Southeast Texas can expect clearer, sunnier skies on Friday with highs in the upper 60s to near 70 degrees after days of clouds.
Close on the heels of a winter storm, a less novel and far wetter week is shaping up for Houston and the surrounding area. Sunday saw Harris County drenched by waves of thunderstorms. We'll see more of these downpours as the week continues,
Recent rains have lifted most of Southeast Texas, including Houston and Galveston, out of drought conditions, while Far West Texas and Central Texas continue to face severe challenges.
We all felt it, and now we know for sure that Beryl was stronger than we thought. Here's what the latest report from the National Hurricane Center found.
HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- A Pacific cool front has pushed through Southeast Texas, and it will usher in fantastic weather for Friday and the weekend ahead! Grab a jacket before you head outside in ...
Phillips' most fond local memory was playing for his father at Port Neches-Groves. Wade was a quarterback and linebacker at PN-G in the early 1960s. It's also where he first took a liking to the head cheerleader at the time, his eventual wife Laurie Phillips.
Thursday is a FOX 26 Storm Alert Day with the chance for heavy rain, damaging wind gusts, hail and a brief isolated tornado.
Tuesday morning some fog around Southeast Texas will start things off with lows in the upper 40s and lower 50s - much like your Monday morning started off.
Just before 5:30 p.m., the NWS in Houston posted a graphic detailing the snowfalls for parts of Southeast Texas. Houston, Anahuac, and Liberty have seen the most snowfall with three to four inches so far. Sugar Land received two to three inches of snowfall.
Houstonians, and most in the Gulf region stretching from Galveston to Lake Charles, Louisiana, woke up Tuesday with several inches of snow and subfreezing temperatures. Houston airports and schools remain closed.
From the lions and leopards to the flamingos and bald eagles, the animals seemed to enjoy exploring the magical snow.
Texas Monthly put out a public service announcement of sorts. In response to a long-sounding albeit fairly faint alarm that may or may not have originated from within the walls of our own office, we expressed a desire to once and for all make the ultimate map of Texas’s regions.