Friday, July 13, 2012

What has been going on?


Many of you might have noticed over the past few weeks when posting the Covington forecast I title it “Covington FirstAlert Forecast”, not “Covington News Forecast.” If you are a fan of Covington News, I have not posted a forecast to that page also. I have only told a few people, but now I need to tell you all what is really going on. I have left Covington News. As many of you know, I did serve as the main weather forecaster for the page and did do some news posting. I left the page back on June 27th after making a couple of people “upset.” I was tracking the latest on the drought and the multi-generational heat wave that was heading our way. With us being under a drought and a burn ban, I could not help but overhear the scanner dispatching many area fire departments out to different fires, most of them being field fires. With West Central Indiana being a mainly rural area, it was the job of Covington News to post that information. If you live in a rural area and see smoke, you want to know what is going on. I, however, did not know it would make a couple of people upset with us. Somehow, what I was doing was not helping with the problem, only making it worse. I then decided to post a link to EvansvilleWatch, a group I am proud to be part of. After I posted that link, I made one of those two people mad, again, and I just had enough of it. I then changed the profile picture, cover picture, and left the page right then and there. In the few days after I had left, I was surprised to see the amount of people that came to my support of what I had done. The two people I had made upset were basically told that Covington News was doing everything right and that we were giving out information in a faster way. I did nothing wrong at all. I was following the Covington News page discloser and the rules set up by EvansvilleWatch. I was posting public information onto a public page using a public police scanner. Today, anyone can have access to a public police scanner by an app for your smartphone, over the Internet, and the old fashion way of a police scanner you can buy at the store. I almost wanted to post that saying, but did not. It was better for me just to leave the page altogether.

EvansvilleWatch was started in 2009 by Bill Merkel of Evansville by using a Twitter account. He no followers, no Facebook fans, and people had to wait to hear about the major breaking stories on the news later. Today, EW has 11,700 Twitter followers, over 21,000 fans on Facebook, and is the place to go in the Tri-State for breaking news first. EW was the first to do what we do best: listen to scanners all day and inform the general public. We tell people in the Evansville-Metro what is going on before the media calls it breaking news. When I became part of EW in April of this year, I wanted to help expand that service into the Covington area. Little did I know, I would make a couple of people upset and it would force me to leave the page. When we do something wrong at EW, we correct ourselves as soon as we can. Same thing at CN, make the correction as soon as we can. Both EW and CN policies say that information may not always be correct. What I had posted that day was to inform the general public, but it was the public that made me leave. One thing I want to make clear right now, I did not create the CN page. I joined the page three days after the page started. The page was made by someone else in Covington. That is all I am going to say about that.

One thing I will not forget about that is me being called an ambulance chaser and that I need to get a life and job. Some of the people on EW were called ambulance chasers, so I’m use to it. As for getting a life, I do have one. I have friends and I talk to them whenever I can. We like to do different things and we respect each other during those times. As for a job, I did have one during the 4th of July. I worked at Shelton Fireworks off of Exit 8 on I-74 in Covington. I learned that there is just more than one kind of firework and that people will buy fireworks, even if the world was ending. While I did not make enough to buy myself a Mac, I did make enough to buy a book or two for school and put gas in my car.

Now the question is, what are my plans next? I currently run the Covington Trojans Football, Covington Gold Rush, my own weather page, a national page know as Weather, and of course EvansvilleWatch. One of the newest projects I am working on is my blog. I hope to one day turn my blog into its own website to help better inform everyone. I will be heading back to the University of Southern Indiana this fall. I am majoring in radio and television (RTV). One of my plans is to hopefully put a forecast together for the schools radio station, 820 The Edge, which is an award winning radio station and the number one college radio station in Indiana. I also have plans of filling in from time to time this year for Access USI and current forecast Kayla Lambert. I have known Kayla for a few years and I hope that we will both teach each other something about the weather. My plan is, as I said, to fill in for her from time to time when I need to for the 2012-2013 school year. As long as Kayla graduates in May 2013, I will be taking over as the full time weather forecaster for Access USI on SETV 12. I do want to try other plans out at this time. One of them is being free-lancing for different groups. What would happen is different groups and originations would hire me to watch the weather for them during the time in which they would be active. For example, the Covington 4th of July Celebration group could hire me to watch radar, temperatures, and so on during the time of which the 4th of July Celebration is going on. I had planned on starting it this summer, but after what had happened in late May and early June with the passing of Jamie Stockdale to brain cancer and Marine Lance Corporal Joshua Witsman giving his life for our county, I had forgotten about my free-lancing. I do hope next summer will go a little better.

