Tropical Storm Arthur's center moved near Houston on Wednesday evening. So why didn't we feel it?

Originally published at: Tropical Storm Arthur’s center moved near Houston on Wednesday evening. So why didn’t we feel it? – Space City Weather

In brief: We talk about why, when Arthur’s center was closest to Houston on Wednesday evening, its winds died off. Also, we look ahead to calmer and hotter conditions for the next couple of days, and some rain chances over the weekend.

Looking back at Arthur

Can we agree that it was an odd storm?

Here’s the National Hurricane Center forecast for the position of its center at 4 pm CT on Wednesday, along with a track forecast.

I received a couple of messages yesterday afternoon from readers asking if they should be concerned about this updated track because, as you can see, the center of the storm is forecast to pass directly over Houston on Wednesday evening. And if this were a typical tropical storm or hurricane, the answer would be yes. But I replied no, nothing really had changed with our forecast because the winds and rains associated with Arthur were located hundreds of miles to the east

In the graphic below you can see that the winds in Bay City, where the “center” of Arthur was located at the time, were almost dead calm. And while there were some fairly strong wind gusts at the time associated with Arthur, they were a couple of hundred miles distant from the center of circulation.

This can happen with weak tropical systems that have fairly poor defined centers of circulation. But it made for an odd situation on Wednesday during which Arthur’s strongest winds came several hours before the center of the storm itself arrived. A similar phenomenon happened with its rains, which were even further removed from the center.

Anyway, Arthur has dissipated and we can all hope this is the only named storm that makes “landfall” in Texas this year.

Thursday

We’re going to see a much calmer day. Mostly cloudy skies this morning should give way to mostly sunny skies this afternoon, with high temperatures reaching the low- to mid-90s for most of the Houston metro area. With dewpoints near 80 degrees, the humidity will be something fierce. Winds will be from the south at about 10 mph today, gusting up to 20 mph this afternoon. Low temperatures tonight probably will not fall below 80 for most of the region, so prepare to sweat. Rain chances are basically zero.

Friday

This should be a similar day to Thursday in terms of temperatures and humidity. There may be a few more clouds in the sky. By Friday evening a weak front (it won’t make it to Houston) will be dropping down from north Texas. This could serve as a focus for some isolated showers and thunderstorms from Friday evening into Saturday.

Saturday and Sunday

I expect skies to be partly to mostly sunny this weekend, with high temperatures generally in the lower 90s. Where we have some uncertainty is in the rain department. The aforementioned dying front could generate some additional showers and thunderstorms on Saturday in the Houston region, perhaps most likely north of I-10. I would put overall rain chances at about 40 percent during the morning and daytime hours, but I don’t have supreme confidence in the forecast at this point. There is a higher likelihood of Sunday remaining rain free.

Next week

By the end of the weekend we should see high pressure taking control of our weather, and this will hold sway for much of next week. We are looking at a sustained stretch of sunny skies and high temperatures in the mid-90s. It won’t be peak summer by any means, but it will likely be the warmest period of weather so far this year for Houston. These temperatures will also coincide with some of the longest days of the year, so be sure and use Sun protection.

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Mid 90s with high humidity? Bring back the tropical storm.

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:sweat_droplets: :smiling_face_with_sunglasses: :smiling_face_with_sunglasses: :sweat_droplets:

Was this really a tropical storm?I was watching the weather channel yesterday afternoon and they were asking the same question

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Wow is it disgusting outside.

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I guess I can’t complain too much. It has been a realitively mild start to summer this year albeit, quite muggy with the constant onshore wind and excess moisture in the ground. However, there hasn’t been any scorching, record heatwaves yet, and our area has been completely removed from the drought. We were also able to escape massive widepread flooding from TS Arther, with hundreds or thousands of homes flooding, another win.

Heck, some of our summers from the 90s and 2000s had a rougher start than this one did. Sadly, it looks like we are now entering the turning point back into modern day summer hell. :sun::fire:

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Yeah it was a strange storm indeed. I remember about 10 am ish, a few sharp windgusts started briefly battering my area and then everything went dead still. Like SCW said, sometimes the winds and rain can be far removed from the center of circulation with these weak disorganized systems. They become lopsided in a sense.

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Today is Houston’s first Heat Advisory or Extreme Heat Warning since August 22, 2024.

Yes, last summer was rare in that we didn’t have a single Heat advisory, which was the first summer that’s happened since 2014.

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Yes I remember feeling really lucky that we didn’t have any extreme heat index values last summer. Last summer was more of an “old school” summer. I knew we would not have that same luck this year.

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Right now. 97F in the URBAN CORE. Dew point = 80F. Sunny with fluffy clouds. Southerly breeze. All very ordinary. But we’re not under a ridge and the barometer is <29.7 inHg. Extraordinary.

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97 with a dewpoint of 80 is not normal, that is like a heat index of 118 or so.

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According to weather.com, the heat index in the rio grande valley is nearly 130 degrees. Is that possible??

And Lockhart in central Texas has 123 heat index.

It’s definitely hot out there. Me and the AC are getting real chummy while I’m driving around doing deliveries. You can see the haze a bit too!

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Ha TL missed the point….we’re not even in the pressure cooker yet.

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