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  • Finding a love for all seasons

    Finding a love for all seasons

    Mother Nature, flowers and candy could be your recipe for finding a love for all seasons or Valentine’s Day.

    It is that time of the year, when romance is in the air. But can the weather, or even the season, spark love? Or do less than ideal conditions dampen love’s flame and blow it out? 


    What You Need To Know

    • Cuffing season is the time between September and November
    • The “turkey drop” is when you breakup with someone after Thanksgiving
    • Some consider gloomy or cold weather romantic
    • Talking about the weather is not a good conversation starter

    We talked to celebrity matchmaker and dating expert Alessandra Conti, co-founder of Matchmakers In The City in Beverly Hills.

    We chatted with her about how the time of season and weather might influence someone’s dating behavior.

    Cuffing season

    Autumn may be the best season to ‘fall’ in love. Many people refer to the fall as cuffing season for couples.

    Conti says cuffing season is the time between September and November. She told us during those months the weather gets colder and people want to find love for the holidays.

    “Everyone wants love for the holidays. Especially leading up to the holidays, that’s when people who are normally single want to be in relationships,” Conti told Spectrum News.

    The matchmaking maven says her business is booming during cuffing season for people wanting to find love just in time for Thanksgiving or Christmas.

    “[People] will usually fast track something that they maybe did not consider in the summertime.”

    The cuffing part comes in as people just wanting to find a partner for the colder months and just come together during that time.

    The turkey drop

    Though cuffing season runs through November, it might be the best opportunity to breakup with someone.

    Conti says the day after Thanksgiving is the time when couples break apart. The celebrity matchmaker calls it the “turkey drop.”

    “You can see it in tons of celebrity couples, that right after Thanksgiving so many couples breakup,” Conti said.

    She said couples like Harry Styles and Olivia Wilde broke up during that time too, among other couples.

    Conti says a lot of couples “turkey drop” right after Thanksgiving.

    A new year for love

    We are a month into the new year and finding that special someone is top priority for some singles. When a new year begins, Conti says people are deliberate about wanting to find love.

    “While cuffing season is over, it’s the new year season, which is people desiring to find that partner,” Conti told us.

    As far as other seasons like spring and summer, she says business doesn’t experience that same uptick in clientele during the winter and fall months.

    Like cuffing season, there is also the something known as a summer fling. A summer fling is between May and September.

    “You see more casual dating during the summertime because that’s more of the weather vibe. It’s sunny out, everyone is relaxed… there’s not that deep longing for connection because it’s freezing cold outside and you want to be cuddling with someone indoors,” Conti said.

    Heartbreak weather

    Now let’s talk about how the weather could lead you to heartbreak or romance.

    Conti laments many dates get cancelled because of bad weather.

    “It is really sad, but a lot of people do if it’s raining. We have experienced that people will cancel a date if it’s raining… even if it’s through a matchmaker.”

    She notes that people really don’t enjoy driving in the rain to go on a date. However, she has one important piece of advice if there is rain or snow in the forecast for a date.

    “My advice to anyone considering in canceling a date if it’s raining or snow… Don’t, you are self sabotaging yourself!,” exclaimed Conti.

    The dating expert said this sabotaging equates to flakiness. She says you have to follow through on the plan.

    “You need to make a shift and make a change. If that means going on an ice skating date, go for it… if that means leaving your house when it’s drizzling outside, go for it!” exclaims Conti. 

    Love is in the air

    The ideal weather for date ranges from person to person. Some like sunny and while others enjoy overcast skies.

    Talking with Conti, she says colder weather might actually be more romantic.

    “I actually think a little colder for a date, actually quite romantic, as long as you are indoors… it’s very cozy. So get a really cute winter jacket and enjoy,” she said.

    Conti might be right about colder weather, because one of the greatest Christmas songs “Let It Snow!” is a romantic song about a couple getting cozy during a blizzard (even though the songwriters wrote it in the summer).

    It all comes down to the people’s preference.

    “I don’t think cold weather is bad for a date. I think it’s cozy. If it’s a little rainy outside, it makes your indoor experience more special and romantic. Use it to your advantage,” Conti told Spectrum Networks. 

    Forecasting romance

    The perfect weather for a date may be in April, if you are Miss Rhode Island from the movie “Miss Congeniality.”

    But for others, it could be something else. We talked to our Spectrum News meteorologists and digital weather team about their ideal weather for date. Watch their responses.

    No matter what season you’re in, you have to be intentional about finding love and being in the moment.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Keith Bryant

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  • Turning colder, with possible snow Saturday

    Turning colder, with possible snow Saturday

    Friday turns cloudy and cold before the possibility of snow for Saturday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Friday turns cooler after Thursday’s system
    • Best chance for precipitation looks to be Saturday
    • Drier and warmer Sunday

    Behind Thursday’s cold front, plan on a cooldown for Friday, with highs back in the 30s for much of the state. 

    Late Friday into early Saturday, another system moves in, likely producing snow showers south, although models do disagree on how much precipitation is possible for the northern 2/3 of the state. 

    While snow is looking likely along the Ohio River, the forecast could trend farther north in the coming days.

