Good Wednesday all-
An AIR QUALITY ALERT is up for the shoreline from 11AM-11PM
Today is going to be almost a carbon copy of yesterday, albeit a bit warmer and more humid as temps will enter the low 90s for most people today. Tomorrow afternoon, a cold front will be moving through with showers and thunderstorms that'll knock down the heat for Friday and Saturday, but not much further than that. Labor Day itself looks like an absolute scorcher, so be prepared for that!
In the Atlantic- Fred is spinning in no-mans land in the east central Atlantic, and poses no threat to land. Additionally, a storm may form early next week near the islands, but it'll be way out there and we'd have plenty of time to watch.
In the Pacific- TD 14-E remains the only game in town.
Today in weather history- September 2, 1935- The strongest hurricane to ever make a US landfall strikes the Florida Keys with 185mph winds, a remarkable feat indeed. This occurred before hurricanes were named, so it's generally referred to "the Labor Day Hurricane of '35"...so this is what people are referring to if you hear that.
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