DAYS 1-5 (JUNE 10-14)
The temperature and dew point met each other overnight in many areas, causing areas of fog, some of it quite dense. Fog and stratus linger mainly in the eastern MA coastal plain as of mid morning but will be mixing out soon as solar heating works on it. We have one more day under the influence of the upper low that’s been around all week, but today’s impact will be far less than yesterday’s in the vast majority of the region. The exception will be any areas that happen to be hit by a passing shower or thunderstorm, which will be more isolated today, but possible at any time – with a tendency for most of them to occur in the noon to 6 p.m. window. Once again any of these could produce small hail, but it’s important to stress that these occurrences will be far more isolated than yesterday’s activity, so outdoor plans should be largely a “go” with just the need to keep an eye out for a shower or storm and have a plan of action in case. Tonight we should only see patchy ground fog form, and it will be a quiet night though some clouds will linger. Sunday’s the “pick” of the week and the weekend as well – the nicest day with the most sun, weighted toward the first half to 2/3 of the day before we see clouds from the next approaching trough start to move in. Some short range guidance has indicated a shower threat later Sunday for interior locations in response to warm air advection, but my emphasis is on increasing clouds and not much of a shower threat, so I am leaving that out of the forecast. It doesn’t get left out of the forecast for early in the week though, when warm frontal rain is probable on Monday and cold frontal showers, some heavy, will be around Monday night into Tuesday as surface low pressure heads through the Great Lakes and a weak secondary low forms to our south and moves up across the region. A dry slot may work in during Tuesday and cut off the shower threat for a number of hours, but these details can be refined with the help of short-range guidance in the next few days. By the time we get to Wednesday, we’re back underneath an upper level low with a cold pool aloft and more diurnal shower development as the same weather pattern rolls on.
TODAY: Low clouds/fog linger into mid morning eastern MA coastal plain, otherwise clouds give way to a sun/cloud mix. Isolated showers and possible thunderstorms, favoring the afternoon, and any can produce small hail. Highs 68-75. Wind variable up to 10 MPH early, becoming N 5-15 MPH, then locally E along eastern coastal areas of NH and MA during the afternoon.
TONIGHT: Partly to mostly cloudy. Patchy ground fog in lower elevations. Lows 50-57. Wind variable under 10 MPH.
SUNDAY: Mostly sunny through midday then increasing clouds thereafter. Highs 73-80, coolest coast. Wind W up to 10 MPH, but some coastal sea breezes likely.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Mostly cloudy. Lows 55-62. Wind S up to 10 MPH.
MONDAY: Mostly cloudy. Chance of rain at times in the afternoon. Highs 70-77, coolest South Coast. Wind S 5-15 MPH.
MONDAY NIGHT & TUESDAY: Mostly cloudy with showers likely. Areas of fog. More humid with dew point temperatures above 60 becoming likely. Lows 60-67. Highs 68-75. Wind S to SW 10-20 MPH but may becoming variable at times.
TUESDAY NIGHT: Variably cloudy. Lows 55-62. Wind SW 5-15 MPH.
WEDNESDAY: Partly sunny. Isolated to scattered mainly afternoon showers and possible thunderstorms. Highs 68-75. Wind SW 5-15 MPH.
DAYS 6-10 (JUNE 15-19)
Upper level low pressure continues to cause mainly diurnal shower chances especially the first part of the period before it lifts out to a more westerly air flow with less shower chances later in the period. Temperatures below to near normal.
DAYS 11-15 (JUNE 20-24)
Weak westerly flow overall but tendency for low pressure trough to dominate with a couple shower chances and no major heat in sight as we welcome Summer 2023 (solstice June 21).