Forecast for Twin Cities is mostly dry and mild for next several days
Temperatures will run 5 to 10 degrees above normal, with highs around 45 on Wednesday.
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Chris Shaffer was raised in Stillwater, Minnesota and left our great state for four years to attend the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, where he earned degrees in Meteorology and Mass Communications.
Chris is an Emmy award-winning meteorologist and a proud member of the American Meteorological Society. He has been awarded the AMS Certified Broadcast Meteorologist (CBM) designation. You may have seen him over the years doing the weather on television at KMSP FOX9 and WFTC/UPN 29. You may have also heard him back in his radio days on KOOL108, BOB100 (as Blaze Bodean), 104.1 The Point (as Cheeks), Cities 97, K102 (as Jack Wilde and himself) or KTLK.
It is no wonder why Chris is so passionate about Minnesota weather. His great uncle Wilbur was struck and killed by lightning while farming in southern Minnesota in the summer of 1952.
His family vehicle was once chased by a tornado near Maplewood, Minn. and one December on the way to Grandma and Grandpa's house, his family spent the night snowed in at a church in Winthrop, Minn., praying the blizzard would let up so they could get to Redwood Falls and open their presents the next morning.
Chris and his wife have family members all around the Twin Cities. And it's natural to forecast for the entire region with family in Pipestone, St. Cloud, Willmar, Sartell and Blooming Prairie just to name a few.
Chris loves the weather because it is always changing and is a constant challenge, much like raising his three daughters, who are as loud as a thunderstorm, pretty as a sunset and strong as a straight-line wind.
And who can forget the family pets? They've had guinea pigs, a hermit crab, a turtle, a salamander, a frog and several fish. They currently have two goldfish and their awesome Boston Terrier, Bailey.
Temperatures will run 5 to 10 degrees above normal, with highs around 45 on Wednesday.
Thursday will be mild and partly sunny with highs in the mid-to-upper 50s.
After a stunning northern lights show Tuesday night, Minnesotans will get another chance to spot them on Wednesday.
A warming trend takes hold in the Twin Cities on Tuesday, with a stretch of quiet days ahead.
The work week will get off to a cold start in Minnesota before a steady warm-up in the coming days.
Wednesday will feel cooler in the Twin Cities with highs in the mid 50s, temperatures still remain above average for early November.
High temperatures will be in the 50s through Thursday. There's a chance the Twin Cities will hit 60 degrees on Tuesday.
Thursday kicks off a mostly cloudy stretch that will last through Saturday morning, when the sun returns.
Rain will linger for some parts of Minnesota on Tuesday.
Monday will be breezy and increasingly cloudy in the Twin Cities ahead of an early week stretch of rain.
Thursday and Friday mornings will be cold with frost and freeze likely, but the next several days warm up.
The Twin Cities will start to dry out on Wednesday, and the sun will make a welcomed return.
It'll be a windy and wet start to the work week in Minnesota.
Monday will be nice, sunny and breezy in the Twin Cities.
Clouds increase Thursday afternoon in the Twin Cities, with a few showers possible in the evening hours.