October 2017 - Halloween Forecast/Rain Chances

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DoctorMu
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Wow = 92°F in October with NNW winds. That scenario can only occur with a hurricane to the east and under influence of upper level descending air.
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From this morning’s Houston-Galveston NWS Area Forecast Discussion:

The much anticipated cold front is still on track to push thru the area late tonight and Tuesday morning. Scattered precip is possible along the front...though some guidance is more bullish than others. Marginal frontal convergence and lingering cap may be a limiting factor for anything of significance coverage-wise across much of the area. Chances and overall coverage appears higher near the coast Tuesday morning as the boundary approaches. PW`s pooling to around 2" there along with less capping should allow a thin line of shra/tstms to fill in along the boundary as it pushes offshore.
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Our cold front is making progress this morning and should arrive in College Station around midnight and off the Coast shortly after sunrise tomorrow morning. I see Winter Storm Warnings are up for the Southern Rockies and both Denver and Raton Pass into Northern New Mexico are reporting light snow at this hour. It must be early October... ;)

We may have to wait another 4 to 5 weeks for a 'real shot' of cold air, but I would not be surprised to see the potential for much colder air as we near the Winter Season of December and who knows...it possibly could bring chances of wintry mischief this coming Winter Season. If the truth be told, I really do not mind our boring weather pattern after all we have experienced this Summer and early Fall. Now come late November/December with the Holidays ahead, we all will be looking for a weather pattern that will be full of Holiday Cheer!
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Cromagnum
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Winter mischief? Yeah right. We had ONE day of freezing temps last year and the previous two Christmases were in the 80s. Winter doesn't exist down here anymore.
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srainhoutx wrote:Our cold front is making progress this morning and should arrive in College Station around midnight and off the Coast shortly after sunrise tomorrow morning. I see Winter Storm Warnings are up for the Southern Rockies and both Denver and Raton Pass into Northern New Mexico are reporting light snow at this hour. It must be early October... ;)

We may have to wait another 4 to 5 weeks for a 'real shot' of cold air, but I would not be surprised to see the potential for much colder air as we near the Winter Season of December and who knows...it possibly could bring chances of wintry mischief this coming Winter Season. If the truth be told, I really do not mind our boring weather pattern after all we have experienced this Summer and early Fall. Now come late November/December with the Holidays ahead, we all will be looking for a weather pattern that will be full of Holiday Cheer!
4 or 5 weeks? Looks like I was right.....there will be no fall this year...lol Oh well.
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snowman65 wrote:
srainhoutx wrote:Our cold front is making progress this morning and should arrive in College Station around midnight and off the Coast shortly after sunrise tomorrow morning. I see Winter Storm Warnings are up for the Southern Rockies and both Denver and Raton Pass into Northern New Mexico are reporting light snow at this hour. It must be early October... ;)

We may have to wait another 4 to 5 weeks for a 'real shot' of cold air, but I would not be surprised to see the potential for much colder air as we near the Winter Season of December and who knows...it possibly could bring chances of wintry mischief this coming Winter Season. If the truth be told, I really do not mind our boring weather pattern after all we have experienced this Summer and early Fall. Now come late November/December with the Holidays ahead, we all will be looking for a weather pattern that will be full of Holiday Cheer!
4 or 5 weeks? Looks like I was right.....there will be no fall this year...lol Oh well.
Hopefully its a bit earlier than 4 weeks so we don't have a super hot humid Halloween night again. Last year was miserable. But with how weak these fronts are and the trends over the past years I don't hold out hope for much.
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DoctorMu
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JDsGN wrote:
snowman65 wrote:
srainhoutx wrote:Our cold front is making progress this morning and should arrive in College Station around midnight and off the Coast shortly after sunrise tomorrow morning. I see Winter Storm Warnings are up for the Southern Rockies and both Denver and Raton Pass into Northern New Mexico are reporting light snow at this hour. It must be early October... ;)

We may have to wait another 4 to 5 weeks for a 'real shot' of cold air, but I would not be surprised to see the potential for much colder air as we near the Winter Season of December and who knows...it possibly could bring chances of wintry mischief this coming Winter Season. If the truth be told, I really do not mind our boring weather pattern after all we have experienced this Summer and early Fall. Now come late November/December with the Holidays ahead, we all will be looking for a weather pattern that will be full of Holiday Cheer!
4 or 5 weeks? Looks like I was right.....there will be no fall this year...lol Oh well.
Hopefully its a bit earlier than 4 weeks so we don't have a super hot humid Halloween night again. Last year was miserable. But with how weak these fronts are and the trends over the past years I don't hold out hope for much.
As of now the models have a moderating front moving through a week apart for the next 3 weeks...at least there will be a break for a few days a week. I'll go out on a limb and suggest we'll have highs in the upper 70s for Halloween, better than the last few years.


