COMMENTARY
Most of yesterday’s high temps in the region were in the middle to upper 90s. There were a couple locations that “officially” touched 100, though Boston’s sensor accuracy is in question so their 100 was likely a 99 (and won’t be corrected). They hit 100+ last summer (June 24) and some media is wailing how rare it is to see a 100-degree reading two summers in a row. Yes, statistically it’s fairly rare, but even more rare was the time it hit 100+ FOUR times in the same summer: 1911. There are always anomalies in stats driven by something with a significant chaos factor. That’s just how it works. Anyway, just keeping it real as always. On we go!
DAYS 1-5 (JULY 3-7)
Our hot stretch continues for two more days, though tomorrow, Independence Day, is a transition day. Today we remain under high pressure aloft with high pressure at the surface to our south and a generally westerly air flow of high heat and fairly high humidity. Again a west northwest wind coming off the hills can dry out the coastal plain at time – which is what helped launch Boston’s temp toward the century mark yesterday – the dew point which had be in the lower 70s just hours before had fallen to the mid 60s. Watch for that again today, although officially I am not forecasting anybody to hit 100 – just many 90s. If the wind lightens up enough, feeble coastal sea breezes can occur, but for the most part, we’ll be looking at a land breeze and very hot weather. Parts of Cape Cod and of course Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard are more exposed to ocean influence so it won’t be quite as hot there, obviously. It will be rain-free today, in general, but I cannot rule out a pop-up isolated air mass thunderstorm today and a passing storm somewhere this evening or tonight with a weak disturbance coming through in the northwest flow aloft. Our transition out of the hot spell takes place on the Saturday holiday as a cold front drops through the region. My current thought is that a pre-frontal trough will trigger initial shower and thunderstorm activity as early as late morning into midday, with the threat of this activity lasting through mid afternoon north of I-90 then shifting to the south mid afternoon to very early evening. Cells may be more numerous the further west you are, and less so further east. I do think that all activity will be offshore by the time of the scheduled evening fireworks displays, as it stands now, but I will monitor the situation very closely. Humidity will remain high on Saturday and it will also be another hot day with many areas reaching or exceeding 90, but not getting close to the levels of yesterday and today due to more cloudiness and the shower / thunderstorm chance, as well as the front passing through and shifting the wind from north to south, introducing a new air mass to the region by the end of the day. With favorable timing, it will be quite comfortable in comparison to previous hours by Saturday night. Sunday looks like a decent summer day with a fair amount of sun, seasonably warm air, and lower humidity with an area of high pressure in eastern Canada. This high will hang out up there into early next week as a wave of two of low pressure ride along the frontal boundary to our south. Right now, I think some shower activity will skirt the South Coast but remain mostly to our south on Monday, before high pressure to the north retreats enough to allow it into our region by Tuesday, which looks like an unsettled day.
TODAY: Mostly sunny. A remote chance of an isolated thunderstorm this afternoon. Highs 92-99 except 84-91 Cape Cod. Dew most mostly 65+ but can fall under that at times in the coastal plain. Wind W 5-15 MPH with a few higher gusts.
TONIGHT: Partly cloudy. An isolated thunderstorm possible. Lows 72-79. Dew point 65+. Wind W to SW 5-15 MPH.
SATURDAY (INDEPENDENCE DAY): Variably cloudy. Chance of showers and thunderstorms especially late morning to mid afternoon, except until late afternoon South Coast region. Highs 88-95. Dew point 65+ but lowering from north to south later in the day. Wind SW 5-15 MPH with higher gusts, shifting to NW from north to south by late-day. Higher wind gusts can occur near any storms.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy to mostly clear. Lows 65-72. Dew point falls below 60 late. Wind N 5-15 MPH.
SUNDAY: Mostly sunny to partly cloudy. Highs 81-88, coolest coastal areas. Dew point sub-60. Wind NE 5-15 MPH.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Variably cloudy. Lows 61-68. Dew point sub-60. Wind NE to E up to 10 MPH.
MONDAY: Partly sunny to mostly cloudy. Possible showers South Coast. Highs 75-82. Dew point near 60. Wind E up to 10 MPH.
MONDAY NIGHT: Mostly cloudy. Patchy fog. Showers possible South Coast evening then anywhere overnight. Lows 62-69. Dew point 60+. Wind SE up to 10 MPH.
TUESDAY: Cloudy. Showers likely. Highs 70-77. Dew point 65+. Wind SE up to 10 MPH.
DAYS 6-10 (JULY 8-12)
Showers may linger July 8. Shower and thunderstorm a slight potential about July 10 and a greater potential by July 12. Temperatures near to slightly above normal.
DAYS 11-15 (JULY 13-17)
Overall pattern features west to east flow with a few passing disturbances bringing shower and t-storm opportunities, but no prolonged unsettled weather. Temperatures near to above normal.