Monday September 8 2025 Forecast (7:06AM)

DAYS 1-5 (SEPTEMBER 8-12)

High pressure dominates our weather with cool and dry conditions early this week. Low pressure passing offshore to our southeast Wednesday throws a shield of clouds into our sky, but most of its rain stays out over the ocean – may just brush the Islands and Cape Cod for a few hours during that day. Another high pressure area builds in for the balance of the work week with more fair weather.

TODAY: Filtered sun becomes brighter from west to east during the day. Scattered fair weather clouds this afternoon. Highs 67-74. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.

TONIGHT: Mostly clear. Fog patches in some low elevation locations. Lows 45-52. Wind NW under 10 MPH.,

TUESDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs 67-74. Wind N to NE up to 10 MPH.

TUESDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows 48-55. Wind NE to E under 10 MPH.

WEDNESDAY: Mostly cloudy. Slight chance of a period of light rain Cape Cod / Islands. Highs 66-73. Wind E up to 10 MPH.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Clearing. Lows 46-53. Wind N up to 10 MPH.

THURSDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs 70-77. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.

THURSDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Fog patches possible in low elevation locations. Wind variable under 10 MPH.

FRIDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs 68-75. Wind variable up to 10 MPH.

DAYS 6-10 (SEPTEMBER 13-17)

High pressure dominates the weather with dry conditions expected for the September 13-14 weekend. We watch another area of low pressure to the south the first half of next week, but for now it appears high pressure will hold strong enough to keep us dry. Temperatures near to below normal.

DAYS 11-15 (SEPTEMBER 18-22)

As we move through the final days of astronomical summer and up to the Autumnal Equinox (September 22 at 2:19 p.m. EDT), the pattern still looks dry overall, but we’ll watch for low pressure hanging out to our south for at least a portion of this period in case it ends up wandering further north.

42 thoughts on “Monday September 8 2025 Forecast (7:06AM)”

  1. Thank you, TK. I’m awake uncharacteristically early with a power outage. Not something that happens in this part of Sutton very often

      1. Excellent.
        My normal 1st 2 words yielded zilch
        I thought, here we go, another fail.
        Then I tried a word I have never tried and got 3 in position and 1 out of position. Answer was obvious at that point.

        1. I had pretty much the same experience you described, a couple days ago.

          When the first 2 guesses yield nothing, it felt good to get it in the next 2 guesses.

      1. Nice!

        I got it in 4. I tried a weird guess for the third try and was surprised that it’s a word. We can exchange stories tomorrow.

  2. https://www.pivotalweather.com/model.php?m=ecmwf_full&p=prateptype_cat_ecmwf-met&rh=2025090800&fh=24&r=na&dpdt=&mc=

    https://www.pivotalweather.com/model.php?m=ecmwf_full&p=prateptype_cat_ecmwf-met&rh=2025090800&fh=84&r=na&dpdt=&mc=

    https://www.pivotalweather.com/model.php?m=ecmwf_full&p=prateptype_cat_ecmwf-met&rh=2025090800&fh=144&r=na&dpdt=&mc=

    In some shape or form, a front that washes out lingers just off the east coast, while a central Atlantic ridge holds it in place from outright moving well east of us into the Atlantic.

    https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/goes/sector_band.php?sat=G19&sector=eus&band=GEOCOLOR&length=24

    Its become stationary now not too far from the east coast.

    The northern half has shear and you can also see an outflow boundary on its leading edge. This has no chance of development.

    But …… the southern half east of Georgia, that area, I think needs to have a half eye kept on it the next 7 days for something that may slowly do something.

    1. For whatever reason, my wife has always played Supertramp when we are driving to Nova Scotia/Cape Breton.

      So, I have heard Supertramp the majority of the past 26 summers. I like their music.

      Sad to hear of his passing.

      1. She has good taste. Supertramp is one of the best.

        RIP Rick.

        Rick was the lead singer on fewer of the band’s singles/hits than his high register bandmate, Roger Hodgson, but nonetheless delivered solid vocal performances as well!

        You can hear the contrast between the two singers on the 1979 hit “Goodbye Stranger”, on which Rick Davies sings the verses with Roger handing the higher register lines in the chorus.

    2. I know of the band, but was never a fan.

      I thought Rick Davies might be related to Ray and Dave Davies of the Kinks, but that is not the case.

  3. Thanks TK, dipped down to 49.8 around 6:15. Lovely fall morning, pattern looks dry for sure. Nice drink yesterday, ended up with 1.31 total from Saturday into Sunday event

  4. If on a gas stove, you need natural gas and some kind of spark.

    Well, the natural gas is plenty with the heating of the oceans from the last 6 months of more direct sunlight.

    I believe the north Pacific heatwave has created a very anomolous jet stream that has, in this analogy, kept the spark blown out.

    I worry that, if the jet stream changes even a little, the back end of the tropical season may become significantly active, especially with La Nina really having returned in a low to moderate capacity, stronger than it was at the start of summer.

  5. A story in the Palm Beach Post updated at 1:30 p.m. today uses a story written by USA Today, with the headline: “National Hurricane Center watching 3 tropical waves. What Florida residents should know and do.”

    Down into the story they talk about various things, eventually getting to the things they call tropical waves, which are not really tropical waves. They show a map titled “what tropical waves are out there now” and the map simply states “Tropical cyclone activity is not expected during the next 7 days” making the headline and the “tropical waves” that fictionalized look really stupid now.

    They then go onto say that it’s unknown if the tropical waves will impact Florida even though the NHC states there is nothing expected through 7 days.

    But they have to find something to hype, so they basically make up some fiction here about the global models showing much more active tropical weather in about 2 weeks, when we all know you cannot go by those!

    Another PRIME PERFECT EXAMPLE of what is wrong with journalism, with regards to weather. They are doing it COMPLETELY WRONG.

    If there is a need to update the tropics, this is how it should have been done:

    “Despite being in the climate peak of tropical season, it is quiet at this time, with no activity expected during the next 7 days.” That is it.

    Tell it like it is, and stop MAKING CRAP UP! It’s really, really stupid.

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