FXUS61 KGYX 181925 AFDGYX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Gray ME 325 PM EDT Wed Jun 18 2025 .SYNOPSIS... A few showers and storms are possible this afternoon with a dying frontal boundary moving southward. Very warm and muggy conditions are expected tomorrow, before a cold front approaches the region. The cold front will bring higher chances for showers and thunderstorms, some of which could be strong to severe. Friday and the weekend will be drier, with windy conditions likely Friday. A few showers or thunderstorms cannot be ruled out through the extended weekend. Hot and humid conditions will then return early next week. && .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM THURSDAY MORNING/... Scattered showers are occuring over the area, with low-stratus still over most locations in New Hampshire and western Maine. Low stratus will build back in tonight, with fog likely to be much more prevalent than last night. Dense fog is likely along the Midcoast, and could persist through a decent amount of tomorrow morning. Fog and low-stratus will likely make tonight feel very warm and muggy, with lows in the upper 60s expected. && .SHORT TERM /6 AM THURSDAY MORNING THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... Low-stratus will peel out of most interior locations tomorrow morning. Clearing skies will allow for destabilization, especially across southern NH. It will feel hot and humid, with many places getting into the upper 80s across southern New Hampshire. In the interior Seacoast, it may even feel like upper 90s in the afternoon. A Heat Advisory has been issued for eastern Hillsborough and interior Rockingham counties, though this kind of heat could even extend out towards Concord and Jaffrey as well. Heat will be followed by strong thunderstorms in the evening. Strong instability and wind shear ahead of a cold front will allow for the development of discrete supercells tomorrow afternoon. CAPE of 2000-3000J, steep low-level lapse rates and up to 200m2/2 of storm relative helicity will create conditions conducive for damaging winds, large hail and/or potentially a brief tornado. The SPC has most of NH and western ME in a Slight Risk for severe weather. Heavy downpours are also possible with storms, but any flash flooding should be limited in nature due to the storms progressive nature, despite PWATs of near 1.8" or so. Storms will arrive in New Hampshire by around 5pm, northern NH/ME by 6pm, and storms will expand into western Maine by 8pm. The threat of severe storms is the lowest over the Midcoast due to the seabreeze expected over the area. Showers and storms may linger through tomorrow night, and should make for another warmer night as well. Lows tomorrow night should range from the upper 50s up north, to the upper 60s along the Seacoast. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... The cold front continues to depart to the east on Friday while the surface low gradually lifts into the Canadian Maritimes. There is a better consensus among the models in a quicker FROPA and low departure than at this time yesterday, so there is more confidence in a drier and breezier day across the region with some showers still possible in the mountains with upsloping and the upper wave crossing. With good mixing, forecast soundings from the NAM support W/WNW wind gusts of 30-40 mph, but the NAM is often too low with mixing, so the higher end wind gusts could be more in the 40-50 mph range, which is close to what the GFS forecast soundings advertise at the top of the mixed layer. So may need to be consider a Wind Advisory if this trend holds. Temperatures for the most part will be "cooler" than Thursday with mid 70s to lower 80s...although for some of the coast it may be warmer than Thursday with winds being offshore this time. An expansive upper ridge across the Deep South extending well up into the Great Lakes will gradually build toward New England and the Eastern Seaboard over the weekend bringing a warming trend. There's still uncertainty on chances for showers and storms over the weekend, although there is arguably a little better agreement in timing of wave(s) riding into the area on the eastern periphery of the ridge with the higher PoPs favoring Saturday night and into the first half of Sunday at this point. However, there is still quite a bit of uncertainty in the location. Going into early next week, confidence remains high in the stong ridge further expanding toward the area and bringing the hottest temperatures of the year so far, which will also come with increasing humidity. Monday and Tuesday could both feature heat indices reaching the mid to upper 90s across portions of the interior with most precipition staying north of the region. There is more uncertainty on whether it will remain as hot going into next Wednesday with more spread in the guidance as a front may approach from the north and weaken the ridge. && .AVIATION /19Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... Short Term...Restrictions will likely stay down through the rest of the evening, as showers and low stratus continue to sit over the area. Restrictions will stay down through the first half of tomorrow, as the aforementioned low-stratus hangs on. Some clearing may provide a brief return to VFR around noon tomorrow before thunderstorms move into the area, and bring sites down through the rest of the afternoon. Showers and some patchy fog tomorrow night will allow for restrictions no better than MVFR to exist overnight and into Friday morning. Long Term...Drier on Friday, but HIE could still a few showers as well as MVFR ceilings. Otherwise, expecting primarily VFR with brisk W/WNW of 25 to 35 kt, potentially over 40 kt on the high end. There will be a chance of showers and storms over the weekend with guidance favoring Saturday night into Sunday of having the higher potential. However, confidence is low on location(s). By early next week. expecting mostly VFR. && .MARINE... Short Term...Low-stratus will bring poor visibility over the Gulf of Maine tonight. From this afternoon through Thursday evening, southerly winds of 9-14kts expected, with 2-4ft seas. Winds and seas pick up to near SCA levels Thursday evening as a cold front moves through the area. By Friday morning, winds over the waters should be out of the southwest, with upto 5ft seas likely. SCA issuance possible Thursday night. Long Term...SCA conditions may persist into Friday as west to southwest winds remain brisk behind the cold front. Conditions then generally remain below SCA levels over the weekend as high pressure builds across the waters and then becomes centered south of the waters. South to southwest flow persists early next week, and there some indications a front may approach from the north late Tuesday or Wednesday, which could tighten the pressure gradient and increase winds across the waters. && .GYX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ME...None. NH...Heat Advisory from noon to 7 PM EDT Thursday for NHZ012-013. MARINE...None. && $$ NEAR TERM...Palmer SHORT TERM...Palmer LONG TERM...Combs