An approaching upper-level disturbance and weak area of surface low pressure will bring widespread showers and thunderstorms to the Tennessee Valley on Tuesday as well.
Minor flooding of streams and low lying areas may develop this afternoon if multiple rounds of heavy rainfall continue to affect the same areas along the Coosa River and Logan Martin Lake. Scattered showers and thunderstorms will continue through a good portion of the evening hours.
Unsettled conditions are expected next week, as a weak upper-level disturbance moves across the state. This will bring scattered showers and thunderstorms to the area.
Unsettled conditions are expected next week, as a weak upper-level disturbance moves across the state. This will bring scattered showers and thunderstorms to the area.
The slow moving upper level storm system will finally lift east and northeast of the region by Tuesday morning. A large area of high pressure will be in control of our weather through the latter part of the upcoming work week. Daytime high temperatures will rise to between 72 and 80 through Wednesday. Expect lower 80s into next weekend.
Temperatures will drop below average over the weekend with some spots only in the 60s. No severe weather is expected. High temperatures this weekend will generally be in the mid 70s.
A tropical depression has formed off the coast of Belize and forecasters say it is expected to bring as much as five inches of rain to parts of Belize, Guatemala and northern Honduras.
Tropical Storm Barry bore down on Mexico's Gulf Coast early Thursday as civil defense workers readied emergency shelters and forecasters warned of the possibility of deadly flash floods and mudslides.
Dozens of homes were evacuated near Denver as a wind-driven wildfire flared, one of many in the western states where hot and windy conditions were making it easy for the wild land blazes to start and spread.
Dozens of homes were evacuated near Denver as a wind-driven wildfire flared, one of many in the western states where hot and windy conditions were making it easy for the wild land blazes to start and spread.
Bob and Barbara Schmidt dashed to their home on a dirt road in a heavily wooded area northeast of Colorado Springs as smoke from what would become the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history filled the air.
A new wildfire in the foothills southwest of Denver forced the evacuation of dozens of homes Wednesday as hot and windy conditions in the West made it easy for fires to start and spread.
India's prime minister said Wednesday that the death toll from flooding this week in the northern state of Uttrakhand had surpassed 100 and could rise substantially.
Monsoon flooding that has stranded thousands of people and caused landslides in northern India has killed almost 120 people, and the prime minister said the toll could rise substantially.
Former Van Halen frontman Sammy Hagar is joining a star-studded country music concert planned to benefit victims of last month's deadly tornadoes in Oklahoma.
Former Van Halen frontman Sammy Hagar is joining a star-studded country music concert planned to benefit victims of last month's deadly tornadoes in Oklahoma.
The federal government is spending less and less on preventing wildfires even as the nation endures increasingly destructive blazes.
As the West battles one catastrophic wildfire after another, the federal government is spending less and less on its main program for preventing blazes in the first place.
Jerry Tracey is Alabama's 13's Chief Meteorologist. He brings Birmingham viewers weather reports at 6 and 10 p.m. Jerry came to Alabama's 13 from the Weather Channel in July 1987. Previously, he worked
It's hard to believe that it wasn't Stephanie Walker's first-hand experience with a devastating volcano, Mt.. Pinatubo in the Philippines, that intrigued her to pursue a career in weather. It wasn't the
Meteorologist Harmony Mendoza joined us from WRBL News 3 in Columbus, Ga., a sister station of Alabama's 13. You can watch Harmony every weekend on Alabama's 13 for your morning weather from 5 a.m. to
Richard Jacks is Alabama's 13 weekend meteorologist. He was born and raised in Talladega and graduated from Talladega High School in 1990. Richard graduated from Mississippi State's Broadcast Meteorology