Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Next major storm to bring mostly rain to southern, eastern US

Next major storm to bring mostly rain to southern, eastern US

The next major storm for the southern and eastern United States, currently scheduled from Thursday, Dec. 13, to Sunday, Dec. 16, is likely to bring rain and not snow or ice to many locations that were hit and others that were missed by the storm this past weekend.
Dry weather is in store for much of the eastern two-thirds of the nation until the latter part of the week in the South Central states and much of the Northeast until the weekend.
While cold air was entrenched in the Southern and Eastern states at the start of this week, the flow of fresh arctic air will be shut off this week and this coming weekend. The cold air in place will slowly moderate, while a flow of milder air from the Pacific becomes established as the week progresses.
Temperatures are forecast to trend to near or slightly above average over much of the eastern two-thirds of the nation by the end of this week.
On Friday, highs are forecast to range form the middle 30s F in Minneapolis and the middle 40s in Boston to the lower 50s in Oklahoma City and the middle 50s in Atlanta.
The moderating temperature trend is key for the primary form of precipitation that the next storm will bring.
"That next storm is likely to bring rain and drizzle from much of the southern Plains to the middle Mississippi Valley and Tennessee Valley and in places in the Southeast states that had heavy snow and ice from the last storm," according to AccuWeather Long-Range Meteorologist Max Vido.
The same storm is forecast to swing much farther to the north than the last with the possibility of some rain falling on parts of the Mississippi Valley and central Great Lakes region and the likelihood of rain for much of the Northeast.
"Storms like the one coming up late this week can be a little tricky, even though there may be no arctic air present," according to AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Bernie Rayno.
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"Cold air from aloft can be tapped and can sometimes produce a narrow band of wet snow in areas surrounded by mild air and do so fairly far south," Rayno said.


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Rain returns to finish the week -- with a 100+ year old record in jeopardy

Rain returns to finish the week -- with a 100+ year old record in jeopardy

Thursday will be our last dry day in DC before a wet pattern sets up through the weekend.
QUICK FORECAST:
Tonight: Mostly cloudy & cold. Low: 33.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy & still chilly. High: 49.
Thursday Night: Mostly cloudy & chilly. Low: 36.
Friday: Mostly cloudy & chilly with PM rain & showers. High: 47.
FORECAST DISCUSSION:
A weak disturbance brings more clouds Wednesday night keeping temperatures milder mostly in the 30s. It brings a slim chance of a snow or rain shower to the mountains and areas north asn west of DC, but nothing in the metro.
Thursday will be mostly cloudy and seasonably cold. Despite the clouds, temps will still manage to reach the upper 40s.
The dry streak comes to an end Friday. The next big low pressure system arrives, bringing with it rounds of showers and periods of rain, along with locally heavy rain. Friday starts dry in the metro, but rain & showers arrive from west to east during the afternoon. Into Friday night, some locally heavy rain will be likely. The Critical Timing for the heaviest is between 6 PM Friday and 6 AM Saturday. More rain and showers linger throughout Saturday, but of lighter intensity overall than Friday night.
In total, 1" - 2" of rain is likely. With this much rain in the forecast, DC will likely break one of it's oldest weather records. Click Here to learn more about 2018 record wet year.
DETAILED FORECAST:
Tonight: Mostly cloudy & cold, snow or rain shower possible N & W. Lows: 30s. Winds: SSE - 10.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy & still chilly. Highs: 45 - 50. Winds: ENE 5 - 10.
Thursday Night: Mostly cloudy & chilly. Lows: 30s. Winds: NE - 10.
Friday: Mostly cloudy & chilly with PM rain & showers. Highs: 44 - 49. Winds: ENE 5 - 10.
Saturday: Mostly cloudy & milder with rain & showers. Highs: 55 - 60. Winds: E - 10.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK:
Showers linger to finish the weekend on Sunday with mild temps hanging on for one more day. Cooler air returns starting Monday with highs back in the 40s.
Sunday: Mostly cloudy with lingering showers. Highs in the mid 50s.
Monday: Partly cloudy and colder. Highs in the upper 40s.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy and seasonably cold. Highs in the mid to upper 40s.


