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2023 Mid-Atlantic Severe Wx Thread (General Discussion)


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15 minutes ago, WxWatcher007 said:

Can I just say how proud I am of my system? Developed years ago it faced its greatest test and came through like a champ. 

Widespread and high end severe throughout the region (sorry DC lol) 

We had three out of four things on my checklist:

1.) Anomalous low pressure to our NW passing during prime heating.

2.) Strong jet streak

3.) Strong EML

4.) Strong surface heating. 

So many times we hype leading up to an event, only to have an anemic 18z RAOB out of IAD. Not so yesterday, we were about as primed as you can get for August.

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2 hours ago, Eskimo Joe said:

Per State Highway, minimum of 2 to 3 days. Have to get transformers with high enough amperage and coordinate with telecom companies to get everything re-strung.

Pain. Only other way to get home is through town and it’s a hot mess. I feel like I’m sitting in I66 traffic. 

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Kiddo and I ventured north into PA. Had to turn around once in PA and take 83 as York Rd was closed in PA. So many trees down everywhere. Numerous on houses, lots of large branches and trunks cut up along the sides of roads, power is completely out in Shrewsbury and Stewartstown. Never made it west towards New Freedom, too many roads closed. Giant and Walmart in Shrewsbury were handing out water and ice, taking cash for non perishable items. 

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It's way out there - but the 12z Euro has a sub-1000mb low pressure passing around the Great Lakes next Monday. it actually deepens it to 996mb by 6z Tuesday. There's some CAPE available Monday on the model too - with significant bulk shear as well. That bears watching. 

The 12z GFS has some threat indicated Sun and Mon but the low looks pretty different/not as deep. 

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105 mph!?! wow.

Public Information Statement
National Weather Service Blacksburg VA
638 PM EDT Tue Aug 8 2023

...NWS Damage Survey completed for the August 7th, 2023 
Thunderstorm Wind Event...

.Meteorologists from the National Weather Service in Blacksburg,
VA have completed a survey of storm-related damage in northwest 
Summers County, WV that occurred on the evening of August 7th, 
and have concluded that the damage was caused by intense straight-
line winds.

Estimated Peak Wind:          105 mph
Wind Swath Length /statute/:  8.1 miles
Wind Swath Width /maximum/:   roughly 2,000 yards
Fatalities:                   0
Injuries:                     0

Start Date:                   08/07/2023
Start Time:                   5:54 PM EDT
Start Location:               1 SW Hinton / Summers County / WV
Start Lat/Lon:                37.66/-80.91

End Date:                     08/07/2023
End Time:                     6:06 PM EDT
End Location:                 1 NW Talcott / Summers County / WV
End Lat/Lon:                  37.66/-80.76

Summary: An already strong thunderstorm over Raleigh County, WV 
continued to strengthen to severe intensity as it neared Summers 
County, prompting the issuance of a Severe Thunderstorm Warning at
5:37 PM EDT. Once in Summer County, Doppler radar briefly detected
strong rotation in the thunderstorm near the community of Jumping
Branch, prompting the issuance of a Tornado Warning at 5:58 PM 
EDT. 

First noted signs of wind damage occurred along Highway 3 just
southwest of Hinton, where numerous hardwood trees were snapped
or uprooted by the force of the winds, estimated to be up to 100
mph. One home sustained damage to both the roof and the siding in
this area. Additional damage was observed along Highway 20 just to
the north, where dozens of trees were blown down by estimated 105
mph wind gusts. The storm continued east, snapping or uprooting 
numerous trees from the community of Bellepoint eastbound along
Highway 3 following the Greenbrier River with 100 to 105 mph wind
gusts. Shortly afterward, the storm began to weaken, though still
produced significant damage to dozens of trees along Judson Road
near the community of Talcott with estimated 70-75 mph wind 
gusts. While additional reports of damage were received further 
east with this storm, this was the eastern-most extent of the 
storm survey.
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37 minutes ago, Eskimo Joe said:

As expected, SPC and NWS are out doing real yeoman's work again. AWell done.

 

I read CPT's PWS from yesterday -- lot of straight line wind damage, but they did find some clusters of intense damage in southern York they were going to investigate further today. Didn't say where, I wonder if it's the Glen Rock area. 

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5 minutes ago, mappy said:

I read CPT's PWS from yesterday -- lot of straight line wind damage, but they did find some clusters of intense damage in southern York they were going to investigate further today. Didn't say where, I wonder if it's the Glen Rock area. 

To be honest, we're fortunate the low level winds weren't more conducive for sustained rotating updrafts. Monday had the potential to be a late breaking High Risk day. Once the 18z special RAOBs went up, it was clear this was going to be a straight line wind kind of day, with embedded spin ups. This reinforces my belief that real mesoscale forecasting hinges on things like soundings, mesonets, and a well rained cadre of field spotters (SKYWARN, fire, EM, DT etc.). It's hilarious and frustrating to see DC bros cackling about how this was a complete bust because the national mall wasn't wiped off the face of the earth, while the suburbs where everyone lives were hit much harder. 

