HomeMy WebLinkAboutwintry weatherWintry weather just -part.
of rou atch for area-
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By HOLLY HUFFMAN
' lege Station, the wintry white
Eagle Sta.J~
Writer stuff didn't last long, either.
Aggi~ fans probably didn't However, meteorologists
predicted that temperatures
think the weekend could get would warm back up -maybe
any more surreal after learn- even unseasonably so - by
ing their beloved basketball Tuesday.' Back to normal.
coach Billy Gillispie opted for The mix of 'snow, sleet and
Kentucky over Texas A&M. rain scattered across much of !'
Then it snowed in Aggieland. the Brazos Valley on a week-
And just as some believed
' end generally reserved for
Gillispie
s tenure - three. __
Years -was too brief in Col-
"
'
ve never seen anything
I
like it," Karan Whitmire, a dis-
patcher with the Leon County
Sheriffs Department, said Sun-
day after the snow had melted
away. "It was so beautiful."
barbecues
swimming pools The mercury could inch up
,
and new spring dresses pur- to the mid-60s Monday.. But
chased specifically for Easter Castillo said traditional spring
church services. temperatures won't be back in
National Weather Service full force until Tuesday, when
meteorologist Mike Castillo the high. is expected to be
blamed the bizarre weather on around 80 degrees -slightly
a cold air mass from Canada, higher than normal.
which kept the atmosphere Castillo laughed Sunday
freezing even though tempera- when asked about the possibili-
tures were warmer on the ty of such a cold front passing
ground. Thus, ~ he explained, through Central Texas again
when anupper-level storm sys- this. spring. He said he may
tem from West Tetras moved forecast the weather but can't
over the area, much of the tell the future.
moisture it contained froze into "You know not to say it can't
sleet and snow. happen," Castillo said, noting
Area counties on Saturday the rarity of the event before
reported varying amounts of turning to a familiar meteorol-
sleet and snow, most of which ogist saying. "It's always possi-
melted not long after falling to ble, but the probabilities are
the ground. Skies were clear by no."
Sunday morning, and no co~n-
ties reported any major prob-
lems because of the dramatic
weather change.
"ff you had asked me last
week, I probably would have
said no," Castillo said, laugh-
ing as he talked about the odds
of springtime snow in the Bra-
zos Valley.
The National Weather Ser-
vice officially .recorded trace
amounts of "unknown precipi-
tation" -rain, sleet and snow
- across the Brazos Valley on
Saturday. Brazos, Leon, Milam,
Robertson and Madison coun-
ties all reported snow Satur-
day, while Burleson and
Grimes counties reported see-
ing only sleet. Neither fell on
Washington County, officials
said.