
Newsroom
A seasonal low-pressure system, teamed up with an unstable air mass, is busy shaping the day’s plot. Translation: sunny start, stormy interludes, and just enough breeze to test your patience.
Today: The morning will pass itself off as clear, though the western coasts and the north may show off some extra cloud cover. By noon and into the afternoon, the mountains, inland, and northeast areas will host isolated showers, with the occasional thunderstorm crashing the party. Winds begin undecided (3 Beaufort), then settle southwest to northwest at a light-to-moderate 3-4 Beaufort, with the south turning it up to 4-5 Beaufort later in the day. Seas stick to “slightly rough,” a maritime shrug. Temperatures: 34°C inland, 30°C along the west and southwest coasts, 31°C for the rest of the shoreline, and a cool 25°C in the mountain peaks.
Tonight: Mostly clear skies will return, though don’t be surprised if a stray low cloud drifts in. Winds lean northwest to northeast at 3 Beaufort, just light enough to be unhelpful. Seas calm down to “calm to slightly rough.” Temperatures dip to 20°C inland, 21°C along the coasts, and a brisk 15°C up high.
Wednesday: Another bright opening, but afternoon clouds, mainly in the mountains, may squeeze out isolated showers.
Thursday & Friday: Mostly clear, though early afternoons could still deliver a dose of extra mountain cloud cover.
Temperatures: Rising gently until Friday, staying slightly above what the climate books say is normal, because “average” is never this summer’s style.