Warm temperatures persist through tonight with most of the area only seeing lows in the middle 70's while some spots near the coast will barely make it below 80 tonight. pic.twitter.com/N6lNhBQuMH
— NWS Mobile (@NWSMobile) June 26, 2024
![](http://ec2-18-119-91-250.us-east-2.compute.amazonaws.com/uploads/Guy%20Brothers%20Roofing.jpg)
Warm temperatures persist through tonight with most of the area only seeing lows in the middle 70's while some spots near the coast will barely make it below 80 tonight. pic.twitter.com/N6lNhBQuMH
— NWS Mobile (@NWSMobile) June 26, 2024
Sunset Mobile,AL @spann @NWSMobile @rzweather @StormHour @ThomasGeboyWX @michaelwhitewx @KDanielCCI @AlanSealls @wkrgcaroline @WKRGEd @TaylorWVTM13 #alwx #sunset #mobwx pic.twitter.com/bGhDZbZd8a
— Ditto Gorme (@dittogorme) June 26, 2024
We’ll be watching two tropical waves that have chances of becoming named storms over the next week or so. Neither system poses an immediate threat to Alabama or Florida. pic.twitter.com/08rbi27ZId
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 26, 2024
Spotty showers and thunderstorms near Huxford, Poarch, Bradley, Escambia Farms, Munson, Choctaw Bluff, Wagerville, and Needham continue to drift slowly southward.
Storms will fade away after sunset. pic.twitter.com/HTOQKHfUvL
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 25, 2024
Widely scattered pop-up thunderstorms continue to develop and fade away across the region. Downpours are noted as of 4:39PM near Crestview, Niceville, Damascus, Wing, Uriah, Huxford, Alma, and Jackson.
More storms will likely develop over the next few hours. pic.twitter.com/45wMtNhc5v
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 25, 2024
The tropical wave in the eastern Caribbean Sea continues to flare with convection. The system has been branded as INVEST 94L. https://t.co/YaZ2qF5XSC
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 25, 2024
Brief thunderstorms continue to develop and fade away across south Alabama and northwest Florida. These downpours aren't lasting long for any one spot.
Storms have developed near Atmore, Poarch, Loango, Carolina, Dorcas, Brooklyn, Perdue Hill, and Suggsville. pic.twitter.com/UO5KwV7m9r
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 25, 2024
POP-UP STORMS DEVELOPING… Scattered thunderstorms are developing this afternoon across parts of south Alabama and northwest Florida. These storms are slowly drifting south.
A few storms have developed near Brooklyn, Dixie, Mossy Head, Gosport.
More storms are likely to develop over the next several hours.
Cumulus clouds have developed across much of the region on this Tuesday afternoon. Spotty showers and thunderstorms are likely to develop later this afternoon into the evening hours.
Not every community will have rain today, but some will. Be ready for possible downpours! pic.twitter.com/MTfnQdiqMk
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 25, 2024
HOT & QUITE HUMID AGAIN THIS AFTERNOON… Heat index values will again be excessively high this afternoon into the early evening hours!
HOT, HUMID, & P.M. STORMS THIS WEEK… Scattered thunderstorms will continue to be possible in each of the next 7 days, mainly in the afternoon and evening hours each day.
Looks like TODAY will feature the hottest temperatures out of the next 7 days, although quite frankly, each day will be hot and humid.
P.M. POP-UP STORMS TODAY; QUITE HOT & HUMID AGAIN… Scattered showers and thunderstorms will bubble up in the afternoon and evening hours on this Tuesday. Storms may fire up a bit later today (1-3PM) compared to yesterday when storms fired up in the 10AM to Noon timeframe. High temperatures will again be in the upper-90s with heat index values in the 105-115° range today. Take it easy if you have to be outside for extended periods of time today as we continue to be in extreme heat and humidity, even compared to our local standards that feature hot temperatures this time of year.
MORE OF THE SAME OVER NEXT FEW DAYS… Scattered P.M. thunderstorms will continue to be the norm over the next several days. High temperatures will continue to be in the 90s with morning lows in the 70s. This is the usual pattern this time of year. It is not uncommon for one spot to get an inch of rain while another location a mile down the road may not get any rain at all. That is the nature of these pop-up thunderstorms that mostly happen in the afternoon and evening hours each day during the summer months around our local area.