Houston Weather: Warmer today, storms tonight

Houston Weather: Warmer today, storms tonight

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BURRRR! Collin says it's going to be chilly this weekend.
Next storm brings wind and rain Thursday and Friday
Leave the heavy winter coat in the closet today. Meteorologist Travis Herzog says that a blanket of clouds is keeping temperatures in the upper 50s out the door, which is 20-25 degrees warmer than yesterday morning.

The thick clouds will remain over Houston today. Even without the sunshine, temperatures will be milder with southeast winds blowing warmer air into the area.

A few showers are possible this afternoon and evening, then Travis says a round of strong thunderstorms will rumble through Houston between midnight and sunrise Thursday.

After the storms clear it will turn windy with gusts over 30 mph as a strong area of low pressure blows into the state.

Unusually cold air in the upper atmosphere will circle around this low, and that could bring snow to north Texas Thursday night. Travis says if there's enough moisture left for the cold air to work with, snowflakes and/or ice pellets could briefly mix with the raindrops before sunrise Friday all the way down to I-10, but no accumulations are expected at this time.

The winds will remain gusty on Friday, then settle down for the weekend. Travis says this weekend looks like a big improvement over last weekend. Instead of flooding rains, clouds, and highs in the 40s, we'll get sunshine and mild afternoons in the 60s.

At least three dead, thousands without power after historic snowstorm in North Carolina

At least three dead, thousands without power after historic snowstorm in North Carolina

Thousands were left without power and many faced treacherous driving conditions as winter weather hit North Carolina and Virginia beginning Dec. 8. 
North Carolina was blanketed with too much snow too soon: more than a foot in several areas — and winter had barely just arrived.
Years' worth of snowfall swept through parts of the state in a little more than a day, causing hundreds of crashes, thousands of power outages and at least three confirmed deaths, officials said Monday. Double-digit snowfall totals, some up to more than two feet, dropped in many cities and towns over the weekend, far higher than what the state normally sees this time of year.
In one county, five families were stranded while 20 inches of snow buried the area.
By Tuesday,the storm has stopped but the state — which is still recovering from the damage wrought by Hurricane Florence in the summer — is not out of the woods yet. A deadly mix of ice and rain will keep roads treacherous, and many could turn into ice rinks, Gov. Roy Cooper said at a news conference.
“Most of North Carolina has gotten through the worst of the storm, but we need to stay vigilant. … The snow and ice and the danger may not go away as quickly as they came,” Cooper (D) said Monday.

A manager of a check-cashing store on Gate City Boulevard shovels snow from the parking lot in Greensboro, N.C., on Dec. 9. (H. Scott Hoffmann/News & Record/AP)
“Even the parts of our state that didn’t see a flake may feel effects from the storm today,” he said. Coastal communities are under flood warnings, and water may wash over parts of Highway 12, which connects the Outer Banks’s barrier islands.
Cooper issued a state of emergency Friday, and the deluge began Saturday.
Just after 4 p.m. Saturday, a tree fell on a moving vehicle in the Charlotte suburb of Matthews. The vehicle crashed into a nearby church. The driver died, while the passenger suffered minor injuries, police said.
In Haywood County in western North Carolina, a woman in hospice care died in her home, Cooper said. No other details were immediately available.
On Monday, a driver suffered a medical problem as he was trying to free his truck that was stuck on a highway, Cooper said. He was hospitalized and later died.
In the eastern city of Kinston, a truck drifted off the road and into a river. Divers have recovered the truck’s cab, but the driver has not been found, officials said.
In Wilkes County, five families ― about 20 people, including small children — were stranded in their homes. The families had been without power for three days and could not get out after their neighborhoods were buried in more than 20 inches of snow, said Lt. Col. Matt Devivo of the North Carolina National Guard. A team of guardsmen rescued the families, who have since been taken to a shelter.
More than 600 collisions have been reported, and 31,000 North Carolina households remain without power as of Tuesday afternoon, according to Duke Energy. About 14,000 are without power in South Carolina.
Much of the winter’s snow in North Carolina usually falls in January and February. Among the worst snowstorms on record happened in January 2000, when Raleigh was buried in more than 20 inches of snow.
The winter storm hit other parts of the Southeast, too, including South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia.
Read more:




https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2018/12/10/least-two-dead-thousands-without-power-after-historic-snowstorm-north-carolina/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.f9b81dfc2f4e