Tropical Storm Bonnie Wind Speed Probabilities Number 20

3 years ago
Issued at 1500 UTC SAT JUL 02 2022 ZCZC MIAPWSEP4 ALL TTAA00 KNHC DDHHMM CCA TROPICAL STORM BONNIE WIND SPEED PROBABILITIES NUMBER 20 NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL EP042022 1500 UTC SAT JUL 02 2022 CORRECTED ADVISORY NUMBER AT 1500Z THE CENTER OF TROPICAL STORM BONNIE WAS LOCATED NEAR LATITUDE 11.2 NORTH...LONGITUDE 86.4 WEST WITH MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS NEAR 35 KTS...40 MPH...65 KM/H. Z INDICATES COORDINATED UNIVERSAL TIME (GREENWICH) PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME (PDT)...SUBTRACT 7 HOURS FROM Z TIME HAWAIIAN STANDARD TIME (HST)...SUBTRACT 10 HOURS FROM Z TIME WIND SPEED PROBABILITY TABLE FOR SPECIFIC LOCATIONS CHANCES OF SUSTAINED (1-MINUTE AVERAGE) WIND SPEEDS OF AT LEAST ...34 KT (39 MPH... 63 KM/H)... ...50 KT (58 MPH... 93 KM/H)... ...64 KT (74 MPH...119 KM/H)... FOR LOCATIONS AND TIME PERIODS DURING THE NEXT 5 DAYS PROBABILITIES FOR LOCATIONS ARE GIVEN AS OP(CP) WHERE OP IS THE PROBABILITY OF THE EVENT BEGINNING DURING AN INDIVIDUAL TIME PERIOD (ONSET PROBABILITY) (CP) IS THE PROBABILITY OF THE EVENT OCCURRING BETWEEN 12Z SAT AND THE FORECAST HOUR (CUMULATIVE PROBABILITY) PROBABILITIES ARE GIVEN IN PERCENT X INDICATES PROBABILITIES LESS THAN 1 PERCENT PROBABILITIES FOR 34 KT AND 50 KT ARE SHOWN AT A GIVEN LOCATION WHEN THE 5-DAY CUMULATIVE PROBABILITY IS AT LEAST 3 PERCENT. PROBABILITIES FOR 34...50...64 KT SHOWN WHEN THE 5-DAY 64-KT CUMULATIVE PROBABILITY IS AT LEAST 1 PERCENT. - - - - WIND SPEED PROBABILITIES FOR SELECTED LOCATIONS - - - - FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM FROM TIME 12Z SAT 00Z SUN 12Z SUN 00Z MON 12Z MON 12Z TUE 12Z WED PERIODS TO TO TO TO TO TO TO 00Z SUN 12Z SUN 00Z MON 12Z MON 12Z TUE 12Z WED 12Z THU FORECAST HOUR (12) (24) (36) (48) (72) (96) (120) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - LOCATION KT 15N 105W 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) 9( 9) 41(50) 1(51) 15N 105W 50 X X( X) X( X) X( X) 1( 1) 19(20) X(20) 15N 105W 64 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 7( 7) X( 7) BARRA NAVIDAD 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 2( 2) 1( 3) MANZANILLO 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) 2( 2) 6( 8) 1( 9) L CARDENAS 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) 10(10) 3(13) X(13) ZIHUATANEJO 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) 11(11) 2(13) X(13) 10N 100W 34 X X( X) X( X) 1( 1) 2( 3) X( 3) X( 3) 15N 100W 34 X X( X) X( X) 2( 2) 48(50) 1(51) X(51) 15N 100W 50 X X( X) X( X) X( X) 17(17) X(17) X(17) 15N 100W 64 X X( X) X( X) X( X) 4( 4) X( 4) X( 4) ACAPULCO 34 X X( X) X( X) 1( 1) 14(15) X(15) X(15) P MALDONADO 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) 5( 5) X( 5) X( 5) P ANGEL 34 X X( X) 1( 1) 8( 9) 4(13) X(13) X(13) HUATULCO 34 X X( X) X( X) 2( 2) 1( 3) X( 3) X( 3) 10N 95W 34 X X( X) 1( 1) 3( 4) X( 4) X( 4) X( 4) 15N 95W 34 X X( X) 2( 2) 10(12) 1(13) X(13) X(13) P SAN JOSE 34 X 3( 3) 2( 5) 1( 6) X( 6) X( 6) X( 6) 10N 90W 34 1 2( 3) 1( 4) X( 4) X( 4) X( 4) X( 4) 15N 110W 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 11(11) 28(39) 15N 110W 50 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 1( 1) 15(16) 15N 110W 64 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 5( 5) 20N 110W 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 2( 2) 10(12) ISLA SOCORRO 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 3( 3) 21(24) ISLA SOCORRO 50 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 5( 5) ISLA SOCORRO 64 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 2( 2) ISLA CLARION 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 10(10) 15N 115W 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 7( 7) 20N 115W 34 X X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) X( X) 4( 4) $$ FORECASTER HOGSETT NNNN
NHC Webmaster