Not exactly like the frost we had in late Oct way back in the early 90s...but I'll take dew points below 70°F. WTH, brown patch has already started in our lawn anyway.
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DoctorMu wrote:
As of now the models have a moderating front moving through a week apart for the next 3 weeks...at least there will be a break for a few days a week. I'll go out on a limb and suggest we'll have highs in the upper 70s for Halloween, better than the last few years.


Not exactly like the frost we had in late Oct way back in the early 90s...but I'll take dew points below 70°F. WTH, brown patch has already started in our lawn anyway.
The early 1990s had warm Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and Cool Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO).
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Cromagnum wrote:Winter mischief? Yeah right. We had ONE day of freezing temps last year and the previous two Christmases were in the 80s. Winter doesn't exist down here anymore.
Winter barely existed for any of the country East of the Rockies. We got a near-record low 7.5" of snow here last season. Should be better this year.
A transplant from Houston to Lincoln, Nebraska.
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Tuesday morning briefing from Jeff:

Cold front currently extends from near Huntsville to Columbus and is moving SE this morning with cooler and much drier air mass surging toward the area.

Upstream surface observations show dewpoints have fallen into the upper 50’s and lower 60’s across the NW 1/3rd of SE TX this morning with upstream temperatures across central TX in the lower 60’s. Front is making steady progress toward the SE and should be off the coast over the next several hours. Moisture has pooled over SE TX and a few showers and thunderstorms have begun to develop across the coastal counties. Should see some additional development as the front slices into the warm and moist air mass along the coast and offshore. NW winds will increase this morning into the 10-20mph range as cold air advection onsets.

Compared to the record high of 94 yesterday, it will be much cooler today and especially tonight and into Wednesday. Low temperatures tonight should range from the upper 50’s to lower 60’s across the region with high temperatures on Wednesday only near 80. Low dewpoints will make it feel cooler.

Cool air outbreak will be short lived however as Gulf moisture comes surging back on ESE winds Thursday into Friday. Another front appears to cross the area early next week helping to bring another cool down to the area.
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000
FXUS64 KHGX 101025
AFDHGX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Houston/Galveston TX
525 AM CDT Tue Oct 10 2017

.DISCUSSION...
The cold front appears to be making its way into SE TX this morn-
ing...with the wind shift about an hour or so ahead of the actual
colder air. Most of the precipitation associated with this bound-
ary is also lagging well behind it given the current radar trends
so far this morning. Shower and isolated thunderstorm development
is expected to become more widespread through the morning as this
front makes its way toward the coast. Much deeper moisture/higher
PWs just offshore should fuel stronger activity as the cold front
moves into the Gulf late this afternoon/early this evening.

Much cooler temps (than it has been of late) progged for the next
day or so, but the building upper ridge from the east could bring
about the return of above normal temps starting Thurs on into the
weekend. Despite the strong upper ridging...rain chances could re-
turn Fri/Sat as a deepening easterly flow helps to draw in a slug
of some much deeper tropical moisture across the northern Gulf of
Mexico (under the ridge). Extended guidance hinting that the next
cold front is slated for late Sun/early next Mon. 41

&&


.MARINE...
Cold front marching southward and prefrontal trough near the coast.
Expect the winds over the coastal waters to weaken this morning
before the front moves off the coast then ramp up to 15-20 knots
with gusts near 25 knots. SCEC for Matagorda Bay and Gulf waters.
Winds remain elevated through Wednesday morning then relax. This
northerly wind will finally draw down our extended period of
elevated tides. At 3 am tides were still running 1 to 1.5 feet above
normal. By late afternoon should be back near normal with the
outgoing tide.
45
&&

.Aviation...
CIGS and VISBY dropping ahead of the prefrontal trough with some
areas down into LIFR to VLIFR. These conditions should improve
rapidly as front moves through and MVFR CIGS of 1500-2500ft should
prevail by 14-15z through mid afternoon. Winds becoming north-
northwest 10-15kts and gusty after FROPA...and a little moreso with
daytime heating. Mid afternoon expecting breaks to develop in MVFR
CIGS and gradual clearing.

