Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Scattered to isolated showers for today.

 Todays post will go over this week’s regional weather and touch on the El Nino and Tropical Storm Andrew

A look at the surface chart shows,

 





Looking at the wind direction chart, form Windy. We can see there is a southwest flow is directing warmer temperatures and higher humidity into the region.  But we also have a southeast flow into the Middle Atlantic and New England, this is directing a moist more stable air mass into those areas. This is creating a battle between the two air masses over the region.  We have a weak warm front lifting into New York State down through Virginia connected to low pressure up over the mid Great Lakes. Then we have another stronger frontal system out to our west. This area of low pressure will head toward the Saint Lawrance Valley tomorrow. The cold front attached to the low pressure move through the region setting off rain showers and thunderstorms.  

We have an MSC (organized thunderstorms) out in the Midwest. This will bring a lot of severe weather out there in the Midwest Tristate today. It’s quite possible this MSC evolves into a derecho. But other than a few isolated stronger thunderstorms across far western Pennsylvania, the region shouldn’t see any severe storms today.




Here is a look at the Storm Prediction Centers Day 1 and day 2 severe outlook.  The leading warm front will lift through today and tomorrow morning. With the warm front scattered rain showers and some rumbles of thunder will move through the region. As the southerly flow strengthens temperatures are going to become much warmer and humid than they are today. The timing of all of this increases the risk for severe weather across eastern New York State, New England into the northern Middle Atlantic. The storm prediction center has these areas under a Slight Risk for severe weather Severe weather will still be possible west of there, but it will be more isolated in nature. The storm prediction center places a Moderate Risk for severe weather over most of the rest of the region. The storms that form tomorrow, will be capable of strong damaging winds, heavy downpours, perhaps some hail, and frequent Lightning. The risk for a tornado is low but not zero. The best time for severe weather will be noon through 9 or 10 pm. The thunderstorms will be hit and miss so some of y’all might not see them.

Tomorrow ahead of the front, we’re going to be dealing with gusty winds. Storms could tap into that increasing the risk for damaging straight-line winds roll.

The area of low pressure is going to linger to our north and east for Friday Juneteenth into Saturday, as the cold front stalls off the Coast. This will keep us unsettled for Friday and the Father’s Day weekend. The weekend will feature cooler conditions and isolated rain showers and perhaps a few thunderstorms. But there is going to be plenty of dry time as well.  But the entire weekend will experience breezy conditions.  Sunday night and Monday will see another frontal system move through bringing widespread rain showers and scattered thunderstorms.  Tuesday will see high pressure build in providing much better conditions.

  

El Nino

Another quick update on the El Nino.

El Nino has arrived, on June 11, NOAA officially announced that El Nino conditions had developed in the tropical Pacific. Waters in a zone of the eastern and central Pacific Ocean near the equator have warmed to more than 0.5 degrees Celsius (0.9°F) above average.

As I’ve said many times, The El Nino Southern Oscillation ENSO is a periodic climate cycle originating in the equatorial Pacific that has an influence on weather across the entire globe. It goes through three distinct phases: El Nino (the warm phase), La Nina (the cool phase), and ENSO-Neutral. It swings between the two main phases on an irregular basis, typically every two to seven years.


El Nino is favored to persist through the upcoming 2026-27 Northern Hemisphere winter 2026-27. It also is looking to be a strong to very strong El Nino



There is a chance this year’s El Nino  could rival or surpass the strongest El Nino in intensity on record, that would be the 1877–1878 event.

As the El Nino intensifies it is going to cause our region to become more and more unsettled for the summer. We’re going to continue to see these cold fronts with the threat for rain showers and thunderstorms for the rest of this summer.

 

Tropical Storm Arthur

The first named storm of the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season.

The NHC has Arthur having max sustained winds of 45 mph with a central pressure of 1000mb. He is tracking northeast at 9 mph.



I’m very surprised that this has become a tropical storm, he has just been hugging the coast and he has been very disorganized.



This does show up in the satellite image. Most of the convection (strong thunderstorm activity) is displaced to the south and east of the center. But I don’t call the shots.

 Arthur is going to bring a lot of rain, another 3-6 inches with locally higher amounts of rain is likely, this is in addition to all the rain that has already fallen. 





That's it