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Today's Weather in Baltimore 03/21/26 Sunny Skies High 63 Degrees Rain Expected Sunday Night
Published 1 month ago
Description
Hey everyone, I'm Dustin Breeze, your AI meteorologist! I process data faster than storm clouds roll in, so you get accuracy you can trust.
Alright Baltimore, let's talk about what's happening in your neck of the woods today. We're looking at mostly sunny skies with a high near sixty-three degrees and north winds at five to seven miles per hour. Pretty nice spring day if you ask me. Tonight, it stays partly cloudy with lows around forty-eight degrees and light variable winds. You could say the forecast is looking pretty breezy... and I would know!
But here's where things get interesting, folks. Sunday starts off partly sunny with highs climbing to seventy-six degrees, which is absolutely delightful. But then Sunday night, we've got a rain system moving in. There's a seventy percent chance of precipitation with rain and thunderstorms expected after two in the morning. We're talking rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter inch, though thunderstorms could pack heavier amounts. That system sticks around into Monday morning with rain likely before eight a.m., a sixty percent chance of precipitation, and north winds gusting up to twenty-three miles per hour.
Once that system clears out, it's smooth sailing. Tuesday brings sunny skies with highs near forty-nine degrees. Wednesday warms up to fifty-eight degrees with partly sunny conditions. Things stay pleasant through the week with highs in the upper fifties and sixties.
Now let's hit the Weather Playbook segment. Today I want to talk about wind shear and why it matters for thunderstorms. Wind shear is simply the change in wind speed or direction at different altitudes in the atmosphere. When you have strong wind shear, rotating updrafts in thunderstorms can organize into super cells, which are the most dangerous storm types. These beauties can produce large hail, damaging winds, and tornadoes. It's like nature's ultimate weather machine, and understanding shear helps us predict when storms will really intensify.
Your three-day outlook: Friday and Saturday stay dry with temperatures in the upper fifties. By next week, we're looking at another chance of rain Thursday night into Friday, but nothing severe on the horizon.
So Baltimore, don't forget to subscribe to the podcast so you never miss an update. Thanks for listening, and remember, this has been a Quiet Please production. You can learn more at quietplease.ai. Stay weather-ready out there!
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Alright Baltimore, let's talk about what's happening in your neck of the woods today. We're looking at mostly sunny skies with a high near sixty-three degrees and north winds at five to seven miles per hour. Pretty nice spring day if you ask me. Tonight, it stays partly cloudy with lows around forty-eight degrees and light variable winds. You could say the forecast is looking pretty breezy... and I would know!
But here's where things get interesting, folks. Sunday starts off partly sunny with highs climbing to seventy-six degrees, which is absolutely delightful. But then Sunday night, we've got a rain system moving in. There's a seventy percent chance of precipitation with rain and thunderstorms expected after two in the morning. We're talking rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter inch, though thunderstorms could pack heavier amounts. That system sticks around into Monday morning with rain likely before eight a.m., a sixty percent chance of precipitation, and north winds gusting up to twenty-three miles per hour.
Once that system clears out, it's smooth sailing. Tuesday brings sunny skies with highs near forty-nine degrees. Wednesday warms up to fifty-eight degrees with partly sunny conditions. Things stay pleasant through the week with highs in the upper fifties and sixties.
Now let's hit the Weather Playbook segment. Today I want to talk about wind shear and why it matters for thunderstorms. Wind shear is simply the change in wind speed or direction at different altitudes in the atmosphere. When you have strong wind shear, rotating updrafts in thunderstorms can organize into super cells, which are the most dangerous storm types. These beauties can produce large hail, damaging winds, and tornadoes. It's like nature's ultimate weather machine, and understanding shear helps us predict when storms will really intensify.
Your three-day outlook: Friday and Saturday stay dry with temperatures in the upper fifties. By next week, we're looking at another chance of rain Thursday night into Friday, but nothing severe on the horizon.
So Baltimore, don't forget to subscribe to the podcast so you never miss an update. Thanks for listening, and remember, this has been a Quiet Please production. You can learn more at quietplease.ai. Stay weather-ready out there!
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI