Mostly Dry Through The Weekend; Heat Levels Rising
DRY DAYS: Showers will be very hard to find across Alabama through the weekend with partly to mostly sunny days and fair nights. There might be a few small, isolated showers around today and tomorrow, but the chance of any one spot getting wet is 10 percent or less.
Heat levels will rise, and afternoon highs will be close to 90 degrees Friday through Sunday.
NEXT WEEK: For now much of the week looks dry, although the reliable European model suggests there could be some of showers around mid-week thanks to an approaching front. Expect highs mostly in the 80s… See the video briefing for maps, graphics, and more details.
TROPICS: There are no named systems in the Atlantic basin as of early this morning. There is a 60 percent chance (based on the latest NHC outlook) the disturbance in the middle of the Atlantic (former Tropical Storm Gordon) will develop, but it will move northward far from land.
Closer to home, a broad area of low pressure could form this weekend over the northwestern Caribbean Sea. This will likely drift into the southern Gulf of Mexico next week; there is no way at this time of knowing if this develops, where it goes, or the intensity. It is simply an area to watch.
FOOTBALL WEATHER: The sky will be clear for the high school games across the state Friday night with temperatures falling into the 70s.
Saturday, Auburn hosts Arkansas (2:30p CT kickoff) at Jordan-hare Stadium. The sky will be sunny with temperatures in the 87-90 degree range during most of the game.
Jacksonville State hosts Southern Miss (2:00p CT kickoff) at AmFirst Stadium… expect a sunny sky with temperatures in the upper 80s.
Troy hosts Florida A&M Saturday evening (6:00p CT kickoff)… the sky will be clear; about 85 degrees at kickoff, mid 70s by the final whistle.
ON THIS DATE IN 1926: The great “Miami Hurricane” produced winds of 138 mph that drove ocean waters into the Biscayne Bay drowning 135 persons. The eye of the hurricane passed over Miami, at which time the barometric pressure reached 27.61 inches. Tides up to twelve feet high accompanied the storm, which claimed a total of 372 lives.
ON THIS DATE IN 2003: Hurricane Isabel made landfall on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Although Isabel had been a Category Five hurricane at its peak, it struck the United States as a Category Two storm. Still, it caused over $5 billion in damage to the Mid-Atlantic states and killed 16 people directly.
Look for the next video briefing here by 3:00 this afternoon… enjoy the day!
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