Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for North Creek, NY
![]() | Sunrise 5:22 AM Sunset 8:21 PM Moonrise 3:05 AM Moonset 4:20 PM |
7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near North Creek, NY

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Troy Click for Map Fri -- 02:12 AM EDT 5.25 feet High Tide Fri -- 03:04 AM EDT Moonrise Fri -- 05:24 AM EDT Sunrise Fri -- 09:05 AM EDT 0.39 feet Low Tide Fri -- 02:36 PM EDT 4.80 feet High Tide Fri -- 04:17 PM EDT Moonset Fri -- 08:18 PM EDT Sunset Fri -- 09:20 PM EDT 0.03 feet Low Tide Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Troy, Hudson River, New York, Tide feet
12 am |
4.1 |
1 am |
4.9 |
2 am |
5.2 |
3 am |
5 |
4 am |
4.2 |
5 am |
3.1 |
6 am |
2.3 |
7 am |
1.6 |
8 am |
0.8 |
9 am |
0.4 |
10 am |
0.8 |
11 am |
2 |
12 pm |
3.3 |
1 pm |
4.2 |
2 pm |
4.7 |
3 pm |
4.8 |
4 pm |
4.2 |
5 pm |
3.1 |
6 pm |
2.1 |
7 pm |
1.3 |
8 pm |
0.6 |
9 pm |
0.1 |
10 pm |
0.3 |
11 pm |
1.4 |
Albany Click for Map Fri -- 02:04 AM EDT 5.25 feet High Tide Fri -- 03:04 AM EDT Moonrise Fri -- 05:25 AM EDT Sunrise Fri -- 08:56 AM EDT 0.39 feet Low Tide Fri -- 02:28 PM EDT 4.80 feet High Tide Fri -- 04:17 PM EDT Moonset Fri -- 08:18 PM EDT Sunset Fri -- 09:10 PM EDT 0.03 feet Low Tide Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Albany, New York, Tide feet
12 am |
4.2 |
1 am |
4.9 |
2 am |
5.2 |
3 am |
5 |
4 am |
4 |
5 am |
3 |
6 am |
2.2 |
7 am |
1.5 |
8 am |
0.7 |
9 am |
0.4 |
10 am |
0.9 |
11 am |
2.2 |
12 pm |
3.4 |
1 pm |
4.3 |
2 pm |
4.7 |
3 pm |
4.7 |
4 pm |
4 |
5 pm |
2.9 |
6 pm |
1.9 |
7 pm |
1.2 |
8 pm |
0.5 |
9 pm |
0 |
10 pm |
0.4 |
11 pm |
1.7 |
FXUS61 KALY 231734 AFDALY
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Albany NY 134 PM EDT Fri May 23 2025
SYNOPSIS
Our stretch of unseasonably cool temperatures along with cloudy skies continues today and even tomorrow. Patchy drizzle this morning turns into more organized areas of light rain showers this afternoon into tonight with diurnally driven showers tomorrow. Temperatures gradually warm back for the second half of the holiday weekend with additional chances for scattered showers on Sunday.
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/
As of 134 PM EDT...Coastal low pressure area is located just off the coast of downeast Maine and it will continue to slowly depart to the northeast through the afternoon hours. Some wraparound rain is impacting New Hampshire and Mane, but the majority of the precip is surface storm is well away from our area at this time. The cyclonic flow around this storm is continuing to allow for widespread low cloud cover, along with very cool temps and damp conditions.
However, MRMS imagery shows another area of steady rainfall associated with the upper level trough moving across central NY and this is starting to expand into our area for the early afternoon hours. This steady rainfall should expand from west to east across the region for the rest of this afternoon, especially for areas along and north of the Mohawk Valley and I-90. Rainfall amounts may be a tenth or two within this steadier rainfall.
Steady rain this evening gradually weakens as the trough axis shifts further east but light showers continue overnight, especially along the favored western facing slopes of the southern Greens, Taconics, and northern Catskills, as westerly flow along the southern periphery of the broad troughing aloft continues.
Otherwise, temperatures today will once again fall well below normal by roughly 20 degrees and struggle to rise out of the upper 50s to mid 50s. Given widespread clouds and showers tonight, not expecting much a diurnal temperature change with overnight lows in the 40s (upper 30s in the southern Adirondacks and southern Greens).
SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/
Broad troughing persists aloft on Saturday and with the cool pool overhead, expecting diurnally and cold air advection driven isolated to scattered showers. The highest potential for showers will be in the western facing slopes of the western Adirondacks, southern Greens, Taconics, and northern Catskills as northwest flow off Lake Ontario also advects lake moisture south/eastward. Areas south/east of the Capital District have the highest potential to remain mainly dry and just out of the reach of daytime showers as showers weaken as they leave the terrain. Otherwise, mostly cloudy skies once again with somewhat breezy west to northwest winds as high pressure building into the Great Lakes tightens the sfc pressure gradient aloft. The breezy winds should enhance boundary layer mixing a bit so that temperatures end up a few degrees warmer compared to the previous few days, especially in the mid- Hudson Valley which should remain dry. Even still, temperatures should end up 10 - 15 degrees below normal.
We finally trend milder by Sunday as north-northwest winds advect a milder air mass that spills overtop an omega block setting up over the Rockies. Even though the cold pool and core of the trough that has plagues us the past few days drifts into the Canadian Maritimes by Sunday, broad troughing persists over the Northeast and, if you can believe it, yet another shortwave from Ontario rotates along its southern periphery. This maintains slight chance and chance POPs (15 - 40% chance) for showers, especially during the afternoon when the stronger forcing for ascent from the incoming shortwave/tough axis pushes into our region. Otherwise, skies should breaks for some limited sun ahead of the shortwave and with warmer temperatures aloft and somewhat breezy northwest winds continuing, boundary layer mixing should allow temperatures to rise into the 60s (50s higher terrain). While this is still cooler than normal for late May, it is an improvement compared to the recent stretch of chilly weather.
Note that despite the chance for showers in the forecast for Saturday and Sunday this holiday weekend, we are not expecting a washout and there will be dry periods, especially in valley areas. Most incoming showers should be isolated to scattered in nature and last for a relatively short period. The exception is the higher terrain areas of the western/southern Adirondacks, Taconics, northern Catskills and southern Green, especially western facing slopes, where rain showers should be more persistent and where we have a more pessimistic forecast.
LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/
The Memorial Day forecast is becoming more optimistic as guidance continues to trend drier. Though some showers may be unavoidable especially early Monday afternoon, given the energy pulsing about the western flank of the persistent upper low off the coast of Nova Scotia, NBM probabilities for 12-hour precipitation of at least 0.01" peak only at 15-40%. The greatest probabilities lie in Southwest Adirondacks and Southern Greens where upslope enhancement could overcome counteracting subsidence from an incoming surface high. That said, without much in the way of forcing and warming temperatures aloft, any showers will be very light and highly scattered in nature. And, decreasing cloud coverage across much of the region throughout the day with high temperatures in the low 60s to low 70s will certainly make for more pleasant conditions to those of late.
Shower activity ceases late Monday afternoon/early Monday evening as high pressure builds in from the west. Regionwide dry conditions will then persist through at least Tuesday with temperatures moderating into the mid/upper 60s to mid 70s. The remainder of the extended forecast retains a fair amount of uncertainty in terms of our next chances for rain. There are clear signals in the guidance that indicate the development of another closed low pressure system in the Upper Midwest/Northern Plains by Tuesday morning, but the depictions of the evolution of this system are varied such that some sources keep us dry into Wednesday and others produce rain by Wednesday morning. Additionally, there are hints at a weak disturbance producing light showers ahead of this main system, but this solution, too, is variable amongst the guidance. Therefore, capped PoPs at slight chance to chance beginning Wednesday through Thursday. Regardless of the outcome, this does not look to be impactful rain. At this point it is more a question of spatial spread. Highs Wednesday will primarily be in the 60s with Thursday's values similar to those of Tuesday. Lows throughout the period will largely be in the 40s and 50s.
AVIATION /18Z FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
Through 18z Saturday...Mainly MVFR conditions as of 1:25 PM EDT.
