130 FXUS61 KALY 310531 AFDALY Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Albany NY 131 AM EDT Tue Mar 31 2026 .WHAT HAS CHANGED... A Flood Watch was issued from 8 am Tue to 8 pm Wed for Herkimer and Hamilton Counties for recent wet soils, the potential for minor flooding due to 1-2" of rainfall and some snow melt. Thunderstorm probabilities were expanded late tonight through Tuesday. Temps were lowered from the Capital Region northward Wed for the frontal passage, though the placement of the front is uncertain how far south it will progress during the day. && .KEY MESSAGES... 1) An excellent RH recovery tonight with some isolated-scattered showers will ease fire weather concerns for western MA. 2) Multiple rounds of showers and widely scattered t-storms are expected late tonight through Wed afternoon. Highest confidence for 1-2 inches of rainfall is over the SW Adirondacks/western Mohawk Valley, where a Flood Watch was issued Tue morning through Wed. 3). Another storm system is expected to bring additional precipitation to the region Thu into next weekend. Outside of the northern mountains (wintry mix), precipitation looks to fall mainly as rain. && .DISCUSSION... KEY MESSAGE 1...A warm afternoon with weak ridging aloft has allowed temps to climb 15-20 degrees above normal with partly sunny skies. Highs are in the 50s over the mtns and 60s to lower 70s in the valleys and over the hills. The RH values have lowered into the 25-40% range due to deeper mixing with the south/southwest boundary layer winds. An SPS continues for Elevated Fire Wx Concerns based on input from MA State Partners and WFO BOX. The SPS runs until 6 pm. RH values will begin to climb after that with thickening and lowering clouds ahead of a front lifting northward as warm front towards northern NY and northern New England. Fire Wx concerns diminish for several days ahead with a wet and unsettled stretch. KEY MESSAGE 2... The mid and upper level flow becomes zonal over the Great Lakes Region into the Northeast. The 850 hPa low-level jet increases with an influx of Gulf moisture ahead of a short-wave and sfc cyclone moving along the frontal boundary north of I-90. The PWATs surge above normal with showers increasing initially west to northwest of the Capital Region around midnight or shortly thereafter, but then expanding across the rest of the region with the isentropic lift with the warm front. The rain continues through the morning, as some thunderstorms are possible with MUCAPEs in the 100-250 J/kg range especially from Albany north and west. We placed slight chances of thunderstorms in the mid to late morning west, and then expanded eastward during the day. The initial surge of rainfall in the quarter to three quarters of an inch range should not be a threat for Herkimer and Hamilton Counties. Another stronger wave moves along the front Tue pm and night. PWATs rise 1-1.25+" which are 2-3+ STDEVs above normal. The low-level southwest flow increases off the southwest Adirondacks which may enhance rainfall totals a bit. The front starts to push southward across the region Tue night. Max temps on Tue will be in the 60s to lower 70s from the Mohawk Valley, Capital Region, Berkshires/southern VT southward with 50s and even a few upper 40s to north. In the warm sector ahead of the front, widely scattered to scattered strong t-storms may occur with MUCAPE instability values in the 500-1000 J/kg range, steep mid level lapse rates around 7C/km on some of the CAMS with deep shear 45-50 KT. The question will be if any parcels become surface based for a severe threat. SPC continues a Day 2 Outlook with a Marginal Risk for severe thunderstorms from Albany west/southwest. An isolated severe or two may be possible with large hail or wind damage, if enough heating occurs. The warm sector maybe cluttered with clouds. SPC does have 2% probs with the low-level and deep shear with the boundary nearby the Mohawk Valley. The additional rainfall may elevate creek/river flows in the western Mohawk Valley and west/southwest Adirondacks. The latest NBM guidance indicates 40-50% probabilities >1" of rainfall for Herkimer and western Hamilton Counties for the 24-hr period ending 12Z/Wed. The latest NERFC forecasts indicate minor flooding forecast for Hinckley Reservoir and Kast Bridge on the West Canada Creek. We collaborated with WFO BUF and BGM on a Flood Watch through Wed pm. The frontal position by 12Z/Wed is variable on the latest short-range and ensemble guidance. It could be near the Mohawk Valley and Capital Region. We blended the NBM/MAVMOS and lowered temps 5-10 degrees