August heat continues, and we finally answer our most asked questions

Originally published at: August heat continues, and we finally answer our most asked questions – Space City Weather

In brief: In today’s post we discuss our ongoing heat and decent rain chances, as well as a new tropical blob in the Gulf (which is not at all an issue for us). Also, we’re excited to share our first stab at a list of regional weather web sites, for other locations, that are similar in tenor to Space City Weather.

Regional weather sites (and other notes)

One of the most frequent questions we hear at Space City Weather goes something like this: “I’m moving to [insert destination] and I’m trying to find a weather blog there just like Space City Weather. Can you help?” Unfortunately, short of a handful of destinations we really could not.

So over the last few months our Dwight Silverman has been digging for independent, locally focused sources weather information. To qualify these sites also need to provide quality information (surprise, there’s a lot of junk out there) and be regularly updated. The end result of this is a page, which we will regularly update, that provides links to recommended regional weather sites. We welcome suggestions for sites to add, which you can provide at this Discourse comment thread.

While we are discussing site housekeeping notes, I also want to remind readers to make sure you’ve downloaded the latest version of our app. We think we have finally solved an issue that led to crashes on some iOS devices. Additionally, don’t forget that we’ve migrated our comment system over to Discourse. The goal is to make it easier for us to moderate conversations, highlight thoughtful contributions, and cut down on off-topic noise.

Tuesday

If your child is heading back to school today, rain showers have remained offshore for the most part this morning. So we’re left with a warm, and humid start to the school year—as is often the case during August. Skies will be mostly sunny this afternoon, allowing highs to reach the mid-90s for most of the region. Far inland areas may nudge up into the upper 90s, whereas coastal areas will top out in the lower 90s. Some scattered to isolated showers will be possible later this morning and into the afternoon hours, but I would put overall chances at only about 30 percent. We may see a few isolated downpours, but for the most part these should be light to moderate rains. Winds will be light. Lows tonight will only drop to around 80 degrees.

Speaking of tonight, the Perseid meteor shower peaks on Tuesday night, with the optimum time for viewing from 1 am to 5 am on Wednesday morning. We should be in luck with largely cloud-free skies, but a waning Moon will unfortunately provide some unwanted extra light. As always, viewing a meteor shower is best far from bright city lights.

Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday

The story remains largely the same for the rest of the week, with high temperatures generally in the mid-90s, mostly sunny skies, and spotty rain chances. Most of us probably will see at least some shower activity this week, especially closer to the coast. But for most of us accumulations will be at or below 0.5 inch. Nights (of course!) remain warm and muggy.

Saturday, Sunday, and beyond

As high pressure expands westward this weekend, we may see a few more high temperature readings in the upper 90s. But we should also still see some scattered daily shower chances, perhaps on the order of 30 percent daily. All in all, it should feel like a typical August weekend, which is to say hot, mostly sunny, and very humid. This pattern will likely continue into the start of next week.

Atlantic tropics

As expected, we are seeing the tropics come to life. Tropical Storm Erin formed on Monday, and this probably will become the season’s first hurricane within a couple of days. Erin is expected to track north of the Caribbean Sea. And while there is a non-zero threat that the storm moves toward the southeastern United States (probably less than 10 percent), at this point the biggest concern I have is in regard to Bermuda about one week from today. To be clear: there is no threat to the Gulf from Erin.

Speaking of the Gulf, there is a yellow X there this morning. However, as Matt pointed out on The Eyewall last night, there is a mountain of wind shear in the western Gulf right now, and the eastern Gulf isn’t exactly hospitable either. So this is just a run-of-the-mill surface trough interacting with warm water and hot, humid Gulf weather, producing lots of thunderstorms. It should slowly lift away from Texas toward the northern Gulf coast. So not at all a threat locally.

Forecast looks great for keeping the high temps down as the kiddos get back to school!

It’s always scary to vacation this time of year but your Tropics forecasts are giving me hope and will help me enjoy my vacation! Thank you!

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Thanks, Dwight! It will be useful to be able to find reliable weather sites for other parts of the country.

One question I have about the new comment system is, what is the quickest way to access it? Aside from having a bookmark to go straight to the discourse page, it seems like you have to scroll to the bottom of a post, click to open the comments, then scroll to the bottom again and click to continue the conversation.

Is there a faster way? It might be nice to have a hyperlink to it at the top of the blog or something.

Great questions. The Discourse software tracks what you’ve read, so navigating back to where you left off ought to be pretty quick. Here are a few ways that might get you what you want:

  1. As you noted, the daily posts on SCW and E/W will always have a link at the bottom to go directly to that post’s discussion thread. If it’s the first time you’ve been to that thread, it’ll start you at the very top; if you’ve already visited the thread before, it should drop you off right at the last post you read, with a “Last read” marker showing you where to pick up.

  2. You can hit the forums directly by navigating to (or bookmarking) https://spacecityweather.discourse.com. Or, if you want to start directly at the Space City Weather or The Eyewall categories, you can bookmark https://discourse.spacecityweather.com/c/scw/ or https://discourse.spacecityweather.com/c/ew/ to go directly there.

  3. If you want to keep an eye on conversations as they happen, you can navigate to the “latest” page, which will show all threads in chronological order. Same deal as before—if you’ve never clicked on a thread before, you’ll be taken to its beginning; if you have clicked on it before, you’ll be taken to your last read message.

Maybe! Do you mean a hyperlink to the day’s discussion thread, or a hyperlink to the SCW Discourse front page?

It’s been kinda cool having Jupiter “revolving around” Venus for the past week or so on my morning runs. Very prominent in the early morning sky the past couple of days.

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Thank you for the suggestions.

I was thinking like adding a hyperlink to the top bar of Space City Weather that goes to the Discourse forums; on the same row as Home/About Us/About Our Sponsor/etc.

Analogkid84,

Yes, I’ve been photographing this Jupiter/Venus conjunction the past several days. Will try to upload some from this morning.

Mmmm, nope. System here keeps giving error messages. Maybe uploading images isn’t allowed.

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Good call—I’ll raise that with @Eric!

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@PLSVN— you can’t upload images on your first post (it’s an anti-spam thing), but you should be able to now!

anyone catch the farmers almanac predicting a colder and wetter winter for texas?

@rflores23 Not specifically the farmers almanac, but I have seen some discussion about the polar vortex weakening this coming winter and a colder, snowier eastern U.S.

as a long time Houstonian, this summer reminds me of summers past - 2007-11 ish timeframe where anytime we hit ~100, we’d get some rain and the temp would fall down into the 90s. This i thought was “usual”. Am i wrong?

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