I will update you all on what my next plans are. Some will work and others will not. I do hope to have something to you all by the end of the month of what I will be doing next. Thank you and God bless. 

Drought Monitor Update


The Drought Monitor as of July 10th, 2012, was released on Thursday morning and it shows that we do need the rain. As I had said last week, we would start to see an Exceptional Drought. We now do see that. Starting off with the Midwest data first. Parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan are at or near normal conditions. Everyone else in the Midwest is has Abnormally Dry conditions or in a drought.
 
None: 16.68
Abnormally Dry: 20.05
Moderate Drought: 30.25
Severe Drought: 26.97
Extreme Drought: 5.74
Exceptional Drought: 0.31






Indiana
99.40% of Indiana is in a drought. Only 0.60% has Abnormally Dry conditions. That 0.60% is around the Louisville area. Even if we get rain this weekend, it will not be enough. Next week is when I do believe that all of Indiana will be in some form of a drought. Exceptional Drought is now in Indiana. Where is it? In Extreme Southern Posey and Vanderburgh Counties. That should expand next week, but I wouldn’t mind being wrong. Extreme Drought for Southwestern Indiana, Northeastern Indiana, and a good part of Central Indiana while Northwestern Indiana and Southeastern Indiana is under a Moderate Drought and the rest of Indiana is under a Severe Drought.

None: 0.00
Abnormally Dry: 0.60
Moderate Drought: 19.25
Severe Drought: 50.38
Extreme Drought: 29.37
Exceptional Drought: 0.40

Rainfall as of Wednesday, July 11th 2012
Evansville: 12.12; -13.36
Indy: 15.15; -8.23
Lafayette: 11.57; -8.07
Terre Haute: 12.56; -11.83
Muncie: 12.56; -11.83
Bloomington: 12.68; -13.91
Shelbyville: 13.10; -10.65
Valparaiso: 12.23; -6.09
Fort Wayne: 11.02; -9.44
South Bend: 12.84; -6.02

Illinois
All of Illinois is now under some form of a drought. The Extreme and Exceptional Drought areas are in Southern Illinois while the rest of the state is Moderate or Severe Drought.

None: 0.00
Abnormally Dry: 0.00
Moderate Drought: 33.72
Severe Drought: 58.15
Extreme Drought: 7.45
Exceptional Drought: 0.68

Rainfall as of Wednesday, July 11th 2012
Peoria: 11.78; -7.47
Springfield: 14.72; -5.18
Champaign: 12.26; -8.49
Decatur: 10.25; -9.88



Lawrenceville: 12.39; -10.64
Lincoln: 9.71; -10.56
Mattoon: 13.27; -6.73
Chicago O’Hare: 13.39; -4.33
Chicago Midway: 11.00; -8.87

Kentucky
Kentucky is well so-so in the drought. Western Kentucky is under Extreme and Exceptional Drought while Extreme Eastern Kentucky and the Louisville area are under Abnormally Dry conditions. The rest of the state has Moderate and Severe Drought conditions. I don’t think all of Kentucky will be under some form of a drought this time next week, but maybe in two or three weeks.

None: 0.00
Abnormally Dry: 13.16
Moderate Drought: 40.18
Severe Drought: 26.34
Extreme Drought: 17.83
Exceptional Drought: 2.49

Rainfall as of Wednesday, July 11th 2012
Paducah: 12.56; -14.35
Louisville: 24.16; -0.93
Lexington: 17.55; -7.82
Bowling Green: 20.94; -6.56
Frankfort: 19.11; -5.88

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

EvansvilleWatch Forecast for July 10th, 2012 (Evening)

Enjoy the day Wednesday because we have a chance of rain starting Wednesday night and running until next Tuesday. Our temps during this time period are going to stay near normal, but Thursday is looking to be the coolest at 84 and Tuesday is looking to be the warmest at 93 of the next seven days. Our best chance of rain will be Thursday Night and Friday as they are just right on the edge of 50%. We have gulf moisture that is moving in and is just going to stay here for awhile. The rain that we do get is not going to take this drought away from us anytime soon. Just knowing that we are getting that good soaking rain right now will not help as much as we want it to with the drought, but it will help us not water our lawns. As for severe weather, weather office is saying that they are not ruling that out. We will be looking at this from a day by day bases. If we do have any severe weather, it will be isolated at this time with the greatest threats being gusty winds, heavy rainfall, and lighting. After Tuesday, keeping the chance of rain around still. Temps increasing a little before dropping back off to near normal. Lets hope it will stay that way.

