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As heat gives way to rain, National Weather Service issues flash flood warning for Monday

  • Residents close to the Paxinosa School in Easton enjoy relief...

    JANE THERESE/Special to The Morning Call

    Residents close to the Paxinosa School in Easton enjoy relief from the heat Sunday. The Easton Fire Department opened eight hydrants throughout the city, letting residents cool off if they couldn't get into crowded pools.

  • Cecily Yarrow-Ackerman 4 plays in the fire hydrant at the...

    JANE THERESE/Special to The Morning Call

    Cecily Yarrow-Ackerman 4 plays in the fire hydrant at the Francis A March School in College Hill on Sunday July 21, 2019. The Easton Fire Department opened roughly 9 hydrants throughout the city relieving residents from the brutal heat soaring close to 100 degrees.

  • Daniel Ackerman of Easton takes a break from the brutal...

    JANE THERESE/Special to The Morning Call

    Daniel Ackerman of Easton takes a break from the brutal sun with his daughter Cecily Yarrow-Ackerman 4 in Easton at the Francis A March School in College Hill on Sunday July 21, 2019. The Easton Fire Department opened roughly 9 hydrants throughout the city relieving residents from the brutal heat soaring close to 100 degrees.

  • Rhonda Johnson, of Bethlehem keeps cool in the pool while...

    April Gamiz/THE MORNING CALL

    Rhonda Johnson, of Bethlehem keeps cool in the pool while reading a book during Saturday afternoon at Clearview Pool in Bethlehem. The city of Bethlehem extended pool hours to give the community an opportunity to cool off during the weekend's heat wave.

  • Peyton Bubba 5, pours water over Kymani Shaw 7 while...

    JANE THERESE/Special to The Morning Call

    Peyton Bubba 5, pours water over Kymani Shaw 7 while playing in an open fire hydrant at the Paxsinosa School at 11th and Butler in Easton on Sunday July 21, 2019. The Easton Fire Department opened roughly 9 hydrants throughout the city relieving residents from the brutal heat soaring close to 100 degrees.

  • Sophia Black 6 fills her bucket with water from an...

    JANE THERESE/Special to The Morning Call

    Sophia Black 6 fills her bucket with water from an open hydrant at the Francis A. March school in College Hill on Sunday July 21, 2019. The Easton Fire Department opened roughly 9 hydrants throughout the city relieving residents from the brutal heat soaring close to 100 degrees.

  • Sophia Black 6 fills her bucket with water from an...

    JANE THERESE/Special to The Morning Call

    Sophia Black 6 fills her bucket with water from an open hydrant at the Francis A. March school in College Hill on Sunday July 21, 2019. The Easton Fire Department opened roughly 9 hydrants throughout the city relieving residents from the brutal heat soaring close to 100 degrees.

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The Lehigh Valley will go from scorching heat over the weekend to a flash flood warning Monday, as a cold front ushers in thunderstorms and cooler temperatures, the National Weather Service said.

The temperature Monday is forecast to reach a high of 84, which may not sound so cool, but is a reprieve from the weekend. Temperatures reached 94 degrees Saturday and 96 Sunday, said Sarah Johnson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service at Mount Holly, New Jersey.

An excessive heat warning remained in effect through 10 p.m. Sunday.

It still wasn’t hot enough Sunday to break the record of 101 set in 1980, Johnson said, though the heat index made it feel more like 110 degrees.

A cold front will slowly make its way into the area Monday morning. That will provide a break from the heat, but the chance for showers and thunderstorms increases.

Johnson said there’s also the chance storms could bring damaging winds.

The storms could bring 1-3 inches of rain Monday, said meteorologist Ed Vallee of Empire Weather, who provides local forecasts for The Morning Call.

“We will get some pretty heavy rainfall, especially later in the day tomorrow and tomorrow night,” Vallee said Sunday.

A flash flood warning is in effect from 8 a.m. Monday through 8 a.m. Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service.

Rain was far from residents’ minds Sunday, however, when they were still looking for creative ways to get wet and stay cool.

Residents close to the Paxinosa School in Easton enjoy relief from the heat Sunday. The Easton Fire Department opened eight hydrants throughout the city, letting residents cool off if they couldn't get into crowded pools.
Residents close to the Paxinosa School in Easton enjoy relief from the heat Sunday. The Easton Fire Department opened eight hydrants throughout the city, letting residents cool off if they couldn’t get into crowded pools.

In Easton, for the second day in a row, officials turned eight fire hydrants in the city’s four neighborhoods into sprinklers for children (and adults) to splash in.

The Easton Department of Public Works in conjunction with Easton Suburban Water Authority installed custom-made sprinkler attachments for the fire hydrants last week in preparation for the heat, Mayor Sal Panto Jr. said,

“I think it’s a fun idea because it gives kids something else to do besides the pool,” College Hill resident Kathleen Zigubu said.

She took her sons, 8-year-old Greyson and 5-year-old Caleb Harrison, to a hydrant sprinkler at March Elementary School on Sunday.

“It’s really hot out here,” Greyson said as he ran through the water with a dozen other children from the neighborhood.

“It’s burning hot,” said his friend, Alec Prentice, 6.

On Saturday, the city’s Heil and Eddyside pools closed to all but those with memberships after they reached capacity.

College Hill resident Erin Chudolij said she planned to visit one of the pools Sunday, but was afraid it would be too crowded, so she took her three children to March Elementary, where they splashed in the sprinkler instead.

“I love it. I think it’s such a fun thing for the city to do,” she said.

Panto said he was unaware of any heat-related incidents in the city Sunday afternoon.

Some people elsewhere in the Lehigh Valley required treatment, said Erin Greene, a spokeswoman with Lehigh Valley Health Network, who said the hospital treated several people Saturday and Sunday for heat exhaustion that required intravenous fluids.

“In some cases they have been outside too long, not taking in enough fluids,” she said.

Morning Call reporter Christina Tatu can be reached at 610-820-6583 or ctatu@mcall.com

This week’s weather forecast:

Monday: High near 84. Showers and thunderstorms. Chance of precipitation 80%. Storms could bring heavy rainfall. Monday night, the low will be around 68. There’s the chance for showers and possibly a thunderstorm.

Tuesday: High near 80. A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy. Chance of precipitation is 50%. Tuesday night will be mostly cloudy with a low around 62.

Wednesday: Mostly sunny with a high near 82. Wednesday night will be mostly clear with a low around 61.

Thursday: Sunny with a high near 84. Thursday night will be mostly clear with a low around 62.

Friday: Sunny with a high near 86. Friday night will be mostly clear with a low around 65.

Allentown forecast from the National Weather Service