Wild weather across the country with hazards from snow to severe weather to wind to record temperatures

In brief: A massive storm is impacting most of the eastern half of the country today and tomorrow with hazards ranging from possibly record snow to fire weather to strong winds and severe weather. Meanwhile, the West is likely to see arguably the strongest early season heat wave ever recorded there begin this week.

There is a whole bevvy of issues across the country this weekend. Let’s walk through them.

Severe weather Sunday

The Ohio Valley and mid-Mississippi Valley are under an enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) today for severe storms, as are portions of Georgia, Alabama, and the Florida Panhandle.

An enhanced risk (3/5) covers a wide swath of the Mississippi Valley and Lower Ohio Valley. (NWS SPC)

While there may be an early element of tornado risk with the storms today, the primary concern will be damaging winds as a line of potent storms cruises south and east later today and tonight. Wind gusts of 50 to 70 mph are likely in the stronger storms, along with an isolated tornado. This should be a QLCS type system, which tend to be notorious for damaging winds in spots and brief “spin up” tornadoes that can cause narrow corridors of damage.

Severe weather Monday

That line of storms will move east of the Appalachians on Monday. What should occur is development of showers and thunderstorms over the Carolinas in the later morning and early afternoon, racing south to north. An additional squall line (another QLCS) will push into the Mid-Atlantic in the afternoon hours. You’ll see severe weather with this, including the potential for damaging winds with the squall line and a somewhat higher-end tornado risk, particularly in the Carolinas and Virginia. As such, a moderate risk (level 4/5) has been issued for the Mid-Atlantic.

Damaging winds and isolated tornadoes will be a serious concern Monday from the Carolinas into southern Pennsylvania. (NOAA SPC)

We don’t see too many moderate risks in this region. In fact, the last day 2 moderate risk from Richmond north appears to have been in 2013. South of there, it appears to be 2021.

Blizzard conditions

On the northern edge of this storm, a massive snowstorm is going to bury parts of Wisconsin and the U.P. of Michigan.

Upwards of 1 to 3 feet of snow is possible in the Northwoods of Wisconsin and the U.P. of Michigan. (NWS)

The snowstorm has backed off a good bit for parts of western Wisconsin and Minnesota based on recent model runs. But it has definitely escalated for the U.P. Surprisingly, the 2-day snowfall record in Marquette, Michigan is 31.9 inches in March 1997, almost 29 years to the day. We could blow past that with this storm.

Northern Michigan will also see significant snow. (NWS Gaylord)

The 2-day snow total in Wausau, Wisconsin may also be threatened (22.1 inches in March 1959). Notice how these big snow records seem to align in March. Some of winter’s biggest storms happen in March. The northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan is going to be right on the edge of more nuisance (6 to 12 inch) snows and significant (12 to 24+ inch) snows, including Traverse City through Sault Ste. Marie.

Blizzard warnings are hoisted from the U.P. back west into southern Minnesota, almost all of Iowa, and parts of the Dakotas and Nebraska. While snow totals will be lower to the west, the winds may be stronger. Wind is the main component of Blizzard Warnings, as the criteria are falling or blowing snow, wind gusts, and low visibility. Snow intensity and amounts are not considered.

Wind and fire weather on the Plains

On the backside of this storm, high wind warnings and red flag warnings are in effect now.

Widespread 60-65 mph wind gusts are expected from the Texas Panhandle into Nebraska. (Pivotal Weather)

Fire weather looks especially concerning in the Texas Panhandle and New Mexico. There is a critical fire weather risk there, and the Texas A&M Forest Service forecast fire weather risk for today is extreme in those areas.

Critical fire weather risk is posted for New Mexico and most of West Texas. (NOAA SPC)
Fire danger as forecast for Sunday by the Texas A&M Forest Service. (TAMU Forest Service)

With this area in drought, the combination of dry fuels, low humidity, and strong winds makes today and parts of Monday important fire weather days in this region.

