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    High season for tornadoes ahead, eyes on Southeast

    WASHINGTON (AP) โ€” With the month of March looming, tornado chasers are already watching the Southeast as a nasty storm brews with the potential to spin off a batch of tornadoes.

    But if funnel clouds develop Thursday or Friday as some forecasters believe, they won't be the first. This tornado season got an early and deadly start in late January when two people were killed by separate twisters in Alabama. Preliminary reports showed 95 tornadoes struck last month, compared with 16 in January during a particularly stormy 2011.

    The season usually starts in March and then ramps up for the next couple of months, but forecasting these storm seasons is even more imprecise than predicting hurricane seasons. Tornadoes are too small and too short-lived for scientists to make seasonal predictions. They don't develop like blizzards and hurricanes, which are easier to project.

    They pop in and pop out. The storms that give them birth may last only a few hours. Hurricanes and blizzards are lumbering beasts that spend days moving across the satellite maps. When a hurricane approaches, coastlines get days warning to evacuate. With a tornado, if the weather service can let people know 20 minutes in advance, it's considered a victory.

    "The Joplin (Mo.) tornado (that killed 158 people last May) wasn't violent until just about the time it got to the hospital," said Harold Brooks, a research scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Severe Storms Laboratory, in Norman, Okla. "Even when you're in the field, there are still times when you're surprised by the intensity of the event and how quickly it started."

    If a forecast for a hurricane or blizzard is off by a mile, it's still bad weather. But a mile difference means no damage in a tornado, Brooks said: "It's so much finer in time and space on the tornado, it does make it a harder problem."

    It takes a piece of debris only a few seconds to fly around an entire tornado; it takes hours to circle a hurricane. But tornadoes, though smaller, can have stronger winds. Since 1950, there have been 58 tornadoes in the United States with winds exceeding 200 mph; six last year alone. Only three hurricanes have made U.S. landfall with winds more than 155 mph.

    And forecasters are telling the Southeast and heartland to get ready again.

    "It looks like this week we're moving into a slightly more active dynamic pattern," said warning meteorologist Greg Carbin at the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center, also in Norman, Okla.

    The percolating Southeastern storm is proof of exactly how hard meteorologists have it. On Tuesday evening, Carbin said, "We're kind of expecting it to be a fairly significant event" and the storm center's website had a small red swath for potential severe storms with tornadoes.

    By Wednesday morning, the storm center's forecast was much less clear. While the storm looks bad with potential for tornadoes, one of the key ingredients โ€” unstable upper level air โ€” is not quite behaving as predicted. So that means forecasters have less an idea of when and where the bad weather and potential twisters will hit, said Corey Mead, a meteorologist at the center.

    By Wednesday afternoon, the storm prediction center massively expanded its Thursday watch area to include Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, West Virginia and parts of Virginia, the Carolinas and most of Florida.

    "A lot of things have to come together at once to have a tornadic storm and the skill at forecasting all those things is near zero," said Howard Bluestein, a professor at the University of Oklahoma. "They are definitely more unpredictable."

    All this comes on the heels of one of the worst tornado years in U.S. history. Tornadoes in 2011 started the earliest ever โ€” New Year's Day โ€” killing 550 people, injuring 5,400 and causing $10 billion in damage over the year, the most in U.S. history. The 2011 season had the most tornadoes in a single day and a single month on record.

    But if you ask tornado experts what that means for this year, they'll answer that they just don't know. Later this summer, meteorologists will meet in a special conference to try to figure out how to do that type of longer-term tornado prediction. And the National Weather Service is installing new radar for live forecasting, tracking and distinguishing of tornadoes. Those together mean that maybe in 2020 or so, meteorologists will be able to say watch out this season or relax a bit โ€” but not just yet, Brooks said.

    A new study by Columbia University professor Michael Tippett points out potential factors โ€” vertical wind shear, updraft and a type of rainfall โ€” that might help for long-range tornado forecasts.

    Another factor is La Nina, the flip side of El Nino. It's a cooling of the central Pacific Ocean. Scientists have noticed a correlation between strong La Ninas and active tornado seasons โ€” including last year. But it's not so simple or clear-cut, Tippett and others say. The current La Nina is weakening so much it shouldn't be a factor this year, several experts said.

    The new radar, called dual polarization, allows meteorologists to see through rain and dark and be sure if high winds are a tornado. In the past, meteorologists had to wait for ground confirmation. This won't help with long-term forecasts but could save lives in real-time because forecasters can be more certain in their warnings, said National Weather Service meteorologist Paul Schlatter.

    __

    Online:

    National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center: http://www.spc.noaa.gov/

    National Weather Service's summary of 2011 tornado season: http://1.usa.gov/wvq3t8

     
    • Mike  •  Huntsville, Alabama  •  3 mths ago
      We have a saying here in the south. Tornadoes and redneck divorces are similar in that someone's fixin' to lose a trailer.
    • philw  •  Fitzgerald, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      I drive by where a f4 tornado crossed I-75 north of Macon,ga. There weren't any houses there but the damage to trees was mind boggling. Unless you have seen damage 1st hand, you really don't know from watching tv broadcast
    • MaxpiratedmyTV  •  3 mths ago
      Got my Noaa radio and police Scanners all ready for this Spring. Keep alert all you in the Mid South/east.
      • Doug4.7 3 mths ago
        When we added the master bedroom suite, we added a tornado closet. We did that about 10 years ago. If we get hit by a tornado, we are ready.
    • Eko  •  Lenora, Kansas  •  3 mths ago
      Living in Kansas this is one of the reasons I don't mind winter so much. You don't have to worry about the tornadoes like you do in the spring and summer. Auntie Em!
      • Big Boss 3 mths ago
        Weather watching in the Jennings, Dresden, & Clayton area in the 80's was an eye-opener. We had a very active year one summer. I remember being out almost every night for almost 3 or 4 weeks with storms coming through. We were also very happy when fall and winter came so we could relax.
      • angien 3 mths ago
        Agreed. I live in Iowa, and I always dread the end of winter because it means I have to start keeping my guard up for the coming spring.

