Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Updated 2009 Hurricane Forecast
Monday, May 25, 2009
With the approach of the 2009 hurricane season, the week of May 24th through 30th has been designated as Hurricane Preparedness Week in Lousiana Now is the time for all residents of southeast Louisiana and south Mississippi to begin reviewing and updating their hurricane preparedness plans. History teaches that a lack of hurricane awareness and preparation are common threads among all major hurricane disasters. By knowing your areas vulnerability and what actions you should take, you can reduce the chance of being in harm's way if a hurricane threatens our area this year.
The official start of the hurricane season is June 1st, and it lasts through the end of of November. Southeast Louisiana and coastal Mississippi are extremely vulnerable to the destructive winds and storm surge associated with hurricanes. In addition, many residents of southeast Louisiana and south Mississippi are still recovering from the damaging affects of Hurricanes Katrina, Gustav, and Ike. A few residents may still be living in structures vulnerable to tropical storm and hurricane force winds.
Area residents, especially those in coastal locations, weakened structures, or mobile homes and travel trailers vulnerable to wind, should review actions they would take if a tropical storm or hurricane threatened the region.
If you live in a vulnerable coastal location, you will likely be requested to evacuate if a hurricane threatens. Also, if you live in a travel trailer or mobile home, you will likely be requested to evacuate for tropical storms and hurricanes.
Now is the time to learn what evacuation routes you would use, the location you would go, and what you would bring with you if you evacuated. If you live in a safe location away from storm surge flooding and decide to stay, you should have provisions of food and water to last from several days to a week or more without normal service.
A variety of web sites are listed below that can assist you in your preparedness plans for the 2009 season.
Hurricane Preparedness Week Information (National Hurricane Center)
American Red Cross
FEMA Hurricane Preparedness Page
Louisiana Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness
Mississippi Emergency Management Agency
Louisiana "Get A Gameplan" Website for Hurricane Preparedness
Louisiana Emergency Web Site
Evacuation Route Maps and Information from the Louisiana State Police
Evacuation Route Maps and Information from the Mississippi Department of Transportation
Friday, April 10, 2009
Severe Threat Easter Sunday

FROM THE STORM PREDICTION CENTER
...THERE IS A SLGT RISK OF SVR TSTMS OVER THE SOUTH CENTRAL U.S....
...SOUTH CENTRAL U.S...
POWERFUL SRN STREAM UPPER LOW WILL SHIFT EAST ACROSS THE SRN ROCKIES
INTO THE SRN PLAINS BY LATE AFTERNOON EASTER SUNDAY AS STRONGEST
FLOW ALOFT TRANSITIONS INTO THE SERN-ERN PERIPHERY OF CYCLONE...H5
FLOW OF 80-90KT....FROM EAST TX INTO NWRN MS.
ADDITIONALLY...STRONGLY DIFFLUENT HIGH LEVEL FLOW WILL OVERSPREAD
THE SCNTRL U.S. IN CONJUNCTION WITH RAPIDLY MODIFYING BOUNDARY
LAYER.
MODELS ARE IN GENERAL AGREEMENT THAT STRONG WARM ADVECTION...ALONG
WITH ASCENT AHEAD OF UPPER VORT...WILL ENCOURAGE A BROAD ZONE OF
WIDESPREAD STRONG CONVECTION ACROSS THE SRN PLAINS EARLY IN THE
PERIOD...MUCH OF IT ELEVATED IN NATURE. THIS ACTIVITY WILL
PROPAGATE/DEVELOP EWD ACROSS TX/OK INTO THE LOWER MS VALLEY...AND
EVENTUALLY THE CNTRL GULF COAST REGION BY 12Z MONDAY AS LARGE SCALE
ASCENT SPREADS DOWNSTREAM.
