Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Madison Center, CT
![]() | Sunrise 6:10 AM Sunset 7:30 PM Moonrise 5:02 AM Moonset 5:40 PM |
Marine Forecasts
NOTE: Zones were updated 3/20/2025. If your report is out of date, please click Edit
ANZ331 Long Island Sound East Of New Haven Ct/port Jefferson Ny To The Mouth Of The Connecticut River- 226 Pm Edt Wed Apr 15 2026
Tonight - S winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 1 ft or less. Wave detail: sw 1 ft at 3 seconds. Chance of tstms this evening. Chance of showers. Slight chance of tstms after midnight.
Thu - SW winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 1 ft or less.
Thu night - SW winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 1 ft or less. Wave detail: sw 1 ft at 2 seconds. Slight chance of showers after midnight.
Fri - W winds around 5 kt. Seas 1 ft or less. Slight chance of showers in the morning, then chance of showers in the afternoon.
Fri night - NE winds around 5 kt. Seas 1 ft or less. Chance of showers and slight chance of tstms in the evening, then slight chance of showers after midnight.
Sat - E winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 1 ft or less.
Sat night - SE winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 1 ft or less. Chance of showers after midnight.
Sun - W winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 1 to 2 ft. Showers likely.
Sun night - NW winds 15 to 20 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft. Chance of showers.
Mon - NW winds 15 to 20 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Mon night - NW winds 15 to 20 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
winds and seas may be higher in and near tstms.
winds and seas may be higher in and near tstms.
ANZ300 226 Pm Edt Wed Apr 15 2026
Synopsis for the long island and connecticut coastal waters - Dominant high pressure begins to break down by late week with a weak frontal passage on Friday, followed by a stronger cold front on Sunday. High pressure develops in its wake.
7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Madison Center, CT

NEW! Add second zone forecast
| Madison Click for Map Wed -- 03:34 AM EDT -0.08 feet Low Tide Wed -- 05:02 AM EDT Moonrise Wed -- 06:10 AM EDT Sunrise Wed -- 09:49 AM EDT 5.14 feet High Tide Wed -- 03:49 PM EDT 0.01 feet Low Tide Wed -- 05:39 PM EDT Moonset Wed -- 07:30 PM EDT Sunset Wed -- 10:07 PM EDT 5.61 feet High Tide Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Madison, Connecticut, Tide feet
| 12 am |
| 3.2 |
| 1 am |
| 1.9 |
| 2 am |
| 0.8 |
| 3 am |
| 0 |
| 4 am |
| -0 |
| 5 am |
| 0.6 |
| 6 am |
| 1.7 |
| 7 am |
| 3 |
| 8 am |
| 4.1 |
| 9 am |
| 4.9 |
| 10 am |
| 5.1 |
| 11 am |
| 4.6 |
| 12 pm |
| 3.5 |
| 1 pm |
| 2.3 |
| 2 pm |
| 1.1 |
| 3 pm |
| 0.3 |
| 4 pm |
| 0 |
| 5 pm |
| 0.5 |
| 6 pm |
| 1.6 |
| 7 pm |
| 2.9 |
| 8 pm |
| 4.2 |
| 9 pm |
| 5.2 |
| 10 pm |
| 5.6 |
| 11 pm |
| 5.3 |
Tide / Current for Hammonasset Point, 1.2 mi SW of (depth 15 ft), Long Island Sound, Connecticut Current
| Hammonasset Point Click for Map Flood direction 287 true Ebb direction 106 true Wed -- 03:49 AM EDT 0.00 knots Slack Wed -- 05:02 AM EDT Moonrise Wed -- 06:09 AM EDT 1.04 knots Max Flood Wed -- 06:10 AM EDT Sunrise Wed -- 09:54 AM EDT -0.00 knots Slack Wed -- 11:50 AM EDT -0.87 knots Max Ebb Wed -- 04:00 PM EDT 0.00 knots Slack Wed -- 05:39 PM EDT Moonset Wed -- 06:29 PM EDT 1.14 knots Max Flood Wed -- 07:30 PM EDT Sunset Wed -- 10:14 PM EDT -0.00 knots Slack Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Hammonasset Point, 1.2 mi SW of (depth 15 ft), Long Island Sound, Connecticut Current, knots
| 12 am |
| -0.9 |
| 1 am |
| -0.8 |
| 2 am |
| -0.6 |
| 3 am |
| -0.3 |
