0800 PM SNOW 4 W DYERSBURG
02/28/2009 E4.0 INCH DYER
0800 PM SNOW HENDERSON
02/28/2009 E2.0 INCH CHESTER
0800 PM SNOW 1 N JACKSON
02/28/2009 E3.0 INCH MADISON
0802 PM SNOW 2 N JACKSON
02/28/2009 E3.3 INCH MADISON
0804 PM SNOW ALAMO
02/28/2009 E6.0 INCH CROCKETT
0810 PM SNOW STANTON
02/28/2009 E8.0 INCH HAYWOOD
0815 PM SNOW GERMANTOWN
02/28/2009 M2.2 INCH SHELBY
0815 PM SNOW GILT EDGE
02/28/2009 E8.0 INCH TIPTON
0825 PM SNOW MANILA
02/28/2009 E4.3 INCH MISSISSIPPI
0825 PM SNOW KENNETT
02/28/2009 E5.5 INCH DUNKLIN
0842 PM SNOW BLUE GOOSE
02/28/2009 M3.0 INCH HENDERSON
0855 PM SNOW 6 SE COVINGTON
02/28/2009 E7.0 INCH TIPTON
0856 PM SNOW 2 N JACKSON
02/28/2009 M5.1 INCH MADISON
0900 PM HEAVY SNOW 5 E RIPLEY
02/28/2009 E10.0 INCH LAUDERDALE
0900 PM SNOW 4 SSE GADSDEN
02/28/2009 M6.5 INCH MADISON
0908 PM SNOW BEMIS
02/28/2009 M5.5 INCH MADISON
0910 PM SNOW 2 S WALCOTT
02/28/2009 M8.2 INCH GREENE
0915 PM SNOW UNION CITY
02/28/2009 M5.0 INCH OBION
0920 PM SNOW GILT EDGE
02/28/2009 M9.3 INCH TIPTON
0920 PM SNOW ATOKA
02/28/2009 M7.0 INCH TIPTON
0930 PM SNOW GREENFIELD
02/28/2009 E1.5 INCH WEAKLEY
0944 PM SNOW 3 N BARTLETT
02/28/2009 M5.8 INCH SHELBY
0945 PM HEAVY SNOW WILSON
02/28/2009 M12.0 INCH MISSISSIPPI
0950 PM SNOW HENDERSON
02/28/2009 M4.0 INCH CHESTER
Pages
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Snow totals in past two hours
Snow totals so far
Video of snow falling in Memphis
Precip approaching
A Winter Storm Warning is in effect for the area until 6am Sunday.
My forecast on MWN is up to date and is calling for light rain to begin after lunchtime, mixing possibly with sleet or snow by around 2pm, then changing to all snow around 4pm. There could be minor accumulations on grassy surfaces prior to dusk, but heavier snow will hold off until after 6pm and last on and off through midnight before tapering to light snow showers for a few hours thereafter. Total accumulations in the metro area are expected to be 2-3" with higher amounts north and east of the city. Places like Jackson, TN could see up to 4-5" from this event! This should be a wet, fairly heavy snow, so it would be good for making snowmen if you wanted to do it after dark tonight!
By tomorrow, the sun will be out and temps will rise above freezing (after an overnight low around 27-28) by mid-morning, so melting will be fairly quick. As far as road conditions, I don't think there will be any problems until possibly after 7-8pm, when some slush might start showing up in areas that get heavier snow bursts and temps approach freezing. Be especially careful on bridges and overpasses.
Stay with MemphisWeather.net and this blog for the latest updates.
Winter Storm Warning for Memphis
...WINTER STORM WARNING IN EFFECT FROM NOON TODAY TO 6 AM CST SUNDAY...
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN MEMPHIS HAS ISSUED A WINTER STORM WARNING FOR SLEET AND SNOW, WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM NOON TODAY TO 6 AM CST SUNDAY. THE WINTER STORM WATCH IS NO LONGER IN EFFECT. RAIN WILL CHANGE OVER TO SLEET AND SNOW THIS AFTERNOON THEN TRANSITION OVER TO ALL SNOW BY EARLY EVENING. SNOW AND SLEET ACCUMULATIONS BETWEEN 2 TO 4 INCHES ARE EXPECTED THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING.
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
A WINTER STORM WARNING MEANS SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF SNOW... SLEET... AND ICE ARE EXPECTED OR OCCURRING. THIS WILL MAKE TRAVEL VERY HAZARDOUS OR IMPOSSIBLE.
Friday, February 27, 2009
Winter Storm Watch posted for Memphis
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN MEMPHIS HAS ISSUED A WINTER STORM WATCH WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM SATURDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH LATE SATURDAY NIGHT.
RAIN WILL CHANGE OVER TO SLEET AND EVENTUALLY TO ALL SNOW SATURDAY AFTERNOON. SNOW ACCUMULATIONS OF 3 TO 5 INCHES ARE POSSIBLE ACROSS THE WATCH AREA. MUCH OF THE ACCUMULATION WILL LIKELY BE ON GRASSY SURFACES, BUT SLIPPERY ROADS WILL BE POSSIBLE WHERE THE SNOW COMES DOWN HARD.
