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
No significant changes were made this evening, just minor touches to forecast cloud cover and patchy fog overnight. Any isolated showers have ended and skies are now mainly clear.
KEY MESSAGES
1) Conditions have now dried out this evening and dry weather is now expected to persist through most of the day Saturday.
2) A dramatic pattern shift will occur over the weekend as a cold front moves through with a round of soaking showers and thunderstorms Saturday night. This will be followed by much colder weather early next week including snow showers for some parts of the area.
3) A gradual warming trend is expected in the middle of next week.
DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE 1...
Brief ridging develops aloft and high pressure builds in at the surface this evening, leading to dry conditions through most of the day on Saturday. Most of the day on Saturday will be mostly sunny, with some increasing clouds later in the day. A few isolated showers may sneak into parts of the Finger Lakes Region late Saturday afternoon, but most of the rain holds off until Saturday night. Ahead of an approaching strong cold front, a sharp pressure gradient will develop, which will result in gusty southerly winds. Winds may occasional gust up to 25-35 mph, especially in the afternoon with peak mixing. High temperatures on Saturday are expected to be in the 70s for most of the area.
KEY MESSAGE 2...
A narrow, yet significant ribbon of moisture will pool all the way up from the Western Gulf, causing rain and embedded thunder to sweep across our region late Saturday through Saturday night. While hydro concerns remain low at this time, we will be monitoring areas west of I-81 where some of the higher rainfall totals seem to be eyeing for the potential for flooding to possibly return.
Abruptly colder weather will be ushered in during the second half of the weekend. Temperatures Sunday will initially range from the upper 30s and lower 40s across CNY to the upper 40s to near 50 degrees across the Poconos and southern Catskills, but strong cold air advection with gusty winds will lead to falling temperatures along with scattered showers. Temperatures plummet into the mid 20s to near 30 Sunday night, with any lingering rain showers mixing with and changing to snow showers/flurries. Highs on Monday will only reach into the upper 30s and lower 40s, and a few lake enhanced snow showers cannot be ruled out anywhere across central NY and northeast PA. Drier air settles in Monday night which will be our coldest night, dropping into the 20s areawide.
KEY MESSAGE 3...
The blast of cold air will be rather short-lived as ridging starts to build back in the area throughout the middle part of next week. As a result, once we get past Monday's chilly weather, temperatures return closer to normal on Tuesday (but still a few degrees below normal with highs in the upper 40s to mid 50s). Temperatures will then continue to trend warmer Wednesday onwards next week with mid 50s to mid 60s for highs on Wednesday, upper 50s to upper 60s on Thursday, and mid 60s to lower 70s by next Friday.
AVIATION /00Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
Widespread VFR conditions are expected the rest of this evening into the overnight and much of the day on Saturday. There could be some patchy MVFR fog and/or stratus clouds INVOF BGM, ITH and AVP between about 06-12z late tonight/Saturday morning. Confidence is generally low on fog development, and moderate for some occasional MVFR CIGs at BGM and near AVP. Any early morning clouds or patchy fog dissipated by 12-14z and VFR conditions return areawide through at least 22z Saturday. Toward the very end of this taf period a line of showers and possible embedded thunderstorms will approach from the west; likely holding off on impacting any of our taf sites until around 23-01z...with the uncertainty in timing no mention of rain or t'storms was made in the current TAFS. This will be reevaluated with the next TAF updates at 06z tonight.
Light and variable winds this evening will turn southeast and gradually increase between 5-10 kts toward daybreak Saturday. South-southeast winds become gusty between 15-25 kts by late Saturday morning and into the afternoon hours.
Outlook:
Saturday Evening...Showery cold front with embedded thunder and a gusty wind shift out of the west- northwest.
Late Saturday night through Sunday...Blustery, chilly post- frontal conditions with probable restrictions and scattered showers.
Sunday night through Monday morning...Occasional restrictions possible in scattered rain and snow showers.
Monday afternoon through Tuesday...Mainly VFR, then a small chance of showers and minor restrictions Tuesday night.
Wednesday...Front approaches the region with restrictions possible.
BGM WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
PA...None. NY...None.
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