
CWG Live updates: Gorgeous weather to start week before shift toward more heat, humidity
Happening now: Increasing sunshine and decreasing humidity this morning with temperatures climbing through the 70s. Afternoon highs reach the low to mid-80s with perhaps a bit of haze.
What's next? Sunshine and delightful low humidity on Tuesday. Then temperatures and mugginess steadily rise through the workweek, with highs well into the 90s by Friday, when storm chances also may return.
Today's daily digit — 9/10: This sunny, dry day is so welcome! It's not a 10 because Tuesday will be even better. | 🤚 Your call?
The digit is a somewhat subjective rating of the day's weather, on a 0-to-10 scale.
Forecast in detail
Today (Monday): It's still somewhat muggy early but the humidity will become less noticeable as the day wears on. Any morning clouds quickly give way to mostly sunny skies as temperatures rise through the 70s. Afternoon highs reach the low to mid-80s, with light winds from the north at 5 to 10 mph. There is the possibility of a little light haze from wildfire smoke working into the area during the afternoon. Confidence: Medium-High 😎 Nice Day!
Tonight: A very pleasant evening as temperatures fall back into the 70s. Overnight, it's mostly clear and cooler than it's been since mid-June, with lows ranging from the upper 50s in our cooler spots to the mid- to upper 60s downtown. Confidence: Medium-High
Tomorrow (Tuesday): This will probably bet nicest day in about a month. Expect beautiful sunshine, low humidity (dew points from 55 to 60) and enjoyable afternoon highs from 80 to 85. Light winds from the northeast at around 5 mph. Confidence: High 😎 Nice Day!
Tomorrow night: Mostly clear with comfortable 70s during the evening and lows ranging through the 60s toward dawn. Confidence: High
A look ahead
Temperatures and humidity slowly ramp up Wednesday and Thursday — but it should stay rain-free. Lots of sunshine both days with highs in the mid-80s on Wednesday and into the upper 80s and low 90s on Thursday. Humidity starts to become more noticeable on Wednesday (dew points in the mid-60s) and it will be hard to miss by Thursday (dew points near 70). The nights also become increasingly muggy with lows from 65 to 70 Wednesday night and from 70 to 75 on Thursday night. Confidence: Medium-High
We're back in the thick of the humidity Friday into the weekend (dew points in the low to mid-70s) and it's also potentially quite hot. Friday may be the hottest day with highs in the mid- to upper 90s, with heat indexes over 100. Highs may step back into the low to mid-90s on Saturday and Sunday because of more clouds. Showers and thunderstorms could develop in the late afternoon and evening on any of the days, but particularly over the weekend. The nights are partly cloudy and muggy, with lows in the 70s. Confidence: Medium
Today's daily digit — 9/10: This sunny, dry day is so welcome! It's not a 10 because Tuesday will be even better. | 🤚 Your call?
The digit is a somewhat subjective rating of the day's weather, on a 0-to-10 scale.
Forecast in detail
Today (Monday): It's still somewhat muggy early but the humidity will become less noticeable as the day wears on. Any morning clouds quickly give way to mostly sunny skies as temperatures rise through the 70s. Afternoon highs reach the low to mid-80s, with light winds from the north at 5 to 10 mph. There is the possibility of a little light haze from wildfire smoke working into the area during the afternoon. Confidence: Medium-High 😎 Nice Day!
Tonight: A very pleasant evening as temperatures fall back into the 70s. Overnight, it's mostly clear and cooler than it's been since mid-June, with lows ranging from the upper 50s in our cooler spots to the mid- to upper 60s downtown. Confidence: Medium-High
Tomorrow (Tuesday): This will probably bet nicest day in about a month. Expect beautiful sunshine, low humidity (dew points from 55 to 60) and enjoyable afternoon highs from 80 to 85. Light winds from the northeast at around 5 mph. Confidence: High 😎 Nice Day!
