- 
Heavy Rain/Flooding TX
From  Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to  All on Wed Jun 19 08:56:00 2024
 
 
 
AWUS01 KWNH 191251
 FFGMPD
 TXZ000-191850-
 
 Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0467
 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
 850 AM EDT Wed Jun 19 2024
 
 Areas affected...South-Central to Southeast TX
 
 Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding possible
 
 Valid 191250Z - 191850Z
 
 SUMMARY...The broken outer rainbands associated with Potential
 Tropical Cyclone One will be arriving this morning across
 south-central to southeast TX. Heavy rainfall rates and eventually
 some concerns for training convection will support a gradually
 increasing threat for flash flooding.
 
 DISCUSSION...Potential Tropical Cyclone One remains situated down
 over the southern Gulf of Mexico early this morning, but the
 broken outer rainbands around the northwest flank of the system's
 circulation are approaching the middle and lower TX coastlines and
 will begin to move inland over the next several hours.
 
 Cloud top temperatures in the GOES-E IR satellite imagery have
 been tending to cool a bit overall over the last couple of hours
 with the offshore activity, and this is largely be driven by
 increasing low-level moisture flux convergence and instability
 transport focusing along inverted surface trough. MLCAPE values
 offshore over the western Gulf of Mexico are on the order of 1500
 to 2500 J/kg, and with notable low-level speed convergence and
 even frictional convergence near the coast, there will likely be
 an increased level of convection becoming concentrated very close
 to the coast and also just inland over the next several hours.
 
 The environment is extremely moist around the northwest quadrant
 of the system circulation, with PWs that are on the order of 2.4
 to 2.6 inches based on early-morning GPS-derived data and the
 latest CIRA-ALPW data shows highly concentrated moisture all the
 way through the top of the vertical column. The very deep warm
 cloud layer environment coupled with the instability transport and strengthening vertical ascent along the coast will support these
 bands of convection producing extremely high rainfall rates that
 should easily reach into the 2 to 3 inch/hour range, and may
 approach 4 inches/hour for some of the stronger convective cells
 by midday that will likely arrive once stronger instability begins
 to overspread the coast.
 
 Dry antecedent conditions will initially cut down on the flash
 flooding risk, but over time, the arrival of heavier rainfall
 rates and eventually cell-training concerns, should elevate the
 flash flood threat. As depicted by the 06Z HREF consensus,
 rainfall amounts going through early afternoon may reach 3 to 6
 inches, and this will at a minimum support an urban flash flood
 threat. Trends will be closely monitored over the next several
 hours, and additional MPDs will be issued this afternoon
 accordingly.
 
 Orrison
 
 ATTN...WFO...BRO...CRP...EWX...HGX...
 
 ATTN...RFC...WGRFC...NWC...
 
 LAT...LON   29459553 28979521 28499599 27799680 26799716
 25779721 25699802 25969846 26839867 27859840
 28639783 29289677
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From  Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to  All on Thu Jul 18 07:50:00 2024
 
 
 
AWUS01 KWNH 180935
 FFGMPD
 LAZ000-TXZ000-181400-
 
 Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0647
 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
 534 AM EDT Thu Jul 18 2024
 
 Areas affected...Hill Country of Texas east through the Piney
 Woods
 
 Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding possible
 
 Valid 180934Z - 181400Z
 
 Summary...A corridor of thunderstorms with heavy rainfall will
 continue to drop southward through the morning along a nearly
 stationary front. These thunderstorms will contain rainfall rates
 of 2-3"/hr, which could produce locally more than 4" of rain.
 Flash flooding is possible.
 
 Discussion...The regional radar mosaic early this morning
 indicates an expanding line of thunderstorms from far western
 Louisiana through central Texas. These storms are developing along
 a stationary front which should sag slowly southward as a weak
 cold front later this morning. North of this boundary, a potent
 shortwave noted in WV imagery and in SPC RAP Differential
 Vorticity fields is spinning southward, enhancing lift in a region
 already favorable through isentropic upglide of a modest LLJ and
 beneath a subtle mid-level deformation axis. Thermodynamics across
 Texas remain supportive of heavy rainfall, with PWs measured by
 GPS of 1.9 to 2.1 inches collocated with MUCAPE exceeding 2000
 J/kg. The overlap of ascent into this airmass is providing the
 favorable conditions for increasing thunderstorm development, and
 recent radar-estimated rain rates from KGRK WSR-88D have been as
 high as 2.5"/hr.
 
 The CAMs this morning all offer differing solutions to the
 evolution of this convection, but while spatial coverage and
 footprint vary, the intensity is well aligned among the various
 models which increases confidence in a heavy rain event. The 850mb
 LLJ is already beginning to slowly veer as noted in regional VWPs,
 and is expected to become westerly by late morning. This will
 limit the isentropic ascent and slowly reduce moisture transport
 northward, but will also then become more aligned to the advancing
 front, helping to turn the mean cloud-layer 0-6km winds parallel
 to the front as well. Additionally, the propagation vectors will
 become increasingly anti-parallel to the mean flow as the LLJ
 veers, suggesting continued backbuilding of echoes to the SW and
 along the front into the greater instability. With both HREF and
 REFS probabilities for 2"/1hr accumulations reaching 40%, this
 could result in 2-3" of rain along the boundary, with locally 4+"
 possible as noted by the neighborhood probabilities. The
 discussion area was drawn to somewhat emulate the EAS
 probabilities which are highest across the Hill Country, Balcones
 Escarpment, and along portions of I-35.
 
