


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Caribou, ME
Issued by NWS Caribou, ME
766 FXUS61 KCAR 241056 AFDCAR Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Caribou ME 656 AM EDT Sun Aug 24 2025 .SYNOPSIS... A cold front will slowly approach from the west through tonight, then cross the region Monday and Monday night, as its parent low passes well to the north. An upper level low remains over the area on Tuesday. Another cold front crosses the area on Thursday followed by high pressure building in from the west on Friday. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY/... Warm moist air advection this morning will continue into the afternoon with southerly winds. A cold front will be slowly pushing east into the St. Lawrence River Valley of Quebec today. PWATs across much of the area from Bangor to Houlton and points north and west increase to 125-150 percent of normal in the 1.2 to 1.5 inches range. As the 250-500mb trof develops and digs south we are increasingly being placed in the right entrance region to a strengthening jet streak today. As upper level divergence increases expecting surface convergence to increase. However, it will take time as the front needs to move further east to kick off showers. For today, expecting much of the CWA to remain dry with increasing cloud cover. Temperatures in the warm sector over the CWA today will be in the 70s to low 80s away from the coast. Seabreeze at the shore will keep these locations in the 60s to low 70s. Dew points are increasing slightly so low RHs less than 45 percent will be confined to the south upslope areas of the Longfellows and into portions of Eastern Aroostook. One thing to note today is the 925mb LLJ is increasing and daytime mixing will tap into those winds. Expect a breezy day today with S winds 10-15mph and gusts 20-30mph possible. Combining the modest low RHs, gusty winds and dry/drought conditions we are watching fire weather concerns in portions of the CWA, see the fire weather section below for more details. Tonight, the front will continue its creep eastward as a low pressure system develops south of Cape Cod in response to the rapidly increasing upper level divergence. The front will push widespread showers into the Moosehead Region, North Woods and St. John Valley. Here becomes the problem in terms of getting beneficial rainfall. The front is slowly moving east and the low pressure system begins to steal much of the QPF potential for Downeast and Central areas. The low will be tracking south of Georges Bank towards western Nova Scotia. On this path it will keep much of the widespread rain shield offshore and only showers for Downeast heading into Monday. The front will keep its eastern movement and showers will be widespread across the north but things are trending lighter. Best chance of a greater than 0.25 inch rainfall will be Moosehead, Baxter to Caribou points westward to the Quebec border with the St. John Valley to North Woods getting 0.5 to 0.8 inch of rain. Elsewhere, rainfall will generally be 0.1 to 0.25 with perhaps the most right along the shore and islands given the low pressure track. Cannot rule out isolated to scattered thunderstorms tomorrow especially closer to the front axis. && .SHORT TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/... Coastal low will be heading over Nova Scotia Monday evening, though it looks to stay far enough south to prevent much in the way of rainfall to Downeast unfortunately. Cold front looks to be set up along the international border 00z Tuesday, poised to move through the CWA overnight. Line of showers, along with a remnant storm, will be passing thru central and nrn areas early before diminishing thru the nighttime hours. With moist ground and light winds kept patchy fog over the area for Monday night. Dewpoints look to start dropping after midnight as min temps dip into the 40s over portions of the North Woods. Tuesday will see temperatures only climb into the upper 60s/lwr 70s acrs the north with mid-upper 70s over interior Downeast. With dewpoints dropping into the 40s and winds gusting to between 15-20 mph cannot rule out another day for fire weather concerns. System Sunday night into Monday is trending drier over eastern areas and with fires starting even with an RH over 40% could see another day of heightened fire weather concerns. Upper level trough continues to hang back to the west with slight chc for showers over the far north due to diurnal heating. Upper cold pool doesn/t appear to move near the area until Tuesday night which will keep showers at bay. With loss of heating skies should clear overnight and allow temps to dip into the middle 40s over favored locations acrs the northwest. && .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... Troughing continues over the northeast through the end of the week. This will bring ocnl upr lvl disturbances thru the area. The next more organized system looks to be with a cold front moving thru on Thursday. NBM gives chc pops acrs the north and west late in the afternoon and have gone with this solution, though may need to speed pops up with later forecasts and include thunder in ahead of the boundary. However, given the disparity with cold front moving thru Thursday and upr low closing off over Quebec late in the week will wait until models come into better agreement before making any changes to NBM guidance. Temps acrs the north will run below normal with near normal temps over srn sections thru the long term. && .AVIATION /12Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... NEAR TERM: SCT/BKN VFR cigs today. S winds 10-15kt with gusts 20-30kt possible. Tonight, expecting MVFR/IFR cigs to develop with vsby reduce with BR/FG. SHRA develop overnight with VCTS possible at northern terms. Widespread IFR and some LIFR by Mon AM with SHRA and FG. Tomorrow expecting MVFR cigs north and IFR cigs south. S-SSE winds 5-15kt with gusts up to 20kt. SHORT TERM: Monday night...MVFR/IFR possibly improving to VFR late over Aroostook terminals. SSW 5-10kts. Tuesday-Wednesday night...Mainly VFR. W 5-15kts. Thursday...VFR, possibly becoming MVFR late in showers over northern terminals. SSW 5-15kts. && .MARINE... NEAR TERM: Small Craft Advisory continues through 8pm this evening. S winds will gust up to 25kt today across the waters. Seas generally 3-6ft this morning subsiding to 3-4ft this afternoon. Winds and seas will be below SCA tonight through Monday evening. Winds will shift SE tomorrow afternoon. Seas subside to 1-3ft tomorrow. Tonight fog and showers will develop across the waters reducing vsby at times. Showers and fog continue through tomorrow evening. SHORT TERM: Winds remain below small craft levels through Thursday. Seas will increase to aoa 5ft Monday night and Tuesday in southerly swell mainly over the outer waters. Seas look to remain marginal Tuesday night before dropping on Wednesday. && .FIRE WEATHER... Southerly winds will increase this morning and peak midday into the afternoon. Gusts will reach 15-25mph at times with a few higher gusts to 30mph possible especially along and southeast of the Longfellow Mtns including Aroostook County. Afternoon relative humidities will drop to 40-50 percent in Eastern Aroostook, Baxter Region into portions of the Central Highlands and interior Downeast north of Route 9. These areas will be the greatest fire weather concerns combined with the ongoing abnormally dry grounds and drought conditions. RHs will be 50-55 percent across the North Woods and 60-80 percent thanks to a seabreeze Downeast. All of this combined with the Maine Forest Service advising fuels are very receptive in the sunlight we expect fire weather concerns to continue today. Much of the state has been experiencing high to very high fire danger. Showers and thunderstorms developing late over the Maine and Quebec border later this afternoon, continuing into Monday and Tuesday. The trend for this system has been drier and drier, with the only wetting rains expected along the mountains and northwest to the Quebec border including the North Woods and St. John Valley. Elsewhere, rainfall generally 0.1 to 0.2 inch expected including Eastern Aroostook, Upper Penobscot Valley, Bangor Region and Downeast. We are currently evaporating 0.1 to 0.25 inch of water from the soil daily which means little rainfall will result in only temporary help in fire weather concerns. Drier weather, lower RHs and steady light winds are possible Tuesday through Thursday. Only a few shower chances mainly in the North Woods and far North. This will continue the fire weather concerns into late week. && .CAR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ME...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for ANZ050>052. && $$ Near Term...Sinko Short Term...Buster Long Term...Buster Aviation...Sinko/Buster Marine...Sinko/Buster Fire Weather...Sinko