logo
Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather: New Orleans faces growing flood risk as relentless storms pummel South

Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather: New Orleans faces growing flood risk as relentless storms pummel South

Yahoo07-05-2025

Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Generate Key Takeaways
Welcome to the Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather. It's Wednesday, May 7, 2025. Start your day with everything you need to know about today's weather. You can also get a quick briefing of national, regional and local weather whenever you like with the FOX Weather Update podcast.
Damage has been reported in portions of Texas and Louisiana as severe weather tore across the region on Tuesday.
Powerful storms pummeled communities with high winds and softball-sized hail .
Extreme weather has been threatening the South for days, from the southern Plains to the Gulf Coast, leaving a 10-year-old Texas girl dead after she was swept away by floodwaters .
Severe storms are expected to redevelop Wednesday afternoon across parts of the Texas Coastal Plain, with large hail and strong wind gusts as the primary threats.
Meanwhile, days of storms have created a flash flood threat across parts of Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi. A large area of thunderstorms is already soaking portions of Louisiana as of Wednesday morning.
Southeastern Louisiana, including New Orleans, has been placed in a Level 3 out of 4 flash flood risk from Wednesday morning through Thursday morning. Rainfall totals could exceed a half-foot in some areas along the Gulf Coast once the event wraps up by Friday.
Parts of the Rockies have seen feet of snow since Monday, and more snow could pile up through Wednesday before finally tapering off.
Snow accumulations remain at elevations above 7,000 feet in Colorado and New Mexico. Chacon, New Mexico, leads the way with 34 inches of snow as of Tuesday evening, while Echo Lake, Colorado, has recorded 13 inches.
Winter Storm Watches and Warnings are in effect.
Hurricane season is on the horizon, and NOAA's Hurricane Hunters are ready to fly into any storms to keep Americans safe.
FOX Weather Correspondent Brandy Campbell spoke with Capt. Nate Kahn, commanding officer of the Noaa Aircraft Operations Center, about the Hurricane Hunters and what it's like to fly into a hurricane.
"Flying into the storms is an exercise in, I'd call it, nine hours of mild discomfort interspersed with two to three minutes of sheer and utter terror," Kahn said to Campbell.
Here are a few more stories you might find interesting.
Need more weather? Check your local forecast plus 3D radar in the FOX Weather app . You can also watch FOX Weather wherever you go using the FOX Weather app, at foxweather.com/live or on your favorite streaming service .
It's easy to share your weather photos and videos with us. Email them to weather@fox.com or add the hashtag #FOXWeather to your post on your favorite social media platform.
Original article source: Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather: New Orleans faces growing flood risk as relentless storms pummel South

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NOAA debuts artificial intelligence models for hurricane season
NOAA debuts artificial intelligence models for hurricane season

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

NOAA debuts artificial intelligence models for hurricane season

The Brief The National Weather Service is rehiring more than 100 employees after mass layoffs. This will be the first hurricane season NOAA uses AI models in forecasts. Experts say the technology could reduce forecasting errors—but humans still lead the effort. TAMPA, Fla. - The National Weather Service is testing artificial intelligence for the first time this hurricane season. What we know NOAA officials say AI models will now join the suite of tools meteorologists use to track storm development and intensity. Follow FOX 13 on YouTube What they're saying Wallace Hogsett, a science and operations officer for NOAA, told FOX 13 this marks a pivotal year: "We were looking at [AI models] a little last year, but this is the first year they will be a part of the suite of models that we're looking at." He explained that traditional models involve solving complicated equations, and take a lot of computing power, so AI can help speed it up, and decrease errors. READ: Hillsborough County seeks feedback to decide how to spend $700 million in hurricane recovery funds "AI models, on the other hand, are looking at 30, 40, 50 years of four-dimensional data and processing all of that information very quickly, recognizing patterns and producing a forecast," said Hogsett. "We're hoping that these models will help continue the trend of lower errors in both track and intensity forecasts, which will allow people to have a clearer picture of the risk that they and their families will be under." FOX 13 Chief Meteorologist Paul Dellegatto agrees AI is promising — but not a replacement: "We look at this model, we look at that model, and now we look at AI models… it's simply another tool we use to forecast … I think AI is probably the future, but we're not there yet." What's next If forecasters find AI models reliable this season, NOAA says the tech could be permanently integrated into future forecasting operations. The Source This article is based on interviews conducted with National Weather Service scientists and FOX 13 Chief Meteorologist Paul Dellegatto. WATCH FOX 13 NEWS: STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 13 TAMPA: Download the FOX Local app for your smart TV Download FOX Local mobile app:Apple |Android Download the FOX 13 News app for breaking news alerts, latest headlines Download the SkyTower Radar app Sign up for FOX 13's daily newsletter

See it: Massive 2-mile-wide tornado caught on video plowing through Texas field
See it: Massive 2-mile-wide tornado caught on video plowing through Texas field

