The day will start off on the damp side around here with additional fog and drizzle, but the afternoon should turn out dry with partly sunny skies and a surge in temperatures to near 75 degrees. Another storm system will impact the DC metro region during the second half of the weekend with more rain as one low pressure system (primary) heads into the Ohio Valley and a secondary will forms near the Mid-Atlantic coastline. While there will be little cold air around initially, strong high pressure will build into southeastern Canada and act as a cold air source. This is likely to result in a changeover from rain-to-snow across some of the interior, higher elevation locations of the northern Mid-Atlantic region and there is a slight chance for a brief changeover across some of our far north and west suburbs late Sunday night.
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The week will end with an influx of colder air and there can be some snow shower activity as well. The cold shot will be rather short-lived and a warming trend will begin this weekend. In fact, high temperatures by Sunday afternoon could be in the middle 50’s and 60 degrees is on the table early next week.
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This on-going pattern of moisture flowing northeastward from the Gulf of Mexico into the eastern US will result in additional heavy rainfall for northern Alabama during the next couple of days. In fact, several inches of rain are possible throughout much of the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valley regions – the same areas that experienced very dry conditions in recent weeks.
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It’ll remain wet and mild in the Mid-Atlantic region both today and tonight and there can be some patchy fog around as well. It turns even warmer on Friday with lingering rain showers possible early in the day and there can be brightening skies in the afternoon. Temperatures will surge on Friday to near 60 degrees for afternoon highs ahead of an incoming cold frontal system. Another storm system is then going to impact the Mid-Atlantic region during the second half of the weekend with one surface low pressure system (primary) heading into the Ohio Valley and a secondary likely to form near the Mid-Atlantic coastline. While there will be little cold air around initially, strong high pressure will build into southeastern Canada and act as a cold air source. This is likely to result in a changeover from rain-to-snow across much of the interior, higher elevation locations in the Mid-Atlantic and potentially, all the way down to the I-95 corridor on Sunday night.
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We’ll enjoy another relatively mild day in the region as temperatures again climb into the 50’s, but a cold shot arrives in the overnight hours with the possibility of some rain and/or snow shower activity. It stays quite chilly on Friday, but a milder trend begins on Saturday and the early art of next week look quite mild.
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It’ll remain wet and mild in the NYC metro region for today and tonight with patchy fog around as well. It remains on the damp side on Friday and there will be a battle in terms of air temperatures around here with warmer air likely limited in its northward advance keeping the metro area in the 40’s to close out the work week. Another storm system is then going to impact the Mid-Atlantic on Sunday and Sunday night with one surface low pressure system (primary) heading into the Ohio Valley and a secondary likely to form near the Mid-Atlantic coastline. While there will be little cold air around initially, strong high pressure will build into southeastern Canada and act as a cold air source. This is likely to result in a changeover from rain-to-snow across much of the interior, higher elevation locations in the Mid-Atlantic and potentially, all the way down to the NYC metro region on Sunday night.
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It’ll remain wet and mild in the Mid-Atlantic region both today and tonight and there can be some patchy fog around as well. It turns even warmer on Friday with lingering rain showers possible early in the day and there can be brightening skies in the afternoon. Temperatures will surge on Friday to near 65 degrees for afternoon highs ahead of an incoming cold frontal system. Another storm system is then going to impact the Mid-Atlantic region during the second half of the weekend with one surface low pressure system (primary) heading into the Ohio Valley and a secondary likely to form near the Mid-Atlantic coastline. While there will be little cold air around initially, strong high pressure will build into southeastern Canada and act as a cold air source. This is likely to result in a changeover from rain-to-snow across much of the interior, higher elevation locations in the Mid-Atlantic region and potentially, all the way down to the northern and western suburbs around here later on Sunday night.
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The next couple of days will be wet, foggy and mild in the Mid-Atlantic region and there will be a surge of temperatures on Friday in much of the I-95 corridor. Another storm system is then going to impact the Mid-Atlantic late in the weekend with one surface low pressure system (primary) heading into the Ohio Valley and a secondary likely to form near the Mid-Atlantic coastline. While there will be little cold air around initially, strong high pressure will build into southeastern Canada and act as a cold air source. This is likely to result in a changeover from rain-to-snow across much of the interior, higher elevation Mid-Atlantic region on Sunday night and there is a chance for a changeover to snow all the way down into the N/W suburbs of the big cities.
Elsewhere, the overall pattern for the next several days will bring copious amounts of rainfall to the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys - areas that have been quite dry in recent weeks - and to the US west coast from California-to-Washington which will be inundated by multiple storms during the next couple of weeks.
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Copious amounts of moisture will stream out of the Gulf of Mexico during the next few days and generate heavy rainfall across the Tennessee Valley region. The past several weeks have been quite dry across the area, but those drought conditions will be wiped away quickly with this onslaught of moisture. Temperatures will remain on the mild side with highs up in the 60’s right into the weekend and then it’ll turn colder early next week.
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The next few days will be mild in the Mid-Atlantic region and quite wet as well as moisture steadily flows to the northeast from the Gulf of Mexico. The warmest day of the week will be on Friday when temperatures surge to near 70 degrees in the DC metro region. Another storm system is then likely to impact the Mid-Atlantic region later in the upcoming weekend with one surface low pressure system (primary) heading into the Ohio Valley and a secondary likely to form near the Mid-Atlantic coastline. While there will be little cold air around initially, strong high pressure will build into southeastern Canada and act as a cold air source…possibly resulting in a changeover from rain-to-snow across interior sections of the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast US on Sunday night.
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