PowellVolz Posted February 22, 2021 Share Posted February 22, 2021 . 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted February 27, 2021 Author Share Posted February 27, 2021 If tomorrow is what some of these short range models are showing, it should be a active day if you like severe. Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1125 AM CST Sat Feb 27 2021 Valid 281200Z - 011200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND OHIO VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms appear possible from parts of Texas into the Ohio Valley on Sunday. Damaging wind gusts should be the main hazard, but some hail and a couple tornadoes may also occur. ...Southern Plains into the Lower Mississippi and Ohio Valleys... Multiple mid-level shortwave troughs will move eastward across the CONUS on Sunday. One such shortwave trough is forecast to advance from the northern Plains and Upper Midwest to the Great Lakes by Sunday evening. Another shortwave trough should develop slowly southeastward from the Great Basin to the Southwest, eventually closing off over AZ/NM late Sunday night. The primary surface low is expected to develop northeastward across the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes and into southern Ontario by Sunday evening, in tandem with the previously mentioned shortwave trough. A cold front extending southward from this low should be located over parts of the lower OH Valley into the Mid-South and southern Plains Sunday morning. This cold front will shift slowly southeastward through the period across these regions, and it will likely provide a focus for convection. A fairly broad swath of enhanced mid-level southwesterly winds should overlie the frontal zone, but stronger forcing associated with both shortwave troughs is likely to remain north of the warm sector. Still, forecast soundings from northeast TX into the lower MS Valley/Mid-South and continuing into parts of KY indicate a veering and strengthening wind profile with height through mid levels. Upwards of 50-60+ kt of effective bulk shear appears likely, which is clearly sufficient for organized storms, including supercells. However, two potentially limiting factors remain apparent. One is the orientation of the front nearly parallel with the southwesterly mid-level flow. Tendency may be for storms to form along the front and then get quickly undercut while becoming elevated. The other limitation may be generally weak low/mid-level lapse rates and related modest instability. Even so, the presence of surface dewpoints generally in the 62-68 F range coupled with some diurnal heating south of the front should support MLCAPE around 250-1000 J/kg by Sunday afternoon. Current expectations are for mainly elevated storms to be ongoing across parts of the lower OH Valley Sunday morning in a strong low-level warm advection regime. Additional convective development appears likely along much of the length of the cold front by late Sunday morning or early afternoon. Short bowing line segments may pose an isolated damaging wind threat as they move east-northeastward. Even though low-level flow should tend to veer to southwesterly across much of the warm sector through the day, enough low-level shear may remain to pose a threat for a couple tornadoes with either semi-discrete storms or circulations embedded within the line segments. Eventually, this isolated severe threat should wane across the lower MS Valley and TN Valley Sunday evening as storms become mainly elevated behind the front. Finally, some hail threat may exist with elevated storms both Sunday morning and Sunday night across parts of TX into the ArkLaTex vicinity. Mid-level lapse rates should be modestly steepened across this region in advance of the shortwave trough over the Southwest, and deep-layer shear will likely be rather strong and uni-directional, potentially supporting elevated supercells. ..Gleason.. 02/27/2021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted February 27, 2021 Author Share Posted February 27, 2021 National Weather Service Nashville TN 330 PM CST Sat Feb 27 2021 .DISCUSSION... Went with a blended model solution through next Saturday afternoon. Good initialization and generally good solution agreement. Big player in this potential significant rainfall event unfolding across mid state region through early Monday will still be a surface warm front moving well north of mid state region tonight, shifting heavier rain axis up into Ohio Valley. Trailing this warm front is a cold front that will drop into mid state region later Sunday, and then work south of our area overnight. Late Sunday/Sunday night will be our biggest threat of flooding as most of expected rainfall will come during that period and some river flooding possibly continuing well through next work week. Severe parameters also a bit enhanced for Sunday afternoon into Sunday evening across our area. Afternoon high temps on Sunday expected to sore into mid 70s south with a good amount of instability and favorable lapses rates for strong to severe convection development, especially if rainfall does not move into this portion of mid state region until late afternoon hours allowing for increased atmospheric instability due to enhanced