Weekend starting off with partly sunny skies
Today: Partly sunny, high 67
Tonight: Mostly clear, low 48
Sunday: Isolated showers, high 70 (54)
Memorial Day: Partly cloudy, high 66 (58)
Tuesday: Rain showers, high 73 (59)
Wednesday: Chance of t-storms, high 74 (58)
The holiday weekend begins with partly sunny skies as cool temperatures stick around. The good news is that a center of high pressure south of Ohio will keep weather locally dry continuing a decent break from the rain.
During the overnight hours conditions are expected to stay calm and cool. Temperatures will fall to the mid-upper 40s. This is roughly 10 degrees below normal for this time of year. Otherwise, the weather tonight will stay fairly uneventful.
Sunday brings in a few more clouds during the day. A few areas may even see an isolated chance for rain showers by the afternoon. Most areas, however, will stay dry. Highs will reach the upper 60s. Calmer conditions and more sunshine return by Memorial Day Monday, but cooler than average temperatures will stick around.
More widespread rain makes its way back to central Ohio by Tuesday. The rest of the week will see at least some chances for scattered showers and storms every day. This includes the chance for rain during most of the Memorial Tournament. Temperatures will stay on the cooler side but slowly approach seasonable by next weekend.
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 This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.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
Flooded in Butler County? Here's how to report damage
BUTLER COUNTY, Kan. (KSNW) — Officials in Butler County and the City of El Dorado are asking residents and businesses impacted by recent flooding to report damages and request help for any unmet needs. Emergency management teams have been conducting on-the-ground assessments in flood-affected areas this week, but say they want to ensure no one is being overlooked—especially those who may need help beyond what insurance can cover. Thousands of I-135 drivers affected with Wichita closure this weekend Unmet needs may include cleaning out flooded basements, removing damaged carpets or drywall, and hauling away debris. Officials say identifying those needs now could help connect affected residents with disaster relief organizations or donors willing to assist. To streamline the process, the county has created two ways for people to report their damages: Online Form: Residents can complete an online form, which includes details and photos of the damage. Access the form here. By Phone: Residents can also call United Way's 2-1-1 line to report damage. Operators are available Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Officials say that immediate responses may not be possible, but all reports will be reviewed and used to coordinate possible assistance. Residents are also encouraged to share the information with neighbors who may have been affected. For more Kansas news, click here. Keep up with the latest breaking news by downloading our mobile app and signing up for our news email alerts. Sign up for our Storm Track 3 Weather app by clicking here. To watch our shows live on our website, click here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Staying muggy with some showers today
Typical Saturday–clouds and showers! It is a dry, albeit muggy start with patchy fog. We will see showers develop later this morning and continue through the afternoon. This will definitely affect some outdoor plans, so my apologies in advance. It will be cooler, but still humid with highs in the low 70s. At least Sunday will be drier! I don't think we'll see a lot of sunshine tomorrow since the clouds will drag their heels, but there will be some breaks and blue sky with lower humidity. I've introduced a few showers into the forecast for Monday. And of course, we are still tracking some afternoon thundershowers on Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday look like the best days of the week! Today: Cloudy with showers/storms developing late morning. Cooler, still humid. Highs in the low 70s. Tonight: Mostly cloudy with patchy fog. Lows near 60°. Sunday: Partial sun. Less humid, highs in the mid to upper 70s. Monday: Mostly cloudy with a few spotty showers. Highs in the low 70s. Tuesday: Mainly cloudy with a round of afternoon showers/storms. Highs in the low 70s. Wednesday: Brighter and warmer. Highs in the low 80s. Thursday: Nice and bright. Highs in the low to mid 80s. Friday: More clouds with a chance of showers. Highs in the low to mid 80s. Saturday: Watching for a chance of showers. Highs in the mid 70s. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ask A Met: Why Can't You Bomb A Tornado?
This week Morning Brief reader Lynda Buckler writes, "I've wondered why a plane couldn't fly above a tornado cloud and drop something into the cloud to disperse the funnel? I read of tornados traveling miles and miles with destruction in their path…so?" Senior Digital Meteorologist Jonathan Belles: Well, just to begin historically, I'm not aware of anyone attempting to divert a tornado, but we have diverted rain clouds. In fact, this has famously been done around the Olympics. Basically, the idea is that you want good weather for the Olympic games, so we want the rain that would normally fall to fall out somewhere else. China has done this a couple of different times. What they're doing is seeding clouds. Basically, a plane injects molecules into the clouds to make them heavier and cause the water molecules to fall out sooner. Typically, they're 100 miles upwind of where the storm would normally go. They seed the clouds and make them rain out before they get into the area that would be impacted. In theory, I think it's possible to apply that kind of technology to a tornado. You're just trying to get the storm to rain itself out. Tornadoes need thunderstorms. Thunderstorms need rain. And rain, obviously, needs moisture. You're trying to take one of those ingredients away from those thunderstorms, so that they can be less successful at producing a tornado later on. The problem with a tornado is a much, much smaller scale. They don't last very long in a thunderstorm or a big thunderstorm complex. Tornadoes may only last a couple of minutes. Sure, a rare one may go for more than 100 miles, but you still have to scramble the plane, arrange all of the ingredients to get the cloud seeding done, and get the pilot into the correct spot. So it's very, very tricky, I think. In the film Twisters in 2024, part of the plot is some kind of idea about being able to stop a tornado. Basically they are forcing the molecules to be too heavy, so that they'll fall out. The video effects in the film are a little pseudoscience-y. They show the actual thunderstorm complex doing, like, a little donut and falling to the ground. It's not probably how that would end up working, but, basically the idea is the same as the cloud seeding in China that I mentioned. If we somehow got 50 years down the line, totally hypothetical here, into the pattern of seeding every storm or every storm system that came across the Plains to produce tornadoes, we would be producing rain in the Rockies or fundamentally changing the climate of some other location. Do you want all of that water coming down into Denver, because we want to possibly stop a tornado in Kansas? Probably not. Somebody's going to be mad about that. We'd be adding rain somewhere and taking it away from somewhere else. So, we'd just be moving the problem from one place to another, right? But I do think this will be an ongoing discussion for the end of time. Do you have a question to ask the meteorologists at Write to us at and we'll pick a new question each week from readers to answer.