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
A WINTER STORM WATCH MEANS THERE IS A POTENTIAL FOR SIGNIFICANT SNOW, SLEET, OR ICE ACCUMULATIONS THAT MAY IMPACT TRAVEL. CONTINUE TO MONITOR THE LATEST FORECASTS.
Special Weather Statement from MWN
A LARGE UPPER LEVEL STORM SYSTEM WILL MOVE INTO THE CENTRAL PLAINS TONIGHT AND REACH THE MID-SOUTH BY SATURDAY EVENING. AHEAD OF THE UPPER LOW...WIDESPREAD RAIN IS EXPECTED TO FALL ACROSS THE AREA. AS THE UPPER LOW MOVES INTO THE MID-SOUTH...MUCH COLDER AIR NEAR THE LOW WILL CHANGE THE RAIN TO SNOW. THE CHANGEOVER FROM RAIN TO SNOW WILL OCCUR IN THE MEMPHIS METROPOLITAN AREA AROUND MID-AFTERNOON, EARLIER TO THE NORTH AND A LITTLE LATER TO THE SOUTH.
AS THE UPPER LOW MOVES ACROSS THE REGION SATURDAY EVENING, SNOW WILL CONTINUE TO FALL. TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATIONS OF 1 TO 2 INCHES ARE POSSIBLE MAINLY ON GRASSY SURFACES. THE AMOUNT OF SNOW THAT FALLS WILL BE HIGHLY DEPENDENT ON THE TRACK OF THE UPPER LOW SO THERE REMAINS QUITE A BIT OF UNCERTAINTY. A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY MAY BE ISSUED BY SATURDAY MORNING. ROAD CONDITIONS COULD BECOME HAZARDOUS FOR A PERIOD DEPENDING ON HOW HEAVY THE SNOW FALLS.
PERSONS IN THE MID-SOUTH SHOULD MONITOR WEATHER CONDITIONS ON SATURDAY AND BE PREPARED FOR POTENTIAL WINTER WEATHER. FURTHER UPDATES WILL BE PROVIDED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AND MEMPHISWEATHER.NET AS WARRANTED.
$$
NWS/MWN
Snowfall possibilities
A low pressure system currently over the Upper Midwest/Northern Plains is moving southeast and bringing with it some very COLD air. As it nose-dives just to our west tomorrow, showers will break out by late morning as temps hover near 40. By mid-afternoon, the cold air aloft will push into the region and surface temps will also fall into the 30s. This combo will begin changing the rain over to snow.
One model (GFS) actually makes this transition earlier in the afternoon (maybe around noon), while another (NAM) is closer to 3pm. The other model differences are in precipitation amounts after the changeover. The GFS believes amounts will be fairly light, but with the earlier transition we could see an inch by the time it ends. The NAM is more bullish and actually gives us closer to 2-3" even with the later transition - most of this falling in the evening hours. Both move the precip out by midnight. The NAM has done exceptionally well with cold air intrusions this winter and I tend to favor it's timing, but think that the precip amounts from it might be overdone. Thus, I think the transition will be ~3pm with an inch of accumulation possible between 3-9pm. I do believe that areas north and east of Memphis, such as Dyersburg, Jackson, Selmer, etc. could see up to 2". I'll look for the models to come into more agreement and update the forecast tonight or early Saturday.
Cold weather will continue Sunday and it will be a windy weekend, so wind chills will be pretty cold (teens to 20s). Dry weather wand a warming trend will commence for the first week of March, which will come in like a lamb!
Severe Weather Awareness Week (part 5) - NOAA Weather Radio
Today is the last day of Severe Weather Awareness week and the focus shifts to NOAA Weather Radio and the Emergency Alert System.
...NOAA WEATHER RADIO AND THE EMERGENCY ALERT SYSTEM...
WEATHER RADIO IS THE VOICE OF THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE. IT PROVIDES CONTINUOUS WEATHER INFORMATION 24 HOURS A DAY... EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR. THE NATIONWIDE NETWORK OF WEATHER RADIO STATIONS PROVIDES THE PUBLIC WITH THE FASTEST MOST RELIABLE SOURCE OF UP-TO-DATE WEATHER INFORMATION DIRECTLY FROM THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE.
YOU NEED A SPECIAL RADIO TO RECEIVE WEATHER RADIO BROADCASTS...A RADIO THAT IS CAPABLE OF RECEIVING SIGNALS IN THE VERY HIGH FREQUENCY PUBLIC SERVICE BAND.
BROADCASTS MAY VARY BUT GENERALLY INCLUDE AREA FORECASTS, PRESENT WEATHER CONDITIONS, SHORT-TERM FORECASTS, CLIMATIC DATA, RIVER AND LAKE STAGE FORECASTS, AND OTHER SPECIALIZED INFORMATION. THE BROADCASTS ARE UPDATED CONTINUOUSLY.
