Don't expect a particularly harsh winter, but expect a volatile one.
Sixteen named storms, including eight hurricanes, are forecast for the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season, according to early predictions released Thursday.
NOAA forecasts a 45 percent chance of above-normal activity.
Rainfall famine has turned to rainfall feast in the past year. But that could be too much of a good thing.
COLLEGE STATION — Despite soggy conditions delaying crop plantings in large swaths of the state, many areas are still contending with dry to d…
COLLEGE STATION — Texas is emerging from one of the hottest, driest summers on record, but the long-term forecast suggests winter and spring w…
After a record-breaking and destructive hurricane season in 2017, the next one looks closer to "normal" or slightly above normal.
COLLEGE STATION — A further strengthening of the current El Niño will likely mean wetter-than-normal conditions continue into spring, accordin…
It’s been a swinging year for Waco weather.
BROWNSVILLE — Late October rains have practically wiped severe drought conditions from the face of Texas maps, and a new weather system is enh…
The same weather system that’s crimping Baylor University’s style this homecoming weekend could be a welcome drought-buster for Central Texas.
Waco set a dubious record Monday when the National Weather Service logged 48 consective days without rain — a dry run longer than any during the monster drought of 2011, and the previous record of 47 days in 1918.
Waco is expected to see its 26th consecutive day of rain Saturday, with meteorologists saying at least a trace of rain has been measured at Wa…
McLennan County inched its way from a “severe drought” ranking to “moderate drought” after the amount of rain the county received in the winte…
Don’t let the green grass and wet skies fool you: Waco and much of Texas is still officially in drought. But meteorologists say signs are good…
Waco’s weather will turn noticeably chilly this week as a cold front ushers in cool temperatures and chances of overnight freezing.
The beginning of 2013 is a nervous moment for farmers, ranchers, water suppliers and others whose fortunes are hitched to rainfall.
COLLEGE STATION — El Niño has fizzled and you can forget the forecasts of a wetter, cooler Texas winter, the state climatologist said.
An El Niño now developing in the tropical Pacific could mean an improved agricultural outlook for all of Texas, according to one expert.
Central Texas farmers are heading into 2011 hoping for rain, after a soggy 2010 that damaged summer crops.
Summer is now officially underway and experts are forecasting a typical season of hot, dry days and peaches for Central Texas.