Very Mild NYC Day Today
03/14/24 10:12am ET
Good morning everyone. For those in parts of the Northeast and the NYC area, this will be the nicest day we’ll have for a couple of weeks, so enjoy while it lasts before our active pattern resumes. We have a few spots across the land that are of some concern, and we will point out those troubled areas.
Yesterday, storms erupted across parts of the Central plains and drifted east; bringing with them, large hail, frequent lightning, damaging winds, and a few tornado warnings. We’re watching that threat play out again as we speak, with storms firing up across parts of Missouri, Illinois, and eventually moving ESE into parts of Indiana and Kentucky.
They will eventually fizzle out, then fire up again as we get towards late evening in Northeast Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, then chug to the east across the northern tier of the Gulf States and into the Southeast. Again, we’ll be looking for the risk of large hail, frequent lightning, damaging winds, and possible tornados. These are more dangerous in scope because they’ll be overnight as people sleep.
If you are in any of these high risk areas, please watch the radar and stay tuned to local media for watches and warnings.
Your local NYC forecast is below –
SATELLITE
We have a gorgeous day today with sunshine and highs in the upper 60’s to low 70’s. Light winds will seal the deal as far as making this a perfect day. Clouds roll in tonight, with some scattered showers possible tomorrow afternoon. We’ll have highs in the mid 60’s.
WEATHER RADAR
Sun returns on Saturday with cooler temps in the 55-60 range. We’ll do it again Sunday with a repeat in the temps, and a mix of sun & clouds.
Things cool off even more on Monday with highs in the upper 40’s to near 50, then we may struggle in the mid 40’s Tuesday for a chilly day.
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MANY THANKS TO TROPICAL TIDBITS & F5 WEATHER FOR THE USE OF MAPS
Please note that with regards to any severe weather, tropical storms, or hurricanes, should a storm be threatening, please consult your local National Weather Service office or your local government officials about what action you should be taking to protect life and property.