amawea wrote:Hey wxman57, look.
HOUSTON BUSH PTCLDY 32 at 7a.m.
Wow...a March freeze in the Heat Miser's backyard!

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amawea wrote:Hey wxman57, look.
HOUSTON BUSH PTCLDY 32 at 7a.m.
gboudx wrote:I guess the only thing left is figuring out when its safe to start my garden where I'll grow basil, tomatoes(Roma and Cherry) and bell peppers. I'll probably wait another 3 weeks just to be safe.
Portastorm wrote:Yeah, I was going to write the same thing as Ntxw said. While I'm not here to say it's going to snow or ice in Dallas or Waco or Austin ... I do think, based on teleconnections and the operational models, that the next 2-3 weeks look potentially cold enough that a freeze in north Texas isn't out of the realm of possibilities.
Down here, I'm just hoping for some rainfall.
gboudx wrote:I guess the only thing left is figuring out when its safe to start my garden where I'll grow basil, tomatoes(Roma and Cherry) and bell peppers. I'll probably wait another 3 weeks just to be safe.
amawea wrote:Here is an interesting little article from Accuweather. The very last paragraph stated by Bernie Rayno says it all.![]()
There is also a video at the link.
http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-n ... ng/6531926
How Weather Forecast Bust
Forecasting is an ever-changing process because the atmosphere is so dynamic. A meteorologist might have a hundred reasons for forecasting a certain event, but if one of those reasons is wrong, the forecast will bust.
"Think of it like a set of dominos," AccuWeather Meteorologist Bernie Rayno said. "You have one domino here, you have the 10,000th one there, and at the end is your pot of gold, that is, the correct forecast. Well, in order to get to there, every domino better be in the right spot and be lined up perfectly so everything falls to get the correct assessment."
With sophisticated computer models, forecasters can get an idea about the storms coming to the United States a week to 10 days in advance. The models' accuracy is weakened by sparse current weather data into the models.
"A lot of our storms originate out in the Pacific Ocean," AccuWeather meteorologist Mark Mancuso said. "In the Pacific Ocean, we have very little data coming from observation spots. There's a few islands out there that might send up a weather balloon. You might get a report here or there about what the profile of the atmosphere is like but a lot of the forecasting done with our models initially is an estimation using satellite data.
[There is] a lot of estimation and very little [actual] data. Once the systems get on land, you get a lot more data and then the models, they can do a lot better job on the forecast. You can get a lot of timing differences, intensity differences, with these storm systems."
If you put garbage into the models, you get a garbage forecast out. Forecasting is more than just interpreting models. It is an understanding of the atmosphere in the language of physics and mathematics.
"I think sometimes as meteorologists, since we have the models that do all the math and physics for us, you lose sight of that and we tend to trust them too much," Rayno said. "I believe a lot of the busted forecasts that we see, I say 70-80% is because we are buying the models lock, stock and barrel and forgetting the meteorology."
Texas Snowman wrote:I believe it was twenty years ago today that the 93 Superstorm or "Blizzard of '93" was roaring through the SE and up the East Coast. It was one of the biggest snowstorms in U.S. history.
Snow missed us here in Denison but I think it started snowing around Tyler and Texarkana in East Texas. Then it just got worse and worse to the east as the low bombed out in the Gulf. Southern cities like Birmingham, Atlanta, and Charlotte just got buried by one to two feet of snow.
Even without the snow, I remember very well the blue norther associated with the storm as it passed through the Red River Valley. Winds were HOWLING behind the front at 25-35 mph, temps were below freezing the next morning, and Lake Texoma looked like the Gulf of Mexico during a hurricane.
Texas Snowman wrote:Officially 30 degrees here in Denison for the overnight low.
Forecast low of 34 degrees tonight.
May be the last flirtation with the freezing mark until next fall.
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