Scattered strong to severe storms are possible today and tonight across east/southeast Texas to western and central Louisiana. Large hail, locally damaging winds, and a couple of tornadoes are possible. More isolated strong to severe storms will be possible across parts of the central and southern High Plains into central Texas, and also across the upper Great Lakes region.
Please stay weather aware. #WeatherAwareDay#weather#wx#SPC#SevereWeather
i dont see tornadoes as a big threat to me in Chicago. but, i also dont want to be considering 'where is the safest place for me?' while a tornado is actively bearing down.
there have been some serious outbreaks of tornadoes very recently, and theyre ongoing. stay safe out there folks, and take a few moments; learn how to react if you are in tornado danger, and where is the safest place in your home
Update: @BakerRL75 is back relaying severe weather updates, her Internet back online. Note: it's always good to have alternate channels of communications with folks you know through social media. #wx
Severe thunderstorms appear likely from parts of the mid Mississippi, Ohio, and Tennessee Valleys into the southern Plains. All severe hazards, including tornadoes, very large to giant hail, and potentially significant damaging winds are possible. Some tornadoes may be strong.
Please stay weather aware. #WeatherAwareDay#weather#wx#SPC#SevereWeather
Mother Nature appears to be VERY interested in clobbering your car/roof/windows/head today, if you are in these colored areas. PURPLE!! (80% probability). #hail#WX
These unofficial Mastodon accounts of space agencies are bots that merely share news items the agencies publish elsewhere, yet the accounts have quite a lot of followers:
Heaviest May rainfall in 82 years recorded in WA town
"Parched areas of southwest WA have finally seen some rain this week, with Wandering recording its highest May rainfall in more than 82 years and the most rainfall the town has seen in 13 months."
Rain and storms spreading across NSW
"A three-day soaking has begun in NSW, with rain and thunderstorms expected to spread across most of the state over the next 72 hours.
An upper-level cut-off low will pass over NSW from west to east between Friday and Sunday. As this upper low crosses NSW, it will interact with moisture-laden air to produce widespread rain and thunderstorms across the state."