Meteorologist Trey Greenwood (@ConvectiveChronicles ) kicks off a new weekly Sunday series on the Texas Storm Chasers YouTube channel. If you want more than the surface-level forecast and prefer the meteorological nuts and bolts behind Texas weather, this is the place.
This week starts off active across the state. Trey dives into the setup for severe storms today (Sunday) and tomorrow (Monday), including large hail, damaging winds, and a low-end but non-zero tornado risk. He breaks down:
• SPC outlooks
• Hail, tornado, and wind probabilities
• Upper-level trough dynamics
• Moisture return, dryline placement, and surface features
• Model guidance and potential supercell development
• Flash flooding and excessive rainfall risks
• Timing for West Texas, Central Texas, East Texas, DFW, the ArkLaTex, and more
• What changes as storms train overnight
• How the environment evolves heading into Monday’s more robust threat
After the early-week mess, Trey looks ahead to the Thanksgiving stretch, which brings quieter weather, cooler temps, and sunshine. Then he touches on next weekend’s potential return to unsettled conditions as another trough and renewed moisture may stir things up again.
This is the technical, weather-nerd breakdown for Texans who want the “why” behind the forecast. For daily updates, check out David’s Weather Roundup videos on our Texas Weather Center channel.
Stay aware today and tomorrow, especially if you live in West Texas, North Texas, Central Texas, East Texas, or the ArkLaTex. Keep weather radios and alerts handy, and we’ll get you through the storms just fine.
Subscribe for weekly deep-dives and daily Texas weather coverage.
This week starts off active across the state. Trey dives into the setup for severe storms today (Sunday) and tomorrow (Monday), including large hail, damaging winds, and a low-end but non-zero tornado risk. He breaks down:
• SPC outlooks
• Hail, tornado, and wind probabilities
• Upper-level trough dynamics
• Moisture return, dryline placement, and surface features
• Model guidance and potential supercell development
• Flash flooding and excessive rainfall risks
• Timing for West Texas, Central Texas, East Texas, DFW, the ArkLaTex, and more
• What changes as storms train overnight
• How the environment evolves heading into Monday’s more robust threat
After the early-week mess, Trey looks ahead to the Thanksgiving stretch, which brings quieter weather, cooler temps, and sunshine. Then he touches on next weekend’s potential return to unsettled conditions as another trough and renewed moisture may stir things up again.
This is the technical, weather-nerd breakdown for Texans who want the “why” behind the forecast. For daily updates, check out David’s Weather Roundup videos on our Texas Weather Center channel.
Stay aware today and tomorrow, especially if you live in West Texas, North Texas, Central Texas, East Texas, or the ArkLaTex. Keep weather radios and alerts handy, and we’ll get you through the storms just fine.
Subscribe for weekly deep-dives and daily Texas weather coverage.

