Plain-language summary:
The weather pattern looks mostly benign for the foreseeable future, though still with variations between occasional hot and humid days (e.g. Monday and likely next Sunday) and cooler days (e.g. Friday). Most days will be mostly dry with decent sunshine, though showers and thunderstorms are likely on Tuesday, though west of Maine, the timing late in the night or early in the morning will preclude severe thunderstorms. Showers and thunderstorms are also likely next Sunday or following Monday, though with somewhat uncertain timing, with them also being possible but more scattered on Thursday night into Friday. A few days of dry weather with a gradual warmup but no extreme heat is likely through the middle of the following week.
Meteorological discussion:
Unexpectedly cool and cloudy today, hot and humid Monday, then showers and thunderstorms Tuesday
It's been unexpectedly cool and cloudy in most of the region today as low-level moisture trapped underneath an inversion has led to persistent stratocumulus clouds, though it is finally clearing from west to east. It will turn hot and humid tomorrow with weak southerly flow, with a sea breeze keeping coastal areas cooler. A disturbance will bring a round of showers and scattered thunderstorms fueled by the heat and humidity late Monday night in eastern Ontario and northwestern New York, moving east to Maine by Tuesday afternoon. Any severe thunderstorms appear to be isolated especially west of Maine, where the early morning timing, when instability is the lowest, does not favor severe thunderstorms.
| Source: Penn State Meteorology |
| Source: TropicalTidbits |
Still warm and moderately humid Tuesday and Wednesday, then notably cooler and showery late Thursday into Friday
Behind the disturbance and its weak cold front, it will still be warm and very humid Tuesday and moderately humid on Wednesday, but a stronger upper-level trough will bring some scattered showers and thunderstorms late Thursday into Thursday night before ushering a stronger cool air mass straight from the north for Thursday night into Friday. This trough, possibly cutting off into a closed upper-level low, is aided by the building upper-level ridge in the western U.S. (slightly positive PNA), opposite of earlier this past week. The cold air aloft and showers will keep most areas cool on Friday, especially along and east of the Green Mountains, mostly below 75F (24C). Canadian surface high pressure will build in Friday night, leading to cool nighttime lows for the beginning of July, perhaps getting below 50F (10C) in normally cooler spots.