
A low-pressure system off the coast of California continues throwing our way, digging deeper into the state and bringing more thunderstorms and periods of heavy rain to southern and central Utah.
The bottom line? The flash flood risk continues in southern Utah, and storms push further into central Utah today. The weather warms up and dries out by the weekend.
There is a flash flood threat for parts of southern Utah, especially in slot canyons, normally dry washes, streams, creeks, and underpasses. If you’re planning on heading out to any of our outdoor recreation areas, it would be best to reschedule if possible.
Wet weather could make it as far north as Utah County and the Uinta Mountains, but the bulk of the precipitation will stay around and south I-70. Meanwhile, the Wasatch Front is looking at a mix of sun and clouds with dry skies.
Temperatures won’t stray too far from where they were yesterday, but northern Utah looks to warm slightly while the south shaves off a couple of degrees. That’ll spell daytime highs in the upper 70s to low 80s in the north, low to mid 70s in the south, and 80s for the typically warm spots.
On Friday, that moisture will push in further to include northern Utah in the fun, but by then it will have lost most of its steam, so thunderstorms become more isolated in nature and won’t dump as much heavy precipitation.
As the moisture content goes down, we’ll see our temperatures going up. Highs return to the mid-80s for most and mid-90s for warm spots to close out the workweek, but the weekend is forecasted to bring 90s and 100s back to the Beehive State!
Stay weather-aware, especially if you’re in southern and central Utah today.
We’ll keep you posted on the latest developments in our 4Warn Weather forecast, both on-air and online, we are Good4Utah!
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