WEATHER National weather forecast: Heat warnings, advisories widespread across West

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
www.foxnews.com /us/national-weather-forecast-heat-warnings-advisories-west

National weather forecast: Heat warnings, advisories widespread across West
Janice Dean2-2 minutes 6/16/2021

Excessive heat warnings and heat advisories remain widespread across the West over the next several days as daytime highs reach into the 100s and 110s for many locations.

Phoenix will see highs above 115 through the end of the week.

Forecast high temperatures for the western U.S. (Fox News)

Forecast high temperatures for the western U.S. (Fox News)

In addition to the extreme heat, red flag warnings are also in effect as low humidities and gusty winds increase wildfire danger regionwide.

DOCTORS WARN OF BURN INJURIES AS RECORD TEMPERATURES CONTINUE TO SCORCH WEST

Heat advisories currently in effect. (Fox News)

Heat advisories currently in effect. (Fox News)

Tropical Storm Bill has transitioned into an extratropical low and will stay offshore.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

There is an increasing likelihood that a tropical depression or storm will form late this week in the western Gulf of Mexico.

Expected rainfall totals through Monday. (Fox News)

Expected rainfall totals through Monday. (Fox News)

The Texas, Louisiana and Central Gulf coasts will need to monitor the forecast, but should at least prepare for heavy rain and flooding threats Friday into the weekend.

Janice Dean currently serves as senior meteorologist for FOX News Channel (FNC). In addition, she is the morning meteorologist for FNC’s "FOX and Friends" (weekdays 6-9AM/ET). She joined the network in January 2004. She is the author of several books. Her latest is "Make Your Own Sunshine." Click here for more information on Janice Dean.
 

Doc1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
It's not only the West, folks. Temps here in southern Mississippi have been unseasonably high, into the mid 90s for several days. MId to high 80s would be more normal for early and mid June, here. Combined with our high humidity, it makes staying outside - much less working outdoors - a real bear.

I confess, I confess, I confess! At 64 YO I've have become a heat wuss - especially when combined with high humidity!

I feel sorry for the people in Arizona and other western states who are suffering through the heat wave, but what they say is true; a dry heat is different.

Best
Doc
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
It's not only the West, folks. Temps here in southern Mississippi have been unseasonably high, into the mid 90s for several days. MId to high 80s would be more normal for early and mid June, here. Combined with our high humidity, it makes staying outside - much less working outdoors - a real bear.

I confess, I confess, I confess! At 64 YO I've have become a heat wuss - especially when combined with high humidity!

I feel sorry for the people in Arizona and other western states who are suffering through the heat wave, but what they say is true; a dry heat is different.

Best
Doc

90F here with a humidity level of 35% which is very unusual for Iowa in the summer, but then again we're in severe drought conditions.
 

cyberiot

Rimtas žmogus
I confess, I confess, I confess! At 64 YO I've have become a heat wuss - especially when combined with high humidity!

You are not a wuss. You are, however, old.

Science:

And more science:
 
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cyberiot

Rimtas žmogus
Don't forget Fido and Fluffy . . .

1623873481663.png


As we speak, my nitwit border heeler is working on her suntan in the 108F heat. Yes, I have a dog door. Yes, she's free to come in. No, she doesn't want to. Think I'll go brush her with garlic butter.
 
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Firebird

Has No Life - Lives on TB
It's not only the West, folks. Temps here in southern Mississippi have been unseasonably high, into the mid 90s for several days. MId to high 80s would be more normal for early and mid June, here. Combined with our high humidity, it makes staying outside - much less working outdoors - a real bear.

I confess, I confess, I confess! At 64 YO I've have become a heat wuss - especially when combined with high humidity!

I feel sorry for the people in Arizona and other western states who are suffering through the heat wave, but what they say is true; a dry heat is different.

Best
Doc
The older I get, the more difficult this heat becomes
 

annieosage

Inactive
Definitely hotter today- 2:05pm and 112

112°F
Mostly cloudy
Expect partly sunny skies. The high will be 112°.
FEELS LIKE
112°
WIND
6 mph
VISIBILITY
9.9 mi
HUMIDITY
6%
PRESSURE
29.78 in
DEW POINT
25°
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
Ran high-temps 'til three AM.

Back up at six and out the door again, just got home.