Tropical Storm Bonnie Forecast Discussion Number 20

3 years ago
Issued at 1000 AM CDT Sat Jul 02 2022 686 WTPZ44 KNHC 021501 CCA TCDEP4 Tropical Storm Bonnie Discussion Number 20...Corrected NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL EP042022 1000 AM CDT Sat Jul 02 2022 Corrected advisory number Radar data from the Nicaraguan Weather Service in Las Nubes indicate that Bonnie has moved offshore from extreme southern Nicaragua and becomes one of the rare tropical cyclones to cross from the Atlantic Basin into the eastern Pacific Basin. The center of circulation remains well-defined after crossing southern Nicaragua last night, and satellite data during the last several hours indicate that deep convection remains active near the center of the storm. Given the robust structure apparent on radar and satellite, the initial intensity is held steady at 35 kt for this advisory, despite the land interactions during the past 12 hours or so. Bonnie is moving due west at 270/14 kt. The primary steering influence throughout the forecast period is a deep-layer ridge located north of the storm, which is expected to cause Bonnie to track west-northwestward and remain offshore and roughly parallel to the coast of Central America and Mexico. Track guidance is in good agreement throughout the forecast period, and the official forecast is very similar to the consensus track aids and the prior forecast. Although the strongest winds are expected to remain offshore, interests in coastal El Salvador, Guatemala, and southwestern Mexico should continue to monitor Bonnie's track for the next few days, as any northward track adjustments could require tropical storm watches for portions of this coastline. While the well-defined structure indicates that some strengthening is possible in the next day or so, sea surface temperatures (SSTs) are only marginally conducive for intensification and confined to a relatively shallow depth. For this reason, intensification is forecast to occur slowly for the next 24 hours until Bonnie reaches warmer waters in about 36 hours, after which the rate of intensification is forecast to increase. Similar to the previous forecast, Bonnie is expected to reach hurricane strength in about three days, and the intensity forecast is near the center of the guidance envelope. In association with Bonnie crossing into the eastern Pacific, product headers for Bonnie have changed to eastern Pacific headers beginning with this advisory, with the ATCF identifier changing from AL022022 to EP042022. KEY MESSAGES: 1. Heavy rainfall across portions of Nicaragua and Costa Rica will continue today. Life-threatening flash flooding and mudslides are expected. 2. Tropical storm conditions are expected along the Pacific coasts of Costa Rica and Nicaragua within the Tropical Storm Warning areas for the next several hours. FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS INIT 02/1500Z 11.2N 86.4W 35 KT 40 MPH 12H 03/0000Z 11.3N 88.3W 35 KT 40 MPH 24H 03/1200Z 11.7N 90.7W 40 KT 45 MPH 36H 04/0000Z 12.5N 93.6W 45 KT 50 MPH 48H 04/1200Z 13.4N 96.6W 55 KT 65 MPH 60H 05/0000Z 14.3N 99.6W 60 KT 70 MPH 72H 05/1200Z 15.1N 102.5W 65 KT 75 MPH 96H 06/1200Z 16.0N 107.5W 70 KT 80 MPH 120H 07/1200Z 16.6N 111.7W 75 KT 85 MPH $$ Forecaster Hogsett
NHC Webmaster

