The solar eclipse is happening April 8, and a restaurant in Louisiana and Texas wants you to watch safely by offering free eclipse glasses with drink purchase.
Is Texas getting ready for a solar eclipse or the apocalypse and what do STDs have to do with it? And an even better question, is Texas ready for what happens April 8th?
No, it is not because the aliens that are planning to take over our planet will be jamming up the systems so there's no way we can call for help when they arrive during the solar eclipse. (Well, at least we've not officially heard that being confirmed. Yes, I'm kidding for Pete's sake.)
Besides, if aliens were going to be invading our entire planet, who on earth would we call for help anyway?
Check out this picture that was taken over the weekend in Lake Charles of lightning hitting the top of the Burton. It is crazy and beautiful all at the same time.
Experts predict warm, wet weather conditions will dominate Louisiana in April, May, and June, pulling the Bayou State out of the drought we experienced in 2023.
The National Weather Service says the threat of strong to severe storms across Louisiana is even more likely than first thought. Here's the timing on the storms.
Spring storms will factor into the beginning of Louisiana's work and school week. It looks as if none of Louisiana's 64 parishes will dodge high wind and heavy rain.
After a stormy St Patrick's Day Weekend Louisiana will experience a return to much cooler temperatures to start the work week. Here's how cold it's expected to get.