Tomorrow night: Mostly clear with comfortable 70s during the evening and lows ranging through the 60s toward dawn. Confidence: High
A look ahead
Temperatures and humidity slowly ramp up Wednesday and Thursday — but it should stay rain-free. Lots of sunshine both days with highs in the mid-80s on Wednesday and into the upper 80s and low 90s on Thursday. Humidity starts to become more noticeable on Wednesday (dew points in the mid-60s) and it will be hard to miss by Thursday (dew points near 70). The nights also become increasingly muggy with lows from 65 to 70 Wednesday night and from 70 to 75 on Thursday night. Confidence: Medium-High
We're back in the thick of the humidity Friday into the weekend (dew points in the low to mid-70s) and it's also potentially quite hot. Friday may be the hottest day with highs in the mid- to upper 90s, with heat indexes over 100. Highs may step back into the low to mid-90s on Saturday and Sunday because of more clouds. Showers and thunderstorms could develop in the late afternoon and evening on any of the days, but particularly over the weekend. The nights are partly cloudy and muggy, with lows in the 70s. Confidence: Medium
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
22 minutes ago
- Forbes
Northern Lights On Tuesday: 14 U.S. States On Aurora Alert
Aurora borealis, also known as Northern Lights, illuminates the night sky above the Kellostapuli ... More Fell in Kolari, Finnish Lapland, early on January 15, 2022. (Photo by IRENE STACHON/Lehtikuva/AFP via Getty Images) The Northern Lights may be visible in northern U.S. state and central Canada on Tuesday night, according to a forecast by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space Weather Prediction Center. Sky-watchers in 14 U.S. states may have a chance to see the aurora borealis on the northern horizon as soon as it gets dark, though astronomical twilight often persists much of the night above about 50 degrees north latitude in July. Latest Northern Lights Forecast The agency's three-day forecast indicates a minor geomagnetic storm, measured at a value of G1 on a scale of G1 to G5. According to NOAA's forecast, the Kp index — which provides a rough guide to the intensity of auroral displays — may reach 5. In a discussion post, NOAA officials stated that a G1 (Minor) geomagnetic storm is most likely on July 23 UTC, which translates to late on July 22 for North America. The 'unsettled to active' geomagnetic conditions — minor disturbances in Earth's magnetic field — could continue through Thursday, according to NOAA. NOAA's aurora viewline for July 22, 2025. Where The Northern Lights May Be Visible NOAA's latest aurora viewlines indicate that aurora displays are a possibility in northern U.S. states and Canada, with 14 U.S. states having a chance after dark on Tuesday, July 22. U.S. states that may see aurora include (northerly parts of) Washington, northern Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. Areas far from light pollution are likely to offer the best views. However, high-latitude locations — such as Alaska, northern Canada Scandinavia and Iceland — will have a better chance. Check NOAA's 30-minute forecast or use the Glendale App for the latest forecasts. Why The Northern Lights Are Being Seen In The U.S. The imminent potential display of aurora is due to a high-speed stream of solar wind coming from a coronal hole — a gap in the sun's outer atmosphere, its corona, where solar wind escapes more freely into space. It's also of 'negative polarity,' which means its magnetic field is orientated in such a way that interactions with Earth's magnetic field are enhanced, if aligned just right. More generally, the possibility of displays of the aurora borealis at more southerly latitudes than is typically down to an increase in solar activity, which is currently at a 23-year high due to the ongoing solar maximum period. The sun is now thought to be on the wane, having peaked in late 2024, but solar maximum periods often have double peaks. Besides, the best aurora displays often occur in the few years after solar maximum. If the current solar cycle does have a long tail, good aurora sightings in the U.S. could result for a few years. What Causes The Northern Lights The Northern Lights are caused by the solar wind, a stream of charged particles from the sun interacting with Earth's magnetic field. Although the magnetic field deflects much of it, some charged particles accelerate along the magnetic field lines toward the polar regions, where they collide with oxygen and nitrogen atoms, exciting them and causing them to release energy as light. Wishing you clear skies and wide eyes.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Why is Ohio seeing more summer downpours than usual?
