Archive for the ‘HW Plugins’ Category

Blizzard, Tornadoes, Flooding Oh My!

Winter Weather Warnings This Morning
Our discussions over the last week for the developing low we have christened “Bubba” are coming together this morning. Blizzard watches were issued yesterday afternoon, and Blizzard Warnings were released early this morning for eastern Colorado and western Kansas, while blizzard watches are still active for the western Texas Panhandle, and a teenie slice of central Kansas. Click the image at left, or here to see the current state of advisories in our Advisory Center.

Very impressive snow totals will accompany Blizzard Bubba as he builds in Colorado and Kansas, with snows forecast to continue along the track we discussed yesterday, and will update again tomorrow morning. The city that will likely garner the most attention in the national media is of course Denver, Colorado, where one of the lowest snow totals for the season on record of 18.8″ will change dramatically as the storm moves through.

The blizzard warning for Denver is below for your convenience:



BLIZZARD WARNING
Issue Date: 257 AM MDT THU MAR 26 2009
Expiration: 600 AM MDT FRI MAR 27 2009

MAJOR WINTER STORM MOVING INTO NORTH CENTRAL AND NORTHEAST COLORADO…

A LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM WILL STRENGTHEN AS IT MOVES FROM WESTERN WYOMING TO NORTHERN NEW MEXICO BY TONIGHT. SNOW WILL SPREAD FROM THE MOUNTAINS ACROSS THE PLAINS OF NORTHEASTERN COLORADO THIS MORNING AS THE LOW APPROACHES AND A COLD FRONT WILL BRING COLDER AIR AND GUSTY NORTH WINDS AS WELL. BY MIDDAY MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOW WILL BE WIDESPREAD ALONG WITH WINDS GUSTING AS HIGH AS 45 MPH. THIS WILL CREATE BLIZZARD CONDITIONS ON THE PLAINS AS WELL AS WIND PRONE AREAS IN THE FOOTHILLS.

CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED TO BE WORST THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING WHEN BOTH THE WINDS AND SNOWFALL WILL PEAK. CONDITIONS WILL IMPROVE THIS EVENING IN THE NORTHERN PART OF THE AREA BUT BLIZZARD CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED TO PERSIST IN AREAS SOUTH OF INTERSTATE 70 MUCH OF THE NIGHT. SNOWFALL TOTALS BY FRIDAY MORNING WILL RANGE FROM AROUND 6 INCHES IN THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE STATE TO BETWEEN 8 AND 16 INCHES IN THE DENVER METRO AREA WITH UP TO TWO FEET OF SNOW IN AREAS SOUTH AND WEST OF DENVER. THE SNOWFALL COMBINED WITH PROLONGED WINDS WILL CREATE SIGNIFICANT DRIFTING OF SNOW ON THE PLAINS.

RESIDENTS OF NORTH CENTRAL AND NORTHEASTERN COLORADO SHOULD MAKE NECESSARY PREPARATIONS FOR THIS STORM EARLY THIS MORNING. IF TRAVEL CANNOT BE COMPLETED EARLY THIS MORNING CONSIDER WAITING UNTIL CONDITIONS IMPROVE ON FRIDAY. ROAD CLOSURES ARE LIKELY LATER TODAY AND TRAVEL WILL BE HAZARDOUS WHERE IT IS STILL POSSIBLE.


Thunderstorms and Tornadoes
Yesterday we mentioned that severe weather would occur for at least the next few days in the southeast, and today we can extend that for another day. We also mentioned the possibility that the SPC might extend their convective outlook to a moderate risk instead of slight risk, but that did not occur. However, at least 8 tornadoes have been reported so far, and in the city of Magee, MS various AP reports state that at least 60 houses were damaged and one church destroyed. A good reference article on the developing story is from FoxNews.com. Storm assessment reports are not available yet for yesterday’s storms, the local NWS office that covers Magee and the surrounding area is out of Jackson, and their site is here.

Update: The Clarion Ledger out of Jackson, Mississippi reports that Governor Haley Barbour has officially declared a state of emergency for many counties affected by yesterday’s severe storms, and that a “path of substantial damage” was noted for the Magee tornado that “… tore through the north side of town.” Other reports and pictures are available with the Clarion Ledger article.

Click the image at right or here to view storm reports by type and date. It is handy when viewing storm reports to choose the “range selector” under the date toggle forms, and choose “past 2 or 3 days” to ensure the relevant information you seek is pulled up from the database.

Storm Reports – Click For Live Data

Rivers & Lakes Center – Click for Live Data
Flooding
The national media has given respectable coverage to flooding that is and will continue to occur in the Dakotas and Minnesota. Not to “toot our own horn” but a fantastic reference for river conditions and flood outlooks is our River Center.

