by Bob Rose | Aug 22, 2022 | bobs-blog, one-column-page
Heavy rain spread across the northern portions of Texas Sunday night into Monday morning, producing a very dangerous, life-threatening flash flood event in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. Much of the Metroplex has seen between 6 and 10 inches of rain. But the...
by Bob Rose | Aug 19, 2022 | bobs-blog, one-column-page
Rain and thunderstorms spread over parts of the region beginning Thursday afternoon as a weak cold front moved to the south. Through 10 am Friday, most totals have been between a tenth and a half inch. But according to LCRA’s Hydromet, more than a dozen locations...
by Bob Rose | Aug 17, 2022 | bobs-blog, one-column-page
Wednesday is looking like it will be the last of the widespread triple-digit temperatures for a while. Forecasts call for a high temperature of 98-103 degrees across the Hill Country and Central Texas regions, with upper 90s expected across the coastal plains. A...
by Bob Rose | Aug 15, 2022 | bobs-blog, one-column-page
Spotty showers developed across parts of the region over the weekend as an area of low pressure over the Gulf of Mexico tracked onshore along the lower Texas coast. According to LCRA’s Hydromet, rain totals since Friday averaged between a few hundredths of an inch and...
by Bob Rose | Aug 12, 2022 | bobs-blog, one-column-page
First up today is a developing trough of low pressure over the north central Gulf of Mexico. National Hurricane Center forecasters are monitoring an elongated trough of surface low pressure located over the north-central Gulf of Mexico, just offshore of southeastern...
by Bob Rose | Aug 11, 2022 | bobs-blog, one-column-page
La Niña is still going along nicely. That’s the latest word from NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center (CPC). In an update published Thursday, CPC forecasters noted a tongue of below-average sea surface temperatures (SSTs) expanded across the central and eastern equatorial...
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