Tag Archives: maine weather

More Beneficial Rain This Week

Hello everyone!

After a weekend of on and off storms and heavy rain, we finally got a break from the heat, humidity, and storms today. Enjoy the drier air while it lasts because it won’t last long. Warm, sticky air will again flood the region tomorrow as a warm front tries to drive north. After heavy rain for many tomorrow evening, rain will become lighter and more scattered for the rest of this week with more dry hours than wet. That changes by this upcoming weekend when a deep trough to our west will bring more tropical moisture and accordingly more heavy rain.

5:00 PM Observations Verifying Today's Forecast
5:00 PM Observations Verifying Today’s Forecast

Today’s forecast worked out fairly well with the exception of cloud cover. In typical upslope/downslope situations, the clouds would reside over the mountains while the sun would be over the southern part of the area. Today, however, warm air advection aloft brought clouds to the south while the atmosphere dried out so much (and was still so warm aloft) that no widespread clouds were observed over northern areas. The cloud cover aside, everyone stayed dry as forecast and forecast temps panned out well with mid/upper 70’s north and low to mid 80’s south. Overall, not a disaster, but as always, it could’ve been better.

12Z GFS Showing The Upper Level Setup Tomorrow Evening
12Z GFS Showing The Upper Level Setup Tomorrow Evening

Tomorrow will feature the return of tropical moisture to the area as a disturbance passes through Northern VT and into Northern ME. A low pressure system will move right through the middle of the area tomorrow as well. This means that SW winds aloft and at the surface will again bring tropical moisture to the area. Tomorrow’s forecast will be basically split up into three parts, the delineation between them being location. The first part will be fairly heavy, fairly steady rain across the north.

12Z GFS Showing Tropical Moisture To Fuel Heavy Rains Tomorrow. Credit: Weatherbell
12Z GFS Showing Tropical Moisture To Fuel Heavy Rains Tomorrow. Credit: Weatherbell

Tropical moisture will once again be present across the region by tomorrow afternoon and evening and Precipitable Water values will be running near or over 2″ which is about as loaded as it gets here in Maine in terms of tropical moisture. Low pressure will pass right through the middle of the area leaving the northern part of the area to the north and eventually north west of the low. This is where steady precip is most likely, The tropical moisture will encounter some residual low level cool air leftover from today’s airmass and rise, cool, and condense, causing rain. Areas mainly north of route 2 could see 1-3″ of rain from this event.

12Z 4km NAM Showing One Idea As To How The Storm Could Play Out Tomorrow. Image Credit: Weatherbell
12Z 4km NAM Showing One Idea As To How The Storm Could Play Out Tomorrow. Image Credit: Weatherbell

The middle part of the area, north of a Portland/Hanover NH line, but south of route 2, will see more scattered showers and possibly a storm or two. This is the area through which the low itself will track which means that it will be missing both the instability from the warm sector south of the low, and the forcing for steady rain north of the low. This area will see the least amount of precip overall because it is neither here nor there so to speak. The precip for this middle stripe will range from a quarter to a half inch and will come from showers and storms that form farther south tracking NE.

12Z GFS Showing More Than Enough Shear For Severe Potential Tomorrow. Credit: Accuweather
12Z GFS Showing More Than Enough Shear For Severe Potential Tomorrow. Credit: Accuweather

Southern areas, south of that Portland/Hanover NH line, will see showers and storms with torrential rains and also with some limited severe potential. The nearby low, strong upper level disturbance, and warm front/cold front combo will provide the trigger. Strong shear associated with the developing low (pictured above) will provide the organizer, but the big question will, as per the norm here in Maine, be instability which, right now, looks limited at best. Due to the lack of instability and the presence of an inversion aloft which will help keep strong winds high in the sky, the severe threat looks limited. That being said, the SPC has this southern area in a marginal risk for severe weather and a stray strong wind gust can’t be ruled out. This severe threat will be least small overnight Tuesday into early Wednesday morning. Some scattered showers and possibly a stray storm is possible Wednesday morning before afternoon drying and clearing. Southern areas will see rainfall amounts vary widely depending on exactly where storms set up going into the evening hours. Some places could see over 1-2″ if storms train over a specific location while it is possible others struggle to see even a quarter of an inch of rain. There is no way of knowing exactly where storms will set up this far in advance.

Highs Tuesday look to remain cooler as clouds and showers overspread the area from west to east. Look for temps largely in the 70’s with a few low 80’s possible in SW NH.

Thursday and Friday at least look warm but not hot with some scattered showers in the afternoon but no organized rain. By the beginning of next weekend, however, a deep trough will be present over the Central US with deep S/SE flow from the tropics over our area out ahead of it.

