logo
Coloradans make best out of wet weather on Memorial Day weekend

Coloradans make best out of wet weather on Memorial Day weekend

CBS News26-05-2025
At Colorado's Cherry Creek State Park, the rain fell in spurts on Sunday. But that wasn't getting in the way of a good camping experience for the many who reserved spots months ago.
At one campsite, Bharat Shrestha, an Aurora resident and volunteer at the park, and his family and friends sat around a fire getting ready to make some dinner.
CBS
"We are making some Nepalese food and [the kids] are asking for marshmallows," he said with a hearty laugh. "But we don't have any marshmallows, so we told them 'next year!'"
Just a stone's throw from their campsite, Rebecca and Joe Reilly were making the best out of their long-planned weekend with their two sons.
"With Cherry Creek, you have to book in advance if you want a good spot, so I think I booked this back in December," Rebecca told CBS Colorado.
Despite the weather, they decided to try and make it a fun weekend anyway. They had gone on trips with their boys before and knew that they'd want to camp, even though the rain took some of their family plans off the table.
CBS
"Finnegan has been asking since last summer at the end of the year when we could go back camping, so we decided to stick it out," Joe said.
Inside their tent, the boys had coloring books and activities to accomplish. Their oldest son proudly showed off his rain boots and junior park ranger badge. Over at Bharat's campground, the family mentioned enjoying the rain itself, particularly during the nighttime.
"It was nice, especially hearing the rain inside the tent," he said.
All over the campground, while rain either misted or poured depending on the time of day, people were playing whiffle ball or making a fire. There was fun to be had no matter the weather, and, for the Reilly family, some memories to take home despite it all.
"Especially if you have kids, they're only young once," Rebecca said. "So you make positive memories, even the rain can be a great story. You're making family stories together, so it's always worth going out now."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

100 million Americans on alert for extreme heat, humidity
100 million Americans on alert for extreme heat, humidity

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

100 million Americans on alert for extreme heat, humidity

At least 100 million Americans are on alert for dangerous heat and humidity -- stretching from Texas to Maine -- on Friday, with parts of the Eastern Seaboard feeling like it's in the triple digits. Heat advisories are in place from Texas to West Virginia on Friday, with temperatures reaching between 105 and 110 degrees. In Boston, the heat index -- how hot it feels with humidity -- could reach 103 degrees; New York City could feel like 104 degrees and Washington, D.C., could feel like 109 degrees. The heat will reach levels that could impact "anyone without sufficient cooling" or proper hydration, according to the National Weather Service. The NWS added there will be "little to no overnight relief." An incoming cold front will provide a slight relief late Friday afternoon, with showers and thunderstorms leading to cooler temperatures in New England. MORE: 130 million people on alert as hot, sticky weather expected from Texas to Maine The sweltering temperatures will continue into the weekend and into next week from the Midwest to the Southeast, with heat indices expected to react 113 in parts of North Carolina and 110 from St. Louis to Tampa. An extreme heat risk is in place from Sunday through Thursday for large portions of the Southeast. While St. Louis deals with the heat wave, parts of Kansas City, Missouri, are under a flash flood watch on Friday. Some parts were under a flash flood warning early Friday morning with 1 to 3 inches of rain having already fallen by 4:30 a.m. According to the Kansas City Fire Department, multiple vehicles have been reported in high water and at least 10 water rescues have occurred as of Friday morning. More rain, from southwest Kansas to central Illinois, is likely to continue through Friday morning, but will break up in the afternoon. However, a redevelopment of this storm is expected later in the day on Friday, bringing additional heavy rain overnight and possible flooding for some of the areas already hit earlier in the day. During these extremely warm temperatures, the National Weather Service recommends those in impacted areas "limit outdoor activity, stay hydrated and ensure access to air-conditioning and other cooling areas." For tips on how to stay safe in a heat wave, click here.