     

    What precipitation we do see looks to be largely gone by late Saturday morning, and from there we’ll dry out for Sunday.

    Temperatures also start to climb a bit for the second half of the weekend, with many hgihs bak in the 40s, and even warmer air returns to the forecast early next week. 

     

    Meteorologist Ashley Batey

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  • National Hurricane Center releases report on Idalia

    National Hurricane Center releases report on Idalia

    The National Hurricane Center issued its final report on Idalia Tuesday. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Idalia reached Category 4 intensity over open water
    • It made landfall near Keaton Beach as a Category 3 storm
    • 12 feet of surge was reported in parts of the Big Bend
    • Maximum surge in Tampa Bay was 4.56 feet above ground level

    Idalia originated in the eastern Pacific Ocean on Aug. 23, 2023. It eventually crossed over Central America and moved into the Caribbean, becoming a tropical depression in the Yucatan Channel on Aug. 26.

    Later that night, it made landfall in Cozumel as it slowly meandered southwest.

    It slowly moved around the Yucatan Channel before finally pulling north and passing west of Cuba on the evening of Aug. 28.

    It became a hurricane shortly after midnight local time that night. 

    The eye of Idalia passed 110 nautical miles west of Tampa on the evening of Aug. 29, becoming a major hurricane out in the Gulf after midnight. 

    Idalia briefly reached Category 4 status, then weakened rapidly as it was making landfall. 

    It made landfall as a Category 3 storm near Keaton Beach with winds of 100 knots at 6:45 a.m. on Aug. 30.

    Idalia continued to weaken rapidly over land, becoming an extra-tropical cyclone after it passed over North Carolina on Aug. 31.

    Idalia’s track. (NOAA)

    Storm surge

    Storm surge was the most widespread impact of Idalia along the coast, with 8 to 12 feet of surge above ground level from Keaton Beach to Steinhatchee.

    Hurricane Idalia maximum storm surge. (National Hurricane Center)

    Surge above ground level was 6 to 9 feet from Steinhatchee to the Suwannee River, 5 to 7 feet between the Suwannee River and Chassahowitzka, and 3 to 5 feet between Chassahowitzka and Englewood. 

    A record surge of 8.04 feet above ground level was observed in the Steinhatchee River, two miles upstream from the Gulf of Mexico.

    Tampa Bay’s surge was 5.7 feet above the predicted tide which yielded water levels 4.56 ft above ground level. 

    Total damage from Idalia was estimated to be $3.6 billion, with most of it occurring in the Big Bend of Florida.

    Horseshoe Beach before and after Idalia. (NOAA)

    Wind and rain

    Before landfall, Idalia reached a minimum pressure of 942 mb with estimated winds of 116 knots or 133 mph, then weakening to 100 knots at landfall or 115 mph.

    The highest observed sustained wind was 64 knots in Horseshoe Beach or 74 mph.

    The highest observed wind gust was 74 knots or 85 mph in Perry, Fla. 

    Wind swath from Idalia. Hurricane force wind swath in red. (NOAA)

    On the ground observations were limited near the landfall site of Idalia as the Big Bend of Florida is a very rural area.

    Idalia brought widespread rainfall totals of 5 to 7 inches from the Big Bend of Florida to North Carolina.

    Rainfall from Idalia. (NOAA)

    Some pockets of 7 to 10 inches were observed.

    Casualties

    Idalia was responsible for 12 deaths, 8 of them were direct. 

    One man in Brevard County died while windsurfing during the storm. Seven other lives were claimed by rough surf from the storm. 

    Of the four indirect deaths, two were caused by falling trees during cleanup in Georgia and two died in car crashes in Florida. 

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Kyle Hanson

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  • Wet weather returns this weekend

    Wet weather returns this weekend

    Welcome to ‘Ask a Meteorologist,’ a weekly chat that discusses a new weather topic every week.

    This week we are talking about rain that will be returning for the weekend.    

    Spectrum Bay News 9 meteorologists answer your questions about how much we will see and when it could rain.

     

     

     

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Rain soaked one of the most important marches to equality

    Rain soaked one of the most important marches to equality

    During one of the most trying times in America, the Southeast’s weather did not help the ongoing battle for justice.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Selma to Montgomery march in Alabama occurred in 1965
    • It was an effort to register more Black voters in the South
    • Heavy rain soaked the protestors

    What was the Selma to Montgomery March?

    The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a huge achievement that ended segregation in public places and banned employment discrimination based on race, color, religion and sex.

    It helped strengthen the voting rights of African Americans in the South, but even so, many southern states continued to deny African Americans their right to vote.

    On Feb. 18, 1965, a peaceful protest for voting rights in Marion, Ala. turned deadly when white segregationists attacked the group. An Alabama state trooper shot an African American protester, Jimmie Lee Jackson.

    In response, Martin Luther King Jr. organized a march from Selma to Montgomery in Alabama to shed more light to what was happening to the Black community and help their voting rights.

    Martin Luther King Jr. leads supporters to the voter registration drive in the rain.

    The beginning of the march

    The event began on March 1, 1965, with a voter registration drive. Pouring rain soaked the supporters and led to ponding on the roadways and sidewalks.

