More Severe Storms Friday Night
Incoming! Another wave of storms folks. Some will experience severe weather. Large Hail, Damaging Winds, even a few Tornadoes are possible. Flash flood watch is in effect too. Tracking. Skies will clear by Noon Saturday and the rest of the day will be dry! Mike June 6th, 2025
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Turning partly sunny, warm and humid today…Rain returns tonight…Will the rain stop on Sunday?
Less than a tenth of an inch of rain fell overnight. Today expect a mix of sun and clouds with a low chance of a stray shower. A great day for outdoor activities including the pool and the Troy Strawberry Festival. Showers and storms redevelop overnight. Rain may even be heavy at times. Sunday starts out wet. The weather should improve some as we go into the afternoon with some dry time, but scattered showers may still be around at times. TODAY: Mix of sun and clouds. Warm and humid. High 80 TONIGHT: Showers and storms likely with heavy rain possible. Low 64 SUNDAY: AM showers and storms likely. Scattered PM showers. High 78 Another chance of showers and storms on Monday. We finally get a stretch of dry weather Tuesday through Thursday. Highs in the 70s and 80s. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Spotty showers knock temperatures back into the low 70s, wildfire smoke returns
Winds from the northwest will pull wildfire smoke back into Minnesota skies over the weekend, as well a chance for rain Saturday afternoon. Smoke will hang around until Monday, impacting the air quality. Another wave of upper-level energy will swing by on Saturday, creating a chance for pop-up showers and storms throughout the afternoon. A chance for a thin line of rain arrives overnight Saturday with a quick-moving cold front. The cold front will knock temperatures back with highs back into the low 70s on Sunday. After some sunshine to start Sunday, more clouds and spotty showers drop in Sunday evening that will last through Monday morning. Monday will make for our coolest day with highs only reaching the 60s. This unsettled pattern looks to break by Tuesday with high pressure building at the surface and aloft. This will promote more sunshine and a warming forecast as highs climb back into the 80s by Wednesday. There is the potential for more storms late next week, but there is some uncertainty with timing. Stay with WCCO as meteorologists fine tune this forecast.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Severe Weather Expected Across Much of the U.S. on Saturday
After a run of severe weather this week, another day of thunderstorm activity was on tap for the Mid-Atlantic, the Southeast and the Southern Plains on Saturday, and the severe weather was expected to persist through the weekend, forecasters said. On Saturday, the threat will be focused over the Southeast, with the highest risk over northern Mississippi and northern Alabama, where clusters of thunderstorms could kick up powerful, damaging winds. When these clusters of thunderstorms become organized, they can 'create their own environment and they become more powerful than a typical thunderstorm,' said Scott Kleebauer, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center. There will also be a low threat of tornadoes on Saturday, 'but the main threat will be wind and that will be across the northern half of Alabama and Mississippi,' he said. On Sunday, the highest area of risk shifts into the southern Plains, especially the Texas Panhandle into western-north Texas and southwest Oklahoma, where thunderstorms could deliver strong winds and large hail, with a moderate risk for tornadoes. Lubbock and Amarillo in Texas and Lawton, Okla., all fall within areas with an enhanced risk of thunderstorm activity. 'I would say the best bet for tornadoes on Sunday would be the Texas Panhandle,' Mr. Kleebauer said. Forecast risk of severe storms for Sunday Some Moderate High The severe weather is being driven by a large and strong storm system moving eastward and interacting with a slow-moving weather front, stretching from the southern Plains through the Ohio Valley. The front is expected to remain nearly stationary over the coming days, said Jennifer Tate, a meteorologist at the Weather Prediction Center. As warm, moist air flows northward into the front, conditions will be favorable for the development of severe thunderstorms. 'That flow coming in from the Gulf, that can bring moisture and instability that are needed to produce those storms,' she said. The setup also brings a risk of flash flooding, especially in areas already saturated from recent rainfall, where repeated rounds of storms are expected. 'With the storms being slow-moving, then there can be multiple rounds of storms affecting the same areas,' Ms. Tate said. 'It makes the soils pretty wet, and then you get another round and that can lead to more flooding.' Flash flood risks will linger. On Saturday the threat falls across southeastern Oklahoma, Arkansas, northern Mississippi and western Tennessee. On Sunday, it shifts into north Texas and south Oklahoma. A gradual improvement in conditions is expected early next week, although some storm activity may still continue in the region.