        Here's hoping this year is SIGNIFICANTLY quieter across the country tornado-wise.
      • CarolT 3 mths ago
        I know its expensive but wished you kansas folk had strong underground shelters, like lined with cement blocks and all. Should be what the govt supplies to all residents throughout all the tornado alley area.
    • Scootter  •  Troy, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      Some Genius bloggers are telling all who will listen that they should disregard the warnings of the very scientists whos jobs are to protect the public by predicting storm seasons. In all situations I prepare for the worst and hope for the best. I listen to those more informed than myself. I value science and see no alterior motive in knowledge. Those who do not subscribe to this line of thought are lost to me. The sane mind cannot understand the mind of the insane.
      • A 3 mths ago
        It's part of a growing anti-science sentiment. I can only blame our deteriorating education system, brought on largly by those who see science as a threat to their religious myths.
      • Robert N 3 mths ago
        There seems to be a disconnect in society toward science and knowledge in general. Whether it's caused by the failing education system or #$%$ politicians that can't or won't accept Global Warming. I know this: we could have been much further along in tornado prediction and knowledge of, but the great Ronald Reagan, hero of fools everywhere, killed a program that would've placed an advanced radar system in the midwest back in the Eighties.
      • An A.C. Resident 3 mths ago
        Exactly Scootter.
    • Tutties  •  3 mths ago
      Well, at least we know. Good luck, everyone.
    • Gin  •  St Paul, Minnesota  •  3 mths ago
      Take Shelter: There's a storm coming & not a one of ya's prepared for it!
      @albrecht77
      • will7 3 mths ago
        Gin? Are you prepared for a natural disaster? In our small town we have no storm shelter's! So were do you suggest we seek shelter? I live in a 1 bedroom apt.What im I supposed to do hide in my bathroom? That's the only safe place I have! So tell us are you prepared? We all would like to know Gin?
      • John 3 mths ago
        Good movie, classic quote : )
      • Hardtimes 3 mths ago
        Run Forrest, Run
    • buggsjr  •  Gulf Shores, Alabama  •  3 mths ago
      I survived the Tuscaloosa,Al. tornado. 2 months later, moved to the gulf coast. I'd rather deal with the hurricaines.
    • TheTruth  •  New Orleans, Louisiana  •  3 mths ago
      I don't like the sound of this......................Plan early...Move quickly...Stay safe.............
    • J Z  •  Vinita, Oklahoma  •  3 mths ago
      here in okla. we get alot of those bad boys but it is better now then 60 years ago when you just wake up in the middle of the night an try to get to storm shelter it was tuff then but it is better now
    • WC  •  Huntsville, Alabama  •  3 mths ago
      I survived the April 27, tornadoes! ... We lost 20 trees in our yard and the biggest one just missed the house. I have never been so scared in all my life. It was so loud you really couldn't hear all the lawn furniture hitting the house. When it was over, it looked like a salad shooter exploded! I am as ready as I can get...
    • goomoo  •  3 mths ago
      if it happens, it happens. if it happens to me, i'll deal with it , if it happens to someone else i'll help them
    • kat  •  Piedmont, Missouri  •  3 mths ago
      Hope south east missouri fairs well this afternoon!
    • Stephanie  •  Jackson, Mississippi  •  3 mths ago
      Nothing new, where I live. Just a part of life in the south.
    • Schrรถdinger Hated Cats  •  3 mths ago
      The National Weather Service offers free SKYWARN Spotter programs, intended for those who observe and report severe weather as part of their city or county emergency preparedness group, but these excellent programs are open to the public. They're great presentations that teach about severe storm formation, characteristics of severe storms, and how to observe severe weather. They also teach about "look-alikes", or what we call "scary looking clouds" that look threatening but which really aren't-- in order to help people to NOT be afraid of every dark or strange looking cloud that shows up. The advanced portion of the program also discusses radar interpretation, and this year's program also discussed the dual polarization radar and CASA radar. This is new information and very helpful. I recommend that everyone who lives in 'Tornado Alley' (or anywhere that severe storms tend to occur) go to one of these presentations. It's a fantastic way to learn about severe weather nad pick up some valuable tips on keeping safe when severe weather occurs. I'm a severe weather spotter with our local group and an Amateur Radio operator-- I go every year and I learn something new every time. It's a day well spent!
    • sarah  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      not looking forward to it :(
    • Sick American  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 mths ago
      Maybe we need a good storm to clean out the trash in the federal system in DC
    • Jackson  •  3 mths ago
      I was in my first tornado when I was 5,tore right thur our farm.I did not know that was only the first,You never know how bad the next one might be.
    • BJ  •  3 mths ago
      Technology advances are wonderful. Just don't depend 100 percent on them to warn you ahead of time. We had a tornado hit our Missouri farm in 09, and didn't even have a thunderstorm warning at the time, and certainly no tornado warning. So, technology + common sense and a watchful eye are more important than people realize.
    • Jerry S  •  3 mths ago
      As a child in the '40s and '50s, weather radars did not exist in or near our farming community. I remember my Dad waking us up in the night to go to the storm cellar, where we would get back in bed and sleep through bad weather.
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