Been like this for a coupla weeks.
 

jward

passin' thru
Extreme heat bakes West, toppling long-standing records
Matthew Cappucci

7-8 minutes

1623889983432.png
Sizzling temperatures are baking the West, with readings about 15 to 30 degrees or more above normal bringing dangerous conditions and highs above 100 degrees to 40 million people. Records have been falling left and right as temperatures reach extreme levels, a number of U.S. cities climbing near or above 110.
For many areas, the worst of the heat has yet to set in, particularly across California and the Desert Southwest, where Wednesday through Friday could be markedly hotter than what has already occurred.
Scorching weather beat down on the Los Angeles area on June 15 with temperatures reaching 106 degrees in some areas. (Reuters)
Scattered wildfires have cropped up across California, Arizona, Utah and Montana, with fears that more may take advantage of the exceptional heat and bone-dry humidity. The ultra-warm temperatures are reinforcing a bitter drought that has wrought havoc across the greater region, simultaneously exacerbating concerns that autumn may bring a devastating fire season.
“This level of heat, and especially the duration of the heat, is dangerous to all population groups and steps should be taken to mitigate risk to heat exposure,” wrote the National Weather Service office in Las Vegas.
Excessive heat warnings blanket the West, where several days more of heat are likely before some relief arrives into the weekend. Here are some of the records that fell Tuesday:
  • Salt Lake City hit 107 degrees, tying its hottest temperature ever recorded year-round and establishing a record for June.
  • Denver made it to 101 degrees, breaking the daily record of 97 set in 1952 and 1993.
  • Billings, Mont., made it to 108 degrees, tying the city’s hottest temperature recorded, on July 14, 2002.
  • Laramie, Wyo., soared to 94 degrees, while Sheridan hit 107, both matching their highest temperatures on record.
  • Casper, Wyo., hit 101 degrees, nabbing a new daily record by a whopping 8 degrees. It’s also its hottest temperature observed on record so early in the year.
  • Death Valley, Calif., logged a high of 124.1 degrees, the highest temperature in the Lower 48 this year; Needles, Calif., made it to 121, setting a new daily record, and Palm Springs, Calif., to 120, topping its daily record by 4 degrees.
  • Las Vegas snagged a high of 114 degree, falling just a bit short of the record of 116, seen in 1940.
  • Phoenix hit 115 degrees, tying a daily record high set in 1974. A very diffuse, thin veil of smoke from the nearby Telegraph Fire probably reduced the temperature by a degree or two below what was originally forecast.

The heat to come

On Wednesday, high temperatures should settle back into the upper 80s or lower 90s across the northern Rockies, but the heat will consolidate and worsen over the southern Intermountain West and California, where widespread triple-digit heat is expected. Las Vegas is likely to hit 116, beating out the record of 114 degrees set in 1940. Phoenix could be equally hot, tying a record of 115 last observed in 1974.
Phoenix didn’t appear to make it below 91 degrees on Tuesday night, only the 10th time on record that has happened in June. Even though records date to 1933, five out of the other nine times have occurred since 2013 — attesting to the rapid pace of climbing overnight lows thanks to urbanization and human-caused climate change.
Since the 1930s, summertime nightly lows in Phoenix have climbed by roughly nine degrees on average. Hot nighttime lows are frequently more dangerous than extreme daytime highs, as cooling shelters often close at night and, for elderly, vulnerable populations and those without cooling resources, the lack of relief offers no opportunity for the body to cool down.

Heat to roast California’s central valley

In California, extreme temperatures will exist just a few miles inland from the coast. At 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, the temperature in Malibu on Civic Center Way was 68 degrees, with a reading of 99 at Tapia Canyon.
The Central Valley will be the bull’s eye for heat, coming a day after widespread 100-degree readings. Lower 100s are likely Wednesday, followed by highs between 105 and 110 degrees Thursday and several readings topping 110 degrees Friday.
A high of 110 degrees is expected in Sacramento on Thursday, which would beat the previous record by 7 degrees. Another record high of 107 is possible Thursday. The local Weather Service office advertised a “widespread high to very high heat risk.”
Bakersfield, Calif., is expecting three consecutive days near or at 110 degrees. That’s impressive but still a far cry from July 1908, when the city recorded 22 days in a row at or above 108. The Weather Service office in Hanford, Calif., referred to the forecast highs as “dangerously hot, life-threatening temperatures.”

Drought and wildfire concerns

Meanwhile, a spattering of wildfires has sparked up across California and the Southwest, including the 139,615-acre Telegraph Fire about 60 miles east of Phoenix, which was 59 percent contained as of Wednesday morning. A number of smaller spot fires have ignited along the Sierra Nevada foothills. Some of the smoke from the Arizona wildfires may reach New England on Friday, tinging sunsets with more vibrant shades.
The anomalous temperatures can be traced to an enormous “heat dome,” or a large area of high pressure languishing over the Four Corners region. That brings sinking air, clear skies and hot temperatures, simultaneously diverting clouds and other weather systems well to the north.
The frequency and intensity of higher-end heat domes has been linked to human-induced climate change; while triple-digit heat is a staple of summertime in the Desert Southwest, the heat is made more severe, and occurs more frequently, thanks to human influence.

“One of the biggest ways climate change is affecting us is by loading the weather dice against us. Extreme weather events occur naturally; but on a warmer planet many of these events are getting bigger, stronger, and more damaging,” Katharine Hayhoe, a climate scientist at Texas Tech University and the Nature Conservancy, said in an emailed statement. “They’re affecting our health, the safety of our homes, the economy, and more.”
The heat is also amplified by antecedent dry conditions tied to an ongoing megadrought across the West, which brings lower relative humidity and makes it easier for the air to heat up. That, in turn, raises temperatures, leading to more evaporation and drying the ground further. That’s what atmospheric scientists refer to as a “feedback loop,” and it’s one that’ is difficult to break out of.

Nearly 55 percent of the West is experiencing an “extreme” or “exceptional” drought according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, and it’s likely that conditions will only worsen as the dry season continues.
posted for fair use
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
We get 107 tomorrow. My central air is busted. I will use the ceiling fan and a floor fan. If it gets unbearable, I will go over to my daughter's house. Plants will need lots of water. Supposed to cool into the low 90s next week. (CA south of Sacto)
 

Marie

Veteran Member
Yesterday morning I turned the air on in the house and locked Quigley and Duchess inside with only potty breaks. Been hsoing down the livestock about every hour to cool them off. it was 106 yesterday. We are always higher than the forecast
It was supposed to be 101 yesterday and 104 today.
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
It’s 73 right now outside with 93% humidity and ZERO WIND (again.) Fifth or sixth day in a row with no breeze. The combination of no breeze and high humidity makes breathing incredibly difficult. It’s like trying to breathe soup. Normally, these temperatures don’t come until July, when the moisture has left the ground. This time however, the ground is still saturated, and the moisture can’t evaporate and dissipate. So it just hovers over the ground (no wind, remember?) and makes things miserable. Yesterday I took the dogs out for a run at about 8 pm. It was still at least 30 minutes before sunset. The mosquitoes descended upon me like I’ve rarely seen. I had to retreat back to the car and take the pups home after only 5 minutes.
 

Terrwyn

Veteran Member
Whew! It used to get like that in Upstate, NY.
I'm sitting here at 5 with the place open getting some air. The low was in the 80's with 20% humidity. Made my DH get up at 4:30 so he can get the trees watered that arnt on irrigation and I can do washing. Its been awhile since there was a heat wave like this one. I just pray nobody loses their power anywhere.
 

Terrwyn

Veteran Member
Nebraska, at 5 am was 84 degrees already.
I was born there. We didn't have air. We would sleep with the fans blowing on us. I remember the rain coming through briefly and how good it felt for a little while playing in it until the heat would get worse after. Do you still get the rain or are you in a drought too?
 

Freeholder

This too shall pass.
We get 107 tomorrow. My central air is busted. I will use the ceiling fan and a floor fan. If it gets unbearable, I will go over to my daughter's house. Plants will need lots of water. Supposed to cool into the low 90s next week. (CA south of Sacto)

Marsh, twenty years ago, just before we moved to Klamath Falls with my grandmother, we were still at her house on the central Oregon Coast and had two days in a row where it got up to 108 F (extremely unusual for the Coast). Grandma's little house had vinyl flooring throughout, so she got her mop out and mopped the floors several times each day with a lot of water. That added humidity to the air so it wasn't quite as miserable. That, with your fans, might make your house more bearable. (Plus take a cool shower as needed, and of course drink plenty of fluids with some electrolytes now and then.)

Kathleen
 

ChicagoMan74

ULTRA MAGA
Yeah even in my locale highs of 91, 94, 90, 89 for today, tomorrow, Sat & Sun.

Funny thing too...we JUST had ComEd out in the area doing maintenance and had the power down for like 6 hours yesterday.
 

Henry Bowman

Veteran Member
Yesterday we had a High of 67 with 35% humidity.

Last night it went down to 45...it was a bit chilly out with the dog this morning.

Should hit close to 70 today. Humidity may creep up to 54%.

NE Pa.
 

Shooter

Veteran Member
I was born there. We didn't have air. We would sleep with the fans blowing on us. I remember the rain coming through briefly and how good it felt for a little while playing in it until the heat would get worse after. Do you still get the rain or are you in a drought too?

were about a inch below normal for the year, but a lot of that was early last month, the dryness is a very localized thing. north of my me dry, but 50 miles south has been getting rain,
 
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