TROPICS: TROPICAL WAVE ENTERING CARIBBEAN SEA… The National Hurricane Center indicates a tropical wave currently located near the southernmost Lesser Antilles has a 20% chance of becoming a named tropical storm as it approaches the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico in about 5 days. The system is currently located in an environment where development is not anticipated in the eastern Caribbean Sea. Parameters will become slightly more favorable for development as the tropical wave approaches the western Caribbean Sea. Development may also be possible in the southwestern Gulf in the Bay of Campeche, even if development from this system does not happen in the western Caribbean Sea. This will be something to monitor over the next few days but nothing to stress over, for now.
TROPICS: GULF OF MEXICO CURRENTLY QUIET… The Gulf of Mexico has no active tropical storms or imminent threats at the moment. We will watch the aforementioned tropical wave as it approaches the southwestern Gulf in about one week.
APP… If you haven’t already, be sure to download the free RedZone Weather app to keep up with all the latest information on the world of weather in south Alabama and northwest Florida. redzoneweather.com/app is the link for the free download. Once you have the app downloaded to your iOS or Android device, be sure to visit the Alerts tab (lower right corner) and tap the large, yellow Alert Settings button to customize the alerts you would like to receive straight from me.
See all the details in your Tuesday morning RedZone Weather forecast video. Have a great day!
QUITE HOT TODAY WITH P.M. STORMS AROUND… Here are the two weather headlines for south Alabama and northwest Florida on this Tuesday:
1) HEAT + Humidity!
2) P.M. pop-up storms
Storms will increase in coverage locally after 2PM.
Sunset Mobile, AL @spann @NWSMobile @rzweather @StormHour @ThePhotoHour @ThomasGeboyWX @michaelwhitewx @KDanielCCI @AlanSealls @WKRGEd @TaylorWVTM13 @wkrgcaroline #alwx #mobwx pic.twitter.com/Ze98EhdAkb
— Ditto Gorme (@dittogorme) June 25, 2024
Another Heat Advisory is in effect from 10am through 7pm on Tuesday for much of the local area. Locations within the advisory could see heat index values rise into the 108-112 degree range. pic.twitter.com/abkHq5SvkL
— NWS Mobile (@NWSMobile) June 24, 2024
@rzweather 1/2 inch of rain (.52 on the machine) fell in North Crestview Florida on Monday afternoon thunderstorms 6-24-2024.
— Car 412 (@HRickover) June 24, 2024
Isolated storms have fired up in parts of Lowndes, Dallas, eastern Wilcox, and northeastern Butler counties in south-central Alabama. These storms are slowly moving south. pic.twitter.com/kiaGjMvvjd
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 24, 2024
Gnarly skies at NAS Pensacola earlier. Thanks to Chuck Mooney for the view! ⛈️ pic.twitter.com/lYaitbEPvF
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 24, 2024
Heavy rain associated with a line of thunderstorms is pushing south near Bayou La Batre, Bon Secour, Foley, Gulf Shores, Orange Beach, Lillian, Perdido Key, Pensacola, Gulf Breeze, NAS Pensacola, Navarre, Tiger Point, FWB, Eglin AFB, Niceville, and Destin. pic.twitter.com/oj9W6Ov3Si
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 24, 2024
Shelf cloud at Navarre, FL. @NWSMobile
Thanks to Heather Nicole for the view! pic.twitter.com/F9kZOY6rp1
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 24, 2024
Beautiful stuff down here in Fort Morgan, AL!@NWSMobile @spann @rzweather @WKRGEd pic.twitter.com/4VnVV17x94
— Tyler Smith (@TylerSmith_wx) June 24, 2024
Beautiful shelf moving towards fort Morgan, AL@NWSMobile @spann @rzweather @WKRGEd pic.twitter.com/wl7gHdkiOt
— Tyler Smith (@TylerSmith_wx) June 24, 2024
Storms have lined up this afternoon and are moving south.
Heavy downpours are expected shortly near Pensacola, Gulf Breeze, Navarre, Fort Walton Beach, Niceville, Destin, Bayou La Batre, Dauphin Island, Foley, Orange Beach, Magnolia Springs, Fairhope, and Gulf Shores. pic.twitter.com/GuyPrf1PKh
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) June 24, 2024