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Strong Storms Over Northwest Alabama This Evening

| August 18, 2021 @ 3:21 pm

RADAR CHECK: Most of Alabama is dry this afternoon, but strong storms are entering the northwest corner of the state ahead of an upper trough. A few storms over Northwest Alabama this evening could produce strong gusty winds… SPC maintains a “marginal risk” for areas north of a line from Hamilton to Huntsville. Away from the storms, the sky is partly to mostly sunny with temperatures mostly in the low 90s… right at seasonal averages for mid-August.

TOMORROW THROUGH SATURDAY: An upper trough in the vicinity will bring scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms on these three days, mostly from noon to midnight. Chance of any one spot getting wet each day is 55-65 percent, and highs will drop into the mid to upper 80s with a limited amount of sun.

SUNDAY AND NEXT WEEK: An upper ridge will begin to build into the region Sunday; the sky will be partly to mostly sunny with only isolated afternoon showers… Sunday’s high will be in the low 90s. Then, the weather will be hot and mostly dry Monday and Tuesday… just a small risk of any one spot getting an afternoon storm with highs in the 91-95 degree range. The ridge weakens over the latter half of the week, and there should be a slow increase in the number of scattered afternoon and evening showers and storms Wednesday through Friday. See the Weather Xtreme video for maps, graphics, and more details.

TROPICS: Grace, in the western Caribbean, is now a hurricane with sustained winds of 75 mph. It will weaken as it moves across the Yucatan Peninsula tomorrow, but is expected to regain hurricane strength by the second landfall on the coast of Mexico well south of Brownsville, Texas late Friday night. Grace will remain far south of the U.S…. but it will bring a higher rip current danger to the Central Gulf Coast tomorrow night and Friday.

Tropical Storm Henri is expected to reach hurricane strength tomorrow; it will loop around Bermuda, and ultimately move out into the North Atlantic while staying east of the U.S. It will bring a high danger of rip currents to the U.S. East Coast this weekend.

The rest of the Atlantic basin is very quiet.

ON THIS DATE IN 1983: Hurricane Alicia made landfall at category three strength on the southwestern end of Galveston Island, Texas. Alicia’s eye passed just west of Downtown Houston, producing widespread damage. Thousands of homes were destroyed. In Downtown Houston, nearly all skyscrapers saw the loss of approximately half of lower-level windows, littering the urban streets with debris. Widespread power outages and flooding impacted much of Southeast Texas, with observed rainfall totals peaking at 9.95 inches. In addition to the strong winds, rough surf, and heavy rain, Alicia also generated 22 tornadoes centered around the Houston–Galveston area; most were rated F0, but the strongest, an F2, tore through Corsicana farther north.

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Category: Alabama's Weather, ALL POSTS, Weather Xtreme Videos

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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