WEATHER RADIO IS USEFUL ANYTIME BUT IT IS MOST IMPORTANT WHEN SEVERE WEATHER THREATENS. DURING PERIODS OF SEVERE WEATHER, ROUTINE PROGRAMMING IS INTERRUPTED AND THE FOCUS SHIFTED TO THE LOCAL SEVERE WEATHER THREAT. IN AN EMERGENCY, A WARNING ALARM TONE IS BROADCAST THAT ACTIVATES SPECIALLY DESIGNED RECEIVERS TO TURN ON AUTOMATICALLY, OR PRODUCE A VISUAL OR AUDIBLE ALARM.
A PRIMARY SOURCE OF WEATHER INFORMATION IS THE EMERGENCY ALERT SYSTEM. EAS IS A SYSTEM OF COMMUNICATIONS LINKS THAT UTILIZE DATA IN A DIGITAL FORM. IT IS A RELIABLE MEANS OF LINKING THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE, EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCIES, AND THE RADIO AND TELEVISION BROADCAST MEDIA TOGETHER. EAS HELPS PARTICIPATING RADIO AND TELEVISION STATIONS RECEIVE AND RELAY WEATHER WARNINGS AND OTHER EMERGENCY INFORMATION IN A TIMELY MANNER.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON WEATHER RADIO...CONTACT THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OFFICE IN MEMPHIS TENNESSEE.
courtesy NWS/MemphisThursday, February 26, 2009
Update on severe weather... and possible snow?
Severe Weather Awareness Week (part 4) - Flooding
Severe Weather Awareness Week continues with a look at the dangers of high water - flooding and flash flooding.
...FLOOD AND FLASH FLOOD AWARENESS DAY...
FLOODS AND FLASH FLOODS OCCUR EVERY YEAR IN THE MID SOUTH. RIVER FLOODING OCCURS SEASONALLY WHEN WINTER OR SPRING RAINS OR TORRENTIAL RAINS ASSOCIATED WITH TROPICAL STORMS FILL RIVER BASINS WITH TOO MUCH WATER TOO QUICKLY. FLASH FLOODS OCCUR SUDDENLY, USUALLY OCCURRING WITHIN HOURS OF EXCESSIVE LOCALIZED RAINFALL. THESE FLASH FLOODS CAN BECOME RAGING TORRENTS WHICH RIP THROUGH RIVER BEDS URBAN STREETS OR VALLEYS SWEEPING EVERYTHING BEFORE THEM.
WHEN A FLASH FLOOD WARNING IS ISSUED FOR YOUR COUNTY, OR THE MOMENT YOU FIRST REALIZE THAT A FLASH FLOOD IS IMMINENT, ACT QUICKLY TO SAVE YOURSELF. YOU MAY ONLY HAVE SECONDS.
A FLOOD WATCH MEANS IT IS POSSIBLE THAT HEAVY RAINS WILL CAUSE FLOODING IN THE SPECIFIED AREA. STAY ALERT TO THE WEATHER AND THINK ABOUT WHAT YOU WOULD DO IF WATER BEGINS TO RISE OR IF YOU RECEIVE A WARNING. WATCH FOR DEVELOPMENT.
HERE ARE SOME FLASH FLOOD SAFETY RULES.
* GET OUT OF AREAS SUBJECT TO FLOODING. THIS INCLUDES DIPS, LOW SPOTS, VALLEYS, STREAM BANKS, AND FLOOD PLAINS.
* AVOID ALREADY FLOODED AND HIGH VELOCITY FLOW AREAS. DO NOT ATTEMPT TO CROSS A FLOWING STREAM ON FOOT WHERE WATER IS ABOVE YOUR ANKLES.
* IF DRIVING...KNOW THE DEPTH OF WATER IN A DIP BEFORE CROSSING. THE ROAD BED MAY NOT BE INTACT UNDER THE WATER. DON'T DRIVE INTO A POOL OF WATER OR WHERE WATER IS FLOWING. WATER UP TO THE BUMPER WILL LIKELY STALL A CAR.
* IF THE VEHICLE STALLS...ABANDON IT IMMEDIATELY AND SEEK HIGHER GROUND. RAPIDLY RISING WATER MAY ENGULF THE VEHICLE AND ITS OCCUPANTS AND SWEEP THEM AWAY.
* BE ESPECIALLY CAUTIOUS AT NIGHT WHEN IT IS HARDER TO RECOGNIZE FLOOD DANGERS. HEAVY RAIN EVENTS FREQUENTLY OCCUR AT NIGHT!
* DO NOT CAMP OR PARK YOUR VEHICLE ALONG STREAMS OR DRAINAGE AREAS PARTICULARLY DURING THREATENING CONDITIONS.
courtesy NWS/Memphis
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Chance of strong to severe storms Thursday night
The front looks like it will stall out just to our south on Friday so continuing rain, and possibly a few thunderstorms, will linger Friday during the day. It will also be cooler Friday as the wind switches to the northwest with the frontal passage. At this time, it appears the main severe weather threat will be in the form of damaging straight line wind, though large hail or an isolated tornado cannot be ruled out. Saturday will be much cooler with scattered showers as an upper-level disturbance traverses the region.