Heat scorches the Mid-Atlantic Friday before the worst hits the Southeast
Heat scorches the Mid-Atlantic Friday before the worst hits the Southeast

Washington Post

timean hour ago

  • Washington Post

Heat scorches the Mid-Atlantic Friday before the worst hits the Southeast

Around 100 million people are under heat alerts Friday, from coastal Maine to South Carolina and across much of the Midwest and lower Ohio Valley into the Mid-South. Additional alerts are likely in the Southeast as temperatures rise in coming days. The primary cause is a large heat dome centered near the Carolina coast on Friday. It will intensify, meander westward and pump sultry conditions into the region through the weekend and into next week. Cities under heat advisories on Friday include Boston, New York City, Washington, Norfolk and Raleigh; Dallas, Little Rock, Memphis and Louisville are also under advisory. In and around St. Louis and the Philadelphia area, extreme heat warnings are in place for heat indexes above 105. Over the weekend, attention increasingly shifts to the Southeast to what the National Weather Service is calling a 'long duration and very dangerous heat wave.' Several consecutive days of extreme heat — temperatures near 100, heat indexes around 110 — are possible through at least the next week in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas in particular. More concerning, overnight relief will be minimal. Much of the Northeast is experiencing Friday's worst heat, with record and near-record afternoon temperatures possible from New England through the Mid-Atlantic. Expected highs of 96 in Boston, 93 in New York's Central Park and 99 in Washington are about 10 degrees above average for the typically toasty time of year. A forecast of 97 in Philadelphia would tie a record for the date; Newark, a typical hotspot in northern New Jersey, is forecast to reach a daily record of 100; Portland, on the south coast of Maine, could flirt with a record for the date of 91. Many low temperature high marks are also in play. The high humidity — at extremes for longevity this summer in much of the region — keeps temperatures from falling too far, exacerbating health risks from prolonged exposure. According to Climate Central's Climate Shift Index, a majority of the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast will experience daytime and nighttime readings at least 5 times more likely due to the effects of long-term warming. Multiple days of the highest-end heat risk, Level 4 out of 4 — when widespread impacts to health, systems and infrastructure become likely — are forecast for a big chunk of the Southeast. The worst conditions are expected from Georgia to North Carolina. Some locations that will see lengthy stretches of dangerous heat include Raleigh, Atlanta, Jacksonville, Orlando, and Lynchburg, Virginia, among others. Expanding to include major heat risk, or Level 3 out of 4, the region facing four to seven days of such grows to house most locations near and east of the Mississippi River and to the south of the Mason/Dixon line. At that level, anyone without adequate cooling and hydration is at heightened risk for heat illness. It will probably be the hottest weather of the year in Atlanta, where the maximum so far is 97. The forecast there calls for 99 on Monday and Tuesday, then 98 on Wednesday. Similarly, Jacksonville is forecast to reach its hottest of the year. Monday's high is currently expected to reach 101, per the National Weather Service outlook there. Charlotte will also make a run for seasonal highs with several days near or above 100. Other parts of the region could also see multiple days in a row at or above 100 degrees. Numerous records are likely daily, from Florida through the Southeast, beginning Saturday and lasting through at least next Thursday. Factoring in the high humidity, heat indexes will feel as much as 10 to 15 degrees worse than actual temperatures. That means values approaching and surpassing 110 in many locations, and on multiple days. Places well positioned to see the highest heat indexes are big cities of the South and locations nearest the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico, or the Mississippi Valley region. Among cities with higher than 110 heat index in the forecast ahead, dew points — a measure of moisture in the air — will generally be in the 70s, which is at least borderline oppressive. Some of the highest heat indexes in the outlook include: Nashville at 115, Jacksonville and Savannah with 113 and Huntsville at 111, Someone in the region could certainly see a heat index around 120 on the hottest of afternoons in this stretch. With time, the heat dome center will shift westward, first toward the central U.S. and ultimately perhaps the 4-corners region. This should open the door to a break in the hottest by this time next week. In fact, the East Coast could begin August cooler than normal in many of the same spots currently scorching.

