
The Weather Man Podcast, I talk about weather!
SCROLL DOWN FOR THE LATEST !...Weekly news on relevant and interesting weather topics, news and personalities. We explain and discuss Tornadoes, Hurricanes, winter snow and ice storms, heat waves, cold waves, regular rainstorms, and how it matters to our homes, cities, states, country and the world. We'll talk about weather all around the world and the people who work 24/7/365 to warn, report, forecast, and archive all that happens weather-wise! Hosted by Certified Consulting and Broadcast Meteorologist Steve Pellettiere in the New York/Northeast region. The "Jersey Weatherman" will entertain, inform and amaze you with factual information, not only about the weather but about everything "UP" that he has experienced in over 45 years of weather and science casting.
The Weather Man Podcast, I talk about weather!
Weather Watch: Northeast Rain Continues
Hi, this is meteorologist Steve Pelletieri and I am the weatherman. Thanks for checking into theweathermanpodcom On your Tuesday. It's the sixth day of the month of May 2025, and the wet weather continues across the mid-Atlantic and the northeast. The setup on the weather chart shows a couple of areas of low pressure, one across the eastern Great Lakes and the other one, located right over central and eastern Pennsylvania and northern Maryland and Delaware, continues to do a slow, gradual drift towards the east by northeast. The couple of frontal systems associated with the system looks like conditions will be overcast, with about an 80 percent probability of rainfall from Baltimore up to Philly, to New York City and all the way up to Boston and even coastal Maine. Areas of rainfall are also expected across much of Pennsylvania, just about much of Pennsylvania, just about all of it, and some heavier rainfall in western New York State, central Ohio and southern portions of the Michigan area and southern Michigan near Detroit. Southward all the way to Toledo, also expecting rain and quite a bit of rainfall. Coast of Texas and Louisiana Gulf Coast extending all the way up into North Texas, oklahoma and even into the mountainous regions of southern portions of Montana through Wyoming and Colorado. West Coast is looking dry at this point, but those persistent areas of low pressure. It's going to be one more day of complete overcast and the possibility of some rain, drizzle and fog and the possibility of those thunderstorms as that front moves through. By tomorrow the situation starts to improve in New York, with a little bit of rain showers early but then becoming partly sunny and temperatures generally ranging between 70 and 75, which is pretty close to normal for this time of year. That type of weather pattern continues into Thursday with a slight chance of a shower, but Friday a better chance of showers, but then some drier, nicer weather coming in for this upcoming weekend in May.
Speaker 1:If you are flying on this Tuesday. Of course the Newark area because of FAA controller problems there and some problems also with communications and also radar, they have extensive delays into the Newark area almost four hours, especially with the IFR weather expected once again today and tonight. So it's going to be really tough in and around the Newark area. Check ahead. You're also finding some isolated delays in JFK and of course in LaGuardia too. Boston area, also IFR, with rainy conditions A little bit better in DC and also in Dulles, and Central and South Florida are looking pretty good.
Speaker 1:Atlanta is going to be dry, as will be Charlotte, however. Rainy conditions in Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth, with some locally severe weather from San Antonio northward right up through Austin and then possibly into Central Texas over the next 24 to 36 hours. Some heavier rains across Central and western portions of Colorado into Wyoming. It looks like a few light showers expected across mostly northern Arizona and northern New Mexico over the next 24 hours as well. Dry conditions over the west coast. I'm your host, steve Pelletier, and I am the weatherman. Hope you have a great day today. Talk to you first thing tomorrow, on Wednesday. See you then.