CLEVELAND, Ohio — Northeast Ohio residents will have to dig deep to find a complaint about Monday’s forecast. The National Weather Service is calling for sunny skies, a high near 60 degrees, and mild wind. That’s a near-perfect day for March. It still will be chilly overnight, with lows and wind gusts up to 23 mph. However, skies will be clear.
The Northeast Ohio region will be seeing warmer temperatures starting next week. Pictured is an aerial view of Cleveland's Scranton Peninsula with the skyline in the background.Aerial view of Cleveland's Scranton Peninsula with the skyline in the background John Pana, cleveland.com
Ice currently attached to the shore will be prone to breaking away from the shoreline,' the National Weather Service warns.
Ohio and nearby areas to experience fair weather and warmer temperatures, with a cold front coming by Tuesday.
CLEVELAND — Cleveland’s 2024-25 meteorological winter brought neither record-breaking cold nor extreme snowfall, instead settling into a season that fell within the middle of the city's historical averages.
Northern Ohio is set to experience a significant windstorm midweek, following a brief calm period, according to NWS Cleveland.
The National Weather Service and at least one local fire department is warning people to stay off the ice on Lake Erie Monday as conditions could be “dangerous.”
Windy weather is common in Cleveland, but when should you expect the strongest winds? Meteorologist Anthony Copeland explains.
La Niña is a recurring climate pattern that occurs when trade winds that push warm water west from South America toward Asia are stronger than usual. Colder water rises to the surface to replenish the warm water pushed off to Asia, affecting weather patterns in the U.S.
Erie is second by a slim margin, 0.6 inches, to Syracuse, New York, for the Golden Snow Globe title through March 6.