#890 Postby weatherdude1108 » Wed Aug 09, 2023 3:13 pm
I think the EWX is even getting tired of the same ole same ole.
I some extra plastic plant tray saucers in the shed. I used four of them to fill with water and put out in my backyard to help out any wildlife that is passing through. This pattern is not friendly to anything or anyone.
000
FXUS64 KEWX 091839
AFDEWX
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Austin/San Antonio TX
139 PM CDT Wed Aug 9 2023
...New SHORT TERM, LONG TERM, FIRE WEATHER, CLIMATE...
.SHORT TERM...
(Tonight through Thursday night)
Issued at 137 PM CDT Wed Aug 9 2023
Mid-level high pressure will continue to dominate over Texas through
the coming short term period. Surface high pressure over the Gulf of
Mexico will keep the low level flow from the south to southeast
reinforcing the hot airmass. Skies will be mostly clear overnight
and temperatures will continue to be very warm. Lows Thursday
morning will be in the 70s to lower 80s. We will continue to see
breezy winds during the evening. Highs Thursday will be close to a
repeat of the last few days with most locations in the triple digits
and only a few spots in the Hill Country possibly remaining in the
upper 90s. Thursday night will be another repeat with mostly clear
skies and very warm temperatures. We will extend the Excessive Heat
Warning and Heat Advisory through Thursday.
&&
.LONG TERM...
(Friday through Wednesday)
Issued at 137 PM CDT Wed Aug 9 2023
We`ve run out of superlatives to describe the current weather
situation. It`s still very hot. It`s still very dry. The risk for
wildfires and heat health concerns will remain very high into the
weekend, and are unlikely to improve significantly beyond that
through the next 1-2 weeks. And given the extended time period we`ve
been in this mess, the risk for complacency may increase.
Not much new can be said about the weather situation. Subtropical
ridging will continue to hold true over the southern tier of the US,
with H5 height anomalies increasing this weekend and maximizing
nearby during the first half of next week. The good news is that we
do expect some improvement (reduction) in surface wind speeds by
Monday, which could help somewhat in the Fire Weather department,
however it also appears we`ll see even lower afternoon RH values so
fire danger will remain high. As we`ve seen over the past 2 weeks or
so it doesn`t take much for fires to start and spread with fuels as
dry as they are. This heightened fire weather threat is unlikely to
go away over the next 2 weeks despite some improvement early next
week.
&&
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