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NWS Caribou Watches & Advisories
NWS Caribou Watches, Warnings, and Advisories


NE Weather Chart
Northeast Weather Chart


Regional Radar from NWS Caribou
Local Radar


Today's High
Today's High


Today's Heat Index ("Feels Like")
Heat Index
Excessive Heat Information


Tonight's Low
Tonight's Lows


Tonight's Wind Chill ("Feels Like")
Wind Chill


Today's Probability of Precipitation
Probability of Precipitation


Tonight's Probability of Precipitation
Tonight's Probability of Precipitation


3-Day Precipitation Totals
72-Hour Precipitation Totals


Winter Storm Severity Index (WSSI)
Day 1 Winter Storm Severity Index (WSSI)


Snowfall Outlook
Snowfall Oultook


Ice Accumulation Outlook
Ice Accumulation Outlook


3-Day Maximum Wind Gust
72-Hour Maximum Wind Gust



Today's Severe Weather Outlook
Maine Thunderstorm/Severe Weather Outlook
Severe Thunderstorm Outlook Categories


Today's Tornado Outlook
Maine Tornado Outlook


Today's Severe Wind Outlook
Maine Severe Wind Outlook


Today's Severe Hail Outlook
Maine Severe Hail Outlook


Today's Fire Weather Outlook
Today's Maine Fire Weather Outlook


ME 161 at Dickey, ME (St. John River)
ME 161 at Dickey Bridge
Located about 30 mi / 48 km W/SW of Fort Kent


Four Seasons Trail Cam
Four Seasons Trail Cam Madawaska, ME
Madawaska, ME -- 28 mi/45 km ENE of Fort Kent


Apex Wx

Fort Kent & the Saint John Valley, Maine
Weather Information

Maine State FlagFlag of Acadia
Weather information for Fort Kent & the Saint John Valley since 2009
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Many weather graphic timestamps are in UTC / Z Time


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📅 Fort Kent Weather Almanac 📅
Non-metric units unless otherwise indicated; times US Eastern
MesoWest has live and archived Apex Wx data (Station EW0429 Fort Kent).


Sunday, February 15
High: 26° at 2:33 pm  | Low: 6° at 7:06 am
Precipitation: 0.00" | Snow: 0.0"
Avg. Daily Wind: NW at 2 mph | Daily Maximum Gust: 13 mph at 11:05 am
Data source: Davis Instruments Vantage Pro 2 Personal Weather Station | Rain gauge not heated in winter.

Monday, February 16
Normal High: 23°  |  Record High: 43° (1984)
Normal Low:   -3°  |  Record Low: -37° (1943)
Normal Daily Precipitation: 0.08" | Record Precipitation: 1.10" (1939)
Normal Daily Snow: 0.8" | Record Snow: 8.0" (1973)
Source: NOAA SC-ACIS NWS Caribou climate data collected since 1893

Precipitation 2026
Precipitation: 2.76" |  normal = 4.04" (-1.28")
Snowfall 25-26: 60.6" | normal = 64.3" (-3.7")
Snowfall 24-25: 73.2" | normal = 99.3" (-26.1")
❄️ Annual snowfall measured from July 1 - June 30 ❄️
Data source: NOAA SC-ACIS NWS Caribou climate data collected since 1893
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Fort Kent, Maine, USA — Sun & Moon Today

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Moon Phase: 🌘 Waning Crescent → 🌑 New Moon at 7:01 am Tue. Feb. 17

Moon Times for Fort Kent, Maine

Fort Kent Sun & Moon Tracker
experimental

The Week Ahead for Fort Kent & the Upper Saint John Valley of Maine
Apex Wx forecasts updated 7–9 am weekdays  /  8–10 am weekends & holiday






7-Day Outlook: Mon. Feb. 16 - Sun. Feb. 22
Updated February 16 at 8:50
am EST

Today - Wednesday
High pressure over the Valley this morning will drift east as the day progresses with partly sunny skies across the SJV. A weak system will move into the region tonight, bringing the chance for light snow mainly across the northwestern part of the area, mainly after midnight. Mostly cloudy skies tonight will feature increasing chances of snow in Fort Kent after midnight with a 30% chance of precipitation. Highs reach the low 30s with overnight temperatures in the upper 10s.

Tuesday,  a trough lifts towards the region with light snow expected under mostly cloudy skies with around 1-inch accumulation possible in Fort Kent and surrounding areas. Highs in the low 30s with south wind 3-6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. Tuesday night, a 40% chance of snow in the evening that tapers off overnight. Lows fall into the upper 10s with southwest wind becoming west 3-4 mph.