Evansville Pollen.com PollenCast
Wednesday: 3.1 (Low-Medium)
Thursday: 1.8 (Low)
Friday: 0.8 (Low)


EvansvilleWatch Seven Day Forecast
Tonight: Partly cloudy, near normal, 68
Wednesday: Mostly sunny, 90
Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy, maybe an isolated shower or two, 68
Thursday: Clouds increasing, widely scattered to scattered showers and thunderstorms, 84
Thursday Night: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, mostly cloudy, 69
Friday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, cloudy, 87
Saturday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, mostly cloudy, 89
Sunday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly cloudy, 90
Monday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly sunny, 92
Tuesday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly sunny, 93

Covington FirstAlert Forecast for July 10th, 2012 (Evening)

Tonight, Wednesday, Wednesday Night, and most of Thursday are looking to be nice. Clear for the overnight and sunshine for the day time hours. We do have a chance of seeing showers and thunderstorms late on Thursday and as head into Thursday Night. Friday, however, is going to be the best day of seeing any rain. We have about a 52% chance of seeing rain on Friday. We that drop to 39% on Saturday and between 30-35% for Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. The reason we are getting this much needed rain is because of gulf moisture pulling north and just sitting here. While this will not take away our drought, I do believe that we could see enough rain to where we don’t have to water our lawns. Temps during this time will be near normal, head up some starting next Wednesday, but cool off by next Saturday. Severe weather for day is looking be more of Southern Indiana/Illinois. As for us, we will be more of a day by day.

Covington Pollen.com PollenCast
Wednesday: 3.9 (Low-Medium)
Thursday: 4.5 (Low-Medium)
Friday: 4.3 (Low-Medium)


Covington FirstAlert Seven Day Forecast
Tonight: Clear, 63
Wednesday: Sunny, warm, 89
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, 64
Thursday: Mostly sunny, isolated showers and thunderstorms late, 86
Thursday Night: Widely scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly cloudy, 67
Friday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, mostly cloudy, 85
Saturday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, mostly cloudy, 86
Sunday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly cloudy, 89
Monday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly sunny, 89
Tuesday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly sunny, 89

Monday, July 9, 2012

EvansvilleWatch Forecast for July 9th, 2012 (Evening)

After what felt like years of being in the 100s, we finally saw today temps more near the normal for this time of the year. Now if only we could get back to near normal rainfall. Stationary front is to our south and will stay there for well just about the rest of this week. Some widely scattered showers and thunderstorms are possible tonight in the southern parts of the Tri-State while the northern parts of the Tri-State will be more on the mostly clear side. Here in Evansville, more of partly cloudy skies. The sun will back again on Tuesday and we may hit 90 at the airport before the afternoon showers and thunderstorms do move. Wednesday is looking to be only day of no rainfall at all. We do have a slight chance of rain on Thursday with greater chances being on Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday. Our highest chance will be on Saturday as a warm front will north into the Tri-State. Behind that, we do see a temp increase above 90 for Sunday and Monday. Looking ahead more long range, Tuesday and Wednesday of next are looking to be in the mid-90s. One of the models is pushing 100 for both days, but I don’t think we will see that. After that, back into the 80s with some rain mixed in.

Pollen.com PollenCast
Tuesday: 2.9 (Low-Medium)
Wednesday: 3.7 (Low-Medium)
Thursday: 3.6 (Low-Medium)


Seven Day Forecast
Tonight: Widely scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly cloudy, 68
Tuesday: Widely afternoon scattered showers and thunderstorms, mostly sunny, warm, 90
Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, 68
Wednesday: Mostly sunny, warm, 90
Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy, 68
Thursday: Widely scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly cloudy, 86
Friday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly cloudy, 86
Saturday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, mostly cloudy, 87
Sunday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly cloudy to partly sunny, warm, 90
Monday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly sunny, warmer, 91

Covington FirstAlert Forecast for July 9th, 2012 (Evening)

If it felt cooler today, that was because it was cooler today. The hot weather is gone for now and more near normal weather is here for now. The only thing we have to talk about is this area of high pressure from Canada. That will keep us dry, clear, and near normal temps. We do have a chance of scattered showers and thunderstorms for Friday until Monday. Best chance will be on Saturday as a weak warm front will lift north. By the time it does get here, it will be weak and we really won’t see temps go up that much. Days 8-14 starting off above normal then heading back to below normal temps.

