Great forecast discussion out of the FW NWS office overnight, pretty much verbatim what we’ve all been discussing on this forum over the past week. Bottom line, trending in the direction of a potentially very impactful winter storm later this week
Eyes turn to the Thursday-Friday (Day 6-Day 7) timeframe where
deterministic and ensemble guidance is beginning to coalesce
around two distinct scenarios regarding our primary upper-level
low and its influence on North and Central Texas`s winter weather
potential:
Scenario 1 (More Favorable for Winter Weather): The parent cut-off
low quickly phases out into an open wave trough, deepens, and
rapidly progress over the Southern Plains Thursday into Friday.
Strong lift, deep moisture, and low- to mid-level warm-advection
leads to widespread precipitation over much of North and Central
Texas Thursday afternoon through Friday afternoon. A quicker,
stronger system will give less time for the overlaying Arctic
airmass to modify and warm, thus providing thermodynamic profiles
supportive of winter weather. Roughly 60% of GEFS, GEPS, and ENS
members support this scenario.
Scenario 2 (Less Favorable for Winter Weather): The parent cut-off
low remains detached from the flow aloft and meanders near Baja
California through the end of the week. Deeper moisture and lift
remains displaced to the west of our region. This slower system
will allow enough time for temperatures to warm enough across our
region to sufficiently diminish any winter weather hopes across
North and Central Texas. Roughly 40% of GEFS, GEPS, and ENS
members support this solution.
There you have it! At least some measurable wintry precipitation
is favored across North and Central Texas in the Thursday-Friday
timeframe, but there remains a 2 out of 5 chance that we avoid
any winter weather mischief. With the current suite of guidance
favoring Scenario 1, the potential for impactful snowfall has
increased some across North and Central Texas with a 30% chance
that much of the region observes at least 1" of snow. It is
important to note that we are still 6-7 days away from this event,
and the forecast will change as we gain better confidence in how
this system will play out.
What Can You Do Now?
1. Get those heavy coats out of the closet.
2. Prepare your home for cold temperatures.
2. Follow credible and trusted weather sources for forecast updates.