Hello, I’m very sorry for the discontinued updates on this blog. If you have been following US Weather on Facebook you would have seen that we moved to a new Facebook page. We decided to rename our organization to US Forecast Network. The main reason for this was because the old name wasn’t unique enough. Hopefully a new domain can be purchased soon which will enable us to make quality Read More ...
A large mass of solar plasma near the sun stays over 30 hours and the plasma continues without letting go nor return to the crown … Two relatively recent catches, one dated February 1 at 21:47:55.120 UTC, the one of 2 February at 00:48:43.130 UTC The greatest observed 3 hr Kp over the past 24 hours was 3 (below NOAA Scale levels). The greatest expected 3 hr Kp Read More ...
Eastern TX/Central AR/Northern LA. Rod’s Severe Weather Chase Index has been set to a 4. There is a elevated chance of successfully chasing a severe weather event… that is isolated tornadoes and damaging winds the big concern in this area…as mid and upper level jet strengthens near the cold front promoting a QLCS. Stay tuned this maybe upgraded to a 5 which corresponds to a MDT risk of successfully chasing a severe weather event. Read More ...
I am proud to announce the new debut of Rod’s Severe Weather Chase Index (RSWCI). The point of this is to help storm chasers to chase severe weather events based on a range of 1-10. This is just a sample. And doesn’t reflect an actual index forecast. The index values correlate to the following: 1-2: Very Low chance of successfully chasing severe weather event(s). 3-4: Low chance of successfully chasing Read More ...
One of the coldest air masses we may see all winter for the Mid Atlantic and New England Regions will be parking itself over the area for at least the next week. There will be a few days where the high temperatures will be in the low twenties but for the most part those highs will be in the middle to upper teens. As you work up through the region Read More ...
It has been quite some time since severe weather affected the United States. This is mainly caused by a strong trough which is keeping cold, Arctic air the US. It is expected to move very soon which will allow a new weather pattern to begin sometime next week. It appears that several new low-pressure systems will bring rain and thunderstorms to parts of the US in 7+ days. The main Read More ...
This Thursday-Friday, the south could experience a small snow! If you live in the south, and love south, you are most likely tired of just rain, rain, rain! This Thursday-Friday, we at U.S Weather predict the south could get up to 5 inches of snow in some areas. In North Carolina and the Eastern border of Tenn. you could get anywhere from 3 inches of snow, to even 6 inches Read More ...
Snow and ice ( mostly in the form of sleet ) will begin to make its way into Southern Pennsylvania early this evening and slowly overspread the majority of the region. From State College Pennsylvania and points south, you will run the risk of accumulating ice. Pittsburgh and Harrisburg are in the zone of heaviest sleet which may accumulate anywhere from a quarter to a half inch. Snow will then Read More ...



