
Perfectly Decent Holiday Weekend Weather
Yesterday was a lousy day for a picnic. The burgers were soggy and I nearly drowned while applying sunscreen. Had temperatures been 5-8F colder, had the storm struck in late April, Minnesota would be digging out from a foot of snow. Good times.
Meteorologically-speaking, the glass is more than half full. Why, you ask? 1). Drenching rains arrived on a Thursday, not on Memorial Day. 2). Heavy rain has eliminated an ongoing rainfall deficit. 3). This was a multi-million dollar rain event for farmers. It doesn't mean we won't grapple with drought later in the summer, but in the short term it was the jolt of moisture we needed.
The sun comes out today and Saturday still looks like the sunniest day of the holiday weekend. The best chance of PM instability T-storms may come Sunday afternoon up north, Monday evening in the metro. Memorial Day should be the mildest day with 70s. NOAA's GFS model shows 90 degrees about 9-12 days from now.
That almost makes up for Freeze Warnings up north this morning. Crazy.

Slow Improvement Today. After waking up to puddles and a leftover shower or two skies brighten and then clear by afternoon. If you have something going on after lunch you should be just fine, but it will be cool out there.









Memorial Day: Best Lake Day. Monday still appears to be the mildest day with 70s pretty much statewide. We can't rule out a few late-day thundershowers Sunday and Monday, but the vast majority of the holiday weekend should be dry (and a few degrees cooler than average). A frost is possible from Duluth into the Minnesota Arrowhead Saturday morning. Yikes.



Toasty. Long-range (GFS) guidance for the evening of June 10, low-confidence guidance, suggests sizzling heat for much of the nation, but a developing Omega Block may keep the Pacific Northwest and New England cool and showery.