 Recent rainfall across this region has generally been below normal
 the last 7 days according to AHPS, but locally, NASA SPoRT 0-10cm
 RSM is above 70%. This indicates that some infiltration of heavy
 rain is likely, which is reflected by the higher FFG and
 corresponding 3-hr FFG exceedance probabilities peaking at just
 10-20%. However, the favorable setup for training of 2-3"/hr rain
 rates could still overwhelm soils, especially in urban areas or
 the across any more sensitivesoils, leading to rapid runoff and
 instances of flash flooding.
 
 Weiss
 
 ATTN...WFO...EWX...FWD...HGX...LCH...SHV...SJT...
 
 ATTN...RFC...LMRFC...WGRFC...NWC...
 
 LAT...LON   31969389 31959322 31719285 30559369 30129502
 29899686 29939839 30429957 30880043 31290077
 31570017 31709930 31719830 31789713 31819532
 
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From  Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to  All on Tue Sep  3 08:38:00 2024
 
 
 
AWUS01 KWNH 031228
 FFGMPD
 TXZ000-031826-
 
 Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0968
 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
 827 AM EDT Tue Sep 03 2024
 
 Areas affected...much of Texas
 
 Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding likely
 
 Valid 031226Z - 031826Z
 
 Summary...Areas of flash flooding are likely to continue through
 at least the early afternoon hours (18Z/1p CDT).
 
 Discussion...Much of Texas remains under the influence of broad
 mid/upper difluence associated with a mid-leel wave over the
 TransPecos.  Additionally, low-level convergence continues in the
 vicinity of a surface front subjectively analyzed from near JCT
 eastward through central Louisiana near ESF.  Across most of the
 discussion area, the combination of 2+ inch PW values,
 orographic/frontal confluence, weak inhibition, and at least 1000
 J/kg MUCAPE was contributing to deep convection.  The strongest
 updrafts were located across the southern 1/3rd of Texas where
 instability was strongest.  Meanwhile, weak steering flow was
 contributing to slow storm motions, and spots of 1-2.5 inch/hr
 rain rates were occasionally observed - highest near deeper
 convection across south Texas.
 
 The ongoing scenario should continue to support scattered
 instances of flash flooding throughout the day today.  Further
 compounding potential runoff issues are antecedent rainfall, which
 has totaled 2-8 inches over the past 24 hours across broad parts
 of Texas Midland to Abilene and in more localized spots near Del
 Rio and along the Texas Coast.  Areas of FFG exceedance are
 expected throughout the day as deep convection lingers and
 continues to result in spots of 1-2.5 inch/hr rain rates through
 at least the early afternoon.  In the near term, the greatest
 concern for flash flood potential resides near Del Rio (where deep
 convection was resulting in near 3 inch/hr rates over FFGs between
 0.25-1.5 inch/hr) and across a large part of west-central Texas
 where lighter rainfall continues and FFGs are between 0-1 inch/hr.
 
 Slight risk areas are valid for much of the discussion area in the
 D1 Excessive Rainfall Outlook, and expansions of that risk to
 cover more of south Texas are anticipated at or before the 16Z
 Outlook Update.
 
 Cook
 
 ATTN...WFO...CRP...EWX...FWD...HGX...LUB...MAF...OUN...SJT...
 
 ATTN...RFC...ABRFC...WGRFC...NWC...
 
 LAT...LON   33479778 33139704 32479689 31509744 30749750
 30089734 29389646 28849589 27909632 27439733
 27539951 28650052 29840109 31620133 33060056
 33359945
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From  Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to  All on Wed Sep  4 09:49:00 2024
 
 
 
AWUS01 KWNH 041222
 FFGMPD
 TXZ000-041821-
 
 Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0974
 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
 821 AM EDT Wed Sep 04 2024
 
 Areas affected...south Texas through the middle Texas coast
 
 Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding possible
 
 Valid 041221Z - 041821Z
 
 Summary...Persistent onshore flow was contributing to scattered
 areas of heavy rainfall especially along coastal areas near Corpus
 Christi.  Isolated instances of flash flooding are expected to
 continue through 18Z/1p CDT today.
 
 Discussion...Deep, slow-moving convection continues to drift
 onshore from northwestern Gulf of Mexico waters into the
 discussion area.  The onshore flow regime is being maintained due
 to a weak surface low near Brownsville and east-southeasterly
 850mb flow on the northeastern side of that cyclone.  That
 enhancement of low-level flow was maintaining strong buoyancy
 (1500 J/kg MLCAPE) along and just inland from Texas coastal areas,
 while low-level convergence was promoting continued updrafts amid
 a very moist airmass (2.5+ inch PW values).  This regime was
 continuing to support local 1-3 inch/hr rain rates at times
 especially with more persistent convection as noted with
 convection near Port Aransas and just north of Brownsville.
 
 The ongoing scenario supporting flash flooding will evolve very
 slowly today.  Spots of 1-3 inch/hr rain rates remain likely as
 convection slowly streams westward toward Texas coastal areas
 today.  These heavier rain rates could also materialize as far
 north as the Galveston area as well. FFG thresholds vary
 spatially, and generally range from 1.5-3.5 inches/hr.
 Isolated/localized flash flood potential is expected to persist
 through at least 18Z today in this regime, with the most
 pronounced threat existing where 1) >1 hour of heavier rainfall
 persists and/or 2) in low-lying/sensitive areas.
 
 Cook
 
 ATTN...WFO...BRO...CRP...HGX...LCH...
 
 ATTN...RFC...WGRFC...NWC...
 
 LAT...LON   29899443 29479412 28739523 28229646 27159711
 26169708 25819715 25769774 26399870 27419880
 28479787 29529608
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