Friday, January 29, 2010

Final Snowfall Totals - Panhandles


PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX
839 PM CST FRI JAN 29 2010

...SNOW TOTALS...

LOCATION SNOWFALL COMMENTS
IN/S/

GRUVER 14.0 900 AM 1/29
DUMAS 1 S 13.5 1208 AM 1/29
HARTLEY 4 ESE 13.5 700 AM 1/29
STRATFORD 13.0 857 AM 1/29
GRIGGS 2 W 13.0 1211 PM 1/29
GUYMON 13.0 200 PM 1/29
VEGA 13.0 706 PM 1/28
ROMERO 8 SSW 12.3 900 PM 1/28
DALHART 12.0 714 PM 1/28
BORGER 12.0 545 PM 1/28
HARTLEY 11.5 938 PM 1/28
DUMAS 11.0 910 AM 1/29
TEXHOMA 11.0 902 AM 1/29
SUNRAY 11.0 900 AM 1/29
SIMMS 9 ENE 11.0 942 PM 1/28
BEAVER 10.0 904 AM 1/29
AMARILLO 7 SW 10.0 700 AM 1/29
AMARILLO 6 W 10.0 900 PM 1/28
BOISE CITY 2 E 10.0 900 AM 1/29
AMARILLO 6 WNW 10.0 538 PM 1/28
TEXLINE 9.0 900 AM 1/29
AMARILLO 5 SSW 9.0 100 AM 1/29
AMARILLO 4 WSW 9.0 553 PM 1/28
CANYON 9.0 708 PM 1/28
SPEARMAN 8.5 640 PM 1/28
MIAMI 8.0 911 AM 1/29
BOYS RANCH 8.0 500 PM 1/28
FOLLETT 8.0 130 AM 1/29
CANADIAN 8.0 912 AM 1/29
PAMPA 8.0 1000 PM 1/28
KEYES 8.0 901 AM 1/29
PERRYTON 8.0 908 AM 1/29
AMARILLO 4 SSW 7.5 705 AM 1/29
AMARILLO 6 ENE 7.1 1130 AM 1/29
HEREFORD 7.0 900 PM 1/28
GATE 7.0 905 AM 1/29
AMARILLO 5 SW 7.0 705 PM 1/28
SANFORD 7.0 900 AM 1/29
LIPSCOMB 6.5 118 AM 1/29
AMARILLO 10 E 6.0 847 AM 1/29
DAWN 6.0 745 AM 1/29

Roads Open Again In The Panhandle


NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX
113 PM CST FRI JAN 29 2010

...THIS PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT IS ISSUED AT THE REQUEST OF
THE AMARILLO TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION REGARDING ROAD
CONDITIONS...

INTERSTATE 40 IS NOW OPEN WEST TO TUCUMCARI NEW MEXICO AND EAST TO
OKLAHOMA.

U. S. 87 NORTH FROM AMARILLO TO DALHART IS NOW OPEN.

U. S. 287 NORTH FROM AMARILLO TO THE OKLAHOMA STATE LINE IS NOW OPEN.

1/29/2010 Winter Storm Update - 9 AM (15Z)

The winter storm for OK and TX is almost over with, but not quite yet. It is snowing lightly here at my house where I've received around 6" of snow. Currently 15F. A nice band of light to moderate snow has developed fairly rapidly from the OK PH down to near Clovis, NM. It appears that this is due to a weak deformation zone which was advertised by the models.

Such dynamics need to be watched carefully as they sometimes catch forecasters off guard with a narrow band of heavy snow. At this point, I expect 1-2" across the PH today and perhaps even 3" in some spots where the narrow band of heavy stuff develops. . It will be interesting to watch this evolve over the next 2 hours.

Across the Panhandle, the total accumulations so far are up to 13" in some spots, in particular just west and north of Amarillo. Totals are listed below. Most importantly, and something not being well advertised so far, is a serious, devastating ice storm that impacted a ~50-75 mile wide swath from east of Plainview, TX to Childress into W and SW and S Oklahoma according to what I am reading this morning. Many towns are suffering massive power failures with some spots like Altus having up to 1.5 inches of glazed ice coating everything!!!!! This of course is bringing down everything including trees, radio towers, and even store awnings!

