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News On 6 KOTV - Tulsa
Overnight Severe Storms In Green Country Bring Flood Watches
20 days ago
A severe thunderstorm watch has been issued for a large part of Northeastern Oklahoma.
A tornado warning was issued near Caney, Kansas until 9:00 p.m., and severe thunderstorms moved across the Kansas-Oklahoma border into the Tulsa metro.
The storms moving through brought a lot of rain and flooding chances for parts of Green Country.
Current Watches:
Severe Thunderstorm Watch for Creek, Hughes, Kay, Lincoln, Noble, Okfuskee, Pawnee and Payne County in OK until 5:00 a.m.
What will the weather be like in Oklahoma on Wednesday, March 1?
The overall forecast hasn’t changed too much compared to Monday’s data. The upper flow remains strongest to our north Tuesday, across the central and northern plains region.
By Tuesday night into early Thursday, the pattern will revert to a more normal southwest upper air flow and will bring slightly stronger forcing near the southern plains. This brings a mention for a few strong to near severe storms, yet the overall severe threats will remain low for our immediate region of the state.
What are the storm chances this week in Oklahoma?
A dry line will become sharp across far northwestern Oklahoma Tuesday afternoon. A few thunderstorms will attempt to develop along and ahead of this feature later Tuesday. Most of these storms will stay west of our immediate area. Thunderstorms are likely to develop across central Kansas later this afternoon and move southeast.
Later Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning, a few of these storms will move across the state line and could impact part of northern Oklahoma, including near the Tulsa Metro. A few could be strong and severe.
What with the weather be like later this week in Oklahoma?
By Thursday into Friday, as the next stronger upper-level trough approaches from the southwest, probabilities for thunderstorms will increase Wednesday night into Thursday before the trough exits the region.
Stronger flow will remain north but a few strong to severe storms will be possible as a surface low develops along the front Thursday and scoots eastward across the state.
By Friday morning, a cold front should be clearing most of the area, with drier and relatively cooler air filtering across the area bringing a short break Friday. The front is expected to stall and may lift or reform slightly north into the weekend as another system is likely to influence part of the area with some scattered shower and storm chances.
The upper air flow is not expected to be overly strong and severe threats will be muted for the first part of the weekend before a strong upper trough nears the region Sunday.
Outages Across Oklahoma:
Northeast Oklahoma has various power companies and electric co-operatives, many with overlapping areas of coverage. Below is a link to various outage maps.
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