Showers moving through Houston this morning, followed by Arctic air tonight and potential for freezing rain

Originally published at: Showers moving through Houston this morning, followed by Arctic air tonight and potential for freezing rain – Space City Weather

In brief: In today’s post we dive into the timing for a second round of precipitation tonight, and when and where that is likely to transition over to freezing rain and sleet. Additionally, cloud cover is complicating the forecast for lows on Monday morning.


Precipitation overview

As of 6:30 am CT on Saturday we are seeing widespread showers, and a few thunderstorms, moving through the region. This was entirely expected, and will drop between 0.5 and 2 inches of rain for most locations. These rains are actually rather beneficial given our region’s ongoing drought, and since temperatures today will remain above freeze there is no threat of ice from them. The main mass of these showers should exit the region to the east by around 9 am, with a few lingering showers possible later this morning and into the afternoon.

Then, later this evening, another round of showers will move in from the west, and persist sporadically overnight into Sunday morning. These will exit to the east by mid-morning on Sunday. This second round of precipitation could drop 0.5 to 1.0 inch of water. Now, the question is if and when this rain on Saturday night and Sunday morning transitions over to freezing rain.

For areas along and north of Highway 105, which includes places such as College Station, Navasota, Conroe, and other locations, this transition could occur as early as 7 pm and 10 pm on Saturday evening. A little closer to the Houston metro area, for places such as Katy and The Woodlands, this transition (should it occur) will happen a little later, perhaps between 10 pm Saturday and 2 am on Sunday. Then, after midnight, we are likely to see a mix of rain, freezing rain, and possibly sleet in central areas such as Sugar Land, urban Houston, Kingwood, and so on; basically areas along and inland of Highway 59/Interstate 69. For areas closer to the coast is is possible this line of freezing rain/sleet transition continues, or it may remain just warm enough to preclude the formation of freezing precipitation.

In any case, when you wake up on Sunday morning, you will want to pay very close attention to road surfaces. For central and northern Houston there is a reasonable likelihood of a light sheen of ice, which will make driving hazardous.

Sunday

Most of the area will start out on Sunday with temperatures around freezing, perhaps a degree or two below or above. One important question is whether air temperatures rise much. I’m starting to think the answer is probably not, because skies are now likely to remain mostly cloudy during the daytime. It is therefore possible that any ice that has accumulated on roads (which again, is likely to have occurred in many locations along and north of Highway 59, and possibly further south) will stick throughout the day. However if temperatures do rise above freezing some of this ice may melt, especially with the aid of northerly winds to dry roads. Speaking of those winds, they will represent the full surge of Arctic air moving in, likely gusting up to 25 or 30 mph on Sunday afternoon. This means it will be very cold outside, even during the daytime. Temperatures on Sunday night will be tricky, because if clouds linger it will provide some limited “insulation.” Accordingly I think low temperatures in Houston will likely fall into the 20 to 25 degrees range, with upper teens to lower 20s possible to the west (Katy and beyond) and north (Spring and Kingwood) and beyond.

Monday

Ok, so will there be ice on the roads on Monday? Will the airports be effectively shut down? Will you have to go to work or school? This is the question everyone wants answered, and I don’t have anything definitive for you (except for some schools that have already shut down). I think, for at least parts of the Houston metro area, there will be ice issues on roads. It may be regional. For example, Bush Intercontinental Airport might be iced in (such that workers cannot get there) whereas Hobby Airport has more passable roads. But honestly, we could see any scenario from very limited ice impacts (excepting elevated roads and bridges) across Houston to pretty widespread impacts on Monday morning. We probably won’t have a definitive answer on this until Sunday, when we see how much ice has accumulated, and what temperatures that afternoon do. I know, I know, that’s not particularly helpful.

We do expect the return of sunshine on Monday, which is great because it should allow afternoon temperatures to rise into the 35 to 40 degree range, helping to clear roads in most locations, hopefully even our far northern areas along Highway 105. We’ll see about that. The downside of the clearing skies is that they will bring another very cold night into the city, with temperatures likely on par with Sunday night. So a hard freeze for many, if not most locations.

The rest of next week

Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of next week should be comfortably in the upper 40s and then early 50s for daytime temperatures. We still might see some light freezes, but nothing too concerning after this weekend’s mess. We should see a decent amount of sunshine. There is the potential for another Arctic front next weekend, but at this time I’m not sure Houston will see a direct shot of the coldest air. So I’m hopeful that we won’t see temperatures drop significantly below freezing. However, we’re not ruling anything out, including the possibility of a wintry mix remix. For now there’s way too many unknowns to say anything intelligent about such a forecast, however.

Saturday Q&A

I’m going to do another Q&A with readers on Facebook at 11 am CT today, so bring your most difficult weather questions and I’ll do my best to answer them. We will once again share the most commonly asked questions here, along with the answers, in a follow-up post.

Our next full update after this will be published around 3 pm this afternoon.

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“The ice does not forgive.” — Finnish Proverb

Being from Houston, TX I am going to defer to the wisdom of those from higher latitudes. So I am staying off the roads after dark tonight until the warm Texas sun works its magic on Monday.

Over the last few decades the weather models have really advanced. Personally, I think their accuracy within three days is amazing. As I prepare for this potential ice storm and almost certain hard freeze a couple of things are on my mind.

