Winds whip, as more unsettled weather begins to arrive in the Houston area

In brief: The word for the weekend is windy. We’ll see 30 to 40 mph wind gusts at times through Saturday, before things calm a bit by early next week. The weather will turn unsettled, with variable chances of daily showers and storms well into next week. We’ll likely see isolated activity today and slightly better rain coverage on Sunday and Monday.

Today

Hold on to your hats, folks. Wind gusts started picking up yesterday afternoon, up to about 30 mph or so. We will likely see that again today, perhaps most of the day this time. Wind will be the most noticeable element over the next few days. A few showers or even a thunderstorm are possible later this afternoon, with the highest chances north of Houston. Highs will be into the 80s once again.

A couple showers or even a thunderstorm will be possible into the first half of the overnight hours tonight.

Saturday

Saturday just looks like another windy, warm, humid day. Winds should be at their strongest on Saturday, with gusts as high as 35 mph or even stronger over the water.

Wind gusts of 30 to 40 mph are likely on Saturday across most of the area, with rough seas and bays. (Pivotal Weather)

Highs in the 80s, lows in the 70s.

Best of luck to any IRONMAN participants or MS 150 riders. We think Saturday will have that solid southeast or south-southeast (mostly) tail wind, at times 30 to 40 mph. For those less seasoned MS 150 riders, please exercise caution with some of the gusts you’ll experience.

Sunday and Monday

Winds will slowly subside on Sunday, but we should still see plentiful 20 to 30 mph gusts. It’s beginning to look as if a line of thunderstorms will develop in Hill Country in the predawn hours Sunday, sweeping east and southeast while weakening. They may fire back up as they approach the Houston area in the afternoon hours. Details on this are still somewhat TBD, but a couple hours of heavy rain, gusty winds, and lightning are a good possibility anywhere in the area Sunday afternoon. Severe weather can’t be entirely ruled out, but it’s not highly likely for Houston.

This will be something to watch for MS 150 riders, as the storms could be better organized crossing I-35 and approaching the Brazos Valley and College Station. It will have to be a Saturday or Sunday gametime decision in all likelihood.

Monday will see additional chances at scattered showers and storms. Whether it’s hit or miss activity or something more widespread and organized remains to be seen.

Another round of highs in the 80s and lows in the 70s are expected both days.

On average, rainfall through next week should be around an inch in Houston, less toward the coast, and more north and northwest of the city. There will be a lot of variability in these totals, however and higher amounts are a good possibility in spots. (Pivotal Weather)

Rest of next week

We will likely continue with daily shower and storm chances into next week. Some days will have better rain chances than others, but because there’s a lot of quick moving traffic in the upper atmosphere, it’s a little difficult to try and time when a disturbance will hit and produce storms here. The good news is that the severe weather risk continues to look mostly north of our area. We will continue with fairly stable temps and high humidity, with highs in the 80s and lows mainly in the 70s.

Flash flooding a good possibility in some spots northwest of Houston later today

Summary: We are hoisting a Stage 1 flood alert for areas northwest of Houston that should see heavy rain later today. Street flooding is a good bet in those areas. Houston and points south and east will see substantially less rainfall. Things quiet down and cool down tomorrow.

Good morning! We covered the forecast mostly fine yesterday, but now that things are in focus, we can fine tune some details for you for today. First off, we are going to issue a Stage 1 flood alert on our Flood Scale for areas northwest of Houston. This means that we expect street flooding in spots, and it’s possible that we see some decent rises on some of the creeks or rivers in those areas. We could see enough rain to impact the Spring or Cypress Creek watersheds, among some others with rises or minor flooding. Also, the larger river systems north or northwest of Houston (Brazos, San Jacinto, Trinity) could see some decent rises.

We have established a stage 1 flood alert, meaning street flooding is possible to likely in spots for areas northwest of Houston. Flooding is unlikely south and east of Houston, and there will be an extremely sharp cutoff in rain totals. (Pivotal Weather)

Unique about this particular setup: Areas south and east of Houston may see minimal rainfall. Some places may even see no rain at all.

Here are a few more notes about this event.

