Weather
Summer Weather Forecast For Tiverton-LC: See Daily Predictions
The private weather company AccuWeather has predicted how often Rhode Island will see 90-degree temperatures, and rain, this summer.
TIVERTON-LITTLE COMPTON, RI — With the official start of summer just weeks away, planning has begun for the residents of Tiverton and Little Compton who look forward to the warmer weather and increased opportunity for outdoor fun.
Specific, long-term weather predictions can help with that planning, and the private weather company AccuWeather has released its 2021 summer weather forecast.
Daily forecasts for Tiverton and Little Compton are listed until early August. After that, AccuWeather lists the historical average temperature for the rest of the summer.
Find out what's happening in Tiverton-Little Comptonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Expect the summer to kick off with warm temperatures and mostly sunny skies. According to the current forecast, rain is likely about once per week, with intermittent thunderstorms. Heading into July, expect temperatures to climb into the 80s, with more chances for thunderstorms.
It's unclear at this point if Rhode Island will face the same extreme heat and drought experienced last summer. There isn't a lot of rain in the forecast just yet, and no 90-degree days are currently predicted.
Find out what's happening in Tiverton-Little Comptonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Across the northeast, the season is expected to kick off with lots of thunderstorms, with the highest summer heat coming a little later.
Nationally, AccuWeather predicts an eventful summer similar to the 2020 season, which brought record-breaking deaths and damage in the form of wildfires and hurricanes.
Meteorologists are also expecting the return of derechos, a weather phenomenon sometimes referred to as an “inland hurricane.” The term became more widely known about last summer when one swept through Iowa with winds faster than 100 miles per hour on August 10.
“We are still very nervous about the possibility of derechos developing based on the pattern that we’re forecasting” Paul Pastelok, AccuWeather’s chief long-range forecaster, said in a statement.
This year, the most extreme weather is expected in the early fall, Pastelok added.
Although the number of tropical storms is predicted to be down from recent years, AccuWeather says tornadoes are likely to be on the rise from May until July.
Pastelok said anywhere from 1,300 to 1,400 tornadoes could be reported by the end of the year, a slight increase from 2020.
“Across the Plains, we’re still going to be watching for the possibility of a flare-up of storms, mainly central areas on north during the month of May, June and early July,” Pastelok said in a statement.
These storms are expected to extend farther east than normal, Pastelok added, due to drought conditions that range from Montana to the Texas Panhandle.
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