| 4 am |
| 0.1 |
| 5 am |
| 0.8 |
| 6 am |
| 1 |
| 7 am |
| 1 |
| 8 am |
| 0.8 |
| 9 am |
| 0.4 |
| 10 am |
| -0.1 |
| 11 am |
| -0.7 |
| 12 pm |
| -0.9 |
| 1 pm |
| -0.8 |
| 2 pm |
| -0.6 |
| 3 pm |
| -0.3 |
| 4 pm |
| -0 |
| 5 pm |
| 0.7 |
| 6 pm |
| 1.1 |
| 7 pm |
| 1.1 |
| 8 pm |
| 0.9 |
| 9 pm |
| 0.6 |
| 10 pm |
| 0.1 |
| 11 pm |
| -0.5 |
Area Discussion for New York City/Upton, NY
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FXUS61 KOKX 151804 AFDOKX
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service New York NY 204 PM EDT Wed Apr 15 2026
WHAT HAS CHANGED
Shower and thunderstorm potential has been delayed until later tonight with the latest update.
KEY MESSAGES
1) Well above normal temperatures through Friday.
2) Showers and thunderstorms possible through Friday, mainly in the evening and overnight, and again Sunday afternoon and evening.
3) Relatively cooler temperatures into the weekend with a more significant cool down early next week to unseasonable levels.
DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE 1
Deep layer high pressure persists over the Eastern Seaboard leading to west-southwest flow at the surface and the continuation of well above normal temperatures. By Friday, the ridge begins to shift eastward ahead of an upper trough and attendant cold front. The breakdown of the ridge, shifting wind directions, and cloud cover will reduce high temperatures by around 5 to 10 degrees compared to earlier in the week, but will still be above normal until the cold front passes through Friday night.
KEY MESSAGE 2
Earlier convection over Central New York largely dissipated under strong subsidence with high pressure dominant over the East. A second short wave aloft will pass to the north late tonight, which may trigger a few showers and thunderstorms, mainly across Connecticut along the thermal trough. Additional showers and thunderstorms will be possible late Thursday night as a cold front moves through the region.
H5 shortwave passes through the mainly zonal flow across New England on Friday. Associated cloud cover and precipitation chances will mitigate highs somewhat relative to recent warmth, with Friday highs in the upper 70s inland and low 70s across the coastal plain.
Thereafter, a more potent mid level closed low dives south out of central Canada Sunday-Monday bringing with it shot of colder air for Sunday- Tuesday of next week. The coldest day of the period looks to be Monday, with highs in the 50s across the board and general warmup thereafter into midweek. NBM spread for high temperatures is on the order of 5 degrees for that period, indicating some consensus in the ensemble guidance. The coldest night looks to be Monday night, with subfreezing temperatures possible across parts of the interior.
KEY MESSAGE 3
Weak frontal system with some support aloft from a mid level shortwave on Friday will increase shower chances across most of the CWA Some shear, but very little instability for late afternoon per model soundings should make any thunder potential conditional on destabilization. On Sunday, a stronger cold front is progged to move through bringing another chance of rain during the afternoon with perhaps some wet snow mixing in post front by early Monday, especially north and west of NYC. NBM probabilities of more than 0.5" of precipitation are only around 20-30%, owing to quick moving, mainly light event.
AVIATION /18Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/
High pressure will remain in place to the south through the period. As weak low pressure and a trailing cold front move across upstate New York today, a prefrontal trough will extend southward into the area this afternoon and evening.
