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SaskatchewanScreamer wrote:p.s. love your Azalea bush!
wxman57 wrote:SaskatchewanScreamer wrote:p.s. love your Azalea bush!
Sometimes our winter is more harsh than in my video. Highs only in the 30s or 40s (3-8C). Back in the 1980s, we had a period of 5 straight days with a high below freezing. Sort of like you saying you had 5 straight days in July with temperature of 27C (80F) or above, when that's not an unusual morning low temp in summer for us.
You should move out of Canada and come down to the Gulf Coast and escape that nasty weather up there.
South Texas Storms wrote:Will April showers bring us May flowers this year? Find out in my latest weather article!
http://www.examiner.com/article/will-ap ... b_articles
wxman57 wrote:"It appears we'll have a few cold days mid week but hopefully with that east coast trof steadily weakening this may be the last low 40s we see this winter.
Went out for a ride yesterday. Took a picture about 16 miles NE of our house looking southwest toward downtown along the White Oak Bayou bike trail. Lots of bluebonnets."
jasons wrote:I had a nice .51" here yesterday. That was a good primer for what is hopefully much more this week.
After weeks of dry weather….the area has entered into an active state.
Thunderstorms yesterday afternoon affected areas mainly east of a line from College Station to Hempstead to Sugar Land to Galveston. Several reports of large hail were noted and good soaking rainfall.
I am hard pressed to call the boundary which moved through late yesterday helping to spark the storms a cool front, but will go with that for now as dewpoints have in fact fallen off some and drier air over N TX is shifting slowly southward. Short break in the active pattern today will be replaced with widespread thunderstorms on Tuesday afternoon into Wednesday.
Powerful upper level storm system offshore of CA this morning will begin to move inland over the next 12-24 hours and this will result in increasingly SW flow aloft over TX instead of NW which we had over the weekend. Low level moisture which has been scoured out of the region (but not far) by the Sunday storms is poised to make a strong return by this evening as pressures begin to lower out over W TX and winds turn more SE instead of NE and E. Should see low to mid 60 degree dewpoints return to the region this evening/overnight. Air mass will begin to destabilize Tuesday with heating and the approach of a low amplitude southern stream impulse in the sub-tropical jet. Brunt of lift with this disturbance should arrive after dark Tuesday and focus across the upper TX coastal waters into the coastal counties. Potential is for a coastal front to form up near/just offshore of the upper coast and act as a focus for thunderstorm development. While this is playing out the main storm system currently just off the W coast of the US will move into the four corners area and into W TX by early Wednesday. Strong and widespread upper level lift and splitting of the jet stream structures on the east side of this feature will promote vigorous thunderstorm development first over W and SW TX and then spreading eastward. Models are in decent agreement on a large scale MCS (meso convective system or thunderstorm complex) to form in the areas east of Big Bend to north of Del Rio and extending northward to near Midland. This complex will move ESE into the increasing low level jet overnight Tuesday into Wednesday. It is uncertain how fast this complex will move toward coastal TX, but the initial severe threat Tuesday afternoon over SW TX should weaken Tuesday night with the loss of heating. Still feel that with good low level inflow over S TX feeding the system, the complex will make it all the way toward the coast by Wednesday morning.
Meso scale influences from outflow boundaries over the next few days may help to override large scale synoptic features and result in varying placements of convective developments. Global forecast models have the correct pattern and need ingredients for some heavy rainfall, but the meso scale can greatly alter what the global models “think” will happen. One such possibility is how much storm development occurs near/off the upper TX coast Tuesday night and does this “rob” good low level moisture inflow into the SW TX MCS.
Rainfall amounts should average 1-2 inches across much of the state of TX which will be much needed rainfall. Could see some higher amounts especially near the coast where a period of cell training could be possible Tuesday night and then again Wednesday morning with the main line. PWS rise to near 1.5-1.7 inches which is high, but not historic for early April. Dry grounds should be able to handle much of what falls, but urban areas could see some ponding under the heavier rain cores.
Sunday Storm Reports:
Panorama Village, Montgomery: 1.25 inch hail at FM 830 and I-45
11 SE of Conroe, Montgomery: tree fell on to pickup truck on FM 1485 near Grapeland
Morgan’s Point, Harris: 40mph outflow winds along leading edge gust front
Manvel, Brazoria: Dime size hail reported in Manvel
Galveston, Galveston: PORTS data recorded a 41mph wind gust at the Galveston North Jetty along thunderstorm gust front.
Freer, Duval: 4.25 inch diameter hail (softball) caused extensive damage across the towns of Freer and Benavides. Nearly all windows broken out of homes and all vehicle windshields shattered
yesterday Reports Graphic
Storm system approaching TX midday with increasing chances for rain and thunderstorms this evening into Wednesday.
While synoptic scale models are in decent agreement with parameters to produce a good bout of much needed rainfall across the region, the meso scale features may help another story play out. Large scale upper level system over the SW US and strong short wave rounding through the base of this feature should eject ENE into SW TX over the next few hours spreading stronger lift into much of TX. Should begin to see an increase in the shower and thunderstorm activity from the SW to the NE by early evening as lift from the short wave comes to bear across the region. Main question is where storms develop. Appears some sort of coastal boundary (maybe a warm front) extends across the NW Gulf and then inland near Galveston and WNW toward Wharton. South of this boundary dewpoints have warmed into the upper 60’s and low 70’s while north dewpoints are in the upper 50’s and low 60’s. Increasing large scale lift combined with breaks in the cloud cover SW of SE TX over the coastal bend into SC TX should result in the development of storms by late afternoon which will spread into the region during the evening hours. High resolution short term models have varying solutions on where and when storms will develop and how they will track across the region. Previous runs really favored the coastal sections, while more recent runs are favoring the developing from CLL to Lufkin and then sagging a line slowly SE into the region overnight.
In addition to local development this afternoon/evening, stronger forcing arrives across SW and WC TX tonight and this should help ignite a complex of thunderstorms from W of Austin into NE MX which will track ESE toward the area toward daybreak on Wednesday. I am a little nervous with so much activity forecasted over SE TX tonight that eh approaching line will have much “fuel” to work with by the time it arrives Wednesday. Much depends on how much thunderstorm activity develops this evening and how far south any outflow boundaries drive which could cut off the good supply of Gulf moisture into any approaching storm complex.
Still feel a solid 1-2 inches of rainfall is likely across the area with PWs increasing toward 1.5 inches. Could see some higher amounts where training cells develop or where any lines slow, especially tonight. With grounds parched from the recent dry weather, much of what falls should soak in although some minor urban flooding issues will be possible under the heaviest rain cores.
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