GIVEN THE STRENGTH OF THE LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM...SHEAR PROFILES WILL
BE VERY STRONG ACROSS THE OUTLOOK REGION...CLEARLY SUPPORTIVE OF
ORGANIZED UPDRAFTS WHERE INSTABILITY IS SUFFICIENT. ALTHOUGH
BUOYANCY WILL BE AT A MINIMUM EARLY IN THE PERIOD...SEVERE
THUNDERSTORMS MAY BE ONGOING AHEAD OF COLD FRONT FROM PORTIONS OF
CNTRL TX...NWD TO THE RED RIVER. WITH TIME A NARROW AXIS OF
INSTABILITY WILL DEVELOP AHEAD OF THIS CONVECTION IN THE WAKE OF
WARM FRONT THAT WILL STRUGGLE TO MOVE BEYOND THE RED RIVER/ARKLATEX
DUE TO EXTENSIVE CONVECTION/PRECIPITATION. MODELS INSIST PRIMARY
SFC LOW WILL LAG SOMEWHAT OVER NCNTRL TX DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON
HOURS. THIS MAY ALLOW SOMEWHAT HIGHER INSTABILITY TO BE GENERATED
AHEAD OF COLD FRONT ACROSS ERN TX IN THE WAKE OF WARM FRONTAL
PRECIPITATION. IF MARITIME AIRMASS IS ABLE TO WARM SUFFICIENTLY
THEN A POTENTIALLY MORE VOLATILE SCENARIO MAY EVOLVE OVER ERN TX
INTO LA AS FORECAST SOUNDINGS STRONGLY SUPPORT SUPERCELL
DEVELOPMENT. AT THIS TIME WILL MAINTAIN A SLIGHT RISK DUE TO THE
UNCERTAINTY OF INSTABILITY. HOWEVER...AN UPGRADE TO MODERATE RISK
MAY BE REQUIRED FOR TORNADOES IN LATER OUTLOOKS.
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Severe Weather Possible Easter Sunday
2009 Revised Hurricane Forecast
State University have scaled back their prediction for the Atlantic
and are now calling for an average season with 12 named storms,
including six hurricanes, two of them major.
In December, researchers William Gray and Phil Klotzbach
predicted an above-average season with 14 named storms with seven
hurricanes - three major.
Gray said Tuesday the forecast was dialed down because of
improved chances of El Nino conditions, which suppress hurricane
formation.
This is Gray's 26th year of forecasting hurricanes. His
predictions are watched closely by emergency responders and others,
but many say long-range forecasts have little practical value
beyond focusing public attention on the dangers.
The season runs June 1-Nov. 30.
Monday, April 6, 2009
Possible Record Breaking Night
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Flash Flood Warnings as of Tuesday Afternoon
Monday, March 30, 2009
Ascension Parish Tornado
...EF1 TORNADO CONFIRMED IN ASCENSION PARISH...
TIME OF EVENT: 1112 PM 3/27/09
BEGINNING POINT: ST. AMANT
ENDING POINT: ST. AMANT
RATING: EF1 MAXIMUM WINDS 100-110 MPH
PATH LENGTH: 1.75 MILES
MAXIMUM WIDTH: 50 YARDS
FATALITIES: 0
INJURIES: 1
SUMMARY: NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SURVEY CONFIRMED TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN IN THE ST AMANT COMMUNITY. ONE HOUSE MOVED OFF FOUNDATION AND ROOF BLOWN OFF. LARGE METAL COMMERCIAL BUILDING HEAVILY DAMAGED. EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT REPORTED TOTAL OF 1 STRUCTURE DESTROYED...10 STRUCTURES SEVERE DAMAGE...20 MODERATE DAMAGE.
Flood Warnings
FLOOD STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW ORLEANS BATON ROUGE LA
910 AM CDT MON MAR 30 2009
...THE FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING RIVERS IN
LOUISIANA...
THE AMITE RIVER AT DENHAM SPRINGS AFFECTING EAST BATON ROUGE AND
LIVINGSTON PARISHES
THE AMITE RIVER AT BAYOU MANCHAC POINT AFFECTING EAST BATON ROUGE
PARISH
FORECAST CRESTS ARE BASED UPON RAINFALL THAT HAS OCCURRED ALONG WITH
ANTICIPATED RAIN FOR THE NEXT 12 HOURS. ADJUSTMENTS TO THE FORECASTS
WILL BE MADE IF ADDITIONAL HEAVY RAINFALL OCCURS.
