Texas Fall 2023
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
Precip depiction to the west of me is showing sleet? Any ground truth?
I'm down to 37F IMBY
I'm down to 37F IMBY
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Don't hold me accountable for anything I post on this forum. Leave the real forecasting up to the professionals.
Location: Ponder, TX (all observation posts are this location unless otherwise noted)
Location: Ponder, TX (all observation posts are this location unless otherwise noted)
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
HockeyTx82 wrote:Precip depiction to the west of me is showing sleet? Any ground truth?
I'm down to 37F IMBY
The sleet/graupel/snow showing up on radar west of you is at 2,000+ feet.
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
Since October 24, the combined conservation pool storage of the two main reservoirs of the Highland Lakes has increased by 8.3 percent. At that rate, the storage would double every 43.4 days.
Current conservation pool storage in acre–feet:
420,457...Lake Travis
379,426...Lake Buchanan
799,883...Total as of October 29, 2023
Change since October 24, in acre–feet:
+42,985...Travis
+18,441...Buchanan
+61,426...Total change (+20,024,876,000 gallons)
Lake surface elevations:
631.94 feet...Travis
993.55 feet...Buchanan
Current conservation pool storage in acre–feet:
420,457...Lake Travis
379,426...Lake Buchanan
799,883...Total as of October 29, 2023
Change since October 24, in acre–feet:
+42,985...Travis
+18,441...Buchanan
+61,426...Total change (+20,024,876,000 gallons)
Lake surface elevations:
631.94 feet...Travis
993.55 feet...Buchanan
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
Not sure why, but FWD has upgraded to a freeze warning for the entire metro for Tuesday morning. The coldest morning is Wednesday, and even much of the metro should be above freezing, though I think I will get to 29 or maybe 30.
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- TropicalTundra
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
Unexpected snowband setting up just north of I-40. Although don't know if it'l last in the drier air
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Summer's for hibernation, Winter’s my vacation
Don't use my posts as forecast, I'm a complete meteorology noob! I just like cold weather, alright?
All observations I post are for Temple, Texas unless otherwise stated.
Don't use my posts as forecast, I'm a complete meteorology noob! I just like cold weather, alright?
All observations I post are for Temple, Texas unless otherwise stated.
Re: Texas Fall 2023
Didn't get any heavy rain in Longview, but got a couple of good soakers at least. 1.10" last Thursday and 1.19" yesterday and today.
It's chilly today!
It's chilly today!

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- cheezyWXguy
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
rwfromkansas wrote:Not sure why, but FWD has upgraded to a freeze warning for the entire metro for Tuesday morning. The coldest morning is Wednesday, and even much of the metro should be above freezing, though I think I will get to 29 or maybe 30.
I’m in Dallas proper and my forecast low for Tuesday morning is around 32-33, depending on the forecast package. Not sure if I’ll make it here, but it seems like most areas outside the immediate cities have a decent shot
Edit: should have been Wednesday morning above, not Tuesday
Last edited by cheezyWXguy on Mon Oct 30, 2023 4:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
Since I made that post, the NWS lowered lows, so I think they issued the warning in preparation for their forecast change.
It shows me down to 30, which before it wasn't even below freezing.
I think tonight I might get to 32 and likely 29 tomorrow night.
It shows me down to 30, which before it wasn't even below freezing.
I think tonight I might get to 32 and likely 29 tomorrow night.
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
Surface high pressure will be overhead. If winds calm we'll have freeze even into the urban core and 20s surrounding. This can overachieve with lows, again depending on winds.
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The above post and any post by Ntxw is NOT an official forecast and should not be used as such. It is just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including Storm2k. For official information, please refer to NWS products.
- South Texas Storms
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
After the long and hot summer we went through, this cold air feels amazing outside!
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
South Texas Storms wrote:After the long and hot summer we went through, this cold air feels amazing outside!
It does. Summer memories are still fresh and I want revenge.
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
tajmahal wrote:Since October 24, the combined conservation pool storage of the two main reservoirs of the Highland Lakes has increased by 8.3 percent. At that rate, the storage would double every 43.4 days.
Current conservation pool storage in acre–feet:
420,457...Lake Travis
379,426...Lake Buchanan
799,883...Total as of October 29, 2023
Change since October 24, in acre–feet:
+42,985...Travis
+18,441...Buchanan
+61,426...Total change (+20,024,876,000 gallons)
Lake surface elevations:
631.94 feet...Travis
993.55 feet...Buchanan
Nice news! Hoping we don't have to wait too long before the next rainy period, so we can keep things flowing.
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The preceding post is NOT an official forecast, and should not be used as such. It is only the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including storm2k.org. For Official Information please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
Interesting post Larry Cosgrove just shared:
“WINTER SEASON CHECKLIST
Major Influence: Current Moderate, Basin-Wide El Nino Episode
If the current El Nino episode unfolds as the numerical models forecast, the eastern portion of the warm water field in the Pacific Basin will cool while the western and central sectors remain relatively above normal. Madden-Julian Oscillation impulses or percolations should mostly fall in Phases 6, 7, 8, and 1, which could have the effect of setting up a West (Modoki) or Central El Nino. Basin wide or East-based positive ENSO events almost always lead to bearish/mild/snowless DJFM periods in the populated lower 48 states east of the Continental Divide. West-oriented warmings often help to amplify ridges in western North America, which can produce the coldest winters.
