• HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue May 19 19:41:23 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 191941
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    341 PM EDT Tue May 19 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue May 19 2026 - 12Z Wed May 20 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN ILLINOIS AND
    INDIANA...

    ..16Z Update..

    A line of convection is ongoing and continuing to push southward
    in eastern OK and northern AR. The inherited SLGT area in TX was
    expanded northward into parts of southern OK and southwestern AR,
    to account for an expected round of convection along an outflow
    boundary, along with convection along the progressing cold front
    thereafter. While the system is expected to be fairly progressive,
    rainfall rates will remain quite high. Latest HREF neighborhood
    probabilities suggest there is a greater-than 70% likelihood of
    rainfall exceeding an inch per hour, and a greater-than 40%
    likelihood of rainfall exceeding 2 inches per hour in the early
    afternoon hours. The SLGT area was also expanded into the Texas
    Gulf Coast to account for an expected development of a low- level
    convergence axis along the coast ahead of the cold front this
    evening and overnight. Latest deterministic guidance suggests a
    solid low-level jet developing overnight, bringing in rich Gulf
    moisture, with PWATs potentially exceeding 2 inches. Meanwhile, the
    SLGT risk area over southern IN and IL was largely unchanged.
    While some CAM QPF disagreement remains over the amount of rainfall
    expected, and where the main QPF core is expected to occur,
    antecedent rainfall over prior days and very low FFGs justify the=20
    SLGT being maintained.

    Blanco-Alcala

    ..Previous Discussion..

    ...Texas...

    A line of intense showers and thunderstorms currently expanding
    south across northern and western Oklahoma will continue south and
    east through the early morning into northeast Texas. With peak
    solar heating around midday, the line of storms will encounter an
    increasingly unstable, and increasingly moist air mass situated
    across much of Texas. Guidance suggests that several lines of
    storms will develop in north Texas through the early afternoon.
    Cold pools and lift ahead of the lines should allow individual
    cells to develop out ahead of the lines, which will locally
    increase the duration of heavy rains in those areas hit by first
    the cells, and then the line shortly thereafter. This could cause
    local flash flooding, especially should that occur over the
    Metroplex or other urban areas in north Texas. By mid to late
    afternoon, upper level energy may support areas of convection
    across central and south Texas that will be separate from any lines
    to the north. Mergers with the lines as they press south across the
    state and any individual cell mergers within the clusters of storms
    may also pose a localized flash flooding threat. By evening, the
    storms will continue pushing into south Texas, potentially
    impacting the San Antonio and Houston metros before they push into
    the Gulf and deep south Texas through the predawn hours.

    Overall the above-described scenario should keep flash flooding
    instances mostly to localized, widely scattered occasions. However,
    since the storms will cover much of the state, it's probable that
    in flood prone areas, the flash flooding threat could be greater. Unsurprisingly with so many clusters of storms expected, the CAMs
    are not having a great handle on them, so the Slight was expanded
    to cover the Texas Triangle. Despite the antecedent dry soil
    conditions over most of the state, PWATs will likely exceed 2
    inches along the Gulf Coast for when the storms reach there
    tonight. Thus, any and all storms will be capable of heavy rainfall
    rates that could cause flash flooding.

    ...Southern Illinois and Indiana...

    After rounds of showers and storms caused flash flooding in
    portions of Illinois and Indiana yesterday, the soils in the area
    are generally saturated due to widespread multiple-inch totals from yesterday/Monday. Much of the day today will be dry. Towards
    evening however, renewed rounds of showers and thunderstorms will
    develop with the approach of a strong cold front, significant
    moisture and instability advection ahead of the front, and upper
    level disturbances helping add to the overall environmental
    forcing. Thus, overnight, expect multiple rounds of training
    showers and thunderstorms tracking up the Ohio River Valley. With a
    robust LLJ supporting the storms, they should have no trouble
    maintaining their organization despite the lack of solar heating.
    Since the soils are fully saturated, most, if not all the rainfall
    will convert to runoff. Thus, the inherited Slight Risk was
    expanded southwest to include much of southern Illinois with this
    update.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed May 20 2026 - 12Z Thu May 21 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE EDWARDS
    PLATEAU REGION OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    ..20Z Update..

    Few changes were made to the inherited SLGT risk area. The main
    adjustment was a minor southward shift further into south TX, as
    updated QPF/CAMs guidance suggest a southward trend. A low-level
    jet will advect moisture from the Gulf, with PWATs now expected to
    approach 1.75 inches. Updated 12Z HREF neighborhood probabilities=20
    suggest over a 50% probability of rainfall exceeding 5 inches in 24
    hours within SLGT risk area. It also suggests moderate chances=20
    (~40%) of rainfall rates exceeding 2 inches in an hour during the=20
    overnight hours. Additionally, the MRGL risk area was trimmed in=20
    the Southern Plains and Central High Plains, also accounting for a=20
    southward trend.=20

    For Louisiana and the Lower Mississippi Valley, latest guidance
    still suggest the possibility for a concentrated area of higher=20 precipitation totals in the afternoon and evening. However, due to=20
    FFGs remaining very high, and model disagreement over the location=20
    of the heaviest precipitation, a MRGL risk has been maintained. As=20
    the convective evolution continues to become clearer, an upgrade to
    a Slight Risk remains possible in future updates.

    Blanco-Alcala

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A developing low level jet of deep Gulf moisture will advect
    northwestward up the Rio Grande in south and southwest Texas in
    response to height falls and an approaching shortwave moving
    towards that area from Mexico. Numerous showers and thunderstorms
    will develop late afternoon across the Edwards Plateau as a dry
    line pushes east from the Big Bend area. The storms feeding off
    PWATs of 1-1.5 inches, which is 2-2.5 sigma above normal for this
    time of year in that part of the country are expected to become
    plenty capable of producing heavy rain in an otherwise dry part of
    the country. More susceptibility and plenty of topography in the
    area will reduce the amount of rainfall needed to develop flash
    flooding concerns. A general 1.5 to 2 inches of rain are expected
    in the Edwards Plateau along the Rio Grande, likely falling in a
    1-3 hour period as the storms track eastward down the plateau.
    Thus, a higher-end Slight is in effect from Eagle Pass north and
    west. As the storms move off the Rio Grande into central Texas,
    generally towards San Antonio, they should weaken with time as they
    separate from the dry line and the upper level shortwave rapidly
    races away by the predawn hours Thursday. This should diminish the
    flash flooding threat further east for this period.

    Another area of more concentrated shower and thunderstorm activity
    will impact the lower Mississippi Valley along the
    Louisiana/Mississippi border Wednesday afternoon and evening. Due
    to high FFGs and a lack of agreement in the guidance as to the
    convective evolution, the area remains in a Marginal for now, but
    should heavy rain producing storms move over an urban area such as
    Baton Rouge, then flash flooding could occur. This area will need
    to be monitored for a Slight Risk upgrade with future updates.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS THROUGH THE OZARKS...

    ..20Z Update..

    Very few changes were made for both the SLGT and MRGL risk areas.
    An expansion to the MRGL area further north into southwest VA was
    made, to account for uncertainty regarding the location of a back-
    door cold front expected to move in. Latest RRFS guidance suggest
    isolated pockets of 1 inch/hour max rainfall rates. Mountainous=20
    terrain may also cause susceptibility of flash flooding due to=20
    runoff, but with higher FFGs and current model uncertainty, only a=20
    low end Marginal has been introduced. A possible reduction to the
    SLGT risk area is also possible as CAM guidance comes in, but the
    latest suite of global deterministic models and ensembles still
    suggest that the inherited SLGT encompasses the heaviest rainfall
    threat.

    Blanco-Alcala

    ..Previous Discussion..

    Numerous areas of showers and thunderstorms will impact the Slight
    Risk area on Thursday through Thursday night. An ensemble of
    guidance that covers the Day 3/Thursday period generally agree that
    Thursday morning, the strongest storms will be across coastal Texas
    through central Texas. These storms will track northeastward and
    grow upscale as the impact areas from northern Louisiana, northeast
    Texas, and Oklahoma. Thursday evening, a new round of storms
    impacts south Texas as the rest of the storms push northeast into
    Arkansas, northeast Oklahoma, and into Kansas, which then continue
    northeast up the mid-Mississippi River Valley and a separate area
    of storms impacts the Kansas City area. Despite this broad
    evolution, there is very little confidence on how the storms will
    behave/merge or track. Thus, the Slight covers likely more
    saturated soils after rainfall expected in many of these areas on
    Days 1 and 2. There will be no shortage of moisture and instability
    across the Slight Risk area, especially the southern half, so it's
    likely any limiting factor will be a generally progressive forward
    speed to the storms, and cold pool interactions.

    It's likely that with future updates, CAMs guidance should help
    narrow down where the greatest threats for storms will be on
    Thursday. This should allow the Slight to shrink a bit with better
    confidence, though much of the region should see at least some
    rainfall.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9mG0aMttgouiq6rL0slB0ToW0LkBPg-9ImIVwCSsqOlm= 3swK4o28nV0lt3CRhk2KC_rk0LEFjJaqJlTD604HXl1nB1E$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9mG0aMttgouiq6rL0slB0ToW0LkBPg-9ImIVwCSsqOlm= 3swK4o28nV0lt3CRhk2KC_rk0LEFjJaqJlTD604HLbXDX3I$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9mG0aMttgouiq6rL0slB0ToW0LkBPg-9ImIVwCSsqOlm= 3swK4o28nV0lt3CRhk2KC_rk0LEFjJaqJlTD604Hh4_QelI$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue May 19 23:50:53 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 192350
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    750 PM EDT Tue May 19 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed May 20 2026 - 12Z Wed May 20 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    01Z Update...
    Few large-scale changes needed to the previously-issued Excessive
    Rainfall Outlook. Some changes were made in West Texas based on
    satellite imagery showing cells that were producing 1 to 2.5+ inch
    per hour rainfall rates just outside the Marginal Risk area. Given
    the amount of instability in the area...at or slightly above 3000=20
    J per kg of CAPE) and slow cell motions...felt the threat of=20
    excessive rainfall will linger into the evening even if these=20
    particular cells weaken and dissipate. See the Mesoscale=20
    Precipitation Discussion 0193 valid until 20/0530Z for latest=20
    details.

    Farther north...trimmed parts of the Ohio Valley out of the=20
    Marginal Risk area that were post-frontal and reshaped the Slight=20
    risk area based on radar and the overlap with lowest 1- and 3-hour=20
    flash flood guidance. Thinking is that the threat will be=20
    diminishing with loss of CAPE and but moisture flux convergence=20
    along the front/outflow boundary may still be enough to support=20
    locally heavy rainfall rates for a time this evening.=20

    Bann

    ..16Z Update..

    A line of convection is ongoing and continuing to push southward
    in eastern OK and northern AR. The inherited SLGT area in TX was
    expanded northward into parts of southern OK and southwestern AR,
    to account for an expected round of convection along an outflow
    boundary, along with convection along the progressing cold front
    thereafter. While the system is expected to be fairly progressive,
    rainfall rates will remain quite high. Latest HREF neighborhood
    probabilities suggest there is a greater-than 70% likelihood of
    rainfall exceeding an inch per hour, and a greater-than 40%
    likelihood of rainfall exceeding 2 inches per hour in the early
    afternoon hours. The SLGT area was also expanded into the Texas
    Gulf Coast to account for an expected development of a low- level
    convergence axis along the coast ahead of the cold front this
    evening and overnight. Latest deterministic guidance suggests a
    solid low-level jet developing overnight, bringing in rich Gulf
    moisture, with PWATs potentially exceeding 2 inches. Meanwhile, the
    SLGT risk area over southern IN and IL was largely unchanged.
    While some CAM QPF disagreement remains over the amount of rainfall
    expected, and where the main QPF core is expected to occur,
    antecedent rainfall over prior days and very low FFGs justify the
    SLGT being maintained.

    Blanco-Alcala

    ..Previous Discussion..

    ...Texas...

    A line of intense showers and thunderstorms currently expanding
    south across northern and western Oklahoma will continue south and
    east through the early morning into northeast Texas. With peak
    solar heating around midday, the line of storms will encounter an
    increasingly unstable, and increasingly moist air mass situated
    across much of Texas. Guidance suggests that several lines of
    storms will develop in north Texas through the early afternoon.
    Cold pools and lift ahead of the lines should allow individual
    cells to develop out ahead of the lines, which will locally
    increase the duration of heavy rains in those areas hit by first
    the cells, and then the line shortly thereafter. This could cause
    local flash flooding, especially should that occur over the
    Metroplex or other urban areas in north Texas. By mid to late
    afternoon, upper level energy may support areas of convection
    across central and south Texas that will be separate from any lines
    to the north. Mergers with the lines as they press south across the
    state and any individual cell mergers within the clusters of storms
    may also pose a localized flash flooding threat. By evening, the
    storms will continue pushing into south Texas, potentially
    impacting the San Antonio and Houston metros before they push into
    the Gulf and deep south Texas through the predawn hours.

    Overall the above-described scenario should keep flash flooding
    instances mostly to localized, widely scattered occasions. However,
    since the storms will cover much of the state, it's probable that
    in flood prone areas, the flash flooding threat could be greater. Unsurprisingly with so many clusters of storms expected, the CAMs
    are not having a great handle on them, so the Slight was expanded
    to cover the Texas Triangle. Despite the antecedent dry soil
    conditions over most of the state, PWATs will likely exceed 2
    inches along the Gulf Coast for when the storms reach there
    tonight. Thus, any and all storms will be capable of heavy rainfall
    rates that could cause flash flooding.

    ...Southern Illinois and Indiana...

    After rounds of showers and storms caused flash flooding in
    portions of Illinois and Indiana yesterday, the soils in the area
    are generally saturated due to widespread multiple-inch totals from yesterday/Monday. Much of the day today will be dry. Towards
    evening however, renewed rounds of showers and thunderstorms will
    develop with the approach of a strong cold front, significant
    moisture and instability advection ahead of the front, and upper
    level disturbances helping add to the overall environmental
    forcing. Thus, overnight, expect multiple rounds of training
    showers and thunderstorms tracking up the Ohio River Valley. With a
    robust LLJ supporting the storms, they should have no trouble
    maintaining their organization despite the lack of solar heating.
    Since the soils are fully saturated, most, if not all the rainfall
    will convert to runoff. Thus, the inherited Slight Risk was
    expanded southwest to include much of southern Illinois with this
    update.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed May 20 2026 - 12Z Thu May 21 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE EDWARDS
    PLATEAU REGION OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    ..20Z Update..

    Few changes were made to the inherited SLGT risk area. The main
    adjustment was a minor southward shift further into south TX, as
    updated QPF/CAMs guidance suggest a southward trend. A low-level
    jet will advect moisture from the Gulf, with PWATs now expected to
    approach 1.75 inches. Updated 12Z HREF neighborhood probabilities
    suggest over a 50% probability of rainfall exceeding 5 inches in 24
    hours within SLGT risk area. It also suggests moderate chances
    (~40%) of rainfall rates exceeding 2 inches in an hour during the
    overnight hours. Additionally, the MRGL risk area was trimmed in
    the Southern Plains and Central High Plains, also accounting for a
    southward trend.

    For Louisiana and the Lower Mississippi Valley, latest guidance
    still suggest the possibility for a concentrated area of higher
    precipitation totals in the afternoon and evening. However, due to
    FFGs remaining very high, and model disagreement over the location
    of the heaviest precipitation, a MRGL risk has been maintained. As
    the convective evolution continues to become clearer, an upgrade to
    a Slight Risk remains possible in future updates.

    Blanco-Alcala

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A developing low level jet of deep Gulf moisture will advect
    northwestward up the Rio Grande in south and southwest Texas in
    response to height falls and an approaching shortwave moving
    towards that area from Mexico. Numerous showers and thunderstorms
    will develop late afternoon across the Edwards Plateau as a dry
    line pushes east from the Big Bend area. The storms feeding off
    PWATs of 1-1.5 inches, which is 2-2.5 sigma above normal for this
    time of year in that part of the country are expected to become
    plenty capable of producing heavy rain in an otherwise dry part of
    the country. More susceptibility and plenty of topography in the
    area will reduce the amount of rainfall needed to develop flash
    flooding concerns. A general 1.5 to 2 inches of rain are expected
    in the Edwards Plateau along the Rio Grande, likely falling in a
    1-3 hour period as the storms track eastward down the plateau.
    Thus, a higher-end Slight is in effect from Eagle Pass north and
    west. As the storms move off the Rio Grande into central Texas,
    generally towards San Antonio, they should weaken with time as they
    separate from the dry line and the upper level shortwave rapidly
    races away by the predawn hours Thursday. This should diminish the
    flash flooding threat further east for this period.

    Another area of more concentrated shower and thunderstorm activity
    will impact the lower Mississippi Valley along the
    Louisiana/Mississippi border Wednesday afternoon and evening. Due
    to high FFGs and a lack of agreement in the guidance as to the
    convective evolution, the area remains in a Marginal for now, but
    should heavy rain producing storms move over an urban area such as
    Baton Rouge, then flash flooding could occur. This area will need
    to be monitored for a Slight Risk upgrade with future updates.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS THROUGH THE OZARKS...

    ..20Z Update..

    Very few changes were made for both the SLGT and MRGL risk areas.
    An expansion to the MRGL area further north into southwest VA was
    made, to account for uncertainty regarding the location of a back-
    door cold front expected to move in. Latest RRFS guidance suggest
    isolated pockets of 1 inch/hour max rainfall rates. Mountainous
    terrain may also cause susceptibility of flash flooding due to
    runoff, but with higher FFGs and current model uncertainty, only a
    low end Marginal has been introduced. A possible reduction to the
    SLGT risk area is also possible as CAM guidance comes in, but the
    latest suite of global deterministic models and ensembles still
    suggest that the inherited SLGT encompasses the heaviest rainfall
    threat.

    Blanco-Alcala

    ..Previous Discussion..

    Numerous areas of showers and thunderstorms will impact the Slight
    Risk area on Thursday through Thursday night. An ensemble of
    guidance that covers the Day 3/Thursday period generally agree that
    Thursday morning, the strongest storms will be across coastal Texas
    through central Texas. These storms will track northeastward and
    grow upscale as the impact areas from northern Louisiana, northeast
    Texas, and Oklahoma. Thursday evening, a new round of storms
    impacts south Texas as the rest of the storms push northeast into
    Arkansas, northeast Oklahoma, and into Kansas, which then continue
    northeast up the mid-Mississippi River Valley and a separate area
    of storms impacts the Kansas City area. Despite this broad
    evolution, there is very little confidence on how the storms will
    behave/merge or track. Thus, the Slight covers likely more
    saturated soils after rainfall expected in many of these areas on
    Days 1 and 2. There will be no shortage of moisture and instability
    across the Slight Risk area, especially the southern half, so it's
    likely any limiting factor will be a generally progressive forward
    speed to the storms, and cold pool interactions.

    It's likely that with future updates, CAMs guidance should help
    narrow down where the greatest threats for storms will be on
    Thursday. This should allow the Slight to shrink a bit with better
    confidence, though much of the region should see at least some
    rainfall.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9rZ-TQS8-Ap9obWAwSosE64KV6__70Yr44aoO5q4J_eV= k3H5r4E0jiDtjCvCblff_AFiGtsdmyqRGdkfr88BH_M_7nQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9rZ-TQS8-Ap9obWAwSosE64KV6__70Yr44aoO5q4J_eV= k3H5r4E0jiDtjCvCblff_AFiGtsdmyqRGdkfr88BnUsn2Lc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9rZ-TQS8-Ap9obWAwSosE64KV6__70Yr44aoO5q4J_eV= k3H5r4E0jiDtjCvCblff_AFiGtsdmyqRGdkfr88B82lsgQ8$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed May 20 08:00:14 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 200800
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 AM EDT Wed May 20 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed May 20 2026 - 12Z Thu May 21 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHWEST TEXAS, AS WELL AS FOR EASTERN LOUISIANA INTO SOUTHERN
    MISSISSIPPI...

    ...Southwest Texas...

    Numerous showers and thunderstorms are expected to develop over
    much of southwest Texas, generally along the Rio Grande from south
    Texas through the Edwards Plateau this afternoon into tonight.
    Convection is likely to initiate over the mountains of Mexico and
    along the dry line north and northeast of the Big Bend Region this
    afternoon. Meanwhile a surge of deep Gulf moisture, characterized
    by PWATs nearing 2 inches, will advect up the Rio Grande Valley on
    a 15-25 kt southeast wind from the Gulf. Where the dry line and
    this surge of moisture meet is where the heaviest and most
    persistent showers and storms capable of producing heavy rain will
    occur. This appears most likely in the portion of the Edwards
    Plateau near Del Rio. A higher-end Slight remains in effect for
    this area where the greatest potential of seeing 3 inches or more
    of rain areally, with locally higher amounts exists. HREF
    neighborhood probabilities peak over 30% of seeing 5 inches of rain
    in this area. Given the steep topography, rocky soils, and
    climatologically dry nature of the area, flash flooding appears
    likely, especially where the storms are most persistent.

    During the evening, the storms are likely to separate both from the
    mountains of Mexico as well as the dry line. They will follow
    generally parallel to the Rio Grande towards the southeast,
    following the influx of deep Gulf moisture and instability. Due to
    recent heavy rainfall from Laredo east through Corpus Christi, the
    soils here are more saturated, and therefore should be more likely
    to convert more rainfall to runoff, despite the storms by that
    point likely being quite progressive. Thus, the Slight extends
    south to around Laredo.

    ...Eastern Louisiana into Southern Mississippi...

    In coordination with LIX/Slidell, LA and JAN/Jackson, MS forecast
    offices, a small Slight Risk upgrade was introduced with this
    update for eastern Louisiana into southern Mississippi. A stalling
    out cold front over central Louisiana will provide the greatest
    forcing for storms as it tries to progress eastward. Deep Gulf
    moisture and instability will ramp up ahead of the front with peak
    heating. However, thunderstorms may still be in progress along the
    coast from the current storms over Texas. New convective initiation
    will occur along the front, likely just east of the Mississippi
    River in Mississippi, and those storms will link up with other
    clusters of storms further south and west over southwestern
    Louisiana. Since the front will be slow-moving, and there will be a
    steady southerly flow of Gulf moisture out ahead of it, the storms
    will likely have some training elements to them. During peak=20
    heating in the mid to late afternoon, the storms will progress into
    Baton Rouge and New Orleans, adding an urban element to the flash=20
    flooding threat. Given the proclivities for those urban areas to=20
    flash flood during heavy rain events, the Slight Risk upgrade was=20 introduced. The storms will then progress north into southern=20
    Mississippi, which while far less urban, still has somewhat wetter-
    than-normal soils, which could also promote flash flooding in some
    areas.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS AND PINEY WOODS REGIONS...

    ...Southern Plains into the Piney Woods...

    The dry line across western Texas and Oklahoma will make a big push
    to the east through the Day 2/Thursday period. The former cold
    front over eastern Texas will retreat as a warm front towards the
    north and as renewed push of deep Gulf moisture advects northward
    with the low level jet. Further, a deep positively tilted longwave
    trough will eject into the Plains from the Rockies during this
    period. The combination off all of these factors will result in a
    large and widespread area of convection stretching from the Gulf
    Coast of Texas north across eastern Oklahoma and Kansas, as far
    north as Kansas City.=20

    Starting from the south, the convection along the Texas Gulf coast
    will be associated with the dry line pushing quickly east and
    running into plentiful Gulf moisture ahead of it. Expect most of
    the storms from Houston south and west to be fast movers with the
    dry line. Most of these storms will impact coastal communities
    Thursday morning. Further north, there will likely be convection
    ongoing at the start of the period across north Texas (near the
    Wichita Falls area) and into southwestern Oklahoma. These storms
    will increase in coverage through the morning as they progress over
    central Oklahoma. Meanwhile by afternoon, the storms will blossom
    over northeast Texas and down into northern Louisiana. With
    moisture continuing to advect north, expect numerous clusters of
    storms over much of eastern Oklahoma, eventually moving into
    western Arkansas in the early evening. These areas got pockets of
    1-3 inches of rain yesterday, so the newly saturated soils across
    western Arkansas should support widely scattered instances of flash
    flooding as multiple rounds of storms move through, and they
    backbuild south and west. Due to the southerly flow of Gulf
    moisture, some convection should also progress northward into
    eastern Kansas and western Missouri through the evening. By this
    far north instability will be lacking, so not expecting
    particularly heavy rain, but all of the stronger storms to the
    south will have merged into a larger area of moderate rain into
    Kansas and Missouri, which have also seen heavy rains lately,
    supporting Slight Risk levels of flash flooding. The steady rain
    there could continue well into Thursday night.

