DAYS 1-5 (MARCH 11-15)
Our warm surge peaks today with a southwest wind increasing across the region, driving the warm air in. But of course, any time in the late winter into very early spring the ocean waters around New England are at their coldest of the season, and that influence will be seen in the lower temperatures across the South Coast region and also cooler along portions of our irregular eastern shoreline where pieces of land stick out in such a way that there is enough water to their southwest to cool them down as well. Two cold fronts will cross there region, one Friday morning and another Friday evening, to put an end to the mild party, but the first front, which may produce a brief rain shower as it passes, is not delivering the cold air, just a wind shift and an ever-so-slightly cooler air mass than the one we’ll be in today. It is the second front which will bring us back to reality for the coming weekend, which will be decidedly colder, along with wind. Initially, some of the wind Friday night into early Saturday may be strong enough to result in some downed tree limbs on weaker trees, with isolated power outages. The weekend will be dry as we get a fresh delivery of arctic air, and this cold and dry weather will continue through Monday, “The Ides of March”…
TODAY: Areas of light fog early morning. Partly sunny. Highs ranging widely from 45-52 Nantucket and outer Cape Cod to 53-60 remainder of South Coast to 61-68 most other areas except 65-72 interior valley locations. Wind SW increasing to 10-20 MPH with higher gusts.
TONIGHT: Partly cloudy evening. Mostly cloudy overnight. Temperatures rise to near 50 where they were in the 40s previously, elsewhere lows 48-55. Wind SW 5-15 MPH, higher gusts.
FRIDAY: Mostly cloudy with a possible rain shower early morning, then mostly sunny. Highs 60-67 except 52-59 South Coast. Wind SW 10-20 MPH shifting to W.
FRIDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows 28-35. Wind NW 15-25 MPH, higher gusts.
SATURDAY: Partly sunny. Highs 41-48. Wind N 15-25 MPH, higher gusts.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows 20-27. Wind N 5-15 MPH.
SUNDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs 35-42. Wind NW 10-20 MPH, higher gusts.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Clear. Lows 18-25. Wind N 10-20 MPH, higher gusts. Wind chill near 0 at times.
MONDAY: Sunny. Highs 30-37. Wind NW 10-20 MPH, diminishing.
DAYS 6-10 (MARCH 16-20)
Cold Canada, warm US Southeast, we should be near but on the colder side of the boundary for most of this period. Temperatures below normal. Watching for two possible low pressure impacts that may include frozen precipitation for at least parts of the region.
DAYS 11-15 (MARCH 21-25)
The early days of astronomical spring will find us still in a battle zone between lingering winter air in Canada and warming early spring air in the US Southeast. This is not atypical whatsoever for our region at this time of year. We’ll be vulnerable to temperature swings and additional unsettled weather.