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Caribou Watches & Advisories
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Tonight's
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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).
February 2026
High: 43° on 2-28 | Low:
-20° on 2-6
Precipitation: 0.51" / normal: 2.34" (-1.83") | Snow: 9.0" / normal: 21.0" (-12.0")
Average Daily Wind: N @ 2 mph | Maximum Gust: 32 mph on 2-28
Data source: Davis Instruments Vantage Pro 2 Personal Weather Station & NOAA SC-ACIS NWS Caribou climate data
Precipitation: 0.51" / normal: 2.34" (-1.83") | Snow: 9.0" / normal: 21.0" (-12.0")
Average Daily Wind: N @ 2 mph | Maximum Gust: 32 mph on 2-28
Data source: Davis Instruments Vantage Pro 2 Personal Weather Station & NOAA SC-ACIS NWS Caribou climate data
Saturday, February 28
High: 43° at 2:05
pm | Low: 10° at 4:11 am
Precipitation: 0.00" | Snow:
0.0"
Avg. Daily Wind: SSW @ 4 mph | Daily
Maximum Gust: 32 mph @ 11:44 am
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.
Sunday, March 1
Normal High: 28°
| Record High: 55° (1894)
Normal Low: 2° | Record Low: -33° (1982)
Normal Low: 2° | Record Low: -33° (1982)
Normal Daily
Precipitation: 0.10" | Record
Precipitation: 0.87" (201)
Normal Daily Snow: 0.8" |
Record Snow: 9.0" (2013)
Source: NOAA
SC-ACIS NWS Caribou climate data
Precipitation 2026
Precipitation: 2.91" | normal
= 5.22" (-2.31")Snowfall
25-26: 60.6" | normal = 74.4" (-13.8")
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
Data source: NOAA SC-ACIS NWS Caribou climate data
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Fort
Kent, Maine, USA — Sun & Moon Today
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sunrise/sunset...
Moon Phase: 🌔 Waxing Gibbous → 🌕 Full "Worm" Moon @ 6:38 am Tue. Mar. 3
experimental
The Week Ahead for Fort Kent & the Saint John Valley
of Maine
Apex
Wx forecasts updated
7–9 am weekdays / 8–10 am weekends &
holiday
7-Day Outlook: Sun. Mar.
1 - Sat. Mar. 7
Updated Sunday, March 1 at 9:43 am EST
Updated Sunday, March 1 at 9:43 am EST
Weather note: Based on temperature patterns and the annual
climate cycle (making it useful for weather records and seasonal
forecasting), meteorological spring begins March 1
and ends May 31. Astronomical spring (the equinox)
occurs on March 20 at 10:46 am EDT.
Today - Tuesday
High pressure over the Great Lakes will build east into the
Valley today bringing quite cold arctic air to Fort Kent and
surrounding communities. The area will briefly climb to around 10°F
late this morning before temperatures begin falling again. Clouds
will gradually thin this afternoon, leading to increasing sunshine
toward sunset. However, brisk northwest winds gusting 20 to 25 mph
will make it feel much colder, with wind chills staying below zero
across the Valley.
Skies clear tonight, allowing temperatures to plunge to between 15
and 20 below zero in the North Woods. Wind chills may dip below 25
below after midnight, creating dangerous cold. Consequently, the
National Weather Service in Caribou has issued a Cold Weather
Advisory from 1 am tonight until 7 am Monday
morning for very cold temperatures and/or wind chill
values as low as 31°F below expected.
Arctic high pressure will continue to slide across the Valley
Monday with very cold temperatures remaining across the region. Monday
night will be a tad warmer with lows falling to around 0°F. A cold
front will slide down from the northwest Tuesday into Wednesday with
mostly cloudy skies and warmer temperatures as southwest flow sets up
ahead of the trough. Some light snow is possible Tuesday night as the
front moves through northern Maine.
In Fort Kent and vicinity, cold high pressure will keep the region
mostly sunny but very chilly today, with afternoon highs struggling to
reach around 10°F. Even with lighter northwest winds of 7 to 9 mph,
wind chill values will hover near -8°F at times. Clear skies tonight
will allow temperatures to tumble to around -12°F, and light west
winds will push wind chills closer to -22°F by early Monday morning.
Sunshine continues Monday with highs near 13°F, though it will still
feel bitterly cold. Clouds increase Monday night as temperatures
moderate, with lows settling near 1°F and wind chills dipping to
around -8°F.
A noticeable warmup arrives Tuesday as southwest winds strengthen to 7 to 13 mph with gusts up to 23 mph, pushing highs into the lower 30s under mostly cloudy skies. The milder air will continue into Tuesday night, a weak area of low pressure is expected to pass south of New England, which may bring a 30% chance of snow after 2 am. Lows will fall back to around 13°F, with light winds developing overnight.
A noticeable warmup arrives Tuesday as southwest winds strengthen to 7 to 13 mph with gusts up to 23 mph, pushing highs into the lower 30s under mostly cloudy skies. The milder air will continue into Tuesday night, a weak area of low pressure is expected to pass south of New England, which may bring a 30% chance of snow after 2 am. Lows will fall back to around 13°F, with light winds developing overnight.
Wednesday - Saturday
High pressure will build into the Valley Wednesday with mostly sunny skies and highs in the mid-30s in Fort Kent. Mostly cloudy skies prevail Wednesday night with lows falling into the upper 10s along with a 20% chance of snow after midnight. Light west wind 0-7 mph expected Wednesday and Wednesday night.