    Even these miserable conditions couldn’t stop the movement, as thousands of people prepared for the drive with raincoats, umbrellas and rain boots. This laid the foundation for one of the most important marches during the civil rights movement.

    On March 7, the march to Montgomery from Selma began and lasted over two weeks. This was because state troopers and segregationists tried to stop the protesters several times, leading to brief pauses in the march.

    On March 15, President Lyndon B. Johnson showed his support for the march, and military personnel led the protesters the rest of the way, finally completing the march on March 25.

    A big win for racial equality

    After all of their hard work, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965. It guaranteed the right to vote for all African Americans in every state.

    Southern states could no longer use literacy tests to stop African Americans from voting.

    The Voting Rights Act of 1965 is one of the greatest pieces of civil rights legislation in American history. It provided another way for the voice of the Black community to be heard.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Shelly Lindblade

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  • Guion “Guy” Bluford: The first African American astronaut

    Guion “Guy” Bluford: The first African American astronaut


    Guion Bluford was one of the most influential people in the space community, becoming the first African American to fly in space.


    What You Need To Know

    • Guy Bluford was the first African American to fly in space
    • He started his career as a pilot in the Air Force
    • He became an astronaut for NASA in 1979

    Bluford became intrigued with flying at a very early age. By high school, he knew he wanted to become an aeronautical engineer.

    Early life

    After getting his college degree, Bluford joined the Air Force and received his pilot wings in Jan. 1966 at the early age of 24.

    He soon became an instructor pilot and eventually entered the U.S. Air Force Institute of Technology, where he received his master’s degree in 1974 and a doctor of philosophy degree in aerospace engineering in 1978.

    Upon his graduation in 1974, he worked in the Air Force Flight Dynamics Laboratory as a deputy until he was promoted to branch chief of the Aerodynamics and Airframe Branch.

    These successes led to his selection to the NASA astronaut program in 1978.

    It’s safe to say he never lost sight of his childhood dreams.

    Becoming a legend

    Guion stands on the launch pad with his crew weeks before his first mission in August of 1983. (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin)

    After a year of training in the astronaut program, Bluford became an official astronaut in Aug.1979.

    Only four years later he flew his first mission aboard STS-8 on Aug. 30, 1983.

    His first trip to space was quick but came with many accomplishments, developing techniques for nighttime operations and deploying the Indian National Satellite.

    After 145 hours in space, the crew returned to Edwards Air Force Base on Sept. 5.

    Over the next 10 years, Bluford became the second, third and fourth African American in space, logging over 688 hours.

    After NASA

    In 1993, Bluford left NASA and retired from the Air Force to become the Vice President and General Manager of the Engineering Services Division of NYMA Inc., in Greenbelt, Maryland.

    After several more high-end jobs, he went on to become the President of Aerospace Technology in Cleveland, Ohio, a job that he still holds today.

    Bluford never stopped learning and pursuing the next level of his career. A brilliant man in the space and engineering community, Bluford became a leader and role model for many African Americans.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.



    Meteorologist Shelly Lindblade

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  • Tampa ask a met: Warmer weather returns

    Tampa ask a met: Warmer weather returns

    Welcome to ‘Ask a Meteorologist,’ a weekly chat that discusses a new weather topic every week.

    Cooler temperatures have been lingering around recently, but warmer air will return. 

    Bay News 9 meteorologists answer your questions about what to expect this weekend and next week. 

     

     

     

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Severe Weather Awareness Week: Lightning safety

    Severe Weather Awareness Week: Lightning safety


    It’s Severe Weather Awareness Week across the state of Florida, and each day, Spectrum News will break down a different hazard you could face this year.

    On Monday, we’ll the focus on lightning and how you can stay safe during afternoon and evening storms during the spring and summer.


    What You Need To Know

    • Florida tops the charts for seeing the most lightning deaths in the nation
    • The Miami-Fort Lauderdale area sees the highest amount of lightning strikes per square mile out of all Florida cities
    • Lightning can strike up to 12 miles outside the nearest storm cell.
    • Remember, when thunder roars, go indoors

    Floridians are no stranger to lightning strikes. During the summer, strikes across the Sunshine state can eclipse 1,000 bolts in just a span of 15 minutes. But how does lightning form and why is it so prevalent across the state compared to other parts of the nation?

    How lightning forms

    To understand how lightning forms, you first have to go up into the atmosphere, thousands of feet above our head.

    As you ascend 30,000 to 40,000 feet up into the sky, the temperature drops well below freezing. As the temperature falls, water vapor in the surrounding clouds begins to transition from a gas to a solid, creating ice crystals in the cloud.

    This process is called deposition.

    As the ice crystals continue to form in the cloud, they begin to accumulate on water droplets that drop below freezing, known as a super-cooled water droplet. That’s just a fancy term for any liquid droplet that remains in a liquid state under 32 degrees. 

    These supercooled droplets eventually reach a key stage in their growth where the ice crystals and the liquid droplets want to separate. The ice crystals move toward the top of the cloud, carrying a positive electric charge with them.