Central Ohio Weather and Radar COLUMBUS (WCMH) — The familiar phrase 'when it rains, it pours' applies to our weather in recent weeks. More than 15 inches of rain have fallen on Columbus since May 1, nearly five inches above normal, and double what fell during last year's drought (June-October). Some areas in southern Ohio had upwards of two feet of rain in the past three months, resulting in flooding. On the evening of July 17, a small shower over northern Fairfield County blew up into a narrow line of torrential rain that spread east along the Licking County border and across Buckeye Lake. Nearly five inches of rain was measured at Sellers Point, much of it falling in a little more than an hour. Inevitably, low-lying areas were swamped, and water entered the lower floors of several homes and buildings and flooded roads, and closed a portion of State Route 13 just south of Interstate 70 in southern Licking County. The pattern of storm deluges began at the start of July. On June 30-July 1, 3.85 inches fell at Bainbridge in Ross County. Rockbridge in northern Hocking County received 7.72 inches from June 24 through July 1. On July 9, localized downpours dropped nearly three inches of rain around the Newark area in eastern Licking County. Historic Columbus building with French bistro sold for $2 million Through July 15, a record 3,045 flash flood warnings were issued by the National Weather Service across the U.S., exceeding the 1998 record for an entire year (3,033). Four historic floods occurred in one week in the eastern part of the country. Catastrophic flooding took more than 135 lives along the Guadalupe River in south-central Texas on July 4. Later in the holiday weekend, up to a foot of rain swamped the Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, area from the remnants of Tropical Storm Chantal, taking six lives. On July 7-8, parts of Chicago were soaked with more than 5 inches of rain. Ruidoso, New Mexico, experienced a deadly flash flood after several inches of rain over a burn scar raced downhill, killing three people and carrying a home downstream on July 8. The New York City area, and neighboring New Jersey and southeastern Pennsylvania region, were swamped with more than six inches of rain on July 14, inundating some subways and flooding neighborhoods and roads. Two people died in New Jersey when their car was swept away in floodwaters. Reason for excessive rainfalls Areas east of the Rocky Mountains and south of the Great Lakes have been caught in soggy pattern due to near-record high levels of atmospheric water vapor. The seasonal northward shift of the jet stream around the periphery of high pressure in the Southeast has been the focus for rounds of showers and storms feeding off the extra available energy derived from stagnant tropical moisture. Frequent disturbances or waves in the mid-level flow drive thunderstorm clusters that tend to congeal into self-sustaining complexes, bringing torrential rain and strong winds. Light steering currents, typical of summer, allows storms to linger longer, or 'train' over the same areas like railroad cars filled with moisture following the same section of track. In the case of the tragic Texas Hill Country flood, the remnants of Tropical Storm Barry played a major role in the rainfall totals that reached 10 to 20 inches on July 3-4. Successive periods of heavy rain in the past two week, totaling five to 10 inches locally in some events, stalled search and recovery efforts. Heavy rainfalls increasing in most of U.S. A recent U.S. study conducted by Climate Central reported that 88 percent (126) of the nation's 144 sampled cities since 1970 have recorded heavier rainfall rates. In the Ohio Valley, the average increase in hourly rainfall intensity was 15 percent, which can add a few additional inches in intense storms, often the difference between ponding and more widespread flooding. More intense rainfalls falling on complex, hilly terrain and in urban areas with poorer drainage (storm drains, sewers become clogged) promote channeled runoff that is conducive to flash flooding–the nation's deadliest severe weather event. The primary reason for the long-term wetter trend is warmer air and sea surface temperatures, which causes more moisture to evaporate into the atmosphere. A one degree Fahrenheit rise in the temperature allows the air to store 4 percent more water vapor. The ocean absorbs about 90 percent of the excess heat generated by greenhouse gas emissions (coal, oil, natural gas) from human activities, which have been steadily increasing globally. Higher ocean temperatures contribute to stronger tropical cyclones capable of bringing copious rain and high winds during and following landfall. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Every Australian state in the firing line as wild weather sweeps nation
