Our Independence Day holiday will have a little more cloud cover, mainly in the morning, but should be dry and comfortably warm, with humidity levels still not too high. Skies will be variably cloudy as high temperatures reach the lower 80s.
Tonight will be partly cloudy and milder. Temperatures will fall to the upper 60s by late evening; overnight low temperatures will fall to the middle 60s by morning.
Tuesday will be partly sunny, very warm and also more humid with high temperatures in the upper 80s. Skies will become mostly cloudy on Tuesday night with scattered showers and thunderstorms developing.
The weather from Wednesday through Friday will be similar for each day, with variably cloudy skies, very warm temperatures, high humidity, and some scattered showers and thunderstorms. The temperatures may be somewhat dependent on the amount and timing of the showers and thunderstorms, but there will also be plenty of rain-free period where sunshine can warm temperatures up quickly. High temperatures will be in the upper 80s on Wednesday, near 90 degrees on Thursday, and in the middle 80s on Friday. With the high humidity, afternoon heat index readings should be in the 90s to possibly near 100 degrees.
A low pressure system will drag a cold front through Wisconsin by Friday night. For next weekend, any lingering showers and thunderstorms should end early on Saturday, leading to partly sunny skies for the rest of Saturday and all of Sunday. Temperatures will be warm, but humidity levels will come down. High temperatures will be in the lower 80s for both Saturday and Sunday.
FOURTH OF JULY (TODAY):
Variable cloudiness and continued warm.
High: 82
Wind: SE 8-15 MPH
TONIGHT:
Partly cloudy and milder.
Low: 62
Wind: S/SW 5-10 MPH
TUESDAY:
Partly sunny, very warm, and more humid.
High: 87; Heat Index: 90 to 95
Wind: S/SW 8-15 MPH
TUESDAY NIGHT:
Becoming mostly cloudy, very mild, and muggy with scattered showers and thunderstorms developing; areas of fog are possible.
Low: 70
Wind: S 8-15 MPH
WEDNESDAY:
Variable cloudiness, very warm, and humid with scattered showers and thunderstorms.
High: 87; Heat Index: 90 to 95
Wind: S 8-15 MPH
THURSDAY:
Variable cloudiness, very warm, and humid with scattered showers and thunderstorms.
Low: 70
High: 89; Heat Index: 92 to 97
FRIDAY:
Variable cloudiness, very warm, and humid with scattered showers and thunderstorms.
Low: 71
High: 86; Heat Index: 89 to 94
SATURDAY:
Any showers and thunderstorms ending early, otherwise partly sunny, a little cooler, and less humid.
Low: 65
High: 80
SUNDAY:
Partly sunny and warm.
Low: 57
High: 82
MONDAY:
Partly sunny, very warm, and more humid (a chance of showers and thunderstorms at night).
Low: 60
High: 85; Heat Index: 85 to 90
NOTES:
The Storm Prediction Center says that there is a ENHANCED RISK of severe thunderstorms for Tuesday and Tuesday night across the southern half of Minnesota, north-central Iowa, and west-central Wisconsin (west of a Grantsburg to Ladysmith to La Crosse line), a SLIGHT RISK of severe thunderstorms for the rest of the southern two-thirds of Minnesota, the rest of the northeastern three-quarters of Iowa, far northwestern Illinois, and the western half of Wisconsin (west of a Superior to Hurley to Stevens Point to Beloit line), and a MARGINAL RISK of severe thunderstorms for the rest of Minnesota, the rest of Iowa, the rest of Illinois, and the rest of Wisconsin. A very warm to hot and increasingly humid air mass will cover much of the Midwest on Tuesday afternoon and evening. A weak cold front will move into western Minnesota and far northwestern Iowa by Tuesday afternoon. Thunderstorms will develop along and ahead of this cold front, with some thunderstorms becoming severe. Hail, high winds, and heavy rainfall are the main threats, with isolated tornadoes possible where thunderstorm development initially takes place. The thunderstorms will move into the rest of Iowa, Illinois, and Wisconsin on Tuesday night, with some threat of a squall line developing, leading to a possibility of more widespread wind damage, especially from western Wisconsin into northeastern Iowa, and possibly into northwestern Illinois. The thunderstorms may weaken a little overnight, with a threat of isolated severe thunderstorms continuing into the rest of Illinois and eastern Wisconsin, where high winds, hail, and heavy rainfall are the main threats.
Because the warm and humid air mass will remain over the Midwest through Friday, there may be additional chances for severe thunderstorms on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. The severe weather threat on any given day may depend in large part on lingering cloud cover and precipitation (if any) from thunderstorms on the previous day and the effect that this will have on temperatures.
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