Pollen.com PollenCast
Tuesday: 3.9 (Low-Medium)
Wednesday: 4.0 (Low-Medium)
Thursday: 4.2 (Low-Medium)


Seven Day Forecast
Tonight: Clear, 63
Tuesday: Sunny, 86
Tuesday Night: Mostly clear, 62
Wednesday: Sunny, 86
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, 63
Thursday: Sunny, 86
Friday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly cloudy, 85
Saturday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly cloudy, 86
Sunday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly sunny, 88
Monday: Scattered showers and thunderstorms, partly sunny, 89

Friday, July 6, 2012

Drought Monitor Update for Thursday, July 5th, 2012



The Tennessee Valley, Southeast, Deep South, and lower Ohio Valley: Brutal heat and only light to locally moderate rain engendered a broad expansion and intensification of dryness and drought. Most of this region recorded less than half of normal precipitation during the last 30 days, with under 25 percent of normal falling on the lower Ohio Valley, much of Kentucky and northern Tennessee. Indiana, Missouri, Kentucky, and Tennessee each have 45 to 50 percent of their corn crop in poor or very poor condition as well as 34 to 49 percent of soybeans.

Some of us have had some rain over the past week, but not that much to help with our drought. Some are lacking just a little bit of rain while the rest of us are in a major drought. The drought outlook is showing that this drought will only worsen if we do not get any rain soon.

Midwest

Starting off in the Midwest, only 28.94% is at or near normal conditions. Last week it was 39.70% and last year was 98.82%. Good news at this time, no one is under the Exceptional Drought.

None: 28.94%
Abnormally Dry: 33.22%
Moderate Drought: 25.88%
Severe Drought: 8.47%
Extreme Drought: 3.49%
Exceptional Drought: 0.00%

Indiana
All of Indiana at this is lacking rainfall. Last week, just 0.14% of the state was at or near normal conditions. This week, everyone is under normal conditions. This time last year, we were all wet. Extreme Drought for the Tri-State area of Indiana and for Northeastern Indiana. I do believe next week those areas could be in the Exceptional Drought conditions if we do not get any rainfall. Central Indiana is under a Severe Drought with the rest of the state under a Moderate Drought or still just Abnormally Dry.

None: 0.00%
Abnormally Dry: 10.98
Moderate Drought: 20.18%
Severe Drought: 45.38%
Extreme Drought: 23.46%
Exceptional Drought: 0.00%

Year to Date Rainfall Totals and Departure from Normal
Evansville: 11.94”, -12.73”
Indianapolis: 15.15”, -7.28”
Lafayette: 11.56”, -7.23”
Terre Haute: 12.56”, -10.90”
Muncie: 13.92”, -7.00”
Bloomington: 12.05”, -13.50”
Shelbyville: 13.10”, -9.69”
Fort Wayne: 11.01”, -8.60”
South Bend: 12.84”, -5.27”
Valparaiso: 12.08”, -5.37”

 

Illinois
The drought in Illinois is like Illinois politics, everything just gets worse. The drought has now grown in the state and next week we could see the whole state under some form of a drought. The Extreme Drought still staying in Southern Illinois, but only time will tell if it makes its way more towards Central Illinois.

None: 0.00%
Abnormally Dry: 7.95%
Moderate Drought: 52.05%
Severe Drought: 31.87%
Extreme Drought: 8.13%
Exceptional Drought: 0.00%

Year to Date Rainfall Totals and Departure from Normal
Chicago O’Hare: 13.39”, -3.64”
Chicago Midway: 11.00”, -8.11”
Peoria: 11.77”, -6.70”
Springfield: 14.47”, -4.65”
Champaign: 12.26”, -7.60”
Decatur: 9.83”, -9.61”
Lawrenceville: 12.03”, -10.17”
Lincoln: 9.62”, -9.64”
Mattoon: 13.27”, -5.92”

Kentucky
Last week, just 3.41% of Kentucky was at or near normal conditions. This week, the whole state needs rain as well. Eastern and Central Kentucky is a mix of Abnormally Dry, Moderate Drought, or Severe Drought Conditions. The Extreme Drought conditions is staying in Western Kentucky at this time, which includes the Tri-State area of Kentucky. Part of this area could be at Exceptional Drought conditions next week.

None: 0.00”
Abnormally Dry: 18.08”
Moderate Drought: 34.03”
Severe Drought: 27.55”
Extreme Drought: 20.34”
Exceptional Drought: 0.00”

Year to Date Rainfall Totals and Departure from Normal
Paducah: 11.85”, -14.16”
Louisville International Airport: 24.16”, -0.12”
Lexington: 17.48”, -6.98”
Bowling Green: 20.01”, -6.62”
Frankfort: 19.11”, -5.05”

All rainfall total data is as of 11:59PM local time on Thursday, July 5th, 2012