Severe Weather Awareness Week (part 3) - Tornadoes
...TORNADO AWARENESS DAY...
YOUR SAFETY DEPENDS ON BEING CONSTANTLY ALERT TO THE POSSIBILITY OF TORNADOES FROM THE THUNDERSTORMS THAT APPROACH YOU. THIS IS ESPECIALLY TRUE DURING TORNADO WATCHES. A CAREFUL LOOKOUT SHOULD BE KEPT DURING ANY PERIOD OF SEVERE WEATHER ACTIVITY. PLAN IN ADVANCE WHERE YOU WILL GO AND WHAT YOU WILL DO IF A TORNADO THREATENS YOU.
REMEMBER, A TORNADO WATCH MEANS THAT TORNADO DEVELOPMENT IS POSSIBLE, SO WATCH THE SKY FOR DEVELOPING THUNDERSTORMS AND ALL THE HAZARDS THEY BRING. STAY TUNED TO WEATHER RADIO, COMMERCIAL RADIO OR TELEVISION FOR WEATHER STATEMENTS OR WARNINGS.
A TORNADO WARNING, USUALLY ISSUED FOR 1 OR 2 COUNTIES AT A TIME, MEANS THAT A TORNADO HAS BEEN SIGHTED OR INDICATED BY WEATHER RADAR. PERSONS IN THE PATH OF THE STORM NEED TO IMMEDIATELY FIND SHELTER, PREFERABLY IN A STURDY BUILDING, BELOW GROUND IF POSSIBLE.
HERE ARE SOME TORNADO SAFETY RULES:
* IN HOMES OR SMALL BUILDINGS...GO TO THE BASEMENT OR STORM SHELTER OR TO AN INTERIOR ROOM SUCH AS A CLOSET OR BATHROOM ON THE LOWEST LEVEL. GET UNDER SOMETHING STURDY, SUCH AS A HEAVY TABLE OR A BED.
* IN MOBILE HOMES AND VEHICLES...ABANDON THEM AND GO TO A STORM SHELTER OR STURDY STRUCTURE. IF THERE IS NO SUCH STRUCTURE NEARBY, LIE FLAT IN A DITCH, RAVINE, GULLY, CULVERT, OR A LOW SPOT WITH YOUR ARMS AND HANDS SHIELDING YOUR HEAD.
* IN LARGE BUILDINGS SUCH AS SCHOOLS, FACTORIES, HOSPITALS, NURSING HOMES, AND SHOPPING CENTERS...GO TO THE PREDESIGNATED SHELTER AREA. INTERIOR HALLWAYS ON THE LOWEST FLOOR ARE USUALLY BEST. STAY AWAY FROM ROOMS THAT ARE LARGE IN AREA BECAUSE THEY HAVE WEAKLY SUPPORTED ROOFS.
* STAY AWAY FROM WINDOWS.
courtesy NWS/Memphis
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Severe Weather Awareness Week (part 2) - Lightning
...LIGHTNING AWARENESS DAY...
SEVERE WEATHER AWARENESS WEEK CONTINUES TODAY WITH A LOOK AT LIGHTNING SAFETY.
HERE ARE SOME LIGHTNING SAFETY RULES.
ANY LIGHTNING SAFETY PLAN SHOULD INCORPORATE THE 30/30 RULE. THE 30/30 RULE STATES PEOPLE SHOULD SEEK SHELTER IF THE FLASH TO BANG DELAY (LENGTH OF TIME IN SECONDS BETWEEN A LIGHTNING FLASH AND ITS SUBSEQUENT THUNDER) IS 30 SECONDS OR LESS AND THAT THEY REMAIN UNDER COVER UNTIL 30 MINUTES AFTER THE FINAL CLAP OF THUNDER.
MOVE INSIDE A WELL CONSTRUCTED HOUSE... A LARGE BUILDING... OR AN ALL METAL VEHICLE. STAY AWAY FROM ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES AND DO NOT USE THE TELEPHONE.
IF YOU ARE IN A BOAT... GET OFF THE WATER AND INTO A SUBSTANTIAL BUILDING... OR AT LEAST INTO AN ENCLOSED AND ALL-METAL VEHICLE WITH THE WINDOWS UP. IF YOU'RE CAUGHT IN AN OPEN METAL BOAT... LIE DOWN IN THE BOAT WITH CUSHIONS BETWEEN YOU AND THE METAL SIDES AND BOTTOM.
IF YOU ARE CAUGHT OUTDOORS... GET DOWN TO AVOID BEING THE HIGHEST POINT FOR A LIGHTNING DISCHARGE. IF YOU'RE CAUGHT IN A FLAT OPEN FIELD OR IF YOU FEEL YOUR HAIR STANDING ON END... CROUCH DOWN AND COVER YOUR HEAD WITH YOUR HANDS. THAT WAY ONLY YOUR FEET WILL TOUCH THE GROUND.
