| National Weather Service weather radar this morning was much busier than many forecasters expected. The rain was quickly moving out and we'll have a sunny, summery afternoon. |
Up until yesterdays afternoon, many forecasters were pretty unconcerned about any showers coming through Vermont this morning with a warm front.
I was suspicious, and noted in previous posts that some of us would wake up to showers this morning. Turns out the rain is even more widespread that I originally thought.
As of 8:30 a.m today, rain was falling across most of northern Vermont, and there were embedded patches of fairly heavy rain. There has even been a few rumbles of thunder in northern New York and north central Vermont.
Oh well, we had a gorgeous weekend, with Burlington have its first 80 degree day of the season on Sunday. The weather is also still expected to vastly improve this afternoon.
We're still looking at some summertime highs in the 80s, and there's a few more storm threats after this morning. Here are the picky details:
TODAY
It was a rather stormy, rainy, sort of raw early morning today in northern Vermont. It was raining steadily outside my St. Albans, Vermont house and gusty winds were tossing the new lilac blooms around.
I wish the rain hit southern Vermont instead, because it's more needed down there, but you take what you can get.
Skies should rapidly clear late this morning into a balmy, summery afternoon after this warm front races on northward into Quebec.
Hard to believe when you start the day rainy and in the low 50s. But trust me, the warmth is on its way. The warm front had already passed through southern Vermont by 8 a.m. and temperatures down there at dawn had already risen into the 60s.
Most places should hit the low to mid 80s for highs this afternoon. Tonight will be pretty warm, too, with lows in the 50s away from Lake Champlain and low 60s in the Champlain Valley
TUESDAY
We know it's going to be very warm and increasingly humid, but thunderstorms are kind of a crapshoot.
| There's a level two out of five risk of severe storms tomorrow in the areas in yellow on this map. Notice a good chunk of Vermont is in that risk area. |
A big severe weather and tornado outbreak got underway in the Plains and Midwest yesterday, and it is expected to worsen today.
NOAA's Storm Prediction Center indicates we in Vermont might get a taste of that. No, we're not going to endure tornadoes that wipe out whole communities or hail the size of canned hams, as David Letterman once forecasted for Indiana in his early days as a TV weatherman back in the day.
Still, the SPC has a slight risk - alert level 2 for severe storms in the northwestern half of Vermont and a marginal risk, alert level 1, in southeastern Vermont.
According to NOAA, some storms that develop in the hot, increasingly humid air over Vermont Tuesday afternoon could unleash strong, gusty winds in a few spots. Once again, the Storm Prediction Center says we also have a really, really low, but not zero chance of a spin up tornado, too.
On the other hand, precipitation forecast call for hardly any rain tomorrow, which doesn't exactly scream severe thunderstorms.
The National Weather Service in South Burlington says we'll have plenty of atmospheric instability over Vermont tomorrow. Instability is what can fire thunderstorms, but you need a spark that would get them going.
That spark tomorrow would be a weak disturbance in the atmosphere teaming up with air current rising near mountain slopes. Will that be enough to trigger severe storms? Stay tuned for updates tomorrow morning.
WEDNESDAY
We're still working out the timing of a cold front due to come through. The consensus is it might come through midday, which could leave us with a wide range of high temperatures. Don't hold me to this, but we could have a situation in which highs are only in the upper 60s far northwest to upper 80s far southeast.
Depending on the timing of the front, we could have more strong thunderstorms. If it waits until the mid afternoon to evening to come through, maybe we'll see a few more strong storms.
THURSDAY
We're back to cool weather, temporarily. The sun should come back out. But some places north might not even get out of the 50s for highs. Areas away from the Champlain Valley could see a few areas of frost.
FRIDAY/WEEKEND
I might as well say it: I have no idea. The weather looks like it might turn unsettled. The computer models disagree on when some rain might return. Friday looks safe at this point. Some of the models postpone rain until Sunday. We'll figure this out eventually.
It'll stay relatively cool into the weekend, with highs in the 60s. This is temporary. The overall weather pattern favors warm weather, so I suspect a nice return to almost balmy weather to conclude the month.

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