In the time it took you to make that sandwich, Tropical Storm Andrea developed and dissipated

In brief: Tropical Storm Andrea formed yesterday — and dissipated yesterday. Heat records were shattered on Tuesday in the East, but the heat will slowly fade away now. Flooding risks continue in New Mexico, and more rain is likely on the way for the Southwest next week.

Atlantic

This morning, we start with a tribute to Tropical Storm Andrea. It formed yesterday morning around 10 AM Central Time. It left us a full 12 hours later. It fought a courageous battle but was ultimately no match colder water temperatures, drier air, and wind shear. Andrea set an example that all other tropical systems should seek to follow between now and November. For that, we are grateful.

All that remains of Tropical Storm Andrea is this swirl and the memories. (Weathernerds.org)

In all seriousness, with Andrea coming and going, the Atlantic looks to remain quiet for the next week or more. The Pacific will awaken again this weekend or so.

Heat records obliterated

Let’s just talk for a moment about the heat yesterday in the East. On Monday, we saw outrageous dewpoints. Yesterday was about temperatures. State temperature records for June were tied or broken in Vermont, Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Maryland.

🌡️7 STATES BREAKING A FULL STATE MONTHLY RECORDon the same day is something we saw very few times in the past 150 years in USAToday is ONE OF THOSEA small list of the several hundreds June records broken which includes NYC,Boston,Newark,Baltimore,Providence etc..👇

Extreme Temperatures Around the World (@extremetemps.bsky.social) 2025-06-25T00:32:34.582Z

For Boston, 102° was their hottest June day on record and 4th hottest day overall on record. Providence saw their hottest June day on record and 6th hottest overall day on record. It wasn’t just the mayoral primary heating up in New York City. Central Park’s 99 degrees was a record for the date, but it fell short of June’s temperature record of 101°. LaGuardia’s 101° ties the June record. 102° at JFK Airport was tied for 3rd hottest all-time and set a new June record. The 103° in Newark, NJ ties for 12th hottest on record and ties the all-time June record. Shout out to my hometown of Atlantic City, tying for 6th hottest day on record at 102°. The hottest day on record was in June of 1969. Philly hit 101°, while Baltimore and DC were comparatively cooler at 98° and 99° respectively.

The heat will begin to ebb now. Another round of multiple temperature records are possible in the Northeast Corridor again today, but they will fall short of yesterday in most cases.

Another spate of records should be broken or tied today, but in most cases they’ll fall a good deal short of yesterday’s values. (NOAA)

Notice how nationally (at the top of the image above) the number of records threatened drops off dramatically after today. The number of nighttime low warm records is pretty wild, but that’s worthy of another post on another day.

Desert Southwest soaking

Parts of New Mexico have received 3 to 6 inches of rain in the last 24 to 48 hours, triggering multiple flash flood warnings across the state on Tuesday.

Significant rainfall as high as 3 to 6 inches has fallen in the last 24 to 48 hours across parts of New Mexico. (NOAA NSSL)

Additional showers and thunderstorms are likely today but hopefully in a more isolated fashion. Several more inches of rain may fall in parts of the state however before all is said and done.

(NWS Albuquerque)

Looking farther out in time, it looks like monsoon season is really going to begin to flex in the Southwest next week, with heavy rain possible again in New Mexico but also perhaps parts of Arizona and West Texas.

Rainfall as much as 200 to 300 percent of normal is possible next week and weekend across the Desert Southwest as monsoon season ramps up. (StormVista Weather Models)

Keep in mind that 300 percent of normal in the Desert Southwest equates to about an inch or so of rain. So from that standpoint, it’s not a ton. That being said, some operational modeling does hint at higher totals than this. This far out, you’re just looking for a signal, and that signal is clearly pointing to an uptick in rainfall there.

Where does heat go next?

Heat will fade in the East, as we noted above. So where does it go next? Well over the next week or so, any heat should be transient in nature, meaning it’ll come and go in spots. Some places that may see an uptick in stronger heat include the Upper Midwest (Minneapolis could push into the 90s this weekend). The interior Northwest could see a burst of heat next week, with Spokane pushing the mid-90s by Monday or Tuesday. Thereafter, it may be Texas that sees the heat too.

