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Worth New York Weather Forecast Discussion

315
FXUS61 KBUF 070741
AFDBUF

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Buffalo NY 341 AM EDT Tue Oct 7 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A sharp cold front will slowly ease its way south across our area this afternoon and evening...and in the process will generate some desperately-needed beneficial rainfall. In its wake...strong Canadian high pressure will build across our region Wednesday and Thursday and provide us with dry weather...along with the coolest temperatures of the fall so far. Expect highs mainly in the 50s both Wednesday and Thursday...with Wednesday and Thursday nights both likely to feature a frost or freeze across many areas away from the immediate lakeshores. Continued dry weather and a gradual warming trend will then follow for Friday and the weekend as the high slides off the New England coast.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... Upper-level troughing draped from Ontario Province to the Upper Mississippi Valley will continue to sharpen and dig southeastward across the Great Lakes through this period...with its axis reaching southern Ontario by 12z Wednesday. At the surface...this will encourage a rather sharp cold frontal boundary currently over southern Ontario/Quebec to slowly push southeast and across our region this afternoon and evening.

Out ahead of the front...a narrow but deep plume of rich Gulf-based moisture will advect northeastward across our area today...with precipitable water values climbing to between 1.5 and 1.75 inches. At the same time...this moisture will encounter increasing amounts of large-scale lift provided by a combination of low-level convergence from the front and one or more weak surface waves rippling along it...increasing height falls/DCVA aloft...and the broadly diffluent flow regime in the right rear quadrant of a 120+ kt upper level jet streak. Coupled with some very weak instability...all this will lead to periodic showers and perhaps a few embedded thunderstorms developing from west to east this morning...with the showers then becoming most widespread and/or (more likely) outright transitioning to a swath of anafrontal rain following the frontal passage later this afternoon/early this evening. This post-frontal pcpn should then linger for roughly a 3-5 hour period at any given location...before sharply tapering off from northwest to southeast through the rest of tonight as strong Canadian high pressure and much cooler/drier air begins building in behind the cold front.

In terms of rainfall amounts...the favorable moisture and forcing should translate into a round of much-needed beneficial rainfall across our region. Latest multi-model consensus generally suggests that basin-average amounts may range from two thirds of an inch to an inch across interior portions of the Southern Tier and Finger Lakes to as much as 1 to 1.5" further north and west across the remainder of the region...with localized amounts of up to 2" possible. This being said...the ultimate location of the axis/axes of heaviest rainfall will be very much dependent upon the forward speed of the front...the track/timing of any embedded subtle waves rippling northeastward along it...and any localized areas of embedded convective enhancement...all details that the guidance suite still exhibits some differences on. All of which is to say that the expected distribution of rainfall amounts outlined above is far from set in stone...and could well change as this event evolves.

As for temperatures...the expected cloud cover and precipitation should help to keep highs largely confined to the upper 60s to mid 70s today...with lows tonight then falling into the 40s as cool air advection increases behind the departing cold front.

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.SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... Strong cold front that brought the much needed rainfall to western and north-central NY will have shifted east into New England, while an expansive area of Canadian-sourced high pressure centered over the upper Great Lakes will be building southeast across the lower Great Lakes region. This feature will bring a return to dry, but more notably MUCH cooler conditions for this period, with potential for frost and freeze headlines being the main item of interest for both Wednesday night and Thursday night.

Strong CAA will already be underway Wednesday morning with an airmass much more representative of the season pouring across the region, with most areas only recovering into the 50s Wednesday afternoon. The axis of the trailing mid/upper level trough will cross the area Wednesday afternoon with a secondary shot of even cooler air flowing into the eastern Great Lakes behind it with 850mb temperatures plummeting to between -2C and -5C (coldest North Country) for Wednesday night and Thursday. There are two main factors that will keep temperatures from tanking further Wednesday night: 1. Surface winds will likely not completely decouple from flow aloft with the center of the surface high still located well to our west over Michigan. 2. This will be more localized, however despite the plethora of dry air, the cool northerly flow may produce some extra lake clouds south of Lake Ontario Wednesday night. Overall frost coverage may be limited to some degree owed to these two aforementioned factors, however there is potential that our normal colder areas see a freeze.