Tropical Storm Bonnie Forecast Advisory Number 20

3 years ago
Issued at 1500 UTC SAT JUL 02 2022 000 WTPZ24 KNHC 021457 CCA TCMEP4 TROPICAL STORM BONNIE FORECAST/ADVISORY NUMBER 20...CORRECTED NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL EP042022 1500 UTC SAT JUL 02 2022 CORRECTED ADVISORY NUMBER CHANGES IN WATCHES AND WARNINGS WITH THIS ADVISORY... THE GOVERNMENT OF NICARAGUA HAS DISCONTINUED THE TROPICAL STORM WARNING ON THE CARIBBEAN COAST. THE GOVERNMENT OF COSTA RICA HAS DISCONTINUED THE TROPICAL STORM WARNING ON THE CARIBBEAN COAST. SUMMARY OF WATCHES AND WARNINGS IN EFFECT... A TROPICAL STORM WARNING IS IN EFFECT FOR... * CABO BLANCO COSTA RICA NORTHWARD TO THE BORDER OF NICARAGUA AND HONDURAS A TROPICAL STORM WARNING MEANS THAT TROPICAL STORM CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED SOMEWHERE WITHIN THE WARNING AREA...IN THIS CASE WITHIN THE NEXT FEW HOURS. INTERESTS ALONG THE PACIFIC COASTS OF EL SALVADOR...GUATEMALA...AND SOUTHERN MEXICO SHOULD MONITOR THE PROGRESS OF BONNIE. TROPICAL STORM CENTER LOCATED NEAR 11.2N 86.4W AT 02/1500Z POSITION ACCURATE WITHIN 15 NM PRESENT MOVEMENT TOWARD THE WEST OR 270 DEGREES AT 13 KT ESTIMATED MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE 1000 MB MAX SUSTAINED WINDS 35 KT WITH GUSTS TO 45 KT. 34 KT....... 60NE 0SE 0SW 40NW. WINDS AND SEAS VARY GREATLY IN EACH QUADRANT. RADII IN NAUTICAL MILES ARE THE LARGEST RADII EXPECTED ANYWHERE IN THAT QUADRANT. REPEAT...CENTER LOCATED NEAR 11.2N 86.4W AT 02/1500Z AT 02/1200Z CENTER WAS LOCATED NEAR 11.2N 85.8W FORECAST VALID 03/0000Z 11.3N 88.3W MAX WIND 35 KT...GUSTS 45 KT. 34 KT... 40NE 0SE 0SW 40NW. FORECAST VALID 03/1200Z 11.7N 90.7W MAX WIND 40 KT...GUSTS 50 KT. 34 KT... 40NE 20SE 20SW 40NW. FORECAST VALID 04/0000Z 12.5N 93.6W MAX WIND 45 KT...GUSTS 55 KT. 34 KT... 50NE 30SE 20SW 50NW. FORECAST VALID 04/1200Z 13.4N 96.6W MAX WIND 55 KT...GUSTS 65 KT. 50 KT... 25NE 20SE 0SW 25NW. 34 KT... 60NE 30SE 30SW 60NW. FORECAST VALID 05/0000Z 14.3N 99.6W MAX WIND 60 KT...GUSTS 75 KT. 50 KT... 30NE 20SE 20SW 30NW. 34 KT... 80NE 50SE 40SW 70NW. FORECAST VALID 05/1200Z 15.1N 102.5W MAX WIND 65 KT...GUSTS 80 KT. 50 KT... 30NE 20SE 15SW 20NW. 34 KT... 90NE 60SE 50SW 70NW. EXTENDED OUTLOOK. NOTE...ERRORS FOR TRACK HAVE AVERAGED NEAR 100 NM ON DAY 4 AND 125 NM ON DAY 5...AND FOR INTENSITY NEAR 15 KT EACH DAY OUTLOOK VALID 06/1200Z 16.0N 107.5W MAX WIND 70 KT...GUSTS 85 KT. OUTLOOK VALID 07/1200Z 16.6N 111.7W MAX WIND 75 KT...GUSTS 90 KT. REQUEST FOR 3 HOURLY SHIP REPORTS WITHIN 300 MILES OF 11.2N 86.4W INTERMEDIATE PUBLIC ADVISORY...WTNT34 KNHC/MIATCPEP4...AT 02/1800Z NEXT ADVISORY AT 02/2100Z $$ FORECASTER HOGSETT/CANGIALOSI
NHC Webmaster

