34 states that will have unusually hot falls this year
Persistent humidity and high temperatures can "finish" the fall foliage.
We hate to be the wearer of bad news, but he looks like Pull time Do not happen soon for a large part of the East and Southwest coast, as well as parts of the North West.
Accuweather meteorologists predict a slower transition to fall this year, with temperatures up to three degrees higher than historical averages due to "persistent summer heat, tropical storms, hurricanes, forest fires, [and] smoke mist". While the midwesterors will look for warmer diapers, people along the coasts could sneak in a few additional beach days in September.
In relation: 6 regions where the fall foliage will reach this month .
"The areas in the middle of the country, including Kansas at Wisconsin, will experience very pleasant and fall calm sections which will be perfect for fairs, festivals and outdoor events", accuweather will direct the long -range expert Paul Pastelok said in a press release shared with Best life. "Other areas of the East and the West of the United States will be faced with heat and humidity of the tenacious summer that stuck around this fall."
Technically, summer is not finished before the Equinox fall on Monday, September 22. However, cafes already deploy their fall menus , department stores are growing large knits and leather boots, and pumpkin beers are now at the pressure.
But while our grocery carts and our cupboards could scream in the fall, mother nature says the opposite.
According to the accuweather report, "hot and humid air will hold firm in the east of the United States until the beginning of autumn, delaying the real arrival of weather conditions in the shape of a fall." Hot than normal temperatures are expected in the "California in Texas and North in Oregon and Idaho" areas.
And the forecasts do not seem better for the east coast, which is in a "hot and sticky" start to die for.
"A slower transition to the fall is expected along a large part of the east coast of Carolines towards certain parts of the Northeast and even New England. There will be heat and humidity that hangs when children start to return to school," added Pastelok.
From September to November 2025, temperatures should be higher than historical averages in 34 states:
- Washington
- Oregon
- Montana
- Idaho
- California
- Nevada
- Utah
- Colorado
- Arizona
- New Mexico
- Texas
- North Dakota
- South Dakota
- Nebraska
- Louisanna
- Mississippi
- Alabama
- Georgia
- Florida
- South Carolina
- North Carolina
- Eastern Tennessee
- Virginia
- Maryland
- Pennsylvania
- new York
- New Jersey
- Massachusetts
- Vermont
- New Hampshire
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- Maine
- Rhode Island
In relation: 4 regions where the hurricanes season will be the worst this year .
The battery of battery coincides with the seasonal temperature prospects of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The agency's climate prediction center (CPC) says there is a 50 to 80% chance This fall temperature will be "probably above" from the average in the southwest, the middle of the Atlantic, the northeast and southern Florida.
In an interview The Washington Post , Climatologist at Towson University Michael Allen Written the extension of summer temperatures to global warming.
"We know that the [latitude] of the sun does not necessarily change," said Allen. "Most changes are caused by the global warming due to burnt greenhouse gases."
Some cities are stuck in the stifling heat longer than others. By comparing the hottest 90 days between 1965 and 1994 and 1995 to 2024, the following cities showed the most important increases in summer days, by The Washington Post ::
- San Francisco
- Miami
- New Orleans
- Houes
- Tampa
- Los Angeles
- McAllen, tx
The overvalued reception of summer can also lead to a "dull autumn foliage" - one of the most awaited periods of the year.
"The heat, drought conditions and even forest smoke will limit the dynamism of colors in a large part of the interior of the west. Trees stressed in the lower altitudes could lower the leaves a week or two earlier than the average of this fall," said Pastelok.
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