downsouthman1 wrote:dhweather wrote:From: National Weather Service, Fort Worth
Date: Monday, 2 March 2015 13:33 CST
Tom Bradshaw/Mark Fox
Where did that come from?
Skywarn Team website
http://wx5fwd.org/NWSUpdate
Moderator: S2k Moderators
downsouthman1 wrote:dhweather wrote:From: National Weather Service, Fort Worth
Date: Monday, 2 March 2015 13:33 CST
Tom Bradshaw/Mark Fox
Where did that come from?
dhweather wrote:downsouthman1 wrote:dhweather wrote:From: National Weather Service, Fort Worth
Date: Monday, 2 March 2015 13:33 CST
Tom Bradshaw/Mark Fox
Where did that come from?
Skywarn Team website
http://wx5fwd.org/NWSUpdate
SouthernMet wrote:possibly some ice accumulations on power lines - will develop in these areas by Wednesday evening/night. Some of these areas in Central Texas may experience their most significant winter weather events of the season.
Exactly what I'm thinking.
dhweather wrote:I have a gut feeling this is not going to be much, if anything, in Heath.
Texas Snowman wrote:Has climbed to 41 in Denison. First time out of the 30s since middle of last week.
Portastorm wrote:SouthernMet wrote:possibly some ice accumulations on power lines - will develop in these areas by Wednesday evening/night. Some of these areas in Central Texas may experience their most significant winter weather events of the season.
Exactly what I'm thinking.
As am I. If the 12z GFS Skew-T progs are close, it looks like Austin would transition to sleet some time early Thursday morning and lasting until around lunch. Prior to that, possibly as much as a quarter of an inch of freezing rain. Area bridges/elevated roadways/and some roads would be an ice rink.
downsouthman1 wrote:dhweather wrote:I have a gut feeling this is not going to be much, if anything, in Heath.
Well NWS is now calling this a more southerly system, which is what the GFS has been showing since last week.
Portastorm wrote::uarrow:
It's unfortunate that my local NWS office doesn't have the foresight to be proactive like NWS Fort Worth is on a regular basis. Given the potential of the storm down here, you'd think the public would be alerted to the threat ... but ... no, apparently that's asking too much.
downsouthman1 wrote:dhweather wrote:I have a gut feeling this is not going to be much, if anything, in Heath.
Well NWS is now calling this a more southerly system, which is what the GFS has been showing since last week.
Portastorm wrote:A snippet from Bob Rose, LCRA's meteorologist, and his recently updated (midday Monday) blog:
I am becoming quite concerned about the development of winter weather Wednesday night into Thursday morning. Unlike the last two recent winter weather events that contained only light precipitation, this event is forecast to involve heavier precipitation due to the efficient overrunning pattern in place. Some forecast data is calling for precipitation totals of at least a half inch during this period. Should this occur as currently forecast, it will result in large amounts of sleet, freezing rain and snow Wednesday night till about midday Thursday. This amount of precipitation has the potential to cause serious travel problems across the area Thursday morning. As of now, the threat for wintery precipitation looks to occur generally along and north of a line stretching from around Brenham to La Grange to San Antonio to Uvalde. Stay tuned for more updates on this winter weather threat over the next couple of days.
weatherdude1108 wrote:Portastorm wrote:A snippet from Bob Rose, LCRA's meteorologist, and his recently updated (midday Monday) blog:
I am becoming quite concerned about the development of winter weather Wednesday night into Thursday morning. Unlike the last two recent winter weather events that contained only light precipitation, this event is forecast to involve heavier precipitation due to the efficient overrunning pattern in place. Some forecast data is calling for precipitation totals of at least a half inch during this period. Should this occur as currently forecast, it will result in large amounts of sleet, freezing rain and snow Wednesday night till about midday Thursday. This amount of precipitation has the potential to cause serious travel problems across the area Thursday morning. As of now, the threat for wintery precipitation looks to occur generally along and north of a line stretching from around Brenham to La Grange to San Antonio to Uvalde. Stay tuned for more updates on this winter weather threat over the next couple of days.
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Hmmm.![]()
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The "quite concerned" words always concern me from any meteorological discussion I read. A half-inch is significant enough to break some tree limbs and down some power lines. Ice day number 2 may be in the works.
downsouthman1 wrote:weatherdude1108 wrote:Portastorm wrote:A snippet from Bob Rose, LCRA's meteorologist, and his recently updated (midday Monday) blog:
I am becoming quite concerned about the development of winter weather Wednesday night into Thursday morning. Unlike the last two recent winter weather events that contained only light precipitation, this event is forecast to involve heavier precipitation due to the efficient overrunning pattern in place. Some forecast data is calling for precipitation totals of at least a half inch during this period. Should this occur as currently forecast, it will result in large amounts of sleet, freezing rain and snow Wednesday night till about midday Thursday. This amount of precipitation has the potential to cause serious travel problems across the area Thursday morning. As of now, the threat for wintery precipitation looks to occur generally along and north of a line stretching from around Brenham to La Grange to San Antonio to Uvalde. Stay tuned for more updates on this winter weather threat over the next couple of days.
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Hmmm.![]()
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The "quite concerned" words always concern me from any meteorological discussion I read. A half-inch is significant enough to break some tree limbs and down some power lines. Ice day number 2 may be in the works.
It said 0.5" precip total. It didn't say that that would all be FRZR.
TXdaddy217 wrote:http://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?site=sjt&zmx=1&zmy=1&map.x=226&map.y=89#.VPTHgLA3PIU
The latest forecast for the San Angelo/Abilene area. Predicts the dreaded THUNDERSLEET on Wednesday.![]()
Portastorm wrote:What folks in Central, West Central, and South Central Texas need to realize -- and Bob touched on this in his blog -- this system is much more dynamic than any other which has hit us this winter season. It's the same system which spurred severe storms in Southern California and is helping copious amounts of snow to fall on Flagstaff, Arizona. The "energy" from this system will likely be further south and that is why concern should be growing for our part of the state.
At a minimum, the 12z GFS showed .22" of FREEZING rain for Austin. That's more than enough to create havoc here.
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