Tropical Storm Arthur forms near Matagorda. Rains now ending for Houston, but coast is windy

Originally published at: Tropical Storm Arthur forms near Matagorda. Rains now ending for Houston, but coast is windy – Space City Weather

In brief: Just a short update to note the formation of the Atlantic season’s first named storm, Arthur, and what it means for Houston today. In short: rains ending, but the next several hours will be windy near the coast.


Hello, Arthur

The Atlantic season’s first named storm, Arthur, has formed less than 100 miles from downtown Houston. Although that may sound concerning, we’re here to tell you it’s really not.

Our biggest concern from this system has been the potential for heavy rainfall, but that risk is now rapidly diminishing. The bulk of the precipitation from Arthur is falling well to the northeast of its center, and most of this is offshore. The scattered showers we are seeing across Houston as of 10 am CT on Wednesday will continue to diminish. We are likely to be rain free from the middle of today through Friday evening. For this reason we are ending our Stage 2 flood alert.

The biggest impact from Arthur is being felt right along the coast. Its sustained winds have been measured at 35 mph, or higher, along Galveston Island, with some gusts up to 50 mph. This has, frankly, exceeded our expectations. Even areas as far inland as Hobby Airport have recorded gusts up to about 30 mph. These winds should start to ease by this afternoon as the center of Arthur nears Galveston and starts to move away. After that we expect calm and sunny, albeit hot, conditions on Thursday and Friday.

We’ll have a full forecast for you, per usual, on Thursday morning.

1 Like

Tropical Storm? Time to head to Spec’s…

2 Likes

Goes to show you, location and organization makes the weather.

If this was say Melissa or some other major Cane, it miiight not look this nice outside.

Spec’s would be blown to smithereens.

It’s 3:30 PM, time to close the books on Tropical Dud Arthur.

Arthur he does as he pleases…

Did Arthur shift on us? Sure looks like it’s going more north than east. Though honestly I don’t expect much from it

1 Like

It looks like there has been a shift to the north is that right of the predicted track?..or just a figment of my imagination.

Per the National Hurricane Center the track did shift to the north, but the impacts here from the shift were basically nothing.

This topic was automatically closed after 24 hours. New replies are no longer allowed.