DO NOT DRIVE CARS THROUGH FLOODED AREAS. REMEMBER...TWO FEET OF
RUSHING WATER CAN CARRY AWAY MOST VEHICLES INCLUDING PICKUPS. TURN
AROUND AND DON`T DROWN.
THE FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FOR
THE AMITE RIVER AT DENHAM SPRINGS.
* UNTIL WEDNESDAY MORNING...OR UNTIL THE WARNING IS CANCELLED.
* AT 8:00 AM MONDAY THE STAGE WAS 32.3 FEET.
* MINOR FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND MINOR FLOODING IS FORECAST.
* THE FLOOD STAGE IS 29.0 FEET.
* FORECAST...THE RIVER IS EXPECTED TO CONTINUE RISING TO NEAR 32.5
FEET BY THIS AFTERNOON THEN FALL BELOW FLOOD STAGE WEDNESDAY
MORNING.
* IMPACT...AT 30.0 FEET...FLOODING WILL BEGIN IN THE WESTERNMOST PARTS
OF DENHAM SPRINGS. RIVER ROAD AT THE FOOT OF BENTON LANE WILL FLOOD.
THE FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FOR
THE AMITE RIVER AT BAYOU MANCHAC POINT.
* UNTIL THURSDAY MORNING...OR UNTIL THE WARNING IS CANCELLED.
* AT 6:52 AM MONDAY THE STAGE WAS 10.0 FEET.
* MINOR FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND MODERATE FLOODING IS FORECAST.
* THE FLOOD STAGE IS 9.0 FEET.
* FORECAST...THE RIVER IS EXPECTED TO CONTINUE RISING TO NEAR 12.5 FEET
BY TOMORROW AFTERNOON THEN FALL BELOW FLOOD STAGE THURSDAY MORNING.
* IMPACT...AT 12.0 FEET...KENDALWOOD ROAD AND ADJACENT PROPERTY WILL
BE INUNDATED. BACKWATER MAY FLOOD BAYOU FOUNTAIN AND FLOOD SOME
HOMES ON BURBANK DRIVE. MOST SECONDARY ROADS WILL BE MODERATELY
FLOODED. AMITE RIVER ROAD AND HORSESHOE DRIVE WILL BE IMPASSABLE. A
FEW HOMES ON HORSESHOE DRIVE WILL FLOOD.
Friday, March 27, 2009
Severe Weather Survey
Severe Weather Affects Southeast Louisiana and Coastal Mississippi
National Weather Service survey teams assessed the damage from a round of severe storms during the early morning hours on March 26, 2009. The following are the results from the surveys across Southeast Louisiana and Coastal Mississippi. Pictures and Track Maps will be updated in the coming days.
...EF1 TORNADO CONFIRMED IN TANGIPAHOA PARISH...
TIME OF EVENT: 158 AM THROUGH 203 AM 3/26/09
BEGINNING POINT: 2 MILES E INDEPENDENCE
ENDING POINT: 2.75 MILES ENE INDEPENDENCE
RATING: EF1 MAXIMUM WINDS 110 MPH
PATH LENGTH: 0.75 MILES
MAXIMUM WIDTH: 50 YARDS
FATALITIES: 0
INJURIES: 1
SUMMARY: NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SURVEY CONFIRMED 7 HOMES WERE DAMAGED AND 1 MOBILE HOME WAS DESTROYED. 1 TRAILER HEAVILY DAMAGED. IN ADDITION TO THE STRUCTURAL DAMAGE NUMEROUS TREES WERE SNAPPED OR UPROOTED. MOST OF THE DAMAGE WAS CONTAINED IN THE VICINITY OF HIGHWAY 40 AND SCHOOL ROAD.
...EF0 TORNADO CONFIRMED IN ST TAMMANY PARISH...