High pressure near Hudson Bay will build into the region Wednesday with mostly sunny skies for Fort Kent and the upper Saint John Valley. Highs in the upper 20s with northwest wind 5-6 mph. Wednesday night, high pressure keeps mostly clear to partly cloudy skies across the region and pushes low pressure to the south keeping the area mostly dry. Lows fall into the 5 to 10 above range Wednesday night with light northwest wind.

Thursday - Sunday
High pressure continues to build into the Valley from the Hudson Bay region Thursday. Partly cloudy to mostly sunny skies with  high in the upper 20s expected in Fort Kent and vicinity. Northwest wind 0-7 mph. Partly cloudy to mostly clear skies Thursday night with a low in the 5 to 10 degree range. Light northwest wind expected.

Friday remains mostly sunny as high pressure looks to slide across the northern Hudson Bay into northern Québec by Saturday. Mostly sunny skies are expected for Fort Kent and vicinity with highs in the low-to-mid-20s with light northwest wind. Friday night, partly cloudy skies overspread the region as a weak occluded front lifting northeast from low pressure over the Great Lakes brings a 20% chance for some light snow Friday night into Saturday.

Mostly sunny skies with a 20% chance of snow is possible Saturday with highs in the middle 20s. Saturday night, partly cloudy and cold conditions with a low around 5°F above in Fort Kent. Sunday remains mostly sunny with a high in the upper 20s, with a 20% chance of snow. Low pressure developing off the Mid-Atlantic coast late in the weekend may bring snow Sunday night into Monday. Mostly cloudy skies are expected Saturday night with a low around 10°F in Fort Kent.

🌤️ Daily Weather for Fort Kent & Vicinity 🌤️
Updated every 3-6 hours from NWS Caribou
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Maine / New Brunswick Regional Satellite

Regional Visible Satellite
Credit: College of DuPage / NOAA GOES-19 Imagery (visible--day; night--infrared)


🇺🇸 U.S. National Weather Outlook 🇺🇸

Today - Wednesday
A strong Pacific storm system will bring active weather to the West. Central and southern California face a Slight Risk of excessive rainfall Monday, with locally heavy rain that could cause flash flooding, especially near burn scars. Rain chances continue into Tuesday. Heavy mountain snow is expected in the Sierra Nevada, with additional snow in the Olympics, Cascades, and eventually the Rockies. By Tuesday into Wednesday, a cold front will bring rain changing to snow across parts of Montana and North Dakota, with a wintry mix possible in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Temperatures remain well above normal across the central and eastern U.S.

Thursday - Sunday
A developing storm over eastern Colorado will track through the Midwest and into the Great Lakes late this week, spreading widespread rain from the Ohio Valley to the Northeast. Inland areas of northern New England may see moderate to heavy snow Friday into Saturday, with rain along the coast. A cold front will sweep through the central and eastern U.S. this weekend, bringing a sharp turn from well above normal temperatures to near or below normal by Monday. Out West, precipitation tapers off briefly before a stronger system approaches next weekend, potentially producing heavy rain and mountain snow from northern California to Washington, with a possible atmospheric river event developing.
⛈️Thunderstorm/Severe Weather Outlook⛈️
Today: A marginal risk of severe thunderstorms exists today along coastal areas of central and southern California. A strong upper-level system moving inland will combine with a cold front to produce bands of heavy showers and a few thunderstorms. While instability will be limited, conditions may support a few stronger storms capable of producing locally damaging wind gusts. A brief tornado cannot be ruled out near the coast before the threat shifts southward and weakens by early evening. Later tonight into early Tuesday, another disturbance will bring colder air aloft into coastal southwest Oregon and northern California, allowing low-topped thunderstorms to develop with gusty winds possible, especially near the immediate coastline.
Tuesday: No organized severe weather is expected Tuesday into Tuesday night, but scattered thunderstorms are possible in a few regions. In California, storms may redevelop from coastal areas into the Central Valley, especially north and central portions of the state. Cooler air aloft and a strengthening upper-level system could allow a few storms to produce gusty winds and small hail, particularly near the San Francisco Bay area, though widespread severe weather is unlikely. Farther east, thunderstorms may develop late Tuesday into Tuesday night from the mid-Missouri Valley into the Upper Midwest as a weather disturbance moves through. Limited moisture should keep the risk for large hail or damaging winds relatively low.
Wednesday: No severe thunderstorms are expected across the U.S. Wednesday through Wednesday night, and overall storm chances remain low. A weakening weather disturbance moving through the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes may produce just enough lift and limited moisture to support a few thunderstorms with lightning into the lower Great Lakes during the day, but coverage should be isolated. Farther west, a developing upper-level system near the Pacific Coast may trigger new low pressure forming east of the Colorado Rockies and into the central Great Plains late Wednesday. However, better moisture from the Gulf of Mexico is forecast to remain focused farther south and east, limiting the potential for stronger storms during this period.
Thursday - Monday: A strengthening storm system over the central Great Plains is expected to deepen further as it tracks northeast toward the Great Lakes late Thursday. Forecast guidance shows increasing moisture returning northward ahead of the storm, with dew points rising into the upper 50s to lower 60s near the Mississippi and Ohio River confluence and spreading into the lower Ohio Valley. Although instability appears modest, it should be sufficient for severe thunderstorm development given strong wind shear and large-scale lift. A few supercells could form, capable of producing tornadoes, along with a growing line of storms bringing damaging wind gusts Thursday evening. The system should weaken Friday, and storm chances are expected to decrease further by late weekend as high pressure builds eastward.
National Weather Outlook sources: Weather Prediction Center & Storm Prediction Center

