. . pete: there it is. we asked, you delivered. yesterday was k-9 anthem day. today is the felines. they got their shot, they delivered. we have a squirrel in there. rachel: i will be hoppest, pictures kept coming up, that is really cute, super cute. when the pictures coming up, i asked the producers did we about to msnbc to get these? this is a dog channel and a baby channel. it worked. pete: halfway through i looked at you, this is a stretch. i don t i this the viewers will like it. joey: those are perfect. rachel: did dave give you that? on your own? joey: i have my own dad jokes. pete: thank you very much. no stock photos in there the a all. those are all viewer photos. yesterday, when i said send cat photos. i was inundated, i forwarded over to ariel who put this together. rachel: my mom is cat person. pete: gwen, one of our cats, storm and trooper. joey: cat people are surprisingly pretty normal. rachel: the cat people. [laughter] joey: they re normal. pete: curled up
Wednesday will be the hottest day yet of the year for most of Eastern North Dakota and areas of Minnesota as highs build into the 80s to low 90s (a few mid 90s possible). Humidity will also pick up a bit and with warmth and 'humid' air instability will grow in the atmosphere. Late Wednesday afternoon a cold front is expected to track across the Red River Valley and into
Strong winds are heading back into the Valley over the next couple of days with gusts upwards of 50 mph or even slightly stronger possible. As another Low spins over Canada, strong "wraparound" winds will funnel into North Dakota and the surrounding area Tuesday through Thursday. A cold front will bring more scattered showers and thunderstorms to Eastern North Dakota and
As another vigorous area of low pressure enters the area, winds will once again accelerate through the morning and afternoon from the SE, bringing warm temperatures into the 70s. The cold front associated with the storm system is expected to track across the state through the late afternoon into the early overnight hours. Storms are expected to develop along the front and