TIME OF EVENT: 343 AM THROUGH 343 AM 3/26/09
BEGINNING POINT: 2 MILES SSE SLIDELL
ENDING POINT: 2 MILES SSE SLIDELL
RATING: EF0 MAXIMUM WINDS 65 MPH
PATH LENGTH: 250 YARDS
MAXIMUM WIDTH: 25 YARDS
FATALITIES: 0
INJURIES: 0
SUMMARY: VERY WEAK TORNADO MOVED THROUGH THE SPRINGHILL SUBDIVISION WITH ONLY MINOR TREE DAMAGE AND YARD ITEMS BLOWN AROUND. THE DAMAGE OCCURRED ON ADMIRAL NELSON ROAD.
...EF0 TORNADO CONFIRMED IN JACKSON COUNTY...
TIME OF EVENT: 533 AM THROUGH 534 AM 3/26/09
BEGINNING POINT: PASCAGOULA
ENDING POINT: PASCAGOULA
RATING: EF0 MAXIMUM WINDS 75 MPH
PATH LENGTH: 250 YARDS
MAXIMUM WIDTH: 50 YARDS
FATALITIES: 0
INJURIES: 0
SUMMARY: NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SURVEY CONFIRMED THAT TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN ALMOST IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE STORM GOT BACK ON LAND. IT TRAVELED TO THE EAST CAUSING THE MOST DAMAGE AROUND TUCKER AND 8TH STREET AT PASCAGOULA HIGH SCHOOL. THE SCORE BOARD ON THE FOOTBALL FIELD WAS BLOWN DOWN ALONG WITH NUMEROUS FENCES WITH DEBRIS SCATTERED ACROSS THE SCHOOL. THE TORNADO MOVED TOWARD PAUL HARVEY ROAD AND TAYLOR STREET CAUSING LIGHT DAMAGE TO TRAFFIC LIGHTS...MINOR ROOF DAMAGE AND BRINGING DOWN SEVERAL TREES. ALSO A TRAMPOLINE WAS BLOWN ONTO A VAN.
...SIGNIFICANT STRAIGHT LINE WIND DAMAGE IN THE BATON ROUGE METRO...
TIME OF EVENT: 105 AM THROUGH 117 AM 3/26/09
MAXIMUM WINDS: 80 MPH
FATALITIES: 0
INJURIES: 0
SUMMARY: NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SURVEY CONFIRMED THAT A BOW ECHO DEVELOPED AS THE SQUALL LINE APPROACHED EAST BATON ROUGE PARISH. IT CROSSED THE RIVER AROUND 105AM CST AND PROCEEDED THROUGH THE PARISH INTO LIVINGSTON PARISH. NUMEROUS TREES AND POWER LINES DOWN THROUGHOUT THE CITY WITH THE MOST SIGNIFICANT DAMAGE ACROSS THE LSU CAMPUS EAST THROUGH THE SOUTHDOWNS AND TOWARDS THE INTERSECTION OF AIRLINE AND OLD HAMMOND HIGHWAYS. ALONG WITH TREES AND POWER POLES SCATTERED COMMERCIAL SIGNS ALONG PERKINS ROAD WERE BLOWN DOWN. SIGNIFICANT STRUCTURAL DAMAGE TO THE LSU FOOTBALL INDOOR PRACTICE FACILITY.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Heavy Rain and Strong Storms this Week



Our weather pattern is setting up to be one of rounds of heavy rain and some threat for severe storms Wednesday afternoon and evening. Off and on rain will continue through early Saturday morning with as much as 3-5 inches possible by then (see forecast rain totals map).
Also the Storm Prediction Center has most of south Louisiana under a slight risk of storms the next day or so. This will be likely again in Friday afternoon and night. See posted outlooks.
For more information and to read the discussion from the Storm Prediction Center, visit
http://www.spc.noaa.gov/products/outlook/
Friday, March 20, 2009
2009 Spring Outlook
Major Midwest Flooding Highlighted in U.S. Spring Outlook
March 19, 2009
Flooding in the upper Midwest, which could rival the high water levels experienced in 2006 and possibly 1997, and continued drought in the South and West are among the highlights in NOAA’s National Weather Service Spring Outlook issued today.
Flooding – Midwest on Watch
High resolution (Credit: NOAA)
A deep snowpack and recent heavy rain have elevated the spring flood threat in parts of the Midwest:
- Water released by melting snowpack that is deeper than normal – while running off the already saturated and frozen ground – poses an imminent serious flood threat in the Red River Valley.