diurnal heating influences. SPC has placed entire mid state region in a marginal risk during Sunday afternoon through Sunday evening time frame. Still looks like all this rain will end as Monday morning hours progress. Past and future QPF have been quite consistent over the previous few model runs giving our area a total rainfall event of 2-4 inches, with isolated 4+ inches possible. Thus a Flood Watch continues from 12Z Sunday through 12Z Monday for most of mid state region expect south central and southeast counties where lesser amounts are expected. This developing weather pattern will result in unseasonably warm lows are tonight as low level warm air advection becomes increasingly established. Lows tonight will actually be higher than seasonal normal high temperatures! Lows tonight will range upper 50s north to lower 60s south. Highs on Sunday will range from upper 60s north to mid 70s south. Lows Sunday night will fall into low to mid 40s as surface frontal passage occurs. As a cold air advection pattern from our north settles into mid state region as Monday progresses, highs will be actually a few degrees cooler than seasonal normal values generally in lower 50s. Following this system, potential of scattered showers will continue across mid state region through Tuesday night as now both latest GFS/ECMWF solutions move a system across mid state region as Tuesday night progresses. Dry conditions should finally prevail across our area Wednesday through Thursday afternoon as upper level ridging influences build across mid state region. Also noted is now better agreement between latest GFS/ECMWF solution as next weekend approaches. However will still maintain forecast consistency with mentioning just a chance of showers across mid state region Thursday night through Friday night. Temperatures are expected to stay around seasonal normal values Tuesday through next Saturday afternoon. Maybe some wintry precipitation mix working in during Tuesday and Wednesday morning hours, but no significant accumulations expected. Mid state continues to get a break from Old Man Winter! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Holston_River_Rambler Posted February 28, 2021 Share Posted February 28, 2021 Rut roh Rorge (from MRX): Within this high shear, low CAPE environment, there will be a very low chance of a QLCS tornado within the convective line across our western and southwestern counties on tonight. While the risk of a QLCS tornado is very low, it is a risk that will need to be considered and monitored closely tonight. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted February 28, 2021 Author Share Posted February 28, 2021 Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1144 PM CST Sat Feb 27 2021 Valid 281200Z - 011200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE ARKLATEX TO MIDDLE TENNESSEE... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe thunderstorms are likely from parts of Texas into Middle Tennessee on Sunday. Damaging wind gusts and a few tornadoes should be the main hazards, but some large hail may also occur. ...Synopsis... Several mid-level shortwave troughs are embedded within a larger trough across the central CONUS. A stronger shortwave will move through the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes through the day. A compact shortwave will develop into a closed low across the Southwest throughout the day while several weaker perturbations will move through moderate southwesterly flow extending from the Southern Plains to the Ohio Valley. At the surface, an area of low pressure will begin the day in Iowa before deepening as it moves northeastward into the Great Lakes. As this surface low strengthens, a cold front will sharpen and advance southeastward from the Midwest to the southern Plains. Numerous thunderstorms, some severe, are expected along and ahead of this cold front. ...Southern Plains to the Ohio Valley... A shortwave trough seen on Water Vapor across northern Mexico early this morning will move quickly northeastward through the morning. Weak ascent associated with this mid-level shortwave is expected to overspread a moist and unstable warm sector across north-central/northeast Texas and southeast Oklahoma this morning which will likely initiate scattered convection. Supercells are possible given moderate instability (1000-1500 J/kg), steep mid-level lapse rates (~7.5 C/km) and effective shear around 65 kts. All severe weather hazards will be possible with these early storms. This includes the potential for a tornado or two given the moderate low-level shear. Temperatures ahead of the cold front are expected to increase into the low 70s with dewpoints in the low to mid 60s from the southern Plains as far northeast as southwest Kentucky by mid afternoon. This should yield MLCAPE around 1000 to 1500 J/kg from the southern Plains northeastward to far southern Kentucky. This destabilization of the air mass, combined with the tightening low-level frontal circulation should support widespread storm development along the front by early to mid afternoon. Storms may initially struggle to become severe due to some warmer temperatures near 700mb and the propensity for storms to initially move to the cool side of the boundary and become elevated. However, through time, storms are expected to grow upscale into a forward propagating MCS. This line of storms will likely pose a threat for damaging winds given the strong low-level flow and a broad region of weak to moderate instability downstream. 