DAYS 1-5 (MAY 24-28)
The last “work week” of May has arrived and we’ll see a cooler week overall than the previous week was. We do remain in a fairly dry pattern, though a couple rain chances are there, generally surrounding air mass changes. We’ll see two distinctive air mass changes surrounding a spike of heat and humidity on Wednesday. But first, Canadian high pressure provides us with a pleasant day to start the week today. As this high slips to the south, a warm front will approach the region later Tuesday. We’ll already have warmed up from today’s temperatures by tomorrow just from return flow on the back side of the high, but the warm front will bring more cloudiness and eventually a chance of passing showers sometime Tuesday night to the early hours of Wednesday before it passes, and opens the door for the brief return of heat and humidity. A cold front will cross the region Wednesday evening, likely accompanied by some showers and thunderstorms, and definitely followed by somewhat cooler and drier air for Thursday as another Canadian high builds north of the Great Lakes but extends eastward enough to push the heat and humidity away. However, that frontal boundary will be fairly close by still and with the high pressure area taking its time moving any further southward initially, the door is open for a disturbance to move up into the area on Friday with clouds and possible showers. I’m not highly confident that this scenario takes place yet, however, but it’s possible.
TODAY: Sun and passing clouds.. Highs 62-67 coast, 68-73 inland. Wind NE 5-15 MPH, diminishing and becoming variable.
TONIGHT: Mostly clear to partly cloudy. Lows 47-54. Wind variable to SW increasing to 5-15 MPH with higher gusts overnight.
TUESDAY: Partly sunny. Highs 68-73 South Coast, 74-79 elsewhere. Wind SW 10-20 MPH.
TUESDAY NIGHT: Variably cloudy. Chance of rain showers. Lows 58-65. Increasingly humid with dew point rising toward 60. Wind SW 5-15 MPH with higher gusts.
WEDNESDAY: Partly sunny. Chance of late-day showers/thunderstorms. Humid – dew point over 60. Highs 85-92 except cooler South Coast. Wind SW 10-20 MPH with higher gusts.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers/thunderstorms early, then clearing. Lows 50-57. Wind shifting to NW 5-15 MPH, higher gusts.
THURSDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs 75-82. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.
THURSDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows 52-59. Wind N 5-15 MPH becoming variable.
FRIDAY: Mostly cloudy. Chance of showers. Highs 61-68. Wind variable to SE 5-15 MPH.
DAYS 6-10 (MAY 29 – JUNE 2)
The computer guidance for the May 29-31 Memorial Day Weekend continues to “disagree” on the solution and resultant weather. The scenario I am leaning toward right now is dry weather all 3 days with Canadian high pressure in control, but with its center to the north, at least through Sunday, with a general easterly air flow and near to slightly below normal temperatures, but it may not be as cool as it could have been since the ocean temperatures are running on the milder side of normal and probably won’t change by then. The atmosphere may warm a bit further, depending on the position of the high pressure, by Memorial Day itself on May 31. Confidence is still not super-high on this outlook so adjustments may occur. Looking ahead to the first couple days of June, a bit warmer and a bit more humid, maybe a shower threat at some point as a disturbance approaches from the west after the high pressure area gives way.
DAYS 11-15 (JUNE 3-7)
A frontal boundary may be hanging around the region with a few opportunities for showery weather. We need rain as our wetter pattern in April and the start of May has vanished on us and we’re trending back into abnormally dry to near drought again with each passing day without widespread significant rainfall.