Here is a sampling of the ice storm reports from Oklahoma:


ALTUS, OK
WIDESPREAD TREE AND POWER LINE DAMAGE ACROSS JACKSON
COUNTY AND EXTENDING WEST INTO HARMON COUNTY. DEPUTIES
ESTIMATED 1 TO 1.5 INCHES OF ICE GLAZE ON ALL ELEVATED
SURFACES. AT LEAST 200 POWER POLES DOWN IN JACKSON COUNTY
ALONE. MANY SECTIONS OF THE MAIN POWER FEEDER LINE FROM
HOLLIS TO ALTUS ARE DOWNED. A MAJORITY OF TREES SUSTAINED
AT LEAST SOME DAMAGE.

HOBART, OK
AT LEAST 1 INCH OF ICE GLAZE ON ELEVATED SURFACES...THE
GLAZE SEEMED TO BE THICKER TOWARDS HOBART. TREES AND
POWER POLES SNAPPED OFF. 4 DOUBLE H-SHAPED POWER POLES
SNAPPED OFF ALONG HIGHWAY 183 BETWEEN SNYDER AND HOBART.
NO POWER IN THE COUNTY FROM HOBART SOUTH.

MANGUM, OK
ABOUT AN INCH OF GLAZE ON EVERYTHING. MILES OF POWER
LINES DOWN. ALMOST EVERY TREE HAS SUSTAINED SOME KIND OF
DAMAGE AND SOME HAVE BEEN SNAPPED OR DOWNED. AWNINGS HAVE
BEEN SNAPPED OFF STORE FRONTS.


LAWTON, OK
TREES AND POWER LINES DOWN COUNTY WIDE. GLAZE AROUND 1
INCH THICK IN NORTHERN PARTS OF THE COUNTY. POWER OUTAGES
CONTINUE...ESPECIALLY IN NORTHERN AND WESTERN COMANCHE
COUNTY. DOUBLE THICK POWER LINES SNAPPED AND CAUSED
ADDITIONAL DAMAGE. A SECTION OF INTERSTATE 44 CLOSED DUE
TO POWER LINE DAMAGE. A 2 MILE STRETCH OF HIGHWAY 7 ALSO
CLOSED AS THE ROAD WAS COVERED WITH NUMEROUS POWER POLES
AND LINES. LAWTON WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER WAS BROUGHT
DOWN BY ICE ACCUMULATION.


The last I heard about the Texas impacts were Childress was pretty much without power. Shelters were being setup and some National Guard units were assisting. I beg and plead with officials in both states to activate ALL available resources to assist the communities hit the hardest. There's also the fact that many motorists are stranded too out on roads and highways. They need rescue too.

Overall, this is going to become a HUGE news story over the next few days. To get more information, Google tv stations and newspapers in Oklahoma and Texas. There are some incredible photos on there as well as information.

For an excellent site for report details and even live webcams in Oklahoma, CLICK HERE. Check out Altus' cam. Wow!

Well, as I write this, the National Weather Service websites are not responding. So, I can't post any snowfall report totals. I'll post those later.

And yes, I got to eat a little crow about my forecast of 10-16" across the PH with some spots to 20". I watched the satellite water vapor loop late last night and this morning. That strong dry slot in the mid levels was a major sucker punch for me. In fact, it raced all the way into Missouri and I believe Indiana. This cut just south of the Panhandle mid day Thursday.

This in effect interrupted and curtailed moisture flow into the area. As soon as it punched in, the entire radar echoes of heavy to very heavy snow started dwindling and weakening. No doubt that this was a major factor in keeping snowfall totals tame compared to what was expected. Had this not been a factor, I have no doubt my forecast would have verified. Oh well...the joys of forecasting winter storms!! :-) Kudos to the weather mets on Channels 4 and 7 who called it accurately...as well as the NWS guys.

So, time to round up another hearty breakfast, grab some coffee, and watch this last gasp of snowfall move across the area. Looking at the models as we get well into February, they aren't looking favorable for any additional winter storms for the southern plains. In fact, it looks like we will get some good precipitation events and stay well above freezing.

Another update later this afternoon!

Thursday, January 28, 2010

1/28/2010 Winter Storm Update - 4 PM (22Z)

Snow continues with 3-4" accumulation here. 20F air temperature.

Despite the brief respite courtesy of a rather prominent dry slot, a new area of moderate to heavy snows blossomed between Lubbock and Hobbs, NM. In addition the drys lot area is starting ti fill in again with increasing precip as well. This trend should continue into tonight as the main upper system approaches. It will be fun to watch how heavy it gets and if we can bust the 10" mark in Amarillo.