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3 minutes ago, Eskimo Joe said:

To be honest, we're fortunate the low level winds weren't more conducive for sustained rotating updrafts. Monday had the potential to be a late breaking High Risk day. Once the 18z special RAOBs went up, it was clear this was going to be a straight line wind kind of day, with embedded spin ups. This reinforces my belief that real mesoscale forecasting hinges on things like soundings, mesonets, and a well rained cadre of field spotters (SKYWARN, fire, EM, DT etc.). It's hilarious and frustrating to see DC bros cackling about how this was a complete bust because the national mall wasn't wiped off the face of the earth, while the suburbs where everyone lives were hit much harder. 

For sure. Could have been much worse than it was. My people at the dance studio were asking me all sorts of questions, what to look for on radar for tornado threats, how to read velocity. Was pretty funny to me that they actually wanted to know all the nerdy details. 

I am incredibly glad we closed Monday night, could not have imagined having a dance studio full of kids, parents traveling and such. Two other studios in the area stayed opened and we heard they had families trapped for hours because they just couldn't travel home. 

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9 minutes ago, mappy said:

For sure. Could have been much worse than it was. My people at the dance studio were asking me all sorts of questions, what to look for on radar for tornado threats, how to read velocity. Was pretty funny to me that they actually wanted to know all the nerdy details. 

I am incredibly glad we closed Monday night, could not have imagined having a dance studio full of kids, parents traveling and such. Two other studios in the area stayed opened and we heard they had families trapped for hours because they just couldn't travel home. 

Agreed. The CWG articles about how this was a bust because no tornadoes were recorded is short sighted. They should know better that damage assessments day up to 10 days and these watch boxes will more than verify.

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13 minutes ago, Eskimo Joe said:

Agreed. The CWG articles about how this was a bust because no tornadoes were recorded is short sighted. They should know better that damage assessments day up to 10 days and these watch boxes will more than verify.

They really said that? That's a shame. Just because there were no confirmed tornadoes as of yet, doesn't mean the severe threat was a bust. 

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36 minutes ago, Eskimo Joe said:

Agreed. The CWG articles about how this was a bust because no tornadoes were recorded is short sighted. They should know better that damage assessments day up to 10 days and these watch boxes will more than verify.

Luckily my area wasn’t as bad as northern MD, l’ve seen a few trees and a street lamp down in my neighborhood. That’s enough to justify the watch, had the wind been a few mph stronger that might have had been enough to cause a lot more damage

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Early next week has decent potential, as discuseed by Mount Holly this morning. 

 

Model guidance next week suggest that a strong shortwave will round the base of thee upper-low
persisting over eastern Canada, possibly phasing with it and
resulting in a more dynamic cold front passing through early
next week. That will certainly deserve monitoring for
thunderstorms, followed by high pressure bringing a cooler and
drier airmass around the middle of the week.

 

 

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10 minutes ago, TSSN+ said:

Drove up Hanover pike between Manchester and the PA line for work today and there was a good bit of damage I seen there. Trees down on houses and power lines down. Had to turn around from my original route cause the road was closed. 

Saw Mill Rd was wrecked. The storm that went through there ultimately became the tornado warned event in York County.

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12 minutes ago, Eskimo Joe said:

Saw Mill Rd was wrecked. The storm that went through there ultimately became the tornado warned event in York County.

It looked pretty bad. I seen someone’s trampoline laying in a corn field about 1000 feet from the house it used to be at. Was a wild ride for sure. When I was watching it come in it sounded like a train coming in. 

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Morning AFD from LWX about Monday's severe weather threat mentions August 7th as reference 

 

LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
A rather potent mid-upper level trough/closed low will pivot through
the eastern Great Lakes early next week pushing a strong cold
front through the region Monday night. Timing differences among
global models have diminished considerably since yesterday
indicating a sharp frontal passage across the area around 06Z
Tue per ECMWF, slower timing on the GFS. Strong height falls
(110 meter/24 hr) are fcst across the region during the day
Monday, which are similar in magnitude to what we saw this past
Mon Aug 07. Strong mid-level wind speeds will enhance the
potential for severe wx. Latest timing from Euro and GFS show
the best potential for thunderstorms later at night in the
00Z-06Z Tue time frame which may temper the severe wx risk
somewhat. Additional showers will remain possible during the
middle of next week as individual shortwaves rotate around the
mean trof, but it looks as moisture and instability will be
fairly limited. Flooding risk will remain very minimal due to
expected very fast storm motions.
 
