The high temperature in Las Vegas reached 113 degrees on Monday, tying the record high for the date and becoming the hottest day of 2019.
Las Vegas Weather
An excessive heat warning remains in effect until 8 p.m. Monday, which has a forecast high of 112, the National Weather Service said.
Las Vegas is under an excessive heat warning through Monday as temperatures are expected to hit 110 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.
The Las Vegas Valley will be hotter than normal for the next week, prompting the National Weather Service to issue an excessive heat warning through Monday.
Following Wednesday’s rain and flash flooding, it will be a “ho-hum” week in the Las Vegas Valley, according to the National Weather Service.
Residents in a southwest valley neighborhood had to deal with floodwaters up to 2 feet deep after more than an inch of rain fell in the area on Wednesday.
The Las Vegas Valley should expect hot and dry weather after Wednesday’s storm that brought up to an inch of rain in the outskirts of the valley.
The National Weather Service is predicting a brief cool down in temperatures midweek as a slight chance for showers and thunderstorms rolls into the Las Vegas Valley.
The record, which eclipsed the 111 degrees seen on July 13, came after an excessive heat warning was issued early Monday for the valley.
The summer grasshopper invasion in the Las Vegas Valley is so large it may be showing up on the National Weather Service’s radar as evening rain storms.
Temperatures will continue to climb over the weekend, and Saturday’s high of 107 degrees was just the beginning. Highs will reach about 110 on Sunday and 111 on Monday, according to the National Weather Service.
After three days of moist monsoonal conditions, the Las Vegas Valley is expected to dry out through the weekend and into the new workweek.
The possibility of wet weather will give way to a warmer, drier weekend in the Las Vegas Valley, the National Weather Service said.
Around 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, a thin whirlwind was spotted in Pahrump in the Gamebird-Homestead roads area.
The Las Vegas Valley got its first taste of monsoon season Wednesday, prompting authorities to issue a flash flood watch for Clark County.
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Wind gusts largely in the upper 30-mph range were felt across much of the Las Vegas Valley but didn’t get much stronger.
A Rainbow Canyon gauge received .31 of an inch on Monday afternoon. No other measurable rain was recorded at Regional Flood Control District gauges.
A Saturday high of 73 is forecast by the National Weather Service, but with the race at 10 p.m., temperatures are expected to be in the low 60s. There is a slight chance of rain.