558 FXUS61 KALY 032316 AFDALY Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Albany NY 716 PM EDT Fri Apr 3 2026 .WHAT HAS CHANGED... The timing of showers and isolated thunderstorms was slowed down slightly Sat pm into the early afternoon. Winds were increased with the frontal passage on Sunday with some gusts 30 to 35 mph. && .KEY MESSAGES... 1) Flooding along the West Canada Creek continues to recede and should fall below flood stage early tonight and tomorrow morning. 2) A pair of low pressure systems and frontal boundaries will bring periods of rain and a few thunderstorms this afternoon through this weekend. 3) Gusty west/northwest winds develop in the wake of the front Sun- Sun night with brisk conditions and high confidence with below normal temps Mon-Wed. && .DISCUSSION... KEY MESSAGE 1... As of 3:00 PM EDT... Flood waters continue to slowly recede within and along West Canada Creek at Hinckley and Kast Bridge this afternoon. Kast Bridge will fall below its minor flood based on the latest NERFC forecast by early this evening. Some additional rainfall from a few showers or a rumble of thunder this afternoon, but will have little impact. Hinckley may fall below its flood stage by tomorrow morning. A few showers late Sat, before a more pronounced period of rain showers moves across the West Canada Creek late Sat night-Sun may cause flows to rise close the minor flood stage Sun-Sun night. Confidence remains low on a renewed the flood threat and will be monitored. For the latest river forecasts, visit www.water.noaa.gov. KEY MESSAGE 2... A warm front continues to move across the region this afternoon, as low pressure continues to move across southern Quebec. Party sunny skies will re-cloud up briefly, as a cold front approaches from the west. MUCAPEs across central NY into the Mohawk Valley/eastern Catskills/Adirondack Park continue to rise to 250-500 J/kg. The moisture fetch is limited and low- level convergence with the front. A narrow broken band of isolated to scattered showers with a few thunderstorms may impact the eastern Catskills, west-central Mohawk Valley, southern Adirondacks. The showers should diminish tonight across western New England and south of the Capital Region. The front stalls across PA and NJ tonight. Low-level cold advection occurs in the wake of the front with lows in the 40s to lower 50s, except some mid and upper 30s over the southern Adirondacks and the Lake George Region. High pressure briefly builds in from southeast Canada tomorrow with fair and dry weather early on. However, the low and mid-level ridging will not last long, as a weak short-wave in southwest flow aloft and a warm front associated with low pressure over the Central Great Lakes Region will approach. This forecast tried to slow down the showers except south and west of the Capital Region in the mid to late pm. Clouds will thicken and lower, as the isentropic lift increases. Highs will lowered below the NBM guidance with 60s from the Capital District south and east with 50s north and west with a few upper 40s over the Adirondacks Park. Low pressure tracks northeast into Ontario Sat night, as the cold front catches up to the warm front, as an occluded boundary and a triple point passes over the region Sat night through Sunday. The low-level jet increases focusing some gulf moisture as PWATs briefly surge 2 to 3 STDEVS above normal based on the latest NAEFS. A period of rainfall sets up Sat night into Sun with basins average of a quarter to half an inch with a half an inch to inch west of the Hudson River Valley. Locations near the southwest Adirondacks may get around an inch, so we will have to watch for any hydro concerns. A few thunderstorms are possible Sat night, where some elevated instability may be tapped into. The timing is bad for any stronger storms for the forecast area Easter Sunday. A strong push of cold air advection occurs across the region Sun-Sun night, as breezy southerly winds 10-20 mph shift to the west northwest 10-20 mph with some gusts 25-35 mph. Residual clouds on Sunday may inhibit stronger wind gusts. After highs in the 50s to lower 60s on Sunday, except some 40s over the Adirondack lows will fall into the mid 20s to mid 30s with brisk conditons. KEY MESSAGE 3... Some gusty winds may develop in the wake of the occluded front Sunday. However, the NBM probs for >35 mph gusts are mainly below 20% in the Mohawk Valley, Capital Region and Berkshires. It may be difficult to mix strong winds down with lingering clouds on Easter. We raised gusts to 25-35 mph blending the NBM/NBM90 winds/gusts. Some lake effect snow showers develop Sun night into Monday morning in the chilly early Spring air mass. Light snow accums an inch or less may occur in the western Adirondacks. Max temps Monday will be 5-15 degrees below normal with 40s to lower 50s for highs and 30s over the higher terrain. In the cyclonic flow, another short-wave moves across the region Mon night into Tue with some scattered rain and snow showers. Temps will be even colder with 30s and 40s for highs on Tue and it will remain brisk. Some locations in the Adirondack Park may not get out of the 20s. High pressure builds in with fair and drier weather for the mid week with one more cool day before temps rebound back above normal to close the week. && .AVIATION /00Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... Through 00Z/Sunday, VFR conditions are expected through at least midnight. In the wake of a cold front, patchy Cigs of 3500-4500 FT AGL are expected to develop after 04Z-06Z/Sat. A second cold front dropping southward could bring brief MVFR Cigs to KGFL, KALB and KPSF between 08Z-14Z/Sat, otherwise mainly VFR conditions are expected until late Saturday afternoon when lowering Cigs could reach MVFR levels after 22Z/Sat, along with a few light showers/sprinkles with VFR Vsbys. South to southwest winds 8-12 KT with a few gusts at KALB to 20-25 KT will become west to northwest at similar speeds and gusts between 04Z-07Z/Sat before decreasing to 5-10 KT by 12Z. Winds will then become north to northeast at 8-12 KT with some brief gusts of 15-20 KT possible between 12Z-15Z/Sat before decreasing to 4-8 KT by late morning. Winds will then become southeast and increase to 8-14 KT with some gusts of 20-25 KT possible after 22Z/Sat. Low level wind shear will be possible until the cold front passes later this evening as winds around 2000 FT AGL remain from the west/southwest at 30-40 KT while surface winds from the south to southwest occasionally drop below 8 KT. Outlook... Saturday Night: High Operational Impact. Breezy. Definite SHRA. Sunday: High Operational Impact. Breezy. Definite SHRA. Sunday Night: Low Operational Impact. Breezy. NO SIG WX. Monday: Low Operational Impact. Breezy. NO SIG WX. Monday Night: Low Operational Impact. Slight Chance of SHSN. Tuesday: Low Operational Impact. Breezy. Slight Chance of SHSN. Tuesday Night to Wednesday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX. && .ALY WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. MA...None. VT...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...15 AVIATION...24