Damp, Dreary Weather

February 5, 2010, 6:00 am | James Spann | Forecast Discussion

An all new edition of the ABC 33/40 Weather Xtreme video is available in the player below. You can subscribe to the Weather Xtreme video on iTunes by clicking here.

TODAY: The heaviest rain is in the process of moving out of Alabama, after a very windy and wet night. A number of places have seen storm totals over two inches, and winds late last night were gusting to over 40 mph on the ridges. In the wake of the big rain mass, today will feature low clouds and periods of light rain or drizzle; nothing really heavy.

TO THE NORTH: A whopper of a snow event will unfold from Indianapolis to the middle Atlantic coast. Our friends in Washington and Baltimore, most likely, will be measuring snow in terms of feet, and not inches. Expect serious travel problems through this region. Snow and ice is possible southward into the rest of Virginia and parts of North Carolina.

TONIGHT/TOMORROW: Colder air begins to drop southward, and low clouds will stay in place, meaning tomorrow will be a pretty raw day to start the weekend. Temperatures will hover in the 40 to 45 degree range all day with a chance of some drizzle. It will feel colder with to strong north winds in the 12 to 25 mph range.

SUNDAY: The sky will clear tomorrow night, and finally we will enjoy a brighter day on Sunday as sunshine returns in full force. The high Sunday afternoon will be in the upper 40s.

NEXT WEEK: The next storm system will bring rain to Alabama early in the week. Global models are now in much better agreement, and it looks like the rain will come late Monday night and during the day Tuesday. Rain totals of 1/2 to 1 inch look likely with that feature.

Much colder air blows in here during the latter half of next week, and we have model madness on the idea of a late week storm. Watch the Weather Xtreme video for details; the GFS just shows a little light snow on Thursday, followed by a dry day on Friday, but the ECMWF shows a more significant storm at the end of the week on Friday, which is probably the better idea considering the pattern. There could be some snow or ice issues for somebody across the Deep South with this, but needless to say no way of knowing who at this stage of the game.

With a strongly negative Arctic Oscillation and active southern branch of the jet stream, look for mid-month winter weather mischief.

STORM ALERT 2010 IS COMING TO WALKER COUNTY: Our annual severe weather rolls along; our next stop will be on Thursday February 11 at Bevill State Community College in Sumiton. You can meet the ABC 33/40 Weather team, see some amazing Alabama weather stories, learn how to keep your family safe this tornado season, and win some cool stuff. The show begins at 7:00; be sure and get there early to get a good seat. See the entire tour schedule here!

WEATHER BRAINS: Don’t forget you can listen to our weekly 30 minute netcast anytime on the web, or on iTunes. This is the show all about weather featuring many familiar voices, including our meteorologists here at ABC 33/40. You can even listen here on the blog; look for the player on the top left.

Busy today today… I am speaking to the Metro Sertoma Club at midday, followed by a weather program early this afternoon at Brookwood Forrest Elementary in Mountain Brook. I should be able to crank out an afternoon Weather Xtreme video; it will be posted by 3:30. Enjoy the day!

4 Responses to “Damp, Dreary Weather”

  1. Brandon from Jacksonville Says:

    I registered a 59.5 mph gust last night here in Jacksonville. Windy….

  2. Michael Mills Says:

    Don’t know how windy it was last night but it was wet my total rainfall so far 2.10.

  3. Bill in Vigo Says:

    Good morning everyone,
    It has been wet and windy here in Vigo.
    event total rain thus far is 2.10 inches and still raining.

    Since midnight,
    low Temp 41
    current temp 42
    wind 10mph from the South
    max sustained wind 25mph
    max gust 37 mph
    humidity is 90%
    DP 40
    pressure 29.60 and up slightly from 29.56 at 0605 this morning
    wind chill at 0610 was 20.00f

    just a few extra details this morning due to the active night last night.

    Stay dry and try to stay safe today it could be interesting for sure. The next week or tow look interesting. hope everyone has taken precautions for some possible wintry type weather.

    Bill

  4. Lawrence Weedov Says:

    McCalla LOW 43 NOW 47 CLOUDY

    DP 44 CAIM 29.68

    RAINFALL 2.30

    PEAK WIND 35

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