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Weather conscious Tuesday: Serious storms probably

    This evening: Our weather will remain silent tonight with fragmentary dense fog that develops under a partially cloudy air with lows in the upper 60s to low 70s. A sprinkle or light shower is possible along the HWY-278 walk around sunrise on Monday morning.

    Monday: Apart from a sprinkle or two over our northern provinces very early Monday, we all have to stay dry. The temperatures will be much warmer in the upper 80s and feel more like the low to the mid -90s with partially cloudy skies.

    This week: A strong cold front will approach the region on Tuesday and yield another day of summery heat. Heights on Tuesday will approach 90 ° over parts of the area, while most of us hang out in the upper 80s, feeling like the low/mid -90s with sultry air in place.

    This warm, humid air will make an unstable environment at the end of Tuesday to the beginning of Wednesday, which means that a potentially considerably heavy weather is at risk.

    Consciously Tuesday evening:

    4 pm Tuesday – 1 am Wednesday

    It is expected that scattered storms will be formed over North Mississippi shortly after lunch on Tuesday before they organize themselves in a flurrement of storms that are a high risk of harmful wind of more than 60-70 km / h in Central Alabama from Tuesday evening. There will also be a risk for a ping pong -ball size hail and possibly a tornado or two, depending on where storms decide to transform.

    As soon as the line of Stormen organizes together, they will soon go to the southeast to late Tuesday evening before they are probably leaving Alabama in the Central Alabama shortly after midnight. Trust with regard to the timing is still low to medium, so make sure you come back for updates as the timing becomes more specific.

    By Wednesday spill lower humidity and refreshing air to the south, drying things out and brings us back to sunshine for the second half of the week. Heights will fall in the upper 70s and lows in the 40s and 50s!

    The coming weekend will be a bit tricky if Northwest Flow Aloft seems to be developing somewhere about the Tennessee River Valley. Where this pattern is set up will determine who could see a few storm complexes comparable to us again last weekend. For the time being we will keep a low -end threat to rain and increase in the coming days if necessary if necessary.

    Follow the CBS 42 Storm -Team:

    Follow us on Facebook: Chief Meteorologist Dave NussbaumMeteorologist Michael Haynes, meteorologist Alex PuckettAnd Meteorologist Jacob Woods.

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