Jim Cantore is in Houston, signaling a serious winter storm! ❄️ Locals are bracing for icy roads and potential record-breaking snow.
Houston is bracing for an arctic blast of snow and bitterly-cold temperatures from Winter Storm Enzo. The Weather Channel’s Jim Cantore is in the city and he spoke with the director of Houston’s airports about the decision to shut down George Bush Intercontinental and Hobby airports and how long that shutdown could last.
The Weather Channel Meteorologists Jim Cantore and Jordan Steele report from Houston and Charleston as the winter storm works through the south. Video courtesy of The Weather Channel on January
Starting with the first Frontier Drive-In on Broadway, the cowboy has greeted diners from just about every marquee and menu in the Frontier Enterprises empire.
A major winter storm slammed the US Gulf Coast Tuesday, blanketing parts of a region largely unaccustomed to extreme winter weather with record-breaking snowfall.
Thundersnow is a relatively rare phenomenon in which a winter thunderstorm produces precipitation in the form of snow rather than rain, according to Fox Weather. The storm develops from ingredients much the same as those that create thunder and lightning in a rainstorm, but when there is cold air in the mix, rain becomes snow.
Roughly 40 million people from Texas to the Carolinas are under winter weather alerts, as a rare winter storm brings bone-chilling temperatures and potentially historic snowfall to cities
The Weather Channel is calling out expected winter snowfall this week Enzo, their fifth named storm for the 2024-25 winter season. The thing is, winter storm names are not a real thing — at least not for the National Weather Service or any other meteorological agency in North America.
The Farmer Market's owner made good on a promise she made to Jim Cantore in October after the meteorologist made his own special sauce.
Historic snowfall is burying parts of the Gulf Coast amid dangerous cold as a once-in-a-generation winter storm wreaks havoc on travel in a region wholly unaccustomed to winter weather.
More than 30 million people across the South are under winter weather advisories as they brace for Winter Storm Enzo to bring a mix of snow, ice and freezing rain to states and cities that rarely have to deal with these dangerous weather conditions.
Snowfall totals across the southern half of the state continued to increase in Monday forecasts to what could be record-breaking levels. Here's what to know for the New Orleans metro, the northshore,