Skepticism: In the past for every potential winter storm the media has blown out of proportion only say one in 4 actually lived up to the hype. I get it, the amount of money they make is directly correlated to how many clicks, views and likes they get. SCW does a great job of trying to navigate this with sober and hype free analysis.

Nagging little voice: Travis Herzog and whomever does the “discussion” at the National Weather Service have both pointed out that this Blue Norther is coming in a little faster and a little colder than models forecast. In this type of event where time and temperature is everything as far as ice is concerned two degrees one way or the other could be the difference between a significant mess and a nothing burger.

In conclusion. Personally I am not going to take part in the hoarding at HEB but I am going to rap my pipes, fire up the generator, get enough gas for a day or two and build the best makeshift shelter I can to protect my avocado tree that has been killed back to the roots in three of the last five years due to these La Niña winter arctic blasts.

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Eric thanks for all the info and your parsing of the potential impacts from this storm. It has been much easier to figure out the timing and actions for my family and I with this info. Stay warm!

As someone who grew up in Ohio, Michigan (not “Mitchigan”), and elsewhere near the Great White North, I do have some fun with the locals who freak out whenever we get a bit of “winter” weather here. No water at HEB? Seriously folks? For a two day freeze? Put some water in a 5-gallon jug you should have in your hurricane kit. Same with little meat items. How you going to cook with no power? At least you didn’t buy all the toilet paper this time.

My relatives in Ohio are going to get a foot of snow out of this. Those in the Carolinas six inches. The ones in Maryland somewhere in-between. That’s something to be concerned about.

That being said, attic preps were done yesterday (checking pipe insulation, temporarily blocking gable events to prevent wind intrusion, and making sure ridge and soffit vents are clear for furnace exhaust). Apart from that, stay home Sunday and Monday (even though I doubt my part of town will ice significantly) and head back to the office Tuesday morning. Chill out, pun intended.

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Rapping your pipes will do no good. They don’t like the vibration from the hammer, and I understand they prefer Classical or Broadway tunes anyway.

I am a little skeptical on the ice forecast for the SE part of Houston. The roads will likely dry out by midnight, and will still be warm when the next round of rain hits at oh-dark-thirty. What worries me more is that a significant number of people here don’t know how to drive on snow or ice - even just a little of it.

And yes, the TV stations around here hype bad weather, particularly freezes, in order to scare people into watching. Some personalities are worse than others, like the ones who tell you how to dress in the morning. Up north (at least when I was up there many years ago), you just got the facts and everyone knew what to do with it. Then again, the average American is significantly dumber than 40 years ago. Thanks, TikTok.

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As an employee of a grocery store and someone who usually works at 6 am on Sundays, I rely heavily on you guys for my safety and helping me judge how to react to these things. My mother is in a nursing home near the beltway as well, and I will have to make decisions whether or not to see her Sunday after work as I normally do based on reporting. Thanks for KIR.

also, dang y’all. Work has been a tad nuts. :peanuts: :grimacing::cold_face::joy:

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Someone asked me at an old job if I could do any wrapping for them, and I replied that no, but could do a little beatboxing instead.

No smile at all. Guy had no sense of humor. :wink:

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Unfortunately I dont have FB for the QA. Ive been wondering why are people in Houston being told to stay off roads by dusk or as late as 9pm when appear as of now that that Houston area wont have freeze move on till much later. Many people now days do not work traditional Mon-Fri 9-5 jobs and I feel like everyone is so focused on Monday road conditions. Some people work late tonight, some people have older kids working at grocery stores, gas stations, movie theaters ect that will be there till they close 12am or later that want to still go in when weather states it will be above freezing till 3am or later

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We had about 3 inches of rain in little over in hour where I work in West Columbia. The little side road that runs next HEBs was under water lol

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People don’t want to be sued, especially those in the media, if they get it wrong. Politicians don’t want to be the next Ray Nagin come election time.

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I will happily eat my words again. I genuinely did not expect to see a harsh freeze and ice event this winter. I am only 31 but we used to not get these types of coldsnaps every winter like we are getting now. I do know from researching and listening to stories from my parents, that this region did used to get hit hard by Arctic fronts quite often in the 70s and 80s. There was a fairly mild period in the 90s and 2000s when we would get hit hard once every few years or so but not every winter.

We could just be in a temporary random cycle or it could be something else. I do know that our harshest coldsnaps decades ago lasted longer than some of our more recent ones.

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I grew up in Wisconsin. My hometown is currently -15 air temperature at the moment. They’re used to it, prepare for it and know how to deal with it. Here……not so much. People drive horribly here when it’s clear. Put even just a glaze of ice on the road and chaos will ensue. On top of that, not much insulation in houses, single pane windows, and the cold, no matter how long or short, will hurt. I’ve got my firewood, got my plants in the garage, and don’t really plan on going anywhere between now and Monday. Not because I don’t know how to do it, but because I don’t need to, and I don’t trust anyone else out there.

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Please Hammer Don’t Hurt ‘Em!

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A pet peeve I have here is that our el-cheapo home builders bring water in through the side of the house rather than through the slab. Growing up it went below minus 20 a couple of times and we never boke a pipe because the water entered the house from the side of the basement, about three or four feet below the ground. But here, the builders would rather save $1000 on construction costs on a $400.000 (or more) home.

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