    ...Southern Appalachians...

    The clash of a cool air mass behind a back door cold front over
    Virginia and tropical Atlantic moisture across the Southeast
    characterized by PWATs over 1.5 inches will support areas of
    showers and storms across portions of southwest Virginia, western
    North Carolina, and perhaps into far eastern Tennessee Thursday
    afternoon into Thursday night. Training convection along the front
    will be likely, especially along the Virginia/North Carolina border
    area, where the topography of the southern Appalachians could
    locally further enhance rainfall rates. Instability will be
    marginal however due to extensive cloud cover over this area.=20
    While the meteorology may support a bit more widespread flooding,=20
    the hydrology will be strongly working against that. A long-term=20
    drought over the area and extremely dry soils compared to=20
    climatology will make much of the rain expected in this area
    beneficial. However, due to training, plentiful moisture that will
    support areas of heavy rainfall, and the topography, isolated
    instances of flash flooding are probable. For now the area remains
    in a Marginal Risk, but a Slight may need to be considered if
    forecast rainfall amounts in this area increase appreciably over
    the next day or so.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE LOWER TO
    MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, OHIO VALLEY, AND PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN
    PLAINS...

    As a longwave trough over the northern Plains pivots northeastward
    through the period, a surface cold front tracking along with it
    will likely slow its eastward progress along the Mississippi and=20
    Ohio Valleys. Plentiful Gulf moisture ahead of the front will
    support numerous areas of convection all throughout the Marginal
    Risk area. With the greatest upper level forcing moving away from
    the front, it will become an increasing struggle to organize the
    convection in a way such that flooding becomes more likely. From
    the Ohio Valley to the Mid-Atlantic, plentiful cloud cover and much
    cooler temperatures will keep the instability near zero, precluding
    any meaningful heavy rainfall in favor of a long-duration light to
    moderate rainfall. The heaviest rains appear most likely into the
    far southern Appalachians (northern AL/GA, western Carolinas, and=20 Tennessee). This is the area that appears most likely to have a
    Slight Risk upgrade with future updates. Elsewhere, other MCSs may
    impact the lower Missouri Valley, and along the Texas coast. Dry
    line convection into Friday evening may impact a good amount of
    Oklahoma, but once again the storms do not appear to be able to
    organize to increase the flooding threat beyond the
    isolated/Marginal category.=20

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9MZScX8Y1sXNDU16IjVFzf6v0BT2kJPUfPsSaHh4sN3s= cQ-BpMOc7wxSIt9vJjDTOocXW6ByCT8msn2WDtFAp9dr3RI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9MZScX8Y1sXNDU16IjVFzf6v0BT2kJPUfPsSaHh4sN3s= cQ-BpMOc7wxSIt9vJjDTOocXW6ByCT8msn2WDtFAlYeEvEE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9MZScX8Y1sXNDU16IjVFzf6v0BT2kJPUfPsSaHh4sN3s= cQ-BpMOc7wxSIt9vJjDTOocXW6ByCT8msn2WDtFAn8Wn-C8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed May 20 15:42:11 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 201542
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1142 AM EDT Wed May 20 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed May 20 2026 - 12Z Thu May 21 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHWEST TEXAS, OHIO VALLEY AS WELL AS FOR EASTERN LOUISIANA INTO
    SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI...

    16Z update... A Slight Risk area was raised for portions of the
    Ohio Valley.

    ...Kentucky, West Virginia and southern Ohio...

    Rains earlier this morning have increased soil saturation and
    lowered local flash flood guidance for parts of the region.
    Additional thunderstorms are expected to repeat/train near the
    frontal boundary as it nears eastern Kentucky and western West
    Virginia this afternoon/early evening. Some of the guidance are
    hinting at isolated rainfall intensity maxes of 1.5 to 2.5+
    inches/hour over sensitive areas. While the rain is welcome to much
    of the drought stricken locations, these rates could lead to very
    isolated instances of flash flooding, particularly for northeast
    Kentucky and near urban areas.

    Campbell

    ...Southwest Texas...

    Numerous showers and thunderstorms are expected to develop over
    much of southwest Texas, generally along the Rio Grande from south
    Texas through the Edwards Plateau this afternoon into tonight.
    Convection is likely to initiate over the mountains of Mexico and
    along the dry line north and northeast of the Big Bend Region this
    afternoon. Meanwhile a surge of deep Gulf moisture, characterized
    by PWATs nearing 2 inches, will advect up the Rio Grande Valley on
    a 15-25 kt southeast wind from the Gulf. Where the dry line and
    this surge of moisture meet is where the heaviest and most
    persistent showers and storms capable of producing heavy rain will
    occur. This appears most likely in the portion of the Edwards
    Plateau near Del Rio. A higher-end Slight remains in effect for
    this area where the greatest potential of seeing 3 inches or more
    of rain areally, with locally higher amounts exists. HREF
    neighborhood probabilities peak over 30% of seeing 5 inches of rain
    in this area. Given the steep topography, rocky soils, and
    climatologically dry nature of the area, flash flooding appears
    likely, especially where the storms are most persistent.

    During the evening, the storms are likely to separate both from the
    mountains of Mexico as well as the dry line. They will follow
    generally parallel to the Rio Grande towards the southeast,
    following the influx of deep Gulf moisture and instability. Due to
    recent heavy rainfall from Laredo east through Corpus Christi, the
    soils here are more saturated, and therefore should be more likely
    to convert more rainfall to runoff, despite the storms by that
    point likely being quite progressive. Thus, the Slight extends
    south to around Laredo.

    ...Eastern Louisiana into Southern Mississippi...

    In coordination with LIX/Slidell, LA and JAN/Jackson, MS forecast
    offices, a small Slight Risk upgrade was introduced with this
    update for eastern Louisiana into southern Mississippi. A stalling
    out cold front over central Louisiana will provide the greatest
    forcing for storms as it tries to progress eastward. Deep Gulf
    moisture and instability will ramp up ahead of the front with peak
    heating. However, thunderstorms may still be in progress along the
    coast from the current storms over Texas. New convective initiation
    will occur along the front, likely just east of the Mississippi
    River in Mississippi, and those storms will link up with other
    clusters of storms further south and west over southwestern
    Louisiana. Since the front will be slow-moving, and there will be a
    steady southerly flow of Gulf moisture out ahead of it, the storms
    will likely have some training elements to them. During peak
    heating in the mid to late afternoon, the storms will progress into
    Baton Rouge and New Orleans, adding an urban element to the flash
    flooding threat. Given the proclivities for those urban areas to
    flash flood during heavy rain events, the Slight Risk upgrade was
    introduced. The storms will then progress north into southern
    Mississippi, which while far less urban, still has somewhat wetter-
    than-normal soils, which could also promote flash flooding in some
    areas.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS AND PINEY WOODS REGIONS...

    ...Southern Plains into the Piney Woods...

    The dry line across western Texas and Oklahoma will make a big push
    to the east through the Day 2/Thursday period. The former cold
    front over eastern Texas will retreat as a warm front towards the
    north and as renewed push of deep Gulf moisture advects northward
    with the low level jet. Further, a deep positively tilted longwave
    trough will eject into the Plains from the Rockies during this
    period. The combination off all of these factors will result in a
    large and widespread area of convection stretching from the Gulf
    Coast of Texas north across eastern Oklahoma and Kansas, as far
    north as Kansas City.

    Starting from the south, the convection along the Texas Gulf coast
    will be associated with the dry line pushing quickly east and
    running into plentiful Gulf moisture ahead of it. Expect most of
    the storms from Houston south and west to be fast movers with the
    dry line. Most of these storms will impact coastal communities
    Thursday morning. Further north, there will likely be convection
    ongoing at the start of the period across north Texas (near the
    Wichita Falls area) and into southwestern Oklahoma. These storms
    will increase in coverage through the morning as they progress over
    central Oklahoma. Meanwhile by afternoon, the storms will blossom
    over northeast Texas and down into northern Louisiana. With
    moisture continuing to advect north, expect numerous clusters of
    storms over much of eastern Oklahoma, eventually moving into
    western Arkansas in the early evening. These areas got pockets of
    1-3 inches of rain yesterday, so the newly saturated soils across
    western Arkansas should support widely scattered instances of flash
    flooding as multiple rounds of storms move through, and they
    backbuild south and west. Due to the southerly flow of Gulf
    moisture, some convection should also progress northward into
    eastern Kansas and western Missouri through the evening. By this
    far north instability will be lacking, so not expecting
    particularly heavy rain, but all of the stronger storms to the
    south will have merged into a larger area of moderate rain into
    Kansas and Missouri, which have also seen heavy rains lately,
    supporting Slight Risk levels of flash flooding. The steady rain
    there could continue well into Thursday night.

    ...Southern Appalachians...

    The clash of a cool air mass behind a back door cold front over
    Virginia and tropical Atlantic moisture across the Southeast
    characterized by PWATs over 1.5 inches will support areas of
    showers and storms across portions of southwest Virginia, western
    North Carolina, and perhaps into far eastern Tennessee Thursday
    afternoon into Thursday night. Training convection along the front
    will be likely, especially along the Virginia/North Carolina border
    area, where the topography of the southern Appalachians could
    locally further enhance rainfall rates. Instability will be
    marginal however due to extensive cloud cover over this area.
    While the meteorology may support a bit more widespread flooding,
    the hydrology will be strongly working against that. A long-term
    drought over the area and extremely dry soils compared to
    climatology will make much of the rain expected in this area
    beneficial. However, due to training, plentiful moisture that will
    support areas of heavy rainfall, and the topography, isolated
    instances of flash flooding are probable. For now the area remains
    in a Marginal Risk, but a Slight may need to be considered if
    forecast rainfall amounts in this area increase appreciably over
    the next day or so.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE LOWER TO
    MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, OHIO VALLEY, AND PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN
    PLAINS...

    As a longwave trough over the northern Plains pivots northeastward
    through the period, a surface cold front tracking along with it
    will likely slow its eastward progress along the Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys. Plentiful Gulf moisture ahead of the front will
    support numerous areas of convection all throughout the Marginal
    Risk area. With the greatest upper level forcing moving away from
    the front, it will become an increasing struggle to organize the
    convection in a way such that flooding becomes more likely. From
    the Ohio Valley to the Mid-Atlantic, plentiful cloud cover and much
    cooler temperatures will keep the instability near zero, precluding
    any meaningful heavy rainfall in favor of a long-duration light to
    moderate rainfall. The heaviest rains appear most likely into the
    far southern Appalachians (northern AL/GA, western Carolinas, and
    Tennessee). This is the area that appears most likely to have a
    Slight Risk upgrade with future updates. Elsewhere, other MCSs may
    impact the lower Missouri Valley, and along the Texas coast. Dry
    line convection into Friday evening may impact a good amount of
    Oklahoma, but once again the storms do not appear to be able to
    organize to increase the flooding threat beyond the
    isolated/Marginal category.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!66QPX3oNfQd1v4UKJ4rxjAjBjhvDI69fRifn14tcpyx2= Q9X4ar2Dju7Zo525tAykazQRLNXRUgTqFmg6UEujTtYs9_8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!66QPX3oNfQd1v4UKJ4rxjAjBjhvDI69fRifn14tcpyx2= Q9X4ar2Dju7Zo525tAykazQRLNXRUgTqFmg6UEujjyvAAEc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!66QPX3oNfQd1v4UKJ4rxjAjBjhvDI69fRifn14tcpyx2= Q9X4ar2Dju7Zo525tAykazQRLNXRUgTqFmg6UEujJtY7idQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 21 00:56:15 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 210056
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    856 PM EDT Wed May 20 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Thu May 21 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHWEST TEXAS, OHIO VALLEY AS WELL AS FOR EASTERN LOUISIANA INTO
    SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI...

    01Z Update...
    Changes were relatively minor and based on short-term trends in
    radar and satellite...and the changes were primarily to trim areas
    where rain has ended in parts of the Ohio Valley and Southern
    Plains as well as a subtle expansion in parts of Texas based on
    amount of development upstream from areas that received locally
    heavy rainfall on Tuesday.

    Bann


    16Z update... A Slight Risk area was raised for portions of the
    Ohio Valley.

    ...Kentucky, West Virginia and southern Ohio...

    Rains earlier this morning have increased soil saturation and
    lowered local flash flood guidance for parts of the region.
    Additional thunderstorms are expected to repeat/train near the
    frontal boundary as it nears eastern Kentucky and western West
    Virginia this afternoon/early evening. Some of the guidance are
    hinting at isolated rainfall intensity maxes of 1.5 to 2.5+
    inches/hour over sensitive areas. While the rain is welcome to much
    of the drought stricken locations, these rates could lead to very
    isolated instances of flash flooding, particularly for northeast
    Kentucky and near urban areas.

    Campbell

    ...Southwest Texas...

    Numerous showers and thunderstorms are expected to develop over
    much of southwest Texas, generally along the Rio Grande from south
    Texas through the Edwards Plateau this afternoon into tonight.
    Convection is likely to initiate over the mountains of Mexico and
    along the dry line north and northeast of the Big Bend Region this
    afternoon. Meanwhile a surge of deep Gulf moisture, characterized
    by PWATs nearing 2 inches, will advect up the Rio Grande Valley on
    a 15-25 kt southeast wind from the Gulf. Where the dry line and
    this surge of moisture meet is where the heaviest and most
    persistent showers and storms capable of producing heavy rain will
    occur. This appears most likely in the portion of the Edwards
    Plateau near Del Rio. A higher-end Slight remains in effect for
    this area where the greatest potential of seeing 3 inches or more
    of rain areal-averaged, with locally higher amounts exists. HREF=20 neighborhood probabilities peak over 30% of seeing 5 inches of rain
    in this area. Given the steep topography, rocky soils, and=20
    climatologically dry nature of the area, flash flooding appears=20
    likely, especially where the storms are most persistent.

    During the evening, the storms are likely to separate both from the
    mountains of Mexico as well as the dry line. They will follow
    generally parallel to the Rio Grande towards the southeast,
    following the influx of deep Gulf moisture and instability. Due to
    recent heavy rainfall from Laredo east through Corpus Christi, the
    soils here are more saturated, and therefore should be more likely
    to convert more rainfall to runoff, despite the storms by that
    point likely being quite progressive. Thus, the Slight extends
    south to around Laredo.

    ...Eastern Louisiana into Southern Mississippi...

    In coordination with LIX/Slidell, LA and JAN/Jackson, MS forecast
    offices, a small Slight Risk upgrade was introduced with this
    update for eastern Louisiana into southern Mississippi. A stalling
    out cold front over central Louisiana will provide the greatest
    forcing for storms as it tries to progress eastward. Deep Gulf
    moisture and instability will ramp up ahead of the front with peak
    heating. However, thunderstorms may still be in progress along the
    coast from the current storms over Texas. New convective initiation
    will occur along the front, likely just east of the Mississippi
    River in Mississippi, and those storms will link up with other
    clusters of storms further south and west over southwestern
    Louisiana. Since the front will be slow-moving, and there will be a
    steady southerly flow of Gulf moisture out ahead of it, the storms
    will likely have some training elements to them. During peak
    heating in the mid to late afternoon, the storms will progress into
    Baton Rouge and New Orleans, adding an urban element to the flash
    flooding threat. Given the proclivities for those urban areas to
    flash flood during heavy rain events, the Slight Risk upgrade was
    introduced. The storms will then progress north into southern
    Mississippi, which while far less urban, still has somewhat wetter-
    than-normal soils, which could also promote flash flooding in some
    areas.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS AND PINEY WOODS REGIONS...

    ...Southern Plains into the Piney Woods...

    21Z update... The Slight Risk was trimmed out of portions of
    south-central Missouri and central Arkansas. Neighborhood
    probabilities for exceeding FFG were at a relative minimum
    compared to surrounding locations. The reduction is model and WPC
    QPF over this part of the region also supported this adjustment.
    Signals persist for some of the higher rainfall totals to focus
    over eastern Oklahoma and Kansas during this period.

    Campbell

    The dry line across western Texas and Oklahoma will make a big push
    to the east through the Day 2/Thursday period. The former cold
    front over eastern Texas will retreat as a warm front towards the
    north and as renewed push of deep Gulf moisture advects northward
    with the low level jet. Further, a deep positively tilted longwave
    trough will eject into the Plains from the Rockies during this
    period. The combination off all of these factors will result in a
    large and widespread area of convection stretching from the Gulf
    Coast of Texas north across eastern Oklahoma and Kansas, as far
    north as Kansas City.

    Starting from the south, the convection along the Texas Gulf coast
    will be associated with the dry line pushing quickly east and
    running into plentiful Gulf moisture ahead of it. Expect most of
    the storms from Houston south and west to be fast movers with the
    dry line. Most of these storms will impact coastal communities
    Thursday morning. Further north, there will likely be convection
    ongoing at the start of the period across north Texas (near the
    Wichita Falls area) and into southwestern Oklahoma. These storms
    will increase in coverage through the morning as they progress over
    central Oklahoma. Meanwhile by afternoon, the storms will blossom
    over northeast Texas and down into northern Louisiana. With
    moisture continuing to advect north, expect numerous clusters of
    storms over much of eastern Oklahoma, eventually moving into
    western Arkansas in the early evening. These areas got pockets of
    1-3 inches of rain yesterday, so the newly saturated soils across
    western Arkansas should support widely scattered instances of flash
    flooding as multiple rounds of storms move through, and they
    backbuild south and west. Due to the southerly flow of Gulf
    moisture, some convection should also progress northward into
    eastern Kansas and western Missouri through the evening. By this
    far north instability will be lacking, so not expecting
    particularly heavy rain, but all of the stronger storms to the
    south will have merged into a larger area of moderate rain into
    Kansas and Missouri, which have also seen heavy rains lately,
    supporting Slight Risk levels of flash flooding. The steady rain
    there could continue well into Thursday night.

    ...Southern Appalachians...

    The clash of a cool air mass behind a back door cold front over
    Virginia and tropical Atlantic moisture across the Southeast
    characterized by PWATs over 1.5 inches will support areas of
    showers and storms across portions of southwest Virginia, western
    North Carolina, and perhaps into far eastern Tennessee Thursday
    afternoon into Thursday night. Training convection along the front
    will be likely, especially along the Virginia/North Carolina border
    area, where the topography of the southern Appalachians could
    locally further enhance rainfall rates. Instability will be
    marginal however due to extensive cloud cover over this area.
    While the meteorology may support a bit more widespread flooding,
    the hydrology will be strongly working against that. A long-term
    drought over the area and extremely dry soils compared to
    climatology will make much of the rain expected in this area
    beneficial. However, due to training, plentiful moisture that will
    support areas of heavy rainfall, and the topography, isolated
    instances of flash flooding are probable. For now the area remains
    in a Marginal Risk, but a Slight may need to be considered if
    forecast rainfall amounts in this area increase appreciably over
    the next day or so.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE LOWER TO
    MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, OHIO VALLEY, AND PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN
    PLAINS...

    21Z update... No adjustments made to the Marginal Risk areas.
    Guidance continues to depict two areas where higher rainfall
    amounts will focus, the first aligning from northern
    Alabama/Georgia to eastern Tennessee/western North Carolina and the
    second from Kentucky to Ohio/Pennsylvania border. Both areas will
    continue to be monitored for any possible upgrades with future
    updates.

    Campbell

    As a longwave trough over the northern Plains pivots northeastward
    through the period, a surface cold front tracking along with it
    will likely slow its eastward progress along the Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys. Plentiful Gulf moisture ahead of the front will
    support numerous areas of convection all throughout the Marginal
    Risk area. With the greatest upper level forcing moving away from
    the front, it will become an increasing struggle to organize the
    convection in a way such that flooding becomes more likely. From
    the Ohio Valley to the Mid-Atlantic, plentiful cloud cover and much
    cooler temperatures will keep the instability near zero, precluding
    any meaningful heavy rainfall in favor of a long-duration light to
    moderate rainfall. The heaviest rains appear most likely into the
    far southern Appalachians (northern AL/GA, western Carolinas, and
    Tennessee). This is the area that appears most likely to have a
    Slight Risk upgrade with future updates. Elsewhere, other MCSs may
    impact the lower Missouri Valley, and along the Texas coast. Dry
    line convection into Friday evening may impact a good amount of
    Oklahoma, but once again the storms do not appear to be able to
    organize to increase the flooding threat beyond the
    isolated/Marginal category.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_6qmq6_SC-F7p1tIBkz_Os3RKuRhb6YgLLd-9s0NjKHq= V8JApC_4vK68g0CDt8Az3awJ5POPYi6lE-gyE7l7bBRZBSM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_6qmq6_SC-F7p1tIBkz_Os3RKuRhb6YgLLd-9s0NjKHq= V8JApC_4vK68g0CDt8Az3awJ5POPYi6lE-gyE7l79e8VnnU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_6qmq6_SC-F7p1tIBkz_Os3RKuRhb6YgLLd-9s0NjKHq= V8JApC_4vK68g0CDt8Az3awJ5POPYi6lE-gyE7l75MOIxfc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 21 08:08:57 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 210808
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    408 AM EDT Thu May 21 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR THE UPPER TEXAS COAST INTO
    SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    ...Southern Plains...

    The combination of several ingredients coming together across
    eastern Oklahoma and north Texas will be the driver for rounds of
    training convection expected across the area. At the surface, the
    nose of a low level jet will advance northward over Oklahoma,
    spiking the PWATs over 1.5 inches this morning. Surface convergence
    around a trough will support low level lift and thunderstorm
    formation. An approaching upper level trough will increase the
    divergence and lift in the upper levels. The result will be a
    rather narrow corridor at first with mostly showers but some
    thunderstorms by early afternoon, as the day is approaching peak
    heating. Cold pools and speed convergence will focus the
    convection, allowing training to become more likely as the storms
    track northeastward. A secondary wave of thunderstorms will move
    northward across north Texas, which will increase the areal
    coverage of convection into the early evening hours. The
    strengthening upper level shortwave driving this secondary wave
    will become the primary forcing, allowing the complex of weakening
    storms tonight to push northward and end the rainfall threat from
    south to north. While the greatest flash flooding threat may be in
    a rather narrow corridor from north Texas north and east through
    Tulsa, sufficient Gulf moisture could still allow for flash
    flooding in other areas as well.=20

    The inherited Slight Risk was split with this update owing to
    better CAMs agreement that from north Texas through Oklahoma will
    be the best area for flash flooding risk, but less rainfall is
    expected across east central Texas, between Houston and the
    Metroplex, allowing for a downgrade to the risk in that area.

    ...Upper Texas Coast into Southwest Louisiana...

    A large complex of storms currently over South Texas will push
    northeast up the Texas Coast through the day today. The area will
    have abundant Gulf moisture, instability, and some limited support
    from the upper levels. Thus, any storms will be capable of very
    heavy rainfall, but the time of the heavy rainfall in any one area
    may be limited as the complex progresses northeastward. The area
    was hit hard with very heavy rain yesterday, resulting in rainfall
    totals over 5 inches near Freeport. As this second round of storms
    moves through this morning, convergence into the storms, sea breeze
    effects, and the saturated soils from yesterday's rains could
    result in additional instances of flash flooding. The storms
    continue into the Houston Metro around midday, introducing an urban
    factor to the flash flooding threat. The storms then turn more
    northward through the afternoon, ending the flash flooding threat=20
    for the day along the coast. To summarize, the Slight Risk, albeit
    a low- end one, remains in place mostly for the potential for very
    heavy rains with PWATs approaching 2 inches and the favorably wet=20
    soils overcoming the fast movement of the storms to result in flash
    flooding.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE EASTERN U.S....

    The inherited Marginal Risk was left largely unchanged for many
    areas with this update, save some trimming across both Oklahoma and
    Missouri due to reduced signal for heavy rainfall in those areas.
    Two areas in particular stand out as higher-end Marginal Risks,
    where a Slight may be needed with future updates:

    Across a portion of the Ohio Valley from northern Kentucky through
    southern Ohio, efficient moisture advection will spike PWATs from
    around 1.25 inches early in the day Friday to 1.75 inches by the
    afternoon. With this added moisture, so too will instability
    increase. Rain in the form of showers and thunderstorms following a
    warm front, the same wave that will impact the Slight Risk areas on
    D1/Thu will increase in coverage at peak heating Friday afternoon.
    Mostly stratiform rain will lead the convection in the morning,
    helping saturate the soils that in some areas of the Ohio Valley
    remain nearly saturated from prior days' rains. Then during the
    afternoon as instability and moisture rapidly increase and the
    cloud cover and relative stability push north into northern Ohio
    and Pennsylvania, areas of showers and storms will impact northern
    Kentucky into southern Ohio. There remains considerable uncertainty
    as to how much instability can develop given the short time frame
    between the morning's stabilizing rains with the warm front and the
    following convection. Further, there is uncertainty as to how the
    storms will organize, with some training needed to produce anything
    more than isolated instances of flash flooding. Thus, for now, the
    Marginal was maintained, but is likely the higher of the two areas
    for a potential Slight risk upgrade with future updates.

