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Friday, July 4, 2008 6:00 AM Prepared by Bob Weisman Professor of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Saint Cloud State University Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Department Saint Cloud and Vicinity Forecast
Synopsis:
Hakuna Matata (No Weather Worries) Until Late Sunday
In the wet weather pattern we've seen for most of the spring, we haven't had more than 6 straight days with no rainfall since the middle of April. However, we've now had 5 straight dry days and should continue the dry weather until Sunday afternoon or evening.
High pressure is right over Minnesota on the NWS
HPC Latest North American zoom-in surface map, ushering in the core of the Canadian air mass. Skies are clear, as seen on the College
of DuPage North Central infrared satellite loop, and the air is dry, as seen by the dew points in the 40's on the UCAR
Minnesota surface chart loop, so temperatures have dropped into the upper 40's. Yesterday morning (46 degree low) was the coolest low we've seen since May 28 (45 degree low) and we have a chance of equaling that.
Our general flow pattern shows the continued push of dry air from central Canada on the College
of DuPage national 24-hour water vapor loop, setting us up for a gorgeous holiday weekend with our first shot at showers and thunderstorms Sunday afternoon and evening as a weak cold front comes through. If you're headed for northwestern Minnesota, you might see a thunderstorm late night on Saturday night.
Other than that, the warming trend will get going in earnest today and continue through over the weekend as the big heat dominating the western third of the country (highs in the high 90's to low 100's in eastern Washington and Oregon on Yesterday's
High Temperature Map from NWS/SUNY-Albany) tries to work its way in.
Today, temperatures will rebound from the upper 40's to around 80. That means that morning parades will have temperatures of around 70 degrees and fireworks will have temperatures falling from the low 70's back into the 60's. Tomorrow, the southwest winds on the west side of the high will kick up, so temperatures will begin in the middle 50's and climb to between 85 and 90.
By Sunday morning, the increasing southwest flow will begin to tap the more humid air to the south of the stalled front in Oklahoma and Texas on the NWS
HPC Latest North American zoom-in surface map. That means that there will be showers and thunderstorms developing in the eastern Dakotas and moving into northwest and north central Minnesota. However, I think that those storms will stay out of here. We should break out into sunshine again on Sunday with humidity starting to become uncomfortable. It appears that the weak cold front will move into Minnesota, then stall Sunday afternoon and evening. That should set the stage for late day showers and thunderstorms late Sunday afternoon and Sunday night. Some storms could be severe.
That cold front will run out of gas close to central Minnesota on Sunday night and Monday. The question is whether or not the showers and thunderstorms on the north side of the front will be in central or southern Minnesota. At this point, my best guess is that it will be a little cooler on Monday with a chance of more showers and thunderstorms late Monday and Monday night. But, that is a very shaky forecast.
The June 2008 St. Cloud weather summary shows that June was a normal month, both in temperature and surprisingly in rainfall, since the heavy rains of the first half of the month have eased. Also, this warm season is only the third of the past 20 without a 90-degree high this late in the season.
The National Weather Service has a nice year-at-a-glance graph of St. Cloud conditions on its St. Cloud climate web page.
Links:
Surface
Satellite
Radar
Current Watches/Warnings
Road Reports
Climate
Drought
Forecast: Friday: Sunny to partly cloudy and seasonably warm. High: between 78 and 82. Winds: SW 5-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall:
0%.
Friday Night: Clear and not quite as cool. Low: between 55 and 60. Winds: SE 4-8 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 0%.
Saturday: Sunny to partly cloudy, windy, very warm, and becoming noticeably humid. High: between 85 and 90. Winds: S 10-25 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall:
0%.
Saturday Night: Partly clear, breezy, very warm, and more humid with a slight chance of a late night thunderstorm. Low: between 65 and 70. Winds: SW 10-20 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 20%.
Sunday: A slight chance of a morning shower or thunderstorm, then partly sunny, windy, very warm, and sticky with a chance of scattered late day showers and thunderstorms. Some late day storms could be severe. High: between 85 and 90. Winds: SW 8-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall:
20% in the morning, 40% in the afternoon.
End of "Reasonable" Forecast Certainty
Sunday Night: A chance of scattered showers and thunderstorms. Low: between 62 and 67. Winds: SW 10-20 MPH, shifting to N late. Chance of measurable rainfall: 40%.
Monday: Partly cloudy and not quite as hot, but still humid with a chance of a late day shower or thunderstorm. High: between 82 and 86. Winds: N 5-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall:
10%.
For Entertainment Purposes Only.
Your Weather May (and Probably Will) Vary
Extended: Still above normal temperatures through much of next week. A chance of showers and thunderstorms Monday night and Tuesday?
Forecast Confidence (10 - "Know what gas will
cost next week, Bob?"; 0 - "Been a victim of road rage lately, Bob?"): 9 Friday through Saturday, 7 Saturday night, 6 Sunday, 5 Sunday night, 4 Monday, 2 Monday night and Tuesday.
Yesterday's High: 74°F; Overnight Low (through 6 AM): 49°F
24-Hour Rainfall: None (Airport through 5 AM); None (SCSU through 5 AM)
Growing Season Rainfall (April 1-current): 11.55 inches (Airport); Normal Rainfall: 9.94 inches
Normal Temperatures for July 3 - High: 81°F; Low: 57°F
Next Update: Monday 6:00 AM or as needed.
Let me know what you think about this forecast and discussion by emailing SCSU
meteorology professor Bob Weisman. Please note that I make the forecast, not the weather!
Are you interested in studying meteorology? If so,
go to the Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Department temporary home page.
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