DAYS 1-5 (MAY 24-28)
This may be one of the slowest onsets of a rain event I’ve observed. The eastern edge of the rain in a sharp edged form sat at the southwesterly edge of the WHW forecast area much of yesterday afternoon and evening, finally advancing somewhat to the east during the night, but continues to battle dry air in its attempt to reach the coast even after the day has dawned today. Here in Woburn MA, for example, I’ve had a few brief instances of a few drops of rain, but never enough to start wetting the ground, and as I watch the radar loop, you can see the echoes drying up as they move into the I-95 belt in my region. This battle will finally be won by the rain as we move through the morning and the rest of the day here, and eastern areas join already-wet western areas for a pretty wet and cool Sunday as low pressure south of our region sends its warm front slowly our way. This front will pass by tonight, at least partially, as the system will be occluding (low pressure passing by to our north) as its cold front starts to catch up with the warm front. The cold front will waste no time crossing our region during the first half of the day on Memorial Day, keeping shower chances in the picture until early afternoon when they end west to east. Outdoor parades / ceremonies marking the holiday will have to deal with at least scattered showers. A drying trend expands across the region along partial clearing later in the day, and we may set up for another nice sunset across parts of the region Monday evening. A warmer, drier westerly flow will be here Tuesday into Wednesday with a little more “summer preview” weather, but when we get to Wednesday, we need to watch for a shower or thunderstorm as a cold front drops down from the north. This is part of a pattern shift to a more amplified set up – evolving omega block with low pressure in the western US, high pressure in the central US, and low pressure near or just east of New England. You’ll notice this with the arrival of cooler air Wednesday night or Thursday. After a shower / t-storm threat Wednesday comes the chance of a pop-up instability shower on Thursday.
TODAY: Overcast. Periods of rain. Highs 52-59. Wind E to NE 5-15 MPH.
TONIGHT: Cloudy. Showers likely. Slight chance of a thunderstorm. Areas of drizzle. Patchy fog. Temperatures steady 52-59. Wind NE 5-15 MPH becoming variable to SW in some areas east of I-95.
MONDAY (MEMORIAL DAY): Mostly cloudy through early afternoon with a good chance of showers. Partial clearing later in the day. Highs 58-65 coast, 65-72 inland. Wind S to SW in some areas east of I-95, mainly N to NW elsewhere expanding across the region.
MONDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows 44-51. Wind NW to W up to 10 MPH.
TUESDAY: Cloud / sun intervals. Highs 66-73 South Coast / Cape Cod, 74-81 elsewhere. Wind W to SW 5-15 MPH.
TUESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows 53-60. Wind SW up to 10 MPH.
WEDNESDAY: Partly sunny. Afternoon and evening shower and thunderstorm chances north to south. Highs 68-75 South Coast, 76-83 elsewhere. Wind SW 5-15 MPH.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. An evening shower possible south of I-90. Lows 50-57. Wind N 5-15 MPH.
THURSDAY: Partly sunny. A pop-up shower possible. Highs 63-70. Wind N 5-15 MPH.
DAYS 6-10 (MAY 29 – JUNE 2)
Indications are for upper level low pressure to sit just east of our region May 29 with additional shower potential and cool air in place, then pull far enough away for a diminished shower threat and milder weather for the May 30-31 weekend before high pressure builds in with fair weather to begin the month of June. This continues to be a low confidence outlook – check updates!
DAYS 11-15 (JUNE 3-7)
Indications are for cooler than average but also drier with limited shower chances during early June. This is due to a trough in place but axis far enough east so we’re drier over wetter, but this also prevents any sustained very warm to hot weather as well.