SPC MD 879

3 years 1 month ago
MD 0879 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND NORTHERN SOUTH CAROLINA
Mesoscale Discussion 0879 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1020 AM CDT Mon May 23 2022 Areas affected...portions of central and northern South Carolina Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely Valid 231520Z - 231645Z Probability of Watch Issuance...20 percent SUMMARY...A line of storms capable of isolated damaging wind gusts will persist across portions of South Carolina through early afternoon. DISCUSSION...A line of thunderstorms has moved across Georgia this morning on the eastern periphery of a compact warm-core low. These thunderstorms have recently shown a bit more organization as they have moved into South Carolina where temperatures have increased into the upper 70s to low 80s with dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s. Mid-level flow around 45 to 50 knots per CAE VWP has proven sufficient for some storm organization along this line. Therefore, at least some isolated damaging wind threat should persist through at least early afternoon. However, these storms are moving further away from the surface low and the compact wind field surrounding it. Therefore, despite improving instability through the afternoon, the damaging wind threat is expected to remain isolated due to the decreasing deep-layer shear and likely reduction in storm organization. ..Bentley/Hart.. 05/23/2022 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...RAH...ILM...CHS...CAE...GSP... LAT...LON 33118098 33158155 33238177 33428196 33648195 34078200 34498204 34628206 35178183 35128111 34888045 34848021 34727961 34177970 33518019 33118098 Read more

SPC May 23, 2022 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

3 years 1 month ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0752 AM CDT Mon May 23 2022 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms will be possible today into tonight across parts of the southern Plains, with large hail, severe wind gusts, and a tornado or two possible. Isolated damaging wind and a tornado may occur across parts of the Southeast. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow will cover much of the Rockies and Plains, as a series of shortwave perturbations contribute to gradual amplification of a slowly eastward-moving synoptic trough. On the southeastern fringe of that regime, moisture-channel imagery indicates a weak southern-stream perturbation over northeastern Chihuahua and far west TX, east of another small trough over western Chihuahua. The leading feature should move east-northeastward across southwest/west-central TX today, with vorticity augmentation likely from convective processes. That perturbation should reach eastern OK and east TX by 12Z tomorrow. Meanwhile, behind the southern perturbation and over the southern High Plains, height falls will continue as the synoptic trough amplifies. By 12Z, the larger trough should extend nearly over the spine of the Rockies from MT-NM, with a prominent vorticity lobe over northeastern NM. Farther east, a deep-layer trough was apparent over AL, with weak low-level circulation centered near MGM at 11Z. This feature is forecast to move northeastward across northern GA and the western Carolinas through the period, while gradually deamplifying. At the surface, 11Z analysis depicted a cold front over the Atlantic east and south of New England, becoming quasistationary across northern/western NC, southeastern TN and northern AL, then a slow- moving cold front again over central MS, southern LA, and the mid/upper TX coastal-shelf waters. A quasistationary to warm front was drawn from there across south TX to a low near FST. A separate low north of MGM should move northeast and merge with the frontal zone through the day. The TX part of the front will move northward and become diffuse, amid an intensifying, broad, low-level warm- advection plume. A dryline should develop today over eastern NM, along the western edge of the associated moisture return. Another frontal zone will develop farther northeast by 00Z -- from the northern part of a strengthening lee trough/low over northeastern NM across the TX Panhandle and north TX. This boundary should pivot to a position from east-central NM to north-central OK by 12Z. ...Southern Plains... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon over the High Plains west of the Caprock, as well as over a swath of weakly capped, moist boundary layer from the southeastern Trans-Pecos/Big Bend regions to the Edwards Plateau and across the northern Serranias Del Burro of Coahuila. The severe threat is not well-focused east of the dryline, but with weak MLCINH and variable large-scale lift aloft expected, a broad area will have the potential for convective initiation and maintenance. Large hail and isolated severe gusts will be the main concerns during the first few hours of the convective cycle. Several supercells are possible, given strong veering of flow with height, and generally 35-45 kt effective-shear magnitudes. Tornado potential appears very conditional and relegated to localized boundary/ storm-scale interactions, given the modest ambient hodographs. Some of the diurnal activity may aggregate into at least a couple loosely organized clusters or small MCSs into this evening, supported by moisture advection/transport associated with a broad, strengthening nocturnal LLJ. Such convection will offer predominantly a wind threat while moving east of the Caprock, and across the southwest/south-central TX region. A combination of moist/theta-e advection and diurnal heating (including heating of higher terrain from the Big Bend region into Coahuila) will erode the cap today, and will contribute to favorable buoyancy. By late afternoon, preconvective surface dew points in the 50s F should be common from the Panhandles to the South Plains, with 60s from the lower Pecos Valley region across the Edwards Plateau, Hill Country, north TX, and southern OK. MLCAPE around 1000-1500 J/kg will be possible over the High Plains east of the dryline, while values of 1500-2000 J/kg may develop prior to convective passage from northwest to southwest TX. Convection should weaken with eastward progress tonight over northwest TX/southern OK, and near the I-35 corridor in central/south TX. ...Southeast... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected through this evening, in a northeastward-shifting, low-level convergence arc located east through south of the primary low/middle-level circulation center and vorticity max. A marginal tornado threat is apparent from embedded supercell(s)/mesovortices, and isolated gusts near severe limits may be noted as well. The overall coverage and magnitude of severe potential still appear isolated and marginal, though mesoscale trends will be monitored for better-focused, higher-probability potential within this swath. The boundary layer should destabilize through the afternoon ahead of the primary convergence arc, within a combination of low-level theta-e advection and pockets of variably cloud-muted diurnal heating. Although weak midlevel lapse rates will temper buoyancy somewhat, moisture associated with surface dew points commonly in the mid 60s to lower 70s F will contribute to MLCAPE around 500-1500 J/kg. Despite the slow weakening of the deep-layer trough, a mesoscale belt of enhanced cyclonic flow in the 850-500-mb layer will shift northeastward across GA and parts of the Carolinas through this evening, just south through east of the main midlevel vorticity lobe. This will overlie the main low-level convergence zone, with enough low-level and deep shear to support sporadic organization of associated quasi-linear convection into bows and LEWPs. Occasional, mostly short-lived supercell structures may be noted either within the main convective arc, or in discrete to semi-discrete supercells to its east. Some backbuilding or regeneration of convection is possible late this afternoon from central GA toward southeastern AL and perhaps adjoining parts of the FL Panhandle as well, though shear will be weaker over that area by then. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 05/23/2022 Read more