Day 11 to 15 temperature anomalies show Texas heating up later next week with 100s possible in Dallas and upper-90s in Houston. (Tropical Tidbits)

Summer doing summer things after an extreme late June for parts of the country.

Connecting the dots on a very extreme early summer weather pattern across the United States and Canada

In brief: We’re watching for Pacific development again later this week, while the Atlantic remains quiet. We dive into absolutely obscene humidity levels in the Northeast yesterday, the continuation of the heat wave, and the latest on flooding risk in New Mexico today. We also look at how all these things are related.

Atlantic update

Invest 90L is just about out of time in the open Atlantic. It has about 12 hours left before it basically gets absorbed into the overall pattern and ushered east with the window for development closing.

Invest 90L is running out of time to develop in the open waters of the Atlantic, though it does look a bit feisty this morning. (Weathernerds.org)

The satellite presentation of 90L this morning is actually fairly feisty looking. Whether it’s enough to get it over the hump and classify it as a depression is really a matter of technicalities at this point. We’ve certainly seen worse looking tropical systems in recent years, so I wouldn’t be shocked if this gets revisited in the postseason analysis. Regardless, this is heading out to sea and is no threat to land. The rest of the Atlantic looks quiet at this point.

Pacific update

On the other side of the continent, we are likely to see the next disturbance emerge off Mexico and into the East Pacific later this week. Right now, the NHC assigns about 70 percent odds of development for this system but probably not til the weekend.

There is a 70 percent chance that another system will develop off the coast of Mexico but probably not until this weekend. (NOAA NHC)

Most modeling suggests this will slide out into the open Pacific, but there remains some subset of model data keeping it fairly close to the coast of Mexico south of Baja. We’ll see if that comes into clearer focus in the coming days.

Absurd Upstate New York/Vermont humidity

Meanwhile, hoooo boy. I worked for 5 years in Central New York in the Mohawk Valley, not far from the foothills of the Adirondacks. We experienced some hot weather every summer just like any other place. But the level of absurdity of dewpoints yesterday in western New England and Upstate New York was wild. Dewpoint is a measure of the amount of moisture in the atmosphere, or the temperature you’d have to cool the atmosphere to for it to be saturated. Essentially, the higher the dewpoint, the worse it feels outside.

At 4PM, the feels-like temperature is likely near or just past its daily peak. It's been an oppressively hot day, and tomorrow will be similar.Some of the preliminary "highlights":Peak feels-like temperature: 117F, at WhitehallPeak temperature: 100F, at Plattsburgh

NY State Weather Risk Communication Center (@nyswrcc.bsky.social) 2025-06-23T20:37:07.928Z

When you combine the temperature and dewpoint, that’s generally how you measure the “feels like” or “real feel” or “heat index” value. Yesterday, Whitehall, NY, which mind you is not exactly some urban heat island on the Gulf Coast measured a heat index of 117° from the New York State Mesonet. That is…absurd. Since the year 2000 (LaBamba from Conan O’Brien voice), Burlington, Vermont has recorded exactly 1 hour with a heat index of 110 degrees back in July 2002. To the south, Albany has had a couple hours up to 109° back in 2011 and 2018. The highest heat index value to date in 2025 here in Houston has been 107° on June 20th. Hourly records for things like heat index are often hard to track, but I think it’s pretty clear that what happened yesterday in Upstate New York and Vermont was an exceptional weather event.

Click to enlarge Monday’s meteogram showing temperature, dewpoint, and heat index at Whitehall, NY. (NYS Mesonet)

At one point, dewpoints got over 80 degrees at Whitehall, which I can’t recall really seeing up that way. Even Montreal had a dewpoint as high as 77° and a heat index of 105° yesterday! I went back through hourly data since 2000. Albany, Burlington, Syracuse, and Montpelier have never touched an 80 degree dewpoint in that time. Having lived there and grown up in South Jersey on the Jersey Shore, which can get rather muggy, it’s somewhat astonishing to me that it got this humid. Heat isn’t uncommon in New England or the Northeast. This sort of humidity, however, is either exceptionally rare or almost unheard of.

Heat outlook

The heat will roll on. Another round of numerous daily temperature records will be threatened today, from 100s in the Northeast Corridor to upper-90s in the interior, and plenty of humidity to boot once again.