As you open the link, scroll down until you see the map and notice “River & Lake Stage Conditions”, with the scale of “Normal (color green)” to “Major Flood (color purple),” and also the Outlook thumbnail in the right menu. For this example I advise clicking the boundary between North Dakota and Minnesota.

After doing so hold your mouse cursor over the large purple dot just south of Fargo, and notice the flyout that says “Red River of the North… Stage 38.67 feet – Major Flooding.” Then click the dot. I chose this for you since it is garnering the most media attention.

Now what comes up is action stages and flow information for the river, then below a Forecast of projected river stages, and historical data. Note that currently (current is highlighted when you scroll down) we are at 38 feet + but as we move forward in time, a peak of 41 feet is forecast to occur by 1pm on Saturday, March 28, and continue at that level through next Tuesday March 31, and then very slowly begin tapering off, remaining at a major flood stage through April 2, a week from today.



Please be sure to view our Advisory and Radar Centers for the latest updates and developments.

As always stay tuned to your favorite weather outlet, stay informed, and stay safe!

cheers,

–patrick

Snow & Mixed For Texas & Ahead For TN – Mid Atl. States – Cooler Temps Ahead

Forecast Precipitation Type (3.5 Day)

Forecast Precipitation Type (3.5 Day)

Forecast Minimum Temperatures (7.5 Day)

Forecast Minimum Temperatures (7.5 Day)

Forecast Precipitation Type (7.5 Day)

Forecast Precipitation Type (7.5 Day)


The snow we’ve discussed for Texas over the last few days is beginning to come together as the NWS has finally issued a Winter Weather Advisory running from Lubbock south through Midland and into the Rio Grande valley.

To see how things have developed over our last few discussions, let’s begin with our short range (3.5 day) Precipitation Type Animation. Recall that this animation forecasts out through 84 hours, at three hour intervals. Each frame in the animation represents a 3 hour window prior to and ending at the valid time, represented by the timestamp on the bottom. It shows that if precipitation where to occur over that three hour window, what form might it take. Users often find that stopping the animation via the controls on the bottom, choosing “first image” and advancing one frame at a time via “forward one” to be the most useful implementation of the product.

Our first frame for our 12z run today is the F003hr forecast, valid 11am EDT this morning. Notice the remnants of our blizzard centered between the provinces of Ontario and Quebec. We wish them luck! Rains are forecast over the lower reaches of the northeastern states, with snow in Maine, verified by our Radar Center this morning. Rains are also forecast, and verified extending from southwest Texas, and running in a generally east northeast (ENE) direction through the Midwest.

Click the “forward one” button a few times until you reach 2am EDT tomorrow (Thursday) morning and watch what happens. Rains are forecast to continue for most of Texas, the monster ridge (1044mb) of high pressure remains centered over the northern Plains, and little specks of snow and mixed precipitation begin showing up over teh southern Panhandle and southwest Texas. Elsewhere things are generally quiet.

At 5am EDT a pocket of snow is shown from around Amarillo south to Big Spring Texas with blotches of mixed beginning to appear over central Oklahoma and Northern Arkansas as overrunning begins to occur with an impulse forecast to slide through. By 8am tomorrow morning we see the expected elongated swath of snow and mixed precipitation stretching from Amarillo ENE through Oklahoma, Northern Arkansas, and touching the western extent of Tennessee. This coincides with the Winter Storm Watch and Winter Weather Advisories issued by the NWS for the region.

Through 2pm EDT tomorrow, our band of precip is expected to extend from Oklahoma and beginning to touch the extreme western extent of Virginia so that by 2am on Friday morning it is finally forecast to reach the Atlantic coastline with a band of snow and mixed extending from just north of the bootheal of Missouri, through Kentucky, Western Virginia, and central and northern Virginia, through southern Maryland and out to sea.

By 8am on Friday morning, the morning commute will be unpleasant for most of the areas mentioned above, with the change being that the western extent of snow and mixed precipitation is forecast to run from Bowling Green, Kentucky ENE through southern Maryland again, with rains extending on the southern flanks of the system.

Notice on F051, 11am EDT Friday morning, that the snows from the Rockies of Colorado and New Mexico begin extending out into southeastern Colorado, eastern New Mexico, and extend into the Texas Panhandle again. Advance 1 more frame to 2pm EDT where most of southestern Colorado and into western Kansas, northeastern new Mexico (nearly to Roswell), and the panhandle have a wider swatch of snow forecast to fall.

