Fort Worth. After a relatively dry weekend, North Texas is in store for severe thunderstorms and possible hail this week. Conditions will be calm on Monday, Jan. 27, and Tuesday,
Thunderstorms Wednesday night may cause heavy rainfall, the weather service predicted on Monday. Temperatures are expected to warm up during the week with daytime highs in the 50s and lower 60s and overnight lows moderating to 40s and low 50s by mid-week.
North Texas is likely to see a three-day stretch of bone-chilling cold starting Sunday, according to the National Weather Service.
The National Weather Service issued a cold weather advisory for North and Central Texas, with wind chills as low as 5 degrees.
Over the last 127 years, North Texas has recorded numerous experiences with snow events that have become significant events in the region’s weather history, according to the National Weather Service.
The NWS Fort Worth TX issued an updated cold weather advisory at 11:26 p.m. on Tuesday. The advisory is for Montague, Cooke, Grayson, Fannin, Lamar, Young, Jack, Wise, Denton, Collin, Hunt, Delta, Hopkins,
Following unusually cold temperatures Houston, Texax is expected to get more rainfall, according to the National Weather Service (NWS). Houston residents have been braving colder-than-average conditions in recent weeks because of a broad weather pattern bringing rare winter weather to parts of the South.
January has produced some amazing and unbelievable weather patterns across the U.S. The lower elevations of North Idaho continue to struggle for snow as only 8.4 inches have been measured at Cliff’s station in Coeur d’Alene for the season to date.
Alligator expert Gary Saurage explained on Instagram how gators in Texas are handling the frigid temperatures in Texas this winter, saying they ‘poke their heads through the ice’ to take ‘about one breath every minute.
Dangerous below-freezing temperatures with even colder wind chills were also expected to last over much of the week in the region.
FW. Rain chances (20%) will enter the forecast late Saturday and continue into Sunday, Jan. 26. Sunday holds a 40% chance of showers and storms, with the
R​oads were still closed Thursday morning after a historic winter storm hit The South, bringing inches of snow to areas not used to seeing any snowfall at all. D​rivers in Southeast Louisiana were urged to continue to stay off the roads on Thursday morning,