DAYS 1-5 (AUGUST 11-15)
Canadian air behind departing low pressure brings a nice summer day today. We will have a gusty breeze from mid morning well into the afternoon, and expect some diurnal cloud development when the sun heats rain-moistened ground with cooler air above. The wind settles tonight and any clouds dissipate and we’ll have a comfortable night by August standards. If you’re up late and are a star gazer, late tonight (early Saturday morning post midnight / pre dawn) will offer a decent opportunity to view the just-about-peak Perseid meteor shower. Best way to view it is away from light sources as much as possible, outside for a while to let eyes adjust, and looking high in the north and northeast sky for thin-appearing, fast-moving streaks. Saturday will dawn with sun which will be dominant for a good part of the day before some clouds arrive later. This will be in response to upstream showers and thunderstorms with a pre-frontal trough approaching from the west. This trough will trigger showers and thunderstorms into western New England by late-day and early evening, and the remains of those can then move across the WHW forecast area from west to east in broken to scattered form mainly after sunset Saturday. Lingering clouds from these may hinder viewing of the peak hours of the Perseid meteors in the early morning hours of Sunday, but with a little luck some partial clearing can take place to allow for at least some limited viewing. A cold front will have to cross the region before the shower and thunderstorm threat is eliminated, and this will take probably until late morning (west) and early afternoon (east), so those will still be in the forecast as a hit-and-miss occurrence for Sunday’s morning and midday hours. Even post front, it will stay on the humid side later Sunday, with slight drying into Monday as a little bubble of high pressure moves close to the region. The zonal flow pattern we’re in sends the next disturbance our way for Tuesday. Low pressure will be set to track north of the region late Tuesday, but before it gets here a warm front will push into and through the region, followed by its cold front as the low moves by. Details to work out will be frontal timing, how long we’re in a warm sector, and resultant shower and thunderstorm intensity and coverage. But it being day 5, it’s too soon for that, so just paint Tuesday as an unsettled day with details to come.
TODAY: Sun and passing clouds. Highs 78-85. Dew point near 60. Wind W 5-15 MPH, higher gusts possible.
TONIGHT: Mostly clear. Patchy ground fog. Lows 60-67. Dew point near 60. Wind SW under 10 MPH.
SATURDAY: Mostly sunny to partly cloudy. Late-day shower or thunderstorm possible southwestern NH / central MA / eastern CT. Highs 80-87. Dew point 60+. Wind SW 5-15 MPH.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Variably cloudy. A shower or thunderstorm possible. Patchy fog. Lows 62-69. Dew point near 60. Wind SW 5-15 MPH.
SUNDAY: Partly sunny. Chance of a shower or thunderstorm morning and midday, diminishing from west to east. Highs 78-85. Dew point 60+. Wind W 5-15 MPH.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows 57-64. Dew point under 55. Wind W up to 10 MPH.
MONDAY: Sun then some clouds. Highs 77-84. Dew point rising back to near 60. Wind variable to S up to 10 MPH.
MONDAY NIGHT: Variably to mostly cloudy. Lows 61-68. Dew point near 60. Wind SE under 10 MPH.
TUESDAY: Mostly cloudy. Chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs 72-79. Dew point 65+. Wind S 5-15 MPH.
DAYS 6-10 (AUGUST 16-20)
A generally zonal flow pattern is expected, disturbances passing by with a couple shower and thunderstorm chances – most likely August 17 & 19. Temperatures near to slightly above normal.
DAYS 11-15 (AUGUST 21-25)
A weaker westerly flow with near to below normal precipitation and near to above normal temperature expected heading into late August.