SPC Jul 2, 2022 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

3 years ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0754 AM CDT Sat Jul 02 2022 Valid 021300Z - 031200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE NORTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC...AND OVER PARTS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms with damaging winds and hail are expected across parts of the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, and over parts of the northern Plains. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, the synoptic pattern from east-west will remain dominated by: 1. A broad cyclone, initially centered over James Bay, and forecast to pivot across QC to near extreme western Labrador by around 12Z tomorrow. A small shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over southern MB -- is forecast to pivot southeastward over Lake Superior by 00Z, then across southern ON and southern QC to northern New England by the end of the period. 2. Ridging over the Rockies and from the southern Appalachians across north TX to eastern AZ. The Rockies branch of the ridge will move eastward slightly over WY/MT late in the period in response to... 3. A Pacific cyclone initially located well west of Cape Flattery, with troughing southward to near 30N. The 500-mb low should move generally south-southeastward through the period, remaining offshore. However, a series of shortwave troughs/vorticity maxima over its southern semicircle should progress inland and lead to net height falls across the Northwest. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a cold front from southern QC across northern/western NY, to central OH, becoming quasistationary across south-central IN, southern IL, central MO, and central KS. This front is forecast to move eastward across NY, New England, and parts of eastern PA/NJ through the period, while becoming or remaining quasistationary (under nearly parallel flow aloft) from WV to KS. Another cold front was drawn from far northern ON across western Lake Superior, becoming wavy/quasistationary over southwestern MN, and southeastern ND to northeastern MT. Only mesoscale oscillations are expected to the position of the northern Plains boundary. ...Southern New England to portions of Mid-Atlantic... Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop in a richly moist environment along/ahead of the front, mainly south of a large area of convective outflow covering New England and NY (that should retreat northward into southern New England/NY today), and near prefrontal troughs and outflow/differential-heating boundaries from ongoing areas of clouds and precip. Scattered damaging wind (in terms of trees/tree limbs/wires, etc.), and isolated severe/50+ kt gusts, are possible from this activity during the afternoon and early evening. Boundary-layer theta-e will be quite favorable, with surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F. Areas of either sustained/strong surface heating, or warm advection from such areas beneath somewhat greater antecedent cloud cover, will provide diurnal destabilization. The result thermodynamically should be shallow but well-mixed boundary layer with weakly inhibited (at best) MLCAPE in the 1000-1500 J/kg range, locally/briefly near 2000 J/kg. Though directional shear will be weak, the region will reside beneath the southern rim of stronger mid/upper-level cyclonic flow, contributing to both favorable cloud-layer shear and around 35-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes, in support of some downward momentum transfer and organization of the severe potential beyond typical warm-season pulse downbursts. ... WV/VA Appalachians to KS/northern OK... Farther southwest and west near the front, and outflow boundaries to its south, widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into early evening. Isolated severe gusts/hail will be the main concern, with activity becoming weaker and more isolated from late evening onward. Convection should take the form of variably sized/organized multicellular clusters. Low/middle-level flow and vertical shear will be weak and mainly unidirectional away from boundaries, limiting convective organization to what can be accomplished through low-predictability, localized boundary- interaction processes and temporary upscale cold-pool aggregation. Strong heating and low-level moisture should offset modest midlevel lapse rates to support 1000-2000 J/kg peak/preconvective MLCAPE during mid/late afternoon. ...Northern Plains to western NE... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon near and south of the front, with a few supercells possible in the first few hours of the convective cycle, then some upscale expansion into one or two small MCSs over the central/ eastern Dakotas possible before activity diminishes tonight. Severe hail and gusts will be possible. The boundary layer over most of this region is expected to be well-heated/mixed. Greater inflow-layer moisture content (but also somewhat stronger MLCINH) is forecast over northern and eastern parts of the outlook area in closer proximity to evaportanspirative source regions. By contrast, a deeply mixed subcloud layer will characterize much of the High Plains. Steep midlevel lapse rates atop those layers will support MLCAPE peaking around 2000-2500 J/kg over central SD where the greatest juxtaposition of moisture and heating is expected, lessening with northwestward extent into cooler air and southward extent to weaker moisture. Favorably strong upper-level winds and veering with height from low/middle levels will yield enough deep shear for a blend of supercells and organized multicells. The hail threat should peak earlier and farther west, while the wind threat continues eastward and deeper into the evening. ...Inland Pacific Northwest... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible from midafternoon into early evening, offering the potential for gusts/hail near severe limits. Height falls and shots of DCVA/destabilization aloft are expected in strengthening midlevel cyclonic flow, placing large-scale ascent and related steepening of midlevel lapse rates over an area of at least marginal low/middle-level moisture inland. Lower-elevation surface dew points in the 40s to low 50s may lessen somewhat due to mixing through the afternoon. However, surface diurnal heating will help to drive pockets of 500-1200 J/kg MLCAPE where dewpoints remain in the 40s to near 50 F, with a well-mixed subcloud layer. Where not too altered by local orographic effects, generally northeasterly to northerly near-surface winds (northwest of the surface low) will elongate hodographs and strengthen deep shear through strong veering with height, despite modest speeds. This may aid in storm organization as well, with 30-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes possible. ...Coastal southern NC... With tropical-storm-force winds detected offshore, T.S. Colin has been named by NHC while centered near the SC coast, between CHS-MYR. This is a well-sheared system (with respect to the deep-troposphere shear vectors). Accordingly, deepest convection is asymmetrically distributed seaward, and may continue to be, given NHC's forecast of even stronger deep shear than at present. Under those circumstances, and being a small, marginal T.S. not forecast to strengthen much (if at all), at most only a mesobeta-scale area of favorable low-level kinematic fields for tornado potential reasonably will be possible in a downshear (east-northeast) sector. At this time, uncertainty is too great to introduce an unconditional/categorical tornado outlook. If confidence increases in both: 1. Favorably large overland hodographs near Cape Fear and/or Cape Lookout, and 2. Convective trends indicate potential for landfalling supercells in the associated wind field, a small area of tornado probabilities may be necessary in a succeeding outlook update. ..Edwards/Goss.. 07/02/2022 Read more