Cold weather behind the storm

While the cold behind this storm won’t be too extreme, a few records are at risk in the Midwest, Mid-South, and Southeast tomorrow and Tuesday mornings. In addition, frost and freeze advisories and warnings are posted across the Southeast and Mid-South as the growing season has started in some of these areas.

Tuesday morning lows will be quite cold in the Southeast, with frost likely in spots and a freeze likely as you creep northward. (Pivotal Weather)

Cold will be short-lived as we see a big warm up into next weekend. Temps will stay fairly cool in the Northeast and Lakes.

Western heat wave

As noted last week, a pretty epic, if not historic heat wave is going to clamp down on the Western U.S. this week. Hundreds of record highs will fall this week in the West, including numerous monthly records and numerous “earliest first” records for 90s and 100s.

Phoenix, AZ temperature forecast from NWS this week, including the earliest 105+ on record. (Weather Bell)

In San Francisco, the monthly record temperature is 85 degrees. That will be threatened on more than one day.

San Franciso forecast temperature forecast from NWS for this week. (Weather Bell)

Even Salt Lake City is likely to break past their March temperature record of 80 degrees.

Salt Lake City NWS temperature forecast for this week. (Weather Bell)

This is going to be one of the most intense, if not the most intense early season heat waves in the West on record.

The weather pattern should calm down some later this week and next weekend.

A late Texas weather round-up, winter’s return to the North, and a blistering heat wave on deck in the West

In brief: Today we recap severe weather in Texas earlier this week, as well as take a look ahead to some temperature whiplash. Plus, a major winter storm will target the north, while the West prepares some of the hottest March weather ever recorded there.

Sorry for the lack of posting Sunday through Wednesday. In a word, I was wiped out and consumed by other priorities. So! You get a Thursday afternoon post instead.

Texas!

Quick recap of Texas severe

Just a quick recap of what we saw in Texas, with storms on Tuesday and Wednesday. Tuesday and Tuesday night saw some significant severe storms across central and western Texas. One particularly potent storm tracked from about Del Rio, as they often do, east-northeast to Comfort. Hail as large as 4.5 inches (grapefruit size) in diameter was reported near Leakey and Camp Wood in Real County on the way.

That storm also briefly produced a tornado east of Del Rio in open land. Another storm produced a brief tornado southeast of Abilene.

That storm later also produced some pretty big hail in Stephens County, with baseball size hail reported. All in all, it was a fairly active day with some locally significant impacts in parts of Texas.

I will point you to Alan Gerard for a recap of the storm with the *insane* hail in Illinois that tracked into Indiana as well on Tuesday. Numerous other hail reports occurred on Tuesday across the Central U.S. as well.

Looking forward in Texas

It looks quiet now through about Saturday in Texas with nice, albeit hot weather. In fact, the state will see multiple record highs threatened on Saturday the 14th, including a forecast high of 90° in Abilene (record is 91°), 90° in Midland (record is 89°), and 86° in El Paso (record is 85°). Those 90s will spread into Central Texas on Sunday the 15th.

Sunday’s forecast highs with numerous 90s in Texas. (Pivotal Weather)

A cold front will push into the state on Sunday afternoon and evening, and that could produce some thunderstorms, mainly east of I-35 and south of I-20. These storms could have gusty winds, but severe risks look minor at this time and confined mainly to the Piney Woods. But that is going to usher in quite a change in weather on Monday, with highs only in the 60s in Houston and maybe the 50s in Dallas.

Monday’s forecast highs with numerous 50s in Texas. (Pivotal Weather)

A late winter treat (or trick, I guess if you like hot weather early!) Rest assured, by later next week it should turn hotter again.

