It will be another warm, dry, and windy day tomorrow. Peak wind gusts may push 25-30 mph from the South-Southwest late morning through the afternoon. That is also when relative humidity will be at the lowest, approaching 30%. Brush and field fires may be hard to contain in such conditions.

Our next cold front will swing in from the Northwest Monday afternoon. This will bring scattered showers and the potential for an isolated storm. Highest coverage of rain, including some steady pockets, will be possible toward and beyond midnight, possibly lasting into early Tuesday morning. Up to 0.5" of rain may be possible for isolated locations, but most in the area will not see that much.

Behind this front, we will see a drop in temperatures back toward average. Believe it or not, we should be closer to the mid or upper 60s this time of year. We will drop at least closer to average for a few days next week. But the taste of fall is short-lived as we are back in the 70s again by the end of the week.

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