greensthings
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: what is the weather like where you are?
86°
Dew Point: 57
Wind Chill: 86
Humidity: 37
Wind: 16 SW
Barometer: 29.68
Visibility: 10.0 mi.
Precip: 0 in.
SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH
...in effect until 10 p.m. for the following counties in the NewsChannel 7 viewing area: Iron, Price, Vilas, Oneida, and Forest Counties.
Hail to 2.5" diameter, thunderstorm wind gusts to 70 mph, and dangerous lightning are possible in these areas. Severe thunderstorms also can and sometimes do produce tornadoes.
FORECAST (updated 4:30 p.m. 5/14/07)
EVENING:
Breezy and warm. Mostly cloudy, chance scattered showers and thunderstorms. Some storms could produce large hail, damaging winds and dangerous lightning. Temperature readings by mid evening should be in the 70s to near 80 across much of the area, but wil be lower where rain occurs. Winds southwest 15-25 early diminishing to 8-18.
TONIGHT:
Showers and thunderstorms likely, a few storms could be severe. Low 53-58. Winds become west/northwest 8-16.
TUESDAY:
Breezy, much cooler and less humid. Mostly cloudy with scattered showers and a few thunderstorms possible during the morning, then partly sunny with an isolated shower possible during the afternoon.
High 58-63. Winds northwest 10-20.
TUESDAY NIGHT:
Becoming partly cloudy, cooler. Low 37-42. Winds northwest 8-15.
WEDNESDAY:
Increasing clouds, chance of a few showers during the afternoon. High 57-62. Winds west 8-15, becoming northwest 8-18 during the afternoon.
RIVER UPDATES
The Wisconsin River is slightly above bankfull stage at the Petenwell and Castle Rock Dams
Scattered Storms Monday Night...Turning Sharply Cooler
After near record highs in the mid to upper 80s across the area Monday afternoon, an abrupt shift to chilly spring air is on the way. In the transition process, a cold front sliding through Monday night could spawn scattered thundestorms. Some could contain hail and strong winds. As of 3 p.m. Monday, golf ball size hail was noted just northwest of Duluth, and baseball size hail earlier in the day smashed car windows out in Marquette, MI.
The rain threat should push southeast of our area by mid to late morning Tuesday. Cool and blustery northwest winds will keep temperatures about 20 degrees cooler Tuesday and Wednesday.
An upper level disturbance dropping into the area from the northwest could spawn a few showers Wednesday afternoon. Then high pressure settles in with very dry air. This could lead to scattered frost early Thursday morning.
Abundant sunshine and southwest flow on the back side of the high pressure will warm things up nicely again toward the end of the week. A weak front is projected to settle into the area Saturday.
WEATHER HISTORY:
On May 14th, 1898 - A severe thunderstorm, with some hailstones up to 9.5 inches in circumference, pounded a four mile wide path across Kansas City MO. South-facing windows were broken in nearly every house in central and eastern parts of the city, and several persons were injured. An even larger hailstone was thought to have been found, but it turned out to be a chunk of ice tossed out the window of a building by a prankster. (The Kansas City Weather Almanac) (The Weather Channel)
86°
Dew Point: 57
Wind Chill: 86
Humidity: 37
Wind: 16 SW
Barometer: 29.68
Visibility: 10.0 mi.
Precip: 0 in.
SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH
...in effect until 10 p.m. for the following counties in the NewsChannel 7 viewing area: Iron, Price, Vilas, Oneida, and Forest Counties.
Hail to 2.5" diameter, thunderstorm wind gusts to 70 mph, and dangerous lightning are possible in these areas. Severe thunderstorms also can and sometimes do produce tornadoes.
FORECAST (updated 4:30 p.m. 5/14/07)
EVENING:
Breezy and warm. Mostly cloudy, chance scattered showers and thunderstorms. Some storms could produce large hail, damaging winds and dangerous lightning. Temperature readings by mid evening should be in the 70s to near 80 across much of the area, but wil be lower where rain occurs. Winds southwest 15-25 early diminishing to 8-18.
TONIGHT:
Showers and thunderstorms likely, a few storms could be severe. Low 53-58. Winds become west/northwest 8-16.
TUESDAY:
Breezy, much cooler and less humid. Mostly cloudy with scattered showers and a few thunderstorms possible during the morning, then partly sunny with an isolated shower possible during the afternoon.
High 58-63. Winds northwest 10-20.
TUESDAY NIGHT:
Becoming partly cloudy, cooler. Low 37-42. Winds northwest 8-15.
WEDNESDAY:
Increasing clouds, chance of a few showers during the afternoon. High 57-62. Winds west 8-15, becoming northwest 8-18 during the afternoon.
RIVER UPDATES
The Wisconsin River is slightly above bankfull stage at the Petenwell and Castle Rock Dams
Scattered Storms Monday Night...Turning Sharply Cooler
After near record highs in the mid to upper 80s across the area Monday afternoon, an abrupt shift to chilly spring air is on the way. In the transition process, a cold front sliding through Monday night could spawn scattered thundestorms. Some could contain hail and strong winds. As of 3 p.m. Monday, golf ball size hail was noted just northwest of Duluth, and baseball size hail earlier in the day smashed car windows out in Marquette, MI.
The rain threat should push southeast of our area by mid to late morning Tuesday. Cool and blustery northwest winds will keep temperatures about 20 degrees cooler Tuesday and Wednesday.
An upper level disturbance dropping into the area from the northwest could spawn a few showers Wednesday afternoon. Then high pressure settles in with very dry air. This could lead to scattered frost early Thursday morning.
Abundant sunshine and southwest flow on the back side of the high pressure will warm things up nicely again toward the end of the week. A weak front is projected to settle into the area Saturday.
WEATHER HISTORY:
On May 14th, 1898 - A severe thunderstorm, with some hailstones up to 9.5 inches in circumference, pounded a four mile wide path across Kansas City MO. South-facing windows were broken in nearly every house in central and eastern parts of the city, and several persons were injured. An even larger hailstone was thought to have been found, but it turned out to be a chunk of ice tossed out the window of a building by a prankster. (The Kansas City Weather Almanac) (The Weather Channel)