Eastern North Pacific Tropical Weather Outlook

3 years 1 month ago

000
ABPZ20 KNHC 231133
TWOEP

Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
500 AM PDT Mon May 23 2022

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

East-Central Pacific well offshore of Southwestern Mexico:
A trough of low pressure located several hundred miles southwest of
the coast of Mexico continues to produce a broad area of
disorganized showers and thunderstorms. Environmental conditions
appear marginally conducive for some slow development while this
system drifts eastward through the end of the week.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...10 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...low...20 percent.

South of the Gulf of Tehuantepec:
A broad area of low pressure is forecast to form around midweek a
few hundred miles south of the Gulf of Tehuantepec. Gradual
development is possible thereafter while this system moves slowly
westward at 5 to 10 mph.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...near 0 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...low...30 percent.

$$
Forecaster Blake
NHC Webmaster

Californians requested to curb water use by 15%

3 years 1 month ago
Although Gov. Newsom asked Californians to curb their water use by 15% compared with 2020, statewide cumulative water savings since July was just 3.7%. Urban water use increased 18.9% in March. Los Angeles Times (Calif.), May 23, 2022 Despite the record dry January and February, Californians are falling short on voluntary water conservation. Gov. Gavin Newsom asked that people conserve 15% compared to 2020 levels, but in January water use increased 2.6% compared to January 2020. Between July and January, statewide water use was down 6.4%. The Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.), March 15, 2022 With the start of 2022 being the driest in California’s history as the state enters its third year of drought, all Californians are asked to increase their water conservation efforts. Los Angeles Times (Calif.), March 11, 2022 California Gov. Gavin Newsom requested that people and businesses curb their water use by 15% as intense drought persisted. “Given how low the reservoirs are going to be at the start of next year, the governor wanted to issue the voluntary call in the event that next year is also dry,” stated the director of the California Department of Water Resources. The governor also included another nine counties in the emergency drought proclamation that encompasses 50 of the state's 58 counties. The nine counties were Inyo, Marin, Mono, Monterey, San Luis Obispo, San Mateo, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara and Santa Cruz. Associated Press News (New York), July 8, 2021

Coconut Fire (Wildfire)

