8:07AM March 4, 2026
A few showers may happen this weekend and into early next week. Warm temperatures are set to continue. Highs will be in the 80s into next week. https://t.co/TIi2LDUrPt
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) March 04, 2026
A few showers may happen this weekend and into early next week. Warm temperatures are set to continue. Highs will be in the 80s into next week. https://t.co/TIi2LDUrPt
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) March 04, 2026
PASSING CLOUDS & WARM TEMPERATURES TODAY AND THURSDAY… Warm conditions will persist on this Wednesday with afternoon highs projected to be near the 80 degree mark today. Patchy fog this morning will burn off by 9AM. Skies will be mostly sunny this afternoon with an increasing https://t.co/VZzKFbD94n
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) March 04, 2026
PASSING CLOUDS & WARM TEMPERATURES TODAY AND THURSDAY… Warm conditions will persist on this Wednesday with afternoon highs projected to be near the 80 degree mark today. Patchy fog this morning will burn off by 9AM. Skies will be mostly sunny this afternoon with an increasing amount of cumulus clouds this evening. Sunset happens at 5:49PM today. Isolated areas of rain will become possible later this week and into the weekend, however the overall coverage of showers and storms will likely remain limited.
ISOLATED SHOWERS POSSIBLE THIS WEEKEND… Moisture values in the atmosphere will increase this weekend, paving the way for a few widely scattered showers on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. I expect the bulk of the rain and storms to happen in areas to our west. If you have outdoor plans this weekend, I would strongly advise maintaining your plans. Rain is expected to be isolated in nature. Any showers that happen Friday and Saturday, specifically, probably won’t last long in any one location.
SEVERE STORMS TO OUR WEST IN THE DAYS AHEAD… Multiple days of severe storms are expected to happen across the southern Great Plains in the days ahead. Parts of Texas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas are involved in multiple severe weather risk zones. Friday, in particular, has the potential to be quite active across parts of those states.
APP… If you haven’t already downloaded the RedZone Weather app, now is a great time to do that. redzoneweather.com/app is the link to the free download. Once you have the RZW app installed on your iOS or Android device, be sure to visit the Alerts tab to turn on the specific notifications you’d like to receive. All notifications are handcrafted by me. No automation and we promise not to bug you!
See all the details in your Wednesday morning RedZone Weather forecast video. My next forecast video will be posted by 7:15AM tomorrow morning. I will have updates posted throughout the day, as needed, in the RedZone Weather app.
Partly cloudy skies and overall nice weather are expected across south Alabama and northwest Florida on this Wednesday. High temperatures will be in the low 80s.
Enjoy the day! 👍 https://t.co/vZl2tNt0rU
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) March 04, 2026
RT @Jeremy_Walker5: @NWSMobile @ThomasGeboyWX @WKRGEd @rzweather @AlanSealls @spann @GarofaloWX
Eclipse pics this morning were a no go. T…— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) March 04, 2026
RT @NWSBirmingham: Today marks the seven-year anniversary of the March 3, 2019 Lee County tornado. This EF-4 tornado carved a near 27-mile…
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) March 03, 2026
You may look at the local radar (classic reflectivity view – what most people think of when I say “radar”) and think “Oh, there’s a couple of rain showers near Sellersville, Whitfield, and Berrydale.”
Using correlation coefficient, however, we see these are smoke plumes from https://t.co/yfR8MUNlsK
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) March 03, 2026