NWS
Caribou Watches & Advisories
NE
Weather Chart
Tonight's
Probability of Precipitation
3-Day
Maximum Wind Gust
Today's Severe Weather
Outlook
Apex Wx
Fort Kent & the Saint John Valley,
Maine
Weather Information
Weather
information for Fort Kent & the Saint John Valley since 2009
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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).
Thursday, February 12
High: 26° at 1:41
am | Low: 15° at 11:36 pm
Precipitation: 0.00" | Snow:
0.0"
Avg. Daily Wind: N at 5 mph | Daily
Maximum Gust: 22 mph at 3:39 pm
Data source: Davis Instruments Vantage Pro 2 Personal Weather Station | Rain gauge not heated in winter.
Data source: Davis Instruments Vantage Pro 2 Personal Weather Station | Rain gauge not heated in winter.
Friday, February 13
Normal High: 22°
| Record High: 45° (1984)
Normal Low: -3° | Record Low: -33° (1975)
Normal Low: -3° | Record Low: -33° (1975)
Normal Daily
Precipitation: 0.08" | Record
Precipitation: 0.80" (1988)
Normal Daily Snow: 0.8" |
Record Snow: 12.0" (1988)
Source: NOAA
SC-ACIS NWS Caribou climate data collected since
1893
Precipitation 2026
Precipitation: 2.71" | normal
= 3.80" (-1.09")Snowfall
25-26: 59.6" | normal = 62.0" (-2.4")
Snowfall 24-25: 73.2" | normal = 99.3" (-26.1")
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
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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sunrise/sunset...
Moon
Phase: 🌘 Waning Crescent → 🌑 New Moon at 7:01
am Tue. Feb. 17
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: Fri. Feb. 13 -
Thu. Feb. 19
Updated February 13 at 8:25 am EST
Updated February 13 at 8:25 am EST
Today - Sunday
High pressure will spread across the Valley today with mostly
clear skies and seasonable temperatures with a high in the
lower-to-middle 20s. Northwest wind around 9 becomes west in the
afternoon. Tonight, skies become partly cloudy over Fort Kent with
overnight temperatures dropping to around 4°F. Southwest wind near
calm become south towards morning near calm.
Colder air aloft associated with a closed, upper-level low over
Québec will move south on Saturday, increasing instability and
bringing scattered snow showers to the region. While moisture is
limited, there will be enough for occasional moderate to briefly heavy
bursts of snow. Northern areas are most likely to see activity, though
a few showers could reach the coast. Some bands may briefly intensify
snowfall and produce gusty winds, along with sudden drops in
visibility. However, widespread strong winds are not expected, and the
risk of snow squalls is low. Most areas will see less than an inch of
accumulation, with isolated spots slightly higher.
In Fort Kent, Saturday's high will be near 24°F with southwest wind
in the morning 3-4 mph becoming northwest in the afternoon around 4
mph. 70% chance of snow showers with around 1-inch snowfall possible.
Saturday night, expect mostly cloudy skies in the evening with a 20%
chance of snow showers, ending before midnight. Skies become partly
cloudy skies overnight. Low around 4°F with northwest wind at 4 mph.
Sunday, high pressure moves across the region from Québec with
mostly sunny skies, highs in the upper 20s and northwest wind 0-5
mph. Sunday night, partly cloudy skies develop with a low around 7°F
and west wind 0-7 mph.
Monday - Thursday
A warm front lifts towards the region President's Day with
partly sunny skies overspreading the Saint John Valley. High in
the low 30s with south wind 0-7 mph. Monday night, mostly cloudy
skies develop with a 30% chance of snow and a low in the lower
20s. South wind 0-7 mph.
For now, Wednesday features partly sunny skies with a 30%
chance of snow, mainly in the afternoon. High in the low 30s with
northwest wind 0-7 mph. Wednesday night, partly cloudy with a 30%
chance of snow and a low in the lower 10s. Northwest wind 0-7 mph.
Thursday, partly sunny with a high in the low 20s. 30% chance
of snow with northwest wind 0-7 mph. Thursday night, partly cloudy
with a 20% chance of snow. Low in the 0 to 5 above range.
Northwest wind 8-14 mph.
🌤️ Daily Weather for Fort
Kent & Vicinity 🌤️
Updated every 3-6 hours from NWS
Caribou
Credit: College of
DuPage / NOAA GOES-19 Imagery (visible--day;
night--infrared)
🇺🇸 U.S.