Eastern North Pacific Tropical Weather Outlook

3 years ago

000
ABPZ20 KNHC 021110
TWOEP

Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
500 AM PDT Sat Jul 2 2022

For the eastern North Pacific...east of 140 degrees west longitude:

Active Systems:
The National Hurricane Center is issuing advisories on Atlantic
basin Tropical Storm Bonnie currently located inland near the
Nicaragua/Costa Rica border. The system is forecast to complete
crossing Central America and move into the east Pacific basin, as a
tropical cyclone, later today.

Central East Pacific:
Showers and thunderstorms have largely dissipated in association
with an area of low pressure located several hundred miles southwest
of the southern tip of the Baja California peninsula. Development
of this system is not expected as it is already over cool waters
and in a dry environment.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...near 0 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...low...near 0 percent.

$$
Forecaster Hogsett/Cangialosi
NHC Webmaster

Gas Plant 2 Fire (Wildfire)

3 years ago
Request for assistance from local fire department to Texas A&M Forest Service (TAMFS) was received at approximately 4:13 pm on June 30, 2022.  The fire is located in the area of Gas Plant Road near the town of Silver, Coke County, Texas. Resources from the TAMFS San Angelo which includes engines, dozers and hand-crew module are assigned to the fire.  TAMFS Incident Commander (IC) is working in unified command with local IC.  The fire is reported to be 300 acres with active fire behavior burning in grass, juniper and mesquite.  Currently one ranch is threatened. Aerial resources have been assigned to the fire.  This includes Aerial Supervision Platform, Lead Plane, 4 Airtankers and Air Bosses.  Concerns are fire's resistance to control, extended drought, dry vegetation and high

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

3 years ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1134 AM CDT Fri Jul 01 2022 Valid 011700Z - 021200Z The forecast remains on track, and no changes were needed with this update. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 07/01/2022 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0125 AM CDT Fri Jul 01 2022/ ...Synopsis... A mid-level trough will gradually approach the West Coast as an upper ridge remains in place across the Interior West into the Plains. Under the upper ridge, most locales should experience relatively quiescent fire weather conditions on a widespread basis. The one exception would be portions of central into southern Nevada, where guidance consensus suggests Elevated surface winds/RH will overspread very dry fuels during the afternoon. Otherwise, a couple of dry lightning strikes may accompany scattered thunderstorms developing from a monsoonal environment across the Intermountain West. However, mediocre fuel receptiveness or spareness of dry strikes precludes dry thunderstorm highlights. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Jul 1, 2022 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

