1st Alert Weather Day
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People tend to underestimate how powerful tropical storms and hurricanes can be. These tropical systems can bring storm surge, inland flooding, high winds, rip currents, rough surf, and tornadoes.
Winds will pick up on Wednesday, with gusts near 30 mph and a high of 107°. The breeze sticks around into Thursday and Friday, with highs cooling slightly to 105° and 104°. This weekend will stay hot and dry. Expect a high of 106° on Saturday and a return to 108° by Sunday.
Thursday finds low and middle 80s with an increase in humidity levels and the threat for isolated storms in the west and far south. Showers and storms then increase a little more on Friday with a much better coverage of the showers and storms this weekend into Monday.
Our next disturbance will bring widespread rain on Friday. It starts in the Western U.P. and tracks east by the evening. For the most part it will be light to steady, but there could be moderate downpours. There’s a Marginal risk for excessive rainfall. No severe weather is expected. Rainfall amounts will range half an inch to an inch.
8hon MSN
Rinse and repeat is the name of the game as we head into Wednesday with yet another round of showers and storms.
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Starting tonight, we will have on and off rain chances over the next four days; some wildfire smoke is expected over Wisconsin yet again
A little patchy fog this morning, but nowhere near as bad as yesterday. We’ll have more sunshine across the Midstate today and it will be a warmer afternoon with highs in the mid to upper 80s. Tonight, will be partly cloudy with lows in the mid 60s by tomorrow morning.
Highs today are likely to be the warmest we’ve had in 2025 so far as they climb into the mid 90s for many of us. Thankfully the air temperature and the heat index won’t vary too much into the afternoon during the hottest part of the day even with the higher dew points.
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) - Typical summertime trade wind weather is expected throughout the week with some scattered showers focused near windward and mauka areas and mostly dry conditions over leeward areas.