The number is the average wind speed.īeware of offshore winds if you are using inflatables, paddle boards or kayaks. If the arrow points from land to sea, the wind will be blowing out to sea (‘offshore’). The arrow shows the direction of the wind (up is north). The number represents the average wind speed expected at that time. The letters show the direction the wind is blowing from (on a standard 16-point compass). The arrow shows the direction the wind is blowing. Strong winds are shown in bold for speeds of 29 mph or more. Wind gust shows the highest wind speed that you should encounter at that time, as winds peak and lull. This gives you a better idea of how the temperature will actually feel at the time. You can see the temperature in Celsius or Fahrenheit by using the dropdown menu.įeels like temperature considers other factors, such as wind speed and humidity. This number shows the air temperature for the time period. It will still be fairly cloudy on Tuesday with highs in the upper 20s.Chance of precipitation represents how likely it is that rain (or other types of precipitation, such as sleet, snow, hail and drizzle) will fall from the sky at a certain time. Sunday expect a cold start, but temps will climb to the middle 30s ahead of our next front, which will come through dry on Monday with highs near 30. The weekend will feature snowfall on Saturday with highs in the lower to middle 20s. Skies will start to clear late Friday and Friday night is going to be quite cold with lows dropping to near zero or below to start the weekend, especially with the fresh snow pack. Snowfall totals will be much lower in the south/southeast.įriday expect some scattered flurries early, then ending with mostly cloudy skies and a much colder day with highs in the lower 20s. In the south, especially south of US-22 we will have rain longer into early Thursday morning, but again the biggest winter threat will mostly be freezing rain/sleet as well. Temps on Thursday in the city will top in the upper 20s to near 30. Thursday night this will be all snow with a few more inches possible before the event pushes east. At this point, I think we are going to see some moderate levels of freezing rain to sleet, and eventually to all snow on top of that by later Thursday. If this transition happens earlier, this would mean a lot more snowfall. The later in the day this happens, the more freezing rain/sleet mix we will see, and the less snowfall. But as we get much closer to I-71 up to I-70 (Columbus) we are going to have a significant period of mixed precipitation from near midnight Thursday to possibly later in the day on Thursday.Įventually the colder air will push through the I-70 corridor and will change the precip. This will occur mainly after midnight early Thursday morning.Īgain, with the colder air north, this will be a mainly snow event for our northern, and northwest counties on Thursday, with high snowfall totals expected at more than 8″ with isolated areas pushing close to 10″+ the further north you go. This will start to slide in under the warmer air and initiate the change over to a wintry mix of freezing rain and sleet in our area. It is important to note that our northwest and northern counties will have some wet snow mixed in as well as the colder air will be lurking near our area.Īs we head into Wednesday night the colder air is going to start winning on its southward move. Most areas will pick up a half inch to an inch of rainfall on Wednesday. Wednesday will start off dry early, but will quickly see rain moving into the area.Įxpect most of us to have a wet day with some periods of on and off rain, some which will be moderate at times, but the prolonged period of rainfall is really going to be the reason that we see some pretty impressive rainfall totals by the end of the day. It will remain mild tonight with clouds increasing and lows dropping into the middle 30s, nearly 15 degrees above normal. It has been a beautiful day today, with our 2nd warmest afternoon of 2022 with highs in the lower 50s.
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