    Meanwhile, the water droplets and any hailstones that develop head toward the bottom of the cloud, obtaining a negative charge.

    Eventually, there comes a time when the negative charges within the base of the cloud become too great to stay put. As a result, these negative charges rush to meet the positive charges in order to dispel energy. This can happen in one of two ways.

    The first is when negative charges surge upward, connecting with the positive charges toward the top of the cloud. If this happens, lightning strikes within the cloud- something meteorologists call cloud-to-cloud lightning. These strikes never reach the ground and remain in the sky between the clouds.

    In the second scenario, the negative charges surge downward to meet positive charges racing up from the ground. If a connection is made between the ground and the base of the cloud, a lightning flash occurs. This is called cloud-to-ground lightning, or CG lightning. 

    (Getty Images)

    Lightning is hotter than anything we have on Earth and is even hotter than the surface of the sun. That excessive heat causes the air to expand rapidly and violently when a lightning flash is created, resulting in what we hear as thunder. 

    Surrounded by water on three sides of the state, Florida’s unique environment helps to keep us supplied with plenty of water vapor throughout much of the year- a key ingredient in lightning strikes.

    This is one of the major reasons Florida has more lightning strikes than anywhere else. The abundance of water vapor, and the occasional cool air aloft from passing storms, help to create excessive lightning strikes across the state.

    How to avoid becoming a statistic

    While it’s still uncommon to be struck by lighting, your odds greatly depend on where you live.

    Florida and Texas are two of the nation’s most deadly states when it comes to lightning fatalities because of the unique environment they share. Both receive ample moisture from the Atlantic Ocean and/or Gulf of Mexico, increasing their odds for more strikes.

    Other places like North Dakota or Wisconsin, average less strikes per square mile due to the lack of consistent ingredients for lightning. Instead, their lightning strikes are more common with well-developed storms systems that must carry that suitable environment with it.

    (Getty Images)

    If you follow basic safety procedures and head indoors when lightning strikes, your odds of being struck are reduced to near zero. But if you remain outside or perform unsafe activities during lightning storm nearby, your odds of being struck increase significantly.

    Let’s put this into perspective.

    In 2020, the U.S. population was estimated to be roughly 331 million. While the number of average deaths attributed to lightning during any given year is only 25, the number of injuries per year rises to only 225.

    That means your odds of being struck by lightning any given year is 1 in 1.3 million. Those odds decrease to 1 in 16,550 when we look at being struck at anytime in your lifetime.

    So what should you do if lightning strikes near your location?

    Well, you want to seek shelter inside a sturdy structure immediately. Try to avoid structures without walls, like outdoor patios or picnic areas. While these structures provide some protection, the lack of walls still keeps you at a risk of being struck by a certain kind of lightning, like side flashes or ground current strikes.

    If you are unable to head into a sturdy, enclosed structure like a well-constructed home, follow these tips:

    • Get away from large open fields. Avoid the crests of hills and ridges.
    • Avoid standing near large objects like trees, power poles or towers.
    • Stay out of the water.
    • If located around trees, get as low to the ground as possible by crouching.
    • If camping, look to stay in valleys and other low-lying areas.

    If you’re inside a sturdy building, follow these tips to keep you safe:

    • Avoid taking showers. If a house is struck, internal piping is the first line of conduction.
    • Avoid windows and doors. These can also become conductors if a house is struck.
    • Do not lay on concrete walls or floors.
    • Do not use any electric equipment except for remote controls.
    • Stay off corded devices like telephones or computers connected by ethernet cords.

    Since 2011, Florida continues to lead the nation, with 61 deaths statewide due to lighting. The state averages the most strikes per year, which correlates to why that number is so high.

    On top of that, Florida sees more lighting per square mile than anywhere else in the nation. Hence, this is why your Weather Experts say “When thunder roars, go indoors!” 

    Remember, lightning can strike as far out as 30 miles from the nearest storm, with the most strikes occurring within a 12-mile radius. Just because it isn’t raining overhead doesn’t mean you’re not at risk. Always head indoors once thunder is heard. 

    On Tuesday, your Weather Experts will talk about the dangers of Florida’s coast, including rip currents and marine hazards.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.



    Meteorologist Zach Covey

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  • Moon mountain named in honor of Melba Mouton

    Moon mountain named in honor of Melba Mouton


    Few humans can say they were a part of the mission that allowed astronauts to land on the moon in 1969. Only the prestigious can claim they have a mountain in their name – not on earth, but on the moon.

    Melba Roy Mouton is now one of the handful of scientists and mathematicians that do.


    What You Need To Know

    • Melba Mouton was an accomplished Black mathematician and computer programmer for NASA from 1959 to 1973
    • Despite being a minority, her strong leadership skills and willpower allowed her to excel in a groundbreaking career
    • One of Mouton’s biggest successes includes her contributions to the Apollo 11 Moon landing
    • NASA recently named a mountain on the moon in honor of her

    While Melba Mouton was not one of the “hidden figures” unveiled and featured for their success at NASA during the late 1950s and 1960s, her story is no different. As a Black female working in a prominently male-dominated field, she too faced the brutal reality of discrimination.