below the 13Z NBM north of the mid Hudson Valley. Daytime highs in the 40s and 50s from the Capital Region, northern Catskills, northern Berkshires northward and 60s south and east. Some additional showers persist into the late afternoon with a few thunderstorms near the I84 corridor. Temps fall Wed night into the 30s with some upper 20s over the Adirondack Park. Some lower 40s are possible in the mid Hudson Valley and northwest CT with some light showers persisting on the backside of the cold front moving into PA and NJ. KEY MESSAGE 3...The latest NBM/WPC guidance continues to support widespread pcpn returning to the forecast area Thu-Thu night. PoPs increase into the 50-80% range on Thu, as the isentropic lift increases ahead of the old front lifting back northward as a warm front. The WPC guidance supports some snow or a brief period of freezing rain along the eastern spine of the southern Dacks and the southern Greens, especially Thu night. There is a cold damming signature along the northern mtns, which may support the brief icy mix. This would be for the northern mtns. An SPS or an winter wx advisory may be needed, if the freezing rain threat increases, though our confidence remains low. Temps will be rising Thu night through the 30s and 40s. Milder weather returns for Friday with highs in the 60s and 70s with the greatest chances for showers and isolated thunderstorms over the northern zones. Another low pressure system moving W/NW of upstate NY over the holiday weekend could bring more showers ahead of its cold front, though it could be late Saturday or on Sunday. && .AVIATION /06Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... Through 06z Wednesday...As of 1:25 AM EDT flying conditions are VFR at all terminals, but showers move in from the west over the next couple to few hours as a warm front lifts north across the region. For ALB/PSF/GFL, expecting a trend down to MVFR vsbys within showers and MVFR cigs. There could be a narrow window around 12z where some brief IFR cigs/vsbys occur at ALB/PSF, but confidence is on the lower side. Have mentioned this in prob30 groups. Confidence is higher at GFL for a period of IFR cigs and vsbys from 11-12z through mid-morning, which was highlighted with a tempo group. Mainly VFR conditions at POU outside of any showers. A rumble of thunder can't be ruled out with any showers this morning, but confidence is too low to mention in the TAFs at this time. Showers taper off by mid to late morning. Some borderline MVFR/VFR cigs may linger into early afternoon, especially at GFL, but overall trend should be for a return to VFR conditions for most of the afternoon at all TAF sites. This evening, coverage of showers increases again, but confidence is low on the timing of showers and how widespread they will be. Mainly MVFR vsbys and cigs expected with the showers. In addition a broken line of heavier showers and embedded thunderstorms looks to cross the region late this evening/early tonight, which was highlighted in prob30 groups. This line should drop south of GFL by the end of the TAF period with some improvement there towards 06z, but showers and MVFR conditions possible at the other terminals through 06z. Winds will be at 5-10 kt from the S/SW through the rest of tonight into this morning, turning more to the south late this morning into the afternoon with some gusts of 15-20 kt at ALB/POU/PSF. Gusts subside this evening around sunset, except winds could remain gusty with any heavier showers or thunderstorms this evening. Have also included LLWS at all terminals this morning as the warm front lifts north with winds around 2000 ft increasing to 35-45 kt from the W/SW, and mentioned LLWS again this evening/tonight with the cold frontal passage as the low level jet re-strengthens to 45-55 kt from the W/SW. Outlook... Tuesday Night: High Operational Impact. Definite SHRA...TSRA. Wednesday: Moderate Operational Impact. Breezy. Likely SHRA. Wednesday Night: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA. Thursday: Moderate Operational Impact. Likely SHRA. Thursday Night: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of RA. Friday: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of RA...TSRA. Friday Night: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of RA. Saturday: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of RA. && .ALY WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...Flood Watch from 8 AM EDT this morning through Wednesday evening for NYZ032-033-038. MA...None. VT...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...15 AVIATION...35