Put on your shorts and T-shirts, Las Vegas. A warm-up is headed this way.
Las Vegas Weather
Expect sunny skies and patchy cloud cover as the valley’s cool temperatures start climbing this week.
The Las Vegas Valley will be dry, cool and calm early this week, but that’s likely to change by midweek.
The cool and dry weather in the Las Vegas Valley over the past few days is likely to continue into the coming week.
After a few days that saw some light rain in the valley, the rest of the weekend and coming week are expected to stay cool and dry.
Though Las Vegas will see a cool, dry break on Saturday, the week’s patchy precipitation will make a comeback Sunday, when a slight chance of showers returns and will linger into next week.
Dreary weather conditions are expected to stick around the Las Vegas Valley on Thursday, disappear Friday and return Saturday.
After the weather service predicted a 60 percent chance of rain for the valley on Wednesday, “we got skunked,” according to the National Weather Service.
Snow and rain swept over the valley Tuesday, and the wintry weather isn’t over yet.
Officials along the lower Mississippi River prepared on Monday for the swollen river to reach its peak in their area, expecting levees to provide protection after flooding killed dozens of people as it pushed downriver toward the Gulf of Mexico.
Las Vegans should keep an umbrella handy this week since the Las Vegas Valley has chances of rain every day through the weekend, and significant snowfall is expected in the mountains.
Residents of flooded areas in far southern Illinois anxiously waited for the swollen Mississippi River to peak on Sunday, with hundreds electing to remain in their homes, as states downstream prepared for the rising waters.
The first week of the new year will be marked by rain and clouds in the Las Vegas Valley, according to the National Weather service.
The first week of the new year will bring rain to the valley and the biggest snowfall of the season to Mount Charleston.
Jason Peck didn’t expect 2016 to start out like this. Three to four feet of flood waters wiped out his basement and living room. Recalling the damage to his son’s room brought Peck close to tears.
A recent Wall Street Journal poll of leading economists put the probability of the United States going into recession over the next 12 months at 63 percent. Conventional wisdom is that the Federal Reserve Bank will continue raising interest rates to combat stubborn high inflation, thereby slowing the economy and causing gross domestic product to […]
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.
Sin City is reeling from a record summer, with extreme heat killing more of its residents than ever before.
Cold to chill the Las Vegas Valley through the weekend with mountain snow a possibility, says the National Weather Service.