La Niña might return. The huge Pacific weather event that shaped last winter and this year’s miserable spring may come back.
read moreEvelyn Browning Garriss doesn't just blog about the weather forecast; she provides insight on WHY extreme weather is happening--and a heads up on weather to watch out for. A historical climatologist, Evelyn blogs about weather history, interesting facts about the weather, and upcoming climate events that affect your life--from farming to your grocery bill. Every week, we look forward to another great weather column from Evelyn. We encourage our weather watchers to post their comments and questions--and tell us what they think!
The Return of La Niña???!!!
August 15, 2011
Roadtrip through the Texas Drought
August 4, 2011
OK—the only thing higher than July’s temperatures is the price of gasoline. So why am I on a road trip? I was asked to teach a seminar for the Texas A&M University Cattle Short Course. I needed to observe the effects of the Texas drought and heatwave for myself . . . time for a road trip.
read moreThe Heat Dome that Fried the U.S.A.
July 25, 2011
The heat wave that is baking America is being called a “heat dome”.
read moreHere Comes the Tropical Trio
July 18, 2011
Are you ready for the Tropical Trio—heat waves, monsoon storms and hurricanes?
read moreAnother One Bites The Dust
July 7, 2011
My young friend from Arizona was not happy. He had served in Iraq and learned to hate haboobs. The silly sounding name meant huge storms of blinding sand and choking dust.
read moreLa Nada in the Pacific: A Whole Lot of Nothing
June 27, 2011
La Niña, that trouble-making cold spot in the Pacific, is gone and now we are being told to brace ourselves for . . . nothing.
read moreWildfires—When the World Ends in Fire
June 10, 2011
This week the air is filled with smoke. I am over 200 miles from the huge Wallow wildfire in Arizona, but the air is filled with the sickly sweet smell of grass fire smoke and my eyes sting.
read moreBoom! The Eruption of Grímsvötn Volcano
May 30, 2011
Volcanoes such as Grímsvötn are nature’s wildcard. First there is the fiery eruption , followed by the ash cloud that endangers air travel. Then the unreported final act arrives – the cold stormy winters of volcano weather.
read moreDrought in the South
May 23, 2011
While the Mississippi floods grab the headlines, Texas and the South are baking in a drought.
read moreSpring 2011: Floods and Droughts
May 16, 2011
Most springs bring April showers and May flowers. This year, springtime has brought floods, droughts and a record-breaking number of tornadoes. Oh, dear!
read moreYikes! Record-breaking Tornado Activity
May 6, 2011
There were an estimated 305 tornadoes that swirled through the South in late April—a new record. Just what we don’t need—a new record for lousy weather!
read moreTornado Weather
April 22, 2011
Few things in creation are as terrifying as a tornado. A list of weather statistics can never conjure the humid yellow sky and the heavy feeling that something is coming.
read moreRadioactive Weather
April 13, 2011
On April 11, the Japanese government raised the Fukushima nuclear accident level from five to seven, the same severity assigned to the Chernobyl disaster. One of the questions I have gotten since the initial reports of the accident has been “How much damaging radiation has reached the United States?”
read moreDing, Dong, the Drought is Dead!
April 5, 2011
On March 30, the Jerry Brown, the new governor of California, announced that the state’s three-year “drought emergency” is officially over. It may be the first good news that the state has heard in years!
read moreMarch: Out Like a Lion
March 28, 2011
According to weather folklore, a stormy March that comes roaring in will meekly leave with sunshine and warm weather. Unfortunately, this year’s March entered like a lion, teased us with some nice temperatures and then reverted back to a snowy, stormy lion before stalking out.



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