3 years 1 month ago
The Coconut Fire started 18 miles south of Vernon, on May 17 at approximately 4:30pm. Elevated fire conditions contributed to a rapid spread and significant fire behavior. Texas A&M Forest Service received a request for assistance from local fire department and is currently working in unified command with local responders.Fire activity has been extreme with rapid spread and crowning in the mesquite brush. Crews are focused on operations related to life safety and will continue with structure protection and line

SPC May 22, 2022 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

3 years 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0744 AM CDT Sun May 22 2022 Valid 221300Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE NORTHERN MID-ATLANTIC AND NEW ENGLAND... ...SUMMARY... Scattered thunderstorms, some with damaging to severe gusts and large hail, are expected today over parts of the northern Mid-Atlantic and New England. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, mean troughing and related large-scale cyclonic flow will persist from northeastern/Arctic Canada across the northern Plains, with some eastward shift over the Great Basin to central Rockies, and across northwestern MX. Numerous embedded shortwaves will perturb that broader cyclonic-flow pattern on the mesoscale. The most convectively important of those shortwave troughs is apparent initially in moisture-channel imagery from northeastern MN across IA. This feature is expected to stretch northeast/southwest through the day as the northern portion ejects more rapidly, reaching southwestern/central QC by 00Z. As that occurs, height falls, tightening mid/upper height gradient, and accordingly, stronger 500-250-mb southwesterlies will overspread much of the Northeast today on both sides of the front described below. Otherwise, a series of convectively induced/enhanced vorticity maxima will occupy a belt of weaker westerlies and southwesterlies aloft, from south TX to VA. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a cold front from southern ON across western OH, western KY, southern AR, through a weak frontal- wave low near SHV, to south-central TX and northern Coahuila. As the northern-stream shortwave trough approaches, the front will accelerate eastward, reaching northern/western New England and near the I-95 corridor between NYC and northern VA around 00Z. From there the front should be positioned across western NC, northern AL, central MS, southwestern LA, and deep south TX. By 12Z, the front will move offshore from the Northeast, and extend across central NC, becoming slow-moving to stationary through a weak frontal wave over northern AL, southwestward over southern LA and deep south TX. ...Northeastern CONUS... Scattered thunderstorms are likely in one or more bands, along/ahead of and largely parallel to the surface front. Activity may develop by midday to early afternoon across portions of PA, northern WV and western NY. Mainly multicell bands/clusters, with isolated discrete or embedded supercells over New England, are possible. This activity should move eastward to northeastward into a diurnally destabilizing, favorably moist air mass and intensify while also growing in coverage. Damaging to severe gusts and sporadic hail are possible, and a tornado or two may occur over northeastern portions of the area. Low-level and deep shear each should increase with northward extent under the greater height falls aloft, while moist advection and pockets of sustained diurnal heating contribute to favorable destabilization, particularly over the "slight" area. A corridor of 1000-2000 J/kg MLCAPE may develop ahead of the front across ME and adjoining parts of northern/central New England, with peak surface dew points in the 60s F and surface temps into the mid/upper 80s and 90s (elevation-dependent). Meanwhile, effective-shear magnitudes around 40-50 kt are possible over northern/western ME, decreasing to less than 35 kt over southern NY and eastern PA. While bands or clusters of thunderstorms may develop farther south, overall organization and coverage should be less. Activity should diminish this evening as it moves into areas from Downeast Maine to southern New England where the cold/stable marine-layer influence will be greater. ...Gulf Coast to southern Mid-Atlantic... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms, sometimes in loosely organized multicellular clusters, should occur today in a broad, favorably moist swath from the southern Mid-Atlantic across the Southeast, ahead of the surface front and along/ahead of an aggregate of outflow/differential-heating boundaries left by prior convection and its lingering cloud cover. Additional convection may form along sea-breeze fronts and serial outflows from successive daytime activity. Being well-displaced from substantial midlevel flow and deep shear, this activity should present a marginal, isolated severe concern, mainly for damaging gusts. A convectively active/reinforced midlevel perturbation over the northern Gulf and southeastern LA may contribute some enhancement to low/middle-level flow and shear (e.g., via strengthened 850-500-mb speeds, and some backing of surface winds as well). This suggests transient storm-scale rotation may occur with associated cells near the coast and offshore, particularly this evening into tonight. As such, marginal tornado probabilities are maintained across parts of that region. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 05/22/2022 Read more

Mayfield Fire (Wildfire)

3 years 2 months ago
At approximately 5 07 pm on May 12th, a wildfire started in San Saba County near the border of San Saba and McCulloch County. approximately 23 miles SW of the town of San Saba. Local fire departments were the first resources on scene and called for assistance from the Texas A&M Forest Service (TAMFS). TAMFS and the Local IC are working in unified command, The fire has been resistant to control and holding heat. The area has experienced above normal temperatures, low relative humidity and drying winds.  On May 17th at approximately 8:30 pm a wind shift occurred and blew the fire across a two track road moving the fire to  the NW toward the river,  Torching and crowning was observed in the junipers and fire is making runs in the grass. The fire potential for additional growth is moderate to high. Mechanized equipment is constructing containment lines areas they can access due to hazards. Engines are working the fire in areas they can access and mopping up along the fireline. ...

