Sunday, July 19, 2026

A quick post on the week ahead and Bertha!

 

Surface chart and radar.

 



 


Yesterday’s Enhanced Risk definitely verified. There were hundreds of damage reports along with at least two tornadoes. The National Weather Service said two tornadoes touched down in western Pennsylvania on Saturday. The first tornado: was near Summerville in Jefferson County. The second tornado touched down just northeast of Latrobe in Westmoreland County. Surveys will be ongoing today and tomorrow to see the ratings of these two, and to see if additional tornadoes occurred.

Today   

The cold front responsible for all the severe weather yesterday has pushed south and east of the region and is off the coast. Today will see clearing skies and lots of sun. Temperatures will be seasonal with a light breeze. The best thing is that wildfire smoke is mostly gone for now. The EPA has Pennsylvania into the Middle Atlantic Region at a moderate level.  High pressure will continue to move into the region, providing tranquil conditions for tomorrow.



Rest of the week

A warm front is going to approach Monday night. This will continue to move across the region on Tuesday. Behind the front, warm and more humid air will move into the region. Along and ahead of the front we will see rain showers and thunderstorms.

Late Tuesday and Wednesday a series of cold fronts will move through. These are going to produce scattered showers and thunderstorms. The conditions will allow for some of these storms to be strong to severe.   We could have some lingering showers Thursday morning. But high pressure is going to be moving in. The high pressure looks to stick around for a few days providing scattered clouds and generally dry conditions.

  

The Tropics

 


That area of low pressure in the Northeast Gulf I was talking about last week, is now tropical depression two. As I said it could it is tracking generally west. The reason for this drifting back to the west; has to do with the trough over the East Coast. The flow around this trough is coming out of the northeast and east.  Currently TD 2 has max sustained winds of 30 mph, a central pressure of 1011 mb and is tracking north-northwest at 2 mph.



Right now, shear is fairly low. TD2 has carved out a moist environment in the dry air that surrounds it, but some of the dry air being pulled into the circulation.  This should allow for slower development for now. We do have high pressure over Texas. The clockwise flow around this high, should allow TD 2 to stay a bit offshore, over that warm water in the Gulf. But based on the overall setup, this is very likely to become Bertha.  Those in Louisiana and Texas should keep an eye on this.