MOVE AWAY FROM MOTORCYCLES... SCOOTERS... GOLF CARTS... BICYCLES... TRACTORS... AND OTHER METAL FARM EQUIPMENT. AVOID WIRE FENCES... CLOTHES LINES... METAL PIPES... DRAINS... RAILROAD TRACKS... AND OTHER METALLIC OBJECTS.
AVOID LONE TREES AND THE TALLEST TREES. IF CAUGHT IN THE WOODS... PICK A SMALL GROVE OF TREES AS YOUR SHELTER... AND STAND AT LEAST 5 FEET FROM THE TRUNK OF THE NEAREST TREE TO AVOID FLYING BARK IF THE TREE IS STRUCK.
AVOID STANDING IN A SMALL ISOLATED SHED OR OTHER SMALL UNGROUNDED STRUCTURE IN OTHER AREAS.
IF IN A GROUP OF PEOPLE IN AN OPEN AREA... SPREAD OUT BEFORE YOU KNEEL DOWN.
ON WEDNESDAY... THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WILL CONDUCT A TORNADO DRILL BETWEEN 9 AND 10 A.M. IN TENNESSEE AND ARKANSAS.
courtesy NWS-Memphis
Monday, February 23, 2009
Severe Weather Awareness Week (part 1) - Severe Thunderstorms
Well, the snow didn't materialize on Saturday as hoped. Honestly, I'm not exactly surprised. Each day last week, the situation looked a little grimmer and the rain just ended too early on Saturday afternoon for the cold air to catch up with it. It was cold... but not cold enough.
This week will see a warming trend with slight chances of rain Tuesday afternoon through Thursday morning, then a pretty good chance of t'storms later on Thursday and Thursday night. See my forecast.
TN Severe Weather Awareness Week
This week (Feb. 23-27) is Severe Weather Awareness Week in Tennesse, with a different type of severe weather highlighted each day. You can visit this NWS-Memphis site for more information. I'll also post blogs each day this week highlighting the topic of interest for that day. Below is today's topic: Severe Thunderstorms.
...SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AWARENESS DAY...
THERE ARE APPROXIMATELY TWO THOUSAND THUNDERSTORMS IN PROGRESS AROUND THE WORLD AT ANY GIVEN TIME. MOST OF THESE STORMS ARE BENEFICIAL AND BRING NEEDED RAIN. ONLY A SMALL FRACTION LESS THAN ONE PERCENT ARE CLASSIFIED AS SEVERE. SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ARE THOSE THUNDERSTORMS THAT PRODUCE HAIL THREE QUARTER INCH IN DIAMETER...OR LARGER...AND OR STRONG WIND GUSTS OF 58 MPH OR GREATER. HAIL THAT IS THREE QUARTERS OF AN INCH IN DIAMETER IS ABOUT THE SIZE OF A PENNY.
A SMALL FRACTION OF THESE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCE TORNADOES. ALL THUNDERSTORMS ARE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING DEADLY LIGHTNING. THE HEAVY RAINS OR THE LIGHTNING ACTIVITY IN A THUNDERSTORM DO NOT HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH A THUNDERSTORM BEING CLASSIFIED AS SEVERE.
SOME OF THE SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SAFETY RULES ARE AS FOLLOWS:
* FIND SHELTER IMMEDIATELY. GO TO A STURDY BUILDING THAT WILL WITHSTAND HIGH WINDS. AVOID ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES AND TELEPHONES.
* IT WOULD BE A GOOD IDEA TO BRING YOUR CAR INSIDE A GARAGE AND TO SECURE LOOSE OBJECTS.
* REMEMBER...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING MEANS THAT A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM IS OCCURRING. THE SEVERE THUNDERSTORM HAS BEEN DETECTED BY THE DOPPLER RADAR...OR REPORTED TO THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BY OUR SKY WARN SPOTTER NETWORK...OR THE LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCY IN A PARTICULAR COUNTY.
* A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH MEANS THAT CONDITIONS ARE RIGHT FOR SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TO DEVELOP...BUT NONE HAS BEEN OBSERVED. FOLKS SHOULD KEEP AN EYE ON THE SKY AND LISTEN TO COMMERCIAL BROADCASTS...OR WEATHER RADIO FOR ANY SUBSEQUENT WARNINGS.
* WHEN A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING IS ISSUED FOR YOUR LOCATION....TREAT IT THE SAME AS YOU WOULD A TORNADO WARNING. SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS CAN PRODUCE DAMAGING WINDS LARGE HAIL AND DEADLY LIGHTNING.
Courtesy: NWS-Memphis
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Special Weather Statement
NWS-MEMPHIS / MEMPHISWEATHER.NET
745 AM CST SAT FEB 21 2009
...DUSTING OF SNOW...MAINLY ON GRASSY AREAS...POSSIBLE TODAY IN NORTHERN AND EASTERN SUBURBS OF MEMPHIS...