Dry Branch Fire (Wildfire)

3 years 2 months ago
The Dry Branch Fire started on May 18 at approximately 3:30pm. Local fire departments requested assistance from Texas A&M Forest Service after 4pm. The fire is burning north of Star in Hamilton County.Initial reports of structures threatened has quickly evolved into mandatory evacuations throughout the area. Evacuations are currently ongoing on FM 2005 between 1047 and CR 511.Crews are focused on operations related to life safety and structure protection, and containment line creation where possible. State resources are working in unified command with local responders. Update May 20th 11:30 am- Mechanized equipment continues to improve containment lines, engines are patrolling lines and mopping up heat.  Weather concerns are high temperatures, low relative humidity and higher winds over the

Pope 2 Fire (Wildfire)

3 years 2 months ago
 At approximately 6:53 pm, a wildfire started at the Schleicher/Sutton County line located near the original Pope Fire (fire that started several days ago) on the Pope Ranch. Local fire departments were the first resources on scene and called for assistance from the Texas A&M Forest Service (TAMFS). TAMFS and the Local IC are working in unified command, Fire crews are currently constructing containment line around the fire with heavy equipment with the support of engines. Aircraft was utilized on the fire. Update May 18th 11:00- mechanized equipment is continuing to build and improve containment lines, engine are mopping up, patrolling line and working areas of concern. A helicopter has been assigned to the fire for bucket work. Fire Behavior observed yesterday- crown runs in the junipers and short range spotting (800').  Today's weather is of concern with continued high temperatures, low relative humidity and drying winds. Update May 19th 8:25 pm- containment lines established...

Twin Starts Fire (Wildfire)

3 years 2 months ago
The Texas A&M Forest Service received a new request in Llano County on Highway 71 in between County Road 308 and 309 at approximately 2:00pm on May 19th. TAMFS crews arrived on scene shortly after and found 2 fires, one that had been stopped by local resources, and one uncontained fire actively spreading. TAMFS is in unified command with local resources to reach full containment. Aviation resources are being used in tandem with TAMFS bulldozers and county motor graders to build containment lines. Engines are being used to mop up hotspots, patrol the fire perimeter, and provide structure protection. Elevated to near critical fire weather is expected in the area of the Twin Starts Fire through Friday 5/20. This fire is in close proximity to the Sandstone Mountain and Slab Road Fires which began on May

Planned burns on hold across U.S, pending review

3 years 2 months ago
The U.S. Forest Service announced that it will not conduct any further fire burning operations for the purpose of clearing brush and small trees on national forest lands as the agency holds a review of protocols and practices before planned operations this fall. Extreme fire danger and unfavorable weather conditions were reasons for the suspension of operations. Associated Press News (New York), May 20, 2022

Stage 2 water restrictions in Los Fresnos, Texas

3 years 2 months ago
Los Fresnos has entered stage two of the Drought Contingency Plan because Falcon Lake in Zapata County and Amistad Reservoir are both below 35% of capacity. Residents are asked water outdoors only thrice weekly or less, not to water sidewalks and to repair leaks. ValleyCentral.com (Brownsville, Texas), May 20, 2022

Extra watering, wise selection of plants to cope with hot, dry weather in Georgia

3 years 2 months ago
A plant nursery in Savannah has moved some plants out of direct sunlight and is watering plants twice daily to cope with the heat and drought. Horticulturalists at the University of Georgia’s State Botanical Gardens in Athens focus on planting native plants that will tolerate heat and dry conditions better than nonnative ones. Savannah Morning News (Ga.), May 21, 2022

