Miami forecast predicts warm, sunny weather with low rain chances and temperatures in the high 70s to low 80s.
The peak of heat for the Miami area should be 2 p.m. Saturday when Weather Underground forecasts 83 degrees. Miami Beach, with sea breezes acting as a coolant, should be 79 at that hour, according to the weather service’s hourly forecast graph.
Clouds and light rainfall expected Thursday into Friday in South Florida from the frontal system lingering just offshore over the Atlantic, said Robert Molleda, the National Weather Service in Miami’s weather coordination meteorologist. That front will move east on Friday as the colder air swoops in.
A dense fog advisory went into effect late Tuesday and will be in place until 8 a.m. for inland Broward and Miami-Dade counties, the National Weather Service said. In Miami, visibility was down to 1.7 miles and 2 miles in Key West at 6 a.m. Normal visibility is 10 miles.
Home security video from Wednesday in Miami Beach shows a large, seemingly cold-stunned iguana hitting the concrete with a loud thwack after falling from its perch in a tree.
Batten down the hatches: a cold front is coming through, and it’s bringing its good friend Strong Wind with it. The National Weather Service out of Wilmington has
Parts of the Florida Panhandle were coated in a blanket of snow with temperatures at 25 degrees on Tuesday while Miami had temperatures in the 80s, seemingly two different worlds. From Pensacola down to Miami, there was a difference of 55 degrees, according to the National Weather Service Miami .
Miami, meanwhile, hits a low of 60 degrees at 6 a.m. Wednesday from this front. But cooler air will work its way to South Florida and frost and freeze warnings could be issued over the weekend for inland southeastern Florida, the National Weather Service ...
A biting cold front is sweeping through Florida this week. Will it get chilly enough for frozen iguanas to fall from trees in Palm Beach County?
Miami endures front with showers before weekend warmth; NWS predicts sporadic rain and cooler temps, with a dryer, warmer weekend ahead.
The nation's next significant storm could blast millions of people with snow, severe weather and flooding starting Wednesday, while dangerous snow squalls associated with a clipper system sweep across the Northeast Tuesday morning.
Weather data from cities across the state suggest that while temperatures are gradually rebounding, variations persist in different regions.