A sampling of forecast high temperatures today that will approach or exceed records for the date. (NOAA)

In fact, the amount of available moisture tomorrow, especially in northern New England and Upstate New York will be very high. Precipitable water, or how much moisture is available is expected to run about an inch above normal in those areas. A really, really impressive setup continues.

Precipitable water anomalies increase, meaning the amount of moisture available in the atmosphere will increase later today. (Pivotal Weather)

New Mexico

Heavy rain is expected today across much of New Mexico, leading to flood watches and a moderate risk (3/4) of excessive rainfall leading to flooding.

A moderate risk (3/4) for flash flooding today from near White Sands north to Taos, including Albuquerque and Santa Fe. (NOAA WPC)

Rain totals of 1 to 4 inches are possible today, which will produce pockets of flash flooding in parts of the state affected by recent heavy rains. Some places have seen 2 to 4 inches in the last 72 hours. This becomes of serious concern near and below burn scars that dot portions of the state from recent wildfires.

(NWS Albuquerque)

The forecast amounts are highest in the southeast, but it won’t take much for some of those higher amounts to show up elsewhere, including some risk of urban flash flooding in the Albuquerque metro. The flood watch in New Mexico remains until Wednesday morning in most spots, but through tomorrow evening in the South Central Mountains in the state.

Connecting the dots

Why is this happening? It all ties into how the weather pattern is interplaying at a large scale. With near-record high pressure over the Mid-South and Appalachia, as well as a deep trough over California, the flow pattern is drawing in Pacific moisture, including tropical moisture. That moisture funnels between the ridge and trough, taking aim at New Mexico, hence today’s flooding risk, as well as into the Upper Midwest, Lakes, southeast Canada, and U.S. Northeast. This provides higher than usual humidity, more thunderstorm chances, and some severe weather around the periphery of the ridge of high pressure.

Because of how the U.S. weather pattern is oriented, we are seeing some extreme outcomes including flooding in New Mexico, extremely high humidity in the Northeast, and periods of severe weather in the Upper Midwest, Great Lakes, and southeastern Canada. (Tropical Tidbits)

In addition, thunderstorm chances on the Gulf Coast have also increased this week due to east to west winds due to the clockwise flow around the high pressure system, with more Gulf and Atlantic moisture pressing across the Deep South and into Texas. Some of that Gulf, Gulf Stream, and even Caribbean air is getting dragged into this whole thing too. With this high pressure being near-record intensity, it underscores that extreme patterns tend to produce extreme outcomes.

Everything is connected in some way on this planet. We’re experiencing a microcosm of this now in the U.S. and Canada.

Sneaky subtropical Atlantic system no threat to land, Eastern heat wave blasts onward, flooding in New Mexico

In brief: Our first investigative area of hurricane season has formed in the Atlantic, but Invest 90L will not threaten any land. Meanwhile, heat roasts the East this week, while flooding threatens New Mexico.

Subtropical mischief from Invest 90L

It’s easy to get so caught up in looking at the corridor between the Gulf, Caribbean, and Africa that mid-latitude systems out in the open Atlantic can sometimes just get lumped in with background noise. Indeed, it appears that this may be one of those cases.

A subtropical system may have a very, very brief window to develop before midweek. (NOAA NHC)

Invest 90L, our first “area of investigation” this season won’t be winning any hurricane look-a-like contests, but conditions may briefly be favorable for a burst of quick development before it launches out to sea. There is zero threat to land from 90L. It’s more of a curiosity than anything.

Invest 90L has a slight chance to develop before Tuesday. If it misses the window, it’s unlikely to do so. (Weathernerds.org)

This one would firmly fall into the stat padding category for the season should it develop, though it would contribute virtually nothing to the overall depiction of the season beyond perhaps a name off the board. But it’s a sign that even in a generally unfavorable overall pattern, something can still spin up.

Rest of this week in the tropics

Quiet. There’s no sign that the overarching dominant pattern of “hostile” will change anytime soon. The medium range models which go out 10 to 14 days generally look quiet as well. We do expect the Pacific to continue somewhat active with another system likely later this week. But for the Atlantic, the best you’ll get out of this pattern in all likelihood is something either like we see in the North Atlantic right now, or some currently un-forecast complex of thunderstorms that ends up in the Gulf or off the Southeast coast. Good news for those of us that want calm.

