New Orleans, Sunny and Chilly Today, Rain & Storms Tomorrow
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New Orleans Sunny and Chilly Today, Rain & Storms Tomorrow

New Orleans Sunny and Chilly Today, Rain & Storms Tomorrow
GOOD TO SEE YOU ON THIS NEW YEAR. YES, HAPPY NEW YEAR. THANKS, TWIN. ALL RIGHT. LIVE LOOK OUTSIDE ON THIS THURSDAY. LOOK AT THAT Y’ALL NICE GUYS OUT THERE. BEAUTIFUL OUT THERE OVERLOOKING THE CRESCENT CITY. THE SUPERDOME RIGHT THERE IN THE CENTER SOMEWHERE. SO HOW LONG WILL THIS NICE WEATHER LAST? LET ME GIVE YOU A HINT. NOT VERY LONG. METEOROLOGIST ART JARRETT LIVE IN WESTLAND WITH YOUR COMPLETE FORECAST. HEY THERE ART. YEAH, 100% RIGHT ON THAT, MY FRIEND. WE’LL GET INTO IT. TEMPERATURES LOOKING RIGHT ABOUT NOW, AS YOU CAN SEE HERE AGAIN, LET ME POP THIS UP SO YOU CAN SEE THIS REAL QUICK. LET’S GET IT INTO SEVERE WEATHER THREAT TOMORROW. WE’RE LOOKING AT THIS WEATHER THREAT AGAIN. IT’S ABOUT A 2% CHANCE FOR TORNADIC ACTIVITY. IT ALSO HOLDS ABOUT A 5% CHANCE FOR, UH, GETTING INTO SOME WINDS. AND THEN LESS THAN A 5% CHANCE FOR HAIL. SO THAT BEING SAID, WE TAKE A QUICK PEEK AS WE GET INTO IT IS A WEATHER IMPACT DAY. AS YOU CAN SEE, WE’LL GO RIGHT INTO THE FLASH FLOOD RISK AS WELL. YOU CAN SEE THAT IS WIDESPREAD AND THAT CONTINUES ACROSS ALL OF THE SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA AND CONTINUING ON TO THE EAST. LET’S GO AHEAD AND TAKE THAT FULL, AND WE’LL GO RIGHT INTO HOW THIS ALL PLAYS OUT FOR US. WE GO INTO MONDAY, TAKE A LOOK AT THIS, ANOTHER WEATHER IMPACT DAY POPPING INTO OUR FORECAST. IT WILL BE A SLIGHT CHANCE FOR SEVERE WEATHER HERE. WE’LL GET SOME PRETTY GOOD STORMS OUT OF THIS AS WELL. AND AS THIS CONTINUES ON, THE RAINFALL ASSOCIATED WITH THIS, WE’LL PROBABLY GET UP TO ABOUT MAYBE TWO AND A HALF TO NEAR THREE INCHES. IN SOME CASES, WE MAY SEE A LITTLE BIT MORE AS YOU GET CLOSER TO GULFPORT AND BILOXI. THAT BEING SAID, WE TAKE A PEEK AT OUR LOCAL TEMPERATURES HERE WIDESPREAD RIGHT NOW IN THE 50S, HOLDING ON TO 54 DEGREES RIGHT NOW AT THE KENNER AIRPORT OVER THE LAKE. LAKEFRONT PRETTY MUCH THE SAME THING, BUT ON THE NORTH SHORE, MIDDLE 50S TO UPPER 50S AREAS. YOU CAN SEE GETTING CLOSER TO SLIDELL TODAY. YOUR FORECAST IS SUNNY. WE HAVE CHILLY SKIES, CHILLY CONDITIONS TEMPERATURE WISE. WE HAVE ALSO NO RAINFALL IN THE FORECAST 56 TO 61 DEGREES. YOUR LOCAL TEMPERATURES TOMORROW THOUGH. DIFFERENT STORIES. YOU CAN SEE. 62 TO 67 DEGREES WILL BE A LITTLE BIT WARMER BECAUSE THAT WARM FRONT IS ASSOCIATED WITH THIS COLD FRONT MOVING INTO THE AREA. AND THIS AREA OF LOW PRESSURE, THE LOW RISK FOR SEVERE WEATHER, WE COVERED THAT AND WINDY AND GUSTY CONDITIONS WILL STILL PLAY. AS YOU SEE, THOSE WINDS UP TO 25MPH GUSTS TO 35. SO IT’S GOING TO BE PRETTY BLUSTERY WORKING THROUGH THE AREA HERE. THERE’S THAT COLD FRONT SLIPPING OUT RIGHT NOW GOING INTO MIAMI. THERE’S OUR NEXT SYSTEM THAT’S COMING IN FOR TOMORROW AND YOU CAN SEE THE BLEND OF RAIN AND SNOW ALL MIXED IN TOGETHER HEADING THROUGH TEXAS. EVENTUALLY IT’S GOING TO BE MOVING INTO OUR AREA AND THAT COLDER AIR IS GOING TO REALLY KNOCK OUR TEMPERATURES DOWN EVENTUALLY AS WE GO INTO, UH, UH, SATURDAY, HOLDING ON TO OUR FORECAST, WE TAKE A PEEK HERE WE GO INTO THE EARLY PORTIONS FROM FRIDAY TAKING A LOOK HERE. BY THE TIME WE GET TO THE AFTERNOON, RAINFALL IS SLOWLY BUT SURELY GETTING TO BATON ROUGE, GETTING CLOSER HERE. THE HIGHS FOR TOMORROW 62 TO 67 DEGREES AND THE THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY IS GOING TO START TO WORK INTO THE NORTH SHORE. FIRST WE HAVE A LITTLE COASTAL SHOWER ACTIVITY WITH STORM ACTIVITY POPPING IN. ONCE WE GET INTO THE 3:00, 4:00, 5:00 HOUR, THAT’S