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take a little break there. Tomorrow, things will start to change. Now since we've had a, what we call a closed or cut off low along the coast, that's caused below average temperatures, there was even places that got rain day before yesterday in the foothills as moisture comes around that low. Very thick marine layer, in fact there's places along the coast right now that have drizzled because of the thick marine layer, about 2,600 feet deep, and that's deep. And that's going to keep the coastal areas clear. So by tomorrow what happens is that low pressure area that's been persistent gets pushed offshore and combines with another low pressure area that sits offshore. So it opens up, moves offshore, San Francisco gets connected with the other low, and it sits there. And so what that does, that's going to start to allow the desert southwest high, or that high pressure that sits to the west, or to the east of California, to start slowly moving westward. But it won't move westward enough because of that low off the coast to where it causes a heat wave. What it does, it warms temperatures up starting tomorrow and into the first of next week to just about normal. Mid-90s and overnight lows continuing in the upper 50s and 60s. So it doesn't get hotter than normal. It stays right around normal. And then by Wednesday and Thursday of next week there's another piece of energy that comes out of Alaska, low pressure area, that cools things off back down into the low. By the end of next week, let me take a break.
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