After a quiet midweek, the workweek’s second half will see a return of more active weather.
A Pacific rainmaker will move across southern California into the Southwest, bringing downpours to much of California. The rain and clouds will keep temperatures suppressed, with chilly 40s and 50s common in places used to 60s and 70s this time of the year. Across the Four Corners area and southern Utah, temperatures will be just cold enough for snow to fall in the highest elevations.
A weak front developing across the southern Plains will produce rain showers from southern and eastern Texas northward into the lower Mississippi Valley today. This will be the precursor to a deluge that will develop on Friday and early Saturday across the same area. Temperatures will be in the 40s and 50s, with 60s and a few 70s found across southern Texas. Snow will be possible over the Ohio Valley northeast into central Appalachians and eastern Great Lakes. Highs will be in the colder 30s and low 40s here.
A Pacific rainmaker will move across southern California into the Southwest, bringing downpours to much of California. The rain and clouds will keep temperatures suppressed, with chilly 40s and 50s common in places used to 60s and 70s this time of the year. Across the Four Corners area and southern Utah, temperatures will be just cold enough for snow to fall in the highest elevations.
A weak front developing across the southern Plains will produce rain showers from southern and eastern Texas northward into the lower Mississippi Valley today. This will be the precursor to a deluge that will develop on Friday and early Saturday across the same area. Temperatures will be in the 40s and 50s, with 60s and a few 70s found across southern Texas. Snow will be possible over the Ohio Valley northeast into central Appalachians and eastern Great Lakes. Highs will be in the colder 30s and low 40s here.
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