Less Heat, Scattered Daytime Storms Throughout This Week
Daytime heat becomes more routine Independence day and beyond. High temperatures peak in the low to perhaps mid 90s on the fourth of July.
Daytime heat becomes more routine Independence day and beyond. High temperatures peak in the low to perhaps mid 90s on the fourth of July.
Strong to severe storms remain possible Sunday evening and overnight into early Monday morning. A severe thunderstorm watch continues until midnight Sunday night for Coosa, Tallapoosa, Elmore, Montgomery, Macon, and Bullock counties.
Strong to severe storms appear possible Sunday, particularly during the afternoon and evening, possibly into Sunday night.
The weekend looks hotter with high temperatures in the low 90s Saturday and possibly mid 90s Sunday. Only stray showers form Saturday afternoon, but the rain chance looks higher Sunday.
At least isolated daytime showers or storms may form Thursday afternoon or evening. Although, outside of rain, the sky likely becomes more sunny during the afternoon.
Wednesday afternoon may not resemble a typical summer day weather-wise for our area. The rest of the day looks rather wet, with scattered to numerous showers and storms.
Much of Tuesday afternoon could remain mainly dry. However, scattered showers or storms may form Tuesday evening.
Strong to severe storms remain possible Thursday afternoon. A tornado watch continues for Wilcox, Butler, Crenshaw, and Covington counties until 3PM.
A cluster of strong to severe storms works south through southern Alabama Tuesday afternoon. A severe thunderstorm watch continues for Alabama counties south of highway 80 until 7PM Tuesday.
Additional storms form Monday afternoon, mainly in south Alabama. Some of these storms may become strong to severe, capable of strong wind gusts and hail.