Big day today. Gonna be following this thread closely. Got my weather radio, weather apps, phones charged, etc. Had a tornado in our general alley last night but didn't make it past the neighboring county. Rained hard last night and already one wave of rain through this morning. Still plenty of moisture in the air though
Hit the 90s yesterday and started today at a crisp 20 something degrees Nebraska. It ain't for anyone.
First wave about an hour or so out for us. 2nd wave seems to be a little disjointed in OK. We'll see if that continues as it gets warmer. Temps been already dropping a little here though.
Seems like this will be the worst hit area. Sun came out in East Arkansas earlier and hasn't had the rain we had.
I survived. Is this likely due to some radar anomaly, or is it just a very odd 100+ mile straight line on the back of the storm?
https://youtube.com/watch?v=/pMzleirwn9I?feature=share I dont know why it's doing that stupid shorts thing where it won't show the video in the thread.
Got really bad around here south of Jackson about 30 minutes ago. They said a tornado touched down about 2 miles north of me. My little boy got scared. And it woke the baby up.
Luckily for me it missed. I'm in the SE corner of the state, we just got a little rain and wind. Some snow today but nothing bad.
Liked because content but that’s gotta be the worst tornado footage and narration this thread has yet to see
I get the radar coverage isn't great, but something feels off about this. I don't see an imminent tornado threat (that can change) and I'm seeing pictures of supposed tornadoes, but they all look like very scary looking clouds
Incredible profile of James Spann from 2019. Can't recommend this enough. Spoiler: The Weatherman FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 2019 Christina Chung for NPR The Weatherman What do you do when you don't know what to do? And how do we handle it when that question has no answer? Who gets to be wrong half the time and keep their job? Weatherpeople! James Spann, chief meteorologist at ABC 33/40 in Birmingham, Alabama, has heard the joke a thousand times. And in some ways it's true. There's a lot meteorologists understand about weather forecasting, but there's even more they don't. They face uncertainty every single day and, when it comes to severe weather, how they navigate that uncertainty matters - it can get people killed, it can save lives. In this episode of Invisibilia, we explore our relationship with uncertainty through the eyes of a chief meteorologist. We wonder: what do you do when you don't know what to do? And how do we handle it when that question has no answer?