By the time the commute home arrives 5pm EDT, snows are expected over from northern Virginia, eastern West Virginia, through most of Maryland and southern New Jersey, with the possibility of mixed in the elevated regions of western Virginia, and western North Carolina. And the Panhandle through northeastern New Mexico, and southeastern Colorado are under the gun for the possibility of snow again.

By 2am on Saturday, the last frame of snow for the Panhandle of Texas, with a blotch in the flatlands of New Mexico, and a blip in the mountains from Taos through Santa Fe show up so that by 8am we see some specks and spots show up in SW Texas and the Panhandle again.

For the Pacific Northwest things are generally quiet until F066 Valid 2am on Saturday morning where snows are showing up just north in British Columbia heading towards Vancouver, where by 8am Bellingham and Port Angeles Washington show chances of snow and by 11am Saturday precip begins moving in with snows in the Cascades and rains in the lower terrain.

For the last few frames of our animation at F081 & F084 valid 5 & 8pm EDT on Saturday snows continue for the PNW extending into the northern Rockies and elevated regions of Arizona and New Mexico are also under the gun. The balance of CONUS (Continental United States) is fairly quiet with general rains forecast to occur in the southeast.

So are there any major snow events forecast to occur after next Saturday? Well let’s look at our Medium Range Forecast Precipitation Type Animation to see. Start basically where we left off above at F090 Valid 2am EDT on Sunday morning. Here we see the snows we previously discussed showing up for the PNW, with a blip of snow in Colorado and New Mexico. For the rest of CONUS we see rains possible running from southern Texas through the Mid-Atlantic states.

By 8pm next Sunday we see the usual rains for the PNW with snows in elevated terrain, a 984mb Low over British Columbia with another “Dodge City” low trying to form at 1008mb (1008 isn’t much to speak of as mean sea-level pressure is 1013.2mb), with the big ridge of high pressure sitting betwen Ontario and Quebec.

It does become a little interesting at F156hr 8pm next Tuesday evening (March 18) with a low pressure beginning to descend from Canada towards the northeastern states, where by 8am snows are forecast to fall from New York State through Maine, and by our last frame F180hr Valid 8pm on Wednesday most of the Northeast shows snow, as well as the PNW.

Now we’ve talked about the cP airmass embedded in the middle of the nation, or the monster ridge of high pressure. So what does that mean for temperatures in our future. Well let’s take a look at our Medium Range Forecast Minimum Temperature Animation and see. Recall this product forecasts out through 180 hours or 7.5 days, at 6 hour intervals, and each frame represents a 6 hour window of time where the lowest temperature forecast to occur 6 hours prior to and ending at the valid time, represented by the timestamp on the bottom.

The first frame from our 12z run, F006hr is valid at 2pm EDT today. Notice the huge swatch of 0ºF and below in the northern tier, and the thin red line that represents 32ºF (Temperature of Interest = TOI) extending from the Panhandle of Texas to the northeast. The south does snow pockets of general warmth, but also notice that the thin blue line (TOI) that represents 72ºF is no where to be seen.

Advance all the way through 2pm EDT on Friday, and the vast majority of the nation is still below freezing, with only small pockets of warmth in Florida and other areas of the deep south. However, by Saturday F084 valid 8pm EDT things start to get a little better as the nasty cold starts moving out and seems to stay away all the way through until our last image F180hr valid 8pm EDT on next Wednesday, March 18th.

I don’t see any tornado outbreaks or massive thunderstorms in our immediate future, so the snow event discussed above for Texas through the Mid-Atlantic states, the snow coming into the PNW, the shorter term cooler temperatures turning into warmth over the weekend and through next week, and the upcoming snow for the northeast next week seem to be the main features of interest at the moment.

Of course the flooding we discussed yesterday will still be an issue for the midwest, view our Rivers & Lakes Center for constant updates and complete information.

Please be sure to view our Advisory and Radar Centers for the latest updates and developments.

As always stay tuned to your favorite weather outlet, stay informed, and stay safe!

cheers,

–patrick

p.s. as an FYI here are some warnings currently issued in Canada for our blizzard that moved into the country.

LG Quatre - Laforge and Fontanges
11:38 AM EDT Wednesday 11 March 2009
Blizzard warning for
LG Quatre - Laforge and Fontanges continued

Wind, snow, cold temperatures and blowing snow will combine today to
create blizzard conditions over these areas.

An intense low pressure system over James Bay this morning continues
toward extreme northern Québec. As this low pressure system passes,
high southwest winds are expected over the St Lawrence Valley this
afternoon and over western regions, temperatures will drop and
snowsqualls will occur.

Closer to the low pressure system, blizzard conditions are occuring
with high northwest winds and extreme wind chills.

