National Weather Service United States Department of Commerce
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Last Map Update: Wed, Sep 3, 2025 at 10:09:05 am CDT

After a warm and mostly dry second half of the work week, much cooler temperatures and daily storm chances arrive this weekend into the beginning of next week.
Mostly sunny skies will bring a warm day today with highs generally in the low 90s area-wide. A few brief storms may develop this evening, but should be very isolated with most locations expected to remain dry.
After a hot Thursday and warm Friday, cooler and wetter conditions are expected this weekend as a cold front stalls out near the region.

 

 

 

Local Weather History For September 3rd...
1967: Late this evening, parts of Lamb and Castro Counties suffered a direct strike from what would later be known as a
derecho. Compiling severe weather reports earlier this evening farther northeast in the TX Panhandle and retrieving
archived upper air weather maps, it was found that a long-lived straight-line wind event tracked from Borger
south-southwest to near Amarillo, Canyon and then into Castro and Lamb Counties. Winds between 100 and 110 mph were
measured at the Pantex Ordnance facility east of Amarillo and this intensity was maintained as the line of storms surged
south-southwest into the far northwest South Plains through late evening. Hail up to golf ball size accompanied 100 mph
winds over a swath from Nazareth to Sunnyside causing $3M in crop losses and damaging many rural homes, barns,
outbuildings and flattening power poles. Crop yields in Castro County were cut by up to 15% for the year as thousands of
acres of cotton, beans, tomatoes, potatoes, carrots, and cucumbers were shredded at mid-harvest. The wind-driven hail also
flattened sorghum, corn, soybeans, castor beans, and maize that were about to begin harvesting. A tornado was reported
eight miles northeast of Nazareth, although the nature of the storm suggests this may have simply been intense
non-tornadic winds. As this derecho continued moving southwest, winds around 100 mph were estimated in Sudan at 8:45 PM.
These winds blew away a 22,000 square foot sheet metal warehouse and caused widespread structural damage throughout the
town. While at their home three miles east of Sudan, Mr. and Mrs. Joel Thompson were injured by flying debris. About
$500,000 in property damage was tallied in Sudan alone.