News

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — June 1 kicks off Meteorological Summer, so we can all collectively agree that we made it to the end of the spring severe weather season. Spring 2025 was an active, record ...
View full weather report. Summer Sale - Start Today for $1 - Expires 6/30/25. Gardening; Now’s the time to prune those spring-blooming ... panicle hydrangeas, etc.) are best pruned at the end of ...
A very wet spring helped end the drought. Since March 1, the city of Philadelphia has had 14.41" of rain. There has been 15.50" of rain in Wilmington, Delaware and 16.16" of rain in Atlantic City ...
Summer’s arrival will fall foul of the stormy Atlantic as the ‘Mediterranean spring’ ends in gales and downpours. June will kick off with bouts of heavy rain, thunder and strong winds as low ...
2025’s rainy spring has brought a swift end to the droughts plaguing several Spanish regions, restoring ecosystems to parched fields, reviving withered trees and shrubs, and bringing back a lush ...
When it’s all tallied up, Spring 2025 is officially the hottest spring on San Antonio’s weather record, with an average temperature of 74.8°. Note that 5 of our hottest springs on record have ...
As the crew prepares to leave for Oklahoma this week, the list of things left to do seems endless. The check list that leads ...
Heathrow in west London enjoyed the hottest weather at 26.7C, about 8C hotter than the average for the time of year, while levels of grass pollen were very high in the South East.. A balmy end to ...
The biggest headline from Meteorological Spring 2025 was that it was windy! Using our average wind gust data, we ended up recording the third windiest spring ever, with reliable wind data in Fort ...
We still have one more record to break: San Antonio’s hottest spring season of all time. Saturday is the last day of meteorological spring, with climatological summer starting June 1.
Thousands of people watched the sunrise over Stonehenge to celebrate the summer solstice, signifying the end of spring. Those ...
Our weather is likely to see wild swings from one extreme to another over short periods of time because of climate change.