Earth Networks released an excellent blog post on lightning detection and parks. It is an informative article on the difference between lightning prediction and lightning detection and how parks can benefit from increased lightning detection. Since I live in a city with a national park, I hope our local government reads over this and implements additional lightning safety measures in our national park, as well as the state follows a similar suit with state parks.
Radar Upgrades Across the US
AllisonHouse released an informative article today concerning the radar upgrades taking place across the US. Radar towers across the US will receive new signal processors by July 2017, increasing the speed and reliability in which we receive radar images from the National Weather Service. By 2019, all radar towers will receive a transmitter refurbishment, and by 2020, the pedestals on radar towers will be rebuilt as well. This, combined with the more major upgrades we saw to radar towers in the recent past such as the upgrading of all radar towers to dual-polarization radar, will ensure we continue to have a wealth of reliable storm tracking information at our fingertips for years to come.
Little Rock and Hot Springs Tornado Sirens in the News #ARWX
Residents of Little Rock experienced a nerve-jarring experience when tornado sirens began sounding unexpedly around 11:48 PM Sunday evening. According to my friend Todd Yakoubian at KATV 7 this was the result of a malfunction. More information regarding the situation is available at his excellent weather blog, The Arkansas Weather Blog.
Hot Springs residents will be experiencing the sound of tornado sirens this Wednesday, June 7, at 12PM for a scheduled test. Since there is not a severe weather outbreak for Garland County and Hot Springs forecasted for Wednesday, Hot Springs residents can rest assured this is only a scheduled test and not a severe weather event notification.
This brings me to a point I want to make regarding tornado sirens. While tornado sirens can be somewhat-beneficial for being alerted to some form of severe weather event while outside, many of them utilize outdated technology which tends to sound countywide alerts, including alerts for people not in the actual alert. Some areas across the state are migrating to tornado sirens that are more locally-specific. Additionally, malfunctions can occur such as the issue that occurred in Little Rock Sunday evening. It is always a good idea to not rely on tornado sirens alone for severe weather alerts. It is always recommended to own a NOAA Weather Radio, utilize a service that calls one’s phone during severe weather such as CodeRED for residents in Hot Springs, or the Baron Critical Weather app for iOS and Android and the WDT Weather Radio app.
Earth Networks Article on Cyclone Mora
Earth Networks (another company I do IT consulting for) released an excellent article (available here) on Cyclone Mora. It is educational and an interesting read. I highly recommend you check it out.
Good Article on Hurricane Season 2017 from Earth Networks
Earth Networks has released an excellent article on their blog concerning the 2017 hurricane season. For those interested in reading it, click here. It’s a great article on this year’s hurricane season and quite informative.