Forecasters say flooding will begin next week and that the Red River of the North in Fargo and Grand Forks, N.D., will ultimately reach major flood stage and has a strong likelihood of a crest measuring among the top five highest on record. Away from rivers, widespread over-land flooding is expected due to the flat terrain and frozen drainage networks in the Red River Basin. The threat in this area is so great that the National Weather Service created a new category – “High Risk” – to distinguish it from the existing “Above Average” category for flooding potential.
- Recent flooding caused by heavy rain from Illinois to Ohio has begun receding, but the now saturated ground is prone to additional flooding with renewed rainfall.
“We are looking at a situation with all the ingredients for near record flooding in the upper Midwest,” said Jack Hayes, director of the National Weather Service. “Sudden snowpack melts due to warm temperatures or a heavy rain could further complicate the flooding on the northern plains.” Supported by advanced water and weather science and early warnings from NOAA, local officials and emergency managers in the Red River Valley are taking action to prepare their communities, according to Hayes.
River levels – past, current and/or projected – at nearly 4,300 stations across the United States are available through the Advanced Hydrologic Prediction Service at weather.gov/water. The National Weather Service Web site has the latest flood advisories, watches and warnings with localized information.
High resolution (Credit: NOAA)
Temperature and Precipitation – A Waning La Niña
The spring (April through June) temperature and precipitation outlook issued today by the Climate Prediction Center – a division of the National Weather Service – indicates warmer-than-normal temperatures from Texas westward to the California deserts north to central Utah with cooler-than-normal temperatures in the Northwest, Hawaii and much of Alaska. Odds favor below-average precipitation across the northwestern U.S. and South Florida and favor above-average precipitation in Hawaii and northern Alaska.
Elsewhere across the country there are equal chances of above-, near- or below-normal temperatures and precipitation because there is no strong large-scale climate signal to guide long-range forecasts.
High resolution (Credit: NOAA)
“The current La Niña will likely have some effect on this spring as it continues to weaken. Although La Niña tends to have a smaller influence on U.S. weather during the warmer months, lingering effects are not uncommon in spring,” said Ed O’Lenic, long-range forecaster with the Climate Prediction Center. La Niña – associated with cooler than average sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean – can alter the typical temperature and precipitation patterns across the United States.
Drought’s Grip Loosening in South, West, but Intensifying in Florida
Texas remains in the bulls-eye of the most widespread and intense drought, followed by California, the Southeast and Wisconsin, but the recent record rain brought much-needed moisture to the Lone Star state, according to recent updates to the weekly U.S. Drought Monitor. Storms in February and early March across northern California provided some relief to the drought, but storage in major reservoirs is much below average and spring runoff is forecast to be below average with less than a month left in the wet season.
High resolution (Credit: NOAA)
The Climate Prediction Center’s newly updated Seasonal Drought Outlook highlights these areas of drought as generally persisting through June with limited areas of improvement. Though with continued dryness, drought may develop from northern Virginia to New Jersey.
Underscoring the severity of the Texas drought, the state just emerged from its driest winter since records began in 1895. Even with the recent rain, cumulative rainfall during the past six months remains as much as a foot below normal in parts of Texas and Oklahoma. Therefore, severe drought has not ended and is expected to linger well into spring. Severe drought has been increasing in Florida, where some cities had their driest winter on record, and where an increasing risk of wildfires has developed. The Florida drought is likely to persist and intensify until the thunderstorm season gets underway in late May and June.
Staying Safe during Tornado Season
Spring is also the season for tornadoes as April, May and June are, on average, the busiest months for twisters. Though the severity of this year’s tornado season is influenced by short-term weather patterns that are only predictable out to a week in the future, it is imperative to know when the atmosphere is ripe for severe thunderstorms to produce tornadoes.
“If you don’t already have a NOAA Weather Radio, get one now,” added Hayes. “This is a fast and reliable way to get life-saving warnings from the National Weather Service.”
