With skies turning sunny fairly quickly this morning, expect a high around 40 today. Winds will be northwest at 10-15 mph, with gusts up to 35 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear, with a low around 22. Winds will calm significantly, to around 5 mph and still out of the northwest.
Tomorrow will start out mostly sunny, before turning cloudy in the late morning and afternoon. The high will be around 49, and winds will turn to the south at around 5 mph. Tomorrow night, temperatures actually rise into the 50s and will be around 54 by sunrise Sunday. Rain is likely and the wind will stay south around 5 mph.
After we get into the mid 50s around sunrise Sunday morning, we fall from there, getting back into the mid 40s by the late morning and midday hours, but the shower chance will end. Sunday night will be mostly clear and 26. Monday and Tuesday will both be mostly sunny, but with completely different temperatures: Monday might not get into the 40s, while Tuesday will likely blast into the 50s. That is sandwiched by a run-of-the-mill Monday night.
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Published by Nathan Coram
Hello! I'm Nathan Coram, a 20 year old meteorology student and weather geek, and am in my junior year at UMass Lowell as a meteorology major. I am the current Vice President of the UML American Meteorological Society Local Student Chapter. Prior to at UML, I attended the Dracut school system for my K-12 years, having graduated from Dracut High in 2018. I first got into weather with the December 2008 ice storm, which knocked out my electricity for 4 days. I had no idea how it could be raining and becoming ice immediately, and how rain can knock out power. (Now I do - warm layer aloft, cold air at surface). But I didn't really get into it until the heat of July 2010 and specifically a few severe weather events during that month, followed by the year 2011, which featured several high profile weather events. Since then I have had a growing interest, and am hoping to make it into the meteorology field, preferably with NOAA/NWS. But for now, I'm blogging here on Dracut Weather (also on Twitter and Facebook), helping with the UML Weather Center social media, and tweeting about the weather on my own account as well. Thanks for visiting!
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