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Canton, NY
(St. Lawrence Valley)

Saranac Lake, NY
(Northern Adks)

North Creek, NY
(Southern Adks)

Watertown, NY
(Jefferson Cty/1000 Is)

Plattsburgh, NY
(Champlain Valley)

Lowville, NY
(Lewis Cty/Tug Hill)

Burlington, VT
(Western VT)

Ottawa, ON
(Capital Region)

Grenadier Is., ON
(1000 Is, Canada)


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Weather Links

Road Closed iconRoad Closures:
NY | VT

Road Closed iconPower Outages:
Nat. Grid | NYSEG


Forecasts:
Burlington: National Weather Service
From Environment Canada
Severe Weather Watches from NOAA
NYS Traffic Advisory map
Adirondack Weather blog

Listening Forecast:
Tropospheric ducting
Aurora Predictions from the Geophysical Institute, Univ. of Alaska, Fairbanks

Marine Forecasts:
Lake Champlain
St. Lawrence River
Lake Ontario

US Naval Observatory Master Clock
Official Time

Radar:
Albany NEXRAD image (from Intellicast)
Burlington NEXRAD image (from Intellicast)
Syracuse NEXRAD image (from Intellicast)
Syracuse RADAR imagery (from Intellicast

Weather Networks:
The Weather Channel (US)
The Weather Network (Canada)
The WeatherBug from AWS

More Weather Links:
Southern Ontario Storm Chasers
National Data Buoy Center
National Snow and Ice Data Center

Lowville, New York, United States (13367)  Lat: 43.79N, Lon: 75.49W
Wx Zone: NYZ008
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ZoneCast NowCast Warnings/Advisories Hourly Track Special Radar
NowCast:
The NowCast is not currently available for Lowville, New York.

The NowCasts (also known as Short Term Forecasts) from the National Weather Service (NWS) normally provide a forecast for the next three to six hours. The NWS does not provide this for all areas and in some cases, the NWS only provides the NowCast when there is inclimate weather present.

Weather in the News

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The recovery bill from Hurricane Sandy is still being added up. Photo: Office of Gov. Cuomo
The recovery bill from Hurricane Sandy is still being added up. Photo: Office of Gov. Cuomo

Weather disasters on the rise and taxpayers are getting the bill

The impact and severity of weather events like the tornado that hit Oklahoma City are increasing due to a changing global climate, according to research from the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC).

And more of the related economic burden is being carried by taxpayers. In 2012, federal spending directed toward disaster response for storms, wild fires, floods and drought reached nearly $100 billion, the NRDC report says, beating out funding for education and transport.  Go to full article

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