WIND ADVISORY Sunday, some strong storms overnight into Monday
Gusts throughout the day could get up to 45 mph.
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Jeff joined CBS 11 and TXA 21 in December 2010. He is the senior Meteorologist on staff and can be seen covering various shifts across the week or on the weekend evenings. He also serves as one of the primary reporters for the CBS series "Climate Connection". Jeff visits area schools weekly as part of the Weather on Wheels program.
Born in Lubbock, Jeff spent most of his childhood in Tennessee. He holds a degree in Communications from the University of Texas at Austin as well as a bachelor's degree in broadcast meteorology from Mississippi State. His master's degree in science education comes from the University of Missouri.
Jeff's broadcast career spans over 35 years. Jeff and his wife Fawn (a chiropractor in Colleyville) have two sons. The oldest is serving in Alaska on the USCGC Alex Haley in the Bering Sea. The youngest is finishing up high school and plans for a career in the Coast Guard as a marine biologist.
If you would like Jeff to come talk to your group about how changing weather patterns are changing the way we garden in this area, please email him at jaray@viacomcbs.com.
Gusts throughout the day could get up to 45 mph.
Storms are possible again this coming Thursday.
As we see the trees and flower beds starting to turn green, we've welcomed this warm and wet start to March.
To garden is to understand an ecosystem, and experience the importance of work and planning.
Although the North Texas climate is getting warmer overall, you may want to buy plants that can survive at colder temperatures.
The calendar says March, but the temperatures say May.
Very warm days start Saturday and stick around for most of the week ahead.
The last weekend of meteorological winter was the warmest weekend of winter, and it is only getting warmer.
Later in the week, we will return to winter temperatures.
Mild temperatures will continue.
Tuesday is the warmest day of winter and there are more days like this on the way in the week ahead.
A dry cold front is expected on Thursday but no cold air behind it. We'll finally have a very warm and dry weekend.
It will not be freezing Monday morning but still, expect a chill in the air with enough wind to produce a wind chill near freezing.
We'll have our first freeze in over 3 weeks tonight. Then we climb out of the cold and right back to spring!
We started VERY warm this morning. By lunch hour, we were in the 70s. We won't see temperatures that warm again until next week.