Chico, California

Labor Day weekend is approaching, bringing an end to a summer that has been mercifully short on headlines, even in northern California, which is part of the world that has earned some time off.

At 553AM, PT, nearby Oroville Airport was reporting a temperature of 66 degrees and clear skies. High pressure is embracing the West Coast, even as a short wave trough ripples out of the northern Rockies to the Northern Plains. The flow onshore is leading to some haze at the surface along the coast, but it is too low slung to be an issue as far inland as Chico.
The upper level pattern will continue to become more stable, with a ridge settling into the West Coast. With less flow aloft, there is likely to be less vigorous onshore flow either. Some stagnancy to the pattern may lead to morning haze in Chico, but clear hot days will still return in the day.
Tomorrow – Sunny, High 102, Low 68
Saturday – Sunny, with some morning haze, High 102, Low 67

TWC: Tomorrow – Sunny, High 100, Low 65
Saturday – Sunny, High 100, Low 65

AW: Tomorrow – Hot with plenty of sunshine; caution advised if outside for extended periods of time High 99, Low 65
Saturday – Hot with plenty of sunshine; caution advised if outside for extended periods of time High 99, Low 66

NWS: Tomorrow -Sunny and hot, High 98, Low 67
Saturday – Sunny and hot, High 98, Low 68

WB: Tomorrow – Sunny, High 97, Low 71
Saturday – Sunny, High 100, Low 70

WN: Tomorrow – Sunny, High 97, low 69
Saturday – Sunny, High 96, Low 69

CLI: Tomorrow – Sunny, High 97, Low 64
Saturday – Sunny, High 97, Low 64

Sun will be out, so I am inclined to follow the warmer guidance. Here is a look at the musings of the Fox 40 team in northern California.

Late season intrigue is on it’s way

The beginning of the month of August was relatively quiet in the North American weather market. There were a couple of tropical features, but they were marked by their languid movement (Debby) or hit small landmasses, away from the American shores (Ernesto). The severe season has been slowed as well. Debby was the only real tornado producer of the month to date.

This will be changing over the next several days, as is often the case as summer changes to fall. Not only should the Atlantic basin start getting moving — there are two curious looking features on the long range model guidance — but with the change in air mass coming with the change of season, there should be enough of a conflicting air mass to produce strong thunderstorms on a regular basis, at least for a few weeks.

This isn’t atypical. There is usually a secondary severe season in the autumn, though cold air is typically more forceful than warm air. As a result, the cold can more easily sweep warmer air away, while warm and cold do battle for longer in the spring. Even though the fall season is shorter, the storms can be quite powerful.

Such was the case in the Great Lakes early this week, where strong straight line winds brought damage to the Twin Cities in a couple of rounds, and then carried on through Wisconsin and eventually Michigan. Consider this the opening salvo of the Fall season.

Severe weather is much more challenging to predict at longer ranges than tropical weather, at least in terms of trends, so we don’t know exactly what to expect more than a few days out, but we do have the short range outlook, which is looking askance at the wave moving through the Dakotas today. Severe weather is possible today and tomorrow, and may carry through across the Great Lakes again as the weekend approaches. Eventually, it will work south again before winter finally seizes the scene.

Don’t be lulled

Thus far, the biggest tropical story in the Continental US surrounded the remnants of Beryl after it had done it’s worst in the Caribbean, and Debby, which was more notorious for lingering in the southeast than for being particularly strong. Now, Ernesto took a swipe at Bermuda and has left us with nothing to monitor in the Atlantic Basin.

Saharan sands are blowing off of the African continent, and getting into the trade winds, inhibiting cyclonic development. The NHC foresees no tropical development for at least the next 48 hours, and the GFS – by no means meteorological gospel – doesn’t really show anything in the area until around Labor Day, nearly two weeks from today.

That’s a real slow stretch in a season that was promised to be very active, particularly since the peak of hurricane season is typically in early September. It seems like this might be a precursor for saying that the season may not be as busy as we believed at the outset, but it is not. Even with the data we have on hand, and access to the freshest short term modeling, the Hurricane Center’s latest outlook came out, and didn’t go easy on the number of tropical storms.

There will still be a week or so from the end of the GFS run to the traditional “peak” of the season. After this peak, the oceanic temperature doesn’t immediately fall off. The season begins in June, and has been creeping earlier. As a result, the season still goes another couple of months, until November. Plenty of time, and with the very warm Atlantic, plenty of fuel still left for storms.

Enjoy the last bit of summer, but remember that by Labor Day, things may be getting pretty hairy in the Caribbean once again.

Are we done yet?

One thing about being in a temperate climate is that we tend to run out of patience for extreme temperatures as the season grows later. Most of the country, save for Hawaii, sees a warm season and a cold season, so even if you associate, say, Beaumont, with hot temperatures, residents are going to wear on those warm temperatures in the summer. On the 9th and 10th of the month, those temperatures were in the mid to upper 90s, and while The Weather Channel nearly aced the forecast, local residents would have much rather shaved a few degrees off the temperature, especially those 76 degree overnight lows.
Actuals August 9th, High 97, Low 76
August 10th, High 96, Low 76

Grade: A-B

Debby – Another August storm

Undoubtedly, in the last 10 years or so, there has been an increase in hurricane headlines. Part of this is because of our own unconscious bias. The US went for about a decade without a landfalling hurricane, which is pretty much absurd, and now that the rate of American landfall is ticking up, it feels like it is happening all the time.