WHEN THE HEAVY RAINFALL STARTS TO WORK IN. WE’LL SEE SOME ELEVATED STORMS POPPING INTO THE PICTURE HERE AS WELL, LIFTING UP SOME OF THOSE STORMS A LITTLE BIT MORE. SO INTO THE UPPER ATMOSPHERE. BUT WE’LL ALSO SEE SOME PRETTY GOOD CONDITIONS IN THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT, MOSTLY LINGERING NEAR THE COAST. THIS WILL ALL START TO PASS A LITTLE BIT MORE TO THE EAST, AND AS THAT HAPPENS BY THE TIME WE GET INTO 630, 7:00 AND 8:00, THE THREAT BEGINS TO MOVE AWAY FROM US. 9:00 THE THREAT IS GONE, AND THEN WE GET INTO SOME CLEARING SKIES WITH A LITTLE BIT OF RAINFALL FALLING BEHIND IT. AS WE GET INTO 1230, OUR. THEN ONCE YOU’RE GETTING INTO POSSIBLY SOME GOLF ON SATURDAY, YOU’RE LOOKING AT CONDITIONS TO BE AT LEAST AROUND A LITTLE SPOTTY SHOWERS WORKING IN YOUR FORECAST. ALL RIGHT. SO WE GO INTO HOW THIS ALL PLAYS OUT FOR THE NEXT SEVEN DAYS. THE WAY WE GO UPPER 50S TO THE MIDDLE 60S. THEN WE GO INTO 62 DEGREES. MUCH COOLER FOR SATURDAY. COLDER AIR POPS IN AS YOU CAN SEE HERE. WE’LL GO INTO MOSTLY CLOUDY SKIES FOR SUNDAY. RAINFALL COMES IN FOR MONDAY, HEAVY AT TIMES. WORKING THROUGH THE FORECAST, IT’S 100% CHANCE 70 DEGREES POSSIBLE AND THEN WE TAKE IT BACK DOWN TO
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New Orleans Sunny and Chilly Today, Rain & Storms Tomorrow
A Sunny and Chilly New Orleans Today, Rain & Storms Tomorrow: Today we started out this early morning with lows from 31-43° between 5 a.m. - 7 a.m. We have wonderful sunshine across Southeast Louisiana, but it is chilly. Highs expected 56-71° degrees. Friday is a WDSU Weather Impact Day for low risk of severe storms. Tornado chance is 2%, Damaging Winds 5% chance, and Hail less than 5%. Late morning light sprinkles to light rain moves into Southeast Louisiana from the coast and the west. By 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. we will be engulfed in light to heavy rainfall with a low risk for severe weather. The rain threat will come up from the coast and move over the South Shore and move northeast across the eastern half of Lake Pontchartrain and southeastern portion of St. Tammany Parish -- covering Group Camp Road at the lake and eastward between Mandeville and Big Branch.This low severe weather threat extends to extreme south Pearl River County, Mississippi near Picayune and along coastal Mississippi to Alabama. The current rain chance is 100% for Southeast Louisiana. Winds will be Windy and gusty from the ESE 15-25 mph, gusts to 35 mph across coastal shipping lanes, inland parishes and counties. This rain has a cold component to the north so a clash along the warm frontal boundary at the coast and will spark coastal storm activity from 3pm to 8pm Friday. Rainfall expected .50-3.00" inches. There will also be elevated energy vaulted into the mid and upper levels where severe storms due to greater shear (turning/spinning of the winds as they increase with height) may develop. The rain and storm threat will have moved out of Southeast Louisiana between 8 p.m. - 9 p.m. By 10 p.m. the frontal boundary is off to the east. Saturday early morning there is a 20-30% chance for isolated light showers west of the lake, otherwise, a day of partly cloudy skies and chilly temperatures from 58 63° degrees. Sunday, partly cloudy skies north of the lake and mostly cloudy skies south of the lake. Highs expected 57-62° degrees. Monday is another WDSU Impact Weather Day due to a widespread slight chance (15%) for severe weather. Rainfall chance for Monday is 100% across Southeast Louisiana with thunderstorms and heavy rain tracking from the coast and west spreading across Southeast