Precip chances looking fairly slim over most of the northern half of
the area. Closer to the coast mainly HOU southward thinking rain
chances much higher and VCSH to TEMPO in order for coverage of
showers and a few thunderstorms between 13-18z.
45
&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
College Station (CLL) 76 58 80 61 87 / 30 0 10 10 10
Houston (IAH) 82 63 80 63 86 / 40 10 10 10 10
Galveston (GLS) 84 70 80 72 85 / 60 20 10 10 10

&&

.HGX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
TX...NONE.
GM...SMALL CRAFT SHOULD EXERCISE CAUTION through Wednesday morning
for the following zones: Coastal waters from Freeport to
the Matagorda Ship Channel out 20 NM...Coastal waters from
High Island to Freeport out 20 NM...Waters from Freeport to
the Matagorda Ship Channel from 20 to 60 NM...Waters from
High Island to Freeport from 20 to 60 NM.

&&

$$
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Slowly it is making its way toward us...
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Oh, it's through the Pearland/Friendswood area, based on wind direction and pressure, but we're still waiting for that dry air. It's currently 75 deg-F and 82% humidity.
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A very comfortable start to the day with the low 60's across NW Harris County and the upper 50's further North. We should be slightly below climatology temperature wise today across our Region before the winds shift East and then to the SE with an onshore flow into the weekend with warm temperature returning. Will pencil in our next front late Sunday into next Monday.

Looking at the longer range, I am seeing some indications of a possible pattern change as a strong Western Pacific Typhoon re curves into the Northern Pacific and buckles the mainly zonal flow we have seen throughout the Summer. It is not unusual to see this sort of Hemispheric Pattern shift as we get deeper into October. If the ECMWF solution is correct, we may see much cooler air build across the Arctic and Siberia. If the jet stream buckles as some of the longer range deterministic and ensemble guidance suggest, we may see some of that "colder air" arrive in about 20 days or so..' or near Halloween. We will see.
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000
FXUS64 KHGX 111034
AFDHGX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Houston/Galveston TX
534 AM CDT Wed Oct 11 2017

.DISCUSSION...
A much cooler/drier start to the day (when compared to yesterday).
With light CAA persisting, high temperatures this afternoon should
remain at to just below climatological norms. However, these lower
temps could be brief. The building upper ridge from the east along
with a light return flow will help warm temps across SE TX through
the rest of the week. Rain chances will remain limited to whatever
(and whenever) surges of higher PWs move in from the Gulf with the
persistent easterly flow. While slightly drier than previous runs,
current progs are still timing rain chances for Fri/Sat, but main-
ly over the coastal waters/SW portions of the CWA.

POPS will be more widespread (but still low) Sun with the arrival
and passage of the next cold front. Much cooler temps expected by
the start of next week. 41

&&

.MARINE...
High pressure over North TX will be sliding east and weakening which
will end the CAA over the coastal waters through Thursday. Moderate
north winds of 20 knots will be weakening this morning and SCA flags
through 11 am will be coming down. Winds turn to the east and
northeast tonight/Thursday which should lead to a slow increase in
moisture across the area Friday into Saturday. Isolated showers
possible with the increase in moisture but warm profile aloft will
limit instability. Moisture surge over the Gulf swings west and
should arrive Saturday. By Sunday can`t rule out isolated
thunderstorms as upper trough swings through the Northern Plains and
associated cold front slides southward...probably reaching the
coastal waters Monday and ushering in moderate northerly flow again.

