Up here in Vermont, things aren't nearly that dire, but we will have our own share of weather trouble.
I'll start things off with how bad the national weather situation is, then get into what we will deal with in the Green Mountain State.
Spoiler: Us Vermonters should consider ourselves damn lucky compared to many other areas of the U.S.
NATIONAL DANGER
When I opened the National Weather Service home page this morning, the U.S. map already looked scary.
A tornado watch was already in effect in parts of Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas and Arkansas, with a tornado warning or two thrown in. Flood watches covered a large area of the Midwest and South.
Winter storm warnings and winter weather advisories stretched from North Dakota, through the northern Great Lakes to northern New York and northern New England.
This was just the beginning. Things will get a lot worse today. And stay really bad the rest of the week.
Tornadoes
NOAA's Storm Prediction Center had declared a relatively rare high risk severe weather and tornado danger zone in the area where Arkansas, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky and Illinois come together. This is an area with Memphis pretty much at the center A large substantial risk zones surrounded that area
"Numerous tornadoes, along with multiple long-track EF3 plus tornadoes appear likely," the Storm Prediction Center wrote this morning.
It's so bad that if I lived in a mobile home or other unsubstantial structure, I'd leave now before there are any watches or warnings. People in this area better be ready to get to their tornado shelters pretty damn quickly this afternoon and evening
The very same region most at risk for destructive tornadoes today is also the epicenter of a terribly high risk of catastrophic deadly flooding over the next few day.
Extreme Floods
Weather fronts associated with today's tornadoes will stall near the region until at least Saturday. Daily rainfall in a broad area centered near Memphis will range from three to six inches and possibly more in some spots.
By tomorrow, another rare high risk zone has been declared in Memphis and the surrounding adjacent states: This is a high risk zone for flooding, issued by NOAA's Weather Prediction Center. This means that terrible damage is pretty much inevitable. Even places that have never flooded before are at risk for inundation.
The National Weather Service office in Memphis is already calling this a "historical rainfall event."
I brought up this flood risk in a post yesterday. If anything, expected rainfall totals might even go a bit higher than the foot or more I mentioned in the previous post. This will be an ongoing thing starting today and going into next week.
Even after the rain stops by Sunday, rivers in the region will be building toward potential record crests.
If possible, people who live in low lying areas in broad zone from roughly near Little Rock, Arkansas to Cincinnati, Ohio should be getting ready to leave, and if possible, moving possessions out.
This whole thing will probably be yet another weather disaster costing $1 billion or more.
VERMONT EFFECTS
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The National Weather Service ice forecast map shows widespread ice in central and eastern Vermont. It won't be enough to cause widespread power outages but will cause some icy road conditions. |
We've got snow, sleet, freezing rain, rain, high winds, quick temperature changes and even thunder to contend with.
The winter weather advisory that was in effect for just the Northeast Kingdom has now been expanded to include all of Vermont except the Champlain Valley and the western half of Rutland County.
Even in those areas with no winter weather advisory, that burst of snow and sleet overnight will make the roads quickly get slush and snow covered and slippery overnight.
The Champlain Valley in particular is in for a noisy overnight and early morning. The snow should go over to rain after leaving maybe a dusting to 1.5 inches of snow. But the winds will really pick up.
A wind advisory has been posted for overnight in much of the Champlain Valley as gusts could go as high as 55 mph in hours before dawn. That could be enough for a few branches to come down, and maybe a couple power lines, too.
During all that wind, the rain could come down pretty heavily at times and some rumbles of thunder could mix in with all this.
Meanwhile, in eastern Vermont, the warmer air will have a harder time moving in. The initial burst of snow will give way to another batch of freezing rain overnight and early Thursday. Between the initial wet snow, the freezing rain and some winds, there might be isolated power outages there, too, but nothing widespread.
The main threat through the early part of the Thursday morning commute will be icy roads.
The rain should taper off in the morning as temperatures rocket upward into the 50s east, 60s west during the day. The afternoon shouldn't actually be all that bad.
Except: That wind advisory in especially the northern Champlain Valley will still be in effect. We expect another burst of winds, this time from the west, in the late afternoon and evening. That could cause a slight smattering of new power outages and a few more downed tree branches.
NEXT STORM
Friday looks nice, then the weekend, not so much. We'll get the tail end of that horrible flood I mentioned that's going to take place in the mid-South this weekend.
No flooding for us, but the remnants of that system will swing several waves of low pressure our way. That'll be enough to set off some occasional rain all weekend.
There could be a little snow and sleet at the onset of the new precipitation on Saturday, but this should be mostly rain. It doesn't look like it will rain hard enough to set off any flooding worries.
Beyond Sunday, the weather will turn colder. Hard to say if there will be much precipitation in that colder air, but we'll at least see some snow showers, or cold rain showers. There's a slight chance a stronger storm or two could form along the coast to bring extra snow during next week, but so far, the risk of that happening looks pretty damn low, which is great news.