MESONET TICKER ... MESONET TICKER ... MESONET TICKER ... MESONET TICKER ... May 6, 2019 May 6, 2019 May 6, 2019 May 6, 2019
Let's Rock
http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/20190506/boom.boom.png
It took awhile to get here, and now that spring has arrived, it's letting its hair down (same thing my scalp did years ago). It's been a tough one thus far. Plenty of rain, for those that need it. The last 30 days have been soggy to say the least, at least for most of the state. The western Panhandle could use a bit more, but the rest of us are ready for a dry spell I'd say.
http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/20190506/rainrfc.720hr.png
http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/20190506/30days.norm_dep.png
http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/20190506/30days.norm_pct.png
Most state lakes are full, or overflowing, so we have that going for us if we dry out later. Flooding has been particularly bad, though, so not so great at the current time.
http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/20190506/Monthly.Reservoir.Storage.png
After a mostly benign first four months of the season, severe weather really ramped up since the last day of April. I think we're well over a dozen tornadoes for the year thus far, including that EF3 monster that traveled 27 miles from Bryan to Atoka County. And it looks like the next three days will be active as well, with most sights set on Wednesday as the big severe weather day with our old nemesis, the western Oklahoma dryline firing off storms in the afternoon to march to the east. Each day will have specific severe weather threats in different parts of the state, however. Mostly western Oklahoma today and tomorrow, then broadening out after that to include the rest of the state. As per usual, Wednesday's severe threat is conditional on how the atmosphere evolves between now and then.
For today's threat, we'll rely on our NWS friends to tell the story.
http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/20190506/nws-norman-monday.png
http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/20190506/nws-tulsa-monday.png http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/20190506/nws-amarillo-monday.png
More rain, more flooding will be possible. The next seven days look particularly wet, especially across SE OK.
http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/20190506/7day-rain-forecast.gif
Looks like the tornado threat today is pretty low, higher tomorrow out west, then throughout much of the state on Wednesday.
Turn around, don't drown. Stay weather aware. Don't spit into the wind. Something about roller skating in a buffalo herd, etc.
Gary McManus State Climatologist Oklahoma Mesonet Oklahoma Climatological Survey (405) 325-2253 gmcmanus@mesonet.org
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