3 years ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1102 AM CDT Fri Jul 01 2022 Valid 011630Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS NORTHEAST WY...SOUTHWEST SD...AND NORTHWEST NE... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe wind and hail will be possible from about 4 to 10 PM MDT in northeast Wyoming across the Black Hills to the Nebraska Sandhills. ...High Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop off the Big Horns to the Sangre de Cristos and spread east across the adjacent High Plains later this afternoon within a plume of upper 40s to mid 50s surface dew points. The greatest potential for organized severe storms will exist across the northern portion of this region from eastern WY into western SD and northwest NE. Here, moderate to strong deep-layer speed shear with height will yield effective bulk values of 40-50 kt and an elongated straight-line hodograph. A few high-based outflow-dominated supercells with mid-level rotation should develop and congeal into a cluster this evening. Initial mix of severe hail and wind transitioning to predominately wind will be the primary threats. A lack of appreciable low-level forcing for ascent this evening in conjunction with a nocturnally stabilizing boundary layer should result in these threats diminishing towards late evening. Farther south to the Raton Mesa, slow-moving thunderstorms may pose a threat for very isolated severe wind gusts and marginally severe wind hail during the late afternoon and evening. ...Lower Great Lakes to the Lower MO Valley... A low-amplitude shortwave impulse near the NE/IA border will shift east along the southern periphery of seasonably moderate to strong mid-level westerlies across the Great Lakes to northern IL/IN/OH. Isolated to scattered thunderstorms will be possible along and just ahead of a cold front sagging southeast across southeast Lower MI through eastern KS later this afternoon. Abundant cloud coverage and weak mid-level lapse rates should temper updraft intensity in the more strongly sheared regime near the Lower Great Lakes. Nevertheless, a few multicell clusters and transient supercell structures may develop with a threat for isolated damaging winds and severe hail through about dusk. ...Mid-Atlantic States... Localized damaging winds and marginally severe hail will be possible through this afternoon as low-level warm theta-e advection-driven convection over the central Appalachians spreads east towards the Mid-Atlantic coast. Poor mid-level lapse rates evident in available 12Z observed soundings and modest deep-layer flow will be limiting factors to a more robust/organized severe threat. See MCD 1314 for further short-term discussion. Additional thunderstorms may spread towards the region tonight from the Lower Great Lakes/Upper OH Valley, but should largely be in a decaying state. ...Northern ME... Pronounced differential diabatic heating and weak low-level convergence may aid in isolated thunderstorms near the Saint Lawrence Valley into southeast QC later this afternoon. Morning guidance suggests a nadir in low-level moisture will be present across parts of western New England, but adequate moisture may still hold across northern ME. This may yield a corridor of weak buoyancy amid poor mid-level lapse rates. The most favorable factor will be effective bulk shear of 40-50 kts, which would conditionally support a supercell or two, but confidence is low. ..Grams/Wendt.. 07/01/2022 Read more

SPC MD 1314

3 years ago
MD 1314 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR WESTERN/NORTHERN MD...EASTERN WV...SOUTHERN PA...NORTHERN VA...NORTHERN DE...DC
Mesoscale Discussion 1314 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1059 AM CDT Fri Jul 01 2022 Areas affected...Western/northern MD...Eastern WV...Southern PA...Northern VA...Northern DE...DC Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely Valid 011559Z - 011830Z Probability of Watch Issuance...20 percent SUMMARY...Thunderstorms are expected to increase in coverage and intensity this afternoon, with a threat of isolated damaging wind gusts and possibly some hail. DISCUSSION...Convection has gradually been increasing late this morning across southern PA into eastern WV, within a zone of richer moisture in the 925-850 mb layer depicted in the 12Z PIT sounding and recent objective mesoanalyses. Diurnal heating and continued low-level moisture transport will support an increase in thunderstorm coverage and intensity this afternoon, as convection gradually spreads eastward toward the I-95 corridor. MLCAPE increasing above 2000 J/kg will support vigorous updrafts, though marginal effective shear (generally in the 20-30 kt range) will limit storm organization to some extent. Steepening low-level lapse rates will support a threat of locally damaging wind gusts this afternoon, and isolated hail will also be possible with the strongest cells. With storm organization expected to remain rather limited, watch issuance is considered unlikely at this time. ..Dean/Grams.. 07/01/2022 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...PHI...CTP...LWX...PBZ...RLX... LAT...LON 40318004 40797727 40687595 40387568 39597557 39257544 38777663 38507779 38257883 38347938 38657995 39108031 39768044 40318004 Read more

Several northwest Iowa towns request water conservation

3 years ago
Drought and increased water demand have led several northwest Iowa communities to ask residents to conserve water. The cities of Storm Lake, Sheldon, Wahpeton and Marcus have urged residents to avoid watering lawns, filling private pools and washing vehicles during daylight hours. KICD AM1240 & FM98.3 (Spencer, Iowa), July 1, 2022