VFR for much the TAF period. There will be a chance of showers/tstms with brief MVFR/IFR conditions this evening and the first part of tonight. The best chances will be north of the NYC terminals and most of the CAMs have backed off on the precip reaching the NYC terminals.
Winds will be from the SW around 10kt kt inland and S along the coast this afternoon, with some gusts over 20 kt at the NYC metros north/west and with the sea breeze at KJFK/KISP. Winds diminish to less than 10 kt by 00Z-01Z Thu. Winds become light and variable in many spots tonight, then increase again on Thursday to 8-15kt with some gusts to near 20kt.
Low chance of fog tonight which may bring flight categories down to MVFR or possibly IFR.
...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty...
Low chance for a shower at the NYC terminals this evening, but confidence is too low to include in the TAF.
OUTLOOK FOR 18Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY
Thursday: VFR. Gusty S winds.
Friday: Chance of showers and possibly a tstm especially in the afternoon and early evening, with MVFR or lower cond.
Saturday: VFR.
Sunday: Chance of showers with MVFR cond possible. W winds G20kt in the afternoon.
Monday: Mainly VFR.
Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/ www.weather.gov/zny/n90
MARINE
Waves across the eastern ocean waters may briefly swell to around 5 ft Fri afternoon, otherwise conditions will remain below SCA level into Saturday night. A strong frontal system over the waters will bring near SCA conditions Sunday into Monday.
CLIMATE
Daily record high temperatures that could be reached:
Wed, April 15: KEWR: 88/1960 KBDR: 81/1960 KNYC: 87/1941 KLGA: 86/1941 KJFK: 80/2006 KISP: 78/2024
Daily record high minimum temperatures that could be reached:
Wed, April 15: KEWR: 60/2023 KBDR: 53/2012 KNYC: 67/1941 KLGA: 64/1941 KJFK: 58/1960 KISP: 56/2023
Thu, April 16: KEWR: 64/2002 KBDR: 53/2002 KNYC: 69/2002 KLGA: 68/2002 KJFK: 57/2002 KISP: 55/2012
Fri, April 17: KEWR: 68/2002 KBDR: 57/2002 KNYC: 74/2002 KLGA: 73/2002 KJFK: 60/2002.
KISP: 61/2002
OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
CT...None.
NY...None.
NJ...None.
MARINE...None.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service New York NY 204 PM EDT Wed Apr 15 2026
WHAT HAS CHANGED
Shower and thunderstorm potential has been delayed until later tonight with the latest update.
KEY MESSAGES
1) Well above normal temperatures through Friday.
2) Showers and thunderstorms possible through Friday, mainly in the evening and overnight, and again Sunday afternoon and evening.
3) Relatively cooler temperatures into the weekend with a more significant cool down early next week to unseasonable levels.
DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE 1
Deep layer high pressure persists over the Eastern Seaboard leading to west-southwest flow at the surface and the continuation of well above normal temperatures. By Friday, the ridge begins to shift eastward ahead of an upper trough and attendant cold front. The breakdown of the ridge, shifting wind directions, and cloud cover will reduce high temperatures by around 5 to 10 degrees compared to earlier in the week, but will still be above normal until the cold front passes through Friday night.
KEY MESSAGE 2
Earlier convection over Central New York largely dissipated under strong subsidence with high pressure dominant over the East. A second short wave aloft will pass to the north late tonight, which may trigger a few showers and thunderstorms, mainly across Connecticut along the thermal trough. Additional showers and thunderstorms will be possible late Thursday night as a cold front moves through the region.
H5 shortwave passes through the mainly zonal flow across New England on Friday. Associated cloud cover and precipitation chances will mitigate highs somewhat relative to recent warmth, with Friday highs in the upper 70s inland and low 70s across the coastal plain.
Thereafter, a more potent mid level closed low dives south out of central Canada Sunday-Monday bringing with it shot of colder air for Sunday- Tuesday of next week. The coldest day of the period looks to be Monday, with highs in the 50s across the board and general warmup thereafter into midweek. NBM spread for high temperatures is on the order of 5 degrees for that period, indicating some consensus in the ensemble guidance. The coldest night looks to be Monday night, with subfreezing temperatures possible across parts of the interior.
