Persistent upper level trough that has dominated over the Northeast
US will gradually migrate westward, allowing for the Bermuda High to
build back westward. Nonetheless, with a predominantly meridional
flow, meteograms from global ensemble guidance suggest that most
days would feature rather seasonable temperatures (upper 70s to low
80s) with no strong signal for big warmups. Of course, if we were
able to get a more zonal component on one of these days, we could
pop into the mid to upper 80s but it is nearly impossible to
determine which day could feature summer heat. In addition, with the
meridional flow comes higher dew points and the risk for training
storms (and potential flooding concerns) along the areas of
convergence. This would suggest near normal to above normal
precipitation especially towards our western zones