Over eastern Québec, strong east winds and snowfalls will reduce
visibilities beginning on this afternoon.

LG Quatre - Laforge and Fontanges
11:38 AM EDT Wednesday 11 March 2009
Severe wind warning for
LG Quatre - Laforge and Fontanges continued

Southwest winds will reach 90 km/h in the St Lawrence Valley
beginning on this afternoon. Over northern Québec, northwest winds
will reach 90 km/h beginning on this afternoon.

An intense low pressure system over James Bay this morning continues
toward extreme northern Québec. As this low pressure system passes,
high southwest winds are expected over the St Lawrence Valley this
afternoon and over western regions, temperatures will drop and
snowsqualls will occur.

Closer to the low pressure system, blizzard conditions are occuring
with high northwest winds and extreme wind chills.

Over eastern Québec, strong east winds and snowfalls will reduce
visibilities beginning on this afternoon.

LG Quatre - Laforge and Fontanges
11:38 AM EDT Wednesday 11 March 2009
Wind chill warning for
LG Quatre - Laforge and Fontanges continued

The arrival of Arctic air will cause extreme wind chill conditions
over these areas beginning this evening.

HW3Rivers 1.1 Plugin Updated

We have released HW3Rivers 1.1 for HW3php.

This updates corrects several issues with the importing of the observations and a few other items, including:

  • Fixed issue in the HWFetchRivers.php that was decrementing the forecast year on a month roll over.
  • Added optional_integration for users who want to add a rivers tab to locations who have rivers data with in X miles of the location the forecast is for. You can also follow the documentation to add the closest river data to the almanac area (similar to the tides plugin)
  • Corrected the HWFetchRivers.php to allow setting “maxdistance=20″ in the “[RIVERS]” section of config. This allows you to control the mix distance to look for rivers when calling the plugin with out a river gauge or when calling to get the near by rivers
  • corrected some style issues in the templates/riversnearby.html and templates/include/rivers_nearby.html templates
  • corrected paths in the riversmap.html template that was incorrectly referring to a buoys directory for the zoom in/out icons
  • Corrected path issue in the riversimportobs.php
  • Added support for following redirection in riversimportobs.php
  • Made adjustments to riversimportobs.php to correct issues with some servers not working properly on the first call
  • Made adjustments to riversimportobs.php to correct issues with some servers giving warnings for some curl items and functionality in safe mode.

Download: Plug-ins Store
If already purchased: Members Area

Documentation:
HTML: http://www.hamweather.com/hw3/docs/hw3php/plugins/HW3_rivers
PDF: http://www.hamweather.com/hw3/docs/hw3php/plugins/HW3_rivers/HW3_rivers.pdf

Support: http://support.hamweather.com

HW3Tides 1.1 Plug-in Released for HW3php

In the continuing effort to provide timely updates, we have released HW3tides 1.1 for HW3php.

This update corrects several time zone issues that were in the original release, including:

  • Fixed issue in the tides.html where the incorrect Timezone name variable was used. changed %%tzname%% to %%loctzname%%
  • Fixed issue in HWFetchTides.php to support daylight savings time for tidal locations.

Download: Plug-ins Store
If already purchased: Members Area

Documentation:
HTML: http://www.hamweather.com/hw3/docs/hw3php/plugins/HW3_tides/
PDF: http://www.hamweather.com/hw3/docs/hw3php/plugins/HW3_tides/HW3_tides.pdf

Support: http://support.hamweather.com

There will be an additional update with in the next month that will include the 2009 tidal predictions.

HW3Cacher Script 1.4.2 released for HW3php

In the continuing effort to improve upon the capabilities of the HW3cacher, we have released HW3cache 1.4.2. 

The main goal of this update is to improve the resource handling and bandwidth usage. The script now supports returning a 304 Not Modified header to browsers that request the same page/data multiple times before the cache has expired. This lowers total resource usage and on high volume sites can greatly lower total bandwidth consumption.

Some of the changes included in the new version include:

  • Improved mime type handling
  • Improved handling of “mod_rewites” within the user rules.
  • Added support for improved cache control and ETAG headers for “if not modified since/#)$ not modified”.
  • New HWCheaders array in the script allows additional custom headers to be added as needed.
  • several other bugfixes and improvement tweaks.

 
Downloads Via Plugins Area: http://support.hamweather.com/dload.php?action=file&file_id=169

Documentation:
HTML: http://www.hamweather.com/hw3/docs/hw3php/HW3Cacher_php/
PDF: http://www.hamweather.com/hw3/docs/hw3php/HW3Cacher_php/HW3Cacher_php.pdf

Support: http://support.hamweather.com