Yea it just clipped my neighborhood. We had a funnel cloud about a mile from my house which set off the sirens but never touched down.
shit, they released water from south Dakota today and its suppose to storm across most of the Midwest the next two days. stay safe big 8 bros
Apparently there's a metric fuckton of snow pack in Northern SD and ND that is starting to melt and raise the water levels upstream. Sioux Falls etc was bracing for flooding this last week so they needed to do it. But it's obviously less than ideal.
Yeah they've declared emergencies for the flooding in the red river valley here in ND. Luckily our weather conditions so far are favorable for a steady melt. No big rain storms coming to melt it all instantly like nebraska had.
I think we are about to get rolling officially in here. Looks like something every day for the next few weeks. Next week has a few chances for higher end stuff.
I have not watched these, but I assume they're decent. If you want to watch this plus a few others on how to decipher a skew-t diagram. http://www.tornadotitans.com/how-to-use-skew-ts-intro/
Have to agree with this. Big time setup a bit undercut with system the moves through just prior to this systems arrival... Limits moisture return for a bigger event The bigger thing will be how much liquid (1-2”) in the high plains falls as rain or snow... If all snow we could see 16+” of snow up here
After a small thunderstorm the other night I'm over the snow. More would just be a gut punch. My yard isn't even completely thawed yet
Anybody know of some live-streams of TX storms right now? All I’ve got is these three on the live storm chasing app
If moisture can recover quickly (a big if), could be a big severe event across the southern/central Plains into Mississippi Valley. I don't want to say that it would be a waste of a dynamically favorable system (cause that implies I like death), but meteorologically speaking, it is kind of a waste.
It would be possible. There will almost certainly be severe weather with this. But if the prior front did/does not scour out some moisture across the southern US, the significant potential (especially tornadic) would be much higher.
It wasn't much, but this piddly little thing got me so excited today. Wasn't anything special, but is just now dying after wondering 100 miles or so east of where it was when I took the picture.
Currently have dew points in the mid 70s in the gulf, but the current system and associated front is scouring that as we speak. Without that front and return flow, we would have had plentiful moisture to work with. Oh well