Timing: There are already a few showers south of Victoria moving toward Matagorda, and through early afternoon a handful of isolated showers are possible. Most folks will be fine though. Between about 2 and 6 PM, we expect more isolated showers or storms anywhere in the area, eventually focusing northwest of Houston by evening in the areas of concern noted above. If you’re attending the Dynamo game this evening, I’m not too worried, but don’t be entirely shocked if it rains a bit or there is a brief lightning delay at some point. The worst rains north and west of Houston will be from about 6 PM through midnight, with everything eventually getting pushed east overnight and out of the area by morning. Some clouds or light rain will be possible Sunday morning.

Rain totals: You can see the forecast above, but there are risks. Houston and points south and east will see an inch or less, probably less than a half-inch in most spots. As you progress north and west from Downtown Houston, we should quickly see totals of 1 to 3 inches. In extreme northwest Harris County, Montgomery County, portions of Waller County, and north of there, expect 2 to 4 inches. A few locations in those areas will likely see 4 to 7 inches of rain, if not a bit more. This is where we are most concerned with flooding.

An NWS Houston graphic laying out the risk of flooding and higher rain totals northwest of Houston tonight. (NWS Houston)

Again, there will likely be a sharp cutoff between 1 to 2 inch rains and minimal rain somewhere in the Houston area.

And Sunday? Cooler! Look for breezy conditions and temperatures stuck in the 60s for most of tomorrow. Some light rain or a few showers may linger in the morning, with gradual PM clearing. Overnight lows into Monday morning still look to be in the 40s and 50s.

Monday morning lows will probably require a light jacket! (Pivotal Weather)

Should anything serious change, we’ll update you later. Otherwise, just stay safe and make sure you stay weather aware, especially northwest of Houston later today.

Pleasant weather is in sight for a couple days, but first Houston must deal with some rain and storms this weekend

Summary: Cooler weather is in sight as we head later into the weekend. Before that, it will be warm to hot and humid, and there will likely be heavy rain and strong storms north and northwest of Houston on Saturday evening. If you’re traveling north and west toward Austin, Waco, or Dallas Saturday afternoon or evening, use caution.

Today

We hit 88 degrees yesterday in what felt like an early summer preview. Expect more of the same today, though we could shave a couple degrees off yesterday’s temperatures with more clouds possible. An isolated shower or storm is possible, much like we saw yesterday across the area. This would be most likely in the afternoon hours.

Saturday into Sunday

The forecast gets more interesting here. As of now, Saturday morning looks warm, humid, but otherwise fine. An isolated shower or storm is possible from late morning into early afternoon. By mid to late afternoon, storm coverage should increase. Here’s how we expect it to go right now.

Storms could develop in the Houston area, along and north or west of US-59/I-69 after 2 to 3 PM. I suspect those storms will lift north and west a bit and eventually line up robustly between about College Station and Huntsville. There is some signal within the models of training storms up that way, so rain could continue to repetitively cycle over the same areas a bit. Eventually, as the front plows south and east, all of those storms will come with it. That should sweep back through the Greater Houston area between midnight and 5 AM or so. It will continue to progress east and out of our area on Sunday.

Rain totals will vary this weekend, with the highest amounts likely north and northwest of Houston, where as much as 3 to 5 inches could fall, leading to some flash flooding. (Pivotal Weather)

How much rain? I think we’re going to see a lot of variability, truthfully. From Houston south and east, probably a half-inch or less, unless the overnight storms pack more punch than we currently expect. Within Houston and the immediate suburbs north and west (Katy through Cypress and The Woodlands), we will probably see anywhere from a quarter-inch to an inch or more in an isolated spot or two. Farther north and west, along a line from about La Grange through College Station through Huntsville, rain totals will likely average 1 to 3 inches, and I would not be the least bit shocked to see someone end up with 5 inches or even a little more out of this. Flash flooding is a definite possibility up that way, and if you’re traveling between Houston and Dallas, Waco, or Austin tomorrow afternoon or evening, just be aware of this potential.

On Sunday afternoon, things should clear out, and the humidity will take a plunge.

Saturday’s highs will again be in the 80s, with morning lows in the 70s. Temperatures should drop into the 60s with the storms Sunday morning before recovering back to near 70 degrees in the afternoon. It will be noticeably cooler and breezy.