    Yet, her relentless determination and curiosity allowed her to overcome obstacles. All of which lead her to become a prominent leader as a mathematician and computer programmer in the Space Race era.

    The life of Melba Mouton

    Melba Mouton was born in the late 1920s and spent much of her childhood in Virginia during the difficult times of the Great Depression and Word War II. Despite this, she still pursued her passion for math.

    She attended the historically Black college, Howard University, earning both a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in mathematics.

    Mouton began her NASA career at the Goddard Space Flight Center in 1959. By the early 1960s, she worked as a lead computer programmer for the Mission and Trajectory Analysis Division’s Program Systems Branch, to compute where spacecraft were in orbit and their trajectories.

    This eventually put her as the head mathematician, helping to track the Echo 1 and 2 satellites.

    (Photo by NASA)

    NASA awarded Mouton the Apollo Achievement Award for all of her contributions toward the famed Apollo 11 mission, that allowed astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to first step foot on the moon (while third crewmember Michael Collins piloted the command module).

    Ending her career at NASA as the Assistant Chief of Research Programs for the agency’s Trajectory and Geodynamics Division, Mouton finally retired in 1973. Years later, doctors diagnosed Mouton with brain cancer and she passed away in 1990 at age 61.

    What’s in a name

    On Feb. 15, 2023, NASA announced they would name a mountain on the moon after Mouton in honor of all her accomplishments during her time at the agency. With all mountains on the moon referred to as mons, “Mons Mouton” is now the official name of the lunar mountain near the South Pole.

    Naming a mountain, or any other topographic features, on the moon isn’t as easy as you think. NASA can only suggest potential names, but it does not have the final say in determining whether the name is confirmed.

    Only the International Astronomical Union (IAU) can approve a name and there’s a designated committee that handles that: the Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN).  

    The WGPSN has certain guidelines it must follow when accepting and choosing a name, whether it be a mountain on the moon or any other astronomical object. To view the set of rules they must abide by, click here.

    According to NASA, the IAU declared that the name for lunar mountains must reflect “scientists who have made outstanding or fundamental contributions to their fields.”

    Given all her accomplishments in the field, it makes sense that the name Mouton was a strong candidate, and thus, approved by the IAU.

    The future of Mons Mouton

    Since Mons Mouton has a relatively flat top, NASA claims it is one of the potential landing spots for Artemis III, the first manned mission to the moon, scheduled in 2026.

    Although Mons Mouton will first serve as the location for NASA’s Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER) mission set to happen later in 2024. 

    Please be sure to check out the tribute video NASA put together honoring Melba Mouton, while discussing its plans for Mons Mouton as a potential landing and research site on the moon.

    Whether Mons Mouton is the selected landing site for the Artemis III mission or not, the gesture of honoring one of NASA’s greatest scientists comes full circle. With all her efforts to get us to the moon, it is only fitting that her name and her legacy earn a spot among the stars.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.



    Meteorologist Shawnie Caslin

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  • Welcome to our Ask a Meteorologist chat

    Welcome to our Ask a Meteorologist chat

    By

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

    Tampa

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Showers and thunderstorms return Sunday morning

    Showers and thunderstorms return Sunday morning

    After several dry days, showers and thunderstorms will return for Sunday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Timing of the heaviest rain will be 7 a.m. to noon on Sunday
    • Some thunderstorms could produce gusty winds
    • Partial clearing expected Sunday afternoon
    • Additional showers wrap in on Monday

    A line of showers and thunderstorms will generally cross the area between 7 a.m. and noon on Sunday.

    It will be windy all day on Sunday with gusts over 25 mph at times, and some stronger gusts are possible in thunderstorms.

    Highs will be near 70 in the afternoon as a slot of dry air moves in.

    While we may even see some sun on Sunday afternoon, wraparound moisture on the backside of this low pressure system will bring cool showers on Monday.

    Most will see around a half an inch to an inch of rain between Sunday and Monday. 

    No description available.

    Finally, drier air will return on Tuesday.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Kyle Hanson

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  • Rain and storms move in this weekend

    Rain and storms move in this weekend

    Welcome to ‘Ask a Meteorologist,’ a weekly chat that discusses a new weather topic every week.

    After a sunny workweek and start to the weekend, wet weather will move in on Sunday. We also can’t rule out a few rumbles of thunder.

    Bay News 9 meteorologists answer your questions about how much rain we could see. 

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Meteorologist or imposter: Probing groundhogs’ precision

    Meteorologist or imposter: Probing groundhogs’ precision

    Are our rodent friends really as accurate as they think?

    Meteorologist Zach Covey

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  • Surviving avalanches: What you need to know

    Surviving avalanches: What you need to know

    This time of year, snowboarders and skiers head to some of the most popular snow summits across the country. However, snowy natural disasters called avalanches can become a concern. 


    What You Need To Know

    • An avalanche is a mass of snow moving down a slope
    • Someone in the victim’s party triggers 90% of avalanche incidents
    • The natural disaster kills about 30 people in the U.S. yearly

    According to the National Weather Service, an avalanche occurs when there’s a rapid flow of snow down a hill or mountainside.

