Spectacular weekend ahead for Houston, as we watch for a stormy start to next week

The ups and downs we’ve seen in the weather-world lately will continue heading into the next several days. A really nice weekend will give way to thunderstorms and locally heavy rain early next week, followed by more nice weather.

Today

The cold front is pushing through as I write this. There doesn’t appear to be any rain with it, but I suppose if you catch a sprinkle or brief shower through 8 AM or so, I wouldn’t be shocked. However, skies will quickly clear out behind the front, and it will be a mainly sunny day.

Wind gusts of 20 to 30 mph today out of the north will keep it a blustery Friday. (Pivotal Weather)

You will notice a pretty gusty wind today. It will be a blustery one, with north or northwest winds of 15 mph, gusting as high as 20 to 30 mph, especially along the coast or near the bay. The push of cold air behind this front isn’t especially strong, so we’ll manage to get to 70 degrees today I think without too much trouble.

I did notice that it smells smoky outside this morning, and there are reports of haze around, so this could be smoke coming in on the northwest winds from wildfires in Central Texas. Several fires were occurring yesterday in Eastland County just east of Abilene. Given the gusty winds with the front, it’s probable that some of that got carried south. Whatever the case, don’t be alarmed if you smell smoke outside this morning, but today is an elevated fire weather day again, particularly in interior Texas.

It’s Marshmello night at the Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo, and you won’t be happier with the weather outlook. It will be cool, with temperatures falling from the mid-60s as you arrive into the upper-50s as you exit. Winds will also drop off some in that time as well. Overall, not bad at all!

Weekend

This weekend looks just spectacular. We’ll lose the wind tomorrow, but we’ll keep the sunshine, low humidity, and cooler temperatures. Since winds lighten up tonight, look for Saturday morning lows in the 40s over most of the area.

Cool nights and warm daytimes will define this weekend, as we enjoy some spectacular weather through Sunday. Saturday morning low temperatures shown here. (Pivotal Weather)

But with the sunshine tomorrow, we should easily push into the low to mid-70s.

Sunday looks similar, with a cool start and lows in the 40s, followed by sunshine and warmer weather, with highs well into the 70s, if not near 80 degrees. Humidity will inch up on Sunday, but the bulk of it will not arrive until Monday morning. Sunday’s only real gripe may be the wind, which will pick up some through the day, gusting onshore at around 15 to 20 mph by Sunday afternoon.

Monday and Tuesday

This will be the main period of concern for the forecast, as a number of issues will present themselves. The overarching storyline is that a strong storm system is going to develop over West Texas allowing for severe weather to develop ahead of it and drag a cold front through by Tuesday morning. This should allow for multiple rounds of showers and storms in our area, along with the potential for severe weather and heavy rain.

The Storm Prediction Center outlook for Monday has been remarkably consistent in calling for a 15 to 30 percent chance of severe weather in East & Southeast Texas. (NOAA via Pivotal Weather)

The Houston area remains included in the Storm Prediction Center’s severe weather outlook for Monday, with the highest risk north of Houston. It does appear that there will be some “capping” in the atmosphere Monday which muddies the risk a little bit over the Houston metro area. Capping, you’ll recall, tends to inhibit storm development. But there’s a clear trend toward that cap “breaking” north of Houston, which is why the higher probabilities of severe weather are north of Conroe. We probably won’t have a clear view on this until Sunday or even Monday morning. Either way, be prepared for scattered storms on Monday, any of which could be strong to severe, with the highest odds north of I-10.

You’ll also notice strong onshore winds Monday, with gusts of 30 mph possible, as the gradient tightens around the storm passing to our north.

We may get a lull in the action Monday evening before the prefrontal trough pushes through on Tuesday morning. This will likely provide heavy rainfall and the possibility of some severe weather as well. I can tell you right now, if the timing of this continues as steady as it has looked for a few days, there’s a chance many of us will be woken up by thunder in the middle of the night Monday into Tuesday morning. We’ll have the latest for you on this certainly Monday but possibly Sunday as well.

Dry air filters in Tuesday morning, which will allow temperatures to shoot up with sunshine Tuesday afternoon well into the 70s. The cold front itself will lag and not push through til Tuesday evening, likely with little fanfare. But it will allow for blustery north winds and cooler temperatures on Wednesday.

Later next week

As noted, Wednesday will be cooler but sunny, so look for morning lows in the 50s or even some 40s and daytime highs well into the 60s. Thursday should be cool as well, with morning 40s and daytime highs near 70 degrees. It will be less breezy on Thursday, with continued sunshine and low humidity.

6 thoughts on “Spectacular weekend ahead for Houston, as we watch for a stormy start to next week”

  1. Speaking of the busty winds again, glad to see that it comes up in the forecast for today.I noticed a smoky smell this morning and was wondering about that. It does indeed seem windier to me these days. The Memorial Park Arboretum is planning a controlled burn because regular fires are part of a prairie ecosystem. They are trying to schedule it on the right day, when the weather is not wet, not too windy, and the fire can burn the grassland but remain under control.

      • According to the Chronicle the window is from now through April 21st. You would have to check with the Memorial Park Conservancy or one of the other agencies involved if you would like to know the reason for those dates. I don’t know.

  2. With regards to the smell of smoke in the area, the Sam Houston National Forest Service is doing a prescribed burn in the New Waverly area.

    • Given the wind trajectory and widespread nature of the smoke, we think it’s almost certainly from the Eastland complex. Local smoke issues northeast of Houston could occur due to those prescribed burns though!

      • Yep. I just got an alert re: the smoke coming from Eastland, and advising against outdoor activity. Particle level is 5x higher than normal.

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