Trend should be for mostly MVFR cigs with pockets of IFR cigs this afternoon and evening as rain overspreads the area from the west, lasting through the evening. POU sees improvement to mainly VFR conditions with SCT to BKN mid-level clouds once rain ends this evening, with VFR conditions there prevailing through the end of the TAF period. At the other terminals, a mix of MVFR to IFR conditions is expected tonight into early tomorrow morning. Best chance for IFR is at GFL and PSF, especially after 06-08z. Scattered showers may linger at GFL through much of the night, but showers should largely taper off at ALB/PSF around or shortly after midnight. ALB/GFL/PSF improve back to MVFR by mid-morning tomorrow, and possibly to VFR early tomorrow afternoon before the end of the TAF period.
Additional scattered showers will develop tomorrow late morning through the afternoon, so prob 30 groups have been used to highlight this, except at POU where coverage of showers will be lower so only a VCSH was used.
Winds will be from the S/SE through this evening at 5 kt or less, then switch to the west at 5-10 kt this evening prior to sunset, except at GFL where winds remain light out of the east. At ALB/POU/PSF, winds remain at 5-10 kt overnight, increasing to around 10 kt with gusts of 15-20 kt by late morning tomorrow through the end of the TAF period.
Outlook...
Saturday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Sunday: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA.
Sunday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Memorial Day: Low Operational Impact. Slight Chance of SHRA.
Monday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Tuesday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Tuesday Night: Low Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Wednesday: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA.
ALY WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
CT...None.
NY...None.
MA...None.
VT...None.
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Albany NY 134 PM EDT Fri May 23 2025
SYNOPSIS
Our stretch of unseasonably cool temperatures along with cloudy skies continues today and even tomorrow. Patchy drizzle this morning turns into more organized areas of light rain showers this afternoon into tonight with diurnally driven showers tomorrow. Temperatures gradually warm back for the second half of the holiday weekend with additional chances for scattered showers on Sunday.
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/
As of 134 PM EDT...Coastal low pressure area is located just off the coast of downeast Maine and it will continue to slowly depart to the northeast through the afternoon hours. Some wraparound rain is impacting New Hampshire and Mane, but the majority of the precip is surface storm is well away from our area at this time. The cyclonic flow around this storm is continuing to allow for widespread low cloud cover, along with very cool temps and damp conditions.
However, MRMS imagery shows another area of steady rainfall associated with the upper level trough moving across central NY and this is starting to expand into our area for the early afternoon hours. This steady rainfall should expand from west to east across the region for the rest of this afternoon, especially for areas along and north of the Mohawk Valley and I-90. Rainfall amounts may be a tenth or two within this steadier rainfall.
Steady rain this evening gradually weakens as the trough axis shifts further east but light showers continue overnight, especially along the favored western facing slopes of the southern Greens, Taconics, and northern Catskills, as westerly flow along the southern periphery of the broad troughing aloft continues.
Otherwise, temperatures today will once again fall well below normal by roughly 20 degrees and struggle to rise out of the upper 50s to mid 50s. Given widespread clouds and showers tonight, not expecting much a diurnal temperature change with overnight lows in the 40s (upper 30s in the southern Adirondacks and southern Greens).
SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/
Broad troughing persists aloft on Saturday and with the cool pool overhead, expecting diurnally and cold air advection driven isolated to scattered showers. The highest potential for showers will be in the western facing slopes of the western Adirondacks, southern Greens, Taconics, and northern Catskills as northwest flow off Lake Ontario also advects lake moisture south/eastward. Areas south/east of the Capital District have the highest potential to remain mainly dry and just out of the reach of daytime showers as showers weaken as they leave the terrain. Otherwise, mostly cloudy skies once again with somewhat breezy west to northwest winds as high pressure building into the Great Lakes tightens the sfc pressure gradient aloft. The breezy winds should enhance boundary layer mixing a bit so that temperatures end up a few degrees warmer compared to the previous few days, especially in the mid- Hudson Valley which should remain dry. Even still, temperatures should end up 10 - 15 degrees below normal.
We finally trend milder by Sunday as north-northwest winds advect a milder air mass that spills overtop an omega block setting up over the Rockies. Even though the cold pool and core of the trough that has plagues us the past few days drifts into the Canadian Maritimes by Sunday, broad troughing persists over the Northeast and, if you can believe it, yet another shortwave from Ontario rotates along its southern periphery. This maintains slight chance and chance POPs (15 - 40% chance) for showers, especially during the afternoon when the stronger forcing for ascent from the incoming shortwave/tough axis pushes into our region. Otherwise, skies should breaks for some limited sun ahead of the shortwave and with warmer temperatures aloft and somewhat breezy northwest winds continuing, boundary layer mixing should allow temperatures to rise into the 60s (50s higher terrain). While this is still cooler than normal for late May, it is an improvement compared to the recent stretch of chilly weather.