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So to recap (for LWX region):

July 28: Corridor of significant wind damage from Frederick to Baltimore County, with a secondary cluster around the northern and eastern suburbs of DC; scattered hail and wind damage reports in NVA. (82 reports total)

https://www.spc.noaa.gov/exper/reports/?date=20230728&hoursBefore&all

July 29: Corridor of significant/major wind damage from NVA and southern MOCO through DC; scattered reports elsewhere (141 reports total; 749 nationwide)

https://www.spc.noaa.gov/exper/reports/?&all&date=20230729

August 7: Corridor of major/extreme wind damage and hail reports along and south of Mason/Dixon line (tornado reports pending?); numerous wind (and some hail) reports in eastern WVA, northern VA, and central MD; scattered reports in DC (203 reports total; 1389 nationwide)

https://www.spc.noaa.gov/exper/reports/?&all&date=20230807

(Links go to CONUS map; I drilled down to just Sterling CWA; I don't know how to make the link focus on just our area)

That about right?

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Morning AFD from LWX on the Monday evening into Monday night severe threat

 

Monday presents yet another chance for some severe
thunderstorms, particularly late Monday into Monday night. A
potent low pressure system will scoot by well to our north
across the Great Lakes region. This will be accompanied by
positively tilted and relatively deep upper trough (for August).
As this approaches from the west, expect shower and
thunderstorms to develop late Monday into Monday night. Could
see some development ahead of the primary system as well along
the lee trough due to diurnal heating as well. As usual, these
could bring some isolated damaging wind gusts. But the main
threat comes with the Monday night round. Damaging wind gusts
and large hail are the primary concerns with these storms.
Additionally, flooding can`t be ruled out, especially if the
front manages to stall near the area. Do think the deep
southerlies should push the warm front north of the area rather
quickly, but still, given 2+ inch PWATs and a lingering
boundary, there exists at least an isolated flooding threat
Monday night.
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22 minutes ago, yoda said:

Morning AFD from LWX on the Monday evening into Monday night severe threat

*Snip*

Last few Afds and guidance were kinda meh re Mon. Seems to be kinda an overnight event with a few localized boomers. Like this season imby.

(Yuck, just made a wx post…)

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Sounds like an interesting evening into overnight coming?

NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
Latest satellite imagery shows a CU field developing beneath a
mid-level stratus deck. Most of the cu south of Mason-Dixon has
been more shallow compared to the cu north into central PA.
Overall thinking through this afternoon is any storms that do
develop should be pretty isolated in nature and not last long
for any given location.

Focus then turns to this evening. There are a few main periods
of interest:

1) The northern periphery of the decaying MCS over West Virginia is
progged to move over the forecast area early this evening
(20-23Z). This will need to be monitored as it could lead to the
development of a rogue thunderstorm, which could be
supercellular given soundings somewhere across central or
northern VA.

2) The approaching frontal boundary from the northwest. While
the better forcing is indeed to the north, guidance continues to
bring convection into western Maryland and the eastern WV
Panhandle between 22-06Z. This area has the greatest potential
to see SVR wx as indicated by the slight risk from SPC. Greatest
threat appears to be wind, especially if an MCS forms upstream.

3) A small jetlet (25-35 kts) is forecast to develop near the
US-29/I-95 corridor this evening (00-06Z). There is also some
backed flow near a pressure trough at the sfc. Some guidance has
redevelopment off the aforementioned threat from above near the
nose of the jet. This makes sense if the abundant CAPE over the
Bay is advected onshore.

Otherwise, summer heat will continue today with high
temperatures in the low 90s, accompanied by a notable increase
in humidity. The addition of humidity will fuel heat indices
into the mid 90s, particularly east of the Blue Ridge and
Catoctins.
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2nd time I've seen machine learning mentioned in the LWX disco (didn't realize AI tech was already used in forecasting):

Monday continues to look like the next widespread potential for
rain and some severe thunderstorms. The one aspect of this
system different from the past few SVR events, is the better
forcing is slightly delayed from peak heading. A potent low
pressure system will scoot by well to our north across the Great
Lakes region. Guidance recently has trended slightly south with
the low. This inherently impacts the warm frontal position. The
low will be accompanied by a positively tilted and relatively
deep upper trough (for August). As this approaches from the
west, expect shower and thunderstorms to develop late Monday
into Monday night. Could see some development ahead of the
primary system as well along the lee trough due to diurnal
heating as well. As usual, these could bring some isolated
damaging wind gusts. But the main threat comes with the Monday
night round. Damaging wind gusts and large hail are the primary
concerns with these storms. CSU machine learning continues to
highlight the FA with modest SVR probs as well as SPC with a
Slight Risk for SVR wx generally west of the Blue Ridge. The
warm frontal positioning will influence the tornado threat.
Additionally, flooding can`t be ruled out, especially if the
front manages to stall near the area. Do think the deep
southerlies should push the warm front north of the area rather
quickly, but still, given 2+ inch PWATs and a lingering
boundary, there exists at least an isolated flooding threat
Monday night.
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