A weather pattern more reminiscent of the middle and end of the summer will keep a large portion of the northwestern United States warm into the weekend while daily, drenching thunderstorms will roam the Southwest into next week, according to AccuWeather forecasters.
The warmth in the Northwest will be a continuation of a heat wave that began last week and has shattered numerous daily temperature records. However, some heat relief is in sight by late in the weekend and into next week as a cooler, more seasonable pattern returns to the region.
The Southwest has also been warmer than average as of late but will now also have to endure near-daily thunderstorm activity that could prove dangerous for outdoor activities. This weather pattern, which will last into next week, typically occurs later in the summer when the North American monsoon is underway.
For the better part of the last week, a ridge of high pressure across the West has helped deliver an unusual May heat wave to the Pacific Northwest and adjacent parts of Canada, and that pattern will persist for a few more days, according to AccuWeather forecasters.
“Temperatures away from the coast along the I-5 corridor in the Northwest will remain well above historical averages through Saturday,” said AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Heather Zehr.
In Portland, there were three consecutive days with record high temperatures from May 12-14, and for the first time on record in the month of May, there were four consecutive days where the mercury reached 90 or higher, breaking the old record of three consecutive days from May 6-8, 1987. One more day of record-challenging warmth is in store for Thursday while temperatures near or in the 80s will linger through Saturday.
Meanwhile, in Seattle, a typical May features only two days with high temperatures of 80 degrees or higher. So far this month, there have been five such days, including four consecutive days that set records from May 12-15. The mercury is forecast to come close to the 80s through Saturday before cooler conditions arrive, according to AccuWeather forecasters.
“Cooler air will arrive in the region as a large storm over the North Pacific slides closer to the West Coast,” added Zehr. “A piece of that will spin into the Northwest by Sunday, causing a substantial cooldown for western Washington and Oregon that will last into the start of next week.”
The historical average high temperature for mid- to late May in Portland is just 70 degrees while Seattle’s is just in the mid- to upper 60s.
A cooldown will be delayed for interior parts of the Northwest and into the northern Rockies, where temperatures will challenge records that are 10 to 20 degrees above the historical average and last into Sunday or Monday. This includes the cities of Billings, Boise and Salt Lake City.
Since the Northwest typically stays cooler year-round compared to other parts of the country, fewer homes have air conditioning units. According to the University of California at Berkeley’s Haas School of Business, only 53 percent of households in Washington state are equipped with air conditioners, the lowest rate of any state in the lower 48.
In addition to the heat in the Northwest, there have been large amounts of smoke in the upper atmosphere from massive wildfires in western Canada. The haze caused by the smoke has been enhancing sunrises and sunsets across the region.
While the typical monsoon season is still months away, residents in the Southwest are getting an early taste of it this week, as showers and thunderstorms have been erupting on a daily basis, and will continue to do so into next week.
“Slow-moving low pressure hovering over northwestern Mexico will pull moisture into the Southwest, all the way to the Four Corners region,” said Zehr. “This is leading to daily shower and thunderstorm activity all across the Southwest.”
“While areas from western Texas to eastern Arizona and northward into Wyoming are in the heart of this rainfall, isolated activity can occur as far west as the Sierra Nevada, as well as the mountains of Southern California,” added Zehr.
In Phoenix, 100-degree heat arrived almost right on schedule, with the first triple-digit day of the season coming back on April 30, compared to the average first date of May 2. Recently, there has been a string of 100-degree days, but temperatures are expected to drop slightly into the 90s, as cloudiness and the chance of thunderstorms expand late this week.
As outdoor enthusiasts return to the region’s parks and monuments in the warmer months, the thunderstorms, which can often pop up quickly and with little warning amid daytime heating, will pose hazards to those who can’t quickly seek shelter. Those threats include large hail, sudden wind gusts that can whip up dirt and dust, lightning and flash flooding from sudden, intense downpours.
On Wednesday, there were reports of 1.5-inch-diameter hail (the size of ping pong balls) in the mountains near Flagstaff and Prescott, Arizona.
Historically, May is the second driest month of the year in Phoenix and in general across the Desert Southwest, trailing only June. This is often due to a sprawling area of high pressure that sets up shop across the Southwest from the spring into the early summer, suppressing cloudiness and rain chances. The reverse is then true from midsummer through early fall, during the monsoon season, when low pressure and storminess dominate.
AccuWeather’s team of long-range forecasters, led by Senior Meteorologist Paul Pastelok, accurately predicted this early spell of shower and thunderstorm activity in the region in AccuWeather’s spring outlook. Despite the early activity, the traditional monsoon season is forecast to get underway later this summer, according to AccuWeather’s summer forecast.
“In the last two years, the monsoon started in mid-June,” said Pastelok. “This year, we expect a more typical, later start around the first week or two of July in southeastern Arizona, before it spreads out to the rest of the region.”
AccuWeather is also expecting this year’s monsoon to be less potent compared to recent years. “With the loss of La Niña conditions, this year’s season is expected to feature less frequent and less intense bouts of moisture compared to 2021 and 2022,” said AccuWeather Meteorologist Brandon Buckingham.
Produced in association with AccuWeather
Edited by Saba Fatima and Newsdesk Manager