And of course, with alarm bells ringing on the increasing heat in the ocean, we are acutely aware that the hurricane season is longer than it ever used to be. Sure, there are more large hurricanes making landfall in the US recently, and the season has become longer over the last couple of decades, but this doesn’t fully translate the issue.

As I said, we had a long lull after Katrina, where the US was spared, so an uptick in landfalling storms was always going to seem worse than it had been in recent memory, even if it is more a correction to what is a normal landfall rate. I think the misperception, however, is that we are having a bunch of strong storms regularly arriving on US Shores, when that is not really the case.

One thing is true about tropical storms is that they are being infused with more moisture, and as a result are bringing more rain. Every storm you see now has a greater tendency to produce flash flooding. This is partly being seen in Debby, where parts of the Carolinas and Georgia have been inundated. Debby wasn’t a particularly strong storm, but she was sure a soaker.

This is where the longer season comes into play a bit. As we know, the transition seasons of spring and fall tend to have the most dramatic weather over the continental United States. The jet dives south and brings active cold and warm fronts that make life a bit more interesting for everyone. Historically, the hurricane season is most active in September, just when things get more interesting with subtropical weather, and these cold fronts usher remnant hurricanes off into the north Atlantic.

In August, the dog days of summer, there are no big jet troughs or cold fronts, and storms are left to dawdle. Debby has been such a danger because she’s not been forced offshore. Harvey was an August storm, and he had the same issue 7 years ago. Dawdling. Storms are carrying more moisture, and early season storms especially are less likely to be kept moving, and flash flooding is on the rise with tropical storms. Expect this trend to continue for the long term.

Upstream from Debby

A cool front was sliding into Alabama as the month started, just as we were waiting for Debby to make her way to the Florida Peninsula. Montgomery, typically awash in pop up showers and storms, was able to evade that activity on Saturday, even as a cool front slid through town. “Cool”. It was still in the 90s after it’s passage. There was a lingering splash of rain on Friday morning, which some people successfully called out, but ultimately, the top forecast came to a good temperature prognostication. Because of that, there was a three way tie on top, between The Weather Channel, Weather Service and Weatherbug.
Actuals: Friday – .02 inches of rain, High 95, Low 77
Saturday – High 96, Low 76

Grade: B-C

July Forecaster of the Month

July was a month heavy on Bloomingtons, but was fortunately not as robust in weather headlines as we have come to expect in the summer. Sure, we’ve certainly had some heat, rain, storms and everything that comes along with the summer, but it wasn’t quite as horrific as the last few years. Baby steps. The Weather Channel took the crown in the first month of the second half of the year.

OutletForecast Wins (year)
The Weather Channel9.82
Victoria-Weather7.48
WeatherNation5.83
Accuweather3.16
Clime3
Weatherbug2
National Weather Service1.49

Bloomington Verification Part 2

We took care of one Bloomington, and now it is on to the next, this time in Indiana. As a Purdue grad, I was always unlikely to feel comfortable in the home of Indiana University, but not everyone felt that was the case. After a few early showers, it laid out perfectly for The Weather Channel, who pegged the forecast quite accurately, missing by only a few degrees of error to wrap up July.
Actuals: Thursday, July 25th: .02 inches of rain, High 86, Low 65
Friday, July 26th, High 85, Low 63

Grade: A – C

Beaumont, Texas

We are planning on continuing the work of surrounding the Gulf of Mexico to begin August. It’s not as interesting as it could be this time of year, at least in Texas. Hurricane Debby, of course, made landfall down the coast in Apalachee Bay this morning.

At 853PM, PT, Beaumont was reporting a temperature of 85 degrees with clear skies. Debby has moved into the Carolinas, with high pressure building into the south central US behind her.
Generally laminar flow in the northern US is causing a stagnant pattern in the southern US, with no cycling pressure centers to freshen things up. This also means that Debby will not be motivated in any particular direction. This will mean continued soaking, eventually flooding rains as she wobbles back to the west in Georgia and South Carolina. Fortunately for Beaumont, this will mean that moisture is going to be drawn to the Tropical feature, and will keep the town quite dry for the next couple of days.
Tomorrow – Sunny, High 99, Low 76
Wednesday – Continued sun, High 98, Low 76

TWC: Tomorrow – Generally sunny despite a few afternoon clouds. High 97, Low 76
Wednesday – Sunshine. Hot. High 99, Low 76

AW: Tomorrow – Sunny and hot; caution advised if outside for extended periods of time High 99, Low 75
Wednesday – Hot with plenty of sunshine; danger of dehydration and heatstroke if outside for extended periods of time High 100, Low 76

NWS: Tomorrow – Sunny and hot, High 97, Low 77
Wednesday – Sunny and hot, High 99, Low 77

WB: Tomorrow – Sunny, High 97, Low 78
Wednesday -Sunny, High 98, Low 76

WN: Tomorrow – Mostly sunny, High 97, Low 78
Wednesday – Sunny, High 99, Low 79

CLI: Tomorrow – Sunny, High 98, Low 75
Wednesday – Sunny, High 99, Low 76

Satellite shows just how quiet it is in the south central, which means that it’s just going to be piping hot.