TexasF6 wrote:MAMMOTH SNOWSTORM FOR CENTRAL TEXAS AT 384HRS ON 06z GFS PARA FEB 1ST!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It WILL happen. #MagicOfFebruaryInTexas![]()
![]()
![]()
There you go! That's the spirit. Hey, it could happen. Right?!
Moderator: S2k Moderators
TexasF6 wrote:MAMMOTH SNOWSTORM FOR CENTRAL TEXAS AT 384HRS ON 06z GFS PARA FEB 1ST!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It WILL happen. #MagicOfFebruaryInTexas![]()
![]()
![]()
wxman57 wrote:PTrackerLA wrote:Absolutely rotten winter of 2016-2017 continues for my area. Another whole week of daytime temps in the middle of winter in the mid to upper 70s. Won't fall below 60 degrees all week either. The carnage of the most damaging freeze in years continues to grow in my yard. I had plants that easily survived the heavy ice storms and below 20 temperatures of three winters ago turn completely brown this time around. Could it have been the high winds combined with low 20s? Either way everything is ugly and the weather sucks.
You're complaining about warm and cold temps at the same time. As for the cold, it's important that plants are thoroughly watered prior to a hard freeze. The increased moisture content will help to prevent freeze damage, as chilling the moisture inside the plants takes a good bit of energy. Strong winds would remove moisture from plants, making them more susceptible to freeze damage. The only freeze damage in my yard was the bananas. Nothing could have saved them with a low of 22. They're nearly 20 ft tall - too tall to cover, and watering them wouldn't have helped. They'll be back soon, though, as long as there are roots underground.
PTrackerLA wrote:wxman57 wrote:PTrackerLA wrote:Absolutely rotten winter of 2016-2017 continues for my area. Another whole week of daytime temps in the middle of winter in the mid to upper 70s. Won't fall below 60 degrees all week either. The carnage of the most damaging freeze in years continues to grow in my yard. I had plants that easily survived the heavy ice storms and below 20 temperatures of three winters ago turn completely brown this time around. Could it have been the high winds combined with low 20s? Either way everything is ugly and the weather sucks.
You're complaining about warm and cold temps at the same time. As for the cold, it's important that plants are thoroughly watered prior to a hard freeze. The increased moisture content will help to prevent freeze damage, as chilling the moisture inside the plants takes a good bit of energy. Strong winds would remove moisture from plants, making them more susceptible to freeze damage. The only freeze damage in my yard was the bananas. Nothing could have saved them with a low of 22. They're nearly 20 ft tall - too tall to cover, and watering them wouldn't have helped. They'll be back soon, though, as long as there are roots underground.
I'm bemoaning the unusually hard freeze we had, but yes also complaining about the much above normal temps. I'd prefer just seasonable winter temps is what I should say, with some light freezes here and there. If it's going to get into the low 20s I'd prefer to have some frozen precipitation to go around. I was out of town for the freeze so I was unable to protect anything. Lost a very mature potted rubber plant but I'm sure I can get it to grow back. It was also odd seeing bottle brush trees rather burnt looking, I don't remember ever seeing cold damage on them before. Also several shrubs that I couldn't tell you the name of but are completely brown now as well as several gardenias that are completely killed. I just found the amount of damage to be odd and the fact that it's staying so warm since that just seems cruel when it feels like April.
BrokenGlassRepublicn wrote:Portastorm wrote:dhweather wrote:I am considering running for Governor.
My platform will be very narrowly focused, shallow and selfish. Cut down every mountain cedar/juniper tree in Texas. Outlaw them.
I pray the rain will stop this madness, it's killing me.
I'm in ... let me go file the paperwork now for the "Draft dhweather" campaign.
IIRC, juniper is not a native plant. Count me in.
Though a fragrant, evergreen, and picturesque tree, Ashe Juniper pollen, like that of many junipers, is very irritating to people with cedar allergies, so where the tree occurs in large concentrations, as in central Texas, it often becomes hated and targeted for removal, with various, sometimes invented, rationalizations given for doing so. Ashe Juniper is native from southern Missouri south through Oklahoma and then down through central and west Texas to northern Chihuahua. It was abundant in central Texas when the earliest European explorers arrived, having existed in the region at least since the Pleistocene. It is thus an integral part of the native flora.
Cpv17 wrote:Man this weather is so blah. Keep hearing about all this cold air coming in the long range, but not seeing it on any of the models. I at least hope we'll get some good soaking rains around here in SE TX this week. Been since the beginning of December since we've had any measurable rains around here.
Ntxw wrote:The past couple of years, super cells for some reason have loved moving up I-35 in NTX. Been a magnet
https://twitter.com/NWSFortWorth/status ... 7377351680
ThunderSleetDreams wrote:Bon voyage La Niña
This Week's ENSO
Niño 4 -0.1ºC
Niño 3.4 -0.3ºC
Niño 3 -0.1ºC
Niño 1+2 0.9ºC
TheProfessor wrote:Ntxw wrote:The past couple of years, super cells for some reason have loved moving up I-35 in NTX. Been a magnet
https://twitter.com/NWSFortWorth/status ... 7377351680
I've always called I-35 a tornado Magnet. Some of the strongest tornadoes (F/EF-5s) have occurred along or fairly close to the Highway. Jarrell, Moore 99/13, El Reno, Andover, Waco tornado 1953, Topeka Kansas F5 tornado 1966(My mom was almost a year old then living in Topeka). I'm sure there are some missing, but I find it kind of interesting that there have been that many on an almost due north imaginary line. I'm not sure if there's a location that has a similar occurrence.
somethingfunny wrote:TheProfessor wrote:Ntxw wrote:The past couple of years, super cells for some reason have loved moving up I-35 in NTX. Been a magnet
[]https://twitter.com/NWSFortWorth/status/821071597377351680[]
I've always called I-35 a tornado Magnet. Some of the strongest tornadoes (F/EF-5s) have occurred along or fairly close to the Highway. Jarrell, Moore 99/13, El Reno, Andover, Waco tornado 1953, Topeka Kansas F5 tornado 1966(My mom was almost a year old then living in Topeka). I'm sure there are some missing, but I find it kind of interesting that there have been that many on an almost due north imaginary line. I'm not sure if there's a location that has a similar occurrence.
Remember that the EF scale is a damage scale - you can't have an EF4/5 if it just moves through a field or a forest. It's not a coincidence that the "strongest" tornadoes tend to hit populated areas with a higher density of strong structures to demonstrate EF4/5 devastation upon... and those structures will always be clustered around imaginary lines like I-35.
Have you noticed that there are far more frequent "radar-indicated" tornado warnings issued in the immediate vicinity of the DFW Metroplex.... within about 50 miles of the NEXRAD radar location? We can't see tornadoes embedded within QLCS line segments in Young, Lamar, or Anderson Counties the same way we can see them in Johnson or Collin Counties. They;re there though... just not reported as frequently as they are in the densely populated areas along I-35.
ThunderSleetDreams wrote:Bon voyage La Niña
This Week's ENSO
Niño 4 -0.1ºC
Niño 3.4 -0.3ºC
Niño 3 -0.1ºC
Niño 1+2 0.9ºC
srainhoutx wrote:Cold weather lovers need to start watching the Ensembles. The morning Updated GEFS Super Ensemble Day 11+ Analogs have some memorable years in the analogs. I particularly like seeing the 1960 analog showing up. Early February brought a hefty snow event to SE Texas...![]()
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests