Weather

A mild, largely dry pattern ahead

Heavy showers associated with Tropical Storm Ana will linger Monday across the western Hawaiian Islands. Meanwhile on the U.S. mainland, mild, dry weather will cover many areas through week’s end, although generally cool conditions will dominate the eastern one-third of the nation. The warmest weather, relative to normal, will cover the northern Plains, where temperatures will exceed 80°F in some locations. Toward week’s end, some readings above 90° may occur on the southern Plains. During the next 5 days, exceptions to the dry pattern will include the Northeast, with 2 to 5 inches of rain possible in New England; southern Florida (2 inches or more); and the Pacific Northwest (locally 2 to 8 inches). After mid-week, scattered showers (mostly an inch or less) will develop across the nation’s mid-section.

Looking ahead, the 6- to 10-day outlook calls for near- to above-normal temperatures nationwide, except for cooler-than-normal conditions in the Atlantic Coast States. Meanwhile, near- to below-normal precipitation across most of the U.S. will contrast with wetter-than-normal weather in the Pacific Northwest, upper Great Lakes region, and southern Florida.

5-Day Precipitation Totals

NOAA’s 6- to 10- Day Outlook

NOAA’s 8- to 14- Day Outlook

 

 

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