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Did you bundle up a bit more today? You weren’t alone. Tomorrow should bring closer-to-average mildness with mostly sunny skies. Our dry spell continues for now, with rain chances remaining elusive until late in the week. (But maybe the lack of rain-producing clouds will help with any early-sunset blues?)
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Through tonight: With clear skies, and as north-northeast breezes probably fully calm near dawn, heat should effectively dissipate. This means chilly low temperatures in the upper 20s to mid-30s (downtown).
View the current weather at The Washington Post.
Tomorrow (Monday): Sunshine reigns. As temperatures rise toward their afternoon maximums in the 52- to 60-degree range, south-southwesterly breezes may gust to around 15 mph. Overnight, a few clouds and persistent breezes help buoy low temperatures from falling below the mid-30s to low 40s.
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See Molly Robey’s forecast that runs through midweek. Come chat tonight! Our Sunday Sunset Live Q&A will start at 4:56 p.m. on YouTube, Facebook and X.
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Tropical Atlantic briefing — one area of interest
One area of disturbance that has a moderate chance of developing over the next seven days is being monitored by the National Hurricane Center. Notice the orange-shaded area in the southwestern Caribbean Sea around and south-southwest of Jamaica. If this disturbed area develops into a tropical storm with sustained winds of at least 39 mph, it would get the next storm name on the 2023 list: Vince.
Back in the D.C. area, meaningful rain chances this workweek may not appear until Thursday night into Friday.
Be sure to come chat tonight during our weekly Sunday Sunset Live Q&A. We’ll examine all the forecast components of the week ahead, including rainfall estimates. Tune in at 4:56 p.m.
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