Good Tuesday, everyone. We have another day filled with scattered showers and thunderstorms rumbling across the region. This action is along a weak front dropping in from the north. As the week wears on, steamy temps are going to increase, but thunderstorms aren’t going away.
You know the drill with today’s storms, any boomer that goes up can put down enough rain to cause local high water issues.
Track away…
Wednesday has a much lower risk for a shower or storm as humidity levels and temps drop just a bit.
The steam starts to really build in on Thursday, but we will have to watch for some thunderstorms developing. The NAM has this…
Other models show several clusters trying to develop and dive in from the northwest through Friday…
Temps are totally dependent on when and where the storms are, obviously. The farther west you live, the higher the thermometer readings.
Heading into the weekend, the steam remains, with more storms floating around…
The European Model then develops a healthy system around here early next week. It brings even higher rain and storms chances and cooler temps…
Folks, this summer is having a very, very hard time giving us more than a day or two of normal heat. It’s a continuation of the past 3 summers around here.
Make it a great day and take care.
I guess the NWS in Louisville is going for a dry hot week as I see there going to be issuing a Air Quality Alert starting tomorrow. There not to optimistic at all about the storm chances for this week.
95 degrees in Crab Orchard at the in laws already…..summer finally here :-p
Most of the storms have jumped my part of the world. It is getting mega dry in southern Scott County. That moisture map Chris posted a few weeks ago had a normal swath across the southern half of Scott and most of Bourbon County, and it hasn’t rained much since. With little chance of storms and the temps coming the next week, it could start to get ugly on the vegetation side here.
When you work in a non-climate controlled facrory all day, you hate seeing those temps rise. Hopefully the rain keeps the temps down.