12Z GFS Showing The Pattern For Our Next Rain Threat This Coming Weekend
12Z GFS Showing The Pattern For Our Next Rain Threat This Coming Weekend

There are several important factors for next weekend’s rainfall potential. The pattern looks a lot like last winter’s with a big trough just to our west flanked by large blocking ridges. Warm S/SE flow ahead of the trough looks to bring another threat for heavy rain, just like it did so many times last winter. At this point, all that seems clear is that another heavy rain threat exists and must be watched between 6 and 8 days from now. The pattern supports it as does all available guidance that I’ve seen. Specifics are still uncertain at this point but they will become less so as the week goes on. I’ll have more updates as those details become clearer.

Following that heavy rain threat, more significant heat relief seems likely as we look to move into the third and fourth weeks of August.

One last note, this Wednesday (8/17) at 6:30 PM, I will be giving a presentation at the Freeport Community Library where I will discuss me and my background, some of the quirks of Maine weather, how to be a better informed consumer of weather information, and finally what you can do to help meteorologists make better forecasts. For more details, click on over to the FB event page that the folks at the Freeport Library created. I hope to see you there!

-Jack

Mid Day Severe Storm Analysis

Hello everyone!

I have a quick break between Beach to Beacon this morning (awesome!) and heading north to Katahdin tonight so I figured I’d sneak in an update to bring you up to speed on how things look for severe storms today as well as a more detailed look at tomorrow’s forecast as I will be up and hiking early, thus unable to post.

1:15 PM Radar And Satellite
1:15 PM Radar And Satellite

I’ll start out with the short forecast for those who just want to know what the weather will be. The why behind the what will be explained in full detail below. Temps are on track to rise into the mid to upper 80’s for most with low to mid 80’s along the island and peninsulas. Some low 80’s are also likely across far northern areas where some thunderstorms have already gone through. Showers and storms move through over the next several hours from NW to SE. The main threats from these storms will be strong winds, heavy rain, and lightning. Remember, when thunder roars, go indoors!

A dry and mild night is in the cards tonight with temps sinking into the upper 50’s north and low to mid 60’s south. For tomorrow, mainly sunny skies are expected with dry and cool NW winds keeping temps right around 80 region wide with noticeably less humidity. An isolated shower or storm is possible in far NE areas but nothing significant is forecast and most folks will be staying dry.

Now for the why behind the what. What are the factors driving thunderstorms today? What will the rest of the afternoon look like and why? How about tomorrow? To answer those questions, we’re going to get to take a little bit of a deeper dive into the world of weather.

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Surface Analysis. All Maps Valid At 12 Noon Unless Otherwise Stated. All Image Credit Goes To The SPC Mesoanalysis Page Unless Otherwise Stated.

A prefrontal trough moved through the area this morning and is now producing showers over NE MA and the Gulf of Maine. The actual front is draped across NY and the St Lawrence valley which is fairly significantly west of where most guidance had it for this time. This was an idea I forecasted in last night’s discussion. Storms are beginning to fire across the mountains as forecast while a lone cell travels across Central Maine towards Augusta. The front will continue to move slowly to the east this evening and storms will continue to fire out ahead of it. When discussing thunderstorms, I always talk about three things: the trigger, the fuel, and the organizer. How are we doing in each category this afternoon?

WV Imagery Showing Both Today's Disturbance And Tomorrow's. Image Credit: COD Nexlab
WV Imagery Showing Both Today’s Disturbance And Tomorrow’s. Image Credit: COD Nexlab

The trigger at the surface is the cold front pictured in the surface analysis above and the trigger aloft is a shortwave over Quebec (orange line) which will be moving ESE through the area this evening. Tomorrow’s disturbance is farther west, just south of Hudson Bay. A 90kt+ jet streak (not pictured) is currently just north of the area and will also be sagging SE as the afternoon goes on. In short: we have plenty of trigger. How about fuel?

Surface Based CAPE Showing Modest Instability
Surface Based CAPE Showing Modest Instability

Most of the area is currently seeing about 1,000 j/kg of CAPE with the exceptions being the immediate coast (due to cloud cover and some weak marine influence) and far NW areas (due to earlier convection using up some of the fuel). One important thing to notice is the unstable air even farther to the NW over SE Quebec. That will translate ESE with the whole system this afternoon and will keep NW areas in the mix as far as storms go. The days long debate as to unstable or not has been more or less resolved and there appears to be enough instability to sustain some storms. However, that being said, instability is still modest/marginal. There does not appear to be quite enough for widespread severe storms. The result will be scattered/isolated severe storms with mainly sub-severe storms as well as showers. The lack of deep instability will also impact storm coverage which will be scattered as opposed to widespread.