SPC MD 848

3 years 2 months ago
MD 0848 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH POSSIBLE FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN IL/IN
Mesoscale Discussion 0848 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1006 AM CDT Sat May 21 2022 Areas affected...Portions of southern IL/IN Concerning...Severe potential...Watch possible Valid 211506Z - 211700Z Probability of Watch Issuance...40 percent SUMMARY...A cluster of thunderstorms may strengthen over the next couple of hours and become capable of producing scattered damaging winds. Watch issuance is possible. DISCUSSION...At 15Z, a small cluster of thunderstorms is ongoing along/near the MS River in the vicinity of St. Louis MO. This activity is probably still slightly elevated to the north of a surface boundary and outflow from prior convection. However, the airmass downstream across parts of southern IL/IN is in the process of destabilizing, with diurnal heating promoting surface temperatures to rise generally into the 70s per recent observations. A fairly moist low-level airmass is also in place across this area, along with modestly steepened mid-level lapse rates per 12Z sounding from ILX. This cluster may become surface based over the next couple of hours as it spreads into southern IL/IN and encounters greater instability. Given the already linear mode, scattered damaging winds should be the main threat, although some hail may also occur. Convective trends will be closely monitored for signs of increasing thunderstorm intensity, which may prompt watch issuance in next couple of hours. ..Gleason/Hart.. 05/21/2022 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...LMK...IND...PAH...ILX...LSX... LAT...LON 37808962 38428970 38988975 39778776 39878610 39738544 38638550 38228676 37808962 Read more

SPC May 21, 2022 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

3 years 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0751 AM CDT Sat May 21 2022 Valid 211300Z - 221200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE LOWER OHIO VALLEY...LOWER GREAT LAKES AND NORTHEAST... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing both damaging winds and large hail should develop through evening from parts of the southern Plains into the lower Ohio Valley, lower Great Lakes and Northeast. A tornado or two may occur as well. ...Synopsis... The large-scale mid/upper-level pattern will continue to be dominated by a positively tilted trough from northeastern Canada across the northern Plains to the Great Basin and southern CA. Numerous shortwaves will be embedded in the associated cyclonic flow over the northern Plains and western CONUS, and downstream southwest flow across the Midwest and Great Lakes. However, the great majority of these, and of the fastest flow aloft, will remain behind the surface front described below. Exceptions will include MCVs produced by ongoing convection over the Ozarks to IN. A weak but still well-defined southern-stream shortwave trough is apparent in moisture-channel imagery over central/south-central TX, and should weaken further as it moves northeastward to parts of east TX and AR by this evening. The 11Z surface analysis showed a cold front from southwestern QC and southeastern Lower MI across western IN, south-central MO, south-central OK, to between MAF-HOB, northwestward into central NM. The front should move slowly eastward/southeastward by 00Z to southern parts of QC/ON, northern IN, southern IL, southern MO, extreme southeastern OK, and central/southwest TX. By 12Z tomorrow, the front should reach parts of OH, western KY/TN, northern LA, deep south TX, and southern Coahuila. A wavy warm front -- drawn initially across portions of eastern NY/PA and northern NJ -- will shift northeastward over most of New England through today. ...Southern Plains to Northeast... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop through the period (including ongoing clusters from parts of IN/OH to northwestern AR). While severe may occur at almost any time from the most intense cells, the greatest concentration of potential should be this afternoon, up and down the over 2000-mile-long swath. Damaging gusts and large hail should be the most common severe threats, though a tornado or two may be possible (especially over parts of western/northern Maine and the Ozarks to lower Ohio Valley). A lengthy corridor of 60s F surface dew points already is observed from southeastern MO northeastward to northern NY, with upper 60s and low 70s over much of AR and TX ahead of the front. Areas of cloud cover will slow diurnal heating over much of the corridor east of the Mississippi River; nonetheless, preconvective MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg should develop. Buoyancy will be greater amidst larger boundary layer theta-e and stronger heating over AR and TX, with 2000-3000 MLCAPE common. Except from near the lower Great Lakes across northern New England, and perhaps parts of northern AR, substantial mid/upper winds and their contribution to deep shear will remain well behind the front. Near the Canadian border, some supercell potential may persist from southern QC into northern and northwestern ME this afternoon/early evening before weakening. [For severe-weather concerns in adjoining parts of Canada, refer to Environment Canada public weather alerts for Quebec-south via weather.gc/ca/warnings.] Clusters of strong-severe thunderstorms also may concentrate along outflow boundaries ahead of the front, left by morning convection from parts of the lower Ohio Valley to AR. Elsewhere, isolated, localized damaging gusts or marginal hail may occur this afternoon from pulse/multicell convection, across a broad area of the South ahead of the cold front. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 05/21/2022 Read more