Apex Wx
Fort Kent & the Saint John Valley,
Maine
Weather Information
Member APRSWXNET/CWOP & CWOP Programs
Normal Low: 17° | Record Low: -8° (1954)
Normal Daily Precipitation: 0.08" | Record Precipitation: 1.10" (1981)
Snow 25-26: 69.3" | normal: 92.6" (-23.3")
Data source: NOAA SC-ACIS NWS Caribou climate data
Moon Phase: 🌔 Waxing Gibbous → 🌕 Full "Pink" Moon @ 10:12 am Wed. Apr. 1
Updated March 31 at 7:40 AM EDT
A slow moving front stretching across much of the country will bring a variety of hazardous weather through midweek. Rain and freezing rain are expected from the Upper Mississippi Valley into the Northeast, with light snow possible in northern Maine and parts of the Northern Plains. Meanwhile, strong to severe thunderstorms will impact the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley through early Wednesday, producing damaging winds, hail, frequent lightning, and a few tornadoes. On Wednesday, severe storms shift into the Central and Southern Plains. Additional areas of rain and freezing rain will persist from the Plains to the Northeast. Out West, rain and mountain snow will spread inland, bringing accumulating snow to higher elevations and unsettled conditions across the region.
Severe
Thunderstorm Threat Across Midwest and
Central Appalachians
A risk for severe thunderstorms will
develop today across parts of the
Midwest, Great Lakes, and into the
Central Appalachians. Storms are
expected to increase in coverage during
the afternoon and evening as a cold
front moves through the region. The
greatest threat area extends from
northern Illinois eastward into portions
of Pennsylvania and New York. These
storms may produce damaging wind gusts,
large hail, and frequent lightning. A
few storms could organize into clusters,
increasing the potential for stronger
wind impacts. Isolated severe storms are
also possible farther west into the
Mississippi Valley and south into the
central and southern Plains. These
storms will be more scattered but could
still produce locally strong winds and
hail through the evening hours.
A slow moving weather system will bring periods of heavy rain to parts of the Great Lakes and Northeast, with the greatest concern focused on western New York and southeast Michigan. Rain will develop in multiple rounds, with the first arriving early and producing moderate to locally heavy rainfall, especially in areas downwind of Lake Erie. Additional rounds of rain later in the day may lead to rainfall totals of one and a half to three inches in some locations. This could increase the risk of flash flooding, particularly in areas with already elevated stream levels. Urban locations such as Detroit may be especially vulnerable. Lighter but still impactful rainfall is expected across surrounding regions.
Learn more about Fire Weather Outlooks
Elevated Fire Weather Risk Across Southern High Plains
A mid-level trough moving into the southern Rockies today will support the development of a surface low along the Texas Panhandle and Oklahoma border. Strong, dry westerly winds of around 15 mph are expected across the southern High Plains, with relative humidity near 15 percent, creating elevated fire weather conditions. Isolated high-based thunderstorms may develop ahead of a frontal boundary in the very dry atmosphere. These storms could produce lightning strikes capable of starting fires, and gusty winds may spread any ignitions. While storms are expected to be isolated, the combination of dry fuels, low humidity, and erratic wind gusts increases the potential for small, lightning-ignited wildfires across the region today.
Today's Fire Weather Outlook
🌤️Weather Resources🌤️
NWS Caribou Weather Information🌎 World Weather
World Temperature Extremes | US Temperature Extremes | Canadian Temperature Extremes | Europe Temperatures Extremes | Northern Hemisphere | Southern Hemisphere | Earth from Nullschool | Weather Around The World | CoolWx World Weather Extremes
APOD | SolarHam | Webb Image Galleries | Space.com | National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) | Spaceflight Now | NASA's ISS Sighting Opportunities | Sky & Telescope's: This Week's Sky at a Glance | Space Weather
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
- Sun/Moon data from timeanddate.com.
- NOAA Warning Banner provided by WillyWeather.com.
- Additional Archived Weather Data from Apex Wx is at the University of Utah's MesoWest
- Apex Wx logo by Joanna Becker ©2016 (Visit Bushi and Brush Arts Dojo)
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 Visible/Infrared Satellite
St. John River at Dickey












































