Loving the freakishly hot weather? You'll enjoy the next week.

Michigan's four National Weather Service offices are reporting broken high-temperature records from the weekend. All indications are the pattern of well-above-normal temps will continue for several days.

Here is a roundup of what the NWS is saying:

Detroit -- The office on the east side of the state said Detroit, Flint and Saginaw are poised to break their record of consecutive 60-degree days in March:

Gaylord -- The region that includes the Northern Lower and Eastern Upper Peninsulas will see highs this week that are 25 to 40 degrees above normal for March (which is in bold because, wow!). "Overnight lows will also remain quite mild," the office says. "Actually, they will be warmer than what daytime highs should be for this time of year, which are normally in the 30s to near 40."

Gaylord, Traverse City and Helston set record highs for March on Sunday. Three other cities -- Alpena, Houghton Lake and Sault Ste. Marie -- have not yet surpassed March highs set in 1946.

Grand Rapids -- As Julie Hoogland in Grand Rapids notes, the record high of 82 is expected to fall there Tuesday, which has a forecast high of 85, which continues a pattern of record-breaking temperatures on the west side of the state.

Marquette -- The NWS office in the Upper Peninsula reports an all-time record high March temperature of 78 on Sunday, topping the previous high of 75 -- which was set the previous day. Sunday's record, significantly, shattered the previous March 18 mark -- 55 degrees, set in 2010 -- by more than 20 degrees.

The office also notes that 47 inches of snow have disappeared in the last two weeks. Also, the winter of 2011-2012 (even though it is not technically over) has set a record for the lowest number of subzero days at nine.