One storm continues to impact the east with rain and thunderstorms while another impacts the West with high winds and heavy mountain snow.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms will continue ahead of a cold front in the Southeast today. Locations from southeast Georgia to the eastern Carolinas could see some isolated severe storms with primarily a hail and wind threat.
Thunderstorms will also continue south through the Florida Peninsula after severe thunderstorms rumbled earlier from near Tampa to Orlando and the Space Coast. As the activity sinks south, isolated severe thunderstorms will be possible with wind, hail and possibly an isolated tornado.
Farther north, a slow moving upper-level system is bringing rain to portions of the southern Michigan and the Ohio Valley. The upper-level system heads east across the Ohio Valley into the Central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic by Wednesday. This will bring an end to the showers in the Ohio Valley during the day tomorrow, however clouds will likely linger over these areas.
The aforementioned upper system and an offshore surface low will keep it wet and cool across the Mid-Atlantic through Wednesday before things improve by Thursday. The surface low will also generate gusty winds across eastern sections of the Mid-Atlantic, especially along the coast. Rain totals including what has already fallen over portions of the drought areas may be an inch or more from Tuesday to Wednesday
In the West, a very sluggish storm will impact the region into late week.
Strong winds gusting between 40 and 60 mph will impact portions of California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico today into Wednesday. Blowing dust may lower visibilities in some locations. Wind advisories, high wind warnings, and blowing dust advisories/warnings are posted across some of these states.
Rain and mountain snow will impact much of the Intermountain West through at least Thursday. Colder air will filter in as the storm pushes farther east lowering snow levels along the way. Snowfall totals will be measure in feet across portions of the Northern and Central Rockies. The heavy snows will impact the Absaroka Range near the Wyoming/Montana border, the Tetons near the Wyoming/Idaho border and the Wasatch of Utah. Foot plus snow amounts will also eventually push into the San Juans of southwestern Colorado.
http://www.weather.com/newscenter/stormwatch/?from=hp_newsIt will be so much fun seeing how many of these assholes actually show up in a rain storm tomorrow.