    The other area of the large Marginal that is drawing additional
    scrutiny is the area from north Georgia into the Carolinas. Here
    moisture and instability will be plentiful, supporting clusters of heavy-rain-producing thunderstorms. Winds are generally
    unidirectional which may support training. However, lack of forcing
    with upper level ridging in place will act as a counter to allowing
    the storms that form to organize. Thus, clusters of disorganized
    convection will be unlikely to produce much in the way of flash
    flooding. Further, much of this area is in severe drought, and
    soils are extremely dry. Sandy soils would work against flooding as
    well into the Piedmont, so that highly unfavorable hydrology should
    also work to effectively keep any flooding threat in check.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    Perhaps the most active day of the Days 1-3 period will be on
    Saturday across eastern Texas into Louisiana. Plentiful moisture
    and instability will be drawn north off the Gulf, spiking PWATs to
    around 2 inches in some areas, and instability could peak over
    4,000 J/kg right at convective initiation midday/early afternoon
    Saturday. Lines of intense thunderstorms will develop in this
    extremely favorable air mass during the afternoon. The storms will
    generally track northeastward. However, as they move north,
    additional clusters are likely to form as both moisture and
    instability rapidly recover. In the upper levels a series of small
    shortwaves, but nonetheless potent ones given the highly favorable
    atmosphere will allow for new clusters of storms to form across
    southeast Texas soon after the prior rounds move off to the north.

    Once daytime heating wanes in the evening, it appears likely that
    additional storms that form will predominantly move southeastward
    towards the Gulf as they follow the instability. This could lead to
    additional periods of heavy rainfall over many of the same areas
    hit with heavy rains Saturday afternoon. Further, these storms
    moving against the prevailing windflow could slow down the storm
    movement, increasing both interaction potential between cells as
    well as the duration of the heavy rainfall, this threat appears
    particularly probable in the Houston metro area. With CAMs input
    over the next day or so, a Moderate Risk may need to be considered
    in and around the Houston metro, perhaps extending southwest along
    the Texas coast with future updates.

    Elsewhere, the Marginal across portions of the Northeast was
    removed with this update as the warm front over the area will have
    zero instability to work with, resulting in a long duration
    stratiform rain. Some elevated convective elements may sneak their
    way that far north, but the otherwise light rainfall should allow
    any rain to soak into the soils with no flash flooding expected.
    Conversely, a Marginal Risk was introduced for a portion of north
    Georgia into the Carolinas. Following likely rain from storms on
    D2/Friday, additional widespread storms are expected again Saturday
    afternoon into the evening over many of the same areas. As on
    Friday, forcing in this area will be very limited. The storms will
    generally track east-southeast towards the coast, with enough
    movement that interactions are generally unlikely to initiate
    additional convection. Any lines of storms should align
    perpendicular to the flow reducing the training risk. Finally,
    despite any rains on Friday, the ongoing severe drought should
    still greatly mitigate most of the flash flooding threat. Given the
    plentiful moisture and instability the storms will have to work
    with, they will still likely produce very heavy rain in their
    cores, raising resultant flooding potential into the Marginal
    category.=20

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4I2PgHjORdKHtOE_PGJyudpAfxWwoWfbP3KAaapQ2Aaw= G_NAPvO3xpExYgmPhgOAJroTeezYFhdBVHlkQjG2p9q4mgs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4I2PgHjORdKHtOE_PGJyudpAfxWwoWfbP3KAaapQ2Aaw= G_NAPvO3xpExYgmPhgOAJroTeezYFhdBVHlkQjG2hlLEI9E$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4I2PgHjORdKHtOE_PGJyudpAfxWwoWfbP3KAaapQ2Aaw= G_NAPvO3xpExYgmPhgOAJroTeezYFhdBVHlkQjG2fscPUUI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 21 15:53:38 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 211553
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1153 AM EDT Thu May 21 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR THE UPPER TEXAS COAST INTO
    SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    ...Southern Plains...

    16Z update... A modest expansion of the western and southern
    portions of the boundary were made to reflect model trends and the
    HREF and REFS FFG exceedance of 25 to 70% for parts of Texas. A
    substantial westward expansion of the Marginal Risk into West Texas
    was made to account for a cluster of thunderstorms and a bowing
    segment that is progged to advance southeast through west-central
    Texas during the afternoon/evening hours. Rain rates of 1.5 to=20
    2.5+ inches/hour were depicts in the CAMs and will be going over=20
    some locations that have very low FFGs thus elevating the threat
    for local flash flooding concerns.

    Campbell

    The combination of several ingredients coming together across
    eastern Oklahoma and north Texas will be the driver for rounds of
    training convection expected across the area. At the surface, the
    nose of a low level jet will advance northward over Oklahoma,
    spiking the PWATs over 1.5 inches this morning. Surface convergence
    around a trough will support low level lift and thunderstorm
    formation. An approaching upper level trough will increase the
    divergence and lift in the upper levels. The result will be a
    rather narrow corridor at first with mostly showers but some
    thunderstorms by early afternoon, as the day is approaching peak
    heating. Cold pools and speed convergence will focus the
    convection, allowing training to become more likely as the storms
    track northeastward. A secondary wave of thunderstorms will move
    northward across north Texas, which will increase the areal
    coverage of convection into the early evening hours. The
    strengthening upper level shortwave driving this secondary wave
    will become the primary forcing, allowing the complex of weakening
    storms tonight to push northward and end the rainfall threat from
    south to north. While the greatest flash flooding threat may be in
    a rather narrow corridor from north Texas north and east through
    Tulsa, sufficient Gulf moisture could still allow for flash
    flooding in other areas as well.

    The inherited Slight Risk was split with this update owing to
    better CAMs agreement that from north Texas through Oklahoma will
    be the best area for flash flooding risk, but less rainfall is
    expected across east central Texas, between Houston and the
    Metroplex, allowing for a downgrade to the risk in that area.

    ...Upper Texas Coast into Southwest Louisiana...

    16Z update... Heavy rainfall was observed along the Texas and
    Louisiana coastline this morning with several locations reporting=20
    a few inches of accumulation already. This has helped prime soil
    saturation and increase sensitivity for the next round of
    convection expected later today. A modest northward nudge was made
    to the Slight Risk across southeast Texas.

    Campbell

    A large complex of storms currently over South Texas will push
    northeast up the Texas Coast through the day today. The area will
    have abundant Gulf moisture, instability, and some limited support
    from the upper levels. Thus, any storms will be capable of very
    heavy rainfall, but the time of the heavy rainfall in any one area
    may be limited as the complex progresses northeastward. The area
    was hit hard with very heavy rain yesterday, resulting in rainfall
    totals over 5 inches near Freeport. As this second round of storms
    moves through this morning, convergence into the storms, sea breeze
    effects, and the saturated soils from yesterday's rains could
    result in additional instances of flash flooding. The storms
    continue into the Houston Metro around midday, introducing an urban
    factor to the flash flooding threat. The storms then turn more
    northward through the afternoon, ending the flash flooding threat
    for the day along the coast. To summarize, the Slight Risk, albeit
    a low- end one, remains in place mostly for the potential for very
    heavy rains with PWATs approaching 2 inches and the favorably wet
    soils overcoming the fast movement of the storms to result in flash
    flooding.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE EASTERN U.S....

    The inherited Marginal Risk was left largely unchanged for many
    areas with this update, save some trimming across both Oklahoma and
    Missouri due to reduced signal for heavy rainfall in those areas.
    Two areas in particular stand out as higher-end Marginal Risks,
    where a Slight may be needed with future updates:

    Across a portion of the Ohio Valley from northern Kentucky through
    southern Ohio, efficient moisture advection will spike PWATs from
    around 1.25 inches early in the day Friday to 1.75 inches by the
    afternoon. With this added moisture, so too will instability
    increase. Rain in the form of showers and thunderstorms following a
    warm front, the same wave that will impact the Slight Risk areas on
    D1/Thu will increase in coverage at peak heating Friday afternoon.
    Mostly stratiform rain will lead the convection in the morning,
    helping saturate the soils that in some areas of the Ohio Valley
    remain nearly saturated from prior days' rains. Then during the
    afternoon as instability and moisture rapidly increase and the
    cloud cover and relative stability push north into northern Ohio
    and Pennsylvania, areas of showers and storms will impact northern
    Kentucky into southern Ohio. There remains considerable uncertainty
    as to how much instability can develop given the short time frame
    between the morning's stabilizing rains with the warm front and the
    following convection. Further, there is uncertainty as to how the
    storms will organize, with some training needed to produce anything
    more than isolated instances of flash flooding. Thus, for now, the
    Marginal was maintained, but is likely the higher of the two areas
    for a potential Slight risk upgrade with future updates.

    The other area of the large Marginal that is drawing additional
    scrutiny is the area from north Georgia into the Carolinas. Here
    moisture and instability will be plentiful, supporting clusters of heavy-rain-producing thunderstorms. Winds are generally
    unidirectional which may support training. However, lack of forcing
    with upper level ridging in place will act as a counter to allowing
    the storms that form to organize. Thus, clusters of disorganized
    convection will be unlikely to produce much in the way of flash
    flooding. Further, much of this area is in severe drought, and
    soils are extremely dry. Sandy soils would work against flooding as
    well into the Piedmont, so that highly unfavorable hydrology should
    also work to effectively keep any flooding threat in check.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    Perhaps the most active day of the Days 1-3 period will be on
    Saturday across eastern Texas into Louisiana. Plentiful moisture
    and instability will be drawn north off the Gulf, spiking PWATs to
    around 2 inches in some areas, and instability could peak over
    4,000 J/kg right at convective initiation midday/early afternoon
    Saturday. Lines of intense thunderstorms will develop in this
    extremely favorable air mass during the afternoon. The storms will
    generally track northeastward. However, as they move north,
    additional clusters are likely to form as both moisture and
    instability rapidly recover. In the upper levels a series of small
    shortwaves, but nonetheless potent ones given the highly favorable
    atmosphere will allow for new clusters of storms to form across
    southeast Texas soon after the prior rounds move off to the north.

    Once daytime heating wanes in the evening, it appears likely that
    additional storms that form will predominantly move southeastward
    towards the Gulf as they follow the instability. This could lead to
    additional periods of heavy rainfall over many of the same areas
    hit with heavy rains Saturday afternoon. Further, these storms
    moving against the prevailing windflow could slow down the storm
    movement, increasing both interaction potential between cells as
    well as the duration of the heavy rainfall, this threat appears
    particularly probable in the Houston metro area. With CAMs input
    over the next day or so, a Moderate Risk may need to be considered
    in and around the Houston metro, perhaps extending southwest along
    the Texas coast with future updates.

    Elsewhere, the Marginal across portions of the Northeast was
    removed with this update as the warm front over the area will have
    zero instability to work with, resulting in a long duration
    stratiform rain. Some elevated convective elements may sneak their
    way that far north, but the otherwise light rainfall should allow
    any rain to soak into the soils with no flash flooding expected.
    Conversely, a Marginal Risk was introduced for a portion of north
    Georgia into the Carolinas. Following likely rain from storms on
    D2/Friday, additional widespread storms are expected again Saturday
    afternoon into the evening over many of the same areas. As on
    Friday, forcing in this area will be very limited. The storms will
    generally track east-southeast towards the coast, with enough
    movement that interactions are generally unlikely to initiate
    additional convection. Any lines of storms should align
    perpendicular to the flow reducing the training risk. Finally,
    despite any rains on Friday, the ongoing severe drought should
    still greatly mitigate most of the flash flooding threat. Given the
    plentiful moisture and instability the storms will have to work
    with, they will still likely produce very heavy rain in their
    cores, raising resultant flooding potential into the Marginal
    category.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-bclteE2uI4TdCEgiMTBzQckXsKkOj0AUxwVrs0A9pkD= x2vMvgJWlBHfWK6ocvr-cstTFv0Pt72YVLboZgzdjI03I4w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-bclteE2uI4TdCEgiMTBzQckXsKkOj0AUxwVrs0A9pkD= x2vMvgJWlBHfWK6ocvr-cstTFv0Pt72YVLboZgzdsBEaMNY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-bclteE2uI4TdCEgiMTBzQckXsKkOj0AUxwVrs0A9pkD= x2vMvgJWlBHfWK6ocvr-cstTFv0Pt72YVLboZgzdJKPM-Eg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 21 20:43:45 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 212043
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    443 PM EDT Thu May 21 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR THE UPPER TEXAS COAST INTO
    SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    ...Southern Plains...

    16Z update... A modest expansion of the western and southern
    portions of the boundary were made to reflect model trends and the
    HREF and REFS FFG exceedance of 25 to 70% for parts of Texas. A
    substantial westward expansion of the Marginal Risk into West Texas
    was made to account for a cluster of thunderstorms and a bowing
    segment that is progged to advance southeast through west-central
    Texas during the afternoon/evening hours. Rain rates of 1.5 to
    2.5+ inches/hour were depicts in the CAMs and will be going over
    some locations that have very low FFGs thus elevating the threat
    for local flash flooding concerns.

    Campbell

    The combination of several ingredients coming together across
    eastern Oklahoma and north Texas will be the driver for rounds of
    training convection expected across the area. At the surface, the
    nose of a low level jet will advance northward over Oklahoma,
    spiking the PWATs over 1.5 inches this morning. Surface convergence
    around a trough will support low level lift and thunderstorm
    formation. An approaching upper level trough will increase the
    divergence and lift in the upper levels. The result will be a
    rather narrow corridor at first with mostly showers but some
    thunderstorms by early afternoon, as the day is approaching peak
    heating. Cold pools and speed convergence will focus the
    convection, allowing training to become more likely as the storms
    track northeastward. A secondary wave of thunderstorms will move
    northward across north Texas, which will increase the areal
    coverage of convection into the early evening hours. The
    strengthening upper level shortwave driving this secondary wave
    will become the primary forcing, allowing the complex of weakening
    storms tonight to push northward and end the rainfall threat from
    south to north. While the greatest flash flooding threat may be in
    a rather narrow corridor from north Texas north and east through
    Tulsa, sufficient Gulf moisture could still allow for flash
    flooding in other areas as well.

    The inherited Slight Risk was split with this update owing to
    better CAMs agreement that from north Texas through Oklahoma will
    be the best area for flash flooding risk, but less rainfall is
    expected across east central Texas, between Houston and the
    Metroplex, allowing for a downgrade to the risk in that area.

    ...Upper Texas Coast into Southwest Louisiana...

    16Z update... Heavy rainfall was observed along the Texas and
    Louisiana coastline this morning with several locations reporting
    a few inches of accumulation already. This has helped prime soil
    saturation and increase sensitivity for the next round of
    convection expected later today. A modest northward nudge was made
    to the Slight Risk across southeast Texas.

    Campbell

    A large complex of storms currently over South Texas will push
    northeast up the Texas Coast through the day today. The area will
    have abundant Gulf moisture, instability, and some limited support
    from the upper levels. Thus, any storms will be capable of very
    heavy rainfall, but the time of the heavy rainfall in any one area
    may be limited as the complex progresses northeastward. The area
    was hit hard with very heavy rain yesterday, resulting in rainfall
    totals over 5 inches near Freeport. As this second round of storms
    moves through this morning, convergence into the storms, sea breeze
    effects, and the saturated soils from yesterday's rains could
    result in additional instances of flash flooding. The storms
    continue into the Houston Metro around midday, introducing an urban
    factor to the flash flooding threat. The storms then turn more
    northward through the afternoon, ending the flash flooding threat
    for the day along the coast. To summarize, the Slight Risk, albeit
    a low- end one, remains in place mostly for the potential for very
    heavy rains with PWATs approaching 2 inches and the favorably wet
    soils overcoming the fast movement of the storms to result in flash
    flooding.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE OHIO VALLEY AND THE SOUTHERN Appalachians....

    21Z update... Storms will be firing along and ahead of a frontal
    boundary lifting northward through the Ohio Valley. With
    instability increasing and PW values surging up to 2-2.5+ std. dev
    above normal local enhancement will be expected, especially
    northern Kentucky and Ohio. Recent rains have lowered local FFGs to
    around 1-1.5 inches which may easily be surpassed. Therefore this
    part of the Ohio Valley was upgraded to a Slight Risk.

    Further south, east-southeasterly low level winds will lead to
    local enhanced lift along the higher terrain from northeast Georgia
    to far western North Carolina. During this time PWs of 2+ will be
    pooling over the region in proximity to the stalled front. Areal
    averages of 1 to 3 inches forecast for this narrow strip however
    very isolated higher maximums possible and a Slight Risk was=20
    raised.

    Campbell

    The inherited Marginal Risk was left largely unchanged for many
    areas with this update, save some trimming across both Oklahoma and
    Missouri due to reduced signal for heavy rainfall in those areas.
    Two areas in particular stand out as higher-end Marginal Risks,
    where a Slight may be needed with future updates:

    Across a portion of the Ohio Valley from northern Kentucky through
    southern Ohio, efficient moisture advection will spike PWATs from
    around 1.25 inches early in the day Friday to 1.75 inches by the
    afternoon. With this added moisture, so too will instability
    increase. Rain in the form of showers and thunderstorms following a
    warm front, the same wave that will impact the Slight Risk areas on
    D1/Thu will increase in coverage at peak heating Friday afternoon.
    Mostly stratiform rain will lead the convection in the morning,
    helping saturate the soils that in some areas of the Ohio Valley
    remain nearly saturated from prior days' rains. Then during the
    afternoon as instability and moisture rapidly increase and the
    cloud cover and relative stability push north into northern Ohio
    and Pennsylvania, areas of showers and storms will impact northern
    Kentucky into southern Ohio. There remains considerable uncertainty
    as to how much instability can develop given the short time frame
    between the morning's stabilizing rains with the warm front and the
    following convection. Further, there is uncertainty as to how the
    storms will organize, with some training needed to produce anything
    more than isolated instances of flash flooding. Thus, for now, the
    Marginal was maintained, but is likely the higher of the two areas
    for a potential Slight risk upgrade with future updates.

    The other area of the large Marginal that is drawing additional
    scrutiny is the area from north Georgia into the Carolinas. Here
    moisture and instability will be plentiful, supporting clusters of heavy-rain-producing thunderstorms. Winds are generally
    unidirectional which may support training. However, lack of forcing
    with upper level ridging in place will act as a counter to allowing
    the storms that form to organize. Thus, clusters of disorganized
    convection will be unlikely to produce much in the way of flash
    flooding. Further, much of this area is in severe drought, and
    soils are extremely dry. Sandy soils would work against flooding as
    well into the Piedmont, so that highly unfavorable hydrology should
    also work to effectively keep any flooding threat in check.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    21Z update... The latest guidance had small increases in the QPF
    for counties near the Rio Grande in South Texas therefore the
    southern boundary of the Slight Risk was extended to the border
    with Mexico. This also required a small nudge of the Marginal Risk
    boundary near the border as well. Much of the coastline had
    received 4 to 6 inches of rain recently and soils are saturated.
    This particular period has the potential for additional few inches
    to fall over these sensitive areas and are fairly confident that
    this will fall on the higher end of the Slight Risk. There is
    enough spread in the placement of the highest QPF totals (offshore
    or not) that confidence was not there to introduce a Moderate Risk
    for much of the Texas Coastline. This part of the state will
    continue to be monitored with future updates on whether there is a
    need for an upgrade.

    Campbell

    Perhaps the most active day of the Days 1-3 period will be on
    Saturday across eastern Texas into Louisiana. Plentiful moisture
    and instability will be drawn north off the Gulf, spiking PWATs to
    around 2 inches in some areas, and instability could peak over
    4,000 J/kg right at convective initiation midday/early afternoon
    Saturday. Lines of intense thunderstorms will develop in this
    extremely favorable air mass during the afternoon. The storms will
    generally track northeastward. However, as they move north,
    additional clusters are likely to form as both moisture and
    instability rapidly recover. In the upper levels a series of small
    shortwaves, but nonetheless potent ones given the highly favorable
    atmosphere will allow for new clusters of storms to form across
    southeast Texas soon after the prior rounds move off to the north.

    Once daytime heating wanes in the evening, it appears likely that
    additional storms that form will predominantly move southeastward
    towards the Gulf as they follow the instability. This could lead to
    additional periods of heavy rainfall over many of the same areas
    hit with heavy rains Saturday afternoon. Further, these storms
    moving against the prevailing windflow could slow down the storm
    movement, increasing both interaction potential between cells as
    well as the duration of the heavy rainfall, this threat appears
    particularly probable in the Houston metro area. With CAMs input
    over the next day or so, a Moderate Risk may need to be considered
    in and around the Houston metro, perhaps extending southwest along
    the Texas coast with future updates.

    Elsewhere, the Marginal across portions of the Northeast was
    removed with this update as the warm front over the area will have
    zero instability to work with, resulting in a long duration
    stratiform rain. Some elevated convective elements may sneak their
    way that far north, but the otherwise light rainfall should allow
    any rain to soak into the soils with no flash flooding expected.
    Conversely, a Marginal Risk was introduced for a portion of north
    Georgia into the Carolinas. Following likely rain from storms on
    D2/Friday, additional widespread storms are expected again Saturday
    afternoon into the evening over many of the same areas. As on
    Friday, forcing in this area will be very limited. The storms will
    generally track east-southeast towards the coast, with enough
    movement that interactions are generally unlikely to initiate
    additional convection. Any lines of storms should align
    perpendicular to the flow reducing the training risk. Finally,
    despite any rains on Friday, the ongoing severe drought should
    still greatly mitigate most of the flash flooding threat. Given the
    plentiful moisture and instability the storms will have to work
    with, they will still likely produce very heavy rain in their
    cores, raising resultant flooding potential into the Marginal
    category.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5rpW8TiakVaQmMzie7FaNrZHt0rTbwd9iMtO8iya64AU= l_Qpun2kw511bYrMON0wyUxhKBn5UnpJAhi5dMQ4E1EoNro$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5rpW8TiakVaQmMzie7FaNrZHt0rTbwd9iMtO8iya64AU= l_Qpun2kw511bYrMON0wyUxhKBn5UnpJAhi5dMQ4O-KWswY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5rpW8TiakVaQmMzie7FaNrZHt0rTbwd9iMtO8iya64AU= l_Qpun2kw511bYrMON0wyUxhKBn5UnpJAhi5dMQ4OfICwiw$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 21 21:55:46 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 212155
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    555 PM EDT Thu May 21 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 2153Z Thu May 21 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR THE UPPER TEXAS COAST INTO
    SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    2147Z Update... Issued a special ERO to expand the Slight Risk=20
    area across portions of western/west central Texas given the=20
    development and strengthening of convection in a region where Flash
    Flood Guidance has been lowered by locally heavy rainfall in the=20
    past 48 hours. The area of most concern has afternoon temperatures=20
    in the 80s and dewpoints in the 60s...yielding CAPE values of 1500=20
    to 2500 K per kg of CAPE with the potential for 1 to 2.5 inches of=20
    rainfall per hours as cells build into line segments and start=20
    propagating towards areas of higher population into the evening.=20
    Refer to MPD 0206 valid until 22/0338Z.

    Bann

    ...Southern Plains...

    16Z update... A modest expansion of the western and southern
    portions of the boundary were made to reflect model trends and the
    HREF and REFS FFG exceedance of 25 to 70% for parts of Texas. A
    substantial westward expansion of the Marginal Risk into West Texas
    was made to account for a cluster of thunderstorms and a bowing
    segment that is progged to advance southeast through west-central
    Texas during the afternoon/evening hours. Rain rates of 1.5 to
    2.5+ inches/hour were depicts in the CAMs and will be going over
    some locations that have very low FFGs thus elevating the threat
    for local flash flooding concerns.

