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Noon Look at Alabama’s Weather: Sun Up North, Partly Sunny to Mostly Cloudy Elsewhere

| March 10, 2019 @ 12:13 pm

Our cold front lies just northwest of I-59 at the noon hour on this Sunday. It will continue pushing southeastward through the day and will end up spending some time along the Gulf Coast through Tuesday. It will come back Wednesday as a warm front as a powerful warm advection pattern sets up over Alabama and the Deep South. But that is another story.

Skies are clear north of a line from Sulligent to Cullman to Fort Payne. Partly sunny conditions exist across Central Alabama as a mix of high and low clouds traverse the area.

The showers have really dissipated over the past couple of hours. A few showers are over East Alabama, across southern Cherokee, Calhoun, and Cleburne Counties.

There is a marginal risk for severe weather across the far southern counties of the state for cities like Evergreen, Greenville, Monroeville, Andalusia, Troy, Ozark, Dothan, and Eufaula. Damaging winds will be the main threat, and even that is a small one.

Temperatures are in the lower and middle 60s across much of the area.

The airmass will not change radically across the state as the front putters through. Lows tonight will be in the upper 40s and lower 50s across the Central part of the state. Highs tomorrow will be pretty close to normal for this time of year, in the lower 60s north, middle 60s north Central and upper 60s to lower 70s in the US-80 corridor from Demopolis to Montgomery, and Columbus.

We should be mainly dry into Wednesday when increasing moisture will set the stage for some showers by afternoon. Rain will increase Wednesday and will be likely Thursday and Thursday night. It now looks like the rainfall totals with the next system will be a little less than we were looking at earlier. Totals will average one inch through Friday.

Category: Alabama's Weather, ALL POSTS

About the Author ()

Bill Murray is the President of The Weather Factory. He is the site's official weather historian and a weekend forecaster. He also anchors the site's severe weather coverage. Bill Murray is the proud holder of National Weather Association Digital Seal #0001 @wxhistorian

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