I will be at Grinder House Coffee on Saturday, March 4, from 11:00-1:00. I can program your weather radio or just chat about weather and/or space! Come on by and see me!

Severe Weather Awareness Week
Today’s topic is the importance of social media. Social media can be a great way to spread severe weather info quickly to multiple people. However, social media should never be your primary source for weather information.
Please make sure you share responsibly from a trusted source. Beware of information that contains multiple misspellings and grammatical errors, often uses capital letters incorrectly, or is reliably wrong. Make sure you know your source and make sure it’s credible.
I can assure you that it’s safe to share my social media postings on weather. I try to be as responsible as I can be. If NASA trusts me, you surely can too. 🙂
Twister

Five-Day Outlook

MM’s Wx Vlog
Weather Summary
Lots of showers and even some thundershowers will be with us for much of our Saturday. That rain is expected to move out by this evening.
Sunday looks mostly cloudy, with areas of drizzle and sprinkles.
Winds pick up Sunday night ahead of our next storm system for Monday. That system will bring a risk for a strong storm, especially north of I-40. Widespread severe weather is not expected.
Rain moves out by Monday night and that leaves us with a sunny Tuesday. That won’t last long.
By Wednesday, clouds increase and that leads to a return of showers by Wednesday afternoon and evening. Rain increases in coverage overnight and that sets the stage for what now appears to be a very wet end to the week.
Temps look to remain mild through next Friday.
12-Hour Modeled Radar
This model runs from 9:00 a.m. this morning to 9:00 pm this evening.

MM’s 24-Hour Temp & Precip % Forecast
The hourly chart begins at 9:00 a.m. this morning.

MM’s 24-Hour Rain Total Forecast for Today

MM’s 24-Hour Wind Forecast
The hourly chart begins at 9:00 a.m. this morning.

Weather Statistics

On This Day
1894- One of the most severe snowstorms in Middle Tennessee’s history produces record accumulations at Carthage (15″), Byrdstown (14″), and Franklin (11″). Lesser amounts are measured at Nashville (9.7″), Clarksville (9″), Waynesboro (7″), and Hohenwald (6.5″).
1977 – Dust reduced visibilities from eastern Virginia through the southeastern states to Florida between the 24th and the 28th. The dust originated in the western Great Plains on the 22nd and 23rd, with wind gusts above 100 mph reported at Guadalupe Pass, Texas, at White Sands, New Mexico, in Sherman County, Kansas, and in eastern Colorado.
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