    Avalanches happen suddenly and “occur during or just after snowstorms on slopes between 30 and 45 degrees.”

    Also, look out for Avalanche Watches and Warnings from the Weather Service.

    The NWS says 90% of avalanche incidents become triggered by someone in the victim’s party.

    They also kill about 30 people a year in the U.S.

    So far this year, avalanches have killed four people; in California, Wyoming, Idaho and Colorado.

    Placer County sheriff vehicles are parked near the ski lift at Palisades Tahoe where avalanche occurred on Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2024, in Tahoe, Calif. (AP Photo/Andy Barron)

    There are resources people can use to get avalanche safety training and spot potential avalanches.

    One resource there is the NWS and Avalanche.org.

    Here’s a breakout of avalanche safety tips and warning signs.

    Remember, stay vigilant and safe during avalanches and be aware of the signs when you’re on the slopes. 

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Keith Bryant

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  • The lightning capital of the U.S. stayed in Florida in 2023

    The lightning capital of the U.S. stayed in Florida in 2023

    After Four Corners, Florida–in the Kissimmee area–was crowned the lightning capital of the United States in 2022, the most frequently struck place moved a little south in 2023.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Miami-Fort Lauderdale area saw the most lightning flashes in 2023
    • Over 242 million flashes were recorded across the U.S. in 2023
    • The global lightning count was over two billion

    The Finnish company Vaisala tracks lightning strikes globally every year using a lightning detection network.

    They found that the Miami-Ft. Lauderdale area had the most total lightning (in-cloud and cloud-to-ground) of any metro in the U.S. with 120,998 flashes in 2023.

    Florida led the country in lightning density (lightning events per square kilometer), followed by Mississippi and Louisiana.

    Texas had the most total lightning of any state, tallying over 42 million flashes.

    June 14 was the most lightning-active day in the U.S. in 2023, with more than 3.6 million flashes.

    While somewhere in Florida is often the lightning capital of the United States, it is not the most struck place in the world.

    Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela is considered the lightning capital of the world, with an average of 233 lightning strikes per square kilometer per year, according to NASA.

    Global lightning density in 2023. (Vaisala/Xweather)

    You can see Vaisala’s full report here.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Kyle Hanson

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  • Wagering with an edge: How weather affects sports betting

    Wagering with an edge: How weather affects sports betting

    Sports betting has become increasingly popular over recent years, and bettors are always trying to find an edge.

    For outdoor sporting events, weather is one of the biggest variables, and RotoGrinders Chief Meteorologist Kevin Roth has spent the past 10 years combining his weather knowledge and passion for sports to help bettors.


    What You Need To Know

    • Weather can heavily influence outdoor sporting events

    • Knowing how weather affects a game can help bettors

    • Altitude is the biggest advantage for a home team

    From football, baseball and golf, to NASCAR, tennis, soccer and even the Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest, if it’s outdoors and sports-related, he’s made a forecast for it.

    After earning a master’s degree in meteorology and working on TV for 10 years, Kevin Roth saw that there was a need in the fantasy sports world for real forecasts provided by an actual meteorologist, not just a low-quality automated forecast.

    He provides forecasts and live weather updates for outdoor sporting events, and breaks down how the weather could affect the game with the lens of a fantasy sports player or a sports bettor.

    In football, fantasy sports players get an entire week to digest the latest forecast and can decide who to start until kickoff. Sports bettors don’t get the same luxury if they want to maximize their profit, since betting lines and totals are fluid.

    Football

    You might think that ‘cold weather teams’ like Kansas City, Buffalo or Green Bay have a built-in advantage during the playoffs when the calendar flips to January, and the weather could offer bitter cold temperatures, high winds and snow.

    Earlier this month on Jan. 13, the Kansas City Chiefs beat the Miami Dolphins during the AFC Super Wild Card Weekend in a frigid matchup. The kickoff temperature was -4 degrees with a wind chill of -20 degrees, making it the fourth coldest game in NFL history.

    But Roth says he’s a firm believer that cold or snowy weather doesn’t inherently favor a ‘cold weather team’ over a ‘warm weather team,’ like Tampa Bay or Miami.

    “The cold, wind and snow impacts all humans the same in a physiological way. Patrick Mahomes [Kansas City Chiefs quarterback] will get the same cold fingers in those conditions that Tua [Miami Dolphins quarterback] would.”

    In football (and other sports), the weather can really make its presence known with high winds. Kicking a field goal or throwing a deep ball is much more difficult with a brisk wind in your face, versus when it’s at your back. 

    Baseball

    According to Roth, baseball is the most interesting sport for weather effects since every single factor (rain, wind, temperature, humidity, elevation) plays a significant role in the expected outcome.

    Since there are 162 games a year, and hundreds of pitches thrown each game, there is a large sample size to help isolate variables and determine how weather affects the game. Baseball is the only major team sport where every ballpark has unique dimensions, so the impacts can vary depending on where ballplayers play the game.

    Roth says “in Chicago’s Wrigley Field, a southerly wind creates a jet stream effect that helps balls sail over the fence for home runs. A 15 mph wind blowing out in Wrigley can increase home run probabilities by over 50%. If you were to take that same wind, blowing out at 15 mph, to San Francisco’s Oracle Park, the wind only accounts for a 5% increase in home runs, as that stadium was specifically designed to minimize the impact of those winds.”

