By Alex Sosnowski, Expert Senior Meteorologist
March 31,2014; 8:08PM,EDT
As tens of millions of people bid good riddance to March, spring will be busting out all over during the first week of April in the South, Northeast and part of the Midwest.
Some people have described this March as being a penguin, lion, polar bear and even a stubborn mule.
"Who cares what March came in like or is going out like," AccuWeather Chief Meteorologist Elliot Abrams said. "The simple fact that it is departing is wonderful in itself."
The surging warmth will help lawns green up, buds to push out and blossoms to burst forth. People will be able to shed winter coats and break out short sleeves. The weather will be much more favorable for outdoor sporting activities ranging from jogging and bicycling to baseball and soccer.
As a storm stalls over the Central states with rounds of severe weather much of this week, a circulation around the storm will push warmer air into most places east of the Mississippi River.
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The pattern will send temperatures to near 80 degrees Fahrenheit in Birmingham, Ala., Atlanta, Raleigh, N.C., and Richmond, Va., during the middle and latter parts of the week. Temperatures will climb well into the 80s F in Columbia, S.C., and Savannah, Ga.
Highs will be in the 70s F most days around Nashville, Tenn., and Louisville, Ky.
Farther north, most days will feature highs in the 60s to near 70 F around Washington, D.C., to Cincinnati. Highs will be in the 60s F for at least a couple of days from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia and New York City.
Multiple days with highs in the 50s F are forecast from Chicago to Detroit and Boston. In this swath, a push of cooler air will sweep eastward and is likely to keep the warmup at bay, but temperatures will still be significantly and consistently higher than they have been during much of March.
Temperatures averaged 4 to 8 degrees Fahrenheit below normal over a large part of the Midwest and Northeast during March. Many areas in the South averaged 2 to 4 degrees Fahrenheit below normal this past month.
Some showers and thunderstorms are projected to push eastward from mid- to late-week from the Ohio Valley to part of the Northeast.
At the end of the week, there may be a round of strong to locally severe thunderstorms from the mid-Atlantic to the Southeast as the slow-moving storm from the Central states picks up forward speed.
Chilly weather is forecast to return later in the weekend into next week from the Upper Midwest to the Northeast and interior South.
"If there is a zone that stays chilly more often than not through much of April, it will be the area from the northern Plains to the Upper Midwest and interior Northeast," AccuWeather Long Range Expert Paul Pastelok said. "The Southwest will have more days with above-average temperatures than below-average temperatures during April, and warmth will build quickly over the Southwest."
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15h- Cory Morrison · Follow · Internship- Filing/Labelling/General Assistant with Industrial Supply Products at Independent Distributors Inc.Very nice day here in Ontario with mild temps and loads of sunshine. I just wish these mild temperatures would STAY! The 45 day forecast where I live isn't calling for anything warmer than 11C (52F) at ALL for the entire month of April when the average temp for the month is around 12C (53-54F), and it almost always gets to the 20'S (70'S) at least ONCE in April. Even in the first half of May, they aren't even calling for 60's (Temps above 15C). Haven't seen anything like this!
Now I know the 45 day forecasts don't mean much but they do show signals that this significant below seasonal temperature pattern isn't coming to an end any time soon. I am glad WINTER'S OVER, I just want this below seasonal temperature pattern to end soon because it's been stuck in much of Eastern North America since late October! - Melanie Kadash Feretich · Bloomsburg University of PennsylvaniaIt's about time it got nice out! I'm going outside to go to the bathroom. Lookout below!
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