    Campbell

    The combination of several ingredients coming together across
    eastern Oklahoma and north Texas will be the driver for rounds of
    training convection expected across the area. At the surface, the
    nose of a low level jet will advance northward over Oklahoma,
    spiking the PWATs over 1.5 inches this morning. Surface convergence
    around a trough will support low level lift and thunderstorm
    formation. An approaching upper level trough will increase the
    divergence and lift in the upper levels. The result will be a
    rather narrow corridor at first with mostly showers but some
    thunderstorms by early afternoon, as the day is approaching peak
    heating. Cold pools and speed convergence will focus the
    convection, allowing training to become more likely as the storms
    track northeastward. A secondary wave of thunderstorms will move
    northward across north Texas, which will increase the areal
    coverage of convection into the early evening hours. The
    strengthening upper level shortwave driving this secondary wave
    will become the primary forcing, allowing the complex of weakening
    storms tonight to push northward and end the rainfall threat from
    south to north. While the greatest flash flooding threat may be in
    a rather narrow corridor from north Texas north and east through
    Tulsa, sufficient Gulf moisture could still allow for flash
    flooding in other areas as well.

    The inherited Slight Risk was split with this update owing to
    better CAMs agreement that from north Texas through Oklahoma will
    be the best area for flash flooding risk, but less rainfall is
    expected across east central Texas, between Houston and the
    Metroplex, allowing for a downgrade to the risk in that area.

    ...Upper Texas Coast into Southwest Louisiana...

    16Z update... Heavy rainfall was observed along the Texas and
    Louisiana coastline this morning with several locations reporting
    a few inches of accumulation already. This has helped prime soil
    saturation and increase sensitivity for the next round of
    convection expected later today. A modest northward nudge was made
    to the Slight Risk across southeast Texas.

    Campbell

    A large complex of storms currently over South Texas will push
    northeast up the Texas Coast through the day today. The area will
    have abundant Gulf moisture, instability, and some limited support
    from the upper levels. Thus, any storms will be capable of very
    heavy rainfall, but the time of the heavy rainfall in any one area
    may be limited as the complex progresses northeastward. The area
    was hit hard with very heavy rain yesterday, resulting in rainfall
    totals over 5 inches near Freeport. As this second round of storms
    moves through this morning, convergence into the storms, sea breeze
    effects, and the saturated soils from yesterday's rains could
    result in additional instances of flash flooding. The storms
    continue into the Houston Metro around midday, introducing an urban
    factor to the flash flooding threat. The storms then turn more
    northward through the afternoon, ending the flash flooding threat
    for the day along the coast. To summarize, the Slight Risk, albeit
    a low- end one, remains in place mostly for the potential for very
    heavy rains with PWATs approaching 2 inches and the favorably wet
    soils overcoming the fast movement of the storms to result in flash
    flooding.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE OHIO VALLEY AND THE SOUTHERN Appalachians....

    21Z update... Storms will be firing along and ahead of a frontal
    boundary lifting northward through the Ohio Valley. With
    instability increasing and PW values surging up to 2-2.5+ std. dev
    above normal local enhancement will be expected, especially
    northern Kentucky and Ohio. Recent rains have lowered local FFGs to
    around 1-1.5 inches which may easily be surpassed. Therefore this
    part of the Ohio Valley was upgraded to a Slight Risk.

    Further south, east-southeasterly low level winds will lead to
    local enhanced lift along the higher terrain from northeast Georgia
    to far western North Carolina. During this time PWs of 2+ will be
    pooling over the region in proximity to the stalled front. Areal
    averages of 1 to 3 inches forecast for this narrow strip however
    very isolated higher maximums possible and a Slight Risk was
    raised.

    Campbell

    The inherited Marginal Risk was left largely unchanged for many
    areas with this update, save some trimming across both Oklahoma and
    Missouri due to reduced signal for heavy rainfall in those areas.
    Two areas in particular stand out as higher-end Marginal Risks,
    where a Slight may be needed with future updates:

    Across a portion of the Ohio Valley from northern Kentucky through
    southern Ohio, efficient moisture advection will spike PWATs from
    around 1.25 inches early in the day Friday to 1.75 inches by the
    afternoon. With this added moisture, so too will instability
    increase. Rain in the form of showers and thunderstorms following a
    warm front, the same wave that will impact the Slight Risk areas on
    D1/Thu will increase in coverage at peak heating Friday afternoon.
    Mostly stratiform rain will lead the convection in the morning,
    helping saturate the soils that in some areas of the Ohio Valley
    remain nearly saturated from prior days' rains. Then during the
    afternoon as instability and moisture rapidly increase and the
    cloud cover and relative stability push north into northern Ohio
    and Pennsylvania, areas of showers and storms will impact northern
    Kentucky into southern Ohio. There remains considerable uncertainty
    as to how much instability can develop given the short time frame
    between the morning's stabilizing rains with the warm front and the
    following convection. Further, there is uncertainty as to how the
    storms will organize, with some training needed to produce anything
    more than isolated instances of flash flooding. Thus, for now, the
    Marginal was maintained, but is likely the higher of the two areas
    for a potential Slight risk upgrade with future updates.

    The other area of the large Marginal that is drawing additional
    scrutiny is the area from north Georgia into the Carolinas. Here
    moisture and instability will be plentiful, supporting clusters of heavy-rain-producing thunderstorms. Winds are generally
    unidirectional which may support training. However, lack of forcing
    with upper level ridging in place will act as a counter to allowing
    the storms that form to organize. Thus, clusters of disorganized
    convection will be unlikely to produce much in the way of flash
    flooding. Further, much of this area is in severe drought, and
    soils are extremely dry. Sandy soils would work against flooding as
    well into the Piedmont, so that highly unfavorable hydrology should
    also work to effectively keep any flooding threat in check.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    21Z update... The latest guidance had small increases in the QPF
    for counties near the Rio Grande in South Texas therefore the
    southern boundary of the Slight Risk was extended to the border
    with Mexico. This also required a small nudge of the Marginal Risk
    boundary near the border as well. Much of the coastline had
    received 4 to 6 inches of rain recently and soils are saturated.
    This particular period has the potential for additional few inches
    to fall over these sensitive areas and are fairly confident that
    this will fall on the higher end of the Slight Risk. There is
    enough spread in the placement of the highest QPF totals (offshore
    or not) that confidence was not there to introduce a Moderate Risk
    for much of the Texas Coastline. This part of the state will
    continue to be monitored with future updates on whether there is a
    need for an upgrade.

    Campbell

    Perhaps the most active day of the Days 1-3 period will be on
    Saturday across eastern Texas into Louisiana. Plentiful moisture
    and instability will be drawn north off the Gulf, spiking PWATs to
    around 2 inches in some areas, and instability could peak over
    4,000 J/kg right at convective initiation midday/early afternoon
    Saturday. Lines of intense thunderstorms will develop in this
    extremely favorable air mass during the afternoon. The storms will
    generally track northeastward. However, as they move north,
    additional clusters are likely to form as both moisture and
    instability rapidly recover. In the upper levels a series of small
    shortwaves, but nonetheless potent ones given the highly favorable
    atmosphere will allow for new clusters of storms to form across
    southeast Texas soon after the prior rounds move off to the north.

    Once daytime heating wanes in the evening, it appears likely that
    additional storms that form will predominantly move southeastward
    towards the Gulf as they follow the instability. This could lead to
    additional periods of heavy rainfall over many of the same areas
    hit with heavy rains Saturday afternoon. Further, these storms
    moving against the prevailing windflow could slow down the storm
    movement, increasing both interaction potential between cells as
    well as the duration of the heavy rainfall, this threat appears
    particularly probable in the Houston metro area. With CAMs input
    over the next day or so, a Moderate Risk may need to be considered
    in and around the Houston metro, perhaps extending southwest along
    the Texas coast with future updates.

    Elsewhere, the Marginal across portions of the Northeast was
    removed with this update as the warm front over the area will have
    zero instability to work with, resulting in a long duration
    stratiform rain. Some elevated convective elements may sneak their
    way that far north, but the otherwise light rainfall should allow
    any rain to soak into the soils with no flash flooding expected.
    Conversely, a Marginal Risk was introduced for a portion of north
    Georgia into the Carolinas. Following likely rain from storms on
    D2/Friday, additional widespread storms are expected again Saturday
    afternoon into the evening over many of the same areas. As on
    Friday, forcing in this area will be very limited. The storms will
    generally track east-southeast towards the coast, with enough
    movement that interactions are generally unlikely to initiate
    additional convection. Any lines of storms should align
    perpendicular to the flow reducing the training risk. Finally,
    despite any rains on Friday, the ongoing severe drought should
    still greatly mitigate most of the flash flooding threat. Given the
    plentiful moisture and instability the storms will have to work
    with, they will still likely produce very heavy rain in their
    cores, raising resultant flooding potential into the Marginal
    category.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_rE52e60WdqzCPGmF8tOCRkdlTLIKq5akTrIBpzDRATU= 2Vllf4mDadnP61Rw7s44yj96PebYUiGbfFguSiRHZtxblRU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_rE52e60WdqzCPGmF8tOCRkdlTLIKq5akTrIBpzDRATU= 2Vllf4mDadnP61Rw7s44yj96PebYUiGbfFguSiRHeB5BKEY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_rE52e60WdqzCPGmF8tOCRkdlTLIKq5akTrIBpzDRATU= 2Vllf4mDadnP61Rw7s44yj96PebYUiGbfFguSiRHei27R-s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 22 00:47:34 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 220047
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    847 PM EDT Thu May 21 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Fri May 22 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF=20
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS SOUTHWARD INTO TEXAS...

    01Z Update...
    The main area of concern for excessive rainfall remains in Texas
    given the low level moisture and dynamics...especially where on-
    going convection intersects/interacts with deeper moisture and
    strengthening low level flow. Elsewhere...the risk for excessive
    rainfall should be diminishing with loss of daytime heating.

    Bann


    ...Southern Plains...

    16Z update... A modest expansion of the western and southern
    portions of the boundary were made to reflect model trends and the
    HREF and REFS FFG exceedance of 25 to 70% for parts of Texas. A
    substantial westward expansion of the Marginal Risk into West Texas
    was made to account for a cluster of thunderstorms and a bowing
    segment that is progged to advance southeast through west-central
    Texas during the afternoon/evening hours. Rain rates of 1.5 to
    2.5+ inches/hour were depicts in the CAMs and will be going over
    some locations that have very low FFGs thus elevating the threat
    for local flash flooding concerns.

    Campbell

    The combination of several ingredients coming together across
    eastern Oklahoma and north Texas will be the driver for rounds of
    training convection expected across the area. At the surface, the
    nose of a low level jet will advance northward over Oklahoma,
    spiking the PWATs over 1.5 inches this morning. Surface convergence
    around a trough will support low level lift and thunderstorm
    formation. An approaching upper level trough will increase the
    divergence and lift in the upper levels. The result will be a
    rather narrow corridor at first with mostly showers but some
    thunderstorms by early afternoon, as the day is approaching peak
    heating. Cold pools and speed convergence will focus the
    convection, allowing training to become more likely as the storms
    track northeastward. A secondary wave of thunderstorms will move
    northward across north Texas, which will increase the areal
    coverage of convection into the early evening hours. The
    strengthening upper level shortwave driving this secondary wave
    will become the primary forcing, allowing the complex of weakening
    storms tonight to push northward and end the rainfall threat from
    south to north. While the greatest flash flooding threat may be in
    a rather narrow corridor from north Texas north and east through
    Tulsa, sufficient Gulf moisture could still allow for flash
    flooding in other areas as well.

    The inherited Slight Risk was split with this update owing to
    better CAMs agreement that from north Texas through Oklahoma will
    be the best area for flash flooding risk, but less rainfall is
    expected across east central Texas, between Houston and the
    Metroplex, allowing for a downgrade to the risk in that area.

    ...Upper Texas Coast into Southwest Louisiana...

    16Z update... Heavy rainfall was observed along the Texas and
    Louisiana coastline this morning with several locations reporting
    a few inches of accumulation already. This has helped prime soil
    saturation and increase sensitivity for the next round of
    convection expected later today. A modest northward nudge was made
    to the Slight Risk across southeast Texas.

    Campbell

    A large complex of storms currently over South Texas will push
    northeast up the Texas Coast through the day today. The area will
    have abundant Gulf moisture, instability, and some limited support
    from the upper levels. Thus, any storms will be capable of very
    heavy rainfall, but the time of the heavy rainfall in any one area
    may be limited as the complex progresses northeastward. The area
    was hit hard with very heavy rain yesterday, resulting in rainfall
    totals over 5 inches near Freeport. As this second round of storms
    moves through this morning, convergence into the storms, sea breeze
    effects, and the saturated soils from yesterday's rains could
    result in additional instances of flash flooding. The storms
    continue into the Houston Metro around midday, introducing an urban
    factor to the flash flooding threat. The storms then turn more
    northward through the afternoon, ending the flash flooding threat
    for the day along the coast. To summarize, the Slight Risk, albeit
    a low- end one, remains in place mostly for the potential for very
    heavy rains with PWATs approaching 2 inches and the favorably wet
    soils overcoming the fast movement of the storms to result in flash
    flooding.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE OHIO VALLEY AND THE SOUTHERN Appalachians....

    21Z update... Storms will be firing along and ahead of a frontal
    boundary lifting northward through the Ohio Valley. With
    instability increasing and PW values surging up to 2-2.5+ std. dev
    above normal local enhancement will be expected, especially
    northern Kentucky and Ohio. Recent rains have lowered local FFGs to
    around 1-1.5 inches which may easily be surpassed. Therefore this
    part of the Ohio Valley was upgraded to a Slight Risk.

    Further south, east-southeasterly low level winds will lead to
    local enhanced lift along the higher terrain from northeast Georgia
    to far western North Carolina. During this time PWs of 2+ will be
    pooling over the region in proximity to the stalled front. Areal
    averages of 1 to 3 inches forecast for this narrow strip however
    very isolated higher maximums possible and a Slight Risk was
    raised.

    Campbell

    The inherited Marginal Risk was left largely unchanged for many
    areas with this update, save some trimming across both Oklahoma and
    Missouri due to reduced signal for heavy rainfall in those areas.
    Two areas in particular stand out as higher-end Marginal Risks,
    where a Slight may be needed with future updates:

    Across a portion of the Ohio Valley from northern Kentucky through
    southern Ohio, efficient moisture advection will spike PWATs from
    around 1.25 inches early in the day Friday to 1.75 inches by the
    afternoon. With this added moisture, so too will instability
    increase. Rain in the form of showers and thunderstorms following a
    warm front, the same wave that will impact the Slight Risk areas on
    D1/Thu will increase in coverage at peak heating Friday afternoon.
    Mostly stratiform rain will lead the convection in the morning,
    helping saturate the soils that in some areas of the Ohio Valley
    remain nearly saturated from prior days' rains. Then during the
    afternoon as instability and moisture rapidly increase and the
    cloud cover and relative stability push north into northern Ohio
    and Pennsylvania, areas of showers and storms will impact northern
    Kentucky into southern Ohio. There remains considerable uncertainty
    as to how much instability can develop given the short time frame
    between the morning's stabilizing rains with the warm front and the
    following convection. Further, there is uncertainty as to how the
    storms will organize, with some training needed to produce anything
    more than isolated instances of flash flooding. Thus, for now, the
    Marginal was maintained, but is likely the higher of the two areas
    for a potential Slight risk upgrade with future updates.

    The other area of the large Marginal that is drawing additional
    scrutiny is the area from north Georgia into the Carolinas. Here
    moisture and instability will be plentiful, supporting clusters of heavy-rain-producing thunderstorms. Winds are generally
    unidirectional which may support training. However, lack of forcing
    with upper level ridging in place will act as a counter to allowing
    the storms that form to organize. Thus, clusters of disorganized
    convection will be unlikely to produce much in the way of flash
    flooding. Further, much of this area is in severe drought, and
    soils are extremely dry. Sandy soils would work against flooding as
    well into the Piedmont, so that highly unfavorable hydrology should
    also work to effectively keep any flooding threat in check.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    21Z update... The latest guidance had small increases in the QPF
    for counties near the Rio Grande in South Texas therefore the
    southern boundary of the Slight Risk was extended to the border
    with Mexico. This also required a small nudge of the Marginal Risk
    boundary near the border as well. Much of the coastline had
    received 4 to 6 inches of rain recently and soils are saturated.
    This particular period has the potential for additional few inches
    to fall over these sensitive areas and are fairly confident that
    this will fall on the higher end of the Slight Risk. There is
    enough spread in the placement of the highest QPF totals (offshore
    or not) that confidence was not there to introduce a Moderate Risk
    for much of the Texas Coastline. This part of the state will
    continue to be monitored with future updates on whether there is a
    need for an upgrade.

    Campbell

    Perhaps the most active day of the Days 1-3 period will be on
    Saturday across eastern Texas into Louisiana. Plentiful moisture
    and instability will be drawn north off the Gulf, spiking PWATs to
    around 2 inches in some areas, and instability could peak over
    4,000 J/kg right at convective initiation midday/early afternoon
    Saturday. Lines of intense thunderstorms will develop in this
    extremely favorable air mass during the afternoon. The storms will
    generally track northeastward. However, as they move north,
    additional clusters are likely to form as both moisture and
    instability rapidly recover. In the upper levels a series of small
    shortwaves, but nonetheless potent ones given the highly favorable
    atmosphere will allow for new clusters of storms to form across
    southeast Texas soon after the prior rounds move off to the north.

    Once daytime heating wanes in the evening, it appears likely that
    additional storms that form will predominantly move southeastward
    towards the Gulf as they follow the instability. This could lead to
    additional periods of heavy rainfall over many of the same areas
    hit with heavy rains Saturday afternoon. Further, these storms
    moving against the prevailing windflow could slow down the storm
    movement, increasing both interaction potential between cells as
    well as the duration of the heavy rainfall, this threat appears
    particularly probable in the Houston metro area. With CAMs input
    over the next day or so, a Moderate Risk may need to be considered
    in and around the Houston metro, perhaps extending southwest along
    the Texas coast with future updates.

    Elsewhere, the Marginal across portions of the Northeast was
    removed with this update as the warm front over the area will have
    zero instability to work with, resulting in a long duration
    stratiform rain. Some elevated convective elements may sneak their
    way that far north, but the otherwise light rainfall should allow
    any rain to soak into the soils with no flash flooding expected.
    Conversely, a Marginal Risk was introduced for a portion of north
    Georgia into the Carolinas. Following likely rain from storms on
    D2/Friday, additional widespread storms are expected again Saturday
    afternoon into the evening over many of the same areas. As on
    Friday, forcing in this area will be very limited. The storms will
    generally track east-southeast towards the coast, with enough
    movement that interactions are generally unlikely to initiate
    additional convection. Any lines of storms should align
    perpendicular to the flow reducing the training risk. Finally,
    despite any rains on Friday, the ongoing severe drought should
    still greatly mitigate most of the flash flooding threat. Given the
    plentiful moisture and instability the storms will have to work
    with, they will still likely produce very heavy rain in their
    cores, raising resultant flooding potential into the Marginal
    category.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ToRUh_sZA0R7jiZjjydNbss8U3XjMbU9YhFDSK3pJAz= -2IkDbHb3_PRiv4f-VMKDT8D-V6IXqtov_ayQTycLY2W364$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ToRUh_sZA0R7jiZjjydNbss8U3XjMbU9YhFDSK3pJAz= -2IkDbHb3_PRiv4f-VMKDT8D-V6IXqtov_ayQTychQbQrj0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ToRUh_sZA0R7jiZjjydNbss8U3XjMbU9YhFDSK3pJAz= -2IkDbHb3_PRiv4f-VMKDT8D-V6IXqtov_ayQTycLIMHf2w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 22 08:12:42 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 220812
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    412 AM EDT Fri May 22 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE UPPER
    OHIO VALLEY AND THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    Shortwave energy embedded in broad southwesterly mid to upper=20
    level flow from the western to central Gulf Coast, northeastward=20
    through the TN/OH Valleys will persist through the upcoming day 1=20
    period. These height falls/broad diffluent upper flow will enhance
    uvvs in a large region of much above average PW values/anomalous=20
    850-700 mb moisture flux, 2 to 2.5+/2-3+ standard deviations above=20
    the mean respectively from the Gulf Coast northeastward into the=20
    Ohio Valley. There is fairly good model consensus for the potential
    for widespread moderate to heavy rainfall total in this anomalous=20
    PW axis day 1. Simulated radars suggest cells will be fairly=20
    progressive to the northeast. However, with potential for short=20
    term training of cells and/or repeat rounds of convection, there=20
    will be potential for runoff issues. Slight risk areas maintained=20
    over the Upper OH Valley from northeast KY into southern OH where=20
    FFG values are relatively low, and in the upslope region of the=20
    Southern Appalachians from far northeast GA into the Upstate of SC=20
    and western NC where heavy precip likely to focus in the region of=20
    southerly low level flow. The slight risk areas fit well with the=20
    axes of the HREF and RRFS means 2 and 3"+ probabilities.

    Across the Southern Plains, a marginal risk area was introduced for
    potential for additional convection Friday evening into the early
    hours of Saturday. Additional shortwave energy expected to push
    eastward into the Southern High Plains, supporting potential for=20
    some organization to the associated convection late Friday into the
    early hours of Saturday. Low confidence on details, with isolated
    runoff issues possible where convection become organized.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    Additional shortwave energy expected to move from far northeast=20
    Mexico into southern and eastern Texas early Saturday, likely=20
    setting the stage for another round of organized convection.=20
    Building instability early Saturday, Mucape values reaching=20
    2000-300 j/kg ahead of these height falls, in an axis of PW values
    1.5-2.5 standard deviations above the mean, will support potential
    for an organized line of convection to push across eastern and=20
    southern TX Saturday morning into afternoon. The previous risk=20
    areas were narrowed to better reflect the latest model qpf output=20
    and the max RRFS 2 and 3"+ probability axes for the day 2 time=20
    period.

    No significant changes made to the marginal risk area from the
    Southern Appalachians into the Southeast. Southwest mid to upper
    level flow with embedded shortwaves will continue across these=20
    areas day 2. With PW values remaining well above average, 2 to 2.5+
    standard deviations above the mean, additional widespread=20
    scattered convection will likely produce locally heavy rainfall=20
    totals. Both the HREF and RRFS show fairly high probabilities for=20
    1"+/hr rainfall totals Saturday afternoon, supporting potential for
    isolated runoff issues.=20

    The marginal risk was also expanded northward from the previous
    issuance into far eastern KS and large portions of MO to cover
    areas the RRFS, GEM and FV3LAM are showing heavy rainfall totals
    day 2.=20=20

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST INTO SOUTHERN LOUISIANA...

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 3 as it=20
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. Similar to the
    day 2 and day 3 period, there will continue to be an axis of much
    above average PW values stretching from the Gulf Coast
    northeastward into the Southeast/Southern to Central Appalachians.
    There is a lot of spread day 3 with the QPF details, but still a
    signal for widespread moderate to heavy rain potential in this
    anomalous PW axis. A slight risk was maintained from the Upper TX
    coast into southern LA, close to the WPC and NBM qpf max. This
    covers the urban areas from Houston to New Orleans.=20=20

    The marginal risk area was extended farther northeast through the
    Southern to Central Appalachians where scattered convection likely
    in the anomalous PW axis, supporting locally heavy rainfall=20
    amounts and potential for isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat=20
    area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoin= ts.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-zpnkO0of-VKaXvU1W6r7UYYs50kQ_QAYyCxthCvPBw6vKUgfiOMxKxyz= LY1nGiU_nmMZebLfofSydllYBkSqE97d3c$ Day 2 threat=20
    area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/98epoin= ts.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-zpnkO0of-VKaXvU1W6r7UYYs50kQ_QAYyCxthCvPBw6vKUgfiOMxKxyz= LY1nGiU_nmMZebLfofSydllYBkSzAXNfkY$ Day 3 threat=20
    area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/99epoin= ts.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-zpnkO0of-VKaXvU1W6r7UYYs50kQ_QAYyCxthCvPBw6vKUgfiOMxKxyz= LY1nGiU_nmMZebLfofSydllYBkSasRa_po$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 22 09:09:56 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 220909
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    509 AM EDT Fri May 22 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE UPPER
    OHIO VALLEY AND THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    Shortwave energy embedded in broad southwesterly mid to upper
    level flow from the western to central Gulf Coast, northeastward
    through the TN/OH Valleys will persist through the upcoming day 1
    period. These height falls/broad diffluent upper flow will enhance
    uvvs in a large region of much above average PW values/anomalous
    850-700 mb moisture flux, 2 to 2.5+/2-3+ standard deviations above
    the mean respectively from the Gulf Coast northeastward into the
    Ohio Valley. There is fairly good model consensus for the potential
    for widespread moderate to heavy rainfall total in this anomalous
    PW axis day 1. Simulated radars suggest cells will be fairly
    progressive to the northeast. However, with potential for short
    term training of cells and/or repeat rounds of convection, there
    will be potential for runoff issues. Slight risk areas maintained
    over the Upper OH Valley from northeast KY into southern OH where
    FFG values are relatively low, and in the upslope region of the
    Southern Appalachians from far northeast GA into the Upstate of SC
    and western NC where heavy precip likely to focus in the region of
    southerly low level flow. The slight risk areas fit well with the
    axes of the HREF and RRFS means 2 and 3"+ probabilities.