Dry and cool weather continue Thursday with daytime highs averaging 5-10 degrees below normal, which will equate to the Tug Hill and western Adirondacks not getting out of the mid/upper 40s under full sunshine. Center of the cool Canadian high will then slowly drift from western to eastern NY Thursday night. After an already chilly day to start and IDEAL radiational cooling conditions setting up, temperatures will quickly fall back through the evening hours, with much of the forecast area dropping into the mid 30s and lower (mid/upper 20s normally colder areas), possibly requiring frost/freeze headlines areawide. WAA will begin aloft second half of Thursday night, however with a stout radiational inversion in place, this will have little impact on surface temperatures.

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.LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... After a chilly start Friday morning, diurnal heating under near full sunshine will eventually erode the radiational inversion allowing the return flow of warmer air aloft to mix down to the surface, with daytime highs returning to near average readings. Continued gradual WAA advection will trend daytime highs back to a little above average for the weekend into the start of next week.

Both the NBM/ensemble and deterministic medium range guidance have struggled with locking in on the overall pattern evolution for late in the weekend into the start of next week, battling with the northward extent of a coastal low making its` way up the Eastern Seaboard, the southward reach of a low pressure system moving across eastern Canada, and the strength and position of high pressure relative to these to systems. Simply put, there are a lot of factors at play here. Latest 07/01Z NBM/ensemble and 07/00Z deterministic medium range guidance are currently fairly well aligned that a strong area of surface high pressure will set up over southern Quebec Sunday and remain ridged southwestward across lower Great Lakes region and Ohio Valley through Monday, which would provide a dry forecast right through the holiday weekend. That said, some differences remain in the upper level pattern evolution. This is again somewhat of a change from the previous guidance package, so further fluctuations will definitely be possible going forward being six to seven days down the road, keeping overall forecast confidence low to medium for the tail end of the period.

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.AVIATION /07Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... Current VFR conditions at all sites will rapidly deteriorate today as a sharp...mositure-laden cold front slowly pushes south from southern Ontario/Quebec and across our region...with the frontal passage itself taking place between the late afternoon and early evening hours.

The approaching front coupled with the arrival of an attendant disturbance aloft will lead to increasingly widespread showers developing from west to east this morning...and perhaps also a few embedded weak thunderstorms (though have kept the latter out of the TAFs for now given continued very low confidence in location/ timing). The showers will then likely transition to a swath of anafrontal rain that will persist for 3-5 hours or so very late today and this evening...with the latter then sharply tapering off from northwest to southeast through the rest of tonight as strong Canadian high pressure and much cooler/drier air begins building into the area.

In terms of flight conditions...expect these to fall from VFR to widespread MVFR with pockets of embedded IFR this morning...with further deterioration to a period of widespread IFR (with embedded LIFR across the higher terrain) expected following the frontal passage later this afternoon/evening. After about mid-evening...the advent of the aforementioned ridging will then result in conditions gradually improving back to VFR from northwest to southeast through the balance of tonight.

Outlook...

Wednesday...Mainly VFR.

Thursday through Saturday...VFR.

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.MARINE... A sharp cold front currently over southern Ontario and Quebec will gradually ease its way south across the Lower Great Lakes this afternoon and early this evening...bringing fairly widespread showers and perhaps a couple isolated thunderstorms. In its wake... winds will freshen and veer to northwesterly and then northerly tonight and early Wednesday. This will bring advisory-worthy conditions to areas along the south shore of Lake Ontario much of the time between tonight and Wednesday night...and possibly also to areas southwest of Dunkirk on Lake Erie.

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.BUF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NY...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 7 PM this evening to 5 AM EDT Thursday for LOZ042. Small Craft Advisory from 7 PM this evening to 8 AM EDT Thursday for LOZ043-044.

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SYNOPSIS...JJR NEAR TERM...JJR SHORT TERM...JM LONG TERM...JM AVIATION...JJR MARINE...JJR

NWS BUF Office Area Forecast Discussion

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