Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Chilly New Year’s Eve ushers in another cold week

- By Bill Kearney and Shira Moolten

The chill of New Year’s Eve will be a harbinger of more cold weather to come this week in South Florida.

The last day of 2023 brought highs in the low 70s, which will be indicative of the first week of 2024. Daytime highs will remain in the low 70s near the coast, and cooler in the western suburbs through Wednesday, with nighttime temperatur­es in the low to mid 50s.

The National Weather Service projects that Thursday will be warmer, but will also carry the possibilit­y of showers as moist air moves in from the south.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Jennifer Simmons said temperatur­es will drop another 10 degrees from the 60-degree mark after the clock strikes midnight on New Year’s Eve, down to the low 50s on the coast and mid 40s inland.

“The low will be later into the evening,” she said. “Around 3 or 4 in the morning (New Year’s Day) for the coolest temperatur­es.”

The New Year’s Eve weekend temperatur­es were the chilliest of the season, though not quite as brutal as the cold snap that took over South Florida last January, when temperatur­es plunged into the 40s.

Looking ahead

The first week of 2024 will be dominated by a series of weak cold fronts that will continue to bring cool air, but not enough moisture for rainfall. They will, however, bring cloud cover and thus slightly warmer nights.

A third front will arrive Thursday, and a chance of showers, Simmons said. The front will have traveled over the Gulf of Mexico, where it will pick up moisture, making precipitat­ion likely, but just how much remains to be seen.

 ?? CAVARETTA/SUN SENTINEL JOE ?? Beachgoers bundle up on a chilly New Year’s Eve morning on Sunday.
CAVARETTA/SUN SENTINEL JOE Beachgoers bundle up on a chilly New Year’s Eve morning on Sunday.

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