Alabama 811 | Know What's Below.

Late Morning in Alabama–Mostly Quiet

| September 28, 2011 @ 11:29 am | Reply

Exception is the Extreme Southwest where a large cluster of thunderstorms was still in progress. At 11:25 am, the storms extended from north of Mobile down into the Pensacola-Fort Walton area of NW Florida. Moving toward the ESE

Most of those storms were still overdosed with lightning.

No formal warnings at this hour. The last one was a Severe Thunderstorm Warning for parts of Covington and Crenshaw County. That one expired at 8:15 am.

The early,early storms were more to the south this morning as compared to recent mornings.

Another plus: Most of the dense fog that draped many areas like a heavy blanket earlier this morning has lifted.

Now, all of our weather eyes turn around and are focused to the far North and Northwest where a fresh supply of cool, dry air will be spreading across the Northern Plains and Northern Rockies looking for the on ramp that heads to Alabama. By Sunday morning, a clear-cool high pressure area will be centered over Kentucky and Tennessee.

Are you ready for some football? Saturday should be perfect.
Are you ready for some 40s? Crawl out of bed early Sunday for that.

Not totally out of the question that we could hear of a 38 or 39 in some NE Alabama valley and traditional cold spot like Valley Head.

We shall see.

Category: Alabama's Weather

About the Author ()

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.