Come to think of it, Minnesota sees a large volume of whine-worthy weather, no question: frost in late August makes for great watercooler babble, the cold does last an awful long time at this latitude, and no, there is nothing more irritating than seeing fresh snow fall on a freshly mowed (green) lawn in late April or May. Annoying? Yes. Cataclysmic - Apocalyptic? No. Most of the time nature is irritable, not demonic enough to actually kill you, just annoy you half to death.
Can you imagine tracking a 400 foot tall wall of flames advancing across the map, plumes of smoke, fire and ash that produce hellish "tornadoes" of flame? One minute: blue sky, palm trees. The next minute: horizontal winds blowing ash and flaming cinders, screeching fire trucks, screams of people trying to evacuate. The fires gripping the Los Angeles are not the classic Santa Ana fires triggered by air howling down the canyons toward the Pacific. This is the result of an extended drought, too much fuel/brush burning, and no good way to stop the flames in time. What firefighters and homeowners really need is a decent size tropical storm or hurricane to quench the flames. That's where Jimena may come in: monstrous, borderline Category 5 hurricane Jimena now steamrolling north, toward Cabo San Lucas. After roughing up the picturesque Mexican fishing village by midweek the soggy remains of this (weakening) hurricane are forecast to spread north, right up Baja Mexico, and it's conceivable that moisture leftover from this tropical system could spark some badly-needed rains across southern California by the weekend. Stranger things have happened.

In stark contrast to the raging fires, surging seas and horizontal rains in the forecast from southern California on south to Cabo - Minnesota's weather looks downright tame this week, dry, seasonably warm, no drama - nothing severe, fine weather for the Minnesota State Fair (and the start of school across the state). If anything it may be a little warm and stuffy in some of those classrooms, the mercury closing in on 80 in time for the Labor Day weekend. Any showers and storms should slosh off just south/west of Minnesota this week - I don't see any significant chance of getting wet until sometime Sunday or Monday (Labor Day). The GFS computer model is hinting at a cool frontal passage on Labor Day, maybe a couple hours of PM showers and T-storms. At least it should be warm enough for the lake or pool - one last crazy splash. Daytime highs approach 80 by the weekend, not exactly Dog Day material, but warm enough. The way this "summer" is going, I no longer take 80 for granted.
Could it be that 80 is the new 90?
Sorry - I think I got a little too much sun yesterday.
Paul's Outlook
Today: Sunny, distractingly nice. Wind: SW 10-15. High: 75
Tonight: Clear, not as cool as recent nights. Low: 51
Tomorrow: Sun fading behind high clouds, still lukewarm. High: 76
Thursday: Mostly sunny, mostly pleasant. High: 78
Friday: A mix of clouds and sun, great way to start the holiday weekend! High: 77
Saturday: Lingering sun, probably the brightest, driest day of the holiday. High: near 80
Sunday: Partly sunny, isolated shower or T-storm possible. High: 81
Monday (Labor Day): More clouds, haze and humidity, more numerous showers, T-storms. High: 78
Tuesday: Clearing, turning cooler and drier with partial clearing. High: 74
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