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

See it: Massive 2-mile-wide tornado caught on video plowing through Texas field

MORTON, Texas – Catching a tornado live on camera is no easy feat, but FOX Weather Exclusive Storm Tracker Brandon Copic not only got a massive tornado at one angle, but three. Copic was tracking storms in northwestern Texas on Thursday when he encountered this monster "dust buster" blasting through a field in Morton. Video from three different points-of-view in Copic's vehicle shows the gigantic twister, encompassing a large area believed to be around 2 miles wide. In the video, Copic tracks the tornado down a dirt road next to a field. "This thing is an absolute dust buster," Copic said. As he gets closer to the tornado, things get bumpier and bumpier, but he keeps trucking along, very slowly. The tornado can be seen on his roof camera and dash camera. The camera angles show the sky still a clear blue on the edge of the twister. Towards the end of the video. Copic's car is enveloped in dust from the storm. Watch: Storm Chaser Provides Wild Drive Through Texas Amid Windshield-shattering Hail, Walls Of Dust As he continues onward, he and other storm chasers following the tornado stop abruptly due to downed powerlines. "Powerlines snapped right in front of us," Copic narrates, as he turns his tracking vehicle around and heads back the way he came. Watch: Supercell Thunderstorm Intercepted In Texas Impacts from this storm system were felt all the way from New Mexico to Texas, as a supercell produced several tornadoes in the area. The National Weather Service plans to complete a survey of the track of the tornado to determine its strength on the Enhanced Fujita article source: See it: Massive 2-mile-wide tornado caught on video plowing through Texas field

Eastern Pacific to churn out more tropical storms before Atlantic activity begins
Eastern Pacific to churn out more tropical storms before Atlantic activity begins

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Eastern Pacific to churn out more tropical storms before Atlantic activity begins

The eastern Pacific Ocean will remain active in the coming days and weeks with more chances for tropical storms, AccuWeather meteorologists say. Meanwhile, the Atlantic is likely to remain quiet through the end of June, despite some early hints at tropical formation. The eastern Pacific hurricane season officially began on May 15, which was about two weeks ahead of the official start to the Atlantic hurricane season on June 1. "This year was one of the latest starts to any tropical activity in the Northern Hemisphere, which not only includes the Atlantic and the eastern Pacific, but also the western Pacific," AccuWeather Meteorologist and Senior Content Editor Brian Lada said. Eastern Pacific has turned things around, is moving swiftly along Last year, the eastern Pacific got off to a record slow start with Tropical Storm Aletta not forming until July 4. This year, Tropical Storm Alvin formed on May 28, or about two weeks after the start of the season, but about two weeks ahead of the historical average for the first tropical storm. Alvin only lasted a few days and peaked as a 60-mph tropical storm over the open waters. Moisture from Alvin caused localized flooding in parts of Central America and Mexico, and some rain even reached parts of the south-central United States. •Have the app? Unlock AccuWeather Alerts™ with Premium+ Just days after Alvin's demise, two more tropical storms formed in the waters west of Central America and southwest of Mexico in the Pacific. Suddenly, the eastern Pacific jumped well ahead of the historical average pace and even set an early-season formation record. Barbara was named on June 4 and two days later, Cozme formed in roughly the same zone. Barbara went on to become a hurricane on June 9. However,, that status only lasted a matter of hours before slipping back to tropical storm intensity. "Barbara was the first hurricane or typhoon in the Northern Hemisphere this year," AccuWeather Meteorologist and Digital Producer Jesse Ferrell said, "Not since 1993 has the first hurricane-force storm been seen this late." Despite that late start in the Northern Hemisphere, the flurry of named systems in the eastern Pacific has taken center stage. The second named storm, Barbara, as a tropical storm and hurricane, is also ahead of schedule for the East Pacific basin. The second tropical storm typically forms around June 24 and the first hurricane about June 26. Cosme, the third named storm of this season, is also way ahead of schedule and one of the earliest third-named storms on record, with the historical average formation date of July 6. "The basin has seen plenty of storms form early, with 44 storms, including 19 hurricanes, forming in May in the historical record," Ferrell said. Yet another tropical storm is likely be just days away from forming in the eastern Pacific. The next name on the list of tropical storms for the 2025 eastern Pacific hurricane season is Dalila. It is possible that, toward the middle and latter part of the summer, downpours from an eastern Pacific tropical rainstorm may enhance the North American monsoon and could bring heavy rainfall to parts of the southwestern U.S. Atlantic still waiting on first storm of 2025 For early-season development in the Atlantic to get a boost, meteorologists look for a front that dips down into the Gulf, Caribbean or Bahamas waters. Another way is for a large area of low pressure to form and slowly spin near Central America. This is known as a gyre. Thus far, fronts dipping in have been unsuccessful at initiating tropical development, and the gyre has failed to fully develop. "We still expect the Central American gyre to form later this month, and its formation could spur tropical development in waters in the western Caribbean or southwestern Gulf," AccuWeather Lead Hurricane Expert Alex DaSilva said. Although the gyre has yet to develop, another critical weather pattern is delaying the start of the Atlantic season-a large area of high pressure over the central Atlantic, known as the Bermuda high. A strong Bermuda high can force budding tropical storms to track close to North America, assuming the tropical storms can form in the first place. Early in the season, that can be a challenging task, especially with water temperatures well short of their peak for the season. "The Bermuda high has been stronger than average this season and has helped to bring more dry air from northern Africa and dust (grains of sand) from the Sahara Desert westward across the Atlantic so far," DaSilva explained, "This, along with a significant amount of disruptive breezes, called wind shear, has greatly contributed to the slow start to the Atlantic hurricane season." AccuWeather is expecting a near- to above-historical-average Atlantic tropical storm and hurricane season for 2025. Between three and six named tropical cyclones are forecast to directly impact the U.S. Based on the historical average, the first tropical storm does not form in the Atlantic until June 20 and the first hurricane not until Aug. 11. In 1992, for example, the first tropical storm did not form until Aug. 16. That storm would go on to become Category 5 Hurricane Andrew and would tear a swath of destruction across South Florida during the last week of August. Want next-level safety, ad-free? Unlock advanced, hyperlocal severe weather alerts when you subscribe to Premium+ on the AccuWeather app. AccuWeather Alerts™ are prompted by our expert meteorologists who monitor and analyze dangerous weather risks 24/7 to keep you and your family safer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store