Sun and rain: See Cheboygan County's weekend forecast here
Cheboygan County can expect some sun and some rain this weekend, with temperatures forecast in a range of 71 to 79 degrees, according to data from AccuWeather.
You can search for more information on hourly, daily, monthly weather forecasts and current air quality conditions for your location here.
Here's a breakdown of the weekend forecast for Cheboygan County:
Friday is forecast to have a high of 75 degrees with a low of 45 degrees and partly cloudy at night. Expect the daytime temperature to feel seven degrees hotter at 82 degrees.
Throughout the day, wind will be blowing west-northwest at 5.8 miles per hour.
Friday's forecast high is above average for this time of year. The 30-year average maximum temperature for June 6 is 74 degrees. This internationally agreed-upon average represents climate data from 1991-2020 and is recalculated every 10 years.
The forecast low is one degree cooler than the established normal of 46 degrees for this time of year. Historically, this day is usually a bit wet, with an average 0.09 inches of precipitation.
Saturday is forecast to have a high of 75 degrees with a low of 52 degrees and partly cloudy at night. Expect the daytime temperature to feel five degrees hotter at 80 degrees.
Throughout the day, wind will be blowing northeast at 6.9 miles per hour.
Saturday's forecast high is above average for this time of year. The 30-year average maximum temperature for June 7 is 74 degrees.
The forecast low is six degrees hotter than the established normal of 46 degrees for this time of year. Historically, this day is usually a bit wet, with an average 0.09 inches of precipitation.
Sunday is forecast to have a high of 77 degrees with a low of 52 degrees and cloudy, showers around late at night. Expect the daytime temperature to feel the same as forecast at 77 degrees.
There will be moderate rain during the day, with less than an inch of rain expected.
Throughout the day, wind will be blowing southeast at 9.2 miles per hour.
Sunday's forecast high is above average for this time of year. The 30-year average maximum temperature for June 8 is 74 degrees.
The forecast low is six degrees hotter than the established normal of 46 degrees for this time of year. Historically, this day is usually a bit wet, with an average 0.09 inches of precipitation.
Monday is forecast to have a high of 71 degrees with a low of 50 degrees and a shower early; partly cloudy at night. Expect the daytime temperature to feel two degrees hotter at 73 degrees.
There will be light rain during the day, with less than an inch of rain expected.
Throughout the day, wind will be blowing west at 9.2 miles per hour.
Monday's forecast high is below average for this time of year. The 30-year average maximum temperature for June 9 is 74 degrees.
The forecast low is three degrees hotter than the established normal of 47 degrees for this time of year. Historically, this day is usually a bit wet, with an average 0.09 inches of precipitation.
In Michigan, daily weather forecasts can be unreliable at times due to the volatile nature of lake effect — cold air passing over warm water that causes extreme low or high temperatures — and lack of weather-measuring coverage in the state, according to Dr. Jeffrey Andresen, the State Climatologist for Michigan.
The USA TODAY Network is publishing localized versions of this story on its news sites across Michigan, generated with data from AccuWeather. Please leave any feedback or corrections for this story here. This story was written by Ozge Terzioglu. Our News Automation and AI team would like to hear from you. Take this survey and share your thoughts with us.
