Iowa Flooding - Palo Iowa - The entire town of Palo Iowa was evacuated and was told to abandon due to flooding during the recent flooding of the the Cedar River and local water ways. During it's abandonment it was under military control. A week later the towns folk were allowed to re-enter their town to assess damage and begin clean-up. The town was devasted as you can see. Due to the fact the entire town was under water, their have been no coordinated efforts for donations, volunteer work, etc... plus, they've just been allowed back into their town and only during daytime hours. I'm sure they could use all the help they could get.
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****hey notice the title of the blog has changed from "Dr.Jeff Masters Tropical Weather Blog" to "Severe Weather Blog" and now its just plain "Weather Blog"...perhaps others are confused that he changes the main forum subject matter to include all weather discussions. Even this blog title is focused on the MidWest floods. Dont know why people get so up in arms that theres talk of things other than tropical weather...esp when theres so little activity in the Atlantic right now.
In the words of the great president of NRA:
"Get your stinking paws off me you damn dirty Ape"
AN ATLANTIC OCEAN TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 27W/28W SOUTH OF 14N
MOVING WEST 10 TO 15 KT. NO DEEP CONVECTIVE PRECIPITATION.
AN ATLANTIC OCEAN TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 38W SOUTH OF 13N MOVING
WEST ABOUT 15 KT. SHOWERS FROM 8N TO 12N BETWEEN 34W AND 38W.
AN ATLANTIC OCEAN TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 52W/53W SOUTH OF 14N
MOVING WEST 15 TO 20 KT. NO DEEP CONVECTIVE PRECIPITATION.
oh well, y'all have a good wknd.
Exactly, Pat...I would have no clue of the flaming comments here today without the reposting and reactions. Use the button if you cannot resist the urge to respond to the garbage...that is why I use it.
CMC model just off the western coast of Africa
Link
94/24
Waiting for better minds to comment.
Current Radar...Rain all around but here.
Yes, I realize it's the ULL...I asked if it looked like it may be trying to spin down to the surface?
It will be partly sunny hot and humid today with isolated t-storms popping up, but coverage less than 20%. The main rain event will be tonight as a cold front moves into North Texas. Strong to severe storms will fire along the Red River and push slowly south. Damaging winds and very heavy rain will be the main threat. The storms will not be as strong as they move into DFW, but they should hold together long enough to provide a 60% coverage of rain to the area. Showers and storms will linger into Sunday with the best of the rain south of I20. Hot and mainly dry weather will the prevail for the rest of the coming week.
So we have cold front from the north and GOM storms from the south....hmmmmmm what is to be expected?????????
I agree, that swirl looks like the type that could turn into something if the shear in the area is low enough.
we should keep an eye on that one.
discussing weather tee hee hee.
In this radar loop, there is a light blue streak ahead of the convective precip (Especially evident over the middle of Lake Pontchartrain). Now I can tell you that the timing for that line is about when the gust front was here. Just what is the radar reflecting off of at the edge of the gust front? Birds?
Not hydrometeors...or is it?
This. For the past few days, it's done nothing but rain here in Prairieville. In fact, yesterday we had a hell of a storm, with winds gusting to 40 mph and lightning all around, along with heavy rain.
And this afternoon as I stepped out the door, the wind started blowing heavily once again, although the storm turned out to not be as bad as yesterday's.
On a tropical weather note, Boris's intensity may be lowered on the next advisory, as northeasterly shear continues to affect the cyclone. I just looked at the visible satellite imagery, as well as data from the NRL, and the circulation is becoming even more exposed than it was earlier, north of the deep convection. In addition to the exposed LLC, the heaviest thunderstorm activity, and likely the strongest winds as well, are confined to the southern portion of the circulation due to the shear.
GFS TPW:
MIMIC-TPW:
CIMSS SAL
Didn't realize you guys got a real storm. Although getting the convective stuff daily, our last storm strong enough to take down small branches was about a week ago...maybe 10 days, in Covington.
Hi, BTW. Familiar with your next of the woods. Grew up off Perkins between Highland and Seigen.
FWIW, all models (except the NOGAPS) have a good area of low-level vorticity coming off the African coast. But still, only the GFS and CMC develop it.
The NOGAPS can never get anything right lol. It's usually the last model to pick up on anything so when it showed some with Arthur it was refreshing. I remember last year it had undermined the intensity of the hurricanes that formed. Also had to remember it's inaccuracy in track. Guess which model did the best last year? The GFS and the BAM suite associated with the GFS.
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