Weather Underground midday recap for Friday,November 29,2013
The U.S. experienced relatively calm weather on Friday as the majority
of the country sat under high pressure systems. In the Southwest, high
surf advisories were issued along the southern California coast as an
area of low pressure drove light to moderate showers across the region.
Avalon, Calif., reported a midday total of 0.64 inches of rain, while
Santa Barbara, Calif., reported a midday total of 0.41 inches of rain.
To the north, an onshore flow along the coast of Washington triggered
light snow showers across the Cascades, while showers moved across
southern Washington. Little to no snow accumulations occurred as snow
turned into sleet during the late morning and early afternoon.
Meanwhile, a cold frontal boundary stretched across the Intermountain
West and into the southern Plains. Precipitation did not accompany this
frontal boundary on Friday, although cold temperatures and gusty winds
moved through the Rockies. Monarch Pass, Colo., recorded wind speeds of
41 mph, while Livingston, Mont., also recorded wind speeds of 41 mph.
Warm, muggy conditions pushed onshore from the Gulf of Mexico as a high
pressure system dominate the Gulf Coast and the Southeast. Brownsville,
Texas, recorded a midday high of 75 degrees, while West Palm Beach,
Fla., recorded a midday high of 78 degrees.
Parts of the upper Midwest and the Northeast experienced light snow
showers as a low pressure system trekked over the Great Lakes. The
Eastern Seaboard avoided wet weather on Friday.
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