Winter’s return to the North

For Minneapolis, the largest 2-day snow total this winter was 7.6 inches back in February. If the European model is to be believed, as an example, they could blow that away this weekend. A major winter storm is going to cut across the North. While the details are still being sorted out, this storm will likely bring a stripe of very heavy snow to somewhere from eastern South Dakota, southern Minnesota, northern Wisconsin, northern Michigan, and central or northern Ontario and Quebec.

(NWS Twin Cities)

This storm is likely to produce blizzard conditions somewhere in that corridor as well, with very strong winds in addition to the heavy snow. Some severe weather is possible south of the wintry part of the storm from Iowa, across the Midwest and Ohio Valley and into parts of the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic.

The day 3 to 7 hazards map identifies areas of severe risk, strong wind risk, fire risk, heavy snow risk, heavy rain risk, and heat risk. A lot! (NOAA)

Bottom line: Winter is not over, and this could be one of the biggest storms of the season.

Western Heat

You’ll note in the map above that California and Arizona are highlighted in the hazardous heat section for St. Patrick’s Day through the 19th. That is part of a burgeoning heat wave that is going to deliver the potential for dozens of record highs and record warm lows, damagingly early snowpack melt, and a longer-term increase in wildfire risk to the West.

The probability of record high March 500 mb heights in the West is nearly 100% next week, which is an astounding ensemble forecast this far in advance. (Polarwx.com)

From Tuesday through Friday next week, it’s conceivable that we set multiple records for highest March 500 mb heights on record in the West. While this area has experienced a lot of extreme heat events in the 2000s, this one is particularly impressive given the confidence and geographic coverage it will have. The current forecast in Phoenix brings highs to 102° by Wednesday. The earliest 102° day in Phoenix occurred on April 6, 1989. This would beat it by at least 2 weeks.

Phoenix’s forecast looks more like late May than mid-March. (Weather Bell)

There’s a legitimate chance that Phoenix hits 105° at some point next week. The 97° forecast in Las Vegas next Wednesday would also be the earliest there on record, beating the 1989 event as well.

This is going to begin a quick melt of a very unstable and modest snowpack. Every water basin in the West is already below normal on snowpack, or snow water equivalent.

The entire West has below normal snowpack, and the upcoming record March heatwave will decimate the already fragile snowpack. (USDA)

The word “decimate” is appropriate here, and given the extremely contentious and risky Colorado River negotiations and situation, the strain is only going to worsen and stakes only increase higher.

The Monday Texas weather round-up featuring some very wet weather north into the Ohio Valley

In brief: Despite the blizzard and cold weather in the Northeast lately, it’s been mostly warm across the country, with some serious warmth this week as well. A much more active pattern will establish over the middle of the country, including in Texas where heavy rain and severe weather are possible later this week.

Happy Monday, folks. We are now in the throes of meteorological spring. Why the difference between meteorological spring (Mar 1-May 31) and astronomical spring (Mar 20-Jun 21)? Convenience, mostly. And consistency. Astronomical seasons don’t always follow the same dates each year, though they’re fairly close, as they’re tied to the Earth’s tilt and the alignment of the sun over the Equator. So when you hear meteorologists talk about spring, we’re talking about the months of March, April, and May.

And to that end, it has felt like deep spring across much of the country. Over the last week, over 2,000 warm temperature records (max and min) have been set compared to 275 cold records. Over the next 7 days, we have additional record warmth expected, perhaps peaking this Friday where dozens of warm temperature records may be set from the Great Lakes into the South.

Record warmth will be common this week, peaking on Friday in the Lakes, Midwest, Ohio Valley, and South. (NOAA)

Most of the record highs are forecast pretty close to the current records for the date. Some of the record warm lows are already well above their records right now. For example, Binghamton, NY is forecast to be 45 degrees on Saturday morning compared to the record warm low of 39 degrees set in 1974. Detroit is forecast to be 51 on Saturday, compared to the record of 47 set in 2012. It takes a lot to forecast record temperatures that far in advance, but it’s going to be that sort of warm period this week. The only cool part of the country right now looks to be New England, and even that will disappear by midweek.

