The National Weather Service has issued a SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH until 8pm this evevning. Strong storms have already developed and will continue to do so through the evening hours before dissipating during the overnight hours. I may have the day off, but I am with Jeff Womack tracking the storms, and he will break in with any severe thunderstorms warnings. The main threat today is the likliehood of strong damaging winds, along with large hail. There is even a minor threat for isolated tornadoes as well! Please plan now for these strong storms!
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Severe Thunderstorm Watch Through Saturday Evening
The National Weather Service has issued a SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH until 8pm this evevning. Strong storms have already developed and will continue to do so through the evening hours before dissipating during the overnight hours. I may have the day off, but I am with Jeff Womack tracking the storms, and he will break in with any severe thunderstorms warnings. The main threat today is the likliehood of strong damaging winds, along with large hail. There is even a minor threat for isolated tornadoes as well! Please plan now for these strong storms!
Thursday, July 29, 2010
June 30 Storms Caused More than Just Hail Damage

Here is an email from a local viewer, talking about the impacts to the forest from the June 30 storms:
I am the west zone trails supervisor for the
The microburst that hit these occurred just after the big June 30th hail storm, and it must have been a whopper. If you have any info on wind speeds, or anything related to this event, from the
We did manage to open the 408, and we opened 401 west of the 408 junction. I thought you all might enjoy seeing nature's handiwork, as I follow the Heard blog fairly often, and I see user pics in there occasionally.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Two Dead after Severe Weather Hits Northeast Montana
According to the Associated Press, the Sheridan County Coroner has confirmed that two people were killed in a tornado that struck west of Reserve Monday evening. One other person was injured, but no details on their injuries have been released.
This gives me a chance to reiterate the importance of being safe in severe weather, and have a plan for any type of severe weather, knowing where to go, what to do, and how to meet up with family members in the event you get separated.
Below you will find the storm reports for Monday issued from the Glasgow National Weather Service Office:
PRELIMINARY LOCAL STORM REPORT...CORRECTED
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GLASGOW MT
510 AM MDT TUE JUL 27 2010
..TIME... ...EVENT... ...CITY LOCATION... ...LAT.LON...
..DATE... ....MAG.... ..COUNTY LOCATION..ST.. ...SOURCE....
..REMARKS..
0635 PM TORNADO SW SCOBEY 48.79N 105.42W
07/26/2010 DANIELS MT TRAINED SPOTTER
TORNADO TOUCH DOWN HALF MILE NORTH OF SCOBEY BREIFLY.
FUNNEL CLOUD OBSERVED FOR SEVERAL MINUTES BEFORE TOUCH
DOWN.
0635 PM TORNADO 11 WNW MEDICINE LAKE 48.58N 104.70W
07/26/2010 SHERIDAN MT TRAINED SPOTTER
LARGE TORNADO ON THE GROUND WITH A DEBRIS CLOUD ABOUT 4
MILES TO THE WEST.
0647 PM HAIL NW NAVAJO 48.79N 105.06W
07/26/2010 E1.00 INCH DANIELS MT TRAINED SPOTTER
QUARTER SIZE AND SMALLER HAIL.
0655 PM HAIL NW NAVAJO 48.79N 105.06W
07/26/2010 M3.00 INCH DANIELS MT TRAINED SPOTTER
GOLFBALL SIZE HAIL COVERED THE GROUND AT 650 PM. THREE
INCH HAIL OCCURRED AT 655 PM. TOTAL RAINFALL OF 0.88.
0720 PM TORNADO W RESERVE 48.61N 104.46W
07/26/2010 SHERIDAN MT PUBLIC
SHERIDAN COUNTY DISPATCH CALLED WITH A REPORT OF A
TORNADO ON THE GROUND WEST OF RESERVE. THIS REPORT WAS
RELAYED THROUGH SHERIDAN DISPATCH.
0721 PM TORNADO W RESERVE 48.61N 104.46W
07/26/2010 SHERIDAN MT PUBLIC
PUBLIC REPORT OF TORNADO ON THE GROUND TO THE WEST OF
RESERVE.
0735 PM TORNADO 9 W RESERVE 48.61N 104.66W
07/26/2010 SHERIDAN MT EMERGENCY MNGR
*** 2 FATAL, 1 INJ *** TWO FATALITIES AND ONE INJURY FROM
A TORNADO...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CONDUCTING STORM
SUREY FOR FURTHER INFORMATION.
0800 PM HAIL 7 SE RESERVE 48.54N 104.35W
07/26/2010 E0.75 INCH SHERIDAN MT TRAINED SPOTTER
ACCOMPANIED BY HEAVY RAIN.
0800 PM TSTM WND GST 9 ESE MEDICINE LAKE 48.46N 104.31W
07/26/2010 E70.00 MPH SHERIDAN MT TRAINED SPOTTER
ONE INCH HAIL ALSO FELL. NO DAMAGE REPORTED SO FAR.
Thursday, July 22, 2010
New Tropical Depression in Caribbean
The National Hurricane Center is Following a new storm that has developed over the northern Caribbean. The latest track of this storm has it going in the central Gulf by late Friday into the weekend.The storm currently known as Tropical Depression #3 is carrying winds of 35 mph. Once the storm reaches 39 mph, it will become Tropical Storm Bonnie, the second named storm of the 2010 Atlantic Hurricane Season.
The latest data suggests that this storm will in all likelihood become Bonnie by late tonight or early tomorrow morning.
The track of TD3 will take the storm through the central gulf and toward the Gulf Coast near central Louisiana. If the current forecast holds true, TD3 will become Tropical Storm Bonnie and make landfall as a Tropical Storm. The main threat with this storm would be heavy rains, and gusty winds as the storm makes landfall during the day on Sunday.
I will continue to follow this storm, along with any others that develop.
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
New Report Shows Potential Water Shortages by Mid-Century
According to a report from Tetra Tech produced for the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), over 1,100
The report uses publicly available water use data across the
The more than 400 counties identified as being at greatest risk in the report reflects a 14-times increase from previous estimates. For a look at county- and state-specific maps detailing the report findings (including a Google Earth map), go to http://www.nrdc.org/globalWarming/watersustainability/ and http://rd.tetratech.com/climatechange/projects/nrdc_climate.asp.
While detailed modeling of climate change impacts on crop production was beyond the scope of the Tetra Tech analysis, the potential scale of disruption is reflected based on the value of the crops produced in the 1,100 at-risk counties. In 2007, the value of the crops produced in the at-risk counties identified in the report exceeded $105 billion. A separate study compared the Tetra Tech data with county-level crop production data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture; state-specific fact sheets outlining the potential agricultural impacts may be found at http://agcarbonmarkets.com/Science.htm.
Dan Lashof, director,
Sujoy Roy, principal engineer and lead report author, Tetra Tech, said: "The goal of the analysis is to identify regions where potential stresses, and the need to do something about them, may be the greatest. We used publicly available data on current water withdrawals for different sectors of the economy, such as irrigation, cooling for power generation, and municipal supply, and estimated future demands using business-as-usual scenarios of growth. We then compared these future withdrawals to a measure of renewable water supply in 2050, based on a set of 16 global climate model projections of temperature and precipitation, to identify regions that may be stressed by water availability. These future stresses are related to changes in precipitation as well as the likelihood of increased demand in some regions."
Water withdrawal will grow by 25 percent in many areas of the
Estimated water withdrawal as a percentage of available precipitation is generally less than 5 percent for the majority of the
Tuesday, July 20, 2010

