txagwxman wrote:ECMWF all rain...552 thickness not cold enough.
the 12z GFS is colder for once, and now the ECMWF 12z is a little warmer. Still a long ways to go, too tiring for me.
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srainhoutx wrote:Going to get interesting folks. A heavy rainfall/Flash Flooding event to wintry weather. Only in TX. Getting rather concerned for Coastal areas as a strong Surface Low looks to form beside the Very Potent Upper Low that will trail slowly behind the surface feature. It's gong to be a wild ride in the days ahead.
srainhoutx wrote:Going to get interesting folks. A heavy rainfall/Flash Flooding event to wintry weather. Only in TX. Getting rather concerned for Coastal areas as a strong Surface Low looks to form beside the Very Potent Upper Low that will trail slowly behind the surface feature. It's gong to be a wild ride in the days ahead.
Sambucol wrote:srainhoutx wrote:Going to get interesting folks. A heavy rainfall/Flash Flooding event to wintry weather. Only in TX. Getting rather concerned for Coastal areas as a strong Surface Low looks to form beside the Very Potent Upper Low that will trail slowly behind the surface feature. It's gong to be a wild ride in the days ahead.
I'm trying to understand, but am having a hard time. In Southeast Texas, are we looking at winter precipitation this weekend?
Sambucol wrote:srainhoutx wrote:Going to get interesting folks. A heavy rainfall/Flash Flooding event to wintry weather. Only in TX. Getting rather concerned for Coastal areas as a strong Surface Low looks to form beside the Very Potent Upper Low that will trail slowly behind the surface feature. It's gong to be a wild ride in the days ahead.
I'm trying to understand, but am having a hard time. In Southeast Texas, are we looking at winter precipitation this weekend?
srainhoutx wrote:Sambucol wrote:srainhoutx wrote:Going to get interesting folks. A heavy rainfall/Flash Flooding event to wintry weather. Only in TX. Getting rather concerned for Coastal areas as a strong Surface Low looks to form beside the Very Potent Upper Low that will trail slowly behind the surface feature. It's gong to be a wild ride in the days ahead.
I'm trying to understand, but am having a hard time. In Southeast Texas, are we looking at winter precipitation this weekend?
Too soon to know just yet. I will say that the system looks very impressive via WV Imagery out over the Pacific and bear watching closely for a heavy rainfall event as well as a chance that some may see significant wintry weather associated with the Upper Low in TX. We have to remember this is a Surface feature as well as an Upper Level Feature. We are still about 36-48 hours out before RAOBS data is entered into guidance. Stay Tuned!
http://wxweb.meteostar.com/models/noaap ... UMBLOOP=10
Yeah that
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Portastorm wrote:And for those of you who don't know what RAOBS is ... it stands for Radiosonde Observations.
Those are, essentially, the atmospheric data received from weather balloons. Once a storm system starts getting close to the Pacific coastline, RAOBS are collected and we begin to understand the dynamics of what is going on in the atmosphere much better than by simply looking at satellite data.
I would expect 2-3 inches of rain from Friday through Saturday....a real good soaking which we don't need.sphelps8681 wrote:How much rain do you think the Beaumont/Lumberton (East Texas) area would possibly get?
Susan
Ntxw wrote:I guess it just depends on how cold the air really is. Also i've noticed the GFS keeps shoving the storm further and further south with each run.
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