The Upper Mississippi Valley will struggle to get into the 30s and 40s, with 40s and 50s for the northern Plains, Midwest, Northeast and Rocky Mountains. Most of the nation will be cooler than average, though the Pacific Northwest will be quite warm for the middle of October. The rest of the nation will be largely dry today, although a few rain showers will move into the Northeast by the late evening hours. Thunderstorms will form south of a stalled front in southern Florida, with gusty winds and brief downpours possible with the strongest storms. The strongest storms will also be capable of producing strong winds, hail up to the size of golf balls, and potentially an isolated tornado.Ī cold front pushing south across the Midwest, South and Mid-Atlantic will also trigger showers and isolated thunderstorms as it slowly moves south. These storms will bring much needed rainfall to the region, but flash flooding may unfortunately result especially in southwestern Texas and southern New Mexico. The Great Lakes will see rain and snow showers swirling around a stalled low-pressure system centered over the region, and these will persist all day.īy the afternoon, a fresh round of showers and thunderstorms will erupt across the Southwest and southern Plains. Today will kick off with showers and thunderstorms persisting across the Desert Southwest, southern Rockies and onto the southern Plains. ![]() Multiple slow moving storm systems will create cool, soggy weather for the Southwest and Great Lakes today.
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