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A hot start to October will greet the Bay Area, and some won’t feel relief for a week


The onset of the first full month of autumn will bring with it red-hot temperatures in the Bay Area, according to the National Weather Service. The bon voyage to the month that says goodbye to summer wasn’t set to be much cooler.

“It still appears that Tuesday and Wednesday this week are going to be the hottest days,” NWS meteorologist Dalton Behringer said. “But the rest of them are going to be pretty warm, too, and we’ll feel the change starting Monday.”

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The blistering conditions are expected to lift the thermometer into the mid-to-high 90s in the hottest spots Monday and then into triple digits at least until Thursday, according to Behringer. Temperatures are expected to max on Wednesday, when they climb to at least 105 in the hottest inland areas.

it won’t be much cooler elsewhere. In the South Bay, Morgan Hill and San Jose are expected to reach at least 96 degrees on Monday and are likely to surpass 100 on Tuesday and Wednesday. San Mateo and Oakland are forecast to be in the upper 80s on Monday and the mid-90s by mid-week. Temperatures are expected to surpass 90 in San Francisco on Tuesday.

Overall, Behringer said temperatures will run 15-25 degrees higher than their average figures.

“Yes, that’s right. It’s gonna be that hot,” Behringer said. “We’ve got high pressure aloft, and we’ve got the upper low pressure that cooled it off over the weekend moving out.”

A heat advisory was set to go into effect for the entire region and Central Coast at 11 a.m. Monday and expected to remain in place at least through Wednesday. A Spare the Air Alert also was in place.

Behringer said the pattern is also “causing a weak off-shore flow (Monday) morning, and that’s what’s enhancing the heat and the temperatures, especially along the coast.”

The off-shore winds — winds blowing toward the water instead of in from it — usually factor into dangerous fire conditions, and Behringer said some areas of the region could receive a red flag warning for fire danger before the week is over. Those areas likely would be in higher elevations and isolated, he said.

“Right now, we’re flirting with red-flag conditions,” he …read more

Source:: The Mercury News – Entertainment

      

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