The graphic to the left depicts the August forecast for the U.S. with respect to temperatures. Any areas in orange indicate an increased chance of being above what is typical during the month.
You can tell that much of the western U.S. looks to run much above average including all of Montana. What this means is that our August outlook appears to be unseasonably warm.
Most of the country actually will run warm during August, which for many of us who experienced that cool spring, is a much welcomed sight. The far western part of the country, along with the southern mid-west and south central U.S. will have an equal chance of being warmer or cooler than normal, in other words, expect a seasonal August.

When it comes to precipitation, the outlook is a little different. The graphic to the right shows the chances of precipitation compared to what we normally expect during August. Though August is a relatively dry month for our area to begin with, the outlook has us drier than seasonal. This means that our August precipitation is expected to be below the already low numbers.
What does this mean for southwest Montana? The latest outlook has us warmer than normal, and drier than normal for the Month of August. After our cool and wet spring, this could increase our fire danger as we head later into the season. Any fuels that had extra moisture to grow during the spring will quickly dry out under the warm and dry conditions, increasing the fuels for forest fires. Though this forecast is just a preliminary outlook, it does give us an idea of what we can expect as we head later into the summer months.
I am currently working on a more detailed outlook, not only for August, but for the next 3 months, I will have that as soon as I have a chance to fully analyze the data!
Thursday, July 15, 2010
Warm weather moving in...possible increased fire danger?
City Forecast Record Record
High High Year
Dillon 88 94 2005
Livingston 95 101 2007
Anaconda 85 95 2004
Ennis 92 97 2007
So warm yes, but not record warm for our area, as many of us have records reaching into the 100's for Friday. A slight cool down is expected during the weekend into early next week, but sunshine will still be dominant and dry weather will also prevail.
These warm and dry conditions could increase our fire danger, as we are already in the 2010 wildfire season across the inter-mountain west. One fire burning north of Helena has grown to more than 300 acres, and was only 10 percent contained as of last night.
Further to the south, there is a much larger fire burning near the Idaho Nuclear Lab facility in the central part of the state. The latest numbers from late last night was that the fire has burned 109,000 acres, roughly 170 square miles. That's equal to about 7-9% of either Gallatin or Silver Bow Counties, so a fairly large area.
With southwesterly winds, and this fire to our southwest, we may get some smoke from this fire to drift into our area by as early as this weekend into early next week. The latest numbers on containment was that the fire was 60% contained.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
How long will the sun last?
Highs will still be comfortable today with 70's for much of the area, though the mountains could remain only in the 60's. Good news is that this cooler weather trend will be short lived as we get back into the 80's and 90's by the end of the work week!
Beyond the next 7 days, we are still looking to stay warm and dry, with very little threat for any wet weather over the coming days. Highs will stay above normal too, so get out and enjoy the summer while it lasts!
Monday, July 12, 2010
Beautiful Weather Pattern Setting In! A little windy though today...
The other impact of this front will be a brief but fairly strong cool down of about 10 to 15 degrees from our Monday highs. This cool down will last through your Tuesday and Wednesday before the full brunt of the high clears things out and we begin to see the warm part of our summer here in southwest Montana.
Highs by the end of the week will be pushing near 90 east of the divide, while west, expect temperatures well into the 80's for several days in a row.
Looking into the longer term, beyond the 7-day forecast, the weather pattern still looks to hold. If all goes well, we could go perhaps up to two weeks with dry and sunny weather and temperatures near or above the seasonal levels! I will keep an eye on that extended forecast, but it appears that now is the time to enjoy the great summer weather outside!
Sunday, July 11, 2010
This Week's Weather Looking Good!
As I switch gears to look at our weather pattern here in Montana, we are setting up nicely for some mild and sunny weather. I will have a more detailed look in the coming hours and will have a complete look at the forecast tomorrow morning on Montana This Morning with Lindsay Clein. For now sit back, relax and look forward to a beautiful weather week!