Also, check out the live TXDOT cameras...especially out west near Vega:

http://amaits.dot.state.tx.us/AMA-ITS/default.htm

As of 2pm CST (20z), here are the official totals around the area so far (with reported times):


NWS AMARILLO 3.0 130 PM

VEGA 7.0 1109 AM
DALHART 7.0 1134 AM
STRATFORD 6.5 118 PM
DUMAS 6.0 1244 PM
CANYON 5.0 1129 AM
SPEARMAN 5.0 132 PM
HEREFORD 5.0 1253 PM
FRITCH 4.0 1250 PM
BORGER 4.0 1251 PM





1/28/2010 Winter Storm Update - 12noon (18Z)

Since 10am, precip has switched between sleet and snow, but finally a total changeover by around 11am. It is now HEAVY snow with LARGE flakes. It is convective in nature as evidenced by a couple rumbles of thunder I've heard in the past 30 minutes. THUNDERSNOW!! :-)

Strangely, radar is now showing a LARGE dry air slot in the precip shield south of Plainview working northward. Could this bust my forecast of 12-16" across the area? I'm starting to think it just might. The radar trends also show a general weakening and dissipation of what was a massive precip shield. Will this dry slot work into Amarillo? Tough to say at this point, but current trends suggest it will.

HOWEVER, water vapor analysis still show the center of the upper low spinning around the far SW corner of New Mexico and SE Arizona. As it continues to approach, the precip should redevelop along with a trowel/deformation zone later this evening. The question is if the moisture will be enough with this big dry slot working in. What a forecasting headache. LOL!

Nonetheless, a pretty strong winter storm....but maybe not the more prolific amounts as previously thought. Stay tuned for further developments! Pic below I just took.


1/28/2010 Winter Storm Update - 10am (16Z)

Precipitation continues to expand in coverage and intensity all across the region. Looks like the heaviest so far on radar has been just along and west of I-27/287 and generally along and south of I-40. Estimated precip amounts in that area are up to 5 inches....due in part to the heavy sleet cores skewing the algorithms. Still, very heavy sleet totals likely there.

Here at my house, the transition to snow started at about 9:30am and as of now probably about 75% snow with the rest sleet. So, my prediction wasn't too far off. :-) The 12z upper air sounding indicated abit more of a warm layer between 850 and 700mb....right around 6-8K feet. At least for my house and Amarillo, it will be snow here on out.

Air temperature is now down to 22F. Radar continues to show things intensifying and growing in areal coverage. Just got through with a shower and a very hearty breakfast. Will work on getting some pics up in a bit. Next update in a couple of hours.

1/28/2010 Winter Storm Update - 7am (13Z)

Moderate to heavy sleet ongoing. 27F outside. Streets covered in a nice layer the icy pellets right now. Also, saw distant lightning flash. Concern with the warm layer aloft and how soon it cools to change everything over to snow. I saw a few snow flakes mixing in just now, so perhaps that will happen in the next couple of hours. Awaiting the 12z upper air sounding from Amarillo to get a more accurate picture of the vertical temperature profile.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Major Snowstorm & BLOG RESUSCITATION!!!!!

After a very long hiatus, this blog is now active once again. Danged Facebook. :-)

I'll be blogging about the upcoming massive snow storm forecast to slam the Texas Panhandle on Thursday. Some model forcasts are showing 18" possible for the area. STAY TUNED!!!!!

Friday, September 25, 2009

May in Autumn?

Latest model guidance is showing a strong consensus for a significant severe weather outbreak next week across the plains including the Panhandles. A powerful upper trough digs and moves across with a strong mid and upper jet streak rounding the base across the southern and central plains. With a good surge of moisture expected, this will help sharpen the dryline as well as provide the necessary fuel. This is a pattern we completely missed this past spring. We had August in May and now April in October. LOL!!!

Normally in fall, the upper air pattern favors a strong east coast trough. It is starting to look as if this October might be different and could be very active. Time will tell of course, but we are starting off pretty good. :-)

Stay tuned!

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Space Shuttle Discovery!!!

Amarillo had a special guest today. The shuttle Discovery, riding piggyback on a 747, stopped at Rick Husband International airport in Amarillo today. They refueled en route to it's home in Florida. I was fortunate to have special access via my flight school's hanger to sit right up front and get great pics and video. It was VERY cool indeed. :-)

I couldn't help it. :-)


Jason Boggs is trying to hitch a ride on the shuttle. :-)








This plane ferries the support staff as well as flying ahead to test for weather.










