Warmer weather into the weekend, next week
South Floridians should anticipate a cold night Thursday night but feel more sunshine later into the weekend.
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South Floridians may spend Super Bowl weekend indoors.
South Floridians should anticipate a cold night Thursday night but feel more sunshine later into the weekend.
South Floridians face a few days of chilly weather as a massive patch of cold weather moves southward into the state.
Some people grabbed heavy sweaters and jackets. Others turned on the heat. Judith and Norman Wiener charged to a Dunkin’ Donuts in Tamarac for hot coffee.
It's time to open the windows and let the fresh air flow right on in.
That cool down you asked for, South Florida? Its on the way.
Ten-foot waves were crashing ashore over the weekend, squeezed between high and low pressure systems. Rain is possible Monday and Tuesday, but then the weather should turn wondrous.
Take a breath. Go outside and let air wash into lungs.
Gray clouds blanketed the sky in areas of South Florida Monday morning, bringing heavy showers and decreasing the summer hot spell by a few degrees.
South Florida’s string of 90-degree-plus days is at 38 and counting.
It is yet another hot, sticky and rainy day in South Florida.
With the atmosphere still unsettled, South Florida likely will see scattered showers and storms by Monday afternoon.
South Florida beachgoers may want to avoid the water due to potentially dangerous rip currents.
Get ready for another bad hair day, as the winds are expected to gust up to 25 mph, particularly near the shoreline.
In the world of tropical storm science, and the public reaction to storms, some things never change, even though year after year, forecasts of where storms are going get more accurate.
Although Friday should be on the dry side, we might actually see some rain over the weekend, thanks to a low-pressure system moving toward South Florida.
When a thunderstorm passed through Raleigh this week, Peggy Mosley retreated to a corner of her home and sat, hoping that two towering trees would stay standing as rain soaked the ground.
Central North Carolina, including the Triangle and surrounding counties, is under a high-wind warning until 8 a.m. today and under a tornado watch until noon as a cold front approaches from the west, according to the National Weather Service in Raleigh.
Hey, isnt this April? When all is supposed to be quiet in the tropics?
Get ready, South Florida: Thursday is going to be a scorcher.