| Wildfire entering neighborhoods in Woodward, Oklahoma on Tuesday. Wildfires and dust storms have plagued the central and southern Plains since yesterday. |
And that wild weather season is off with a big bang with a variety of scary weather going on around the nation.
That weather action beganwith extreme wildfires in the central and southern Plains, dust storms, and drought-denting snow in the Rockies, feet of snow in the Sierra and a West Coast that has abruptly turned soggy after a month and half of uncharacteristic wintertime dry and warm weather
The new weather pattern is at least easing the harshest winter weather the eastern United States has seen in years or even decades. But the cost of this is dangerous storms that will eventually extend nearly coast to coast.
WILDFIRES/DUST STORMS
Wildfires raced through parts of northern Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas on Tuesday. One of the fires forced nearly 4,000 people to evacuate their Woodward, Oklahoma. Four firefighters have been injured so far.
The Woodward County fire demolished three structures, including two a U.S. Department of Agriculture facility.
One fire started in the Oklahoma panhandle and spread into Kansas, consuming 155,000 acres. Video showed large fire whirls moving rapidly across the dry landscape and thick towers of smoke looming overhead.
The storminess out west has helped produce strong, dry southwest and westerly winds across the Great Plains, which are already in drought.
The winds died down slightly today, but not all that much, The fire threat hasn't gone away. A broad zone from eastern New Mexico to South Dakota and on to Iowa and Illinois are under a fire risk today. To give you a sense of how chaotic the weather is in the Plains, southern South Dakota is under a fire alert today, while the northern part of the state, less than 100 miles away, is under a blizzard warning
Wildfires are raging in Florida, too. A combination of drought, sunny, breezy weather and freezes earlier this month have turned the state into a powder keg. One fire in Vero Beach, Florida started from an illegal burn and threatened several homes.
Back in the Great Plains, dust storms also raged on Tuesday, especially in Texas, eastern Colorado and western Kansas and Nebraska.
A dust storm on Tuesday along Interstate 25 near Pueblo, Colorado cut visibility and caused a 30-vehicle pileup. The crash killed four people and injured 29 others.
Winds gusted to 68 mph in Amarillo, Texas and the relative humidity dropped to 13 percent.
WESTERN STORMS
The storms shut down in California around the first of January, and pretty much no precipitation fell until this week.
These new storms are easing fears that the lack of rain and snow might allow drought to start creeping back into California.
The Sierra Nevada mountains are part way through a series of dumps that will leave several feet of new snow behind. Some areas of the Sierra Nevada area had three feet of snow within 24 hours.Blizzards shut down all highways crossing the Sierra Nevada mountains, including heavily traveled Interstate 80.
Nine back country skiers are missing and six were rescued following an avalanche near Lake Tahoe.
Video from Soda Springs, California, showed near zero visibility in heavy snow and blowing snow, The snow looked like it was accumulating very fast. Fox Weather had a chaotic report from the Heavenly Ski Resort in the Sierra amid almost zero visibility and a mess of stuck vehicles.
There's an excellent YouTube channel called Tahoe Mountain Life that gives you just what the title says. Today's video on that channel gives you a great idea how things are like in this mountain blizzard.
The UC Berkeley Snow Lab in the Sierra Nevada reported 29.3 inches of new snow in 24 hours and 57.5 inches within two days. Another two to three feet of snow is expected there by Friday.
The snow level has dropped to 2,000 above sea level, which is quite a bit lower than it usually is. That
means more roads are either closed or dangerous for inexperienced winter drivers.
A couple more feet of snow might fall up there by Thursday night. It should stop snowing temporarily Friday, but more mountain snows should arrive Saturday and continue into the middle of next week.
The heavy snow has been pushing eastward along the Canadian border through North Dakota, northern Minnesota and northern Michigan. Heavy snow with thunder and lightning over Duluth, Minnesota.
SEVERE WEATHER
As if all this wasn't enough, a flash of severe weather is likely tomorrow in Indiana and parts of Illinois, Ohio and Kentucky. There could even be a tornado or two. That's pretty far north to have a tornado this time of year.
