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‘Sizzling’ Summer Ahead For Ohio: Farmers’ Almanac


OHIO — The Great Lakes region will see “warm, showery” weather this summer, though July and August could be boiling hot, according to a new prediction.

Ohioans should expect plenty of rain as spring turns to summer across the Buckeye State, according to the Farmers’ Almanac. Summer won’t officially start until June 21, with the solstice, and there could be plenty of thunderstorms along the way.

That phenomenon won’t be unique to Ohio though. Generally, storminess will mark the transition from spring to summer, especially along the Eastern Seaboard and the Great Lakes regions, according to the Farmers’ Almanac.

Summer will be “a hot one nationwide,” the Farmers’ Almanac said. The closest thing to a mild summer will be in New England and the Great Lakes region, but that prediction is based on a wave of cool air arriving in September, according to the Farmers’ Almanac.

According to the forecast, the dog days of summer in late July are expected to be “brutally hot,” with highs in the 90s and triple digits, and “blistering hot” temperatures are expected to persist over Central and Western states.

The worst of the heat should be over by mid-August, though, the almanac said.

Rainfall is expected to be about normal in the middle of the country, including in the Great Lakes and north and south-central United States; above normal in the Southeast; and below normal in the Northeast.

Drought conditions are expected to persist in the Southwest, where even the Desert Southwest monsoon rains aren’t expected to deliver any drought relief. The Pacific states will be unusually dry as well, according to the almanac.



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