TAKE COVER NOW IF YOU LIVE IN Tallahassee, FL!
This storm is moving East at 55 mph, not very much time to get down!
![Image](https://s2.gifyu.com/images/Screenshot-2021-01-27-at-10.36.43-AM.png)
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Weather Dude wrote:https://mobile.twitter.com/CityofTLH/status/1354482737688797184
Iceresistance wrote:Weather Dude wrote:https://mobile.twitter.com/CityofTLH/status/1354482737688797184
What does that say?
I can't get on to Twitter
Weather Dude wrote:Today is a prime example of why every level of risk needs to be taken seriously. Even marginals
InfernoFlameCat wrote:I have been monitoring patterns of previous years to this one and it does not bode well. I was mistaken in my previous post about an inactive 2021 storm season with a pattern shaping up with consistent cold air to the East and warm air to the west. With a powerful jet stream prevailing south east, shear will be perfect for shaping rotating storms embedded within fronts spawned by the Atmospheric river feeding into the west USA. Buckle up storm2k.
Weather Dude wrote:There is no science to this post whatsoever, but I have noticed that over the past decade or so, the odd years have been more active/impactful for severe weather/tornadoes than the even years (with the possible exception of 2015/16) in the plains. Not like the even years were not significant (for the most part...looking at you 2018), but for whatever reason, the odds have out performed the evens recently. Again, no science at all here, just an observation. We'll see if 2021 continues that trend. Again this is just for the plains and not the whole country.
Weather Dude wrote:Well today was quite the marginal risk event in NE OK/SE KS/SW MO. At one point there were 6 tornado warnings active at once... Definitely would have verified as a slight risk.
Weather Dude wrote:All the tornado action was NE of me today but we still ended up with a few storms at my location. The problem is, if we're getting a day like this in a marginal risk in January... how bad is it going to be in April and May...
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