A COLD FRONT WILL SWEEP THROUGH THE AREA FROM THE WEST TODAY AND THIS EVENING. PRECIPITATION BEHIND THE FRONT WILL QUICKLY CHANGE TO SNOW ACROSS PORTIONS OF NORTHEAST ARKANSAS...THE MISSOURI BOOTHEEL...MUCH OF WEST TENNESSEE NORTH AND EAST OF MEMPHIS...AND EXTREME NORTHEAST MISSISSIPPI. LIGHT SNOW ACCUMULATIONS ARE POSSIBLE NORTH AND EAST OF THE CITY. ANY SNOW IN THE EXTREME SOUTHEAST CORNER OF WEST TENNESSEE AND NORTHEAST MISSISSIPPI WILL NOT OCCUR UNTIL LATE THIS AFTERNOON OR EARLY EVENING.
ANY SNOW THAT DEVELOPS IS ONLY EXPECTED TO LAST FOR ONLY A COUPLE OF HOURS AT MOST... PRODUCING NO MORE THAN A DUSTING MAINLY ON GRASSY AREAS AND ELEVATED SURFACES.
TEMPERATURES WILL DROP INTO THE UPPER 30S AS THE SNOW OCCURS BUT WILL REMAIN ABOVE FREEZING. THIS IN COMBINATION WITH THE RECENT WARMTH WILL HELP TO KEEP TRAVEL PROBLEMS TO A MINIMUM. STAY TUNED TO NOAA ALL-HAZARDS RADIO AND MEMPHISWEATHER.NET FOR ANY UPDATES.
$$
JCL/EAP
Friday, February 20, 2009
Update on Saturday winter weather
I've written a couple of times about possible winter weather for Saturday, but I'm becoming less bullish on snow with each new model run. I am now fairly certain that we will see about a 6-8 hour window of rain tomorrow beginning by mid-morning and ending around 3-4pm. Cold air will follow a cold frontal passage around noon tomorrow, but I think that most of the moisture will have moved east by the time it gets cold enough to snow. That begin said, I am still carrying a slight chance of very light snow in the MWN forecast after 3pm tomorrow afternoon. I just can't rule it totally out at this time. Highs will be in the 40s, but will fall into the 30s by late afternoon.
Sunday will be sunny again, but cool with highs in the mid 40s. A warm-up is expected to commence by Tuesday with scattered showers and t'storms by mid-week, lasting a few days.
Thursday, February 19, 2009
First call on Saturday's potential winter weather
The timing of that cold air (temps will be falling from morning highs down into the 30s in the afternoon) and the precip shutting off will be critical, as usual for our Mid-South location. It appears as though there is a potential for 1/10" of liquid equivalent (precipitation) between noon and about 5 pm. If that were to all fall as snow, we'd see somewhere around an inch (given a standard 10:1 snow to liquid water ratio). However, I think that air cold enough to support snow will be delayed a couple of hours behind the front.
My best guess at precip amount and timing at this point then is this: rain changing to snow by mid-afternoon with a dusting on elevated, grassy, or exposed surfaces, ending by 5 pm. No accumulation on streets and right now I don't expect to see any ice. Locations well east of Memphis (say closer to the TN River) will have the best chance of seeing an inch or more. I'll update again as conditions warrant.
Anyone care to comment? Remember my poll from ~3 weeks ago? 6-in-7 of you said we weren't yet done with the snow - you may be the best prognosticators in the business!
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
All eyes on Saturday
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Possible severe weather tonight
As low pressure works it's way across the Plains, a warm front will move through the Mid-South and the stage will be set for a rapid increase in the coverage of showers and thunderstorms this evening. Some of these storms could touch severe limits, mainly in the form of large hail and a brief damaging wind gust, across the region. The Storm Prediction Center has the same idea and has placed the Mid-South under a SLIGHT RISK of severe weather overnight.
The associated cold front will move through by mid-morning tomorrow with a decrease in cloud cover following. However, with the warm front passing through tonight, I expect temps to continue to rise overnight, probably up to around 60 by daybreak, so look for a high tomorrow in the mid 60s before temps begin falling in the afternoon. It will also be very windy with this system with gusts to 30+ mph overnight and early tomorrow and well into the 20s throughout the day Wednesday.
Dry weather will persist under high pressure through Friday before the next system drops swiftly into the area on northwest flow aloft. We'll talk more about this one later, but it bears watching for the potential for winter weather...