With warm air is going to come precipitation, and the potential exists for a healthy amount of it from Texas (more below) into the Mid-Mississippi Valley and Ohio Valley. Current rainfall forecasts over the next 7 days are anywhere from 2 to 5 inches across the region.

Rainfall over the next week is expected to exceed 3-4 inches from North Texas into Arkansas with locally higher amounts possible from Texas into the Ohio Valley. (Pivotal Weather)

In addition, there will be some severe weather possible in the Central U.S., with a couple of days highlighted between North Texas and Missouri.

A slight risk (2/5) is posted for Wednesday between the DFW Metroplex and the Missouri/Arkansas border. (NOAA SPC)

It appears that this active weather pattern is likely to persist beyond this week into next week as well, so prepare to start hearing about at least the risk of flooding eventually.

Texas weather this week

Focusing in on Texas, we know two things about this week: It will be a pattern change to stormy and will continue to be quite warm. Beyond that, we still have some questions to answer

Rainfall/Storms

First, over the course of the week, it will become increasingly stormy over parts of the state. Beginning Tuesday night, we could start to see a couple thunderstorms develop in the Panhandle and north-central plains of the state. Into Wednesday afternoon and evening, the chances of storms spread to the east, and parts of North Texas and East Texas are highlighted in severe weather risk for Wednesday.

Severe weather risk ranges from marginal (1/5) to slight (2/5) from parts of Hill Country through DFW to the Red River on Wednesday. (NOAA SPC)

This includes the Metroplex. I wouldn’t be shocked to see a couple stronger storms just outside this highlighted area too, down into Hill Country. Additional rounds of storms should follow Thursday, with a focus drifting back into West Texas. Strong to severe storms may attempt to develop again on Friday in Central Texas up into North Texas.

Severe weather risks shifts west on Thursday, then back to North Texas on Friday. (NOAA SPC)

More numerous showers and thunderstorms may affect the area from the Permian Basin into northeast Texas on Saturday. Active weather should continue in much of the state after this, perhaps with the exception of El Paso and the Panhandle.

All told, total rainfall is going to vary widely across the state. Most areas outside of El Paso and the Big Bend and Panhandle should see at least a half-inch of rain. Areas from about Laredo and Del Rio northward into San Antonio, Austin, Waco, and Dallas should see at least 1 to 2 inches of rain. I would expect at least an inch on either side of that in Hill Country, the Piney Woods, and College Station through Victoria. Embedded within those areas of rain will be isolated higher amounts. Some places could easily see 5 or 6 inches of rain or even more before all is said done. Consider the map below an average for what to expect across the state.

The average total rainfall should be highest in North Texas and northeast Texas, but there will almost certainly be isolated areas in Hill Country or the Valley that see higher amounts. (Pivotal Weather)

Currently, most of Texas is not highlighted in any WPC risks for flooding. That being said, we’ll almost certainly see a few areas of flash flooding pop up. There will be a healthy amount of atmospheric moisture available in the state from Wednesday through the weekend, so these storms should have little trouble tapping into the heavy rain potential if they align themselves appropriately. The state has been so dry lately though that most of this rain will be beneficial.

Temperatures

It’ll be quite the warm week across Texas, with highs expected to be in the mid-80s in Houston, low to mid-80s in Dallas, and mid to upper 80s in San Antonio and Austin. Temperatures will be a little bouncier in West Texas, with Wednesday and especially Saturday looking cooler.

Austin forecast temperatures this week look more like mid-May than early March. (Weather Bell)

Last week’s hottest temperatures in the major Texas triangle cities were 86° on Friday in Houston, 84° in Dallas on Saturday, and 88° in Austin on Wednesday and Saturday. San Antonio wins the prize for first triangle city to 90 degrees, hitting 95° on Thursday. This was the 5th hottest temperature observed in winter in San Antonio going back to 1886.

