textproduct: Binghamton
This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.
WHAT HAS CHANGED
PoPs were lowered in NE PA into the early evening hours. There is now just an outside chance for an isolated shower or storm near the Wyoming Valley or Poconos through sunset; but more than likely it stays dry. Also, adjusted PoPs Thursday morning, as CAMs are now showing potential for isolated showers over the Finger Lakes and the Central Southern Tier of NY.
KEY MESSAGES
1) Remaining warm today with plenty of afternoon sunshine. A moisture-starved cold front pushing south this evening will allow noticeably cooler air to funnel in from the north for Thursday.
2) Low pressure moving south toward New England late Friday and Friday night will drag a cold front across the area with a reinforcing shot of cooler air Saturday through early next week.
DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE 1... High clouds are clearing from west to east early this afternoon. With nearly full sunshine expected across Central NY and the northern tier of NE PA, expect temperatures to reach the upper 70s to mid-80s areawide before the weak cold front arrives early this evening. Lowered PoPs as the latest CAMs are not showing any shower or t'storm activity across NE PA late this afternoon or early evening. Still cannot 100 percent rule out an isolaed pop up shower or storm, but it is definitely trending drier.
There could be some patchy valley fog developing in portions of CNY/NE PA late tonight, otherwise expect mostly clear conditions with light winds and lows in the upper 40s to mid-50s.
A shortwave disturbance is progged to drop south, out of Canada into the Finger Lakes region toward daybreak Thursday morning. The latest hi-res guidance is indicating a substantial increase in clouds with this feature, along with isolated showers or drizzle through much of Thursday morning west of Auburn--Ithaca--Elmira and Towanda. Exactly where this feature rotates through does remain somewhat uncertain. Where the clouds and isolated showers linger, it will keep temperatures down in the 50s through the morning hours Thursday. This shortwave then exits the area, with partly sunny skies areawide Thursday afternoon and evening. It will be much cooler, with highs only in the 60s (except low 70s Wyoming Valley), and a breezy NW wind at 8-15 mph with gusts to 25 mph.
KEY MESSAGE 2...
After a slight recovery on Friday with high temperatures in the back into the 70s, the next potent upper low drops south late Friday into Friday night and passes by just to our east across New England. The surface front with this feature can bring a few spotty showers to the area later Friday afternoon into Friday night, but the bulk of the moisture looks to stay east. With the low off to our east Saturday, a strong northerly flow will inject a fresh round of cool, Canadian air over the region along with a pop up shower or two. Highs Saturday are expected to be in the upper 50s to the mid 60s. The Wyoming and Delaware River Valleys in NE PA will fare a little better with temperatures reaching the upper 60s. It is expected to be a breezy day as well with NW wind gusts of 20 to 30 mph common. Lows Saturday night will be in the 40s areawide, and as mentioned in the previous forecast discussion, some upper 30s can't be ruled out in the typical colder valley locations.
Sunday through Tuesday of next week we start to see some variations in the upper levels with regards to placement and strength of waves of energy and upper lows around the region. Deterministic and ensemble model guidance is in support of the cool north to northwest flow continuing with below average temperatures right through Tuesday, with highs in the 60s and low 70s each day. While there is no real good source of moisture over the area early next week, with low heights and the cool temperatures aloft, some isolated pop up showers can't be ruled out. The first shortwave is expected to move through the area Sunday night and Monday with scattered showers, and the next upper level low could swing through sometime Tuesday/Tuesday night with more showers possible (again, with some uncertainty in timing). The upper level pattern finally starts to shift away from the Omega block (with troughing over the Northeast) by the middle to end of next week.
AVIATION /00Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/
VFR conditions are expected through the next 24 hours at SYR, RME, and AVP but some brief MVFR cigs are possible at ELM, BGM, and ITH as a cluster of rain showers and drizzle moves through between 13Z and 17Z.
With higher confidence that the winds overnight at ELM will be higher and the dew points dropping off over the last couple of hours, the chance of fog has largely disappeared.
Outlook: Thursday afternoon through Friday...Mainly VFR.
Friday Night and Saturday...Chance for scattered showers and associated restrictions.
Sunday and Monday...Mainly VFR; potential for afternoon showers that could cause restrictions.
BGM WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
PA...None. NY...None.
IMPORTANT This is an independent project and has no affiliation with the National Weather Service or any other agency. Do not rely on this website for emergency or critical information: please visit weather.gov for the most accurate and up-to-date information available.
textproduct.us is built and maintained by Joshua Thayer.