45
&&

.AVIATION...
VFR. Mid level clouds 6000-10000 ft will build over the southwest
areas and likely spread northward today. North winds relaxing late
this morning and afternoon. Return flow Friday could lead to a bout
of fog Saturday morning.
45
&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
College Station (CLL) 78 63 88 68 90 / 10 10 10 10 10
Houston (IAH) 82 63 87 67 89 / 10 10 10 10 10
Galveston (GLS) 82 72 85 76 87 / 10 10 10 10 10

&&

.HGX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
TX...NONE.
GM...Small Craft Advisory until 11 AM CDT this morning for the
following zones: Coastal waters from Freeport to the
Matagorda Ship Channel out 20 NM...Coastal waters from High
Island to Freeport out 20 NM...Matagorda Bay...Waters from
Freeport to the Matagorda Ship Channel from 20 to 60 NM...
Waters from High Island to Freeport from 20 to 60 NM.

Small Craft Advisory until 7 AM CDT this morning for the
following zones: Galveston Bay.

SMALL CRAFT SHOULD EXERCISE CAUTION until 11 AM CDT this morning
for the following zones: Galveston Bay.

&&

$$

Discussion...99
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Warm and humid weather returns as an onshore flow off the Gulf begins in earnest today and continues through Saturday. There have been some changes overnight with the timing of our next Pacific Cold Front suggesting an earlier arrival during the day on Sunday and offshore by late Sunday afternoon. A building Ridge to the West should keep NW breezes both aloft and at the surface through at least mid next week offering noticeably cooler and drier air to start the work week. Rain chances look meager at best with possibly some post frontal clouds and a few sprinkles Sunday night into Monday.

It appears to warm back up by the end of next week with another front arriving around the 23rd of October, +/- a day or two.

There are still indications of a possibility that some Canadian Air may arrive near Halloween. That is still to far out to know with any certainty, but I am watching the West Pacific for an increase in Tropical Activity and possibly a strong Typhoon re curving into the North Pacific Ocean buckling the jet stream that may allow a deep full latitude trough to settle over Canada into the United States late October. Fingers Crossed!
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DoctorMu
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Chamber of Commerce weather the last couple of days and early today. Not looking forward to a surge in humidity without a significant chance of rain...but by Sunday evening, drier and cooler air spills in.

Long term projects look like great weather in late October, naturally when I'm out of town. Next week looks like largely a repeat of this week, but the "cooler" and drier spell is a little longer lasting from Sunday night to Thursday afternoon.
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Drive safe this morning with fog across many areas of SE TX this morning. Expect sunny, warm, and humid weather this weekend before another cold front arrives Monday dropping the lows into the 50s.
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Friday morning briefing from Jeff:

A strong cold front will cross SE TX late Sunday resulting in some of the coolest temperatures since last spring, early next week

Upper air pattern over the US will undergo amplification with a trough developing over the western US into the central plains unleashing a Canadian air mass southward down the plains today into this weekend. Upper ridge over the eastern US and Gulf of Mexico will break down enough to allow this front to push off the TX coast Sunday evening. May see enough moisture return ahead of the front to result in a few showers on Sunday, but don’t think we will see more than 30% coverage.

Post frontal cold air advection will increase Sunday night as NW winds push the colder air mass into the area. Could see some pretty good wind gusts near the coast Sunday night into Monday as the colder air moves over the warm Gulf waters. Highs on Monday will only reach the mid 70’s and lows Tuesday morning will fall into the upper 40’s and lower 50’s over the region.

Unfortunately, the same high pressure ridge building southward across the Rockies this weekend will result in a “Santa Ana” wind event for much of the state of California already dealing with 22 major wildfires. ENE/NE surface winds will be developing Saturday and lasting into Monday which will result in strong downslope component off the mountains across the central part of the state. This results in rapid drying of the air mass and wind speeds can reach 50-70mph through the valleys and canyons producing extreme fire weather conditions. While most typical in southern CA, this event will span much of the state

A slow warming trend will begin by the middle of next week as winds swing back to the ESE and Gulf moisture makes a return to the area.
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DoctorMu
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A few showers may develop in the SW HGX area this afternoon, and a broken line of shower accompany tomorrow's cold front. NW winds 15-20 mph possible behind the front and below average temps through Wednesday. Some return flow late next week with the biggest chance of rain Friday. Another cold front is projected next weekend.




Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Houston/Galveston TX
1041 AM CDT Sat Oct 14 2017

.DISCUSSION...
Not too many significant changes with this update. Maximum
temperatures along the coast were raised to better match higher
current observations and the current thinking that we could
approach near-record high temperatures across the area today.

