Meteorologist April Loveland's First Warning Forecast
The showers will move out after midnight and the cold front will move offshore. Temperatures will drop and skies will clear. Expect lows in the mid 40s.
It will be much cooler on Monday, but expect wall-to-wall sunshine with highs near 60. A cold front will cross the area on Tuesday from the northwest to the southeast. This will bring another shot of cold air to the area, but we won't see any rain. Many communities will struggle to get out of the 50s on Tuesday. Tuesday night will be one of the coldest nights of the season and of the week with lows in the 30s.
Folks heading out early Wednesday morning will want to bundle up because wind chills will be in the 20s! Wednesday will be a blustery day with winds out of the northwest at 10-15 and high temperatures will struggle to get out of the 40s! Brr! That's more like February weather than November.
Conditions will continue to remain dry through the end of the week. Expect highs on Thursday in the mid and upper 50s. Milder on Friday with highs in the mid 60s under mostly sunny skies as Canadian high pressure remains in control.
The weekend looks dry and milder with highs in the mid and upper 60s on Saturday to near 70 on Sunday under mostly sunny skies.
Tropical Update:
Hurricane Iota forecast to become a dangerous major hurricane soon. Expected to bring potentially catetrophic winds, life-threatening storm surge, and extreme rainfall impacts to central America.
Iota is moving toward the west near 9 mph. On the forecast track, the core of Iota will pass near or over Providencia island late tonight or Monday, and make landfall within the hurricane warning area in northeastern Nicaragua and eastern Honduras Monday night.
Maximum sustained winds have increased to near 105 mph, with higher gusts. Rapid strengthening is expected during the next 24 hours, and Iota is forecast to be an extremely dangerous category 4 hurricane when it approaches Central America.
Hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 35 miles from the center and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 150 miles.
Meteorologist April Loveland
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