Today's US Forecast Chart
National Forecast Chart



Today's US High Temperature Outlook

Tonight's US Low Temperature Outlook


8-14 Day Temperature Outlook
8-14 Day Temperature Outlook


8-14 Day Precipitation Outlook
8-14 Day Precipitation Outlook
Climate Data Source: NOAA Climate Predication Center


Bird Migration Forecast Map
Bird Migration Forecast Map
Migration Forecasts Updated March 1 to June 15 & Aug. 1 to Nov. 15


🌤️Weather Resources🌤️

🇺🇸 NOAA/National Weather Service Weather Information


🌎 World Weather


Weather Notice: This information is based on available computer models and data and may not reflect current conditions or later forecast updates. Always visit NWS Caribou at https://www.weather.gov/car/ for the latest official watches, warnings, and advisories for northern Maine.

Apex Wx is a private weather information service unaffiliated with NOAA/NWS operated by Joseph Becker, PhD. Dr. Becker holds a certification in weather forecasting from Penn State University and is a trained NWS Storm Spotter.

Credits
How accurate are forecasts? On average, for the first 72 hours the accuracy is 90 percent. For days 4-7 it is 70 percent. After seven days, it is 50 percent—just good for indicating trends. On social media and other similar sites, posts that show a forecast model run a week out are just for clicks and likes, and are not considered reliable.

The vast majority of weather apps are automated without human oversight and can miss critical, nuanced details during severe or changing weather. Do not rely on an app for the forecast. Instead, go to weather.gov for the forecast.

Radar apps visualize precipitation intensity using color-coded echoes. However, updates are not instant, and even the most advanced composite radar mosaics can be delayed by 5 to 20 minutes by the time they reach your app.That delay means the weather you are viewing might already be miles away — or more intense than the image suggests.

US Surface Weather Chart
Current Surface Chart
 Weather Underground


US Visible/Infrared Satellite
True Color Satellite Image of CONUS
College of DuPage NEXLAB


US Weather Radar
US Weather Satellite
Weather Underground



US Advisories, Watches, & Warnings
National Advisories, Watches, and Warnings


Today's Excessive Rainfall Outlook
Day 1 Excessive Rainfall Outlook
Understanding ERO Categories


Today's US Fire Weather Outlook
Today's Fire Weather Outlook


Yesterday's Storm Reports
Yesterday's SPC Storm Reports


2-Day Tropical Atlantic Outlook
2-Day Tropical Atlantic Outlook
Graphics update June - November

7-Day Tropical Atlantic Outlook
7-Day Tropical Atlantic Outlook
Graphics update June - November

Northeast Regional Satellite
Regional Satellite


Northeast Severe Weather Outlook
Northeast Severe Weather Outlook
Severe Thunderstorm Outlook Categories


Northeast Precipitation Outlook
NE Precipitation Outlook


Northeast Snowfall Outlook
Regional Snow Accumulation


Northeast Ice Accumulation Outlook
Regional Ice Accumulation


Northeast Wind Gust Outlook
NE Wind Gusts


Northeast Wave Height Outlook
NE Wave Height


Maine Drought Monitor
Maine Drouht Monitor


Saint John River at Fort Kent
Saint John River at Fort Kent
Ice in winter may affect gauge measurement.


Fish River at Fort Kent
Fish River at Fort Kent
Ice in winter may affect gauge measurement.


Allagash River above Allagash
Allagash River above Allagash
Ice in winter may affect gauge measurement.


St. John River at Dickey
St. John River at Dickey
Ice in winter may affect gauge measurement.


Environment Canada Weather Map
Canadian Weather Map
Temperature in Celsius


Today's Sun
Today's Sun
HMI Intensitygram / Dark areas are sunspots


Aurora Outlook
Aurora Outlook
Learn more about Geomagnetic Storm Impacts