0-6km Wind Shear
0-6km Wind Shear

The final piece of the puzzle is the organizer. Will storms have enough shear to get organized enough so that they are capable of damaging winds? 0-6km shear is currently in excess of 40kts across the entire area with some parts seeing shear in excess of 50kts. This amount of shear is more than enough to organize some strong storms. We have our trigger, our fuel, and our organizer which means we are a go for strong storms this afternoon.

Downdraft CAPE Indicating The Potential For Strong Wind Gusts.
Downdraft CAPE Indicating The Potential For Strong Wind Gusts.

Most storms will remain below severe limits but a few could grow strong enough for some marginally severe wind gusts. Shown at left is downdraft CAPE, which measures how fast air can sink in downdrafts (as opposed to normal CAPE which measures how fast air can rise in updrafts), is plenty high enough for some strong wind gusts. Also to note is the drying out of the mid levels of the atmosphere on WV satellite (look at the trigger graphic and see the dry air (black) moving in). This will aid in the development of strong downdrafts by evaporationally cooling the air which will result in even more intense negative buoyancy due to the cooled parcels being even cooler than their environment. However, this development comes with a caveat: the drying aloft will be robbing the storms of any deep moisture. This is another factor that looks to limit any serious severe weather today.

By tonight, the front will be offshore and cooler air will be filtering in on NW winds. Lows will settle into the upper 50’s north and low to mid 60’s south. Skies will be mainly clear.

12Z GFS Showing The Setup For Afternoon Mountain Showers Tomorrow.
12Z GFS Showing The Setup For Afternoon Mountain Showers Tomorrow.

Tomorrow will be a mainly quiet day but there could be an afternoon shower or storm in the NE mountains due to a cold pool aloft associated with a lively upper level disturbance (shown in the left panel). It will trigger some daytime heating driven showers and storms. They will be clustered in the mountains and especially the NE mountains (shown in the right panel). Because freezing levels are so low (~10,000 feet), some small hail is possible in any of the stronger cells but no severe weather is expected. That activity will die down tomorrow evening with the loss of daytime heating.

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NHC 5-Day Tropical Outlook. Image Credit: NHC

What’s after tomorrow? A period of cool, quiet weather is likely through the middle of next week with highs each day in the low to mid 80’s with full sun and low humidity. As we approach next weekend, however, things change. Some beneficial rainfall could arrive next weekend if everything comes together right, which, as of now, is possible. This rainfall chance will be connected to that yellow ‘X’ over the NE Gulf of Mexico which the NHC is monitoring for possible tropical development. Right now that appears unlikely.

12Z GFS With The Pattern Overview For Next Weekend
12Z GFS With The Pattern Overview For Next Weekend

A pattern change driven by the recurvature of Typhoon Omais off Japan will result in the development of strong high pressure near Bermuda by next weekend. SW flow on the west side of that high will direct moisture from a tropical disturbance over the NE Gulf of Mexico (shown on the tropical disturbance map above) towards us. At the same time, a front will be draped near the region which could help focus rainfall. Model guidance is quite optimistic we see drought easing rains from this setup and the pattern supports it so while it is certainly not a lock, it is something to keep a serious eye on as we enjoy another week of lovely weather.

I will not have a post tomorrow morning as I will be climbing Katahdin. Please refer to this post as well as to the NWS and local media for your forecast tomorrow. I will be back with a post Monday morning.

-Jack

 

 

 

 

Widespread Whiteouts As Blizzard Churns Offshore

Hello everyone!

Quick mid-storm update this morning and all systems are go as far as the forecast is concerned. Heavy mesoscale bands are producing intense snowfall rates of 2-4″ per hour and storm to sometimes hurricane force wind gusts (50-80 MPH) are blowing all that snow around. Yesterday’s maps and analysis still stands so refer back to last night’s blog post for those details.

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Here is a look at the radar as of 10:00 this morning showing several areas of enhanced snowfall. Our next intense band is strengthening offshore and will bring more intense snowfall rates to the area this afternoon. Even in areas outside of the heaviest bands, snowfall rates are still in the 1-2″ per hour range.

Expect continued blizzard conditions through the afternoon and evening before snow becomes lighter tonight. Steady snow will end tomorrow morning before tapering off to snow showers. Colder air will arrive on NW winds tomorrow so expect continued blowing and drifting which could cause locally reduced visibilities and dangerous road conditions even though snow will no longer be falling.

Our next chance for widespread snowfall arrives Friday but it should not be a major event. More details once this storm ends. Yet another storm threat arrives early next week.

I’ll be back tomorrow morning with the usual AM update.

-Jack