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Mid-South max wind speeds for Feb. 11, 2009
Location speed time
---------------------------------------------------
Paris TN (PHT) 55 mph 256 PM CST
Jonesboro AR (JBR) 53 mph 1241 PM CST
Jackson TN (MKL) 53 mph 148 PM CST
Blytheville AR (HKA) 52 mph 822 AM CST
Dyersburg TN (DYR) 52 mph 155 AM CST
Union City TN (UCY) 51 mph 151 PM CST
Memphis TN (MEM) 51 mph 1144 AM CST
Millington TN (NQA) 48 mph 150 AM CST
North Jackson TN 47 mph 130 PM CST
Tunica MS (UTA) 47 mph 615 AM CST
Tupelo MS (TUP) 44 mph 142 PM CST
Savannah TN (SNH) 43 mph 1236 PM CST
Lexington TN (PVE) 43 mph 338 PM CST
Yalobusha MS (YAL) 43 mph 809 AM CST
Harrisburg AR (LPS) 41 mph 110 AM CST
West Memphis AR (AWM) 41 mph 103 AM CST
Tishomingo MS (TIS) 40 mph 114 PM CST
Bartlett TN (WXLIVE) 39 mph 1111 AM CST
Marianna AR (SF2) 37 mph 1239 AM CST
Winborn MS (WIN) 35 mph 909 AM CST
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Power outage affecting MWN
Hang on to your hats!
Also, interesting to look at from my Davis Vantage Pro2 personal weather station, are graphs of conditions from the frontal passage this morning (see below). The front passed over the sensors just before 7am (the red lines on the graphs). Note especially the substantial drop (and subsequent rise) in barometric pressure, the temperature and dewpoint dropping after it passed, and the wind shift from south to southwest/west. Also, the wind speed peaked at 36 mph when the front passed, then started rising again after 8am behind the front to a max gust of 39 mph a little after 11am. Very nice data signature with this frontal passage!
6:30am - Narrow squall line crossing the river
4:30am update on severe weather threat
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
High Wind Warning for Memphis
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MEMPHIS TN / MEMPHISWEATHER.NET
345 PM CST TUE FEB 10 2009
...WINDY CONDITIONS WILL OCCUR OVER THE MID-SOUTH TONIGHT AND WEDNESDAY...
.STRONG...POTENTIALLY DAMAGING WINDS WILL DEVELOP TONIGHT IN ADVANCE OF A POWERFUL UPPER LEVEL STORM SYSTEM LIFTING FROM TEXAS INTO THE OZARKS. LATE TONIGHT...THE STRONG WINDS WILL PREVAIL FROM THE SOUTHERLY DIRECTION...BUT SWITCH TO THE SOUTHWEST FOLLOWING THE PASSAGE OF A SQUALL LINE IN THE EARLY MORNING DAYLIGHT HOURS. THE STRONG WINDS WILL GRADUALLY MODERATE DURING THE MID TO LATE AFTERNOON.
...WIND ADVISORY NOW IN EFFECT FROM 6 PM THIS EVENING TO 3 AM CST WEDNESDAY...
...HIGH WIND WARNING IN EFFECT FROM 3 AM TO 3 PM CST WEDNESDAY...
...WIND ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 3 PM TO 7 PM CST WEDNESDAY...
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN MEMPHIS HAS ISSUED A HIGH WIND WARNING...WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM 3 AM TO 3 PM CST WEDNESDAY. A WIND ADVISORY IS IN EFFECT PRIOR TO THE HIGH WIND WARNING...FROM 6 PM THIS EVENING TO 3 AM WEDNESDAY MORNING...AND FOLLOWING THE HIGH WIND WARNING...FROM 3 PM CST WEDNESDAY TO 7 PM CST WEDNESDAY.
SOUTH WINDS OF 25 TO 35 MPH WILL DEVELOP THIS EVENING AND PERSIST THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. PORTIONS OF WEST TENNESSEE... INCLUDING THE MEMPHIS METRO AREA... WILL LIKELY SEE GUSTS OF 45 MPH WITH ISOLATED GUSTS OF 50 MPH AFTER 3 AM CST. A SQUALL LINE WILL PASS THROUGH THE METRO AREA BETWEEN 5-8 AM CST. FOLLOWING THE PASSAGE OF THIS SQUALL LINE...SOUTHWEST WINDS OF 25 TO 35 MPH WILL PREVAIL. WIND GUSTS MAY REACH AS HIGH AS 45-50 MPH IN THE LATE MORNING AND EARLY AFTERNOON.
A WIND ADVISORY MEANS THAT SUSTAINED WINDS OF 25 TO 39 MPH ARE EXPECTED...OR GUSTS WILL RANGE BETWEEN 40 AND 57 MPH. WINDS THIS STRONG CAN MAKE DRIVING DIFFICULT... ESPECIALLY FOR HIGH PROFILE VEHICLES. USE EXTRA CAUTION.
A HIGH WIND WARNING MEANS A HAZARDOUS HIGH WIND EVENT IS EXP ECTED OR OCCURRING. SUSTAINED WIND SPEEDS OF AT LEAST 40 MPH OR GUSTS OF 58 MPH OR MORE CAN LEAD TO PROPERTY DAMAGE.
