1 mi / 1.5 km SW of Apex Wx station in Fort Kent
Apex Wx
Fort Kent & the Saint John Valley, Maine
Weather Information
Member APRSWXNET/CWOP & CWOP Programs
📊 Fort Kent Weather Almanac 📊 (Click to Collapse/Expand)
2022
June 2026 Major Moon Phases
🇺🇸 US National Weather Outlook 🇺🇸
(Click to Collapse/Expand)
A much cooler air mass is spreading across much of the eastern and central United States, bringing a welcome break from recent warmth. Rain across New England is moving out, while temperatures from the Plains to the Northeast fall to levels well below normal for mid-June. Many areas will see comfortable highs mainly in the 70s and lower 80s. Meanwhile, the greatest weather concern will be along the Gulf Coast from South Texas into Louisiana, where a prolonged period of heavy rain is expected through the middle of the week. Several inches of rain may fall, raising the risk of flooding in vulnerable locations. Forecasters are also monitoring the potential for tropical development near the Texas coast. Elsewhere, the Pacific Northwest will begin to cool after a brief heat wave, while hot conditions persist across the Desert Southwest.
A few strong to severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains and the Upper Midwest. The greatest threats will be isolated large hail and damaging wind gusts, although widespread severe weather is not expected. Across eastern New Mexico, southeastern Colorado, southwest Kansas, and nearby areas, thunderstorms are expected to develop during the afternoon and may organize into clusters as they move southeastward. Some storms could produce large hail and locally strong winds. Farther north, scattered thunderstorms are forecast across the Dakotas and parts of Minnesota. While moisture will be somewhat limited, strengthening winds in the atmosphere could allow a few storms to produce gusty to damaging winds. Along the Gulf Coast and Southeast, isolated storms may also become briefly strong, but the overall severe weather threat remains low and localized.
Learn more about Excessive Rainfall Risk
Serious
Flash Flood Threat Develops
Along the Texas Gulf Coast and
Parts of Mississippi
A dangerous flash
flooding situation is expected to
develop today across much of the
Texas Gulf Coast, South Texas, and
portions of west-central
Mississippi. Extremely moist
tropical air moving inland from
the Gulf of Mexico will create
conditions capable of producing
intense rainfall rates and
repeated rounds of thunderstorms.
In South Texas and along the Texas
coast, some storms may produce
several inches of rain in just a
few hours, with localized areas
receiving much higher totals.
Flooding could become widespread,
especially in urban areas and
locations where storms repeatedly
move over the same communities.
Farther east, parts of Louisiana
and Mississippi face a heightened
flood risk as numerous
thunderstorms develop along a
stalled front. Areas with already
saturated ground will be
especially vulnerable to rapid
flash flooding through this
evening.
🔥Fire Weather Outlook🔥
Learn more about Fire Weather Outlooks
Elevated wildfire danger is expected this afternoon across portions of eastern Wyoming, the Nebraska Panhandle, and nearby areas as dry air and gusty winds combine with receptive vegetation. A cold front moving through the region will bring stronger northwesterly winds, while daytime heating lowers humidity levels to very dry values. These conditions can allow fires to start more easily and spread more rapidly if they develop. Additional pockets of elevated fire weather are possible across parts of the eastern Great Basin, Four Corners region, and Central Rockies. Although the threat is expected to be more localized in these areas, low humidity and locally strong winds could still support increased fire activity.
National Weather Outlook information sources: Weather Prediction Center & Storm Prediction Center
🌤️ Weather Resources 🌤️
(Click
to Collapse/Expand)
🇺🇸 NOAA/National Weather Service 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 | Stellarium Web Online Star Map | Heavens Above | Moon Times for Fort Kent, Maine | Fort Kent Sun & Moon Data
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 US Naval Observatory with additional information 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












































