James Spann: Warm days, pleasant nights, very little rain for Alabama
James Spann forecasts a quiet period for Alabama’s weather from Alabama NewsCenter on Vimeo.
QUIET DAYS: A strong upper high will continue to shunt most of the active rain-producing systems north of Alabama for the next seven to 10 days, meaning a quiet and mostly dry pattern for the Deep South. With sunshine in full force today, we project a high in the mid 80s for most places. The average high for Birmingham on May 10 is 81.
A weak disturbance could bring an isolated shower to the northern part of the state Wednesday, but most of the state will stay dry with a partly to mostly sunny sky and a high between 85 and 90 degrees.
Thursday and Friday will be dry with a mostly sunny sky both days; an easterly flow will bring temperatures down a bit with highs in the low to mid 80s.
THE ALABAMA WEEKEND: Moisture levels will rise slightly and we will mention some risk of isolated showers Saturday and Sunday, but the chance of any one spot getting wet is only 10-20%. With a partly sunny sky afternoon temperatures will rise into the mid to upper 80s both days.
NEXT WEEK: The upper ridge holds and the week will remain mostly dry, with only isolated showers on a couple of days. Highs will be between 88 and 92 degrees. There’s no sign of any severe weather threats for Alabama, and I think it is safe to say we are pretty much done with the 2021-22 severe weather season (it runs from November through May).HURRICANE SEASON: With the tornado season winding down, now we look ahead to the 2022 Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from June 1 through Nov. 30. Phil Klotzbach and his team at Colorado State released their outlook for the season, and they expect above-average activity with 19 named storms, nine hurricanes and four major hurricanes. Names this year are Alex, Bonnie, Colin, Danielle, Earl, Fiona, Gaston, Hermine, Ian, Julia, Karl, Lisa, Martin, Nicole, Owen, Paula, Richard, Shary, Tobias, Virginie and Walter.
ON THIS DATE IN 2010: Oklahoma experienced its largest tornado outbreak since May 3, 1999. Fifty-five twisters tore through the state, including two rated EF4. The EF4 storms took three lives and injured 81 people. Both struck Norman, Oklahoma, home of the Storm Prediction Center and the National Severe Storms Laboratory.
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