A Pacific storm is bringing areas of low elevation rain, moderate to heavy mountain snow, and high winds to the Northwest. Strong Santa Ana winds and very dry conditions are producing elevated to critical fire weather conditions in southern California. Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible through early Wednesday morning across parts of northeast Texas into western Tennessee. Read More >
From Winter... |
To Spring! |
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Tour of the Seasons February 2011’s Wild Weather Ride Includes Winter, Spring, and Summer |
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Recap ...Everything turned. Valentine’s Day came in sweet and sunny, with temperatures poking above 80°F away from the coast. Springlike temperatures had arrived, and humidity would follow, especially near the coast. Prolonged and pronounced southeast winds, often gusting to 40 mph or higher during the afternoon, brought warm days and muggy nights to the Lower Valley. Weak troughs edging across the Rio Grande Plains into the central Valley poked high temperatures to summer like levels from Brooks and Hidalgo Counties westward, culminating in the first century mark (100°F) maximum values on February 27th in Zapata and Starr County. For the coastal counties of Cameron, Willacy, and Kenedy, the muggy nights combined with enough soaking rainfall in mid January to turn brown lands green (above right). No such luck farther west, where rainfall of less than 2 inches since late September 2010 combined with a number of hot and dry afternoons to maintain highly cured vegetation, particularly along and west of Highway 281. By month’s end, temperatures recovered back to a value that matched the long term climatological average for February. The sharpness of the U–turn from much below average to well above average is shown in the following table:
Reasons |
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Height of the 500 mb pressure surface, 6 AM CST February 10th, 2011. Note the broad and generally high amplitude of the cold vortex, extending from the Arctic regions into the southern U.S. |
Height of the 500 mb pressure surface, 6 AM CST February 24th, 2011. Note the change in the pattern, with a broad ridge extending from the Texas coast through the Gulf of Mexico including the Deep South. Also, note the more west to east flow across the central U.S., with the cold vortex retracted toward the Arctic. |
Above: Graphs of daily high temperatures for selected stations in the Rio Grande Valley, February, 2011. Blue bars denote below average values; yellow bars above average values. The black line is the daily average. Check out the following for another view: Brownsville, Harlingen, McAllen, and Bayview. |