Phillip l
Member
David chandley has said that he does not expect any more warnings but, you never know.
How many hooks or hook like structures can you spot?Hot'Lanta looks to be rockin', but by and large (let's hope) this is now a study, rather than a classroom experience ...![]()
not takin' the bait and sorry you cast it ....How many hooks or hook like structures can you spot?![]()
Yeah, these storms have got my mind out of place. Probably best to sit back and watch the rain roll through lol.not takin' the bait and sorry you cast it ....![]()
probably, all things considered ....Probably best to sit back and watch the rain roll through
We've had a number of school systems around here close early several days, then all day today, and not a drop of rain during any of it. Complacency is a concern going forward for sure.
For the governor of Alabama to declare a state of emergency that early also shows that people aren't going to trust the governments as much too. Making calls to early isn't smart, even if it means faster relief.Definitely. This one may have been the final straw, twice this week with a moderate that should have been a slight. I hope this doesn't create dangerous situations with either schools not believing it or with the SPC under warning from here.
Wow, that's huge.Holy hail![]()
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It's an issue every single year unfortunately.We've had a number of school systems around here close early several days, then all day today, and not a drop of rain during any of it. Complacency is a concern going forward for sure.
We've had a number of school systems around here close early several days, then all day today, and not a drop of rain during any of it. Complacency is a concern going forward for sure.
Would you believe I'm STILL in an enhanced area?
You're being wedged in by southerly winds at 12 mph.Seems like things have died down a lot compared to earlier today. Only in the slight chance now. Seems the wedge was underestimated again here.
I'm in it and I have no earthly deal on whyLooks like they've also extended the tornado watch for another hour around the Atlanta area. This thing just won't stop.
I'm in it and I have no earthly deal on why
The squall line is the cold front.
NAMs really drive dews up ahead of the front. It looks like we might develop an inversion overnight and any cells that we get will be elevated but that's speculative on my part. I could still see a few decent storms for the morning rush but I think that MCS pushing off the EC lessened the threat a bitWRAL still really talking up the severe chance here, though. Saying the storms will be between 2 and 10 a.m., some will be rotating storms and wouldn't be surprised to have tornado warnings, and the atmosphere could become unstable again after the rain we had tonight moves out.
Hate to say it, but if we don't get any bad storms, folks are going to be saying WRAL cried wolf big time.NAMs really drive dews up ahead of the front. It looks like we might develop an inversion overnight and any cells that we get will be elevated but that's speculative on my part. I could still see a few decent storms for the morning rush but I think that MCS pushing off the EC lessened the threat a bit
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Probably because the warm front is compressed against the cold front. TEC was showing the frontal boundaries, and the warm front that should have moved North never made it past Macon, so the temperature differences are creating the higher winds. Meanehile, we had a nice heavy rain here to end this event. Overall, I believe we got near 2 inches, which is a great hit to the drought.Post front winds are crazy . I've had a peak gust of 47