Wednesday Forecast

7:14AM

DAYS 1-5 (JULY 26-30)
Making a few adjustments in timing of systems for this update. We still get a great day today courtesy of a high pressure area overhead. However, adding more cloudiness and eventual shower/thunderstorm risk to Thursday’s forecast based on a cold front pushing in more quickly. The biggest change to the forecast comes with Friday/Saturday as it appears enough dry air will push in behind Thursday’s cold front to make Friday a generally nice day, and then the area of low pressure that appeared ready to make Friday nasty may pass a little further south and a little later, bringing unsettled weather later Friday night into part of Saturday, and hopefully moving along enough for a better ending to Saturday and then fair weather Sunday as high pressure returns. One thing seems certain, the weekend will be cool for the end of July.
TODAY: Mostly sunny. Highs 76-83, but cooling back in some coastal areas. Wind W 5-15 MPH morning, becoming light variable with sea breezes in the afternoon.
TONIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows 58-65. Wind light S.
THURSDAY: Variably cloudy. Chance of showers/thunderstorms afternoon to early evening. More humid. Highs 77-84. Wind SW 10-20 MPH.
FRIDAY: Partly sunny daytime. Clouds return at night with a chance of rain late. Lows in the 60s. Highs from the middle 70s to lower 80s.
SATURDAY: Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain morning. Clearing afternoon. Lows in the 60s. Highs in the 70s.
SUNDAY: Mostly sunny. Lows in the 50s. Highs in the 70s.

DAYS 6-10 (JULY 31-AUGUST 4)
The feel of summer returns as a more westerly flow dominates aloft and high pressure retreats early in the period and is replaced later in the period. In between a frontal system may bring a few showers/thunderstorms around August 2 or 3.

DAYS 11-15 (AUGUST 5-9)
Fair and a little drier early in the period then humidity increases and shower and thunderstorm threat returns.

25 thoughts on “Wednesday Forecast”

  1. Thanks TK
    SPC has all of SNE in marginal risk for thunderstorms tomorrow. Will see if this changes when the outlook gets updated around 130pm today.

  2. Yesterday I stopped at the farmer’s market and the peaches are back this season! Last year’s crop was literally wiped out due to the spring freeze and widespread drought.

    I have them on the windowsill so they can get sunlight and hopefully soften up. 🙂

    1. I just got some from a local farm this past weekend too! So bummed last year. I haven’t had a good peach yet from the grocery store so I’m looking forward to this

  3. In the we shall see 12z NAM keeps enough instability once the sun goes down for thunderstorm development tomorrow night.

  4. 12z EURO Monday 995 low west of SNE. Today 12z EURO same pressure low way south in Maryland.

  5. It would be a lot more fun if this was winter tracking to see what this thing will do.
    This blog would be lighting up like a Christmas tree if a similar situation is happening with a snow threat.

    1. And Devers’ first major league hit was a homerun. But, the Sox have many issues to deal with, including a peculiar grudge against the media, a woefully inadequate offense at times, and several gaps in their pitching rotation and bullpen.

  6. Looks like Saturday could be yet another day mired in the 60s and clouds, at least for locales near or at the coast. I believe that would be the 6th day this month. Would that be a record? Probably not. But, certainly an unusual occurrence. Sunday’s not a whole lot better with temperatures expected to barely cross the 70F mark.

  7. Still looks like the Friday-Saturday event is a glancing blow, rain likely over the South Coast and Cape, possible but less likely to the north. Would not take a big track shift either direction to cause big changes though. Sharp gradients likely.

    Regardless of what happens, I wonder what the odds are we get a setup this good at any point December-March… 😉

  8. I hope we get some good coastal storms this upcoming winter that gives us some good dumps of snow.

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