Summer sizzle: NYC, Boston among cities eyeing record highs this week
Summer sizzle: NYC, Boston among cities eyeing record highs this week

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Summer sizzle: NYC, Boston among cities eyeing record highs this week

Summer sizzle: NYC, Boston among cities eyeing record highs this week Intense heat is set to surge into the Northeast late this week, with temperatures climbing high enough in some areas to challenge daily records, according to AccuWeather meteorologists. The brief burst of heat will be fueled by a piece of a larger heat dome anchored over the Great Plains, which is expected to break off and push eastward heading into the weekend. While average temperatures in late July are typically the highest temperatures of the year, driven by intense sunshine, warmer Atlantic and lake waters and long days-this upcoming event may push the upper bounds of historical norms. But, even with routine temperatures typically very high this time of the year, some locations may set daily record highs from Friday to Saturday in parts of the Northeast. Temperatures began to climb on Thursday with widespread highs well into the 80s to mid-90s for the Northeast. Friday will bring the crest of the heat in New England and in the zone from Upstate and eastern New York to portions of New Jersey and northern and eastern Pennsylvania. "In Hartford, Connecticut, the current record of 98 set in 2001 on Friday may be topped," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Chad Merrill said. "The record of 99 set in 2016 in Newark, New Jersey, may be swapped by a triple-digit reading." The high temperature in New York City on Friday is projected to approach the record high of 97 from 1999. Meanwhile, in Boston, the high temperature on Friday could come near the record of 96 set way back in 1882, but is forecast to fall a few degrees short with thunderstorms approaching in the late afternoon. "Showers and heavy thunderstorms follow late in the day on Friday and bring a significant cooldown to the upper 70s on Saturday," Merrill said. "This will be a very similar pattern to last month when Boston hit 102 degrees on June 24 and cooled to the upper 70s for highs two days later," Merrill added. Lower humidity will accompany the cooler air in New England and the upper part of the mid-Atlantic on Saturday and may push southward a bit more on Sunday along the Atlantic coast for a time. The temperature boundary will be a focusing point for at least spotty thunderstorm activity this weekend. The storms will extend from parts of the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes states to the mid-Atlantic coast. With more cloud cover around and the likelihood of some local cooling breezes from thunderstorm activity, temperatures may inch downward just a bit over the mid-Atlantic during the weekend but far from the extent enjoyed by millions from this past Monday to Tuesday. Highs in Washington, D.C., will trend downward from near the century mark on Friday to the mid-90s on Saturday and the low 90s on Sunday to put the mid-Atlantic region's cooling trend in perspective. The core of the heat dome will settle southward in the Eastern states over the weekend and will take up residence in the Southeast from Saturday to Wednesday. During this weekend alone, 175 million people will experience RealFeel Temperatures of 100 degrees or higher in the East. The cooling trend in the mid-Atlantic will likely briefly reverse early next week with highs well into the 90s from Monday to the app? Unlock AccuWeather Alerts™ with Premium+ "Much more sweeping changes will come through the Northeast from Tuesday to Wednesday, depending on location, "Merrill said. "A touch of autumn is expected for a few days during the middle to latter part of next week with lower-than-historical average highs that will linger into the first few days in August." The transition could be marked by drenching downpours and gusty thunderstorms. Those with travel plans are encouraged to keep abreast of the forecast for timing and locations of the most severe activity that could lead to disruptions. "In the wake of the storms next week, nighttime temperatures will drop into the 30s and 40s in the Adirondacks and Green and White Mountains with comfortable 60s for much of the Interstate 95 corridor by the end of next week," Merrill said. Want next-level safety, ad-free? Unlock advanced, hyperlocal severe weather alerts when you subscribe to Premium+ on the AccuWeather app. AccuWeather Alerts™ are prompted by our expert meteorologists who monitor and analyze dangerous weather risks 24/7 to keep you and your family safer. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store