James Spann: Dry Friday ahead for Alabama before showers return

SUNNY, COOL DAY: Temperatures are in the 50s over north Alabama this afternoon; the southern counties are in the 60s. The sky is sunny with a few high clouds passing by. Tonight will be mostly fair with a low between 34 and 42 degrees.
Friday will be dry; with a partly sunny sky, most places will see a high in the mid to upper 60s. Clouds increase Friday night.
THE ALABAMA WEEKEND: A surface front will drift into the state and become stationary, meaning the weekend will be mostly cloudy with some rain at times Saturday and Sunday — not a washout at all, and there is no risk of severe storms, probably little thunder. Highs will be in the 60s. Rain amounts over the weekend will average one-half inch, with potential for heavier totals over the northern quarter of the state.
NEXT WEEK: Unsettled weather will continue Monday through Wednesday with some risk of showers daily. The weather will be mild, with highs in the 60s and 70s. Cooler, drier air will filter into the state on Thursday and Friday, but there’s still no sign of any bitterly cold Arctic air around here for the next seven to 10 days. We also are seeing no sign of severe storms through the next 10 days.STORM SURVEYS: National Weather Service survey teams from Birmingham and Mobile have now confirmed nine tornadoes from the Tuesday night event across Alabama. The strongest is an EF-3 that moved through Washington County in southwest Alabama; it originated in Greene County, Mississippi, and was on the ground for 19 miles. It produced damage at Fruitdale and Tibbie. An EF-2 moved through the Flatwood community just north of Montgomery, where three people were killed.
Survey work will continue for the next few days.
ON THIS DATE IN 1970: Four tornadoes affected east-central Wisconsin during the morning. The strongest tornado, an F3, formed at 10:15 a.m. near Medina in Outagamie County. The twister moved northeast at 50 mph and destroyed 20 barns and five houses.
ON THIS DATE IN 2006: A winter storm produced more than 6 inches of snow along a 1,000-mile-long path from central Oklahoma to northern Michigan.
BEACH FORECAST: Click here to see the AlabamaWx Beach Forecast Center page.
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