One of the hottest winter days on record occurred in San Antonio last week. (NOAA/ACIS)

Corpus Christi’s 95 degrees on Thursday was their third hottest winter day on record. Laredo’s 103° was the hottest winter temperature on record there, tying the mark hit in 2011 and 1986. A preliminary all-time U.S. hot record for winter was set on Thursday at Falcon Dam in the Valley at 106°. The data is preliminary and has to be vetted for accuracy before we can officially put in the books.

The hope is that some of this rain will reach drought-stricken parts of the state. South Texas needs it desperately.

Recapping the mammoth Blizzard of 2026 and looking at how snowfall and model output varied

In brief: Today starts with a lot of statistics recapping the blizzard. We then jump into a more nuanced narrative showing how these types of storms unevenly distribute snowfall. After, model performance in the 1-2 days ahead of the storm is assessed, and the results are fascinating.

Blizzard recap

The blizzard that raked the Northeast and parts of the Mid-Atlantic will go into the history books as a first-ballot hall of fame storm. For southeastern New England, this storm rewrote the records. Prior to yesterday, Providence, Rhode Island’s biggest snowstorm came in the Blizzard of ’78 (which if you recall we mentioned before this storm). In that one, they received 28.6 inches of snow. Going forward, the bar has been raised 9 inches higher. Providence finished with 37.9 inches of snow yesterday, a single day and storm record going back into the early 1900s. Incredible. They weren’t alone.

(NWS WPC)

The 37.9 inch total in Warwick (TF Green Airport, Providence’s official obs site) is a preliminary state record for Rhode Island. The current record is 30 inches in Woonsocket from the Blizzard of ’78. Before a state record is certified, it needs to undergo a pretty rigorous investigation on how measurements were obtained, quality of siting, quality of measurement, timing, location, etc. The last certified state record snowfall occurred in 2013 in Connecticut, when Ansonia had 36 inches. A more recent candidate from Milton, Florida’s 9.8″ in January 2025 has not yet been certified to my knowledge.

I figure it’s as good a time as any to take a second and look at the all-time record snowfalls in the Northeast Corridor.

Richmond’s record has been established since 1940. Washington’s biggest storm remains the Knickerbocker Storm of 1922. Baltimore established their record in 2016’s “Snowzilla” storm. Wilmington, DE set their record in 2010’s Snowmageddon. Philly through Newark remains Blizzard of ’96 territory. Central Park also set their record in 2016. Bridgeport, CT won their record in the 2013 storm The Weather Channel dubbed “Nemo.” Hartford’s record was established in January 2011. Providence has a new benchmark, and Boston set theirs in Presidents’ Day II in 2003. Interestingly, every major city north of DC had their record established in the last 30 years (one notable exception is Albany, which is still led by the Blizzard of ’88…1888).

Snow disparities and model performance

We often think about nor’easters and East Coast storms as monoliths. The big storms were the Blizzard of ’96, the Presidents’ Day blizzard of ’78, Snowmageddon, the March 1993 Superstorm, etc. But as our technology has improved to be able to analyze these systems, we’ve learned so much more about how complicated they are. We’ve always known storm track was important; that much is obvious. But in the last 20 years, we’ve really latched on to understanding how banding and gradients, these finer-scale features within nor’easters can really amplify snow totals in some spots. You can see that in this storm too.

Click to enlarge the image above comparing radar precipitation estimates to snow totals. (NOAA/NSSL/NWS)

In the maps above, which you can enlarge by clicking on the image, I compared a few areas of relatively higher snow totals compared to areas around them. That’s the map on the left. It’s imperfect because reports are not evenly or equitably distributed or entirely finalized, but there is enough there to give you the general picture. To the right is the radar estimated precipitation. I narrowed the scale to exaggerate the differences and to try and tease out some relatively higher values. If you look at the overlap between the higher totals we saw in southeast New England, Long Island, the NYC Metro, and between Trenton and Philly, those do correspond to higher radar estimates as well. The location and “noise” from the Doppler sites makes this a little more challenging, but there’s enough “there” there. Those areas were more likely to trip 2.25 inches of radar estimates than in other areas. Delaware could also be included here I think as well, and the radar totals there are much higher due to warmer temps and some mixing.

