Colder Saturday night and Sunday, rain and storms Tuesday night
Sunday remains considerably cooler than Saturday, with high temperatures in the upper 50s to low 60s despite a mostly sunny sky. Sunday night lows could fall into the 30s again.
Sunday remains considerably cooler than Saturday, with high temperatures in the upper 50s to low 60s despite a mostly sunny sky. Sunday night lows could fall into the 30s again.
Saturday looks mainly sunny with highs in the low to mid 70s. Saturday night looks cooler, thanks to a dry cold front sweeping through Alabama this weekend. Temperatures fall into the 30s Sunday morning.
Clouds increase Thursday as a cold front enters Alabama. A few showers appear possible as the front moves through. However, water content in the atmosphere looks very limited. That means many locations remain dry.
Outside of a few spotty showers early Monday morning, Monday looks mainly dry. Sunshine increases during the afternoon. Temperatures warm into the mid 60s.
Models now show higher rain coverage and amounts late Sunday. It now looks like most of us receive rain during the afternoon and evening. Rain amounts could be around half of one inch in many locations through Monday morning.
Friday night looks cold again, but not quite as cold as Thursday night. Overnight lows fall into the upper 20s. However, winds remain light to calm, so no bitter wind chill values this time.
High temperatures range from the upper 30s to low 40s Thursday afternoon, some 20-25° below average for February 20th. Wind chills remain in the 30s.
Clouds partially clear Wednesday night, while temperatures turn colder. Lows range from the mid to upper 20s. Wind chills fall below 20° early Thursday morning.
The sky should be mostly sunny Monday morning. Temperatures turn even colder overnight, with lows in the low 30s and wind chills in the 20s. Monday remains cool despite sunshine, with high temperatures in the 50s.
Severe storms remain possible Saturday night, capable of damaging wind gusts and tornadoes. The Storm Prediction Center now places most of our area within an enhanced (level 3/5) risk.