Note that despite the chance for showers in the forecast for Saturday and Sunday this holiday weekend, we are not expecting a washout and there will be dry periods, especially in valley areas. Most incoming showers should be isolated to scattered in nature and last for a relatively short period. The exception is the higher terrain areas of the western/southern Adirondacks, Taconics, northern Catskills and southern Green, especially western facing slopes, where rain showers should be more persistent and where we have a more pessimistic forecast.
LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/
The Memorial Day forecast is becoming more optimistic as guidance continues to trend drier. Though some showers may be unavoidable especially early Monday afternoon, given the energy pulsing about the western flank of the persistent upper low off the coast of Nova Scotia, NBM probabilities for 12-hour precipitation of at least 0.01" peak only at 15-40%. The greatest probabilities lie in Southwest Adirondacks and Southern Greens where upslope enhancement could overcome counteracting subsidence from an incoming surface high. That said, without much in the way of forcing and warming temperatures aloft, any showers will be very light and highly scattered in nature. And, decreasing cloud coverage across much of the region throughout the day with high temperatures in the low 60s to low 70s will certainly make for more pleasant conditions to those of late.
Shower activity ceases late Monday afternoon/early Monday evening as high pressure builds in from the west. Regionwide dry conditions will then persist through at least Tuesday with temperatures moderating into the mid/upper 60s to mid 70s. The remainder of the extended forecast retains a fair amount of uncertainty in terms of our next chances for rain. There are clear signals in the guidance that indicate the development of another closed low pressure system in the Upper Midwest/Northern Plains by Tuesday morning, but the depictions of the evolution of this system are varied such that some sources keep us dry into Wednesday and others produce rain by Wednesday morning. Additionally, there are hints at a weak disturbance producing light showers ahead of this main system, but this solution, too, is variable amongst the guidance. Therefore, capped PoPs at slight chance to chance beginning Wednesday through Thursday. Regardless of the outcome, this does not look to be impactful rain. At this point it is more a question of spatial spread. Highs Wednesday will primarily be in the 60s with Thursday's values similar to those of Tuesday. Lows throughout the period will largely be in the 40s and 50s.
AVIATION /18Z FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
Through 18z Saturday...Mainly MVFR conditions as of 1:25 PM EDT.
Trend should be for mostly MVFR cigs with pockets of IFR cigs this afternoon and evening as rain overspreads the area from the west, lasting through the evening. POU sees improvement to mainly VFR conditions with SCT to BKN mid-level clouds once rain ends this evening, with VFR conditions there prevailing through the end of the TAF period. At the other terminals, a mix of MVFR to IFR conditions is expected tonight into early tomorrow morning. Best chance for IFR is at GFL and PSF, especially after 06-08z. Scattered showers may linger at GFL through much of the night, but showers should largely taper off at ALB/PSF around or shortly after midnight. ALB/GFL/PSF improve back to MVFR by mid-morning tomorrow, and possibly to VFR early tomorrow afternoon before the end of the TAF period.
Additional scattered showers will develop tomorrow late morning through the afternoon, so prob 30 groups have been used to highlight this, except at POU where coverage of showers will be lower so only a VCSH was used.
Winds will be from the S/SE through this evening at 5 kt or less, then switch to the west at 5-10 kt this evening prior to sunset, except at GFL where winds remain light out of the east. At ALB/POU/PSF, winds remain at 5-10 kt overnight, increasing to around 10 kt with gusts of 15-20 kt by late morning tomorrow through the end of the TAF period.
Outlook...
Saturday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Sunday: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA.
Sunday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Memorial Day: Low Operational Impact. Slight Chance of SHRA.
Monday Night: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Tuesday: No Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Tuesday Night: Low Operational Impact. NO SIG WX.
Wednesday: Moderate Operational Impact. Chance of SHRA.
ALY WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
CT...None.
NY...None.
MA...None.
VT...None.
Airport Reports
Link to 1 hour of 5 minute data for KGFL
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) for KGFL
Wind History Graph: GFL
(wind in knots)GEOS Local Image of Northeast
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Burlington, VT,

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