Home Weather Patchy Fog Today As Temps Climb Towards The 90’s

Patchy Fog Today As Temps Climb Towards The 90’s

patchy fog

patchy fogAs a cold front approaches, we’ll have patchy fog early this morning, and some spots in Miami-Dade and Broward counties have had visibility drop to around one quarter mile. The fog should burn off by 10 AM.

The cold front will bring temperatures well into the 80s, with the sunny skies and offshore flow possibly allowing a few locations along the east coast urban corridor to reach 90’s. Overnight lows will be in the 60’s.

Behind the cold front, seasonally warm conditions are expected, with highs in the 80s. Winds will gradually turn to the south by Wednesday as a high pressure builds into the region.

Expansive deep-layer high pressure ridge will build for the latter half of the week into the weekend. No rainfall is expected, but as moisture returns so will humidity. Temperatures will reach the 80’s, with some areas in the interior hitting the low 90s.

Faith Based Events

Regarding yesterdays rainfall, all three South Florida east coast climate sites set daily rainfall records. Miami had 2.08 inches, breaking the old record of 2 inches from 1938. Fort Lauderdale received 3.7 inches, breaking 1954`s records of 2.2. Also, West Palm Beach had 3.5 inches, surpassing the daily record of 2 inches from 1927.Other isolated locations in South Florida had over 5 inches of rainfall.

Isolated showers are expected along this afternoon`s cold front, otherwise no rain is expected through the short term.


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Donna Thomas has studied hurricanes for two decades. She holds a PhD in history when her experience with Hurricane Andrew ultimately led her to earn a degree in broadcast meteorology from Mississippi State University. Donna spent 15 years at WFOR-TV (CBS4 in Miami-Fort Lauderdale), where she worked as a weather producer with hurricane experts Bryan Norcross and David Bernard. She also produced hurricane specials and weather-related features and news coverage, as well as serving as pool TV producer at the National Hurricane Center during the 2004 and 2005 seasons. Donna also served as a researcher on NOAA's Atlantic Hurricane Database Reanalysis Project. Donna specializes in Florida's hurricane history.