So within the storm, these mesoscale banding features establish and sometimes pivot, and you get these corridors of amplified snow totals, not a monolithic slew of snowfall. You can see that in 1996 as well, though with somewhat less clarity than you can see today.

(NOAA CPC)

You can see the terrain effects in Maryland and the Virginias, as well as where the “megaband” setup along the Northeast Corridor between Philly and Morristown.

So with all this nuance, how did the models perform this go around? It’s tough to say who “won” per se, but clearly this was a general GFS victory, as it sniffed it out and kept it held even as the Euro got wishy washy. But, let’s focus on precipitation totals. Here were the global model forecasts from Friday morning’s model runs.

24 hour precipitation from 18z Sunday through 18z Monday for (clockwise from top left) the GFS, Euro, AIGFS and Euro AIFS. (Tropical Tidbits)

I had to take 24 hour precipitation in this case because there was consequential precipitation Friday that would have polluted this map. But you can see that the GFS, although somewhat overdone in terms of total liquid did correctly pick up on the relatively higher totals we saw in Delaware, Long Island, and southeast New England. The Euro was much too dry. Their AI counterparts did similarly, though in the Euro’s case, it looks like the AI model somewhat outperformed the physics-based model. Again, here was the total precip in that same 18z-18z 24-hour period.

Total liquid precipitation estimates from the Blizzard of 2026. (NOAA NSSL)

If we look at how some of the shorter-range models (NAM, HRRR) did on Saturday morning/afternoon, as well as the Euro, in a time you’d expect to have the storm nailed down, we see some interesting things.


24 hour precipitation from 18z Sunday through 18z Monday for (clockwise from top left) the hi-res NAM, classic NAM, Euro operational, and HRRR. (Tropical Tidbits, NOAA)

First, I had to struggle to find an adequate HRRR image, so I settled on the one from NOAA. Secondly, let’s assess this. The NAM’s hi-res 3km version? Not terrible. It highlighted southeast New England, Long Island, and the heavier stuff near Delaware. The classic NAM? A little overdone in Jersey. Recall, we saw the peak totals showing up ahead of the storm in Ocean and Monmouth Counties in NJ. In reality, those locations did about as well as the whole corridor from there into New York City and Long Island. But overall, it did okay. The HRRR is a little tougher to lean into with poor granularity, but generally speaking it handled itself ok, though it slightly overdid the 2-inch totals. It nicely highlights Rhode Island relative to the rest of New England though. And the Euro continued to struggle here.

It will be interesting to see why the Euro floundered with this event so much more than some other modeling. Even with a 6-hour lead time on Sunday it still dropped the ball on precip totals and was outdone by the GFS in most cases and even by its own AIFS model. On that last point, it is encouraging to see the AI modeling handle a storm like this fairly well.

The same 24-hour precipitation forecast as the ones above except from last Tuesday from the European AIFS model. (Tropical Tidbits)

You can see that the signal was quite robust on the AIFS with that Tuesday morning run. Now, to be fair, it did lose it that night and did not really fully recover til Friday, though it showed correct trends in the runs between. Still, it stabilized faster than the Euro operational. I’m not going to call this one a “win” for AI modeling, but it was an encouraging overall performance that shows where it has strengths and value when used in conjunction with other model output, even at short lead times. Had you noticed this, noticed the Euro wavering, and noticed the consistency in the NAM modeling, any questions of uncertainty would have been allayed somewhat on Saturday. Easier said than done however, and Northeast snowstorms remain one of forecast meteorology’s most difficult challenges.