Late showers doused the west valley Saturday and wind gusts reached 40 mph, the National Weather Service said.
Las Vegas Weather
A flash flood warning is in effect until 9:45 p.m. for the east half of the Carpenter 1 burn area in Kyle Canyon, the National Weather Service announced Friday evening.
Clouds lingering over the Las Vegas Valley on Thursday are not expected to bring any rain, the National Weather Service said.
A surging Red River that flooded northwest Louisiana this week, damaging hundreds of structures and displacing scores of people, slowly began to recede on Wednesday but was still expected to be above flood stage for several more days.
Rain hasn’t touched down in the valley so far, but a 30 percent chance for showers will persist overnight, according to the National Weather Service.
Step outside Monday if you want to bake in triple-digit heat and sun: Cloudy skies and showers are bound for Las Vegas.
The end and beginning of the week will warm everyone up, just before a chance of rain is expected to shower the Las Vegas Valley.
Tropical storm Blanca approached Mexico’s Baja California peninsula on Sunday, the system slowing as it approached landfall but still threatening to drench the area with significant rain.
Prepare for triple digit temperatures again, Las Vegas. Saturday’s pleasant, partly cloudy conditions are going to give way to 100-degree highs by the start of the week, according to the National Weather Service.
Hot and sunny weather is predicted in Las Vegas this weekend, with a chance of rain in the mountains, the National Weather Service said.
Tornadoes and hail-producing thunderstorms struck the greater Denver area on Thursday, damaging several homes in two counties in the northern part of Colorado, though no injuries were reported, emergency officials said.
Hurricane Blanca weakened to a category 2 storm off Mexico’s Pacific coast on Thursday but it is forecast to strengthen as it heads toward tourist resorts at the southern tip of the Baja California peninsula, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.
It’s still going to be sunny and a little windy in the Las Vegas Valley on Tuesday, but the “gradual cool down” begins now.
Spring weather in downtown Los Angeles and other areas of Southern California flip-flopped this year as temperatures cooled from March to May, creating a so-called reverse meteorological spring for the first time in nearly a century, officials said on Tuesday.
The Las Vegas Valley will experience a “gradual cool down” from the triple-digit temperatures it saw over the weekend, according to the National Weather Service.
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.