Heat bakes on

The Eastern U.S. heatwave is going to continue onward. Some notable numbers from this weekend: Prior to Saturday, only 31 nights on record in Minneapolis had failed to drop below 80 degrees. Saturday was 32 and Sunday was 33. Sunday’s 82 degrees ties for the fourth warmest low temperature on record and first time since the Dust Bowl era that Minneapolis has been so warm at night. Yesterday was also the first time since 2019 that Chicago failed to drop below 80 degrees.

Heading into the next couple days, the heat will begin to peak in the Eastern U.S., with numerous records likely to be threatened or fall. The most impressive on the list below for some selected major cities is probably the 1888 record in New York City that should fall tomorrow or the 1923 record in Philly.

Whatever the case, there is a massive swath of the country under heat advisories and warnings. Models continue to suggest that upper level “heights” in the atmosphere have a fairly decent chance at breaking all-time records in parts of Virginia based on the historical data we have. And there’s a very good chance they’ll be setting new June records. Heights can help us determine the intensity of a ridge or trough in the atmosphere. The higher the values, the stronger the heat can be this time of year.

European ensemble model depiction of probability that 500 mb heights set annual records on Monday afternoon. (Polarwx.com)

The good news is that as the week progresses, the ridge should break down, slowly. This will accelerate over the weekend and next week, allowing heat to rebuild in places to the west, like the Plains and Texas and possibly Southwest.

Southwest flooding risk

This pattern setup is allowing for a feed of monsoonal moisture from the Pacific into New Mexico and parts of West Texas. This, combined with a number of favorable factors for significant rain is likely to put a pretty substantial flooding risk into New Mexico and perhaps portions of western Texas tomorrow.

(NWS Albuquerque)

Burn scar flooding and mudslide risk is a major concern in New Mexico. But all forms of flooding look to be in high supply tomorrow. Conditions should ease up some in the back half of the week.

Total expected rainfall through midweek in New Mexico. (Pivotal Weather)

The quiet Atlantic rolls on, so we look at a major Eastern heat wave

In brief: We explain what’s behind the quiet Atlantic start this season. We also look at how wet bulb globe temperatures can more adequately qualify the severity of the heat next week in the Eastern U.S.

The calm Atlantic continues

This morning at our Houston-focused site, Space City Weather, I explained to our local audience sort of why things have been quiet in the Atlantic. I am reposting that here today, as we have no further items to discuss at this point in time tropics-wise.

Today is June 20th, and to this point I don’t think we’ve said a word at Space City Weather about hurricanes or tropical storms. It’s a refreshing change of pace after recent seasons. In fact, the last year that we did not have a storm in the Atlantic before July 1st was back in 2014. It’s been a while.

All’s quiet for now. (NOAA NHC)

Meanwhile, the Pacific has been churning out storms apace this season, with five so far. Of course, only one of them (Erick, which just made landfall yesterday) was a big storm. Still, the conditions to this point this hurricane season have strongly favored the Pacific. You can thank dust and wind shear in the Atlantic for one, but those things aren’t abnormal, even in recent Junes. So there has to be more at play here.

Rising air has been centered on southeast Asia and Central America so far this month, with most of the Atlantic in a generally unfavorable background state. (NOAA)

We often talk about the “background state” of the atmosphere. You have individual tropical waves and systems and such through the year, but the background state is important. Are the overarching global weather conditions favorable for development or unfavorable? So far this June, we’ve had the majority of rising air, or a “favorable” background state for tropical development sitting over Central America. Rising air is what helps thunderstorms to develop. Since tropical weather generally moves east to west across the planet, this has meant that most seedlings for development are being planted in the eastern Pacific Ocean. Sinking air sits over Africa and extends all the way across to the Caribbean islands. Sinking air tends to suppress cloud development and dry the air out a bit. By the time any waves can really get going, they more than likely end up over land or kicked into the Pacific.

Over the next couple weeks, this pattern is unlikely to change a whole heck of a lot, but we may start to see slightly more favorable conditions emerge over Africa or the far eastern Atlantic by early July. That said, there are no guarantees that actually means anything. Realistically, the next 7 to 10 days look calm and the 10-to-14-day period has no signs of meaningful change yet.