    Across the Southern Plains, a marginal risk area was introduced for
    potential for additional convection Friday evening into the early
    hours of Saturday. Additional shortwave energy expected to push
    eastward into the Southern High Plains, supporting potential for
    some organization to the associated convection late Friday into the
    early hours of Saturday. Low confidence on details, with isolated
    runoff issues possible where convection become organized.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    Additional shortwave energy expected to move from far northeast
    Mexico into southern and eastern Texas early Saturday, likely
    setting the stage for another round of organized convection.
    Building instability early Saturday, Mucape values reaching
    2000-300 j/kg ahead of these height falls, in an axis of PW values
    1.5-2.5 standard deviations above the mean, will support potential
    for an organized line of convection to push across eastern and
    southern TX Saturday morning into afternoon. The previous risk
    areas were narrowed to better reflect the latest model qpf output
    and the max RRFS 2 and 3"+ probability axes for the day 2 time
    period.

    No significant changes made to the marginal risk area from the
    Southern Appalachians into the Southeast. Southwest mid to upper
    level flow with embedded shortwaves will continue across these
    areas day 2. With PW values remaining well above average, 2 to 2.5+
    standard deviations above the mean, additional widespread
    scattered convection will likely produce locally heavy rainfall
    totals. Both the HREF and RRFS show fairly high probabilities for
    1"+/hr rainfall totals Saturday afternoon, supporting potential for
    isolated runoff issues.

    The marginal risk was also expanded northward from the previous
    issuance into far eastern KS and large portions of MO to cover
    areas the RRFS, GEM and FV3LAM are showing heavy rainfall totals
    day 2.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST INTO SOUTHERN LOUISIANA...

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 3 as it
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. Similar to the
    day 2 and day 3 period, there will continue to be an axis of much
    above average PW values stretching from the Gulf Coast
    northeastward into the Southeast/Southern to Central Appalachians.
    There is a lot of spread day 3 with the QPF details, but still a
    signal for widespread moderate to heavy rain potential in this
    anomalous PW axis. A slight risk was maintained from the Upper TX
    coast into southern LA, close to the WPC and NBM qpf max. This
    covers the urban areas from Houston to New Orleans.

    The marginal risk area was extended farther northeast through the
    Southern to Central Appalachians where scattered convection likely
    in the anomalous PW axis, supporting locally heavy rainfall
    amounts and potential for isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9nuS9L1JjuPUTI0pPZjENXQ8h3zvjxGw5rvj9fNZXQMu= oKJAHmrRuBW06vVuXzBa0DzCXNwWw0Tv2IZCHAvdZsAVWiA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9nuS9L1JjuPUTI0pPZjENXQ8h3zvjxGw5rvj9fNZXQMu= oKJAHmrRuBW06vVuXzBa0DzCXNwWw0Tv2IZCHAvdlhyJMS4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9nuS9L1JjuPUTI0pPZjENXQ8h3zvjxGw5rvj9fNZXQMu= oKJAHmrRuBW06vVuXzBa0DzCXNwWw0Tv2IZCHAvdPPV0Otw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 22 15:47:18 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 221547
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1147 AM EDT Fri May 22 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE UPPER
    OHIO VALLEY, THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL GULF COAST
    INTO ALABAMA...

    16Z update... Several storms clusters are expected to fire up
    across Oklahoma and Texas around 23/00Z and track east/southeast
    through the evening hours. Recent rains have lead to an increase in
    locations being more sensitive to higher rainfall intensities. The
    current Marginal mainly focused on Oklahoma so an expansion
    southward into central Texas to include more of the region was=20
    made at this time. A minor expansion of the Slight Risk over the
    Ohio Valley was made to reflect latest observations and model
    trends.

    Intense rainfall rates of 2-3 inches/hour with total accumulations
    around 5 inches possible southeast Mississippi into central
    Alabama. Refer to the WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion (MPD
    #0210) for additional details. A Slight Risk was hoisted for much
    of the same areas defined in that product. This additional also
    necessitated a minor eastward adjustment of the Marginal Risk
    across the Southeast.

    Campbell

    Shortwave energy embedded in broad southwesterly mid to upper=20
    level flow from the western to central Gulf Coast, northeastward=20
    through the TN/OH Valleys will persist through the upcoming day 1=20
    period. These height falls/broad diffluent upper flow will enhance=20
    uvvs in a large region of much above average PW values/anomalous=20
    850-700 mb moisture flux, 2 to 2.5+/2-3+ standard deviations above=20
    the mean respectively from the Gulf Coast northeastward into the=20
    Ohio Valley. There is fairly good model consensus for the potential
    for widespread moderate to heavy rainfall total in this anomalous=20
    PW axis day 1. Simulated radars suggest cells will be fairly=20
    progressive to the northeast. However, with potential for short=20
    term training of cells and/or repeat rounds of convection, there=20
    will be potential for runoff issues. Slight risk areas maintained=20
    over the Upper OH Valley from northeast KY into southern OH where=20
    FFG values are relatively low, and in the upslope region of the=20
    Southern Appalachians from far northeast GA into the Upstate of SC=20
    and western NC where heavy precip likely to focus in the region of=20
    southerly low level flow. The slight risk areas fit well with the=20
    axes of the HREF and RRFS means 2 and 3"+ probabilities.

    Across the Southern Plains, a marginal risk area was introduced for
    potential for additional convection Friday evening into the early
    hours of Saturday. Additional shortwave energy expected to push
    eastward into the Southern High Plains, supporting potential for
    some organization to the associated convection late Friday into the
    early hours of Saturday. Low confidence on details, with isolated
    runoff issues possible where convection become organized.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    Additional shortwave energy expected to move from far northeast
    Mexico into southern and eastern Texas early Saturday, likely
    setting the stage for another round of organized convection.
    Building instability early Saturday, Mucape values reaching
    2000-300 j/kg ahead of these height falls, in an axis of PW values
    1.5-2.5 standard deviations above the mean, will support potential
    for an organized line of convection to push across eastern and
    southern TX Saturday morning into afternoon. The previous risk
    areas were narrowed to better reflect the latest model qpf output
    and the max RRFS 2 and 3"+ probability axes for the day 2 time
    period.

    No significant changes made to the marginal risk area from the
    Southern Appalachians into the Southeast. Southwest mid to upper
    level flow with embedded shortwaves will continue across these
    areas day 2. With PW values remaining well above average, 2 to 2.5+
    standard deviations above the mean, additional widespread
    scattered convection will likely produce locally heavy rainfall
    totals. Both the HREF and RRFS show fairly high probabilities for
    1"+/hr rainfall totals Saturday afternoon, supporting potential for
    isolated runoff issues.

    The marginal risk was also expanded northward from the previous
    issuance into far eastern KS and large portions of MO to cover
    areas the RRFS, GEM and FV3LAM are showing heavy rainfall totals
    day 2.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST INTO SOUTHERN LOUISIANA...

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 3 as it
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. Similar to the
    day 2 and day 3 period, there will continue to be an axis of much
    above average PW values stretching from the Gulf Coast
    northeastward into the Southeast/Southern to Central Appalachians.
    There is a lot of spread day 3 with the QPF details, but still a
    signal for widespread moderate to heavy rain potential in this
    anomalous PW axis. A slight risk was maintained from the Upper TX
    coast into southern LA, close to the WPC and NBM qpf max. This
    covers the urban areas from Houston to New Orleans.

    The marginal risk area was extended farther northeast through the
    Southern to Central Appalachians where scattered convection likely
    in the anomalous PW axis, supporting locally heavy rainfall
    amounts and potential for isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_RGK0U2nK-32GvbxPAGPbcir0UqARzZdQCgwOvdM0T37= EipPowiB21mgGL1RrWg41QNgNGeH55B5aoPg882jfysUsbI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_RGK0U2nK-32GvbxPAGPbcir0UqARzZdQCgwOvdM0T37= EipPowiB21mgGL1RrWg41QNgNGeH55B5aoPg882jggnfRpM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_RGK0U2nK-32GvbxPAGPbcir0UqARzZdQCgwOvdM0T37= EipPowiB21mgGL1RrWg41QNgNGeH55B5aoPg882jY4cyU10$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 22 18:55:30 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 221855
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    255 PM EDT Fri May 22 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 1854Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE UPPER
    OHIO VALLEY, THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL GULF COAST
    INTO ALABAMA...

    1930Z Uodate... Expanded the Slighht Risk area in Alabama based on=20
    latest trends in radar imagery and continued cooling of cloud tops=20
    upstream from the area seen on satellite imagery. In=20
    addition...soils have become increasingly wet given rainfall from on-
    going convection which will be limiting their ability to take in=20
    additional water. Refer to WPC Mesoscale Precipoitation Discussion=20 0210.=20=20

    Bann

    16Z update... Several storms clusters are expected to fire up
    across Oklahoma and Texas around 23/00Z and track east/southeast
    through the evening hours. Recent rains have lead to an increase in
    locations being more sensitive to higher rainfall intensities. The
    current Marginal mainly focused on Oklahoma so an expansion
    southward into central Texas to include more of the region was
    made at this time. A minor expansion of the Slight Risk over the
    Ohio Valley was made to reflect latest observations and model
    trends.

    Intense rainfall rates of 2-3 inches/hour with total accumulations
    around 5 inches possible southeast Mississippi into central
    Alabama. Refer to the WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion (MPD
    #0210) for additional details. A Slight Risk was hoisted for much
    of the same areas defined in that product. This additional also
    necessitated a minor eastward adjustment of the Marginal Risk
    across the Southeast.

    Campbell

    Shortwave energy embedded in broad southwesterly mid to upper
    level flow from the western to central Gulf Coast, northeastward
    through the TN/OH Valleys will persist through the upcoming day 1
    period. These height falls/broad diffluent upper flow will enhance
    uvvs in a large region of much above average PW values/anomalous
    850-700 mb moisture flux, 2 to 2.5+/2-3+ standard deviations above
    the mean respectively from the Gulf Coast northeastward into the
    Ohio Valley. There is fairly good model consensus for the potential
    for widespread moderate to heavy rainfall total in this anomalous
    PW axis day 1. Simulated radars suggest cells will be fairly
    progressive to the northeast. However, with potential for short
    term training of cells and/or repeat rounds of convection, there
    will be potential for runoff issues. Slight risk areas maintained
    over the Upper OH Valley from northeast KY into southern OH where
    FFG values are relatively low, and in the upslope region of the
    Southern Appalachians from far northeast GA into the Upstate of SC
    and western NC where heavy precip likely to focus in the region of
    southerly low level flow. The slight risk areas fit well with the
    axes of the HREF and RRFS means 2 and 3"+ probabilities.

    Across the Southern Plains, a marginal risk area was introduced for
    potential for additional convection Friday evening into the early
    hours of Saturday. Additional shortwave energy expected to push
    eastward into the Southern High Plains, supporting potential for
    some organization to the associated convection late Friday into the
    early hours of Saturday. Low confidence on details, with isolated
    runoff issues possible where convection become organized.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    Additional shortwave energy expected to move from far northeast
    Mexico into southern and eastern Texas early Saturday, likely
    setting the stage for another round of organized convection.
    Building instability early Saturday, Mucape values reaching
    2000-300 j/kg ahead of these height falls, in an axis of PW values
    1.5-2.5 standard deviations above the mean, will support potential
    for an organized line of convection to push across eastern and
    southern TX Saturday morning into afternoon. The previous risk
    areas were narrowed to better reflect the latest model qpf output
    and the max RRFS 2 and 3"+ probability axes for the day 2 time
    period.

    No significant changes made to the marginal risk area from the
    Southern Appalachians into the Southeast. Southwest mid to upper
    level flow with embedded shortwaves will continue across these
    areas day 2. With PW values remaining well above average, 2 to 2.5+
    standard deviations above the mean, additional widespread
    scattered convection will likely produce locally heavy rainfall
    totals. Both the HREF and RRFS show fairly high probabilities for
    1"+/hr rainfall totals Saturday afternoon, supporting potential for
    isolated runoff issues.

    The marginal risk was also expanded northward from the previous
    issuance into far eastern KS and large portions of MO to cover
    areas the RRFS, GEM and FV3LAM are showing heavy rainfall totals
    day 2.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST INTO SOUTHERN LOUISIANA...

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 3 as it
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. Similar to the
    day 2 and day 3 period, there will continue to be an axis of much
    above average PW values stretching from the Gulf Coast
    northeastward into the Southeast/Southern to Central Appalachians.
    There is a lot of spread day 3 with the QPF details, but still a
    signal for widespread moderate to heavy rain potential in this
    anomalous PW axis. A slight risk was maintained from the Upper TX
    coast into southern LA, close to the WPC and NBM qpf max. This
    covers the urban areas from Houston to New Orleans.

    The marginal risk area was extended farther northeast through the
    Southern to Central Appalachians where scattered convection likely
    in the anomalous PW axis, supporting locally heavy rainfall
    amounts and potential for isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5-wy88dTvRaIlJKMKXgRwn112Kd7OR--xVd0-AZ6EubE= D1bCeRuKDWjXAQgHYZwBXNeQwK6bdpPyQOMT_QeXuDamfOU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5-wy88dTvRaIlJKMKXgRwn112Kd7OR--xVd0-AZ6EubE= D1bCeRuKDWjXAQgHYZwBXNeQwK6bdpPyQOMT_QeXbJSCe5M$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5-wy88dTvRaIlJKMKXgRwn112Kd7OR--xVd0-AZ6EubE= D1bCeRuKDWjXAQgHYZwBXNeQwK6bdpPyQOMT_QeXzxioomc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 22 19:11:39 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 221911
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    311 PM EDT Fri May 22 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri May 22 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE UPPER
    OHIO VALLEY, THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL GULF COAST
    INTO ALABAMA...

    1930Z Update... Expanded the Slight Risk area in Alabama based on=20
    latest trends in radar imagery and continued cooling of cloud tops=20
    upstream from the area seen on satellite imagery. In=20
    addition...soils have become increasingly wet given rainfall from=20
    on- going convection which will be limiting their ability to take=20
    in additional water. Refer to WPC Mesoscale Precipitation=20
    Discussion 0211.=20

    Bann

    16Z update... Several storms clusters are expected to fire up=20
    across Oklahoma and Texas around 23/00Z and track east/southeast=20
    through the evening hours. Recent rains have lead to an increase in
    locations being more sensitive to higher rainfall intensities. The
    current Marginal mainly focused on Oklahoma so an expansion=20
    southward into central Texas to include more of the region was made
    at this time. A minor expansion of the Slight Risk over the Ohio=20
    Valley was made to reflect latest observations and model trends.

    Intense rainfall rates of 2-3 inches/hour with total accumulations
    around 5 inches possible southeast Mississippi into central
    Alabama. Refer to the WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion (MPD
    #0210) for additional details. A Slight Risk was hoisted for much
    of the same areas defined in that product. This additional also
    necessitated a minor eastward adjustment of the Marginal Risk
    across the Southeast.

    Campbell

    Shortwave energy embedded in broad southwesterly mid to upper
    level flow from the western to central Gulf Coast, northeastward
    through the TN/OH Valleys will persist through the upcoming day 1
    period. These height falls/broad diffluent upper flow will enhance
    uvvs in a large region of much above average PW values/anomalous
    850-700 mb moisture flux, 2 to 2.5+/2-3+ standard deviations above
    the mean respectively from the Gulf Coast northeastward into the
    Ohio Valley. There is fairly good model consensus for the potential
    for widespread moderate to heavy rainfall total in this anomalous
    PW axis day 1. Simulated radars suggest cells will be fairly
    progressive to the northeast. However, with potential for short
    term training of cells and/or repeat rounds of convection, there
    will be potential for runoff issues. Slight risk areas maintained
    over the Upper OH Valley from northeast KY into southern OH where
    FFG values are relatively low, and in the upslope region of the
    Southern Appalachians from far northeast GA into the Upstate of SC
    and western NC where heavy precip likely to focus in the region of
    southerly low level flow. The slight risk areas fit well with the
    axes of the HREF and RRFS means 2 and 3"+ probabilities.

    Across the Southern Plains, a marginal risk area was introduced for
    potential for additional convection Friday evening into the early
    hours of Saturday. Additional shortwave energy expected to push
    eastward into the Southern High Plains, supporting potential for
    some organization to the associated convection late Friday into the
    early hours of Saturday. Low confidence on details, with isolated
    runoff issues possible where convection become organized.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    21Z update... The mid and upper levels over Texas and Louisiana are
    quite favorable for heavy rainfall capable of producing scattered
    areas of flash flooding however a limiting factor is the lack of low
    level flow to help foster the general organization of convection
    that would become more widespread and/or increase training and back
    building of storms. The latest guidance does show storms capable=20
    of producing 2 to 3 inch/hr rates for southeast/coastal Texas and=20
    southwest Louisiana; however the exact location of said rates=20
    remains uncertain. Should the environment in the lower level=20
    provide a trigger for increased wind speed/forcing there may be=20
    better confidence for the possibility of an upgrade to a Moderate=20
    Risk in future updates. At this point, much of Southeast Texas and=20
    southwest Louisiana will remain on the higher end of the Slight=20
    Risk category for scattered areas for flash flooding (with
    potential for very isolated instances of significant flash
    flooding if it occurs over very sensitive locations). Further=20
    east, the overall axis of rainfall and amounts increased across=20
    portions of Georgia and western South Carolina so the southern half
    of the Marginal was shifted eastward.

    Campbell

    Additional shortwave energy expected to move from far northeast=20
    Mexico into southern and eastern Texas early Saturday, likely=20
    setting the stage for another round of organized convection.=20
    Building instability early Saturday, Mucape values reaching=20
    2000-300 j/kg ahead of these height falls, in an axis of PW values=20
    1.5-2.5 standard deviations above the mean, will support potential=20
    for an organized line of convection to push across eastern and=20
    southern TX Saturday morning into afternoon. The previous risk=20
    areas were narrowed to better reflect the latest model qpf output=20
    and the max RRFS 2 and 3"+ probability axes for the day 2 time=20
    period.

    No significant changes made to the marginal risk area from the
    Southern Appalachians into the Southeast. Southwest mid to upper
    level flow with embedded shortwaves will continue across these
    areas day 2. With PW values remaining well above average, 2 to 2.5+
    standard deviations above the mean, additional widespread
    scattered convection will likely produce locally heavy rainfall
    totals. Both the HREF and RRFS show fairly high probabilities for
    1"+/hr rainfall totals Saturday afternoon, supporting potential for
    isolated runoff issues.

    The marginal risk was also expanded northward from the previous
    issuance into far eastern KS and large portions of MO to cover
    areas the RRFS, GEM and FV3LAM are showing heavy rainfall totals
    day 2.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST INTO SOUTHERN LOUISIANA...

    21Z update... Heavy rainfall will continue to focus along the Gulf
    Coast for this period, with some overlap from the Day 2 footprint
    along with shifting eastward into the Lower Mississippi Valley/Deep
    South. The Slight Risk was expanded to the northeast into southern
    Mississippi Again, Southeast Texas and southwest/south-central
    Louisiana will be on the higher end of the threat=20

    Campbell

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 3 as it
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. Similar to the
    day 2 and day 3 period, there will continue to be an axis of much
    above average PW values stretching from the Gulf Coast
    northeastward into the Southeast/Southern to Central Appalachians.
    There is a lot of spread day 3 with the QPF details, but still a
    signal for widespread moderate to heavy rain potential in this
    anomalous PW axis. A slight risk was maintained from the Upper TX
    coast into southern LA, close to the WPC and NBM qpf max. This
    covers the urban areas from Houston to New Orleans.

    The marginal risk area was extended farther northeast through the
    Southern to Central Appalachians where scattered convection likely
    in the anomalous PW axis, supporting locally heavy rainfall
    amounts and potential for isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Nscjjf6732nwLZux3JF0fPCDsFC09e8wvzhc55vgafs= dAp_in7RwSldX-2w6o1VwkRnTRYhFqDsQar_oHYfcxB7oNU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Nscjjf6732nwLZux3JF0fPCDsFC09e8wvzhc55vgafs= dAp_in7RwSldX-2w6o1VwkRnTRYhFqDsQar_oHYf1R5iK80$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Nscjjf6732nwLZux3JF0fPCDsFC09e8wvzhc55vgafs= dAp_in7RwSldX-2w6o1VwkRnTRYhFqDsQar_oHYfum7yCd0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sat May 23 00:58:36 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 230058
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    858 PM EDT Fri May 22 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sat May 23 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE UPPER
    OHIO VALLEY, THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL GULF COAST
    INTO ALABAMA...

    01Z update...Expanded the Slight Risk area over portions of the=20
    southern Appalachians in response to upscale growth early this=20
    evening and strengthening low level flow interacting with the=20
    terrain later this evening. The expected development of several=20
    storm clusters over portions of Oklahoma and Texas has started and=20
    only minor adjustments needed there. Extended the Marginal risk
    area as far west as SHV from renewed convection developing over
    southeast AR...similar to the NAM and 23/00Z HRRR and in an area
    covered by WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0214.

    Bann

    Shortwave energy embedded in broad southwesterly mid to upper
    level flow from the western to central Gulf Coast, northeastward
    through the TN/OH Valleys will persist through the upcoming day 1
    period. These height falls/broad diffluent upper flow will enhance
    uvvs in a large region of much above average PW values/anomalous
    850-700 mb moisture flux, 2 to 2.5+/2-3+ standard deviations above
    the mean respectively from the Gulf Coast northeastward into the
    Ohio Valley. There is fairly good model consensus for the potential
    for widespread moderate to heavy rainfall total in this anomalous
    PW axis day 1. Simulated radars suggest cells will be fairly
    progressive to the northeast. However, with potential for short
    term training of cells and/or repeat rounds of convection, there
    will be potential for runoff issues. Slight risk areas maintained
    over the Upper OH Valley from northeast KY into southern OH where
    FFG values are relatively low, and in the upslope region of the
    Southern Appalachians from far northeast GA into the Upstate of SC
    and western NC where heavy precip likely to focus in the region of
    southerly low level flow. The slight risk areas fit well with the
    axes of the HREF and RRFS means 2 and 3"+ probabilities.

    Across the Southern Plains, a marginal risk area was introduced for
    potential for additional convection Friday evening into the early
    hours of Saturday. Additional shortwave energy expected to push
    eastward into the Southern High Plains, supporting potential for
    some organization to the associated convection late Friday into the
    early hours of Saturday. Low confidence on details, with isolated
    runoff issues possible where convection become organized.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    21Z update... The mid and upper levels over Texas and Louisiana are
    quite favorable for heavy rainfall capable of producing scattered
    areas of flash flooding however a limiting factor is the lack of low
    level flow to help foster the general organization of convection
    that would become more widespread and/or increase training and back
    building of storms. The latest guidance does show storms capable
    of producing 2 to 3 inch/hr rates for southeast/coastal Texas and
    southwest Louisiana; however the exact location of said rates
    remains uncertain. Should the environment in the lower level
    provide a trigger for increased wind speed/forcing there may be
    better confidence for the possibility of an upgrade to a Moderate
    Risk in future updates. At this point, much of Southeast Texas and
    southwest Louisiana will remain on the higher end of the Slight
    Risk category for scattered areas for flash flooding (with
    potential for very isolated instances of significant flash
    flooding if it occurs over very sensitive locations). Further
    east, the overall axis of rainfall and amounts increased across
    portions of Georgia and western South Carolina so the southern half
    of the Marginal was shifted eastward.

    Campbell

    Additional shortwave energy expected to move from far northeast
    Mexico into southern and eastern Texas early Saturday, likely
    setting the stage for another round of organized convection.
    Building instability early Saturday, Mucape values reaching
    2000-300 j/kg ahead of these height falls, in an axis of PW values
    1.5-2.5 standard deviations above the mean, will support potential
    for an organized line of convection to push across eastern and
    southern TX Saturday morning into afternoon. The previous risk
    areas were narrowed to better reflect the latest model qpf output
    and the max RRFS 2 and 3"+ probability axes for the day 2 time
    period.

