Love Those April Cold Fronts
Bob Breck's Blog
by
2d ago
We can get "cold" fronts push off our coast well into May & June, but the longer days & higher sun angle makes them mainly "dry" fronts with no cooler air behind them.  Going off to church this morning was almost chilly with temps around 60 & brisk north winds making it feel even cooler.  But once the sun returned this afternoon, buda bing, temps quickly bounced back above 70. The cold front has pushed off our coast with the rains & clouds covering most of the East coast states. Sweaters and jackets are needed as temps hover in the 40s & 50s.  ..read more
Visit website
Almost Winter=Like From Denver, Dallas to North Louisiana
Bob Breck's Blog
by
4d ago
Talk about a frontal boundary with drastic temperature changes, it's 30 degrees colder behind our next cold front.  If we were back in March, I'd be a little nervous with such a cold air mass behind it.  However, it's now late April and the higher sun angle will moderate the chill once the sun comes back out on Monday & Tuesday. In addition, the upper energy is not as strong as several weeks ago and it'll quickly race off to our north and east keeping the core of the cold away from us. We will get into a much drier air mass for the start of next week. Mov ..read more
Visit website
Not Done With Cold Fronts, Keep Sweaters Ready.
Bob Breck's Blog
by
4d ago
Living here for the past 46 years, my fading memory tells me the real ugly heat of Summer doesn't arrive until the 2nd weekend of Jazz Fest.  Typically, our 1st 90+ day day doesn't happen until we're into May.  Tomorrow could get close ahead of our next cold front coming Sunday morning.  There still is plenty of chilly up north & Denver will see some snow tomorrow.  The reason?  Look at the upper flow. It's essentially flat (west to east) over the lower 48 with an upper trough north of the Great Lakes.  That is bringing the Canadian chill across the nor ..read more
Visit website
The Beaches Are Ready And Waiting
Bob Breck's Blog
by
1w ago
Years ago, I took my young boys over to Pensacola Beach and rented a house for 4 days.  It rained for 3 of the 4 days so my first experience with the "white sands" was not a pleasant one.  One of my late friends (Don Noel) owned a house at Seagrove Beach and we had many wonderful experiences there over the years.  The only negative was the 5 1/2 hour drive.  After Don passed, we found Henderson Park Inn just east of Destin and had many terrific times there, BUT it was 4 1/2 hours away.  In the last 10 years, we've discovered that the white sands of Gulf Shores, Orange ..read more
Visit website
A Quiet Week Ahead, Warming Up.
Bob Breck's Blog
by
1w ago
It's really hard to find something to talk about when we have no weather coming for the next 5-7 days.  However, when I walked outside this morning, and thought back to less than 3 months ago (Jan. 24th freeze), my backyard (In my humble opinion) looked stunning!  Gone were all the dead plants and flowers replaced with brilliant colors. Let's start with the back fence. Can you find it? When we moved in after Katrina in 2006, the fence was fairly new, but I knew over time the wood would weather and look ugly.  The solution?   Plant Jasmine  It totally has cove ..read more
Visit website
Because We Know What's Coming, Being On The Mountaintop Is Glorious!
Bob Breck's Blog
by
1w ago
In San Diego, they expect this kind of weather 8 months of the year.  In south Louisiana, we might get this kind of weather 8 weeks of the year (April & October).  Who do you think appreciates it more?  Has to be us since we know in another 4 weeks, the road to Hell/Heat begins as we drop into that deep Valley we call Summer.  The upper energy that brought us a cold front & tornadoes has lifted up into Canada with a deep trough wrapping clouds around it.   That is keeping folks in the Great lakes & Northeast in sweaters and jackets as there rema ..read more
Visit website
National Weather Service Now Says Tornado Was EF-2.
Bob Breck's Blog
by
1w ago
FOX 8 Sportscaster Sean Frazende often says, "after further review" when discussing a play.  Yesterday, the NWS indicated the Slidell tornado was an EF-1 strength.  Today, they went back and (based on damage) "after further review" increased the strength to an EF-2.  Here's the preliminary map put out by NWS through FOX 8 Meteorologist Amber Wheeler. Note the tornado touchdown at 10:03 AM and only lasted 9 minutes before lifting back up.  The path was 9.3 miles, which shows you why these brief, short lived tornadoes are difficult to predict well in advance.  Thank ..read more
Visit website
Man, Were They Ever Right!
Bob Breck's Blog
by
2w ago
Imagine being in SE Oklahoma (Broken Bow) Monday evening getting text alerts on my phone saying schools will be closing, City hall will be closed, have your pirogue ready, yada, yada.  I hadn't seen the weather since last Friday so I had no clue what was going on.  Luckily I flew back last night before the storms.  The usual overhype turned out to be reality so bravo to the SPC, NWS for giving us the warnings ahead of time.  Since I've been gone and am just getting back into seeing what is happening, I won't spend a lot of time talking about the weather.  However, what ..read more
Visit website
In the Path Of Totality
Bob Breck's Blog
by
2w ago
Some of you maybe wondering why I haven't been posting.  The simple reason is there has been nothing to talk about since our weather has been so nice.  The other reason is I have been spending time with my sons & grandson (Ethan's 5th Birthday) PLUS we're going to journey into the path of totality for Monday's solar eclipse.  New Orleans will see a partial eclipse , but it won't turn dark like in the small path of totality. Oklahoma City/Edmond is also not in the path of totality so we have to journey 3-4 hours on the back roads of SE Oklahoma to Broken Bow, wher ..read more
Visit website
Prediction...2024 Hurricane Season From Hell
Bob Breck's Blog
by
3w ago
Oh sure, the headline screams over-hype, Much like the old newsroom guidance "if it bleeds, it leads".  Headlines are designed to grab your attention and Joe Bastardi of WeatherBell Analytics did just that back in December 2023 when he issued his first early 2024 season outlook.  His numbers were scary (25-30 named storms) based on warm (above normal/average) Atlantic water temps. and no El Nino.  Now, Dr. Phil Klotzbach of Colorado State University has issued their preseason outlook, and it pretty much agrees with the Weather Bell Outlook.  Not as high as Weather Bell's, b ..read more
Visit website

Follow Bob Breck's Blog on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR