Another dreary day is in store today in the Mid-Atlantic and parts of the Northeast thanks to the consecutive storm systems revolving toward eastern Canada.
Early today, most precipitation will have already fallen in the Northeast, with the older low-pressure system already reaching Canada by the early morning. However, remnant snow and some wintry mix will fall in the interior Northeast and areas downwind of the Great Lakes.
Further south, a weak clipper storm rips from the Lower Midwest into the Mid-Atlantic as the day moves on. Although a wintry mix could speckle the higher peaks of central Appalachia, light to moderate spring rains will be the primary precipitation poised to drop through the eastern middle latitudes.
Aside from isolated thunderstorms popping in a South Florida afternoon, the far northern Rockies will be the final corridor of active weather today. This will bring mainly morning showers and a minuscule wintry mix from far northern Washington into parts of Montana under a stalled frontal system.
Over half of the nation will bite back into warm temperatures today as spring warmth settles into the weather pattern. Widespread 80s and 90s break into the Desert Southwest, central Florida, and the southern Plains while 60s and 70s surge into the South, the central Plains, the Intermountain West, and the Pacific Coastline.
Slightly cool 40s and 50s run the southern Great Lakes, northern Plains, Rocky mid-elevations, and most of the Northeast. In a major turn away from winter, only isolated Rocky peaks, the far northern Plains, and the interior Northeast will hold into the 30s.