KEY MESSAGE 3
Weak frontal system with some support aloft from a mid level shortwave on Friday will increase shower chances across most of the CWA Some shear, but very little instability for late afternoon per model soundings should make any thunder potential conditional on destabilization. On Sunday, a stronger cold front is progged to move through bringing another chance of rain during the afternoon with perhaps some wet snow mixing in post front by early Monday, especially north and west of NYC. NBM probabilities of more than 0.5" of precipitation are only around 20-30%, owing to quick moving, mainly light event.
AVIATION /18Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/
High pressure will remain in place to the south through the period. As weak low pressure and a trailing cold front move across upstate New York today, a prefrontal trough will extend southward into the area this afternoon and evening.
VFR for much the TAF period. There will be a chance of showers/tstms with brief MVFR/IFR conditions this evening and the first part of tonight. The best chances will be north of the NYC terminals and most of the CAMs have backed off on the precip reaching the NYC terminals.
Winds will be from the SW around 10kt kt inland and S along the coast this afternoon, with some gusts over 20 kt at the NYC metros north/west and with the sea breeze at KJFK/KISP. Winds diminish to less than 10 kt by 00Z-01Z Thu. Winds become light and variable in many spots tonight, then increase again on Thursday to 8-15kt with some gusts to near 20kt.
Low chance of fog tonight which may bring flight categories down to MVFR or possibly IFR.
...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty...
Low chance for a shower at the NYC terminals this evening, but confidence is too low to include in the TAF.
OUTLOOK FOR 18Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY
Thursday: VFR. Gusty S winds.
Friday: Chance of showers and possibly a tstm especially in the afternoon and early evening, with MVFR or lower cond.
Saturday: VFR.
Sunday: Chance of showers with MVFR cond possible. W winds G20kt in the afternoon.
Monday: Mainly VFR.
Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/ www.weather.gov/zny/n90
MARINE
Waves across the eastern ocean waters may briefly swell to around 5 ft Fri afternoon, otherwise conditions will remain below SCA level into Saturday night. A strong frontal system over the waters will bring near SCA conditions Sunday into Monday.
CLIMATE
Daily record high temperatures that could be reached:
Wed, April 15: KEWR: 88/1960 KBDR: 81/1960 KNYC: 87/1941 KLGA: 86/1941 KJFK: 80/2006 KISP: 78/2024
Daily record high minimum temperatures that could be reached:
Wed, April 15: KEWR: 60/2023 KBDR: 53/2012 KNYC: 67/1941 KLGA: 64/1941 KJFK: 58/1960 KISP: 56/2023
Thu, April 16: KEWR: 64/2002 KBDR: 53/2002 KNYC: 69/2002 KLGA: 68/2002 KJFK: 57/2002 KISP: 55/2012
Fri, April 17: KEWR: 68/2002 KBDR: 57/2002 KNYC: 74/2002 KLGA: 73/2002 KJFK: 60/2002.
KISP: 61/2002
OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
CT...None.
NY...None.
NJ...None.
MARINE...None.
| Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air | Water | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
| NWHC3 - 8465705 - New Haven, CT | 16 mi | 52 min | S 6G | 65°F | 54°F | 29.85 | ||
| NLHC3 | 28 mi | 52 min | 73°F | 45°F | 29.85 | |||
| BRHC3 - 8467150 - Bridgeport, CT | 31 mi | 52 min | SSW 8.9G | 72°F | 51°F | 29.79 | ||
| MTKN6 - 8510560 - Montauk, NY | 37 mi | 52 min | 65°F | 49°F | 29.85 |
Wind History for New Haven, CT
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Airport Reports
Link to 1 hour of 5 minute data for KSNC
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) for KSNC
Wind History Graph: SNC
(wind in knots)GEOS Local Image of north east
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Upton, NY,
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