• Heavy Rain/Flooding TX/LA

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Jul 24 09:43:00 2024
    AWUS01 KWNH 241246
    FFGMPD
    LAZ000-TXZ000-241845-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0716
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    845 AM EDT Wed Jul 24 2024

    Areas affected...Far Southeast TX...Central to Southwest LA

    Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding likely

    Valid 241245Z - 241845Z

    SUMMARY...Slow-moving bands of locally training showers and
    thunderstorms will be capable of producing extremely heavy
    rainfall rates and excessive totals going through midday. At least
    scattered instances of flash flooding, including urban impacts,
    are likely to materialize.

    DISCUSSION...The early morning GOES-E IR satellite imagery shows a
    loosely organized complex of convection focused near the Upper TX
    coast and overspreading adjacent areas of far southeast TX and
    into southwest LA. The convection is associated with a weak
    mid-level shortwave perturbation and an associated low-level
    trough while interacting while also interacting with a very moist
    and moderately unstable airmass that is pooling north from the
    Gulf of Mexico.

    MLCAPE values around the southeast flank of the vort energy and
    adjacent to some of the convective bands is on the order of 1000
    to 1500 J/kg, with the main axis of this noted from near the Upper
    TX coast northeastward into far southwest LA. The low-level flow
    is rather confluent in general over the northwest Gulf of Mexico
    with about 20 to 25 kts of southwesterly 850 mb flow aiming into
    southwest LA.

    This low-level flow is forecast by the RAP guidance to increase
    over the next few hours to as much as 30+ kts which will favor a
    general uptick in not only moisture transport, but also speed
    convergence. This should favor a persistence and localized
    expansion of the ongoing convective activity, with a tendency for
    this to become locally more concentrated over southwest to central
    LA, while also lingering potentially farther back to the southwest
    over the Upper TX coast where low-level convergence near a surface
    trough will be well-established.

    Some of the most recent hires model guidance and surface
    observations suggest a wave of low pressure may be attempting to
    form over southeast TX in association with this energy, and this
    may help to maintain a semi-organized convective threat going into
    the afternoon hours.

    PWs over the region are deeply tropical in nature, with values of
    2.25 to 2.5 inches, and this coupled with the level of instability
    and forcing should promote rainfall rates reaching 2 to 3
    inches/hour with the stronger cells. There will be concerns for
    cell-training with these slow-moving linearly oriented bands of
    convection, and some rainfall totals through midday may reach as
    high as 4 to 6 inches where this occurs. Given the rainfall
    potential and increasingly wet/sensitive antecedent conditions,
    there will likely be at least scattered instances of flash
    flooding. This will include impact concerns to the more urban
    corridors which will include areas from Port Arthur, TX over to
    Lake Charles, LA.

    Orrison

    ATTN...WFO...HGX...LCH...SHV...

    ATTN...RFC...LMRFC...WGRFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 31639308 31459209 30469195 29689231 29699309
    29619367 29549402 29379448 29539458 29729452
    30179407 30979376
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Jul 26 09:21:00 2024
    AWUS01 KWNH 261057
    FFGMPD
    LAZ000-TXZ000-261655-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0732
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    656 AM EDT Fri Jul 26 2024

    Areas affected...Portions of Eastern TX into West-Central and
    Southwest LA

    Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding likely

    Valid 261055Z - 261655Z

    SUMMARY...Additional areas of heavy rainfall should tend to
    continue this morning across areas of eastern TX and west-central
    to southwest LA. Flash flooding will remain likely including
    continued concerns for locally considerable urban flash flooding.

    DISCUSSION...The early-morning GOES-E IR satellite imagery shows a
    rather impressive cold-topped convective wedge (with tops to -60
    to -65 C) near the upper TX coast and generally advancing east of
    Galveston Bay to the immediate offshore waters, However, radar
    imagery does show some of the heavier showers and thunderstorms
    with this still impacting some inland areas of southeast TX, with
    the activity also encroaching on southwest LA.

    An elongated axis of vort energy is noted along much of the middle
    and upper TX coast and up across interior areas of eastern TX
    around the eastern flank of a broader mid-level trough over the
    southern Plains. This energy is interacting with a very deep
    tropical airmass and axis of stronger instability that is pooled
    up across the northwest Gulf of Mexico and inland to some extent
    over far southeast TX and far southwest LA. In fact, MLCAPE values
    of 1500 to 2500 J/kg are noted across these areas with PWs of 2.0
    to 2.25 inches.

