Snow map is interesting

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Stormnut wrote:Shows 70's Monday the 19th now for DFW
Brent wrote:Pre-Christmas storm taking shape on Thursday the 22nd arctic air in oklahoma
This run is wet not wintry
Ntxw wrote:Brent wrote:Pre-Christmas storm taking shape on Thursday the 22nd arctic air in oklahoma
This run is wet not wintry
it's very close though. Overall not too different a run than previously aside from 300hr+ details. It is a little faster with ejecting the trough.
JDawg512 wrote:Key word being August... June (normally our second wettest month of the year in Austin) saw very little rain. July was abnormally dry. September had some rain, though for my specific area it mostly occured during one event. Even October was extremely dry considering it is the 3rd wettest month of the year. I wouldn't call this summer a washout simply because August had a lot of rain.
It comes down to this... When we see several weeks of dry conditions followed by 3 or 4 weeks of heavy rain followed by several weeks of dry conditions, it doesn't do a whole lot for soil moisture. Evaporation is very high during the summer months so by the time August came, much of that rainfall mearly saved the overall soil moisture levels from getting worse and a good amount of that rainfall simply washed away without doing anything. The grass, plants and trees were very happy but they sucked up the moisture within a few weeks and by mid to late September, soil moisture levels deep down was again on the decline.
Personally I consider it a wet summer when all of the summer months see at least average to above average rainfall and where we see 2 to 3 days per week where rain falls. Doesn't have to be a lot but it's better for smaller amounts of rain distributed over a greater time span rather than a whole lot of rain squeezed out over a few days.
BigB0882 wrote:It has really sucked being in Louisiana the last few winters. Even when cold does come down, it wants to stay to our west thanks to the SE ridge. I need that thing to budge a little further east.
A.V. wrote:BigB0882 wrote:It has really sucked being in Louisiana the last few winters. Even when cold does come down, it wants to stay to our west thanks to the SE ridge. I need that thing to budge a little further east.
What are you talking about, there are freeze warnings lining the entire area north of Lake Pontchartrain, and all the way down to Biloxi, MS?
That SE ridge needs to become a permanent winter feature, and let it be expansive, so that the entire eastern Texas gets covered.
ThunderSleetDreams wrote:We get it, you don't like cold weather. Some of us do. No need to repeat yourself every post.
Cpv17 wrote:All of the forecasts I've seen have highs in the 50's or 60's here in southeast TX for the end of next week. I think that forecast is gonna bust, but they just gotta be conservative I suppose.
A.V. wrote:JDawg512 wrote:Key word being August... June (normally our second wettest month of the year in Austin) saw very little rain. July was abnormally dry. September had some rain, though for my specific area it mostly occured during one event. Even October was extremely dry considering it is the 3rd wettest month of the year. I wouldn't call this summer a washout simply because August had a lot of rain.
It comes down to this... When we see several weeks of dry conditions followed by 3 or 4 weeks of heavy rain followed by several weeks of dry conditions, it doesn't do a whole lot for soil moisture. Evaporation is very high during the summer months so by the time August came, much of that rainfall mearly saved the overall soil moisture levels from getting worse and a good amount of that rainfall simply washed away without doing anything. The grass, plants and trees were very happy but they sucked up the moisture within a few weeks and by mid to late September, soil moisture levels deep down was again on the decline.
Personally I consider it a wet summer when all of the summer months see at least average to above average rainfall and where we see 2 to 3 days per week where rain falls. Doesn't have to be a lot but it's better for smaller amounts of rain distributed over a greater time span rather than a whole lot of rain squeezed out over a few days.
Well, in SE Texas, every summer month ended up above average in rainfall, and it was over lots of days as well. Places like Beaumont and Houston Hobby broke records for days with consecutive rainfalls. No 100F days in those locations.
2014 was another wet summer, with not even Houston IAH seeing 100F. The totals weren't high, but rain was frequent. Thus frequency of rain plays more of a role in temps than amount.
Because of the evaporation issue you mention, I honestly don't mind dry spells that occur during late fall-early spring periods; that is the time of coolest temps, so evaporation is minimized.
Cpv17 wrote:All of the forecasts I've seen have highs in the 50's or 60's here in southeast TX for the end of next week. I think that forecast is gonna bust, but they just gotta be conservative I suppose.
JDawg512 wrote:If your around Houston and Beaumont then summers are quite different than other areas. Texas is of couse a ginormous state so it depending where each of us lives, we can experience very different weather. Overall this summer was not that bad when compared to most summers Texas experiences. August was a much needed respite and without rain that month, it would have been hotter than it ultimately was.
As far as what's going on now, like Porta mentioned most areas of Austin didn't get a freeze. My sensitive plants are all alive and well. Not a huge fan of freezing weather but would be nice to have a couple of moderate short freezes to kill off the mosqitos and would be good for my plum tree.
Ntxw wrote:Officially DFW had a high of 38 degrees today which together with the low is -17F below normal. Yesterday was -14F below normal. Both IAH and AUS were -10F below normal today
Interestingly enough for the month IAH (Houston) is the winner so far in December which is at -3.7F below normal. Every day but one has been below normal. Wxman57 is having a lot of trouble keeping Houston warm.
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