DETROIT – Potentially severe thunderstorms were moving across Michigan on Tuesday, reaching the southeast region in the morning.
Metro Detroit was at a marginal risk (level 1 of 5) for severe weather starting Tuesday, June 25, particularly for areas south of M-59. Areas along the Ohio state lane, including the southeast edge of the state into Monroe County, were at a slight risk (level 2 of 5).
National weather authorities expected severe thunderstorms to be possible throughout Tuesday and into Wednesday morning across Michigan, the Midwest, and into the Plains.
---> SE Michigan at risk for severe weather Tuesday: Details here
You can change the filters in the interactive radar below to track the storm. To see the future radar forecast, change the “past” option to “future” and press the “play” button.
According to 4Warn Meteorologist Ashlee Baracy: Thunderstorms, some potentially severe, were moving across Metro Detroit on Tuesday morning. Those showers and storms were expected to dissipate by about noon.
Communities along the Ohio state line, however, could continue to see showers and some possibly severe storms through the afternoon and into the evening. Another round of storms was possible Tuesday evening -- although those storms will likely track along or south of the Ohio state line. Computer model data has showed consistently that the stronger storms along Southern Michigan’s border may stay in Ohio, Baracy reports.
More scattered showers and storms were possible midday on Wednesday.
You can watch Ashlee Baracy’s detailed forecast below.
Click here to read the forecast.
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