    The ongoing convection is likely to continue going through the
    morning hours given the set-up which is also being facilitated by
    favorable right-entrance region upper-level jet dynamics and a
    convergent southerly low-level jet of 20 to 30 kts that is nosed
    up along to the TX/LA border.

    Generally the focus for the heaviest rainfall totals in near-term
    going through at least mid-morning should continue to be over
    areas of far southeast TX which over the next 1 to 3 hours will
    likely include portions of the Beaumont-Port Arthur vicinity, but
    this convection is expected to advance into some areas of
    southwest LA, and eventually the Lake Charles vicinity may come
    under impacts from this convection. Some of the rainfall rates
    with these cells are likely to reach 2 to 3 inches/hour. Galveston
    Airport in the last hour (4AM to 5AM CDT) alone reported 2.38
    inches as these storms crossed through.

    Additional areas of heavy rain are also noted farther north away
    from the coast across parts of eastern TX and into west-central LA
    where antecedent conditions are already quite wet and locally
    saturated from recent heavy rainfall. High streamflows are noted
    more regionally also via the latest USGS gauge data.

    Therefore, with the potential for an additional 3 to 5+ inches of
    rain locally this morning, and the sensitive ground conditions,
    additional areas of flash flooding are likely.

    Orrison

    ATTN...WFO...HGX...LCH...SHV...

    ATTN...RFC...LMRFC...WGRFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 32019350 31809281 31189243 30399238 29679263
    29599344 29339437 28809551 28989604 29549595
    30159575 30819518 31689421
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Nov 9 09:04:00 2024
    AWUS01 KWNH 091105
    FFGMPD
    LAZ000-TXZ000-091600-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 1144
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    605 AM EST Sat Nov 09 2024

    Areas affected...Southeast TX...Western LA...

    Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding possible

    Valid 091100Z - 091600Z

    SUMMARY...Slow moving, highly efficient cells along the front will
    continue to produce pockets of heavy rainfall and totals capable
    of inducing localized flash flooding. Scattered totals over 3-5"
    remain possible.

    DISCUSSION...Deep layer convergence through the warm sector over
    the northern Gulf and southern LA continues to drive convective
    development along the slowing/approaching cold fronta across SE
    TX. Strong upper-level divergence at the inflection of the
    cyclonically curved jet with maximized diffluence aloft as further enhanced/expanded convective development and isentropic ascent
    along and east of the triple point northeast of JAS, TX. CIRA LPW
    shows enanced surface to 700mb moisture through the warm sector
    though stronger 700-500 moisture along the northern coreo of
    Rafael remains distant enough for stronger WAA ascent later today.
    So with some weak steepening of lapse rates, modest instability
    remains in proximity of the Sabine River Valley to the triple
    point and should help to maintain updraft strength and focus
    moisture flux convergence to support 2-2.5"/hr rates. Duration of
    heavy rainfall may be more limited further north towad the
    entrance of the jet/divergence maxima as it slides away with the
    speed max with time. Spots of 2-4" across west-central to
    north-central LA may result in possible flash flooding over the
    next few hours.

    Furhter south, the east-southeast surface to 850mb flow
    decelerates into a col/weak surface wave near BPT. As such,
    similar deep layer moisture convergence and slightly enahnced
    surface based CAPE of ~1500 J/kg (due to proximity to the warmer
    Gulf) is providings stronger updraft strength. Due to proximity
    of slower low to midlevel flow, cells have been a bit more
    stationary/slow moving with time and some suggestion of upstream
    redevelopment toward the south may allow for some repeating;
    duration may continue to result in very localized but intense
    rainfall up to 2.5"/hr and localized totals of 3-5" over the next
    few hours. Given higher natural FFG values (only locally reduced
    due to 5-8" totals over Hardin, E Liberty and NW Jefferson
    counties), flash flooding from similar cells may continue risk for
    flash flooding.

    Gallina

    ATTN...WFO...HGX...LCH...SHV...

    ATTN...RFC...LMRFC...WGRFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 32749283 32599214 32029213 31029271 29919333
    29709366 29439446 29149487 28989532 29809504
    30979455 32399364

    $$
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