High pressure will build into the Valley Wednesday with mostly sunny skies and highs in the mid-30s in Fort Kent. Mostly cloudy skies prevail Wednesday night with lows falling into the upper 10s along with a 20% chance of snow after midnight. Light west wind 0-7 mph expected Wednesday and Wednesday night.
Friday, low pressure tracking across
Hudson Bay into northern Québec
pulls a cold front towards the region with a 30% chance of snow,
mainly in the afternoon. High in the mid-20s with southeast wind
0-7 mph. Friday night, expect a 60% chance of snow as a warm front
lifts across the area with a low in the upper 10s and southeast
wind 0-7 mph.
Saturday, the cold front approaches with snow likely in the
morning, with mostly cloudy skies and chances of precipitation
falling to 40% as the day progresses. A chance of rain in the
afternoon with high temperatures reaching the low 40s and
southwest wind 0-7 mph ahead of the front.
Saturday night, a 30% chance of rain in the evening then a 30%
chance of snow overnight as the front moves through and cooler
high pressure builds in behind. Look for a low in the middle 20s
with west wind 8-14 mph. The cold front should move offshore by
Sunday morning.
🌤️ 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)
🇺🇸
Today's U.S. National Weather Outlook
🇺🇸
Wet and Wintry Weather Expands East;
Western Storm and Temperature Extremes Continue
Nationwide
A strong cold front stretching from the Northeast to the southern Plains will keep weather unsettled to start the week. Light snow will move across parts of the Northeast this morning before a mix of rain, sleet, freezing rain, and snow spreads across the central Plains and mid-Mississippi Valley tonight. This wintry mix will shift into the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic by Monday, where pockets of subfreezing air could lead to slippery travel. Farther west, another storm will bring valley rain and mountain snow from the Pacific Northwest to the Rockies. Meanwhile, record warmth in the Southwest and southern Plains contrasts sharply with bitter Arctic air lingering across the northern tier.
A strong cold front stretching from the Northeast to the southern Plains will keep weather unsettled to start the week. Light snow will move across parts of the Northeast this morning before a mix of rain, sleet, freezing rain, and snow spreads across the central Plains and mid-Mississippi Valley tonight. This wintry mix will shift into the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic by Monday, where pockets of subfreezing air could lead to slippery travel. Farther west, another storm will bring valley rain and mountain snow from the Pacific Northwest to the Rockies. Meanwhile, record warmth in the Southwest and southern Plains contrasts sharply with bitter Arctic air lingering across the northern tier.
⛈️Thunderstorm/Severe
Weather Outlook⛈️
Marginal
Risk for Isolated Severe Storms in South
Florida and Oklahoma
Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon and evening across parts of South Florida and Oklahoma. In South Florida, a weak disturbance moving across the peninsula combined with daytime heating and sea breeze boundaries may spark scattered storms. A few could produce large hail and brief damaging wind gusts before weakening after sunset. In Oklahoma, a slow-moving cold front near the I-40 corridor may serve as a focus for storm development late today. While coverage is uncertain, any storm that forms could become strong enough to produce hail and locally gusty winds. Meanwhile, parts of northern California may see isolated thunderstorms with small hail, but severe weather is not expected there.
Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon and evening across parts of South Florida and Oklahoma. In South Florida, a weak disturbance moving across the peninsula combined with daytime heating and sea breeze boundaries may spark scattered storms. A few could produce large hail and brief damaging wind gusts before weakening after sunset. In Oklahoma, a slow-moving cold front near the I-40 corridor may serve as a focus for storm development late today. While coverage is uncertain, any storm that forms could become strong enough to produce hail and locally gusty winds. Meanwhile, parts of northern California may see isolated thunderstorms with small hail, but severe weather is not expected there.
🔥Fire
Weather🔥
No Critical Fire Weather Areas Expected Today
Fire weather concerns will remain limited today as shortwave ridging builds over the Southwest and weakens winds aloft across the southern Rockies and High Plains. A cold front will continue drifting south before stalling over the southern Plains. Ahead of this boundary, parts of eastern New Mexico and far West Texas may experience a few hours of warm, dry, and occasionally breezy conditions this afternoon. Winds of 15 to 20 mph combined with low humidity between 15% and 20% could lead to brief, localized fire weather concerns, especially where dry fuels are present. However, lighter overall winds, cooler temperatures behind the front, and areas of precipitation should prevent any widespread or critical fire weather threats.
No Critical Fire Weather Areas Expected Today
Fire weather concerns will remain limited today as shortwave ridging builds over the Southwest and weakens winds aloft across the southern Rockies and High Plains. A cold front will continue drifting south before stalling over the southern Plains. Ahead of this boundary, parts of eastern New Mexico and far West Texas may experience a few hours of warm, dry, and occasionally breezy conditions this afternoon. Winds of 15 to 20 mph combined with low humidity between 15% and 20% could lead to brief, localized fire weather concerns, especially where dry fuels are present. However, lighter overall winds, cooler temperatures behind the front, and areas of precipitation should prevent any widespread or critical fire weather threats.
National Weather
Outlook sources: Weather
Prediction Center &
Storm Prediction Center
Today's
US
Forecast Chart
Today's US Fire Weather Outlook
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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
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.
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
Surface Weather Chart
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College of
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2-Day Tropical Atlantic
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update June - November
St. John River at Dickey
8-14 Day Temperature Outlook
8-14 Day Precipitation
Outlook










































