"Prevailing" means just that, prevailing. The prevailing winds indicate the direction the winds blow in the lower troposphere
on average. The term does not mean "all the time".
The canonical joke about three statisticians who went duck hunting comes to mind. The statisticians see a duck flying across in front of them. The first statistician shoots, but his shot goes to the left of the duck by 10 meters. The second statistician shoots, but his shot goes to the right of the duck by 10 meters. The third statistician shouts "we got it!"
What's happening now? Are the winds prevailing from the west? Check out this site:
http://hint.fm/wind/
This site shows the surface winds at points across the US. Today, the northeastern seaboard is seeing winds from the east. Winds are strong across the plains, but are definitely not moving west to east. The winds in the plains are blowing strongly from the north in some places, strongly from the south in others. There's a line separating the northerly winds from the southerly winds. At the top and bottom of that line you'll see two nice little swirly patterns. Those are probably not nice places to be right now.
Those are the surface winds. Oftentimes winds are strong when the sky is clear. So, what's today's weather look like?
http://www.accuweather.com/en/us/national/satellite?play=1
The above site cycles through the last six weather satellite photos, separated by 15 minutes. Some things to notice:
- A lot of the places that have high winds have no clouds.
- The clouds oftentimes aren't moving in the same direction as are the surface winds.
- The clouds oftentimes aren't moving to the east, the direction in which the prevailing winds blow.
Here's one last site:
http://earth.nullschool.net
This site shows the surface winds for the entire globe. It is so very cool. You can rotate the Earth so you can see different parts of it, zoom in, zoom out. As I said, cool. Here you can see two much worse swirly patterns, one in the Arabian Sea and the other in the Pacific off the coast of Mexico. The first is Tropical Cyclone 02A and the other, Hurricane Christina. Those definitely are not nice places to be right now.
Bottom line: Prevailing doesn't mean always. It means "on average." Keep those statistician duck hunters on mind when you read about prevailing winds.