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Blog

Weather forecasting and analysis, space and historic events, climate information

7:00 AM | More rain this weekend leads to a taste of autumn on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday

Paul Dorian

6-Day Forecast

Today

Mostly sunny, very warm, humid, mid-to-upper 80’s

Tonight

Partly cloudy, warm, muggy, lows in the mid-to-upper 70’s

Saturday

Partly sunny, breezy, warm, muggy, showers and thunderstorms possible at the end of the day and some of the rain can be briefly heavy, mid 80’s

Saturday Night

Showers and thunderstorms likely and some of the rain can be briefly heavy, lows in the mid-to-upper 60’s

Sunday

Becoming mostly sunny, noticeably cooler, less humid, mid-to-upper 70’s

Monday

Mainly sunny, cool, mid-to-upper 70’s

Tuesday

Mainly sunny, still cool, mid-to-upper 70’s

Wednesday

Mainly sunny, warmer, near 80

Discussion

Today will be another very warm day in the Mid-Atlantic, but big changes are on the way. A strong cold front is sweeping across the nation bringing the first real taste of fall to many locations and this front will usher in much cooler air to the Mid-Atlantic for Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. An organized round of showers and thunderstorms will likely occur later tomorrow and tomorrow night in the Mid-Atlantic as the front plows eastward towards the east coast, and some of the rain that falls can be briefly heavy. Temperatures behind the front on Sunday will be noticeably cooler to go along with comfortable humidity levels and the cool air mass will stick around into mid-week. It'll get warmer again later next week as the cool air mass modifies slowly with time.

Elsewhere, nearly stationary Hurricane Leslie continues on a path that should take it just to the east of Bermuda this weekend and then it’ll accelerate and head to near the Atlantic Canadian province of Newfoundland by early next week. Rip currents are being caused by Hurricane Leslie up and down the east coast and that will continue through the weekend. Meanwhile, Hurricane Michael continues to grind away way out in the Atlantic, and it is not a threat to any land mass in the near term.

Video

httpv://youtu.be/txP3bo2ijxM