Large areas of cumulus clouds are building throughout the area,
especially off the coast, so precipitation changes were kept
higher along the southwest of the are where precipitable water
values are near 1.6-1.7". NAM soundings show a cap around 800 mb,
which should limit thunderstorm capabilities along the coast.
Therefore, isolated showers are expected across the southern half
of the area through this evening.

22

&&

.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 651 AM CDT Sat Oct 14 2017/

AVIATION...
MVFR/IFR criteria with isolated LIFR/VLIFR across all TAF sites
this morning, besides GLS and HOU currently in VFR. The GOES-16
fog product shows decent coverage impacting many terminals, with
the most dense fog west of the Houston Metro at CLL, LBX, and SGR.
CXO currently sitting at VLIFR, due to dense fog and low cigs
given it`s rural terrain and location. With the help of some
daytime heating and mixing, should see this fog layer lift by mid
morning. VFR conditions will prevail this afternoon, with winds
picking up between 7-10 kts. Similar conditions expected for this
evening, with once again a persistence forecast in store.
Diminished vis and lower cigs in the early morning hours will once
again lower flight categories at most terminals.

Hathaway

PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 406 AM CDT Sat Oct 14 2017/

DISCUSSION...
Similar to yesterday morning, dense fog and low clouds continue
to develop and spread across areas west and southwest of the
Houston metro. Have issued a Dense Fog Advisory through 10 AM CDT
for these areas with several locations reporting visibilities at
or below one quarter mile this morning. Daytime heating and east
to southeast winds increasing into the 5 to 10 MPH range should
allow for the fog to mix out by mid-morning.

Daytime heating will also result in isolated showers or possibly a
thunderstorm to develop in areas generally west of Interstate 45
as convective temperatures in the mid to upper 80s are reached.
Highs are forecast to range in the mid 80s along the coast to
lower 90s inland. These highs, in addition to the unseasonably
warm temperatures being observed across the region this morning,
may mean a few locations may tie or break record high minimum
and/or maximum temperatures for today. More information about
these records are included in the climate section below.

Evening upper air analysis showed mid and upper ridging extending
from southern Texas towards Virginia with a shortwave trough
located over Idaho. As the shortwave trough crosses the Northern
Plains today, it will nudge the upper ridge eastward and also
send a cold front surging southward across the Southern Plains by
tonight. Fog and low clouds are expected to develop again early
Sunday morning ahead of the cold front. This fog is expected to
lift across northern areas as an associated prefrontal trough
arrives Sunday morning and across southern areas with daytime
heating.

The prefrontal trough will move across the region during the
morning hours Sunday, resulting in light and variable winds
becoming light and north to northwesterly. The cold front will be
marked by strengthening northerly winds, reaching the Brazos
Valley mid to late Sunday morning, the Houston metro early to mid
Sunday afternoon, and the upper Texas coast Sunday evening. Surface
convergence along the cold front will be minimal as a result of
the prefrontal trough and only expect a thin, broken line of light
showers to develop along the front as it moves south across the
region. Better coverage of showers and thunderstorms is expected
across the coastal waters as a plume of 2 inch precipitable water
air moves into the western Gulf of Mexico.

Temperatures will be tricky on Sunday as frontal timing, cloud
cover, and strength of the cold air advection behind the front
will all be key players in how warm temperatures actually get on
Sunday. Based on anticipated frontal timing, currently advertising
highs in the upper 70s to low 80s across the northern counties
with mid to upper 80s near Interstate 10 and towards the coast.
Otherwise, breezy northerly winds 10-20 MPH are expected Sunday
night into Monday morning. Slightly stronger winds in the 15-25
MPH range will be possible along the coast.

Northwest flow aloft on Monday and Tuesday will promote dry
conditions across the region with temperatures slightly below
seasonal normals with highs in the upper 70s to low 80s and lows
in the upper 40s to low 60s. Shortwave ridging becomes established
by mid-week as a disturbance from the Pacific amplifies over the
Southern Plains, allowing for temperatures to gradually warm to
near seasonal normals. Low rain chances return to the forecast
late next week as return flow resumes.

Huffman
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