    No significant changes made to the marginal risk area from the
    Southern Appalachians into the Southeast. Southwest mid to upper
    level flow with embedded shortwaves will continue across these
    areas day 2. With PW values remaining well above average, 2 to 2.5+
    standard deviations above the mean, additional widespread
    scattered convection will likely produce locally heavy rainfall
    totals. Both the HREF and RRFS show fairly high probabilities for
    1"+/hr rainfall totals Saturday afternoon, supporting potential for
    isolated runoff issues.

    The marginal risk was also expanded northward from the previous
    issuance into far eastern KS and large portions of MO to cover
    areas the RRFS, GEM and FV3LAM are showing heavy rainfall totals
    day 2.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST INTO SOUTHERN LOUISIANA...

    21Z update... Heavy rainfall will continue to focus along the Gulf
    Coast for this period, with some overlap from the Day 2 footprint
    along with shifting eastward into the Lower Mississippi Valley/Deep
    South. The Slight Risk was expanded to the northeast into southern
    Mississippi Again, Southeast Texas and southwest/south-central
    Louisiana will be on the higher end of the threat

    Campbell

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 3 as it
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. Similar to the
    day 2 and day 3 period, there will continue to be an axis of much
    above average PW values stretching from the Gulf Coast
    northeastward into the Southeast/Southern to Central Appalachians.
    There is a lot of spread day 3 with the QPF details, but still a
    signal for widespread moderate to heavy rain potential in this
    anomalous PW axis. A slight risk was maintained from the Upper TX
    coast into southern LA, close to the WPC and NBM qpf max. This
    covers the urban areas from Houston to New Orleans.

    The marginal risk area was extended farther northeast through the
    Southern to Central Appalachians where scattered convection likely
    in the anomalous PW axis, supporting locally heavy rainfall
    amounts and potential for isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9I-lXCzRtNHDKBrRm7Io0BDtP339zlTXheUrFKyT5xyW= 7x4GCtV4i-Aim6TKjDL1ZqYuKaBx8DTZgavzlVf3AslvDlc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9I-lXCzRtNHDKBrRm7Io0BDtP339zlTXheUrFKyT5xyW= 7x4GCtV4i-Aim6TKjDL1ZqYuKaBx8DTZgavzlVf3OSboEtY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9I-lXCzRtNHDKBrRm7Io0BDtP339zlTXheUrFKyT5xyW= 7x4GCtV4i-Aim6TKjDL1ZqYuKaBx8DTZgavzlVf3gySOqE8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sat May 23 08:08:39 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 230808
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    408 AM EDT Sat May 23 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF EASTERN
    TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    Convection across the Southern Plains early this morning will
    likely remain active in the post 1200 UTC period Saturday in an
    overall favorable convective pattern over the Southern Plains into
    the Lower MS Valley. There is a strong signal for widespread
    heavy precip day 1 across eastern/southern TX into southern LA as=20
    additional shortwave energy moving east northeastward from far=20
    northeast Mexico into southern and eastern Texas early Saturday
    enhances large scale uvvs. HREF and RRFS neighborhood probabilities
    are high for 1 and 2"+ totals day 1 in the slight risk area.
    Several of the latest CAMS, ARW2, GEM, NAMNEST and FV3LAM show
    potential for a period of training of cells across the Upper TX
    coast into southwest LA late morning into this afternoon. Across
    these areas, the HREF and RRFS neighborhood probabilities are high
    for 3"+ totals and the HREF probabilities high for 5"+ totals.
    There is potential for these heavier totals affecting the urban
    areas from Houston to Lake Charles, where an upgrade to a moderate
    risk was considered and will be re-evaluated after viewing the 1200
    UTC hi-res guidance as per collaboration with affected NWS WFOs.=20=20

    No significant changes made to the marginal risk area from the=20
    Southern Appalachians into the Southeast. Southwest mid to upper=20
    level flow with embedded shortwaves will continue across these=20
    areas day 1. With PW values remaining well above average, 2 to=20
    2.5+ standard deviations above the mean, additional widespread=20
    scattered convection will likely produce locally heavy rainfall=20
    totals. Both the HREF and RRFS show scattered areas of fairly high probabilities for 1"+/hr rainfall totals Saturday afternoon,=20
    supporting potential for isolated runoff issues.

    Over the Upper OH Valley region, a marginal risk area was added for
    potential for additional scattered convection and locally heavy
    rains into this afternoon. This additional scattered heavy precip
    will fall across areas that have received 1-2" of rain over the
    past 24 hours, raising soil moisture and stream flows and lowering=20
    FFG values. Isolated runoff issues possible across these areas.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST INTO SOUTHWESTERN LOUISIANA...

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 2 as it=20
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. This will
    likely help fire another round of convection in the vicinity of the
    Upper TX coast, eastward into southern LA. At the moment, it=20
    appears the best instability ahead of this next closed low will be=20 suppressed southward into the northern Gulf in the wake of the=20
    active day 1 convection. This may support the heaviest rains being=20
    shunted southward and off the coast day 2, as suggested by the RRFS
    mean and the FV3LAM. There is still a lot of model spread, but WPC
    qpf has trended south, with the heaviest offshore. Subsequently,=20
    the previous slight risk area has been trimmed on the north end,=20
    confined to the far Upper TX coast into southwest LA. There may be=20
    overlap of the day 1 and day 2 heavy rain areas over the Upper TX=20
    coast into southwest LA. However, at the moment, the risk level was
    maintained as slight as there is still model spread with the day 2
    heaviest qpf axis.

    No significant changes made to the previous broad marginal risk
    area extending northeastward from the Central Gulf Coast, across
    the South and into the Southern to Central Appalachians. Similar=20
    to the day 1 period, there will continue to be an axis of much=20
    above average PW values stretching across these areas, with=20
    embedded shortwaves in the broad southwesterly mid to upper level=20
    flow, supporting widespread scattered convection, locally heavy=20
    rains and isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE=20=20
    SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    A small slight risk area was introduced in the vicinity of the
    Southern Appalachians from north Georgia into the Upstate of SC and
    far southwestern NC. A very broad region of much above average PW=20
    values, 2 to 2.5+ standard deviations above the mean, will stretch=20
    from the Central gulf coast, northeastward across the South,=20
    Tennessee Valley, Southern Appalachians and into the Southern Mid-
    Atlantic during day 3. Similar to the day 2 period, broad south=20 southwesterly mid to upper level flow with embedded shortwaves will
    support additional widespread scattered convection across these=20
    areas. While locally heavy rains are likely across a large region=20
    in this anomalous PW axis, there is model signal for concentration=20
    of heavy precip into the upslope regions of the Southern=20
    Appalachians, with a small slight risk area depicted here. Included
    the Atlanta metro in the slight risk area given the sensitivity to
    potential urban issues. There may be additional slight risk areas=20
    in this anomalous PW axis depicted in future updates, but low=20
    confidence with placement at this time.=20

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-TaBXLalFxfYGwgmpsi6LxnZTyQeT7n-ty9wHm9PTIPd= 4L8boD2gKp8cZyyffLFLbX7aB19XOanYQMis7rNhG5lCTqg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-TaBXLalFxfYGwgmpsi6LxnZTyQeT7n-ty9wHm9PTIPd= 4L8boD2gKp8cZyyffLFLbX7aB19XOanYQMis7rNh9m9RL2c$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-TaBXLalFxfYGwgmpsi6LxnZTyQeT7n-ty9wHm9PTIPd= 4L8boD2gKp8cZyyffLFLbX7aB19XOanYQMis7rNhSHgwsR4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sat May 23 15:53:23 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 231553
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1153 AM EDT Sat May 23 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHEASTERN=20
    TEXAS, SOUTHERN LOUISIANA, AND THE UPPER OHIO VALLEY...

    16Z Update...=20

    ...Southern Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    GOES East satellite paints a chaotic picture with numerous clusters
    of thunderstorms that stretch from just east of the Rio Grande to=20
    as far east as southern Louisiana. A convective complex emerging=20
    off of the Sierra Madre is tracking east into South TX where RAP=20 mesoanalysis depicts 3-hr MLCAPE changes of >600 J/kg. There is=20
    also a narrow theta-e gradient just north of Corpus Christi with SE
    850mb intersecting the boundary. This environment, along with the=20 approaching 500mb vort max providing support aloft, will sustain=20
    and likely ignite additional storms in South TX today with rainfall
    rates of 2-2.5"/hr, perhaps even 2" of rainfall in 30 minutes, in=20
    the most intense cells. That said, these storms are embedded within
    a 20-30kt 850-300mb mean wind flow, which should keep storms=20
    moving along. The biggest threat for flash flooding likely lies=20
    along and just south of the 850mb theta-e axis where intersecting=20
    low-level winds could trigger storms in advance of the MCS tracking
    over the Rio Grande. Latest 12Z HREF shows a narrow area from just
    southwest of Houston with moderate-to-high chances (50-70%) for=20
    3hr QPF > 3hr FFG between 18-21Z. Storms may linger between Houston
    and Galveston on east to Beaumont through this afternoon before=20
    dissipating this evening. WPC's Metwatch Desk has issued a couple=20
    of MPDs (215 and 216) highlighting the ongoing flash flood threat=20
    for southern LA (215) and southern TX (216). Please refer to WPC=20
    Metwatch MPDs for the latest information as the day progresses.=20

    Given the progressive nature of the storms, opted to maintain what
    is a "high-end Slight" from the Upper TX Coast to southern LA. The
    Slight also extends south to just north of the Rio Grande.=20
    Scattered areas of flash flooding are possible today with more=20
    urbanized setting most vulnerable. Localized cases of significant=20
    flash flooding can occur, particularly if back-building and=20
    training cells along the Upper TX Coast on east to southern LA=20
    transpire. Residents in these areas should ensure they have a=20
    reliable method to receive any flash flood warnings issued today=20
    and this evening.

    Farther east, a 300mb disturbance will eject east over the=20
    ArkLaTex at the same time a southerly IVT out of the western Gulf
    advects anomalous moisture into the southern MS Valley this
    afternoon and into tonight. Sufficient shear coupled with MUCAPE
    2,000 J/kg will trigger numerous thunderstorms from northern LA
    and the ArkLaTex on east through the Lower MS Valley and even as
    far north as the Ozarks. Storms may flare up over AL as well, where
    NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-40cm anomalies are >90%. For these reasons, the
    Marginal Risk was extended to cover all of MS/AL and into the TN=20
    Valley.

    ...Ohio Valley...

    12Z surface analysis shows a classing CAD signature in the East
    with a N-S oriented stalled front from the Cumberland Plateau on
    north to the OH River. The front oriented SW-NE from from the Lower
    MS Valley to the Lower OH Valley will slowly advance east, but will
    not advance east much towards the Upper OH Valley today. As the
    primary low in northwest OH moves northeast towards Lake Erie, the
    warm sector will advance north into eastern OH and western PA with
    a narrow tongue of 500-1,000 J/kg of MLCAPE encompassing eastern
    KY, southern and eastern OH, and western WV. Latest HRRR and RAP
    soundings show highly saturated soundings (>85%) in the 1000-500mb
    layer, warm cloud layers up to 12,000ft deep, and upshear Corfidi
    vectors <10 kts in some cases. Cloud layer winds are uniformly out
    of the SW, intersecting the lifting warm front in eastern OH and
    western PA and parallel to the quasi-stationary front to the west.
    This setup is ripe for not only thunderstorms containing efficient
    warm-rain processes, but also for training and back-building=20
    cells.

    FFGs remain quite low with 1-hr FFGs <1" in some areas, and 3-hr
    FFGs <1.5" along and just west of the OH River. NASA SPoRT-LIS also
    shows >95% soil saturation percentiles for much of the region. With
    these factors, opted to upgrade to a Slight Risk from northeast KY
    on north and east into the Upper OH Valley. Scattered instances of
    flash flooding are possible, with locally significant flash
    flooding not out ot the realm of possibility. This is backed by the
    latest 12Z HREF guidance that show=20

    ...Southeast...

    =46rom Florida on north to the Carolinas, the region lies on the
    western periphery of a Bermuda high while embedded 500mb
    disturbances track over the region due to broad longwave troughing
    to the west. A stalled front in the Carolinas, marking the southern
    fringe of the CAD signal in the East, will act as a trigger for
    additional storms today thanks to southerly 850mb flow intersecting
    the front. The Carolinas and into central GA will sport an IVT=20
    400 kg/m/s today that will provide no shortage of atmospheric
    moisture aloft. PWATs >1.75" are likely (above the 97.5
    climatological percentile) in the Carolinas and MUCAPE up to=20
    1,000 J/kg provides a favorable environment for rainfall rates up
    to 1.5"/hr. Farther south into GA, where instability is greater,
    rainfall rates eclipsing 2"/hr are possible this afternoon and
    evening. Some CAMs do show the potential for strong thunderstorms
    with torrential rainfall rates potentially sneaking into the
    Atlanta metro area this afternoon. The "Peach State" is consumed in
    severe drought conditions, so much of this rainfall will be
    welcomed. That said, excessive rainfall rates referenced above in
    urbanized locations or areas that drain poorly could still see
    cases of flash flooding occur. The Marginal Risk was expanded for
    to encompass most of the state (GA coast line the lone exception).

    Farther south, strong surface based heating is ongoing
    from Tampa Bay on north and east towards Orlando and the
    northern FL Atlantic coast. 12Z CAMs show good agreement on a
    cluster of potent thunderstorms flaring up with rainfall rates
    between 2-3"/hr possible. PWs in FL are anomalous as well for late
    May with >2.0" PWs likely and plenty of instability (>1,000 J/kg=20
    MLCAPE). While much of FL can certainly use the rain, many CAMs=20
    show these storms flaring up over some of the Sunshine State's main thoroughfares (I-10, I-75, I-4 most notably). Storms should=20
    subside later tonight, but torrential downpours in urbanized areas=20
    could pose a flash flood threat this afternoon and evening. Due to=20
    these factors, the Marginal Risk was expanded into northern and=20
    central FL today.

    Mullinax

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST INTO SOUTHWESTERN LOUISIANA...

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 2 as it
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. This will
    likely help fire another round of convection in the vicinity of the
    Upper TX coast, eastward into southern LA. At the moment, it
    appears the best instability ahead of this next closed low will be
    suppressed southward into the northern Gulf in the wake of the
    active day 1 convection. This may support the heaviest rains being
    shunted southward and off the coast day 2, as suggested by the RRFS
    mean and the FV3LAM. There is still a lot of model spread, but WPC
    qpf has trended south, with the heaviest offshore. Subsequently,
    the previous slight risk area has been trimmed on the north end,
    confined to the far Upper TX coast into southwest LA. There may be
    overlap of the day 1 and day 2 heavy rain areas over the Upper TX
    coast into southwest LA. However, at the moment, the risk level was
    maintained as slight as there is still model spread with the day 2
    heaviest qpf axis.

    No significant changes made to the previous broad marginal risk
    area extending northeastward from the Central Gulf Coast, across
    the South and into the Southern to Central Appalachians. Similar
    to the day 1 period, there will continue to be an axis of much
    above average PW values stretching across these areas, with
    embedded shortwaves in the broad southwesterly mid to upper level
    flow, supporting widespread scattered convection, locally heavy
    rains and isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    A small slight risk area was introduced in the vicinity of the
    Southern Appalachians from north Georgia into the Upstate of SC and
    far southwestern NC. A very broad region of much above average PW
    values, 2 to 2.5+ standard deviations above the mean, will stretch
    from the Central gulf coast, northeastward across the South,
    Tennessee Valley, Southern Appalachians and into the Southern Mid-
    Atlantic during day 3. Similar to the day 2 period, broad south
    southwesterly mid to upper level flow with embedded shortwaves will
    support additional widespread scattered convection across these
    areas. While locally heavy rains are likely across a large region
    in this anomalous PW axis, there is model signal for concentration
    of heavy precip into the upslope regions of the Southern
    Appalachians, with a small slight risk area depicted here. Included
    the Atlanta metro in the slight risk area given the sensitivity to
    potential urban issues. There may be additional slight risk areas
    in this anomalous PW axis depicted in future updates, but low
    confidence with placement at this time.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9J7XPVeNivVMnwNK38Z5R8xbhP2eVEl4l-A0aKR3MwJl= qQFueaEIQq2y3E2HQI4QDZ_Ptnaf_wlrx0X-cDTz4vqa7oM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9J7XPVeNivVMnwNK38Z5R8xbhP2eVEl4l-A0aKR3MwJl= qQFueaEIQq2y3E2HQI4QDZ_Ptnaf_wlrx0X-cDTzLdwhrNI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9J7XPVeNivVMnwNK38Z5R8xbhP2eVEl4l-A0aKR3MwJl= qQFueaEIQq2y3E2HQI4QDZ_Ptnaf_wlrx0X-cDTzcNS0_2k$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sat May 23 19:44:25 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 231944
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    344 PM EDT Sat May 23 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat May 23 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHEASTERN
    TEXAS, SOUTHERN LOUISIANA, AND THE UPPER OHIO VALLEY...

    16Z Update...

    ...Southern Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    GOES East satellite paints a chaotic picture with numerous clusters
    of thunderstorms that stretch from just east of the Rio Grande to
    as far east as southern Louisiana. A convective complex emerging
    off of the Sierra Madre is tracking east into South TX where RAP
    mesoanalysis depicts 3-hr MLCAPE changes of >600 J/kg. There is
    also a narrow theta-e gradient just north of Corpus Christi with SE
    850mb intersecting the boundary. This environment, along with the
    approaching 500mb vort max providing support aloft, will sustain
    and likely ignite additional storms in South TX today with rainfall
    rates of 2-2.5"/hr, perhaps even 2" of rainfall in 30 minutes, in
    the most intense cells. That said, these storms are embedded within
    a 20-30kt 850-300mb mean wind flow, which should keep storms
    moving along. The biggest threat for flash flooding likely lies
    along and just south of the 850mb theta-e axis where intersecting
    low-level winds could trigger storms in advance of the MCS tracking
    over the Rio Grande. Latest 12Z HREF shows a narrow area from just
    southwest of Houston with moderate-to-high chances (50-70%) for
    3hr QPF > 3hr FFG between 18-21Z. Storms may linger between Houston
    and Galveston on east to Beaumont through this afternoon before
    dissipating this evening. WPC's Metwatch Desk has issued a couple
    of MPDs (215 and 216) highlighting the ongoing flash flood threat
    for southern LA (215) and southern TX (216). Please refer to WPC
    Metwatch MPDs for the latest information as the day progresses.

    Given the progressive nature of the storms, opted to maintain what
    is a "high-end Slight" from the Upper TX Coast to southern LA. The
    Slight also extends south to just north of the Rio Grande.
    Scattered areas of flash flooding are possible today with more
    urbanized setting most vulnerable. Localized cases of significant
    flash flooding can occur, particularly if back-building and
    training cells along the Upper TX Coast on east to southern LA
    transpire. Residents in these areas should ensure they have a
    reliable method to receive any flash flood warnings issued today
    and this evening.

    Farther east, a 300mb disturbance will eject east over the
    ArkLaTex at the same time a southerly IVT out of the western Gulf
    advects anomalous moisture into the southern MS Valley this
    afternoon and into tonight. Sufficient shear coupled with MUCAPE
    2,000 J/kg will trigger numerous thunderstorms from northern LA
    and the ArkLaTex on east through the Lower MS Valley and even as
    far north as the Ozarks. Storms may flare up over AL as well, where
    NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-40cm anomalies are >90%. For these reasons, the
    Marginal Risk was extended to cover all of MS/AL and into the TN
    Valley.

    ...Ohio Valley...

    12Z surface analysis shows a classing CAD signature in the East
    with a N-S oriented stalled front from the Cumberland Plateau on
    north to the OH River. The front oriented SW-NE from from the Lower
    MS Valley to the Lower OH Valley will slowly advance east, but will
    not advance east much towards the Upper OH Valley today. As the
    primary low in northwest OH moves northeast towards Lake Erie, the
    warm sector will advance north into eastern OH and western PA with
    a narrow tongue of 500-1,000 J/kg of MLCAPE encompassing eastern
    KY, southern and eastern OH, and western WV. Latest HRRR and RAP
    soundings show highly saturated soundings (>85%) in the 1000-500mb
    layer, warm cloud layers up to 12,000ft deep, and upshear Corfidi
    vectors <10 kts in some cases. Cloud layer winds are uniformly out
    of the SW, intersecting the lifting warm front in eastern OH and
    western PA and parallel to the quasi-stationary front to the west.
    This setup is ripe for not only thunderstorms containing efficient
    warm-rain processes, but also for training and back-building
    cells.

    FFGs remain quite low with 1-hr FFGs <1" in some areas, and 3-hr
    FFGs <1.5" along and just west of the OH River. NASA SPoRT-LIS also
    shows >95% soil saturation percentiles for much of the region. With
    these factors, opted to upgrade to a Slight Risk from northeast KY
    on north and east into the Upper OH Valley. Scattered instances of
    flash flooding are possible, with locally significant flash
    flooding not out ot the realm of possibility. This is backed by the
    latest 12Z HREF guidance that show

    ...Southeast...

    =46rom Florida on north to the Carolinas, the region lies on the
    western periphery of a Bermuda high while embedded 500mb
    disturbances track over the region due to broad longwave troughing
    to the west. A stalled front in the Carolinas, marking the southern
    fringe of the CAD signal in the East, will act as a trigger for
    additional storms today thanks to southerly 850mb flow intersecting
    the front. The Carolinas and into central GA will sport an IVT
    400 kg/m/s today that will provide no shortage of atmospheric
    moisture aloft. PWATs >1.75" are likely (above the 97.5
    climatological percentile) in the Carolinas and MUCAPE up to
    1,000 J/kg provides a favorable environment for rainfall rates up
    to 1.5"/hr. Farther south into GA, where instability is greater,
    rainfall rates eclipsing 2"/hr are possible this afternoon and
    evening. Some CAMs do show the potential for strong thunderstorms
    with torrential rainfall rates potentially sneaking into the
    Atlanta metro area this afternoon. The "Peach State" is consumed in
    severe drought conditions, so much of this rainfall will be
    welcomed. That said, excessive rainfall rates referenced above in
    urbanized locations or areas that drain poorly could still see
    cases of flash flooding occur. The Marginal Risk was expanded for
    to encompass most of the state (GA coast line the lone exception).

    Farther south, strong surface based heating is ongoing
    from Tampa Bay on north and east towards Orlando and the
    northern FL Atlantic coast. 12Z CAMs show good agreement on a
    cluster of potent thunderstorms flaring up with rainfall rates
    between 2-3"/hr possible. PWs in FL are anomalous as well for late
    May with >2.0" PWs likely and plenty of instability (>1,000 J/kg
    MLCAPE). While much of FL can certainly use the rain, many CAMs
    show these storms flaring up over some of the Sunshine State's main thoroughfares (I-10, I-75, I-4 most notably). Storms should
    subside later tonight, but torrential downpours in urbanized areas
    could pose a flash flood threat this afternoon and evening. Due to
    these factors, the Marginal Risk was expanded into northern and
    central FL today.

    Mullinax

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST, SOUTHERN LOUISIANA, AND SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI...

    20Z Update...