Next week

Monday looks absolutely spectacular for late April. Expect lows in the 50s (or even a handful of 40s!), highs in the low to mid-70s, and plentiful sunshine.

Monday morning will be one of our last truly cool mornings until autumn. (Pivotal Weather)

Tuesday should be similar humidity-wise but a touch warmer with lows near 60 and highs around 80 or a little hotter. The weather pattern may get a bit more unsettled for late week. Along with very warm highs well into the 80s to perhaps near 90 later next week, each day will have a slight chance of showers or thunderstorms. Details are still TBD. I don’t want to speculate a ton on next weekend yet, with plenty of big athletic events on tap. I don’t think the MS 150 riders will be enduring much of a headwind, but the rest of the forecast is up in the air. More to come.

A calm, mostly pleasant weekend settles in for Houston before at least a chance at our first 90 next week

Summary: Quiet weather continues through the weekend before we eye up some heat and rain chances again later next week. There’s about a 40 to 50 percent chance we hit our first 90 degree day of the year next week.

Today through Sunday

After a wild Wednesday morning, things calmed down dramatically as expected yesterday. After another cool morning, we should warm back up into the 70s or near 80 degrees this afternoon. Humidity will remain low, and winds will be lighter than Thursday.

For Saturday, look for more sunshine with clouds, morning lows in the 50s, and highs sneaking back above 80 in most spots away from the coast. We should notice a lot more humidity and more clouds around on Sunday. The morning will start out noticeably milder, with low temperatures only in the mid-60s. Expect to see highs in the low to mid-80s under partly sunny skies.

Monday

Things start to change a bit Monday. One thing we will notice is more wind. Breezy conditions set in probably by Sunday but on Monday, they’ll nudge up a little with gusts over 30 mph at times and stronger at the coast and southwest of Houston.

Wind gusts of 25 to 35 mph will be likely on Monday, with even some higher gusts possible at the coast and down toward Matagorda Bay. (Pivotal Weather)

Morning lows will be well into the 60s and highs in the 80s. Rain chances remain low. I do expect to see some additional clouds on Monday, and as is often the case with an influx of humidity in springtime, some showers or sprinkles can’t be entirely ruled out.

Tuesday through Thursday

The chance of rain remains pretty low in the Houston area for most of next week because we expect to see a pretty robust capping inversion in place over the region. This implies that in a layer in the atmosphere, temperatures will actually warm as you go up. This creates what is basically a block in the atmosphere to limit cloud growth and thus reduce rain chances. This is common in spring in Houston and is why we see far less really severe weather than our neighbors to the north and west in the Plains. While things could change, for now expect isolated showers, a slight chance of a thunderstorm, and otherwise partly to mostly cloudy skies into Thursday morning, with increasing rain chances thereafter.

From Tuesday (above) and especially into Wednesday and Thursday, we expect high temperatures to flirt with 90 degrees in much of the area, along with humidity. An early summer preview. (Pivotal Weather)

Otherwise, it’s going to get warm with an early summer preview. Right now, we have about a 40 to 50 percent chance to top out at 90 degrees in Houston officially on Wednesday or Thursday. Parts of the Rio Grande Valley should push 100 degrees as well. For Houston, the average date of our first 90 degree day has occurred on April 29th since 1995. We’re getting close.

Wet bulb globe temperature shows mostly elevated heat and pockets of moderate heat next Wednesday afternoon. It will be hot for April, but if you’re new here, this is just scratching the surface. (NWS)

Last summer we started using more charts of “wet bulb globe temperature” (WBGT) instead of heat index. The WBGT looks at numerous factors besides just temperature and humidity and tends to offer a more realistic view of how serious the heat will be for our bodies. Last summer saw numerous days in the high and extreme category. While it will get hot and humid later next week, as of now we’re sitting mostly in the elevated to moderate level for heat. So this will serve as a reminder that summer is coming, rather than feel a ton like summer. I’m mostly showing this today to start getting you comfortable with how these categories work; instead of a number, we see a category. And lots of people continue moving to this area. You’ll be seeing a lot more of this during summer.

It does look like storm chances and front chances will increase late next week or weekend, but we’ll look into that more on Monday.