National Weather Outlook
🇺🇸
Updated February 13, 2026
Updated February 13, 2026
Today -
Sunday
A strengthening
storm system will move from the southern Plains
into the Southeast this weekend, bringing
widespread rain and a few thunderstorms from
Texas to the lower Mississippi Valley and
beyond. Some areas could see locally heavy
downpours, especially where bands of rain track
over the same locations. A few storms may
produce gusty winds or small hail. By Sunday,
rain will spread into parts of the Southeast and
Mid-Atlantic, with a chance of a rain and snow
mix in higher elevations of the Northeast.
Meanwhile, a separate system moving into the
Pacific Northwest will bring periods of rain and
mountain snow, with light to moderate snowfall
possible in the higher terrain of the Interior
West. Temperatures will run well above normal
across the central U.S., with mild to warm
conditions from the Plains to the Southeast.
Monday -
Thursday
After a weekend
storm exits the East Coast on Monday, quieter
weather will briefly return before a major
pattern shift takes shape. A strong ridge of
high pressure will build from the southern
Plains to the Midwest, spreading unseasonably
warm and breezy conditions eastward through
midweek. Highs across Texas and the
south-central U.S. will climb well into the
70s and 80s, with gusty winds raising fire
weather concerns from western Texas to
Wyoming. Meanwhile, a large storm system will
move into the West, bringing much-needed rain
to California and heavy mountain snow from the
Sierra Nevada to the Rockies. Several feet of
snow are possible in the highest elevations.
As the week progresses, a developing Plains
storm will spread precipitation into the
Midwest and Great Lakes, with rain south and
snow to the north.
⛈️Thunderstorm/Severe
Weather Outlook⛈️
Friday:
A few strong to severe thunderstorms
are possible this evening into the overnight
hours across parts of the southern Plains.
Storms may first develop late this afternoon in
northwest Texas before becoming more widespread
tonight from west Texas into Oklahoma. Some
storms could produce hail and gusty winds,
especially as they organize into clusters or
lines moving east-northeast. Hail may be the
main threat early on, with a mix of hail and
damaging wind potential overnight. Storms could
extend into parts of southern Kansas by early
Saturday morning. While severe weather is
expected to remain isolated, residents should
stay alert for changing conditions.
Saturday:
Strong thunderstorms may develop late
Saturday afternoon through Saturday night from
the southern Great Plains into the lower
Mississippi Valley. Widespread clouds and
earlier rain may limit daytime heating, but
increasing Gulf moisture and cooler air aloft
could still allow storms to strengthen,
especially across central and southeastern
Texas. Some storms may produce large hail at
first, with a growing risk of gusty or
damaging winds as activity becomes more
organized during the evening. The overall
severe threat appears limited but not zero. A
brief tornado cannot be completely ruled out
Saturday night, mainly across southeastern
Texas into the lower Mississippi Valley,
though the risk currently appears low.
Sunday: Strong
thunderstorms may continue Sunday across parts
of the eastern Gulf Coast, including areas
from eastern Mississippi and southeastern
Louisiana into the Florida Panhandle and
northern Florida. While the overall storm
system will be weakening, enough moisture and
instability may remain to support a few
stronger storms. Gusty to locally damaging
winds and small hail will be the main
concerns. The tornado risk appears low, and
the severe threat should gradually decrease
through the day as winds aloft and surface
energy weaken. Storms may be most organized
near the immediate Gulf Coast before slowly
diminishing Sunday evening.
Monday -
Friday: A broad area of high
pressure is expected to remain over the
eastern Pacific through next week, while
another ridge gradually strengthens from the
Gulf region into the Bahamas and Caribbean. In
between, a series of disturbances will move
from the West across the Rockies and into the
Plains. These systems may lead to periodic
areas of low pressure forming east of the
Rockies, bringing rounds of unsettled weather
to parts of the central and eastern U.S. One
such system could track from the central
Plains toward the Great Lakes early to
midweek. However, limited moisture should keep
the risk of severe thunderstorms low. Another
stronger system may develop later in the week
as Gulf moisture begins to increase.
National Weather
Outlook sources: Weather
Prediction Center &
Storm Prediction Center
Today's
US
Forecast Chart
Today's US Severe Weather / Thunderstorm Outlook
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US Low Temperature Outlook
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15 & Aug. 1 to Nov. 15
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⚠️ Weather Notice: This
information is compiled by Joseph Becker / Apex Wx 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.
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.
Forecast outlooks written by Dr. Becker
are usually posted between 7 - 9 am M-F / 8 -10 am weekends &
holidays.
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)
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St. John River at Dickey











