We do still expect an average to above average hurricane season; June’s activity has no real correlation to the rest of the season, so you can’t decipher any relationships. But when you can get a hassle-free month in hurricane season, you take it without complaints.

Bottom line: You still have time to prepare for hurricane season.

Qualifying a major heat wave

No, it’s not “just summer.” The upcoming heat wave in the Eastern U.S. is expected to break a number of records.

A map showing sites that may threaten or easily break record highs next Tuesday based on the current NOAA temperature forecast. (NOAA)

In Houston, we’ve adapted our readers to looking at heat in a more nuanced way. Heat and humidity are common issues here in Texas. We deal with low to mid 90s almost daily from June through early September, with a face-full of humidity and hotter temps periodically peppered in. It’s not pleasant. So things like “heat index,” which is commonly referred to as real-feel or apparent temperature doesn’t always help us to explain heat. Some days can have a 105 degree or 110 degree heat index, but what does it actually mean?

That’s why we often utilize the wet bulb globe temperature (WBGT) for expressing heat risks here in Texas. Our forecast is pretty normal right now, without any real significant heat on the horizon. So when you look at our WBGT, you’ll see it sits in the moderate to high range for the next week. High heat is normal in Southeast Texas. But we do not rise to the level of extreme with this forecast.

Wet bulb globe temperature forecast for Houston, TX shows moderate to high heat over the next week, fairly common this time of year. (Weather Bell)

What is WBGT? It factors in more than heat index (which is just temperature and humidity). A heat index of 105 in Houston means something much different than a heat index of 105 in New York City. So we need more variables. WBGT factors in latitude, sun angle (time of year), wind, cloud cover, temperature, and humidity. It’s a lot more “stuff” than just heat index, so it becomes more valuable. It also helps that it’s a medically accepted guideline for qualifying heat as extreme or high.

So what of the upcoming heat in the Eastern U.S.? Well, let’s let the WBGT guide us. Let’s start in New York City, which is of course the center of the universe. The upcoming heat rises to “extreme” levels by a fair margin.

The heat next week in New York can be qualified as “extreme” and hazardous. (Weather Bell)

This is a hazardous heat for the City. Even at night, we still retain moderate heat values which can cause problems of its own.

Let’s look at Richmond, Virginia. There, where higher heat is a little more common, the WBGT levels are forecast to just barely get to extreme levels.

The heat in Richmond, VA is more high than extreme, meaning that the relative impact of heat is probably going to be higher in NYC than in Virginia. (Weather Bell)

Since the region of the country is what sets the scale, extreme heat starts with a WBGT of 84 in New York but 90 in Richmond. Let’s move to Chicago, where they’ll likely see borderline extreme heat too.

Borderline extreme heat will occur in Chicago this weekend and Monday. (Weather Bell)

While the focus is on the East, let’s not forget the Upper Midwest. A short-lived but powerful dose of heat is going to set in this weekend, with Minneapolis likely experiencing two days of extreme heat before temperature fall off a cliff.

Minneapolis will have some of the relatively hottest air of all this weekend. (Weather Bell)

In some places, the heat is going to sit around deep into next week, and it’s possible that some forecasts will need to be adjusted hotter over time. The ridge of high pressure responsible for this heat wave should begin to break down next weekend.

So what is the point of this? Extreme heat is not “just summer,” and when you utilize metrics like WBGT, the data becomes very clear. Also critical is the duration of the heat and how warm it stays overnight. In New York, for example, nighttime lows may struggle to drop below 80 degrees. That is exceptionally warm there. Going back to the 1860s, Central Park has only recorded 69 nights that failed to drop below 80 degrees. Over a third of those have occurred in just the last 30 years, due in part to climate change and warming oceans. It’s been a minute since nighttime temperatures that warm have occurred in New York, with the last 80 degree night recorded in July 2020. The longer those warm nights occur, the more compounding impact the daytime heat has, and the more hazardous it becomes, particularly for elderly people and those with poor air conditioning.

Anyway, bottom line, be smart about the heat in the East next week. Practice heat safety and drink plenty of water.