    The Slight Risk was adjusted to mimic the latest WPC QPF which=20
    showed increased precipitation over southeast LA and southern MS.=20
    This is due to the growing sentiment, across various guidance=20
    members, that the closed 700mb low over the Upper TX coast will=20
    remain slow moving and maintain a prolonged fetch of anomalous=20
    moisture. ECMWF SATs shows a continuous >400 kg/m/s IVT fetch=20
    (above the 90th climatological percentile) over southern LA for=20
    much of the day. The Lower MS Valley also resides downwind of a=20 negatively-tilted 200-500mb trough axis that enhances vertical=20
    ascent atop the upper troposphere. Instability will be the biggest
    question mark in south-central LA, but soils have grown=20
    increasingly saturated thanks to rainfall in recent days (and=20
    during the day Saturday, too). The best instability should reside=20
    just east of NOLA on north into southern MS where MUCAPE in excess=20
    of 2,000 J/kg is expected. Rainfall rates in excess of 2"/hr are=20
    likely in the heavier thunderstorms when accounting for >2" PWATs.=20
    For these reasons, the Slight was expanded more into southeast LA=20
    and southern MS.=20

    Elsewhere, there was a change in guidance with a more expansive=20
    area of showers and storms to the west. The frontal boundary=20
    approaching from the Midwest is a little slower, allowing for=20
    scattered storms to form over the eastern Corn Belt on south to=20
    western TN. With sufficient instability present and these areas
    still dealing with overly saturated soils, decided to expand the=20
    Marginal Risk westward. In addition, the Marginal Risk was=20
    expanded eastward to cover eastern NC and southeast VA. The=20
    stationary front in the Southeast lifts north as a warm front on=20
    Sunday, putting the southeast VA Tidewater region and eastern NC=20
    squarely in the warm sector. PWs approaching 2" and MLCAPE between=20
    500-1,000 J/kg will be more than enough to support rainfall rates=20
    of 2-3"/hr, along with warm cloud layers as deep as 12,000ft. There
    remains uncertainty in the placement of the heaviest rainfall, but
    given these rates and some urbanized areas present, the Marginal=20
    Risk was expanded to these regions.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 2 as it
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. This will
    likely help fire another round of convection in the vicinity of the
    Upper TX coast, eastward into southern LA. At the moment, it
    appears the best instability ahead of this next closed low will be
    suppressed southward into the northern Gulf in the wake of the
    active day 1 convection. This may support the heaviest rains being
    shunted southward and off the coast day 2, as suggested by the RRFS
    mean and the FV3LAM. There is still a lot of model spread, but WPC
    qpf has trended south, with the heaviest offshore. Subsequently,
    the previous slight risk area has been trimmed on the north end,
    confined to the far Upper TX coast into southwest LA. There may be
    overlap of the day 1 and day 2 heavy rain areas over the Upper TX
    coast into southwest LA. However, at the moment, the risk level was
    maintained as slight as there is still model spread with the day 2
    heaviest qpf axis.

    No significant changes made to the previous broad marginal risk
    area extending northeastward from the Central Gulf Coast, across
    the South and into the Southern to Central Appalachians. Similar
    to the day 1 period, there will continue to be an axis of much
    above average PW values stretching across these areas, with
    embedded shortwaves in the broad southwesterly mid to upper level
    flow, supporting widespread scattered convection, locally heavy
    rains and isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST, TENNESSEE VALLEY, AND SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    The inherited Slight Risk area in the southern Appalachians was
    expended south and west all the way to the central Gulf Coast. The
    closed upper-low in east TX that slowly drifts over the ArkLaTex
    Monday night continues it southerly onslaught of anomalous Gulf=20
    moisture. PWs above 2.0" are likely throughout the Deep South,
    MUCAPE >1,000 J/kg, and soils will only continue to grow more
    saturated with Sunday's rainfall. Rainfall totals between 1-3" are
    anticipated within the Slight Risk area, however the exact axis of
    heaviest rainfall at this range is still in flux. Additional=20
    changes to the placement of the Slight Risk area are still likely=20
    to come, but the meteorological setup is primed for more scattered=20
    instances of flash flooding from the central Gulf Coast to the=20
    southern Appalachians on Monday.=20

    Farther east, additional heavy rainfall is possible over southern
    VA and northern NC. With these areas sporting more sensitive soils
    in wake of Sunday's rainfall, the anomalous PWs and lingering
    instability aloft may lead to additional isolated cases of flash
    flooding on Monday.

    Mullinax

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7KV7-DRLAG7t2An3VtkC18W132FZtk4Y0Vu_0Ev7CwVH= eDCUcMwgIS1mWnbglZ69KBLdJEdyVo3Zuaj3QMLuISp7_Zw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7KV7-DRLAG7t2An3VtkC18W132FZtk4Y0Vu_0Ev7CwVH= eDCUcMwgIS1mWnbglZ69KBLdJEdyVo3Zuaj3QMLuWFM_EVQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7KV7-DRLAG7t2An3VtkC18W132FZtk4Y0Vu_0Ev7CwVH= eDCUcMwgIS1mWnbglZ69KBLdJEdyVo3Zuaj3QMLuFhQJbaw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sun May 24 00:47:53 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 240047
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    847 PM EDT Sat May 23 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Sun May 24 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHEASTERN
    TEXAS, SOUTHERN LOUISIANA, AND THE UPPER OHIO VALLEY...

    01Z Update...
    Made a few realignments to on-going outlook areas based on latest
    trends in satellite and radar imagery. The biggest change was to
    trim much of South Texas out of the Slight and Marginal risk now
    that multiple boundaries have shunted the deepest moisture and
    focusing mechanisms for heavy rainfall off the coast. Changes=20
    farther north along the Upper Texas coast were pretty minor even=20
    though the area of rainfall approaching from the southwest should=20
    not have the same kind of rainfall rates that were observed earlier
    in the day.=20

    Introduced a Marginal risk area out in West Texas where locally=20
    heavy rainfall has the potential to produce isolated instances of=20
    flash flooding. The expectation is that the threat will gradually
    diminish during the late evening or very early morning hours.

    In the Upper Ohio Valley, tightened up the areal coverage given=20
    the 24/00Z position of the boundary approaching from the west. The
    24/00Z soundings showed the boundary will be moving into an
    environment with precipitable water values peaking a little in
    excess of 1.5 inches...suggesting some local downpours may still
    occur in a region of lower flash flood guidance.

    Bann


    16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...Southern Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    GOES East satellite paints a chaotic picture with numerous clusters
    of thunderstorms that stretch from just east of the Rio Grande to
    as far east as southern Louisiana. A convective complex emerging
    off of the Sierra Madre is tracking east into South TX where RAP
    mesoanalysis depicts 3-hr MLCAPE changes of >600 J/kg. There is
    also a narrow theta-e gradient just north of Corpus Christi with SE
    850mb intersecting the boundary. This environment, along with the
    approaching 500mb vort max providing support aloft, will sustain
    and likely ignite additional storms in South TX today with rainfall
    rates of 2-2.5"/hr, perhaps even 2" of rainfall in 30 minutes, in
    the most intense cells. That said, these storms are embedded within
    a 20-30kt 850-300mb mean wind flow, which should keep storms
    moving along. The biggest threat for flash flooding likely lies
    along and just south of the 850mb theta-e axis where intersecting
    low-level winds could trigger storms in advance of the MCS tracking
    over the Rio Grande. Latest 12Z HREF shows a narrow area from just
    southwest of Houston with moderate-to-high chances (50-70%) for
    3hr QPF > 3hr FFG between 18-21Z. Storms may linger between Houston
    and Galveston on east to Beaumont through this afternoon before
    dissipating this evening. WPC's Metwatch Desk has issued a couple
    of MPDs (215 and 216) highlighting the ongoing flash flood threat
    for southern LA (215) and southern TX (216). Please refer to WPC
    Metwatch MPDs for the latest information as the day progresses.

    Given the progressive nature of the storms, opted to maintain what
    is a "high-end Slight" from the Upper TX Coast to southern LA. The
    Slight also extends south to just north of the Rio Grande.
    Scattered areas of flash flooding are possible today with more
    urbanized setting most vulnerable. Localized cases of significant
    flash flooding can occur, particularly if back-building and
    training cells along the Upper TX Coast on east to southern LA
    transpire. Residents in these areas should ensure they have a
    reliable method to receive any flash flood warnings issued today
    and this evening.

    Farther east, a 300mb disturbance will eject east over the
    ArkLaTex at the same time a southerly IVT out of the western Gulf
    advects anomalous moisture into the southern MS Valley this
    afternoon and into tonight. Sufficient shear coupled with MUCAPE
    2,000 J/kg will trigger numerous thunderstorms from northern LA
    and the ArkLaTex on east through the Lower MS Valley and even as
    far north as the Ozarks. Storms may flare up over AL as well, where
    NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-40cm anomalies are >90%. For these reasons, the
    Marginal Risk was extended to cover all of MS/AL and into the TN
    Valley.

    ...Ohio Valley...

    12Z surface analysis shows a classing CAD signature in the East
    with a N-S oriented stalled front from the Cumberland Plateau on
    north to the OH River. The front oriented SW-NE from from the Lower
    MS Valley to the Lower OH Valley will slowly advance east, but will
    not advance east much towards the Upper OH Valley today. As the
    primary low in northwest OH moves northeast towards Lake Erie, the
    warm sector will advance north into eastern OH and western PA with
    a narrow tongue of 500-1,000 J/kg of MLCAPE encompassing eastern
    KY, southern and eastern OH, and western WV. Latest HRRR and RAP
    soundings show highly saturated soundings (>85%) in the 1000-500mb
    layer, warm cloud layers up to 12,000ft deep, and upshear Corfidi
    vectors <10 kts in some cases. Cloud layer winds are uniformly out
    of the SW, intersecting the lifting warm front in eastern OH and
    western PA and parallel to the quasi-stationary front to the west.
    This setup is ripe for not only thunderstorms containing efficient
    warm-rain processes, but also for training and back-building
    cells.

    FFGs remain quite low with 1-hr FFGs <1" in some areas, and 3-hr
    FFGs <1.5" along and just west of the OH River. NASA SPoRT-LIS also
    shows >95% soil saturation percentiles for much of the region. With
    these factors, opted to upgrade to a Slight Risk from northeast KY
    on north and east into the Upper OH Valley. Scattered instances of
    flash flooding are possible, with locally significant flash
    flooding not out ot the realm of possibility. This is backed by the
    latest 12Z HREF guidance that show

    ...Southeast...

    =46rom Florida on north to the Carolinas, the region lies on the
    western periphery of a Bermuda high while embedded 500mb
    disturbances track over the region due to broad longwave troughing
    to the west. A stalled front in the Carolinas, marking the southern
    fringe of the CAD signal in the East, will act as a trigger for
    additional storms today thanks to southerly 850mb flow intersecting
    the front. The Carolinas and into central GA will sport an IVT
    400 kg/m/s today that will provide no shortage of atmospheric
    moisture aloft. PWATs >1.75" are likely (above the 97.5
    climatological percentile) in the Carolinas and MUCAPE up to
    1,000 J/kg provides a favorable environment for rainfall rates up
    to 1.5"/hr. Farther south into GA, where instability is greater,
    rainfall rates eclipsing 2"/hr are possible this afternoon and
    evening. Some CAMs do show the potential for strong thunderstorms
    with torrential rainfall rates potentially sneaking into the
    Atlanta metro area this afternoon. The "Peach State" is consumed in
    severe drought conditions, so much of this rainfall will be
    welcomed. That said, excessive rainfall rates referenced above in
    urbanized locations or areas that drain poorly could still see
    cases of flash flooding occur. The Marginal Risk was expanded for
    to encompass most of the state (GA coast line the lone exception).

    Farther south, strong surface based heating is ongoing
    from Tampa Bay on north and east towards Orlando and the
    northern FL Atlantic coast. 12Z CAMs show good agreement on a
    cluster of potent thunderstorms flaring up with rainfall rates
    between 2-3"/hr possible. PWs in FL are anomalous as well for late
    May with >2.0" PWs likely and plenty of instability (>1,000 J/kg
    MLCAPE). While much of FL can certainly use the rain, many CAMs
    show these storms flaring up over some of the Sunshine State's main thoroughfares (I-10, I-75, I-4 most notably). Storms should
    subside later tonight, but torrential downpours in urbanized areas
    could pose a flash flood threat this afternoon and evening. Due to
    these factors, the Marginal Risk was expanded into northern and
    central FL today.

    Mullinax

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE UPPER
    TEXAS COAST, SOUTHERN LOUISIANA, AND SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI...

    20Z Update...

    The Slight Risk was adjusted to mimic the latest WPC QPF which
    showed increased precipitation over southeast LA and southern MS.
    This is due to the growing sentiment, across various guidance
    members, that the closed 700mb low over the Upper TX coast will
    remain slow moving and maintain a prolonged fetch of anomalous
    moisture. ECMWF SATs shows a continuous >400 kg/m/s IVT fetch
    (above the 90th climatological percentile) over southern LA for
    much of the day. The Lower MS Valley also resides downwind of a negatively-tilted 200-500mb trough axis that enhances vertical
    ascent atop the upper troposphere. Instability will be the biggest
    question mark in south-central LA, but soils have grown
    increasingly saturated thanks to rainfall in recent days (and
    during the day Saturday, too). The best instability should reside
    just east of NOLA on north into southern MS where MUCAPE in excess
    of 2,000 J/kg is expected. Rainfall rates in excess of 2"/hr are
    likely in the heavier thunderstorms when accounting for >2" PWATs.
    For these reasons, the Slight was expanded more into southeast LA
    and southern MS.

    Elsewhere, there was a change in guidance with a more expansive
    area of showers and storms to the west. The frontal boundary
    approaching from the Midwest is a little slower, allowing for
    scattered storms to form over the eastern Corn Belt on south to
    western TN. With sufficient instability present and these areas
    still dealing with overly saturated soils, decided to expand the
    Marginal Risk westward. In addition, the Marginal Risk was
    expanded eastward to cover eastern NC and southeast VA. The
    stationary front in the Southeast lifts north as a warm front on
    Sunday, putting the southeast VA Tidewater region and eastern NC
    squarely in the warm sector. PWs approaching 2" and MLCAPE between
    500-1,000 J/kg will be more than enough to support rainfall rates
    of 2-3"/hr, along with warm cloud layers as deep as 12,000ft. There
    remains uncertainty in the placement of the heaviest rainfall, but
    given these rates and some urbanized areas present, the Marginal
    Risk was expanded to these regions.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    A slow moving upper trof expected to amplify somewhat day 2 as it
    pushes from eastern Texas into the Lower MS Valley. This will
    likely help fire another round of convection in the vicinity of the
    Upper TX coast, eastward into southern LA. At the moment, it
    appears the best instability ahead of this next closed low will be
    suppressed southward into the northern Gulf in the wake of the
    active day 1 convection. This may support the heaviest rains being
    shunted southward and off the coast day 2, as suggested by the RRFS
    mean and the FV3LAM. There is still a lot of model spread, but WPC
    qpf has trended south, with the heaviest offshore. Subsequently,
    the previous slight risk area has been trimmed on the north end,
    confined to the far Upper TX coast into southwest LA. There may be
    overlap of the day 1 and day 2 heavy rain areas over the Upper TX
    coast into southwest LA. However, at the moment, the risk level was
    maintained as slight as there is still model spread with the day 2
    heaviest qpf axis.

    No significant changes made to the previous broad marginal risk
    area extending northeastward from the Central Gulf Coast, across
    the South and into the Southern to Central Appalachians. Similar
    to the day 1 period, there will continue to be an axis of much
    above average PW values stretching across these areas, with
    embedded shortwaves in the broad southwesterly mid to upper level
    flow, supporting widespread scattered convection, locally heavy
    rains and isolated runoff issues.

    Oravec

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST, TENNESSEE VALLEY, AND SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    The inherited Slight Risk area in the southern Appalachians was
    expended south and west all the way to the central Gulf Coast. The
    closed upper-low in east TX that slowly drifts over the ArkLaTex
    Monday night continues it southerly onslaught of anomalous Gulf
    moisture. PWs above 2.0" are likely throughout the Deep South,
    MUCAPE >1,000 J/kg, and soils will only continue to grow more
    saturated with Sunday's rainfall. Rainfall totals between 1-3" are
    anticipated within the Slight Risk area, however the exact axis of
    heaviest rainfall at this range is still in flux. Additional
    changes to the placement of the Slight Risk area are still likely
    to come, but the meteorological setup is primed for more scattered
    instances of flash flooding from the central Gulf Coast to the
    southern Appalachians on Monday.

    Farther east, additional heavy rainfall is possible over southern
    VA and northern NC. With these areas sporting more sensitive soils
    in wake of Sunday's rainfall, the anomalous PWs and lingering
    instability aloft may lead to additional isolated cases of flash
    flooding on Monday.

    Mullinax

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ivscb9tXDAWED4wJEM2mM5DRs5gbdgTsglNfKkOONIE= LHK-B2oiOJQXddo0UGKRqWgol16jq8_TfQ5JSYh9RFwhYb4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ivscb9tXDAWED4wJEM2mM5DRs5gbdgTsglNfKkOONIE= LHK-B2oiOJQXddo0UGKRqWgol16jq8_TfQ5JSYh94TFHdeA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ivscb9tXDAWED4wJEM2mM5DRs5gbdgTsglNfKkOONIE= LHK-B2oiOJQXddo0UGKRqWgol16jq8_TfQ5JSYh9jpHMoIc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sun May 24 08:16:03 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 240815
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    415 AM EDT Sun May 24 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST INTO NORTH GEORGIA AND ACROSS THE UPPER OHIO VALLEY...

    The well defined MCV moving from southeast LA into far southern MS
    early this morning expected to continue to push northward day 1
    across central AL and into north GA. While the organized convection
    associated with this MCV may weaken early day 1, there is potential
    for convection to re-fire ahead of this MCV later this afternoon=20
    in the axis of much above average PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard=20
    deviations above the mean expected to stretch from the Central Gulf
    Coast, northeastward through the Southern to Central Appalachians,
    Southeast and Mid-Atlantic. We added a slight risk from central AL
    into north GA to account for this convective potential.

    Farther to the southwest...we made some significant changes to the
    previous slight risk area across southern MS and southern LA. We=20
    suppressed the slight, keeping it just for far southeast LA. The=20
    best instability in the wake of the northeastward moving MCV will=20
    be over the northern Gulf, suggesting the heaviest precip with the=20
    next round of convection also being offshore. We kept the New=20
    Orleans metro area in the slight as model consensus is for a narrow
    axis of heavy rains to extend into far eastern LA.

    Across FL...the marginal risk was extended south into portions of
    north central to southwest FL. Model consensus is for another round
    of active convection forming Sunday afternoon in a general north to
    south axis. Slow moving cells will again have potential for produce
    locally heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues. There
    will be potential for overlap of yesterday's heavy rainfall amounts
    with Sunday afternoon's. The biggest runoff threat will continue to=20
    be in more urbanized regions.


    Over the Upper Ohio Valley...added a slight risk area from
    northeast KY into eastern OH, northwest WV and far southwest PA.
    Both the HREF and RRFS are showing fairly high probabilities,
    25-50%+ for 3 hour precip amounts exceeding FFG values this
    afternoon into early evening. Favorable right entrance region jet
    dynamics in the above mentioned axis of anomalous PW values will
    support potential for heavy precip and localized runoff issues.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...


    An axis of anomalous PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard deviations=20
    above the mean, will persist from the Central Gulf Coast,=20
    northeastward across the South, Southeast and Southern Mid-Atlantic
    day 2. The closed low over the eastern portions of the Southern=20
    Plains toward the Lower MS Valley will move only very slowly north=20 northeastward day 2, keeping a favorable broadly upper diffluent=20
    pattern to its east in this anomalous PW axis. This will support=20
    widespread scattered convection and potential for widespread=20
    moderate to heavy precip totals. There is a typical amount of model
    qpf spread, but consensus for potential for widespread moderate to
    heavy totals. There will likely be overlap between the day 1 and=20
    day 2 heavy precip areas, although low confidence at the moment=20
    with details. No significant changes made to the previous outlooks=20
    areas. Minor adjustments made to fit the latest model qpf=20
    consensus.

    Oravec

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND ACROSS THE SOUTH=20
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    Not a lot of changes to the wet pattern from the Central Gulf
    Coast, northeastward across the South, Southeast and Southern
    Appalachians. The axis of anomalous PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard
    deviations above the mean, will persist across this area in a
    region of persistent south southwesterly mid to upper level flow on
    the east side of the weak mid to upper low moving north through the
    Lower MS Valley. Expect another day of widespread scattered
    convection and widespread moderate to heavy rainfall totals. With
    not much changes overall to the large scale pattern, a slight risk
    was maintained in a similar region as during the day 2 period.
    There may again be overlap in heavy rain areas day 3 with day 1 and
    2, which may lead to a upgrade in threat categories in future
    issuancs.

    Mid to upper level troffing developing across the Southwest during
    day 2 will be pushing height falls into the Southern Plains day 3.
    Increasingly active convection likely across the Southern Plains
    day 3, with model consensus for widespread moderate to heavy
    totals. Not a lot of changes made to the previous slight risk area
    over south central TX. This region has seen several rounds of
    heavy precip over the past week, lowering FFG values and increasing
    threat of additional runoff issues. There is a lot of spread with
    qpf details, but a strong signal for heavy rainfall totals day 3
    across this area.

    Oravec

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4jJlhDsNQjMJqUm2nsMGnvX7UqlG3__yioIrLLz_tTI3= vpWwll0tSPkoJNuXNAJ9FYnM8OhBnebKAJle2t01KjpRrb4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4jJlhDsNQjMJqUm2nsMGnvX7UqlG3__yioIrLLz_tTI3= vpWwll0tSPkoJNuXNAJ9FYnM8OhBnebKAJle2t01nlxtFAU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4jJlhDsNQjMJqUm2nsMGnvX7UqlG3__yioIrLLz_tTI3= vpWwll0tSPkoJNuXNAJ9FYnM8OhBnebKAJle2t010rEsBPo$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sun May 24 15:55:40 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 241555
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1155 AM EDT Sun May 24 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL=20
    GULF COAST INTO NORTH GEORGIA AND ACROSS THE UPPER OHIO VALLEY...

    16Z Update...

    The forecast overall remains on track with some tweaks made to=20
    reflect the latest trends on 12Z CAMs. Satellite shows mostly=20
    cloudy and overcast skies across a large portion of the eastern=20
    third of the CONUS. Large sums of anomalous moisture remain in=20
    place in the South and into both the OH Valley and Mid-Atlantic.=20
    However, it is where there are breaks in the clouds that will=20
    promote a more unstable atmosphere over soils that are highly=20
    saturated (WV, eastern OH, western PA) or near the remnant MCV in=20 approaching central AL that remain the focus as showing the best=20
    potential for scattered areas of flash flooding. The Slight Risk in
    the OH Valley was expanded south more into eastern KY where 12Z=20
    HREF probabilities show low chances (20-35%) for localized rainfall
    totals >3". Some zones in eastern KY sport 3-hr FFGs <2", and NASA
    SPoRT-LIS 0-10cm soil percentiles are >80% in some cases.=20

    12Z soundings are painting a busy picture in the Mid-South and Ohio
    Valley. The BMX soundings show a weak capping inversion with over=20
    1,500 MUCAPE and a 1.87" PW ahead of the approaching MCV. Farther=20
    north, the BNA sounding is highly saturated and shows an even=20
    weaker capping inversion. This air-mass in the TN Valley will=20
    advect north and east into the OH Valley this afternoon, setting=20
    the stage for highly efficient thunderstorms from central TN to as=20
    far north and east as the central Appalachians and western PA.=20
    Strong differential heating is also underway in central GA and=20
    southern SC along the stationary front, which will once again be=20
    another trigger for additional strong thunderstorms this afternoon.
    Latest 12Z HREF brought QPF up in the windward side of the central
    Appalachians in eastern WV, with some low-to-moderate chance=20
    probabilities (30-50%) for >3" of rainfall this afternoon and=20
    evening. There are also moderate chance probabilities (40-60%) for=20
    rainfall totals >3" from the SC/GA border to the coastal plain of=20
    NC. Localized flash flooding is possible in these areas this=20
    afternoon and evening.

    ...Central TX...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced for the midday update. 12Z HREF
    probabilities show low chances (10-30%) for localized rainfall
    totals topping 3" this afternoon and lingering into this evening.
    There is a remnant mid-upper level circulation over the heart of TX
    that coincides within an area seeing strong surface-based heating
    and PWs approaching 1.5". Storm motions will be very slow with
    ECMWF area-averaged soundings showing mean cloud-layer winds within
    the Marginal Risk area less than 5 kts. The lack of shear should
    make these storms more pulse like in nature and shorter in duration,
    but given the saturated soils in the region (NASA SPoRT-LIS shows=20
    80 percentile 0-10cm soil moisture the farther south you go in=20
    central TX) and these storms potentially packing a punch in a brief
    period of time (1-hr HREF PMM precip rates up to 1.5"), the=20
    potential exists for isolated cases of flash flooding this=20
    afternoon and evening.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    The well defined MCV moving from southeast LA into far southern MS
    early this morning expected to continue to push northward day 1
    across central AL and into north GA. While the organized convection
    associated with this MCV may weaken early day 1, there is potential
    for convection to re-fire ahead of this MCV later this afternoon
    in the axis of much above average PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard
    deviations above the mean expected to stretch from the Central Gulf
    Coast, northeastward through the Southern to Central Appalachians,
    Southeast and Mid-Atlantic. We added a slight risk from central AL
    into north GA to account for this convective potential.

    Farther to the southwest...we made some significant changes to the
    previous slight risk area across southern MS and southern LA. We
    suppressed the slight, keeping it just for far southeast LA. The
    best instability in the wake of the northeastward moving MCV will
    be over the northern Gulf, suggesting the heaviest precip with the
    next round of convection also being offshore. We kept the New
    Orleans metro area in the slight as model consensus is for a narrow
    axis of heavy rains to extend into far eastern LA.

