In brief: Today we recap severe weather in Texas earlier this week, as well as take a look ahead to some temperature whiplash. Plus, a major winter storm will target the north, while the West prepares some of the hottest March weather ever recorded there.
Sorry for the lack of posting Sunday through Wednesday. In a word, I was wiped out and consumed by other priorities. So! You get a Thursday afternoon post instead.
Texas!
Quick recap of Texas severe
Just a quick recap of what we saw in Texas, with storms on Tuesday and Wednesday. Tuesday and Tuesday night saw some significant severe storms across central and western Texas. One particularly potent storm tracked from about Del Rio, as they often do, east-northeast to Comfort. Hail as large as 4.5 inches (grapefruit size) in diameter was reported near Leakey and Camp Wood in Real County on the way.
That storm also briefly produced a tornado east of Del Rio in open land. Another storm produced a brief tornado southeast of Abilene.
That storm later also produced some pretty big hail in Stephens County, with baseball size hail reported. All in all, it was a fairly active day with some locally significant impacts in parts of Texas.
I will point you to Alan Gerard for a recap of the storm with the *insane* hail in Illinois that tracked into Indiana as well on Tuesday. Numerous other hail reports occurred on Tuesday across the Central U.S. as well.
Looking forward in Texas
It looks quiet now through about Saturday in Texas with nice, albeit hot weather. In fact, the state will see multiple record highs threatened on Saturday the 14th, including a forecast high of 90° in Abilene (record is 91°), 90° in Midland (record is 89°), and 86° in El Paso (record is 85°). Those 90s will spread into Central Texas on Sunday the 15th.
A cold front will push into the state on Sunday afternoon and evening, and that could produce some thunderstorms, mainly east of I-35 and south of I-20. These storms could have gusty winds, but severe risks look minor at this time and confined mainly to the Piney Woods. But that is going to usher in quite a change in weather on Monday, with highs only in the 60s in Houston and maybe the 50s in Dallas.
A late winter treat (or trick, I guess if you like hot weather early!) Rest assured, by later next week it should turn hotter again.
Winter’s return to the North
For Minneapolis, the largest 2-day snow total this winter was 7.6 inches back in February. If the European model is to be believed, as an example, they could blow that away this weekend. A major winter storm is going to cut across the North. While the details are still being sorted out, this storm will likely bring a stripe of very heavy snow to somewhere from eastern South Dakota, southern Minnesota, northern Wisconsin, northern Michigan, and central or northern Ontario and Quebec.
This storm is likely to produce blizzard conditions somewhere in that corridor as well, with very strong winds in addition to the heavy snow. Some severe weather is possible south of the wintry part of the storm from Iowa, across the Midwest and Ohio Valley and into parts of the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic.

Bottom line: Winter is not over, and this could be one of the biggest storms of the season.
Western Heat
You’ll note in the map above that California and Arizona are highlighted in the hazardous heat section for St. Patrick’s Day through the 19th. That is part of a burgeoning heat wave that is going to deliver the potential for dozens of record highs and record warm lows, damagingly early snowpack melt, and a longer-term increase in wildfire risk to the West.

From Tuesday through Friday next week, it’s conceivable that we set multiple records for highest March 500 mb heights on record in the West. While this area has experienced a lot of extreme heat events in the 2000s, this one is particularly impressive given the confidence and geographic coverage it will have. The current forecast in Phoenix brings highs to 102° by Wednesday. The earliest 102° day in Phoenix occurred on April 6, 1989. This would beat it by at least 2 weeks.
There’s a legitimate chance that Phoenix hits 105° at some point next week. The 97° forecast in Las Vegas next Wednesday would also be the earliest there on record, beating the 1989 event as well.
This is going to begin a quick melt of a very unstable and modest snowpack. Every water basin in the West is already below normal on snowpack, or snow water equivalent.

The word “decimate” is appropriate here, and given the extremely contentious and risky Colorado River negotiations and situation, the strain is only going to worsen and stakes only increase higher.





