    Temperature and humidity is a variable that applies to all ballparks more equally. Most of the season (April through October) athletes play in the thick of the warm summer months. Since hotter air is less dense, offensive players score more runs during the dog days of summer since the air is thin. Routine pop-ups can carry further, sometimes becoming a home run.

    In the northern climates, teams there play those early and late season games in temperatures between 30 to 40 degrees. Roth says “the cold, dense air mass will limit how far a well-hit ball will travel, and what would have been a home run in 70 degree weather suddenly becomes a fly out.”

    Best “home field advantage?”

    If you’re a sports fan, you’ve heard of home field advantage. Oddsmakers and sports books will factor in 2 to 3 extra points for the home team in football games when creating lines, determining the favorite and underdog.

    Some factors baked into home field advantage include the crowd, home stadium familiarity, potential officiating bias and the lack of travel, sometimes visiting teams travel across multiple time zones. But how does the weather factor in?

    Roth says you have to consider elevation, since it’s the exception to the ‘this impacts everyone equally rule.’ “Our bodies take time to adjust to elevation, so any visiting team thrust into a game at elevation (i.e. – Denver) is immediately at a disadvantage when compared to players whose bodies are already acclimated to the thinner air at elevation.”

    Denver Broncos defensive end Matt Henningsen (91) leaves the field during an NFL football game against the Carolina Panthers on Sunday, Nov. 27, 2022, in Charlotte, N.C. (AP Photo/Rusty Jones)

    Roth says that Colorado teams have the best home field advantage, since the elevation change and thin air can cause fatigue in more active sports, and change the way a pitch breaks in baseball.

    What’s next?

    Roth says he’s focusing on “quantitative over qualitative.” He’s been compiling weather data on every outdoor baseball game since 2000 and the statistical results (runs, home runs, ERA, strikeouts, etc) of those games.

    The large sample size has allowed him to isolate weather as an individual variable, and the next step he plans is taking that data and applying it to the gambling odds or totals.

    Instead of saying “it’s hot and winds are blowing out, that’s great for hitting,” he can definitively say “in 72 games with similar heat and wind in this ballpark, we’ve seen a 48% increase in home runs and a 20% increase to runs scored compared to average.”

    You can check out RotoGrinders Chief Meteorologist Kevin Roth’s forecasts here:

    Our team of meteorologists dive deep into the science of weather and break down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Reid Lybarger

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  • Warmer weather sets in this week

    Warmer weather sets in this week

    Welcome to ‘Ask a Meteorologist,’ a weekly chat that discusses a new weather topic every week.

    Our average temperature for this time of the year is in the low 70s, but we’ll see temperatures climb into the 80s throughout the week.

    Bay News 9 meteorologists answer your questions about what to expect and if the warmer air stays for the weekend. 

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Decoding tree rings: Unveiling the hidden clues of climatic history

    Decoding tree rings: Unveiling the hidden clues of climatic history

    We’ve all heard it before. Tree rings can tell us the age of a tree, but did you know they can also tell us the weather?


    What You Need To Know

    • Tree rings can tell us the age of the tree
    • They can also help us determine what years were colder, warmer, drier and wetter
    • Studying tree rings can help us predict future climate


    How to prep for research

    There are a couple of things to consider before scientists survey trees.

    First, they must find a site where humans haven’t affected the area with logging or other research.

    Then they pick a group of the same species of trees to take samples from. Having numerous samples from the same area can provide a more reliable look at climate similarities over the years. 

    Christine Buhl, a forest health specialist for the Oregon Department of Forestry, uses an increment borer to core a dead western red cedar at Magness Memorial Tree Farm in Sherwood, Ore., Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2023. (AP Photo/Amanda Loman)

    How scientists take samples

    Much like coring an apple, scientists core the trees with an instrument called an increment borer.

    This allows them to take a thin sample that shows the rings from the outside to the center of the tree.

    This method does not harm the tree, and the tree can heal quickly after it’s cored.

    After coring the tree, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) says that the scientists return to the lab, sand the samples so every ring is perfectly visible, and place them upright for a microscope to begin research.

    What the rings tell us

    Counting the rings on the sample can tell us the trees’ age, but it can also tell us what weather patterns were like each year.

    NOAA explains, “trees will have narrow rings during cold periods and wider rings for warm periods.”

    They also say “trees that depend heavily on moisture during the growing season will have wider rings during rainy periods and narrower rings during dry periods.”

    (Pixabay)

    How this helps us

    Studying tree rings can help scientists determine what climate was like for each year the tree was alive.

    Because trees can live for hundreds to thousands of years, we can see what the climate was like well before record-keeping began for most in the 1800s.  

    Determining climate through tree rings over the past thousands of years can help reveal weather patterns and predict what climate we might see in the future.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Warming temperatures and gender disparities in sea turtles

    Warming temperatures and gender disparities in sea turtles

    Few species have their sex determined by temperatures, but for sea turtles it’s almost a certainty.