I thought this was kinda funny. :-)









Sunday, September 13, 2009

Long Overdue Update

As I've gotten more immersed into the online social networking world called "Facebook", I've really ended up neglecting this blog. To be honest, I've found myself in a state of transition moving further away from stormchasing as a passionate hobby. For anybody who keeps up with my posts here may recall one of the reasons I wanted to move to Amarillo. That is to be able to spend my vacation and free time pursuing other interests aside from stormchasing. After all, one has to satisfy their mid-life crisis, right? :-)

I've pursued my CHL (Concealed Handgun License) which should arrive in the next 4-6 weeks. Recent posts talked about this and the Glock G23 which will be my conceal carry. It's also a fun gun to shoot on the range. And speaking of fun, I've also obtained a new target rifle to do some entry level competition eventually and in general to have fun punching paper. It's a Savage 17HMR target rifle (93R17 BTVSS) with Leupold VX-I 3-9x40 scope. There will be more toys in the future though as I get more into the shooting sports.


As if that weren't expensive enough, I've taken the plunge into aviation by starting flying lessons. I originally wanted to get started with a Sport Pilot certification as it requires only 20 hours training and half the cost of a Private Pilot. However, to do so, I'd have to fly 5 hours solo in a sport rated plane (max 1,350 lbs gross weight and speed limit). There are none to rent around Amarillo. Yikes! I just assumed there would be. I could go elsewhere like Dallas or OKC, but I would still not be able to rent one here after I get the license (business opportunity anybody?).

So, I've decided to go for the full Private Pilot license instead...which I would have gotten eventually. I'm starting my ground school training in a week or so when I receive the DVD kit. Yep, you can do that all at home. Passing the FAA written test is all that is required for that. Then the fun (and expense) begins with flight training. Being that will likely cost around 6 grand over a period of 4-6 months, I'll likely wait to start that until after the first of the year....perhaps starting next summer when the weather is more stable. We'll see how that goes (hopefully not having to wait so long). I'll have plenty to keep me busy until then. I've got MS Flight Simulator X coming in next week with yoke, throttle and rudder controls, so I expect that to keep me busy and get some self training in the meantime....as much as that will allow. :-) I did take my introductory flight with a trainer last Friday though.







You know, it's amazing how much time and money one has when not blowing it all on stormchasing. LOL!! I'm not giving it up completely. What I will be severely curtailing are the long marathon trips and chasing too many marginal setups. After all, this is the Texas Panhandle. With an average or above-average year for storm activity, I expect to have enough opportunities to witness the full fury of mother nature in all her glory.....2008 and 2009 not counting of course. :-)

The bottom line is I should have plenty to satisfy my appetite for pursuing and admiring supercell thunderstorms. That sort of passion and appreciation never dies. But the tens of thousands of miles driving, dealing with thousands of chaser hordes, and all of the bullshit drama that goes with that...is something I won't miss one bit at all. In fact, those sorts of problems will only continue to grow and get worse. Stormtrack, which I don't participate in anymore, is an excellent "barometer" in that respect. Another reason to start looking for other more rewarding and satisfying hobbies.

I also see diminishing business opportunities as competition for supply increases at an exponential rate for a nearly constant demand. I've seen and experienced far too many cutthroat practices already. It just ain't worth it. I can spend the same amount of time doing something else with far fewer headaches and bullshit and yet make substantially more money. That comes with being 44 years old too I guess....and a couple of "shots across the bow" concerning one's health (nothing too serious). Life is too short. ;-)

So, as far as weather is concerned, Amarillo officially set an all-time rainfall record for the month of August. It was around 9.4 inches I believe. It just missed the all-time rainfall record for ANY month by about an inch. Everything is lush and green all across the Panhandle. Hopefully we won't experience another drought over the winter thus setting up another extreme wildfire season early in 2010. With a moderate to strong El Nino setting up for this winter, this should make things interesting around here as far as winter weather goes. It could be a real doozy. Maybe that will translate into an active chase season around here in 2010. Something to watch!

So, that about wraps it up for me. I'll try to update here a little more often. However, feel free to add me as a friend over on Facebook where I am much more active.

http://www.facebook.com/SteveMillerTX

Sunday, August 09, 2009

Awesome Lightning Video

Watching Discovery Channel this evening, they had a special on lightning with some incredible video. Check it out!!