Storms Stay North And West Of Alabama Through Friday; Very Warm
WARM: Temperatures are in the 80s across Alabama this afternoon with a mix of sun and clouds. Eyes are on thunderstorm activity to the northwest, where SPC has defined a “high risk” (level 5/5) of severe thunderstorms for parts of the Mid-South late this afternoon and tonight. The high risk includes parts of TN/AR/MO/KY/IL.
A few violent, long track tornadoes are possible in this area through tonight along with large hail and damaging straight line wind. High resolution models continue to keep almost all of this activity north and west of Alabama through the night thanks to a strong upper ridge in place. A shower or storm could drift into the northwest corner of Alabama late tonight or tomorrow morning, but most of the state will be dry.
A wind advisory remains in effect for a decent part of Alabama through tonight; winds out of the south will average 12-25 mph, with gusts to 30/35 mph possible.
Alabama’s weather will stay mostly dry through Saturday morning as the significant waves of showers and storms will stay to the north and west. A major flood threat will likely unfold from Arkansas to Ohio over the next four days, where rain amounts could exceed one foot in spots.
THE ALABAMA WEEKEND: Saturday will be another very warm day with highs in the mid to upper 80s. As the ridge breaks down we will introduce the risk of a shower or storm as early as Saturday afternoon. But, the more organized storms will come late Saturday night into Sunday. SPC has all of Alabama in a severe weather risk, but it remains too early to be specific about the magnitude of the threat. The event looks very similar to what we experienced on Monday of this week; hopefully it will be mainly a big rainmaker with some small hail and gusty winds, but that remains to be seen. We will be able to provide more details later this week. Rain amounts of 1-2 inches are likely over the weekend.
NEXT WEEK: Much colder air invades the Deep South. Temperatures will likely drop into the 30s across the northern half of the state by Tuesday and Wednesday morning with potential for frost; a few colder spots could see a late season freeze. And, for now much of the week looks dry. See the video briefing for maps, graphics, and more details.
STORM SURVEY: The tornado that moved through Dothan Monday was rated EF-1 by the NWS in Tallahassee; it was down for 3.11 miles with the peak wind was estimated at 105 mph.
ON THIS DATE IN 1957: An F3 tornado tore through Dallas, TX. 10 people were killed, and 216 were injured. Total damage was $1.5 million. This tornado was among the most photographed and studied in history.
ON THIS DATE IN 1982: Severe thunderstorms spawned fifty-six tornadoes in the central U.S., including seventeen in the Red River Region of Texas and Oklahoma. The tornadoes claimed thirty lives and injured 383 other persons. A violent tornado near Messer, Oklahoma left only the carpet tack strips on the slab of a house it destroyed and carried a motel sign thirty miles.
Look for the next video briefing here by 6:00 a.m. tomorrow…
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