Forwarded from Fireworks Daily Team (Mezlim)
Arizona’s Weather Has Officially Gone Off-Script — And the Numbers Prove It
Arizona is seeing weather we do NOT get, not in November, not in this intensity, and not for this many days in a row.
Phoenix has already recorded 7.7 inches of rain by mid-November — which is MORE rain than we normally get in an entire year (typical annual total: ~7.2 inches).
November alone usually gives us about half an inch. We’re more than 10× above normal.
And with the rain has come the strange behavior:
• Tornado-type wind signatures ripping through parts of the Valley
• Damage from rotating storm cells in areas that never see this
• Hail storms so severe it looked like snow covering streets, sidewalks, and parking lots
• Multiple rounds of heavy rain hitting day after day — extremely rare for the desert
• Sudden downpours, flooding pockets, and storm cells building in minutes
• Wind bursts that felt more like the Midwest than Arizona
For a state built on dry air, stable skies, and long gaps between storms…
this is not normal behavior.
Anyone else in Arizona noticing how intense this pattern has become?
#MrMBB333 #Arizona #SkyPhenomenon #StormWatch
Arizona is seeing weather we do NOT get, not in November, not in this intensity, and not for this many days in a row.
Phoenix has already recorded 7.7 inches of rain by mid-November — which is MORE rain than we normally get in an entire year (typical annual total: ~7.2 inches).
November alone usually gives us about half an inch. We’re more than 10× above normal.
And with the rain has come the strange behavior:
• Tornado-type wind signatures ripping through parts of the Valley
• Damage from rotating storm cells in areas that never see this
• Hail storms so severe it looked like snow covering streets, sidewalks, and parking lots
• Multiple rounds of heavy rain hitting day after day — extremely rare for the desert
• Sudden downpours, flooding pockets, and storm cells building in minutes
• Wind bursts that felt more like the Midwest than Arizona
For a state built on dry air, stable skies, and long gaps between storms…
this is not normal behavior.
Anyone else in Arizona noticing how intense this pattern has become?
#MrMBB333 #Arizona #SkyPhenomenon #StormWatch
Forwarded from Fireworks Daily Team (Mezlim)
Another rare, ‘rogue and random’ earthquake has just occurred, this was just slightly over 100 miles east of the Grand Canyon in NE Arizona!
Historically, Arizona is certainly not known for its earthquake activity, if anything lack there of.
This was an M3.7 at a shallow 5.8 miles deep.
#MrMBB333 #earthwatch #earthquake #Arizona #grandcanyon
🔗 Michael Bradbury (@MrMBB333)
📲 @twittervid_bot
Historically, Arizona is certainly not known for its earthquake activity, if anything lack there of.
This was an M3.7 at a shallow 5.8 miles deep.
#MrMBB333 #earthwatch #earthquake #Arizona #grandcanyon
🔗 Michael Bradbury (@MrMBB333)
📲 @twittervid_bot
Forwarded from Fireworks Daily Team 2.0 (Stella)
🔥 MILLIONS ACROSS CALIFORNIA & ARIZONA ARE NOW UNDER DANGEROUS HEAT CONDITIONS
And it’s only May.
Extreme heat is already building across the Southwest with temperatures climbing high enough to create serious health concerns, strain power grids, and increase wildfire danger.
But here’s something a lot of people are missing:
When prolonged heat arrives this early in the season, the ground dries out faster, vegetation loses moisture sooner, and nighttime temperatures often stay elevated making heat waves harder to recover from day after day.
That’s when the risk really starts building.
At the same time:
• wildfire concerns increase
• water demand rises
• power usage spikes
• asphalt and infrastructure take a beating
• vulnerable populations face greater danger
This summer is already starting differently than normal in parts of the West.
👇
How hot is it where you are right now?
#MrMBB333 #HeatWave #Arizona #California #ExtremeHeat #WeatherAlert
https://x.com/mrmbb333/status/2053556920519417955
And it’s only May.
Extreme heat is already building across the Southwest with temperatures climbing high enough to create serious health concerns, strain power grids, and increase wildfire danger.
But here’s something a lot of people are missing:
When prolonged heat arrives this early in the season, the ground dries out faster, vegetation loses moisture sooner, and nighttime temperatures often stay elevated making heat waves harder to recover from day after day.
That’s when the risk really starts building.
At the same time:
• wildfire concerns increase
• water demand rises
• power usage spikes
• asphalt and infrastructure take a beating
• vulnerable populations face greater danger
This summer is already starting differently than normal in parts of the West.
👇
How hot is it where you are right now?
#MrMBB333 #HeatWave #Arizona #California #ExtremeHeat #WeatherAlert
https://x.com/mrmbb333/status/2053556920519417955
🙏2