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The 21st Night Of September

| September 21, 2017 @ 3:23 pm

Anyone remember the song by Earth, Wind, and Fire?

“Do you remember the
21st night of September?
Love was changing the minds of pretenders
While chasing the clouds away

Our hearts were ringing
In the key that our souls were singing.
As we danced in the night,
Remember how the stars stole the night away”

When these lyrics come to mind every year, you know fall is here. The autumnal equinox is tomorrow at 3:02p CT. But, we will have to wait a while for a “fall feel” to our weather.

RADAR CHECK: As expected, showers and storms across Alabama today are small, and very isolated. They are moving southward, and will dissipate once the sun goes down.

Away from the showers, temperatures are mostly in the 87-90 degree range, about 5 degrees above average for mid to late September in Alabama.

TOMORROW THROUGH THE WEEKEND: No change, as the upper ridge over the eastern U.S. holds. Partly sunny, very warm days, fair nights, and isolated afternoon and evening showers and thunderstorms. The chance of any one spot getting wet each day is only about one in five. Highs remain mostly in the upper 80s.

FOOTBALL WEATHER: For tomorrow night’s high school games, it will be warm and humid with temperatures falling from the low 80s at kickoff, into the upper 70s by the final whistle. Just a slight risk of a shower during the first quarter.

Alabama will be in Nashville Saturday to take on the Vanderbilt Commodores (2:30p CT kickoff)… the sky will be mostly sunny with a kickoff temperature near 88 degrees… falling into the mid 80s by the fourth quarter. Just a small risk of a brief shower.

Auburn is also on the road; they play Missouri in Columbia Saturday evening (6:30p CT kickoff)… we expect a clear sky with temperatures falling from 85 degrees at kickoff into the upper 70s by the final whistle.

And, UAB is also traveling this weekend; they play North Texas Saturday evening (5:30p CT kickoff) in Denton. The weather will be dry with a fair sky; about 90 degrees at kickoff, falling through the 80s during the game.

NEXT WEEK AND BEYOND: We will roll with a persistence forecast for much of next week with highs well up in the 80s, but global models continue to advertise a pattern change in about 7-8 days. This will bring a cold front in here toward the end of next week with a chance of showers and storms, followed by much cooler air as October begins.

EYES ON MARIA: Maria remains a category three hurricane with sustained winds of 120 mph, north of the Dominican Republic. It will move more northward in coming days, passing east of the Bahamas this weekend.

There is a good chance Tropical Storm Jose, still spinning off the New England coast, will leave a weakness in the sub-tropical ridge, allowing Maria an escape path off the East Coast of the U.S. Most global models agree with this scenario, but it is still too early to completely rule out a brush with the U.S. East Coast.

Maria should slowly weaken over the next five days; it should be a category one hurricane by early next week between the Outer Banks of North Carolina and Bermuda.

BEACH FORECAST: Click here to see the AlabamaWx Beach Forecast Center page. The Beach Forecast is partially underwritten by the support of Brett/Robinson Vacation Rentals in Gulf Shores and Orange Beach. Click here to see Brett/Robinson’s Hot Deals now!

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Look for the next Weather Xtreme video here by 7:00 a.m. tomorrow…

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About the Author ()

James Spann is one of the most recognized and trusted television meteorologists in the industry. He holds the AMS CCM designation and television seals from the AMS and NWA. He is a past winner of the Broadcast Meteorologist of the Year from both professional organizations.

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