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The weather will cooperate for one of the busiest travel days of the year. The only minor hiccup spots will be the northern Rockies and along a frontal system from the Midwest to southern Plains.
Early day snow showers in the northern Rockies will dissipate while valley rain and high elevation snow in the central and southern Rockies give way to plenty of clouds. The frontal system triggering the Mountain West snow showers will sweep into the Midwest later in the day. A shield of light rain will precede the front this evening from the southern Great Lakes into the southern Plains. Fortunately, none of the rain will be heavy and thunderstorms are not expected.
Pacific moisture will rush into northwest Washington, so a couple of showers will develop north of Seattle later in the evening. Meanwhile, the East Coast and much of the West will be governed by two separate high pressure systems that will produce bright sunshine.
The coldest spots will be the central and northern Rockies, northern Plains, and interior New England where highs will reach the 20s and 30s. Surrounding this zone will be 40s and 50s from the interior West into the central Plains, Upper Midwest, Great Lakes, Tennessee Valley, Carolinas, Mid-Atlantic and eastern New England.
Along the West Coast, highs will range from the 40s in Seattle to the lower 70s in Los Angeles and San Diego. The entire Southern Tier from Phoenix to Miami will also warm into the 70s Wednesday afternoon.