Site icon Virgin Islands Free Press

THE DAILY BURN: St. Croix Stays Dry While Puerto Rico Drenches

By V.I. Free Press Staff

ST. CROIX — If you’re waiting for a downpour to cool off your morning coffee, you might be waiting a while. Despite some grumbling from residents about “missing rain” yesterday, the National Weather Service (NWS) in San Juan confirms that the U.S. Virgin Islands are currently caught in a limited heat risk that isn’t going anywhere fast.

The Local Outlook: Heat Over Humidity While Puerto Rico faces an elevated flooding risk today, the story for St. Croix is about the thermometer.

The Marine & Beach Alert The water might look inviting, but the “threat” you felt this morning extends to the shoreline:

Looking Ahead: The Weekend Dry-Out A gradual drying trend is expected to begin Thursday and solidify by the weekend as a mid-level ridge builds over the region. For those complaining about the rain that never came—congratulations, you’re about to get exactly what you wanted: clear skies and persistent heat through early next week.

The Burn Index: Reaching the Red Line

Checking the UV index is a smart move—today’s readings are leaning into the danger zone.

The ‘First Waves’ of the Season

Meteorologist Brian Shields (Mr. Weatherman) said today that the first tropical waves of 2026 are expected to emerge from the coast of Africa within the next 1 to 3 weeks.


SIDEBAR: The Incompetency of (Rain) Expectations

Weather forecasting in the Caribbean isn’t a retail transaction—you don’t always get what you “ordered.” While Puerto Rico is dealing with 2.0 inches of precipitable water and a flooding threat, the USVI is largely bypass-territory for this specific moisture plume.


The Beat Note: One has to wonder if the local Department of Health is as prepared for a heat-exhaustion spike as the Bureau of Corrections is for its $14 million budget leak. If the heat is a “threat,” the government’s lack of a cooling infrastructure is the smoking gun. Perhaps Elon Musk can pivot from Starlink to a giant space-umbrella for the territory—at least then we’d have someone specific to complain to when the shade doesn’t hit our porch exactly at noon.

Exit mobile version