Spring warmth can vanish fast, and we prove it with a real-time look at a wild temperature jump that briefly made the region feel like July. We break down how a southwest wind can spike readings near 80 and why a thermometer’s location matters, especially when it sits near a major roadway with constant traffic and extra heat. If you follow New Jersey weather, NYC weather, Long Island forecasts, or eastern Pennsylvania conditions, this is a practical reminder that “the number” depends on exposure, wind, and microclimates.
From there, we get into the Thursday forecast: rain moving in, temperatures dropping as the day goes on, and the possibility of wet snow mixing in later in the day or early evening as colder air arrives. We talk timing, what that means for accumulation risk, and why areas farther southwest like parts of the Shenandoah into Maryland and southwestern Pennsylvania can have a better shot at seeing accumulating snow while the metro mainly deals with a chilly, damp changeover.
We also run through the near-term outlook with a cooler but calmer Friday, a mostly sunny Saturday that could still see a quick early frontal pass, and another round of rain later Sunday into Monday before a sharper cold push midweek. If you’re traveling by air, we flag occasional showers and possible mixed precipitation aloft near the New York area that can slow operations, with potential delays at Newark, LaGuardia, and JFK, plus a fast check of conditions from Boston to DC and out to the West Coast. Subscribe, share this update with a friend who’s always “dressed for the wrong season,” and leave a review with your local high and what you saw outside.