Weather

A more seasonal pattern shift to expand

For the remainder of Tuesday, rain showers will shift from the Southeast into the Northeast. Accumulating snow can be expected in northern New England. For Tuesday night and Wednesday, a second round of rain will spread across the Southeast, providing much-needed drought relief and aiding wildfire containment efforts. In addition to what has already fallen, Southeastern rainfall could reach 1 to 2 inches or more across the core drought areas. Toward week’s end, additional rainfall—possibly heavy—should spread across the South. Elsewhere, snow showers will end by mid-week across the north-central U.S., while generally cool, dry weather will prevail from the West Coast to the High Plains—except for occasional showers in the Pacific Northwest.

Looking ahead, the 6- to 10-day outlook calls for the likelihood of colder-than-normal conditions across much of the western half of the U.S., while near- to above-normal temperatures can be expected from the Mississippi Valley eastward. Meanwhile, near- to above-normal precipitation across the majority of the country will contrast with drier-than-normal weather from central and southern California to portions of the central and southern Plains.

5-Day Precipitation Totals

NOAA’s 6- to 10- Day Outlook

NOAA’s 8- to 14- Day Outlook

Add Comment

Your email address will not be published.


 

Stay Up to Date

Subscribe for our newsletter today and receive relevant news straight to your inbox!

Brownfield Ag News