Today is the
first day of the Summer Solstice, meaning this Father’s Day will see the most
daylight of the year.
Surface
chart and Radar
We have high pressure up over the Great Lakes and low pressure to our north producing a trough over the eastern half of the region, we can also see a system out west that is going to push east.
For today, a
warm front will begin lifting north, heat and humidity will start to push into
the southern part of our region. The best chance for scattered showers and isolated
thunderstorms will be closer to the Canadian Border, in the Adirondacks and
across northern Vermont, northern New Hampshire, and Maine. But isolated
showers will be possible across the rest of New York State, northern
Pennsylvania, into New England. But most won’t see them. Storms will be slow moving, so isolated
flooding can’t be ruled out.
Tonight
clouds will increase ahead of the next weather system, as that system out west
approaches, there will be a chance of some showers over the evening hours for
western parts of our region. As the system out west gets closer.
Monday will
see waves of steady rain and some thunderstorms push into Western Pennsylvania
and western Maryland, as that wave of low pressure passes to our south across
the Middle Atlantic. The rain and storms will push east into the region. How
far north the system tracks the farther north the rain and storms. Right now,
it looks like heaviest rain will fall across Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware,
and New Jesey. With Steady rain maybe making it as far north as the southern
Half of New York State (mainly south of I-90) and across southern Vermont and
southern New Hampshire and Maine. Those across northern New York State
and the northern half of Vermont
and New Hampshire along with northern Maine saying mostly dry with a chance for
some isolated showers. Thunderstorms
could become strong too severe across Pennsylvania, New Jersey and points
south. Those with the greatest chance of
seeing severe storms will be across a large part of eastern Maryland and Delaware.
The SPC has a Slight Risk for severe storms across Maryland and Delaware with a
Marginal Risk stretching into Southern Pennsylvania, northern New Jersey and NYC and part of Long Island.
Monday night
into Tuesday will see that low-pressure system track across Southern New
England heading into the Gulf of Maine. This will bring widespread sometimes heavy
rain across the southern half of New England Monday night into Tuesday some of this steadier
rain could make it into southern inland and coastal locations of Maine. With scattered
showers across northern Maine. The
farther west and north you are on Tuesday the less your chance of seeing rain.
Wednesday
looks to be a mostly dry day with mild temperatures. Clouds will be on the increase Wednesday
night, ahead of another system for Thursday and Friday. Both days look to be
active with showers and thunderstorms quite possible.