This article originally appeared on Cheboygan Daily Tribune: Sun and rain: See Cheboygan County's weekend forecast here June 6-9, 2025

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
June 2025 full moon: It's been years since you've seen one that looks like this
June 2025's full moon is coming to a sky near you in the early morning hours of June 11. And while all June full moons ride low in the sky, spring's final full moon this year will be the lowest full moon in almost 20 years. The strawberry moon will rise on the evening of Tuesday, June 10, and will shine into Wednesday morning, a "sight that can be seen around the world," said Brian Lada, an AccuWeather meteorologist. June's full moon is called the strawberry moon because it signaled to some Native American tribes that it was the time of year to gather ripening wild strawberries, according to the Old Farmer's Almanac. Notably, this year's strawberry moon could actually have a reddish glow, due to how low it will sit in the sky and the haze from wildfires. June's full moon will reach peak illumination on June 11, 2025, at 3:44 a.m. ET, the Almanac said. But it will look plenty full as it rises the evening before, June 10. The strawberry moon is the most colorful of the year because it takes a low, shallow path across the sky, said Bob Bonadurer, director of the Milwaukee Public Museum's planetarium. The June full moon's arc across the sky means moonlight must travel through more of the Earth's atmosphere, which can give it a colorful tint. "So there's a chance it will actually look a little bit reddish or pink, and, and so that may also be part of the origin of the name," Chris Palma, professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State University, told AccuWeather. Smoke in the atmosphere from Canadian wildfires could also act to create a colorful moon. According to EarthSky, the moon will the lowest in the sky that it's been since 2006. "That's because we're in the midst of a major lunar standstill," which has to do with the moon's orbit around the Earth. "It's all about the inclination of the moon's orbit, which undergoes an 18.6-year cycle," noted EarthSky's John Jardine Goss. "The cycle happens because the moon's orbit is being slowly dragged around – mostly due to the pull of the sun – every 18.6 years." This year's major lunar standstill culminated in January 2025. And we're still close enough to it that the standstill is affecting the path of this June full moon, EarthSky said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: A notable June 2025 Strawberry full moon visible on June 11
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Radar astounds scientists, chasers as 'monster' tornado approaches city
It has been a stormy start to June across the central United States, and one of the strongest storms of the week spawned a large tornado on Thursday afternoon that stunned storm chasers on the ground and people watching events unfold online. AccuWeather Meteorologist and Storm Chaser Tony Laubach filmed a large wedge tornado grinding through farm fields near Morton, 50 miles northwest of Lubbock, Texas. Meanwhile, research scientists from University of Oklahoma had set up its high-resolution RAXPOL radar nearby. What the radar operators and storm chasers saw astounded them. A hurricane-like swirl with an eye appeared on the radar as the large tornado touched down. This is what a classic hook echo looks like in high resolution. "You are looking at the best image of tornado that radar can show you in 2025," said Texas Meteorologist Collin Myers on Facebook. "You can see the individual structure and circulation of the main tornado vortex and centrifugal bands emanating out from the common center. It looks like a mini-hurricane," he added. Indeed, tornadoes and hurricanes are low pressure centers at different scales, both with a calm eye and dangerous eyewall where winds ramp up suddenly to unimaginable speeds. "I knew this was a monster looking at it... there was no question," Laubach recalled. "I was just so glad this was out in the middle of nowhere, but at the same time, terrified for the city of Lubbock cause it was coming for them." RAXPOL stands for rapid X-band polarimetric radar. The unit is similar to the nation's network of NEXRAD radars that you're used to seeing on TV and the Internet, but this one is mobile, higher resolution, and can be quickly deployed near a severe storm for research purposes. The radar images are provided in real-time on the RAXPOL website. As it moved east, the storm rolled a semi truck near Whitharral, and one person was injured when a building was damaged by another tornado near Reese Center, Texas. Fortunately for Lubbock, the last tornado appeared to lift just before it arrived, though wind damage and flooding were reported over the western half of the city. The local National Weather Service office may survey the damage to determine the tornado's rating on the Fujita Scale.


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Law Would Make Most National Weather Service Workers Hard to Fire
A bill introduced in the House of Representatives on Friday would make it harder to fire most employees of the National Weather Service and give the agency's director the authority to hire new staff directly, months after it lost nearly 600 employees to layoffs and retirements as part of the Trump administration's sweeping cuts to the federal work force. The Weather Workforce Improvement Act would designate certain positions within the agency as critical to public safety. The bill's sponsors say it would have protected meteorologists, as well as other roles within the agency, from the cuts this year. Those jobs include the people who specialize in hurricane forecasts and issue warnings about tornadoes and flash floods, as well as the employees who physically maintain things like weather models or launch weather balloons. 'Weather forecasting is not partisan,' said Representative Mike Flood of Nebraska, one of the bill's sponsors. 'Everyone supports the National Weather Service. Everyone relies on them, whether they realize it or not.' The Weather Service has suffered from short staffing for years, long before the Trump administration's cuts, but that became more severe this spring, as hundreds more employees began retiring or were forced out. At the same time, the country has faced a nonstop pace of deadly and expensive weather disasters, including the California wildfires, several tornado outbreaks and severe hailstorms. For the first time in the agency's history, some forecasting offices no longer had enough staff members to operate overnight, and others had to curtail the twice-daily launches of weather balloons, which collect data on atmospheric conditions that feed into forecast models. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.