    However, this natural occurrence could become a biological disadvantage as global temperatures continue to rise, leading to larger gender disparities.


    What You Need To Know

    • A sea turtle’s gender is determined by the temperatures in its surrounding environment
    • Higher nest temperatures produce females, while cooler temperatures yield males
    • A warming planet will likely upset gender diversity in the sea turtle population

    Temperature-driven gender reveals

    The differences in reproduction between humans and sea turtles extend beyond the obvious ‘one lays eggs while the other does not.’ One key difference between the two is how sex is determined.

    For humans and many other species, gender is determined from the by sex chromosomes when fertilization occurs. But this is not the case with sea turtles and other reptiles, given that they lack sex chromosomes.

    For them, the gender of their offspring is determined after fertilization, and the deciding factor all depends on temperature. This kind of sexual determination is called temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD).

    Building their nest onshore, a female will lay their eggs in the sand, where they will continue to develop before hatching about two months later.

    A baby Olive Ridley sea turtle crawls to the sea past discarded turtle eggs at Ostional beach on the northern Pacific coast of Costa Rica, Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2007. (AP Photo/Kent Gilbert)

    During that time, the temperature of the surrounding sand can activate an enzyme, aromatase, in the embryos responsible for converting sex hormones, and determining gender.

    Higher temperatures stimulate more aromatase activity. This yields an increase in female hormones and thus, the baby sea turtle will hatch as a female.

    On the contrary, cooler temperatures limits aromatase activity. This promotes male hormones to dominate, and so the sea turtles that hatch will be male.

    (AP Photo/Cody Jackson)

    According to NOAA, sand temperatures of 88.8 degrees or more will yield female sea turtles, while sand temperatures of 81.86 degrees or less will produce males.

    Eggs incubated in sand temperatures falling between these two thresholds will cause a mix of male and female sea turtles.

    A warming world and gender inequality

    Following the world’s warmest year on record in 2023, rising global temperatures will likely upset gender diversity within sea turtle populations in the years to come.

    (NOAA)

    Researchers from Florida Atlantic University Marine Lab announced warmer nest temperatures in recent years have produced more female hatchlings, some years even recorded no male offspring at all. 

    As the male sea turtle populations continue to decrease, growing disparities in gender could ultimately endanger the species’ existence in the future.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Shawnie Caslin

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  • Where does the rain go? Understanding river basins and watersheds

    Where does the rain go? Understanding river basins and watersheds

    Have you ever wondered where all the rain goes? It goes to the same place as snowmelt when temperatures thaw out in the spring.

    It’s called a river basin, or a watershed, and whether you know it, all the land we stand on is part of a river basin. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Rain and snowmelt goes into river basins

    • A river basin channels runoff into larger bodies of water

    • Some water soaks into the ground

    Some water will seep into the shallow ground, moving through the soil and helping keep grass, trees and plants healthy. It can even travel deeper down, recharging groundwater aquifers.

    Once the ground becomes saturated, a river basin collects runoff and excess water and drains it into a larger body of water.

    Depending on where in the basin, it can move into small bodies of water like creeks, streams and rivers, and eventually to outflow points into larger bodies of water like a reservoir, bay or the ocean.

    In the U.S., most rain runoff eventually finds its way into the Gulf of Mexico, Atlantic and Pacific Ocean, or the Great Lakes. 

    This map below from Grasshopper Geography shows all the permanent and temporary streams and rivers of the Lower 48 in the U.S., divided into catchment areas. 

    River basins of the United States. (Robert Szucs/www.grasshoppergeography.com)

    The Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Basin (highlighted in pink) is one of the largest in the world. It includes parts or all of 31 U.S. states and two Canadian provinces, collecting precipitation for 41% of the contiguous United States.

    The Mississippi River’s water level closely correlates to precipitation totals across the basin. Persistent, heavy rainfall or excessive snowmelt can cause high water levels and put sections of the river into flood stage, threatening communities along the river.

    Conversely, severe drought across the Mississippi River basin can lead to low water levels, which can disrupt the shipping industry and expose some oddities from the bottom of the river.

    Snowmelt

    When snow melts, the water goes to the same place that rain would go. Generally, 10 to 12 inches of snowfall produces 1 inch of liquid water.

    In the western U.S. mountains, environmental and utility experts work to conserve that water and replenish lakes and reservoirs that shrink or dry up during times of drought. In the Central U.S., most of the snowmelt ends up in the Mississippi River.

    The annual snowpack in mountain ranges can help forecast potential flooding concerns when temperatures warm up. If there’s a large snowpack, rapid snowmelt can cause flooding.

    Below, you can see a video from Dec. 2023, after heavy rainfall and snowmelt from warm temperatures combined and led to significant flooding and high waters in Fairfax, Vt. 

    It’s more common during the spring, but also possible if temperatures climb well above normal during winter.

    Snowmelt can be just as important as rain for areas when it comes to recharging groundwater and supplying freshwater for people and animals. Less snowfall means less snowmelt and less water that could be resourceful for us. 

    Our team of meteorologists dive deep into the science of weather and break down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    Meteorologist Reid Lybarger

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