storm

Previewing the heavy rounds of rain coming to New England midweek

Thunderstorms are possible during a lull between the shots of rain Wednesday, and travel could be a mess

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Monday night: Patchy fog, otherwise clear skies. Lows in the mid 30s. Tuesday: Morning fog breaks apart. Partly Cloudy day. High Temperature: 56. Wednesday: Rainy and windy. Gusts from the south around 40 mph. Highs around 60.

After clouds built in for the morning, sun returns for Monday afternoon. That will warm temperatures into the 50s by the evening.

This is the beginning of our warm-up. Tuesday will be the best afternoon to be outdoors, with warm air and dry skies. Highs are near 55 degrees. Tuesday evening, more clouds build in ahead of stormy skies on Wednesday. 

Warmer air progressively builds in for Wednesday, but some of that will help support showers and even isolated pockets of thunderstorms.

There are two rounds of rain that we’re watching: Morning showers, then evening downpours and gusty winds approach ahead of a cold front. The midday will have a brief clearing.

A map showing a low system over Michigan and a high system over the Atlantic Ocean that's bringing warm temperatures and rain to Boston.

The quiet and lull during the day is something to watch, as thunderstorms could develop in it its wake. Any storms that develop should be rather limited in duration and size.

Not only will the day be wet, but Wednesday will be windy. Wind gusts at near 45 mph along the coast are possible, and only a little slower, at 40 mph, for interior New England.

After on-and-off showers through the day, a cold front will guide the last batch of rain overhead Wednesday into Thursday. Rain totals near and below 1 inch.  

Higher elevations could see some snow/a rain-snow mix before sunrise Thursday. 

Thursday remains windy with drying skies. Temperatures will drop through the day Thursday, by Friday morning it will be brisk. The cold air won't linger long, by Saturday we're back to the mid-50s.

A map showing the temperature outlook in the U.S. March 2-6 — the East Coast is expecting warmer than normal temperatures, especially around the Great Lakes, while the West Coast, especially California, is expecting cooler temperatures than usual.
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