A major weather system is on the move — and it's going to leave very few parts of the country untouched. From Western Australia to Tasmania, most Australians will see rain this week, and in many alpine areas, that'll soon turn to snow. For some, it'll be the biggest downpour in over a year. For others, the best skiing conditions in recent memory. In an interview with Yahoo News, Dean Narramore, Senior Meteorologist at the Bureau of Meteorology, gave an overview of what's coming this week. Western Australia Western Australia will be the first to feel the full force of the system, and it's expected to arrive with intensity. Thunderstorms, strong winds and widespread showers will push across the west and south of the state from midweek, fuelled by tropical moisture. Perth is forecast to cop 35mm of rain on Wednesday. "It's going to move into Western Australia on Wednesday, bringing widespread storms in western and southern parts of WA," Narramore said. "As it moves across WA, it's going to pull down some moisture from the tropics, and that's going to develop a very large band of rain." South Australia From Thursday night, South Australia will be soaked. For many communities, it could be the best rain they've seen in years. After months of dry, dusty paddocks and stubborn rainfall deficits, farmers and residents are set to get long-overdue relief. "This is definitely a very good news story, particularly for South Australia — eastern South Australia — where we've had pretty large rainfall deficiencies over the last couple of years. It's been very, very dry," Narramore said. "Depending on where you are, if they get 20 or 30 millimetres — which is looking pretty good — it'll be the wettest they've seen in 12 to 24 months." Victoria Central and eastern Victoria are shaping up as the epicentre of this event. With saturated air pushing through the Great Dividing Range and soaking already dry ground, some regions could see torrents of rain — with snow falling thickly over the peaks. "Central and eastern Victoria could see another 50 to 80, maybe even up to 100 millimetres there," Narramore said. "And half of that could fall as snow for our alpine areas," Narramore said. "Outside the Mount Lofty Ranges, central and northeast ranges of Victoria, and northern Tasmania — everyone else is probably going to be in that 20 to 40 millimetre range." Tasmania The Apple Isle is forecast to cop a serious drenching, with the system dragging moist air across the Bass Strait. The state's north in particular could see some of the highest rainfall totals, before lingering showers stretch into Sunday. "Northern parts of Tasmania could be in that 50 to 100mm range as well," Narramore said. "And continuing showers likely into Sunday, probably easing by the end of the weekend or early next week." NSW and ACT While the rain won't arrive in NSW and the ACT until later in the week, when it does, it'll come in force in some regions. Widespread falls are expected from Friday through Saturday, with a mix of steady rain and bursts of intense showers, especially in the south and east. "Friday to Saturday through Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, and Tasmania, with continuing showers on Sunday, probably easing by the end of the weekend or early next week," Narramore said. On Saturday, Canberra is expecting up to 25mm of rain and Sydney up to 10mm. Queensland Eastern and southern Queensland will get their turn as the system rolls east, with downpours reaching inland farming communities and coastal hubs alike. Totals will vary — but many places can expect a long-awaited soaking. "Much of southern and eastern Queensland could see anywhere from 20 to 40 millimetres of rain as well," said Narramore. Northern Territory It's one of the few parts of the country that will escape the worst of the weather. The Top End remains dry, and even central areas will be on the fringes of the system. "If you drew a line from Carnarvon to Birdsville to somewhere around Mount Isa, everywhere south and west of that line is going to be impacted by this system," Narramore explained. "Pretty much northern WA and that's it — Broome will be fine, but everywhere else will see some rain or wind." Snowfall could be the 'best in years' Behind the rain, a blast of cold air will sweep up the ranges, and for alpine regions in NSW and Victoria, it could deliver the kind of snow totals skiers dream about. Resorts that started the season slowly could be transformed by the weekend. "We're looking at probably 30 to 50 centimetres for alpine areas — Falls, Hotham, up through Perisher and Thredbo — through our highest peaks," Narramore said. "That should bump them up to well over a metre of base so far this season. It's really good news, particularly coming off such a bad last few years for ski seasons, because it was such a warm and dry winter." The Bureau doesn't officially keep snowfall records, but Narramore said this event could rank among the most significant of the past decade. "This is definitely the best in the last few years, because 2023 and 2024 were really bad," he said. Some higher peaks could even push past 50 centimetres by the end of the weekend. Weather system is good news, but will create dangerous conditions For the most part, this system is being welcomed, but that doesn't mean it's without risk. Damaging winds and alpine hazards could still present challenges, particularly for travellers heading into the snow. "We've got some pretty severe weather with this front at the moment, mostly it's a good news story in terms of widespread soaking rainfall," Narramore said. "Obviously, the dangerous part could be very heavy snowfall for alpine areas — and driving or getting up and down the mountains. There could be some dangerous and treacherous driving conditions, and you could see some damaging wind through our elevated areas and coastal parts of southeastern Australia." Love Australia's weird and wonderful environment? 🐊🦘😳 Get our new newsletter showcasing the week's best stories.