Ed Mahmoud wrote:Are you sure the local forum is fixed?
We're up and running. Might want save the "direct link" just in case...
http://www.khou.com/forums/viewforum.php?f=9
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Ed Mahmoud wrote:Are you sure the local forum is fixed?
After weakening for 2 weeks allowing clouds, rainfall, and cooler temperatures the heat ridge of summer of 2009 will rebuild over the region starting today.
Little to speak about as strong ridge over the western US shifts/builds eastward into the southern plains in similar fashion to late June 2009. Will go 2-4 degrees warmer than guidance on maximum especially W and SW zones where grounds are baked and vegetation heavily dried. NE zones where rainfall last week was plentiful will go near guidance temps. This suggest 100-105 out west and southwest each day this week, 98-102 Houston and surroundings, and 95-100 NE zones (E of I-45 and N of I-10). Will go ahead and zero out the rain chances as synoptic scale subsidence under the building ridge will squash any hopes of even a small shower…even cloud cover after today will be sparse. Slight rain chances may return by Friday-Saturday as mammoth ridge builds into the SE US allowing deep SE flow to advect moisture into the region…not going to bite just yet as so far this summer the ridge as not given much ground once established and drought feedback processes on the low level air mass is resulting in too high model QPF.
Drought/Heat 2009:
City of Houston records its warmest summer on record…and it is not over!
City of Houston records the driest May-June ever. With only 3.49 inches of rainfall, old record was 4.37 inches in 1931 and the normal would be 13.68 inches!
College Station shattered its old July average record of 88.6 in 1998 with 89.1 for July 2009.
Hobby recorded the warmest July average on record of 86.7 surpassing the old record of 86.6 in 1998.
IAH recorded its second warmest July ever of 87.4 just shy of the 1980 (87.5).
The average temperature for the June/July period at IAh is 86.5 beating out the benchmark summer of 1980 for the warmest “summer” on record minus August.
The warm averages have been more a result on high overnight lows. A total of 10 overnight low maximum records were recorded In July at IAH including a low of only 83 on July 30th.
At Austin the 89.5 degree July average beat the old record of 89.1 from 1860.
At San Antonio the 88.8 July average beat the old record from 1980 and 1998 and is also the warmest July on record since 1885.
Number of July 100 degrees or above days:
New Braunfels: 27
San Antonio: 26
Austin: 26
La Grange: 23
Giddings: 20
IAH: 4
College Station: 23
Hobby: 1
Conroe: 4
Tomball: 4
Sugar Land: 16
Huntsville: 14
Wharton: 9
Brenham: 16
Victoria: 17
Drought:
Historic drought continues across much of S, SC, and SE TX. Current drought monitor shows extreme to exceptional drought conditions over all of S, SC, and portions of SE TX. The worst areas continue to be around Matagorda Bay NW to Austin/San Antonio and now spreading south into deep south Texas. Some areas in SC TX and the coastal bend have not seen rainfall in 60-80 days.
The 23 month period from September 2007 to July 2009 is the driest ever recorded at San Antonio since 1885. Only 24.38 inches of rain has fallen in the last 23 months shattering the previous record of 28.94 inches from Nov 1908 to Sept 1910
southerngale wrote::uarrow: I wish I could find someone who broke everything down like that over here. Interesting stuff.
And yeah, back to the HEAT.
srainhoutx wrote:It really depends on the year. I've seen the first real front hold off until late October (Halloween). One positive about an el nino year is the fronts should make things a bit more interesting as Meteorological Fall/Winter approaches. We certainly could use the moisture in most of TX.
Severe Thunderstorm Watch
SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH OUTLINE UPDATE FOR WS 666
NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK
1250 PM CDT THU AUG 6 2009
SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH 666 IS IN EFFECT UNTIL 800 PM CDT
FOR THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS
TXC005-199-203-241-245-315-347-351-361-365-403-405-419-457-
070100-
/O.NEW.KWNS.SV.A.0666.090806T1750Z-090807T0100Z/
TX
. TEXAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
ANGELINA HARDIN HARRISON
JASPER JEFFERSON MARION
NACOGDOCHES NEWTON ORANGE
PANOLA SABINE SAN AUGUSTINE
SHELBY TYLER
$$
Dominate upper level ridge starting to give ground with increasing chances for rainfall and cooler daytime highs.
Currently a cluster of thunderstorms is found over C LA moving SSW in NNE steering flow aloft. KLCH sounding is very moist (PW of 2.1in) and unstable with CAPE of 5440, while KCRP is drier and more stable (PW of 1.4in) and CAPE around 4000. Morning visible satellite images showed a decent cumulus field that is now starting to mix out west of I-45 where drier air mass is entraining into shallow updrafts. Cumulus east of I-45 continue to show modest growth indicating this area is comparable to the KLCH sounding while the rest of the area matches closer to KCRP...this is also confirmed through aircraft ascents out of KIAH and KHOU showing a slightly more stable profile.
With that said...SPC has just hoisted a Severe Thunderstorm Watch for all of SW LA and deep E/SE TX up to our eastern counties for the cluster of storms over C LA. The ridge will continue to slide eastward this afternoon allowing upper level subsidence to wane some and a chance that either the storms themselves or their outflows could spark additional development over the region. May also see a few storms fire on the seabreeze across the coastal tier counties.
Rain chances on the upswing into the weekend as the ridge moves eastward allowing a deep SE to S flow throughout the air column. Deep tropical moisture with PWS exceeding 2.2 inches surges into the area on Saturday with the passage of a tropical wave. Expect more and more thunderstorms along the seabreeze each afternoon as subsidence from the ridge weakens and deep moisture enters into the area. Rain chances should peak on Sunday with the wave axis to our west and our area on the moist and "lifted" east side of the wave. Hard to dry out the forecast as fast as models are showing for next week and would like to retain at least slight chances Monday and Tuesday as deeper moisture lingers. While models were correct this week in building the ridge...this ridge is not near as powerful as the one in late June as a few seabreeze showers have been developing...and the models were slightly on the drier side...a new change from the recent months.
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