00Z CAM guidance suggests the most robust linear segments may occur from northeast Arkansas into western Tennessee where height falls and cooling temperatures aloft may assist in stronger updraft development. Low level flow is expected to increase above 40 knots at 0.5 km in this region which will support a greater threat for severe wind and a favorable low-level shear profile for potentially a few tornadoes embedded within the line. By late evening, instability is expected to weaken substantially which will likely support the line weakening by the early overnight hours. ...South Texas... A few storms are expected to form late in the period (after 07Z) near the Edwards Plateau and move eastward. Moderate instability (1500 to 2000 J/kg) is expected in this region with steep mid-level lapse rates around 8 C/km. Supercells will be the likely storm mode given effective shear around 60 to 65 knots. Low level flow will remain quite weak and thus large hail will be the primary threat with this activity. ..Bentley/Darrow.. 02/28/2021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WestTennWX Posted February 28, 2021 Share Posted February 28, 2021 Picked up over 3 and a half inches of rain this morning in Obion County. Several reports of culverts and bridges washed out as well. Snapped these around 9 am. 2 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted February 28, 2021 Author Share Posted February 28, 2021 Tornado Watch TORNADO WATCH OUTLINE UPDATE FOR WT 13 NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 220 PM CST SUN FEB 28 2021 TORNADO WATCH 13 IS IN EFFECT UNTIL 1000 PM CST FOR THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS TNC005-017-021-023-033-037-039-043-045-047-053-055-069-071-075- 077-079-081-083-085-095-097-099-101-109-113-117-119-125-131-135- 147-157-161-165-167-181-183-187-010400- /O.NEW.KWNS.TO.A.0013.210228T2020Z-210301T0400Z/ TN . TENNESSEE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BENTON CARROLL CHEATHAM CHESTER CROCKETT DAVIDSON DECATUR DICKSON DYER FAYETTE GIBSON GILES HARDEMAN HARDIN HAYWOOD HENDERSON HENRY HICKMAN HOUSTON HUMPHREYS LAKE LAUDERDALE LAWRENCE LEWIS MADISON MARSHALL MAURY MCNAIRY MONTGOMERY OBION PERRY ROBERTSON SHELBY STEWART SUMNER TIPTON WAYNE WEAKLEY WILLIAMSON $$ ATTN...WFO...LZK...OHX...MEG...LMK...PAH... 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PowellVolz Posted March 1, 2021 Share Posted March 1, 2021 . 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Calderon Posted March 1, 2021 Share Posted March 1, 2021 This cell is on a precarious path, to say the least. Directly at Nashville. . 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 1, 2021 Author Share Posted March 1, 2021 2 minutes ago, Calderon said: This cell is on a precarious path, to say the least. Directly at Nashville. . How bizarre,it was around this time last year when tonadoes struck 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PowellVolz Posted March 1, 2021 Share Posted March 1, 2021 No way this is legit right?. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 1, 2021 Author Share Posted March 1, 2021 2 minutes ago, PowellVolz said: No way this is legit right? . Not sure,i just seen that tea cup hail 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 1, 2021 Author Share Posted March 1, 2021 Might have been a tornado,seeing reports of power poles snapped in half 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 1, 2021 Author Share Posted March 1, 2021 URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED Severe Thunderstorm Watch Number 15 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 810 PM EST Sun Feb 28 2021 The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a * Severe Thunderstorm Watch for portions of Far south-central Kentucky Middle Tennessee * Effective this Sunday evening from 810 PM until 1100 PM EST. * Primary threats include... Scattered damaging wind gusts to 70 mph possible A tornado or two possible SUMMARY...Cluster of strong to severe storms may produce damaging winds and a brief tornado before it weakens later this evening. The severe thunderstorm watch area is approximately along and 40 statute miles north and south of a line from 80 miles west of Crossville TN to 20 miles northeast of Crossville TN. For a complete depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU5). 