Louisiana. The main corridor for the heaviest of rainfall tracks from southern Terrebonne Parish at the coast to the across the lake and toward the Northshore. The central and eastern portion of the heavy rainfall corridor is blanketed across the remaining portions of the Southshore (including the Metro area to Slidell, Coastal Mississippi, and northward up along the Pearl River including Bogalusa). Windy conditions will occur again with gusty winds that could cause overturing of smaller boats. Rainfall expected for now .750-3.00" inches. Tuesday, partly cloudy, highs drop to 57-62. Wednesday, partly cloudy, highs 53-58° degrees.

A Sunny and Chilly New Orleans Today, Rain & Storms Tomorrow: Today we started out this early morning with lows from 31-43° between 5 a.m. - 7 a.m. We have wonderful sunshine across Southeast Louisiana, but it is chilly. Highs expected 56-71° degrees.
Friday is a WDSU Weather Impact Day for low risk of severe storms. Tornado chance is 2%, Damaging Winds 5% chance, and Hail less than 5%. Late morning light sprinkles to light rain moves into Southeast Louisiana from the coast and the west. By 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. we will be engulfed in light to heavy rainfall with a low risk for severe weather. The rain threat will come up from the coast and move over the South Shore and move northeast across the eastern half of Lake Pontchartrain and southeastern portion of St. Tammany Parish -- covering Group Camp Road at the lake and eastward between Mandeville and Big Branch.
This low severe weather threat extends to extreme south Pearl River County, Mississippi near Picayune and along coastal Mississippi to Alabama. The current rain chance is 100% for Southeast Louisiana. Winds will be Windy and gusty from the ESE 15-25 mph, gusts to 35 mph across coastal shipping lanes, inland parishes and counties. This rain has a cold component to the north so a clash along the warm frontal boundary at the coast and will spark coastal storm activity from 3pm to 8pm Friday. Rainfall expected .50-3.00" inches. There will also be elevated energy vaulted into the mid and upper levels where severe storms due to greater shear (turning/spinning of the winds as they increase with height) may develop. The rain and storm threat will have moved out of Southeast Louisiana between 8 p.m. - 9 p.m. By 10 p.m. the frontal boundary is off to the east. Saturday early morning there is a 20-30% chance for isolated light showers west of the lake, otherwise, a day of partly cloudy skies and chilly temperatures from 58 63° degrees. Sunday, partly cloudy skies north of the lake and mostly cloudy skies south of the lake. Highs expected 57-62° degrees. Monday is another WDSU Impact Weather Day due to a widespread slight chance (15%) for severe weather. Rainfall chance for Monday is 100% across Southeast Louisiana with thunderstorms and heavy rain tracking from the coast and west spreading across Southeast Louisiana. The main corridor for the heaviest of rainfall tracks from southern Terrebonne Parish at the coast to the across the lake and toward the Northshore. The central and eastern portion of the heavy rainfall corridor is blanketed across the remaining portions of the Southshore (including the Metro area to Slidell, Coastal Mississippi, and northward up along the Pearl River including Bogalusa). Windy conditions will occur again with gusty winds that could cause overturing of smaller boats. Rainfall expected for now .750-3.00" inches. Tuesday, partly cloudy, highs drop to 57-62. Wednesday, partly cloudy, highs 53-58° degrees.

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