RESIDENTS OF THE MID-SOUTH ARE ENCOURAGED TO MONITOR THE LATEST FORECASTS AND STATEMENTS... AND BE READY TO ADJUST TRAVEL PLANS AS NECESSARY. LOOSE OUTDOOR OBJECTS SHOULD BE SECURED BEFORE THE STRONG WINDS ARRIVE. STAY WITH MEMPHISWEATHER.NET... BLOG.MEMPHISWEATHER.NET... NOAA ALL-HAZARDS RADIO... AND COMMERCIAL RADIO AND TV OUTLETS FOR THE LATEST ON THIS WEATHER SCENARIO.
$$
NWS/MWN
Update on severe weather threat
Monday, February 9, 2009
Latest severe weather threat for Memphis metro
Sunday, February 8, 2009
70s in February can only mean one thing...
What a fantastic February day! Highs across the metro area hit 70 degrees this afternoon with much less wind than yesterday and filtered sunshine. I expected to see more low clouds today so I forecast a couple of degrees cooler than Saturday. Didn't happen! We definitely saw our share of high level clouds, but that didn't keep the temps down too much. As we head into the early part of the week, we'll remain near 70 or a touch higher for high temperatures through Wednesday. And you know what temps that high this time of year mean!
Thunderstorms.
It looks like we might get our share, and the weather could become severe overnight Tuesday night into Wednesday. Our first round will start Monday night and continue Tuesday with scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms, though most should remain below severe level. However, an intense cold front of Pacific origin and strong low pressure system will likely bring a squall line into the region sometime after midnight Tuesday or Wednesday morning. The greatest threat at this time appears to be damaging straight line wind gusts, though the possibility of tornadoes exists as well. The Storm Prediction Center has highlighted portions of the Mid-South under a SLIGHT risk of severe weather Tuesday night and a broad portion of the eastern U.S. on Wednesday, an indicator of the large scale of this system and the uncertainty that still exists in the model data. These areas will likely be better defined in the next day or two. The severe weather areas are indicated in the maps below.
The MWN Forecast will be updated throughout the week to bring you the latest on the possible late winter severe weather.
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Great weather day... if you don't mind the breeze
As we head into next week, a stormy pattern will set up, though temps will continue to be well above normal through Tuesday. Showers and some thunderstorms will move in Monday evening and continue off and on through Tuesday as a cold front nears the area, but high pressure to our east serves to hold it back just west of the Mid-South. We'll nonetheless be close enough that most areas will see rainfall and some thunder and lightning. The main system will move through Tuesday night or Wednesday, bringing a pretty good chance of thunderstorms and the possibility of severe weather not non-existent. The Storm Prediction Center has highlighted the Memphis area for a chance of severe weather during that time frame. Following that system, temperatures look to come back down closer to normal. I'll stay on top of the severe weather possibility and make sure you are kept informed via this blog and the MWN forecast.
Enjoy the weekend!
Thursday, February 5, 2009
National Weatherperson's Day!
I just wanted to take a minute to pat myself, and all of you like me, on the back for a job well done! ;-) Today, February 5, is National Weatherperson's Day! Very strange that the Super Tuesday Tornado Outbreak also occurred on National Weatherperson's Day... we all earned our keep that day. (See my previous blog for more on the outbreak.)
For more info on this very special day, here are a couple of links:
- NWS-Chicago provides some background on this day
- USA Today's Weather Guys also blog on it
Seriously, I consider it an honor and privilege to love what I do everyday and be able to serve others in a small way too. Thanks for your support of us, the oft-maligned forecasters, and don't forget to hug your local meteorologist today (and then tell them why you are doing it, because they probably won't know either and will think you're just plain creepy...)
p.s. In honor of National Weatherperson's Day, I bring you a warmer forecast.
Remembering the Super Tuesday Outbreak in the Mid-South
The Sharp Manufacturing plant in Hickory Hill, heavily damaged by a tornado
Monday, February 2, 2009
MWN Blog readers expect more snow this winter
6 more weeks of winter? Or not?
Sunday, February 1, 2009
This week's weather (post #200)
Now on to the stuff you really want to know about. I haven't had a lot of time the past few days to post, so I'm one of the few in the region that has not talked about our chances of winter weather this coming week. It's a good thing too... Late last week, models were hinting at (OK, they were pretty much insistent on) at least a little bit of snow tomorrow morning. I carried it in my MWN forecast. It's now been removed, though a shot at light rain showers remains likely. The next chance is from a clipper system on Tuesday that looked like it might be a flurry-maker, or perhaps bring even a few snow showers. Well, I'm less confident on that now too. So while I still have a slight chance of snow in my forecast for Tuesday, that may have to come out by tomorrow too. It will definitely be colder than this weekend though (hasn't it been gorgeous!), so prepare for another round of cold weather early this week.
The good news is that the long-range models that had been predicting much wamer temperatures for the first couple of weeks in February now seem like they were on to something. I expect a pattern shift to occur after the middle of this week and we will start to see warmer, and likely more moisture-laden, air masses dominating the Mid-South as we head into next weekend and the following week. That doesn't mean we won't get a cold snap, but the main storm track appears as though it will favor warmer weather. We'll see how this plays out. Maybe Mr. Groundhog will be able to tell us tomorrow morning! I'll let you know what he says.