Weak high pressure in the eastern states will slide east during the next couple of days and it’ll remain quite hot and humid around here with a small shot at PM showers and thunderstorms. Temperatures today and Tuesday should peak in the low-to-mid 90’s and it’ll stay very warm on Wednesday as well. By mid-week, the remnants of Hurricane Beryl will pass by to our northwest and it’ll combine with a frontal system to enhance the chance for heavy rainfall around here late Wednesday and Thursday and potentially into Friday and Saturday as well.
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High pressure will remain east of here through the weekend and a couple of frontal systems will generate some instability in the atmosphere. As a result, it’ll remain hot and sticky for the next couple of days and there is the threat for showers and thunderstorms both today and on Saturday. Any thunderstorm that forms can be strong and produce locally heavy rainfall. It quiets down a bit for Sunday and Monday and overall rain chances will diminish somewhat.
Elsewhere, Hurricane Beryl is now a category 2 storm and it will cross the Yucatan Peninsula today. The movement over land will likely weaken Beryl to tropical storm status and then it could strengthen this weekend -even back to hurricane levels - as it pushes over the warm waters of the southwestern Gulf of Mexico. A turn to the NW late this weekend could bring landfall on Sunday night/early Monday to the southern part of Texas.
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High pressure will remain east of here through the weekend and a couple of frontal systems will generate some instability in the atmosphere. As a result, it’ll remain hot and sticky for the next couple of days and there is the threat for showers and thunderstorms both today and on Saturday. Any thunderstorm that forms can be strong and produce locally heavy rainfall. It quiets down a bit for Sunday and Monday and overall rain chances will diminish somewhat.
Elsewhere, Hurricane Beryl is now a category 2 storm and it will cross the Yucatan Peninsula today. The movement over land will likely weaken Beryl to tropical storm status and then it could strengthen this weekend -even back to hurricane levels - as it pushes over the warm waters of the southwestern Gulf of Mexico. A turn to the NW late this weekend could bring landfall on Sunday night/early Monday to the southern part of Texas.
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High pressure will remain east of here through the weekend and a couple of frontal systems will generate some instability in the atmosphere. As a result, it’ll remain hot and sticky for the next couple of days and there is the threat for showers and thunderstorms both today and on Saturday. Any thunderstorm that forms can be strong and produce locally heavy rainfall. It quiets down a bit for Sunday and Monday and overall rain chances will diminish somewhat.
Elsewhere, Hurricane Beryl is now a category 2 storm and it will cross the Yucatan Peninsula today. The movement over land will likely weaken Beryl to tropical storm status and then it could strengthen this weekend -even back to hurricane levels - as it pushes over the warm waters of the southwestern Gulf of Mexico. A turn to the NW late this weekend could bring landfall on Sunday night/early Monday to the southern part of Texas.
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The main weather theme during the next several days will be hot and humid with an occasional shower or thunderstorm. In fact, temperatures are likely to reach 90+ degrees on a daily basis through the first half of next week and here - on this Independence Day – they can climb all the way into the upper 90’s. There can be an isolated late day or evening thunderstorm and this threat will hold true for the next few days as well.
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High pressure pushes offshore today and this re-positioning will allow hotter and more humid air to flow northeastward into the Mid-Atlantic region for the Independence Day holiday. The atmosphere becomes more unstable as well with the arrival of a surface trough of low pressure raising the chance for afternoon or evening showers and thunderstorms. Any thunderstorm that forms later today or tonight can be strong and produce locally heavy rainfall. Hot and sticky weather will continue on Friday and Saturday as will the threat of showers and thunderstorms; however, much of the time will be rain-free.
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The Independence Day holiday will feature very nice overall weather conditions with plenty of sunshine and a comfortable combination of warm temperatures and low humidity values. The cooler and drier air mass will stick around on Friday and then it turns warmer to begin the upcoming weekend. The best chance of rain during the next few days likely comes on Sunday and only isolated showers are possible before the latter part of the weekend.
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High pressure pushes offshore today and this re-positioning will allow hotter and more humid air to flow northeastward into the Mid-Atlantic region for the Independence Day holiday. The atmosphere becomes more unstable as well with the arrival of a surface trough of low pressure raising the chance for afternoon or evening showers and thunderstorms. Any thunderstorm that forms later today or tonight can be strong and produce locally heavy rainfall. Hot and sticky weather will continue on Friday and Saturday as will the threat of showers and thunderstorms; however, much of the time will be rain-free.
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High pressure pushes offshore today and this re-positioning will allow hotter and more humid air to flow northeastward into the Mid-Atlantic region for the Independence Day holiday. The atmosphere becomes more unstable as well with the arrival of a surface trough of low pressure raising the chance for afternoon or evening showers and thunderstorms. Any thunderstorm that forms later today or tonight can be strong and produce locally heavy rainfall. Hot and sticky weather will continue on Friday and Saturday as will the threat of showers and thunderstorms; however, much of the time will be rain-free.
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Hurricane Beryl is now classified as a category 4 storm and will impact Jamaica shortly with hurricane conditions as it continues to push across the Caribbean Sea in a west-northwest direction. On this path, Hurricane Beryl will slide across the Yucatan Peninsula region of Mexico on Friday and then push to a position out over the open warm waters of the southwestern Gulf of Mexico this weekend. The weakening of Beryl which began late yesterday will likely continue for the next couple of days as it bypasses Jamaica and then crosses land mass of the Yucatan Peninsula on Friday. After that, Beryl may very well re-intensify this weekend and it likely shifts to a northwesterly direction which would put southeastern Texas on the table for a possible landfall by Sunday night/early Monday.
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