SPC Jul 1, 2022 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

3 years ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0750 AM CDT Fri Jul 01 2022 Valid 011300Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHEAST WYOMING ACROSS THE BLACK HILLS REGION TO THE NEBRASKA SANDHILLS... ...SUMMARY... Severe gusts and isolated large hail will be possible this afternoon and evening from northeast Wyoming across the Black Hills region to the Nebraska Sandhills. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a mostly low-amplitude synoptic pattern will characterize the prevailing westerlies across the northern half of the CONUS, downstream from a slow-moving cyclone and trough located offshore from the Pacific Coast. Ridging should amplify somewhat over the northern Rockies, while another mid/upper low shifts largely eastward over the southern coastline of Hudson Bay. Associated cyclonic flow will shift eastward across the Great Lakes and Northeast through the period, with gradual height falls much of today and tonight over the Lower Great Lakes region, northern Appalachians and most of New England. An embedded shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery across portions of Upper MI, WI and southern/central MN -- should move eastward across Lower MI and southern ON today, then over northern New England tonight. A minor perturbation preceding that is located over southwestern QC and parts of eastern ON, and should move down the St. Lawrence River/estuary near ME today. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a wavy cold front from Lake Huron across southern Lake Michigan, northern IL, extreme southeastern NE, and western KS. This front should move to southeastern ON, northern IN, central portions of IL/MO, and southwestern KS by 00Z. By 12Z tomorrow, the cold front should extend from northern NY across OH to parts of southern IL, becoming quasistationary across southern MO and southern/southwestern KS. ...High Plains... Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into early evening around the Black Hills in WY/SD, spreading into parts of northwestern NE this evening before weakening. Severe gusts are possible, along with isolated large hail. Diurnal heating, and moist advection with 50s F surface dewpoints, should underlie 7-8 deg C/km midlevel lapse rates, contributing to MLCAPE in the 1000-1500 J/kg range. Even though low-level winds are not forecast to be very strong (generally less than 10 kt through the boundary layer except very near convection), substantial veering with height is expected beneath the midlevel west-northwesterly flow. This will support a blend of multicells and at least transient supercellular characteristics, with attendant severe-gust and large-hail threats. Some aggregation of this activity is possible into the evening, with localized reinforcement of severe- gust potential, before the convection moves into a nocturnally stabilizing boundary layer and wind potential diminishes. Farther south, and close to the mid/upper-level subtropical ridging, flow aloft and deep shear will be weak. Nonetheless, clusters of convection -- forming over higher terrain during the afternoon -- may shift eastward across the central High Plains atop a very well- heated/mixed boundary layer and steep low-level lapse rates, with isolated severe gusts/hail possible. ...Northeastern CONUS to KS and lower Missouri Valley... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible along/ahead of the cold front this afternoon into evening. Isolated severe gusts/hail may occur in the most intense multicell storms/clusters and/or short convective bands. Multiple relative concentrations of convection and/or severe potential are possible on the mesobeta-scale, but predictability remains too limited to highlight any within the broader 5%/marginal outlook corridor at this time. A small midlevel perturbation and related MCV -- now apparent in radar imagery over central/north-central KS -- may enhance shear and low-level lift somewhat over parts of the middle Mississippi/lower Ohio Valley regions today. Ahead of the cold front, favorable moisture should remain over the lengthy region, with surface dew points commonly in the 60s F and locally around 70 over the lower Ohio/middle Mississippi Valley regions, where localized water-loaded downdrafts are the most likely potential source of damaging to marginally severe gusts. Hotter conditions with better-mixed subcloud layers (but also weaker CAPE due to modest midlevel lapse rates) are expected over some areas over and east of the Alleghenies in the eastern parts of the corridor, and across parts of KS and western MO. Though south of the main belt of westerlies over most of this corridor, effective- shear magnitudes of 25-35 kt in the west, and 30-40 kt elsewhere, should support some multicellular organization. Diurnal heating and low-level lift near the front will be the main foci for convection, though some persistence of loosely organized, cold-pool-driven activity may occur this evening in the eastern Ohio Valley/central Appalachians region. ...Northern ME... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms - perhaps including a supercell or two -- may move across northern ME this afternoon into early evening. Isolated severe hail and/or damaging gusts are possible. An area of clouds/precip this morning -- related to a zone of strong low-level warm advection/isentropic ascent -- should depart the region through the remainder of the morning. Diabatic surface heating and continuing warm advection will contribute to gradual destabilization throughout the day, as mid/upper ascent subtly increases with the passage/approach of the low-amplitude shortwave troughs. Mid/upper-level lapse rates will remain modest, but low-level theta-e should increase enough to support the development of 500-1000 J/kg MLCAPE. Meanwhile, increasing mid/upper-level flow will boost effective-shear magnitudes into the 40-50-kt range. Veering of boundary-layer winds with height also may produce 150-200 J/kg effective SRH and curved hodographs. Diurnal heating (including effects along differential-heating/outflow boundaries) and prefrontal surface troughing may provide sufficient lift over and west of this area to support initiation. ..Edwards/Goss.. 07/01/2022 Read more