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nrgjeff Posted March 1, 2021 Share Posted March 1, 2021 Weekend was interesting along an east-west boundary. Thankfully it' didn't March 2-3, 2020 again. Mid-Range the weekly models have shown that trough west with low SER look mid-month; and, operational models are similar now in the 11-15 day period. Weeks 2-3 are the edge of any forecast value; but, it's nice they agree. Forecast AO/NAO is positive. Bering Sea ridge (not Alaska) could anchor the downstream Rockies to Plains trough. Get thunderstorms going Mid-South to Ohio Valley? Severe Season overall I'm somewhat bullish, but not crazy lit. I see La Nina hanging in there. It's not a pure La Nina resurgence since it's still first year, but it has that bullish lean for severe. Recent MJO activity and Kelvin wave placement in the Tropical Pacific has juiced the La Nina status (esp 3.4 region). +TNI is in question. Right off South America (region 1&2) is still cool. It had been warning up; but, the said activity impacted the whole basin. If 1&2 can warm to near or above normal, while 3.4 stays cooler than normal, then we have +TNI flavor. Either are bullish. Missing one should not be bearish if the other holds. Finally got a chance to compare La Nina flavors, and I think this year is closer to 2012 and 2008 than 2011. The latter was a true resurgent La Nina second year, strongest correlation with severe; but, we are still first year. However 2021 looks more active than 2017 or 2018, weaker or weakening La Ninas. 2021 is La Nina hanging in, not technically resurgent, but holding well. 2 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CheeselandSkies Posted March 1, 2021 Share Posted March 1, 2021 29 minutes ago, nrgjeff said: Weekend was interesting along an east-west boundary. Thankfully it' didn't March 2-3, 2020 again. Mid-Range the weekly models have shown that trough west with low SER look mid-month; and, operational models are similar now in the 11-15 day period. Weeks 2-3 are the edge of any forecast value; but, it's nice they agree. Forecast AO/NAO is positive. Bering Sea ridge (not Alaska) could anchor the downstream Rockies to Plains trough. Get thunderstorms going Mid-South to Ohio Valley? Severe Season overall I'm somewhat bullish, but not crazy lit. I see La Nina hanging in there. It's not a pure La Nina resurgence since it's still first year, but it has that bullish lean for severe. Recent MJO activity and Kelvin wave placement in the Tropical Pacific has juiced the La Nina status (esp 3.4 region). +TNI is in question. Right off South America (region 1&2) is still cool. It had been warning up; but, the said activity impacted the whole basin. If 1&2 can warm to near or above normal, while 3.4 stays cooler than normal, then we have +TNI flavor. Either are bullish. Missing one should not be bearish if the other holds. Finally got a chance to compare La Nina flavors, and I think this year is closer to 2012 and 2008 than 2011. The latter was a true resurgent La Nina second year, strongest correlation with severe; but, we are still first year. However 2021 looks more active than 2017 or 2018, weaker or weakening La Ninas. 2021 is La Nina hanging in, not technically resurgent, but holding well. Very interesting pair of analogs because those years behaved very differently during the spring and summer here in the upper Midwest. Very wet/stormy with numerous tornadoes and widespread flooding problems ('08) vs. exceedingly warm and dry ('12). 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 1, 2021 Author Share Posted March 1, 2021 Talk about a lucky young man https://wreg.com/news/child-shocked-by-power-line-in-nashville-while-playing-barefoot-in-rain/ 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A777 Posted March 2, 2021 Share Posted March 2, 2021 --- around 9:40 EST 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 2, 2021 Author Share Posted March 2, 2021 https://www.spc.noaa.gov/exper/archive/event.php?date=20210228 Fatality in Ga Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 2, 2021 Author Share Posted March 2, 2021 11 hours ago, nrgjeff said: Weekend was interesting along an east-west boundary. Thankfully it' didn't March 2-3, 2020 again. Mid-Range the weekly models have shown that trough west with low SER look mid-month; and, operational models are similar now in the 11-15 day period. Weeks 2-3 are the edge of any forecast value; but, it's nice they agree. Forecast AO/NAO is positive. Bering Sea ridge (not Alaska) could anchor the downstream Rockies to Plains trough. Get thunderstorms going Mid-South to Ohio Valley? Severe Season overall I'm somewhat bullish, but not crazy lit. I see La Nina hanging in there. It's not a pure La Nina resurgence since it's still first year, but it has that bullish lean for severe. Recent MJO activity and Kelvin wave placement in the Tropical Pacific has juiced the La Nina status (esp 3.4 region). +TNI is in question. Right off South America (region 1&2) is still cool. It had been warning up; but, the said activity impacted the whole basin. If 1&2 can warm to near or above normal, while 3.4 stays cooler than normal, then we have +TNI flavor. Either are bullish. Missing one should not be bearish if the other holds. Finally got a chance to compare La Nina flavors, and I think this year is closer to 2012 and 2008 than 2011. The latter was a true resurgent La Nina second year, strongest correlation with severe; but, we are still first year. However 2021 looks more active than 2017 or 2018, weaker or weakening La Ninas. 2021 is La Nina hanging in, not technically resurgent, but holding well. SPC today almost shows a basin wide moderate NINA,but the SOI is acting like this is a more ELNino the last few days,been awhile since it went negative,the SOI 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 2, 2021 Author Share Posted March 2, 2021 1.mp4 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 2, 2021 Author Share Posted March 2, 2021 I was playing with my new toy above. CFS looks active in the Pacific upcoming.Sure this will change some but the models will probably struggle with the upcoming pattern.GFS is already trying to hint at bulding another Sub-Tropical ridge into the GOM.But this time frame should be our best shot upcoming at some possible severe weather. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 8, 2021 Author Share Posted March 8, 2021 CFS is showing another EKW the next couple days getting into 1+2,the last one that went through a few days ago has warmed this region up pretty good recently. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nrgjeff Posted March 8, 2021 Share Posted March 8, 2021 Time to tee it up! Just kidding, gotta do the basketball March Madness first. Monday could be a thing in the Tennessee Valley iff everything happens just right - which is not progged attm. SPC gives us a mention for Monday but no graphic. LLJ may be quickly weakening as main kinematic and short-wave energy ejects north into Hoosier Alley, which looks too stable. Still be the boundary will be here and wind at / above 500 mb, but that's junk without a proper LLJ. Looks like a cool period starting middle to late next week after the main trough and all the surface lows. Then late March is anybody's game. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 9, 2021 Author Share Posted March 9, 2021 23 hours ago, nrgjeff said: Time to tee it up! Just kidding, gotta do the basketball March Madness first. Monday could be a thing in the Tennessee Valley iff everything happens just right - which is not progged attm. SPC gives us a mention for Monday but no graphic. LLJ may be quickly weakening as main kinematic and short-wave energy ejects north into Hoosier Alley, which looks too stable. Still be the boundary will be here and wind at / above 500 mb, but that's junk without a proper LLJ. Looks like a cool period starting middle to late next week after the main trough and all the surface lows. Then late March is anybody's game. Definite not seeing nothing consistent with the models 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nrgjeff Posted March 11, 2021 Share Posted March 11, 2021 Models have converged in the last 36 hours of runs. Did you see the GFS/EC divergence Monday? On 3/9/2021 at 2:42 PM, jaxjagman said: Definite not seeing nothing consistent with the models SPC just refused to add Monday. Plains snobs dissin' Dixie, lol! However Monday does have problems. Trough ejecting north, pulling away the best kinematics. Also instability is meh, but that's March. Also if the LLJ does try to recover with the southern-stream short wave, Monday will go. Wednesday is a possibility too, but will focus on Monday now. After next week looks like a quiet period. Ensembles and weeklies BN temps Southeast but warm North. That says, wake me up after the Final Four. I'll stay up if Kansas or Tennessee do well, lol! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PowellVolz Posted March 12, 2021 Share Posted March 12, 2021 SPC throwing out a mention for the southeast on Wednesday and Thursday. MRX actually added it in to their morning AFD also. . 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 12, 2021 Author Share Posted March 12, 2021 Last four runs of the GFS,looks better today but still beyond it's belief time frame 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PowellVolz Posted March 13, 2021 Share Posted March 13, 2021 Some unusual strong wording from MRX in their AFD for Wednesday/Night severe chances. “Much uncertainty still exists in the location, type(s), andmagnitude of potential severe weather with this mid-week system.With respect to the cyclogenesis expected to occur on Wednesday, theGFS is the most aggressive deterministic model, suggesting thesurface low to strengthen below 995mb as it moves into the lowerMidwest. The ECMWF and CMC guidance are less aggressive with the CMCholding a more northerly track towards the Great Lakes. The strengthand track of the system is key for efficiency of surface-based WAAand sufficient instability in our area. In any solution, strong deep-layer and low-level shear is expected, along with a veering verticalwind profile. The GFS solution, being most aggressive, suggestssurface-based instability sufficient for organized supercellularconvection Wednesday afternoon into Wednesday night in southernportions of the area at a minimum. With this solution, a threat forall types of severe weather exists. However, the ECMWF and CMCsolutions keep instability and convection as elevated with possiblethreats for damaging winds and hail. Ensemble solutions also varysignificantly. Ultimately, this system will certainly be somethingto watch as we head into next week since potential exists fornotable severe weather across southern portions of the U.S”. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted March 13, 2021 Author Share Posted March 13, 2021 I'd be surprised if you dont see a slight risk upcoming,even with some timing differences the mid week system 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts