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WEATHER IN 5/JOE & JOE WEATHER SHOW PODCASTS
NYC Quiet Chilly Stretch Continues
Good morning everyone. We have a quiet and chilly day today, and the lack of activity aside from a weak system tomorrow, will continue till Thursday. Enjoy this relatively calm stretch, because things are going to get more active again down the road.
SATELLITE
Sunshine and light winds will dominate today, giving today a “warmer” feel even though it won’t be. Expect highs in the low 30’s, then lows in the upper 20’s under a canopy of clouds tonight.
REGIONAL RADAR
Those clouds are ahead of a weak and disorganized systems that’ll pass by the East Coast tomorrow and into the night. Most of the energy will be well south and well north of us. Cold enough air might stick around in the AM, to the point where any precip may fall as a few light snow showers or rain/snow mix. Anything that does fall will be widely scattered and very light in nature.
By afternoon, that atmosphere overhead will be too warm for snow, and anything that does cross the area will be light rain. No accumulation is expected, and we’ll have highs in the upper 30’s to near 40.
LOCAL RADAR NEW YORK CITY
The sun is back Monday through Wednesday, and we’ll have highs in the near 40 to low 40 range. Our next system continues to look like it’ll bring some mild weather and heavy rain at times for Christmas Eve. 55-60 degree temps look to be on the menu, but then we turn chilly again for Christmas Day with highs in the upper 30’s to low 40’s.
We’ll also watch closely to see if there’s any residual moisture behind our front, which may give us a few flakes in the air Christmas Day. So far, nothing major is expected aside from a harmless visual.
LOCAL RADAR PHILADELPHIA

In the long range, that Christmas Eve system looks to be the starting gate for a series of systems that’ll swing by. Some of these look weak as of now, others show some potential. However, it’s too early to make the call on any of these and we will watch each one closely into the New Year and first/second week of January.
MANY THANKS TO TROPICAL TIDBITS FOR THE USE OF MAPS
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