Eastern North Pacific Tropical Weather Outlook

3 years ago

000
ABPZ20 KNHC 011137
TWOEP

Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
500 AM PDT Fri Jul 1 2022

For the eastern North Pacific...east of 140 degrees west longitude:

Active Systems:
The National Hurricane Center is issuing advisories on Atlantic
basin Potential Tropical Cyclone Two, currently located over the
southwestern Caribbean Sea. The system is forecast to cross Central
America and move into the east Pacific basin, as a tropical cyclone,
on Saturday.

Offshore of Southern Mexico:
Satellite data from several hours ago indicate that the area of low
pressure located several hundred miles southwest of the southern
tip of the Baja California peninsula still did not have a
well-defined circulation. The associated showers and thunderstorms
have generally changed little during the past several hours, and
the system only has about another day to become a short-lived
tropical depression before it reaches cooler waters and a dry air
mass while it moves westward at 10 to 15 mph.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...medium...50 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...medium...50 percent.

$$
Forecaster Cangialosi/Hogsett
NHC Webmaster

Water conservation urged in San Francisco, California

3 years ago
The San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, the primary water provider for 2.7 million residents and businesses in the Bay Area, acted on May 24 to further reduce systemwide water use as urged by Governor Gavin Newsom and the State Quality Control board. The commission was pushing for an 11% systemwide use reduction. The Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.), June 30, 2022

New Mexico wildfires burned grazing land for cattle

3 years ago
Fires in northern New Mexico burned thousands of acres at higher elevations that usually support grazing cattle during the summer. In Mora County, the Hermits Peak Calf Canyon Fire forced ranchers to graze their cattle on low-country lands where the ranchers would normally grow hay and alfalfa to feed their livestock in the winter. This arrangement leaves ranchers without feed for winter. The ranchers are frustrated and insist that the federal government should help with remedying the situation. Santa Fe New Mexican (N.M.), June 27, 2022

Use of personal fireworks suspended in Alaska

3 years ago
The Alaska State Fire Marshal’s Office suspended the use of personal fireworks across a large part of the state on June 30, a move that was supported by the Alaska Division of Forestry and Fire Protection. The suspension covers the Kenai Peninsula Borough, Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Denali Borough, Fairbanks North Star Borough, Copper River Basin Area and the areas of Delta Junction, Tok and the upper Tanana Valley and will remain in effect until further notice. Fireworks displays planned by municipalities or local jurisdictions are allowed with the proper permits. As of June 30, there were 159 wildfires burning in Alaska, 19 of which are staffed, according to the Alaska Interagency Coordination Center. Anchorage Daily News (Alaska), June 30, 2022

One million acres burned in Alaska

3 years ago
More than 1.7 million acres burned in Alaska as of June 30, according to the National Interagency Fire Center and the Alaska Interagency Coordination Center Wildland Fire Dashboard. Limited snow over the winter allowed early snowmelt and dry vegetation, which advanced the start of the wildfire season. CNN (Atlanta, Ga.), June 30, 2022 A new wildfire record was set for Alaska when the number of acres burned reached the one million mark on June 15, the earliest in decades. Anchorage Daily News (Alaska), June 30, 2022

Fire danger remained high in Sandoval County, New Mexico

3 years ago
The June monsoon moisture has been very welcome, but more is still needed, say local fire officials. Sandoval County Fire, Bernalillo and Corrales extended their fireworks restrictions through late July. Rio Rancho’s burn ban is scheduled to expire on July 15, but Rio Rancho Fire and Rescue has not ruled out extending the ban. The Bernalillo fire chief noted that he was still worried about the dry fuels in combination with the heat heightening the fire risk. Rio Rancho Observer (N.M.), June 30, 2022

Stage 2 water restrictions in Georgetown, Texas

3 years ago
Stage 2 water restrictions began in Georgetown on June 28 because continued high water use was nearing system treatment capacity. During the past two weeks, water production from the city’s water treatment plants has exceeded 90% of capacity on multiple days, triggering the need to move to Stage 2 of the Drought Plan. Outdoor watering will be permitted once per week. FOX 7 Austin (Texas), June 30, 2022