Brent wrote:Ugh. I miss the cool air already
NWS is saying that 100s are possible again next week.


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Brent wrote:Ugh. I miss the cool air already
Iceresistance wrote:Brent wrote:Ugh. I miss the cool air already
NWS is saying that 100s are possible again next week.![]()
rwfromkansas wrote:My attitude is getting a bit worse about the heat. I can deal with 95 in September, but 99-100 is harder to take. Lol.
vbhoutex wrote:rwfromkansas wrote:My attitude is getting a bit worse about the heat. I can deal with 95 in September, but 99-100 is harder to take. Lol.
Feel the same way here in Houston with upper 90s expected here! UGH!!!
Ntxw wrote:Will say this after the late season heatwave there is a lot of model disagreements. Seems like the recurving typhoons is making for a tough forecast.
weatherdude1108 wrote:What's the latest SOI? I know that's just one variable for looking at weather forecasts. But seems to be a decent indicator of looking at short/long rain chances for Texas based on past discussions.
All I know now is the cockroach death ridge has taken over, with record highs in jeopardy this next week or so (possibly slightly over 100 according to EWX), and it's almost October.It's like that rainy period we had last month said, "Haha, just teasing!"
Iceresistance wrote:weatherdude1108 wrote:What's the latest SOI? I know that's just one variable for looking at weather forecasts. But seems to be a decent indicator of looking at short/long rain chances for Texas based on past discussions.
All I know now is the cockroach death ridge has taken over, with record highs in jeopardy this next week or so (possibly slightly over 100 according to EWX), and it's almost October.It's like that rainy period we had last month said, "Haha, just teasing!"
Daily SOI is at +29.42, it was +20 yesterday.
weatherdude1108 wrote:Iceresistance wrote:weatherdude1108 wrote:What's the latest SOI? I know that's just one variable for looking at weather forecasts. But seems to be a decent indicator of looking at short/long rain chances for Texas based on past discussions.
All I know now is the cockroach death ridge has taken over, with record highs in jeopardy this next week or so (possibly slightly over 100 according to EWX), and it's almost October.It's like that rainy period we had last month said, "Haha, just teasing!"
Daily SOI is at +29.42, it was +20 yesterday.
Does this mean (in this case) the higher positive number means likely drier?
And if the number were lower/negative number, it means likely wetter (at least for TX/OK)?
I guess the 90 day trend is more the long-term trend?
I'm guessing the latest number is bad for rain in our areas. Just educating myself. Water is a precious thing these days.
weatherdude1108 wrote:Iceresistance wrote:weatherdude1108 wrote:What's the latest SOI? I know that's just one variable for looking at weather forecasts. But seems to be a decent indicator of looking at short/long rain chances for Texas based on past discussions.
All I know now is the cockroach death ridge has taken over, with record highs in jeopardy this next week or so (possibly slightly over 100 according to EWX), and it's almost October.It's like that rainy period we had last month said, "Haha, just teasing!"
Daily SOI is at +29.42, it was +20 yesterday.
Doea this mean (in this case) the higher positive number means likely drier?
And if the number were lower/negative number, it means likely wetter (at least for TX/OK)?
I guess the 90 day trend is more the long-term trend?
I'm guessing the latest number is bad for rain in our areas. Just educating myself. Water is a precious thing these days.
Ntxw wrote:weatherdude1108 wrote:Iceresistance wrote:
Daily SOI is at +29.42, it was +20 yesterday.
Doea this mean (in this case) the higher positive number means likely drier?
And if the number were lower/negative number, it means likely wetter (at least for TX/OK)?
I guess the 90 day trend is more the long-term trend?
I'm guessing the latest number is bad for rain in our areas. Just educating myself. Water is a precious thing these days.
SOI is an ENSO proxy. When it is consistently negative, Texas is generally in wet pattern. When consistently positive it is a dry pattern. When you get spikes either way expect a little more extreme (+30/-30 is my general rule for major spikes). When the index has a big swing one way or another then there is likely a pattern shift on the way regarding precip. This is regarding daily values.
30-90 day tells you overall El Nino or La Nina state. Positive being La Nina conditions and negative being El Nino.
September is spiking positive and staying there.
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