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Drought Conditions Continue To Worsen

| November 2, 2016 @ 6:19 am

LONG TIME, NO RAIN: Today will be the 45th consecutive day without rain for Birmingham; the record streak is 52 days set in 1924, and unfortunately it sure looks like we have a good chance of beating that record as prospects for meaningful rain look very small through next week.

We have been under an upper ridge since summer, deflecting the major rain producing systems away… and as the soil moisture vanishes and plants and vegetation begin to die, there is less water available for evaporation from the soil surface, meaning less water available for transpiration. Basically a nasty feedback loop, meaning no moisture available for waves and boundaries that pass through. It makes it very hard to break out of these things.

And, the lack of soil moisture sets the stage for very warm afternoons; the sun’s energy doesn’t have to work on evaporation, so it all goes into heating the ground, which in turn heats the air. If this were August, we would be dealing with nasty, triple digit heat. Yesterday was the warmest November day on record for most of Alabama; Birmingham soared to 88 degrees, beating the old record of 85 on November 1 set in 2000.

TODAY/TOMORROW: We project highs in the 82-85 degree range both days; the average high is 69 for early November. Sunshine through scattered clouds, and no rain despite a cold front approaching late tomorrow.

BIG COOL DOWN: The one thing we can promise is cool air Friday. A nice north breeze will usher in much cooler air; the high Friday will drop into the 70-75 degree range despite sunshine in full supply. By Saturday morning, most communities will be in the low 40s, with 30s for colder pockets along with a touch of scattered light frost.

THE WEEKEND: Delightful fall weather. Sunny pleasant days, clear chilly nights. Highs in the 70s, lows in the 40s.

NEXT WEEK: Not much change. Unfortunately the idea presented yesterday by the GFS involving rain on Thursday is off the table; the week looks rain-free. Highs hold in the 70s, lows mostly in the 40s.

PATTERN CHANGE: Evidence remains in place for a major pattern flip in two weeks that will bring rain chances back to Alabama. The mean upper ridge over the Deep South will be replaced by a trough, opening the door for the return of active weather and rain.

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Ensemble data from the reliable European model (ECMWF) continues to suggest potential for about 5 inches of rain around here from mid-November through mid-December…

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This will begin a process, hopefully, of ending the short term drought, and preventing a long term drought from beginning. This is supported by climatology, since November and December are usually wet and stormy; it is our late fall severe weather season.

AT THE BEACH: Sunny days, fair nights through next week on the Gulf Coast from Panama City Beach to Gulf Shores; highs in the low 80s today and tomorrow, then in the 70s Friday and over the weekend. See a very detailed Gulf Coast forecast here.

TROPICS: A disturbance northeast of the Leeward Islands could show some slow development over the next five days, but it will move northeast and is no threat to land.

TIME CHANGE: Don’t forget we go back on standard time this weekend… set those clocks back one hour before you go to bed Saturday night. Good news in the weather world… we get model data one hour earlier beginning Sunday (model runs are based on GMT)…

WEATHER BRAINS: Don’t forget you can listen to our weekly 90 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. Scroll down for the show notes on the new episode we recorded last night.

CONNECT: You can find me on all of the major social networks…

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I have a weather program this morning at Gwin Elementary in Hoover… look for the next Weather Xtreme video here by 4:00 this afternoon. Enjoy the day!

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Category: Alabama's Weather

About the Author ()

James Spann is one of the most recognized and trusted television meteorologists in the industry. He holds the AMS CCM designation and television seals from the AMS and NWA. He is a past winner of the Broadcast Meteorologist of the Year from both professional organizations.

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