RedDread
11-25-2006, 02:41 AM
from TWC.com
Midwest
Some colder air will work its way southward through the northern Plains and Upper Midwest over the weekend but the main blast of cold air will establish itself over the region by midweek. Highs in the 20s, 30s and 40s prevail over the Dakotas, Minnesota, northern Wisconsin and northern Michigan over the weekend. From Kansas to the Ohio Valley, high temperatures will remain quite mild (5 to 15 degrees above average) in the 50s and 60s.
Light snow will streak out along the Canadian border across North Dakota and northwest Minnesota during the day Sunday. Showers and maybe a few thunderstorms will increase along the front from the southern Great Lakes to the mid-Mississippi Valley and eastern side of Nebraska and Kansas.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, the most prominent cold front in quite awhile will sweep through the Plains and eventually the rest of the Midwest. Mild rains and some thunderstorms will precede the cold front. Strong northerly winds, bitterly cold temperatures and a burst of snow or sleet will make it feel more like January. Parts of the north-central states could see blizzard Tuesday into Wednesday.
Midwest
Some colder air will work its way southward through the northern Plains and Upper Midwest over the weekend but the main blast of cold air will establish itself over the region by midweek. Highs in the 20s, 30s and 40s prevail over the Dakotas, Minnesota, northern Wisconsin and northern Michigan over the weekend. From Kansas to the Ohio Valley, high temperatures will remain quite mild (5 to 15 degrees above average) in the 50s and 60s.
Light snow will streak out along the Canadian border across North Dakota and northwest Minnesota during the day Sunday. Showers and maybe a few thunderstorms will increase along the front from the southern Great Lakes to the mid-Mississippi Valley and eastern side of Nebraska and Kansas.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, the most prominent cold front in quite awhile will sweep through the Plains and eventually the rest of the Midwest. Mild rains and some thunderstorms will precede the cold front. Strong northerly winds, bitterly cold temperatures and a burst of snow or sleet will make it feel more like January. Parts of the north-central states could see blizzard Tuesday into Wednesday.