NOAA understands and predicts changes in the Earth's environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and conserves and manages our coastal and marine resources.Monday, March 16, 2009
Flood Safety Awareness Week
http://www.weather.gov/floodsafety/
Friday, March 13, 2009
Wet Weather Pattern for the Weekend

Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Lower Mississippi Valley in for a Wet Weekend

You are looking at a welcomed change in our weather pattern for the next four days. A strong cold front will move south and stall along the Louisiana coast on Wednesday night and hang out for the next several days. Upper level lift will be significant enough to provide for scattered showers through Friday. A surface low pressure system will develop on Saturday morning in the western Gulf of Mexico and move northeast along the front through Saturday night and into Sunday. Rain totals could approach two to three inches in parts of south Louisiana with higher totals across the northern part of the state. It looks like drier air will filter in on Monday and bring the wet weather to an end. As we've been mentioning, our rain deficit for 2009 is more than seven inches in Baton Rouge. This will at least put a dent in the ongoing moderate drought for south Louisiana.
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Southern Lousiana Under Moderate Drought

That's according to Mark Svoboda, a climatologist with the National Drought Mitigation Center. Svoboda says almost all of Louisiana is abnormally dry for this time of year, but the southern region is experiencing a moderate drought.
Signs of drought include below normal precipitation and very dry soil and vegetation conditions that can result in forest fires.
Mike Efferson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Slidell, said rainfall levels in the state are about two inches below normal. He said Louisiana usually gets about 12.74 inches of rain from January to this time of year but has only gotten 10.79 inches (Information provided by Associated Press).
Friday, March 6, 2009
Why so warm and beautiful for winter?


Thursday, March 5, 2009
It's Allergy Season Folks!
So even though the weather is going to be above average and exceptional this weekend, you may want to bring that box of Kleenex for those sniffles. Possible rain on Monday and Tuesday of next week should bring the extremely high levels back to normal.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Dry & warm conditions expected this spring for Louisiana due to La Nina
La Nina conditions have been present since late December. CPC officials say it is too early to say exactly how strong the event will be and precisely how long it will last. However, for the next few months La Nina is expected to bring milder and drier than average conditions to the southeastern and southwestern states. Louisiana would fall in this category; therefore, expect a dry and very warm spring very similar to last year as we also experienced La Nina conditions in 2008. It is also expected to bring wetter-than-average conditions to the Ohio and Tennessee valleys, plus cooler than average temperatures to the Pacific Northwest.
Monday, March 2, 2009
March is in like a Lion
Although we are not setting any new records, March has started out very much on the cold side. We were definitely bit by the lion this morning and yesterday morning. Yesterday involved strong winds with the unusual low temperatures. We saw wind chills (feel like temperatures) nearly 10° below the actual air temperature. It was definitely a cold day for a crawfish boil. Today, at least, the winds will finally relax. Tomorrow, expect even lower temperatures. During the overnight hours, expect clears and a little radiational cooling (more heat will be released from the ground into space than absorbed at the surface). We could expect possibly a period of 2-5 hours of temperatures below freezing. A light freeze watch is in effect for tomorrow morning until 8 a.m. At this time of the year, we should be ramping up our temperatures and should see average daytime highs in the upper 60s. Unofficially, March is considered the first month of spring. It definitely doesn't feel like spring here in Southern Louisiana. It is always tough to get a little taste of some warm weather and then turn 180° and plummet back into the cold. Good news...warmer temperatures are on tap for the end of the week.
Friday, February 27, 2009
Wild & Wacky Weekend!
Crazy weekend ahead...We continue on our roller coaster of temperatures. Today, we started out around 70° and are looking to top out around 80°. Tomorrow will bring a strong cold front through that will drop our temperatures by nearly 20°, putting our daytime high in the lower 60s. By Monday morning, we could start the morning with subfreezing temperatures. I just want consistency and I know everyone else does too! Good news...weather conditions look to settle down towards the middle of next week as the upper atmosphere ( the jet stream) becomes more zonal ( straight west to east, instead of dipping southward). Stay with the Storm Tracker 33 Weather team and we will continue to alert and warn you of changing weather conditions.