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TexasF6 wrote:Power out 13 damn hours. Turned on at 558pm today. City of Austin had warning from NWS agencies about the wx coming. No teams on standby? You do it for ice events? I called at 248AM and submitted the report for my house? They sent a team allegedley at noon to start on our area. Neighbors up the street? Power all day. We have God knows what running this city. What happens when multiple E-F3 or F4s hit the city? I bet they have no plan for that either. Medically vulnerable people should have some preference in getting help with power getting on.![]()
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Portastorm wrote:Shoshana wrote:weatherdude1108 wrote:Severe thunderstorm going on right now ("70 mph wind" gust prompted). Old dog freaking out. I took her down to the bathroom so she doesn't keep everyone up. Thunder and heavy rain. No hail. Dog hyperventilating.
Yikes. I know we got wind here (today is trash and recycle day and some people put theirs out last night and the cans are toppled) Some power outages nearby but we are ok here with underground utilities. No fences down here, a minor miracle.
Poor pup! Ours slept through everything but when we were in Dallas we did have to have her wear her Thundershirt. The only difference I can think of is that we haven't had the a/c on yet...
Wish I fared as well as you all did. I awoke to one-third of my beautiful red oak tree in the front yard being split and down on the ground. I heard the winds and knew they were strong but I had no idea they were THAT strong. I'm guessing winds gusts to 60 mph at the PWC per the tree damage. Lots of tree damage in my neighborhood.
Portastorm wrote:Shoshana wrote:weatherdude1108 wrote:Severe thunderstorm going on right now ("70 mph wind" gust prompted). Old dog freaking out. I took her down to the bathroom so she doesn't keep everyone up. Thunder and heavy rain. No hail. Dog hyperventilating.
Yikes. I know we got wind here (today is trash and recycle day and some people put theirs out last night and the cans are toppled) Some power outages nearby but we are ok here with underground utilities. No fences down here, a minor miracle.
Poor pup! Ours slept through everything but when we were in Dallas we did have to have her wear her Thundershirt. The only difference I can think of is that we haven't had the a/c on yet...
Wish I fared as well as you all did. I awoke to one-third of my beautiful red oak tree in the front yard being split and down on the ground. I heard the winds and knew they were strong but I had no idea they were THAT strong. I'm guessing winds gusts to 60 mph at the PWC per the tree damage. Lots of tree damage in my neighborhood.
***Heavy Rainfall and Severe Thunderstorms Friday night-Sunday***
Discussion:
Repeating upper level pattern in place will bring yet another storm system across TX this weekend. Large upper level system currently digging into the SW US will transition upper level winds to the SW aloft starting midday on Friday allowing upper level disturbances to translate across the area by Friday afternoon. Surface warm front will back inland this afternoon allowing a very moist Gulf air mass to spread northward. PWS will be on the rise back toward near record levels for this time of year…something that has become almost normal of late. As the upper level low moves into the NM region, upper level winds over SE/E TX will go increasingly divergent helping to add lift to the air mass. A surface front will slowly drop southward over TX adding more lift and helping to focus convection.
Rainfall:
Ingredients are coming together to produce a widespread rainfall event with some excessive rainfall looking likely over parts of the area. Overall favorable set up of strong low level inflow, high moisture levels, slowing/training storm motions, and a defined low level boundary at point toward an excessive rainfall and flash flood threat. Main question remains as to where the greatest totals might be found. Orientation of the expected line of convection early Saturday appears to favor areas north of I-10, but I have seen time and time again where outflow boundaries push storms further southward than expected. Meso scale influences will dictate this event and will determine where the greatest rainfall will be.
Will of with widespread amounts of 1-3 inches over the area with isolated totals of 4-5 inches. Could see even higher amounts especially under any sustained training areas.
Severe:
Air mass will become unstable on Friday and a few isolated severe thunderstorms may develop with a large hail or damaging wind threat. Severe threat increases Friday night into Saturday as complex of storms approaches from the W/NW. Think the main threats will be wind damage and large hail, but would not rule out a weak isolated tornado similar to yesterday morning (see below). SPC has a large portion of SE TX outlooked for Friday afternoon into Friday night and a portion of this risk area may need to be upgraded to a higher risk.
Given the extremely wet grounds…even non-severe thunderstorm winds may uproot and knock over trees.
Hydro:
Region remains highly sensitive to additional rainfall. Widespread nature of this upcoming event will put additional pressure on river systems still draining flood flows from a couple of weeks ago and the complexes of storms every 2-3 days we have experienced since then.
Will likely see new rises on area rivers given the expected rainfall and some that have recently fallen below flood stage may return to at or above flood levels.
Recent Rainfall:
As wet as 2015 was….2016 is starting out even wetter!
Since March 1, 2016…. Houston, Columbus, Sugarland, and Houston Westbury have all recorded their wettest March 1-April 27 period on record. Columbus has surpassed their 2015 record by over 2.0 inches. The City of Houston has surpassed its 2015 same period record by an astounding by 4.59 inches.
Tomball…Klein Tornado:
NWS survey team investigated the wind damage across northern Harris County yesterday and determined a weak tornado occurred 6 miles SW of The Woodlands along Willow Creek in the Willow Forest Subdivision. The tornado was .41 miles wide with a damage path of 40 yards and winds estimated near 70mph. Numerous large pines were snapped or uprooted with several trees impacted homes. 1 person was killed when a tree fell on their mobile home.
TheProfessor wrote:RIP TVN
Houstonia wrote:TheProfessor wrote:RIP TVN
Yes, i just read this too. It seems very sudden, although I noticed that they had problems with overload this past week...
I enjoyed watching the dashcam videos, but recently I noticed there were an increasing number of storm chasers and in the last storm event, it seemed like there were people using TVN to further their own interests. Also, with Facebook offering FB Live - maybe that would be strong competition.
Thoughts?
The notice is here: https://tvnweather.com/
Ntxw wrote:Friday through early next week will probably have more tornadoes than Tuesday. It's not a perfect set up but weaker cap, better wind profiles. Likely boundaries sitting around which in the past at least for our area has proven to overperform at times. Warm front will be close which often times storms love to ride
Below normal weather next week. April will be wetter than normal at DFW comparable to April 2015.
I am concerned about tornado potential for Friday. Outflow boundaries produced by tonight's storms could be left behind for Friday's storms to "work with." New storms that move across old outflow boundaries can pull them up off the ground and cause the new storm to rotate even faster leading to an increase in tornado potential.
Stay tuned for details...
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