Winter/Spring Flood Potential Outlook For Northern And Eastern Maine - 02/15/2024
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WINTER/SPRING FLOOD POTENTIAL OUTLOOK
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME
916 AM EST Thu Feb 15 2024
...WINTER/SPRING FLOOD POTENTIAL OUTLOOK FOR NORTHERN, CENTRAL
AND DOWNEAST MAINE...
This is the fourth Winter/Spring Flood Potential Outlook for 2024,
issued by the National Weather Service in Caribou, Maine. This
outlook is for Northern, Central, and Downeast Maine for the two
week period of February 15th through February 29th, 2024.
The potential for ice jam flooding is Normal across Northern Maine
and the Central Highlands. The potential for ice jam flooding
is Below Normal across the Downeast basins. The potential for
open water flooding is Below Normal across all basins.
...NORTHERN BASINS...
SNOW DEPTH: Below Normal. 10-15 inches with isolated higher
amounts
WATER EQUIVALENT: Below Normal. Generally 2.5-4 inches with
isolated higher amounts
STREAM FLOWS: Near Normal.
RIVER ICE: St. John and Aroostook River`s are 90-95% frozen.
Other smaller rivers are 50-75% frozen. Several openings in the
river ice from near Dickey Bridge in Allagash downstream to Fort
Kent and Madawaska. Mainly frozen river downstream to Hamlin.
There is ongoing frazil production in the open areas, however that
has been reduced with the lower streamflows.
...CENTRAL HIGHLAND BASINS...
SNOW DEPTH: Below Normal. 4-12 inches.
WATER EQUIVALENT: Below Normal. Generally 1-3 inches.
STREAM FLOWS: Near Normal.
RIVER ICE: Northern stretches of the Penobscot & Piscataquis
rivers are 60-75% ice covered. 90-95% of the Mattawamkeag is
frozen. Central to Southern stretches of the Penobscot are 25-35%
frozen with most ice above dams. These openings are mostly due to
tributaries and dam discharges. Ice has significantly decreased
since previous outlook.
...DOWNEAST BASINS...
SNOW DEPTH: Below Normal. 0-7 inches.
WATER EQUIVALENT: Below Normal. Generally 0-2 inches.
STREAM FLOWS: Normal to Slightly Above Normal.
RIVER ICE: Above dams the rivers are generally 90% ice covered in
mainly sheet ice or fractured ice.
...ICE THICKNESS...
Ice thickness is extremely variable this year posing a serious
risk to life. Do not venture onto the ice unless you know the
exact thickness. For more information on ice safety visit the
Maine Warden Service website www.maine.gov/ifw/fishing-
boating/fishing/ice-safety-tips.html
For the 2024 season the Winter/Spring Flood Outlook (ESF) will be
in graphical format on our website
www.weather.gov/car/springfloodoutlook
...CLIMATE GUIDANCE FROM NORTHEAST RIVER FORECAST CENTER...
As we move into late February...it appears the North Atlantic
Oscillation (NAO) index will become weakly positive while the
Pacific North America (PNA)index tries to move from weakly
positive to weakly negative. The combination of a weakly positive
NAO and weakly negative PNA would favor a return to above normal
temperatures with precipitation perhaps returning to above normal
as more southern stream systems come north with the weakly
positive PNA trying to build an upper level ridge across the
southeastern United States. The official 8 to 14 day outlook from
NOAA`s Climate Prediction Center for 21-27 February 2024 seems in
line with the pattern discussed above as it calls for temperatures
to likely remain normal across the area. Precipitation for the
same time period is leaning above normal across the entire region.
$$
Sinko
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