Week Ahead Is An Onshore Flow Show
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Week Ahead Is An Onshore Flow Show
We have a frontal boundary that is meandering its way through the Northeast and Northern Mid Atlantic states today. We have seen some showers move through overnight over parts of Southern NY and Southern New England down to Long Island and NYC. There are more showers to the west in Pennsylvania that are headed eastward. In between all this is cloud cover and that will be the primary story today. It will be a very humid warm day with highs in the 70s to near 80 degrees. Even the sun could make an occasional appearance in some areas.
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We will continue to see these showers shift northeastward tonight as the front starts to drop southward and so begins what I am calling the onshore flow show. High pressure in Southeastern Canada and Northern New England will be steering weather in the Eastern US all week long with mixed results.
Tuesday the boundary lies close by so it is likely that we will be in clouds most of the day and there is the chance for a lingering scattered shower or two. Highs will be in the 60s in Southern New England to Long Island and Coastal New Jersey with temperatures in the 70s inland. With a little luck, Wednesday we could see the frontal boundary move further south into the Southern Mid Atlantic and if enough of that high to the north builds southward, we could see more along the lines of partly sunny conditions Wednesday through Friday once overnight and morning low clouds burn off. Highs each day will be in the low to mid 70s with 60s right along the immediate coast. This high to the north is due to a warm ridge aloft so temperatures will be on the warm side of average but it won’t get overly warm due to the flow off the ocean. We may see some showers coming back over the weekend depending on the strength of the ridge but this isn’t written in stone just yet.
As far as rainfall is concerned this week, the bulk comes today and tonight. Except for Southeastern New England where rainfall amounts will be on the order of 1 to 2 inches or more, most of the area from Eastern Pennsylvania to Southern New England is looking at a quarter to a half inch total.
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