Welcome to Texas Weather This Week with Trey Greenwood, a more meteorologically in-depth Sunday feature from the Texas Storm Chasers YouTube channel.
Meteorologist Trey Greenwood is back with a detailed look at the week ahead in Texas weather, including continued fire weather concerns in West Texas and the Texas Panhandle, plus the return of severe storm chances Tuesday and Wednesday.
A cold front, dryline, returning Gulf moisture, and stronger winds aloft may support severe thunderstorms across parts of North Texas, Northeast Texas, Central Texas, and East Texas this week. Damaging winds look like the main concern, but large hail and a low-end tornado risk may also be possible if more isolated storms can develop.
In this briefing, Trey breaks down the upper-level pattern, moisture return, expected surface boundaries, forecast soundings, storm mode concerns, and why this Tuesday-Wednesday setup is not a classic trough ejection but still needs to be watched closely.
Areas discussed include North Texas, Northeast Texas, East Texas, Central Texas, the Dallas-Fort Worth area, Abilene, Waco, Austin, Lufkin, Houston, West Texas, and the Texas Panhandle.
Forecast details will change, so make sure you are subscribed to Texas Storm Chasers and have notifications turned on. We will continue to post updates as new data and outlooks arrive.
👍 Like this video if the in-depth meteorology breakdown was helpful.
💬 Drop your city in the comments and let us know what part of Texas you are watching from this week.
🔔 Subscribe and turn on notifications for more Texas weather updates.
#TexasWeather #SevereWeather #TexasStormChasers #StormForecast #Meteorology
Meteorologist Trey Greenwood is back with a detailed look at the week ahead in Texas weather, including continued fire weather concerns in West Texas and the Texas Panhandle, plus the return of severe storm chances Tuesday and Wednesday.
A cold front, dryline, returning Gulf moisture, and stronger winds aloft may support severe thunderstorms across parts of North Texas, Northeast Texas, Central Texas, and East Texas this week. Damaging winds look like the main concern, but large hail and a low-end tornado risk may also be possible if more isolated storms can develop.
In this briefing, Trey breaks down the upper-level pattern, moisture return, expected surface boundaries, forecast soundings, storm mode concerns, and why this Tuesday-Wednesday setup is not a classic trough ejection but still needs to be watched closely.
Areas discussed include North Texas, Northeast Texas, East Texas, Central Texas, the Dallas-Fort Worth area, Abilene, Waco, Austin, Lufkin, Houston, West Texas, and the Texas Panhandle.
Forecast details will change, so make sure you are subscribed to Texas Storm Chasers and have notifications turned on. We will continue to post updates as new data and outlooks arrive.
👍 Like this video if the in-depth meteorology breakdown was helpful.
💬 Drop your city in the comments and let us know what part of Texas you are watching from this week.
🔔 Subscribe and turn on notifications for more Texas weather updates.
#TexasWeather #SevereWeather #TexasStormChasers #StormForecast #Meteorology

