
Light snow overnight Wednesday in Twin Cities, followed by arctic blast
A strong cold front is headed for Minnesota, bringing light snow in time for the Wednesday morning commute.
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Joseph Dames joined the WCCO team during the winter of 2022. He is currently the weekday morning meteorologist. You can also catch him putting together weather, science, and other environmental stories during the week.
Born and raised in Illinois, just outside of Chicago, Joseph grew up in the small community of Plainfield. Plainfield is notorious for the 1990 F5 tornado, which started Joseph's interest in weather. Joseph stayed in the state of Illinois for his education and attended Eastern Illinois University with a concentration in broadcast meteorology.
Joseph spent seven years covering wildfires, ice storms, and atmospheric rivers in Portland, Oregon. As a fan of snow, he is excited to trade those in for winter forecasting.
You better believe he has a love for Chicago sports and, of course, that deep dish pizza. In his down time, Joseph spends his days and nights hitting the outdoors, enjoying live music, and trying all the different restaurants around the area.
Feel free to send in weather questions, photos, or weather and environmental story ideas to Joseph.
A strong cold front is headed for Minnesota, bringing light snow in time for the Wednesday morning commute.
The Twin Cities will be mostly cloudy and windy on Monday evening, with temperatures falling back to around 20 degrees.
The Twin Cities are still dealing with dangerously cold wind chills on Thursday.
An arctic cold front is pushing into Minnesota on Wednesday, along with wind speeds of up to 50 mph.
Flurries will fly in parts of Minnesota on Wednesday, and arctic air is set to arrive in time for Thanksgiving.
Temperatures will fall back to the upper teens on Tuesday night in the Twin Cities and clouds will roll in.
Northern Minnesota will see snow Monday, but the Twin Cities will stay mostly dry as temperatures plummet.
Friday will be another cool and cloudy day, with Saturday following suit.
Overcast skies and northwest winds with gusts up to 35 mph will make the Twin Cities feel chilly on Thursday.
A system spreading across Minnesota Wednesday will bring minimal accumulation to the Twin Cities, but higher snow totals out west.
After some more dense fog to start Friday, the Twin Cities should be able to squeeze out a little sunshine with highs in the lower 50s and calm winds.
Patchy fog and mist early Thursday will give way to clouds as the Twin Cities dry out and warm up ahead of a pleasant fall weekend.
Tuesday will start out cold, then the Twin Cities will get more wind and sunshine before the next rain event arrives.
Things will dry out and clear up to start the week as cold winds bring temperatures down.
Expect the rest of the work week to stay dry before showers return this weekend.