds will be thicker there, many areas of southern Vermont could stay in the 40s pretty much all day. That's ridiculously cold for this time of year, but there you go.
In the north, since rain will be lighter, and in some areas won't start until later in the morning, highs should only get into the low 50s, which is still damn chilly for this time of year.
Even worse, breezes will make it feel colder. Those breezes will probably be especially gusty along the western slopes of the Green Mountains.
If you had warm weather outdoor plans for Sunday, you are s*it out of luck. I guess we have to pay for the 90 degree weather we had earlier this week. No good weather goes unpunished.
Memorial Day
Well, it can't get worse than Sunday, so there's that. We will actually see a fair amount of improvement, especially as we get later into the afternoon. It looks like some showers will come through in the morning, but they'll tend to taper off in the afternoon to allow some afternoon sunshine, fingers crossed.
If the sunshine develops, highs should get into the low 70s. If it stays cloudy, we'll settle for 60s. Again, that's a LOT better than Sunday's misery.
NEXT WEEK
A brief warm up, then a cooling trend starting Wednesday and continuing at least into next weekend.
A steep dip in the jet stream will develop just to our east, and a pool of cold air might settle overhead by next weekend, Though a forecast that far out is iffy, so you can still take it with a big grain of salt.
If the forecasts do pan out at least sort of correctly, Tuesday will bring us nice highs in the low 80s. Then it cools into the still very pleasant 70s Wednesday, near 70 Thursday, in the 60s Friday and even cooler than that next weekend. In fact, some models make us quite cold, so we'll see how that works out.
This type of weather pattern features a chance of showers, and we'll have that chance daily starting Wednesday and going into the weekend. But these should be very light scattered showers. And they're more likely to hit northern Vermont and not so much in the south.
Also, I know long range patterns are shaky, but NOAA has the dry weather in all of New England lasting well into the first week of June. Even longer range forecasts into the middle of June do moisten us up a little to near normal precipitation.

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