DECEMBER:
Most parameters suggest a cold West vs. warm East alignment. But the vigorous southern branch storm track may alter that picture if it comes in through Baja California and emerges over the open Gulf of Mexico. Note that precipitation potential which suggests Gulf Coaster > Nor'easter tracks, which would bring cP air masses southward in concert with Alaska ridging.
JANUARY
There is actually good agreement between the ECMWF model results for January and that of the analogs. A strong -NAO ridge signal, somewhat like 2010, forces a gigantic buckle of the polar and Arctic jet streams through the Rio Grande Valley and Florida. A cAk vortex in British Columbia and an mAk gyre over the Flemish Cap are possible core features. This is a recipe for alternating strong Arctic intrusions and lower-latitude ice and snow events. In theory, when the two vortices separate enough, ridging in the middle of the continent might bring about a January Thaw, perhaps in the third week of 2024.
FEBRUARY
Rather than a genuine split flow, common to El Nino events, this February may be a special case where a unified Arctic/polar/subtropical jet stream is forced far below a -EPO/+PNA/-AO/-NAO ridge complex. Literally a mild Canada vs. cold USA configuration with the potential for ice and snow (depending on actual air mass alignment) might visit northern Mexico, Texas and the Deep South. This pattern may replicate in northern Asia and Europe. Of all the months in the coming winter, the best chance for a high-impact frozen precipitation and wind event looks to be the second month of 2024. But ridging may suppress chances for snow in the Great Lakes, New York and New England.
MARCH
The impression I get from the forecast depiction is of a "last hurrah" winter storm in early March that moves out of the Southwest through Dixie, then into the open Atlantic Ocean. All guidance reverts the temperature field to much warmer air from the Great Plains to the East Coast. Late season cold and snow would cover the West and possibly West Texas/Oklahoma Panhandle. But the "fill the space" ridge signal reminds me strongly of 1973, where the spring along the Eastern Seaboard quickly turned warm and stayed that way through the following summer. There may also be a Colorado/Limon vertically stacked storm involving the High Plains and Rocky Mountains”
“WINTER SEASON CHECKLIST
Major Influence: Current Moderate, Basin-Wide El Nino Episode
If the current El Nino episode unfolds as the numerical models forecast, the eastern portion of the warm water field in the Pacific Basin will cool while the western and central sectors remain relatively above normal. Madden-Julian Oscillation impulses or percolations should mostly fall in Phases 6, 7, 8, and 1, which could have the effect of setting up a West (Modoki) or Central El Nino. Basin wide or East-based positive ENSO events almost always lead to bearish/mild/snowless DJFM periods in the populated lower 48 states east of the Continental Divide. West-oriented warmings often help to amplify ridges in western North America, which can produce the coldest winters.
DECEMBER:
Most parameters suggest a cold West vs. warm East alignment. But the vigorous southern branch storm track may alter that picture if it comes in through Baja California and emerges over the open Gulf of Mexico. Note that precipitation potential which suggests Gulf Coaster > Nor'easter tracks, which would bring cP air masses southward in concert with Alaska ridging.
JANUARY
There is actually good agreement between the ECMWF model results for January and that of the analogs. A strong -NAO ridge signal, somewhat like 2010, forces a gigantic buckle of the polar and Arctic jet streams through the Rio Grande Valley and Florida. A cAk vortex in British Columbia and an mAk gyre over the Flemish Cap are possible core features. This is a recipe for alternating strong Arctic intrusions and lower-latitude ice and snow events. In theory, when the two vortices separate enough, ridging in the middle of the continent might bring about a January Thaw, perhaps in the third week of 2024.
FEBRUARY
Rather than a genuine split flow, common to El Nino events, this February may be a special case where a unified Arctic/polar/subtropical jet stream is forced far below a -EPO/+PNA/-AO/-NAO ridge complex. Literally a mild Canada vs. cold USA configuration with the potential for ice and snow (depending on actual air mass alignment) might visit northern Mexico, Texas and the Deep South. This pattern may replicate in northern Asia and Europe. Of all the months in the coming winter, the best chance for a high-impact frozen precipitation and wind event looks to be the second month of 2024. But ridging may suppress chances for snow in the Great Lakes, New York and New England.
MARCH
The impression I get from the forecast depiction is of a "last hurrah" winter storm in early March that moves out of the Southwest through Dixie, then into the open Atlantic Ocean. All guidance reverts the temperature field to much warmer air from the Great Plains to the East Coast. Late season cold and snow would cover the West and possibly West Texas/Oklahoma Panhandle. But the "fill the space" ridge signal reminds me strongly of 1973, where the spring along the Eastern Seaboard quickly turned warm and stayed that way through the following summer. There may also be a Colorado/Limon vertically stacked storm involving the High Plains and Rocky Mountains”
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
A few days ago, ERCOT announced that the grid it manages would have a 20 percent chance of falling into an emergency condition if the cold temperatures just before Christmas 2022 were repeated this coming winter. ERCOT did not say what would happen if the much colder temperatures of February 2021 happened again.
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Re: Texas Fall 2023
Next 10 days look awfully dry again
hopefully things will turn wetter towards the middle of the month

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Re: Texas Fall 2023
27 this glorious Halloween morning with a heck of a frost. Second freeze of the year!
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