    Across FL...the marginal risk was extended south into portions of
    north central to southwest FL. Model consensus is for another round
    of active convection forming Sunday afternoon in a general north to
    south axis. Slow moving cells will again have potential for produce
    locally heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues. There
    will be potential for overlap of yesterday's heavy rainfall amounts
    with Sunday afternoon's. The biggest runoff threat will continue to
    be in more urbanized regions.


    Over the Upper Ohio Valley...added a slight risk area from
    northeast KY into eastern OH, northwest WV and far southwest PA.
    Both the HREF and RRFS are showing fairly high probabilities,
    25-50%+ for 3 hour precip amounts exceeding FFG values this
    afternoon into early evening. Favorable right entrance region jet
    dynamics in the above mentioned axis of anomalous PW values will
    support potential for heavy precip and localized runoff issues.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...


    An axis of anomalous PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard deviations
    above the mean, will persist from the Central Gulf Coast,
    northeastward across the South, Southeast and Southern Mid-Atlantic
    day 2. The closed low over the eastern portions of the Southern
    Plains toward the Lower MS Valley will move only very slowly north northeastward day 2, keeping a favorable broadly upper diffluent
    pattern to its east in this anomalous PW axis. This will support
    widespread scattered convection and potential for widespread
    moderate to heavy precip totals. There is a typical amount of model
    qpf spread, but consensus for potential for widespread moderate to
    heavy totals. There will likely be overlap between the day 1 and
    day 2 heavy precip areas, although low confidence at the moment
    with details. No significant changes made to the previous outlooks
    areas. Minor adjustments made to fit the latest model qpf
    consensus.

    Oravec

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND ACROSS THE SOUTH
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    Not a lot of changes to the wet pattern from the Central Gulf
    Coast, northeastward across the South, Southeast and Southern
    Appalachians. The axis of anomalous PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard
    deviations above the mean, will persist across this area in a
    region of persistent south southwesterly mid to upper level flow on
    the east side of the weak mid to upper low moving north through the
    Lower MS Valley. Expect another day of widespread scattered
    convection and widespread moderate to heavy rainfall totals. With
    not much changes overall to the large scale pattern, a slight risk
    was maintained in a similar region as during the day 2 period.
    There may again be overlap in heavy rain areas day 3 with day 1 and
    2, which may lead to a upgrade in threat categories in future
    issuances.

    Mid to upper level troffing developing across the Southwest during
    day 2 will be pushing height falls into the Southern Plains day 3.
    Increasingly active convection likely across the Southern Plains
    day 3, with model consensus for widespread moderate to heavy
    totals. Not a lot of changes made to the previous slight risk area
    over south central TX. This region has seen several rounds of
    heavy precip over the past week, lowering FFG values and increasing
    threat of additional runoff issues. There is a lot of spread with
    qpf details, but a strong signal for heavy rainfall totals day 3
    across this area.

    Oravec

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_N0_Q88w8JkgxuS4zW8VYCDgtbuTGJYnxm3e30GWyBOi= olHB2TX30h2yWqS2o-xwhEhlSgAuHktwEYBsvLEPZi31Kzc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_N0_Q88w8JkgxuS4zW8VYCDgtbuTGJYnxm3e30GWyBOi= olHB2TX30h2yWqS2o-xwhEhlSgAuHktwEYBsvLEPwaIMQSQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_N0_Q88w8JkgxuS4zW8VYCDgtbuTGJYnxm3e30GWyBOi= olHB2TX30h2yWqS2o-xwhEhlSgAuHktwEYBsvLEP8JNHs6Q$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sun May 24 20:00:28 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 242000
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 PM EDT Sun May 24 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun May 24 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST INTO NORTH GEORGIA AND ACROSS THE UPPER OHIO VALLEY...

    16Z Update...

    The forecast overall remains on track with some tweaks made to
    reflect the latest trends on 12Z CAMs. Satellite shows mostly
    cloudy and overcast skies across a large portion of the eastern
    third of the CONUS. Large sums of anomalous moisture remain in
    place in the South and into both the OH Valley and Mid-Atlantic.
    However, it is where there are breaks in the clouds that will
    promote a more unstable atmosphere over soils that are highly
    saturated (WV, eastern OH, western PA) or near the remnant MCV in
    approaching central AL that remain the focus as showing the best
    potential for scattered areas of flash flooding. The Slight Risk in
    the OH Valley was expanded south more into eastern KY where 12Z
    HREF probabilities show low chances (20-35%) for localized rainfall
    totals >3". Some zones in eastern KY sport 3-hr FFGs <2", and NASA
    SPoRT-LIS 0-10cm soil percentiles are >80% in some cases.

    12Z soundings are painting a busy picture in the Mid-South and Ohio
    Valley. The BMX soundings show a weak capping inversion with over
    1,500 MUCAPE and a 1.87" PW ahead of the approaching MCV. Farther
    north, the BNA sounding is highly saturated and shows an even
    weaker capping inversion. This air-mass in the TN Valley will
    advect north and east into the OH Valley this afternoon, setting
    the stage for highly efficient thunderstorms from central TN to as
    far north and east as the central Appalachians and western PA.
    Strong differential heating is also underway in central GA and
    southern SC along the stationary front, which will once again be
    another trigger for additional strong thunderstorms this afternoon.
    Latest 12Z HREF brought QPF up in the windward side of the central
    Appalachians in eastern WV, with some low-to-moderate chance
    probabilities (30-50%) for >3" of rainfall this afternoon and
    evening. There are also moderate chance probabilities (40-60%) for
    rainfall totals >3" from the SC/GA border to the coastal plain of
    NC. Localized flash flooding is possible in these areas this
    afternoon and evening.

    ...Central TX...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced for the midday update. 12Z HREF
    probabilities show low chances (10-30%) for localized rainfall
    totals topping 3" this afternoon and lingering into this evening.
    There is a remnant mid-upper level circulation over the heart of TX
    that coincides within an area seeing strong surface-based heating
    and PWs approaching 1.5". Storm motions will be very slow with
    ECMWF area-averaged soundings showing mean cloud-layer winds within
    the Marginal Risk area less than 5 kts. The lack of shear should
    make these storms more pulse like in nature and shorter in duration,
    but given the saturated soils in the region (NASA SPoRT-LIS shows
    80 percentile 0-10cm soil moisture the farther south you go in
    central TX) and these storms potentially packing a punch in a brief
    period of time (1-hr HREF PMM precip rates up to 1.5"), the
    potential exists for isolated cases of flash flooding this
    afternoon and evening.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    The well defined MCV moving from southeast LA into far southern MS
    early this morning expected to continue to push northward day 1
    across central AL and into north GA. While the organized convection
    associated with this MCV may weaken early day 1, there is potential
    for convection to re-fire ahead of this MCV later this afternoon
    in the axis of much above average PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard
    deviations above the mean expected to stretch from the Central Gulf
    Coast, northeastward through the Southern to Central Appalachians,
    Southeast and Mid-Atlantic. We added a slight risk from central AL
    into north GA to account for this convective potential.

    Farther to the southwest...we made some significant changes to the
    previous slight risk area across southern MS and southern LA. We
    suppressed the slight, keeping it just for far southeast LA. The
    best instability in the wake of the northeastward moving MCV will
    be over the northern Gulf, suggesting the heaviest precip with the
    next round of convection also being offshore. We kept the New
    Orleans metro area in the slight as model consensus is for a narrow
    axis of heavy rains to extend into far eastern LA.

    Across FL...the marginal risk was extended south into portions of
    north central to southwest FL. Model consensus is for another round
    of active convection forming Sunday afternoon in a general north to
    south axis. Slow moving cells will again have potential for produce
    locally heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues. There
    will be potential for overlap of yesterday's heavy rainfall amounts
    with Sunday afternoon's. The biggest runoff threat will continue to
    be in more urbanized regions.


    Over the Upper Ohio Valley...added a slight risk area from
    northeast KY into eastern OH, northwest WV and far southwest PA.
    Both the HREF and RRFS are showing fairly high probabilities,
    25-50%+ for 3 hour precip amounts exceeding FFG values this
    afternoon into early evening. Favorable right entrance region jet
    dynamics in the above mentioned axis of anomalous PW values will
    support potential for heavy precip and localized runoff issues.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    20Z Update...

    Some adjustments were made to the eastern periphery of both the
    inherited Marginal and Slight Risks in the South with the latest
    QPF being a little wetter in southern AL, southern GA, and the FL
    Panhandle. This aligns well with where the greatest source of
    instability is likely to be.=20

    Biggest change was to introduce a Marginal Risk in eastern NM and=20
    western TX. ECMWF SATs show a narrow 200 kg/m/s southerly IVT in=20
    advance of the approaching upper low over AZ. PWs jump to 1" over=20
    the plains of eastern NM, but approach 0.75" in the Sacramento,=20
    Guadalupe, and Davis Mountains. All PWs in these areas are likely=20
    to surpass the 90th climatological percentile. On top of the=20
    synoptic scale forcing and ample moisture, sufficient MUCAPE >500=20
    J/kg will support rainfall rates that could range between=20
    1-1.5"/hr. There is a Flood Watch for areas downstream of the South
    Fork and Seven Cabins burn scars in the Sacramento, indicating the
    flash flood potential that could occur near burn scars as well.
    Latest HREF probabilities do show low chance probabilities (20-35%)
    for rainfall totals >2" within the Marginal Risk area, particularly
    just east of the Sacramento Mountains.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    An axis of anomalous PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard deviations
    above the mean, will persist from the Central Gulf Coast,
    northeastward across the South, Southeast and Southern Mid-Atlantic
    day 2. The closed low over the eastern portions of the Southern
    Plains toward the Lower MS Valley will move only very slowly north northeastward day 2, keeping a favorable broadly upper diffluent
    pattern to its east in this anomalous PW axis. This will support
    widespread scattered convection and potential for widespread
    moderate to heavy precip totals. There is a typical amount of model
    qpf spread, but consensus for potential for widespread moderate to
    heavy totals. There will likely be overlap between the day 1 and
    day 2 heavy precip areas, although low confidence at the moment
    with details. No significant changes made to the previous outlooks
    areas. Minor adjustments made to fit the latest model qpf
    consensus.

    Oravec

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND ACROSS THE SOUTH
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    20Z Update...

    The rationale with the inherited Slight Risk in the Southern Plains
    remains in good shape. There was an increased number of model
    members that showed Excessive Rainfall potential just out ahead of
    the negatively-tilting 200-500mb trough axis ejecting out of NM.
    This places more of northwest TX (encroaching upon the TX
    Panhandle) within an axis strong forcing aloft within a narrow
    corridor of >1.25" PWs, which is above the 90th climatological
    percentile. Latest guidance also show the potential for up to 1,000
    J/kg of MUCAPE as far north as the TX Panhandle. Some portions of
    West TX, even as far north as the Cap Rock, have dealt with
    localized flash flooding in recent days, and sensitive soils in the
    area are unlikely to recover fast enough for a setup that could
    feature 1.5-2.0"/hr rainfall rates at their peak. For these
    reasons, the Slight Risk was extended farther north into northwest
    TX.

    The setup continues to be one that residents in the TX Hill Country
    will want to monitor in the coming days. While there remains some
    uncertainty in the exact location of the heaviest precipitation,=20
    rainfall rates topping 2"/hr are possible as far south as Laredo
    and south of San Antonio. Soils remain most sensitive along the
    I-35 corridor on north to the Edwards Plateau. The flash flood=20
    threat could start as early as Tuesday afternoon, but latest=20
    ensemble guidance is indicating the heaviest rainfall rates are=20
    favored to occur overnight Tuesday.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    Not a lot of changes to the wet pattern from the Central Gulf
    Coast, northeastward across the South, Southeast and Southern
    Appalachians. The axis of anomalous PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard
    deviations above the mean, will persist across this area in a
    region of persistent south southwesterly mid to upper level flow on
    the east side of the weak mid to upper low moving north through the
    Lower MS Valley. Expect another day of widespread scattered
    convection and widespread moderate to heavy rainfall totals. With
    not much changes overall to the large scale pattern, a slight risk
    was maintained in a similar region as during the day 2 period.
    There may again be overlap in heavy rain areas day 3 with day 1 and
    2, which may lead to a upgrade in threat categories in future
    issuances.

    Mid to upper level troffing developing across the Southwest during
    day 2 will be pushing height falls into the Southern Plains day 3.
    Increasingly active convection likely across the Southern Plains
    day 3, with model consensus for widespread moderate to heavy
    totals. Not a lot of changes made to the previous slight risk area
    over south central TX. This region has seen several rounds of
    heavy precip over the past week, lowering FFG values and increasing
    threat of additional runoff issues. There is a lot of spread with
    qpf details, but a strong signal for heavy rainfall totals day 3
    across this area.

    Oravec

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_yb6RxxStd-3bbrX2eP2Nr2Vasu_JF684PyED86wPN9Y= DOUg9_Pxu6cO_hSvGsTj82nVgBI-EXA8tquuzpK3DxW3G1g$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_yb6RxxStd-3bbrX2eP2Nr2Vasu_JF684PyED86wPN9Y= DOUg9_Pxu6cO_hSvGsTj82nVgBI-EXA8tquuzpK3jMGfA70$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_yb6RxxStd-3bbrX2eP2Nr2Vasu_JF684PyED86wPN9Y= DOUg9_Pxu6cO_hSvGsTj82nVgBI-EXA8tquuzpK3oeNkH1k$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Mon May 25 00:53:50 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 250053
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    853 PM EDT Sun May 24 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Mon May 25 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM PARTS OF THE
    GULF COAST INTO THE SOUTHEAST US AND ACROSS THE UPPER OHIO=20
    VALLEY...

    01Z Update...

    Changes were made to each of the Slight Risk areas but the changes
    were fairly modest and done to better reflect trends in the radar
    and satellite imagery. The primary threat overnight looks to be in
    parts of the Upper Ohio Valley, parts of the Southeast US and=20
    to a lesser extent across portions of Texas. Over the eastern part
    of the country, Low and mid level flow was tapping deep moisture=20
    and drawing that moisture where soils have become saturated. In=20
    these areas...the amount of additional rainfall needed to renew=20
    flooding or result in new flooding can be realized is fairly=20
    minimal. In Florida...some overlap between areas of heavy rainfall
    on Saturday and the where additional rainfall may occur later this
    evening suggests the threat of excessive rainfall will linger into
    the late evening hours.

    On-going convection over Texas should be tapering off by
    late evening. Until then...there is a chance that sufficiently high
    rainfall rates will occur to challenge the 1- and 3-hour flash
    flood guidance before the threat wanes.

    Bann

    16Z Update...

    The forecast overall remains on track with some tweaks made to
    reflect the latest trends on 12Z CAMs. Satellite shows mostly
    cloudy and overcast skies across a large portion of the eastern
    third of the CONUS. Large sums of anomalous moisture remain in
    place in the South and into both the OH Valley and Mid-Atlantic.
    However, it is where there are breaks in the clouds that will
    promote a more unstable atmosphere over soils that are highly
    saturated (WV, eastern OH, western PA) or near the remnant MCV in
    approaching central AL that remain the focus as showing the best
    potential for scattered areas of flash flooding. The Slight Risk in
    the OH Valley was expanded south more into eastern KY where 12Z
    HREF probabilities show low chances (20-35%) for localized rainfall
    totals >3". Some zones in eastern KY sport 3-hr FFGs <2", and NASA
    SPoRT-LIS 0-10cm soil percentiles are >80% in some cases.

    12Z soundings are painting a busy picture in the Mid-South and Ohio
    Valley. The BMX soundings show a weak capping inversion with over
    1,500 MUCAPE and a 1.87" PW ahead of the approaching MCV. Farther
    north, the BNA sounding is highly saturated and shows an even
    weaker capping inversion. This air-mass in the TN Valley will
    advect north and east into the OH Valley this afternoon, setting
    the stage for highly efficient thunderstorms from central TN to as
    far north and east as the central Appalachians and western PA.
    Strong differential heating is also underway in central GA and
    southern SC along the stationary front, which will once again be
    another trigger for additional strong thunderstorms this afternoon.
    Latest 12Z HREF brought QPF up in the windward side of the central
    Appalachians in eastern WV, with some low-to-moderate chance
    probabilities (30-50%) for >3" of rainfall this afternoon and
    evening. There are also moderate chance probabilities (40-60%) for
    rainfall totals >3" from the SC/GA border to the coastal plain of
    NC. Localized flash flooding is possible in these areas this
    afternoon and evening.

    ...Central TX...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced for the midday update. 12Z HREF
    probabilities show low chances (10-30%) for localized rainfall
    totals topping 3" this afternoon and lingering into this evening.
    There is a remnant mid-upper level circulation over the heart of TX
    that coincides within an area seeing strong surface-based heating
    and PWs approaching 1.5". Storm motions will be very slow with
    ECMWF area-averaged soundings showing mean cloud-layer winds within
    the Marginal Risk area less than 5 kts. The lack of shear should
    make these storms more pulse like in nature and shorter in duration,
    but given the saturated soils in the region (NASA SPoRT-LIS shows
    80 percentile 0-10cm soil moisture the farther south you go in
    central TX) and these storms potentially packing a punch in a brief
    period of time (1-hr HREF PMM precip rates up to 1.5"), the
    potential exists for isolated cases of flash flooding this
    afternoon and evening.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    The well defined MCV moving from southeast LA into far southern MS
    early this morning expected to continue to push northward day 1
    across central AL and into north GA. While the organized convection
    associated with this MCV may weaken early day 1, there is potential
    for convection to re-fire ahead of this MCV later this afternoon
    in the axis of much above average PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard
    deviations above the mean expected to stretch from the Central Gulf
    Coast, northeastward through the Southern to Central Appalachians,
    Southeast and Mid-Atlantic. We added a slight risk from central AL
    into north GA to account for this convective potential.

    Farther to the southwest...we made some significant changes to the
    previous slight risk area across southern MS and southern LA. We
    suppressed the slight, keeping it just for far southeast LA. The
    best instability in the wake of the northeastward moving MCV will
    be over the northern Gulf, suggesting the heaviest precip with the
    next round of convection also being offshore. We kept the New
    Orleans metro area in the slight as model consensus is for a narrow
    axis of heavy rains to extend into far eastern LA.

    Across FL...the marginal risk was extended south into portions of
    north central to southwest FL. Model consensus is for another round
    of active convection forming Sunday afternoon in a general north to
    south axis. Slow moving cells will again have potential for produce
    locally heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues. There
    will be potential for overlap of yesterday's heavy rainfall amounts
    with Sunday afternoon's. The biggest runoff threat will continue to
    be in more urbanized regions.


    Over the Upper Ohio Valley...added a slight risk area from
    northeast KY into eastern OH, northwest WV and far southwest PA.
    Both the HREF and RRFS are showing fairly high probabilities,
    25-50%+ for 3 hour precip amounts exceeding FFG values this
    afternoon into early evening. Favorable right entrance region jet
    dynamics in the above mentioned axis of anomalous PW values will
    support potential for heavy precip and localized runoff issues.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    20Z Update...

    Some adjustments were made to the eastern periphery of both the
    inherited Marginal and Slight Risks in the South with the latest
    QPF being a little wetter in southern AL, southern GA, and the FL
    Panhandle. This aligns well with where the greatest source of
    instability is likely to be.

    Biggest change was to introduce a Marginal Risk in eastern NM and
    western TX. ECMWF SATs show a narrow 200 kg/m/s southerly IVT in
    advance of the approaching upper low over AZ. PWs jump to 1" over
    the plains of eastern NM, but approach 0.75" in the Sacramento,
    Guadalupe, and Davis Mountains. All PWs in these areas are likely
    to surpass the 90th climatological percentile. On top of the
    synoptic scale forcing and ample moisture, sufficient MUCAPE >500
    J/kg will support rainfall rates that could range between
    1-1.5"/hr. There is a Flood Watch for areas downstream of the South
    Fork and Seven Cabins burn scars in the Sacramento, indicating the
    flash flood potential that could occur near burn scars as well.
    Latest HREF probabilities do show low chance probabilities (20-35%)
    for rainfall totals >2" within the Marginal Risk area, particularly
    just east of the Sacramento Mountains.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    An axis of anomalous PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard deviations
    above the mean, will persist from the Central Gulf Coast,
    northeastward across the South, Southeast and Southern Mid-Atlantic
    day 2. The closed low over the eastern portions of the Southern
    Plains toward the Lower MS Valley will move only very slowly north northeastward day 2, keeping a favorable broadly upper diffluent
    pattern to its east in this anomalous PW axis. This will support
    widespread scattered convection and potential for widespread
    moderate to heavy precip totals. There is a typical amount of model
    qpf spread, but consensus for potential for widespread moderate to
    heavy totals. There will likely be overlap between the day 1 and
    day 2 heavy precip areas, although low confidence at the moment
    with details. No significant changes made to the previous outlooks
    areas. Minor adjustments made to fit the latest model qpf
    consensus.

    Oravec

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND ACROSS THE SOUTH
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    20Z Update...

    The rationale with the inherited Slight Risk in the Southern Plains
    remains in good shape. There was an increased number of model
    members that showed Excessive Rainfall potential just out ahead of
    the negatively-tilting 200-500mb trough axis ejecting out of NM.
    This places more of northwest TX (encroaching upon the TX
    Panhandle) within an axis strong forcing aloft within a narrow
    corridor of >1.25" PWs, which is above the 90th climatological
    percentile. Latest guidance also show the potential for up to 1,000
    J/kg of MUCAPE as far north as the TX Panhandle. Some portions of
    West TX, even as far north as the Cap Rock, have dealt with
    localized flash flooding in recent days, and sensitive soils in the
    area are unlikely to recover fast enough for a setup that could
    feature 1.5-2.0"/hr rainfall rates at their peak. For these
    reasons, the Slight Risk was extended farther north into northwest
    TX.

    The setup continues to be one that residents in the TX Hill Country
    will want to monitor in the coming days. While there remains some
    uncertainty in the exact location of the heaviest precipitation,
    rainfall rates topping 2"/hr are possible as far south as Laredo
    and south of San Antonio. Soils remain most sensitive along the
    I-35 corridor on north to the Edwards Plateau. The flash flood
    threat could start as early as Tuesday afternoon, but latest
    ensemble guidance is indicating the heaviest rainfall rates are
    favored to occur overnight Tuesday.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    Not a lot of changes to the wet pattern from the Central Gulf
    Coast, northeastward across the South, Southeast and Southern
    Appalachians. The axis of anomalous PW values, 2 to 2.5+ standard
    deviations above the mean, will persist across this area in a
    region of persistent south southwesterly mid to upper level flow on
    the east side of the weak mid to upper low moving north through the
    Lower MS Valley. Expect another day of widespread scattered
    convection and widespread moderate to heavy rainfall totals. With
    not much changes overall to the large scale pattern, a slight risk
    was maintained in a similar region as during the day 2 period.
    There may again be overlap in heavy rain areas day 3 with day 1 and
    2, which may lead to a upgrade in threat categories in future
    issuances.

    Mid to upper level troffing developing across the Southwest during
    day 2 will be pushing height falls into the Southern Plains day 3.
    Increasingly active convection likely across the Southern Plains
    day 3, with model consensus for widespread moderate to heavy
    totals. Not a lot of changes made to the previous slight risk area
    over south central TX. This region has seen several rounds of
    heavy precip over the past week, lowering FFG values and increasing
    threat of additional runoff issues. There is a lot of spread with
    qpf details, but a strong signal for heavy rainfall totals day 3
    across this area.

    Oravec

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7FQuUv6GetMa5s6I5sGF9_qyhwxjknlsJCC_jrLMuBnl= U2IjXKpmQBu2JeB3zmTRynNnoFCOdQhxHtSB57gq19KecVg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7FQuUv6GetMa5s6I5sGF9_qyhwxjknlsJCC_jrLMuBnl= U2IjXKpmQBu2JeB3zmTRynNnoFCOdQhxHtSB57gqYbfY-w0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7FQuUv6GetMa5s6I5sGF9_qyhwxjknlsJCC_jrLMuBnl= U2IjXKpmQBu2JeB3zmTRynNnoFCOdQhxHtSB57gqbvoG1RY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Mon May 25 07:50:17 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 250750
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    350 AM EDT Mon May 25 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    ...Gulf Coast to Southern Appalachians...

    Stagnant upper level pattern across much of the CONUS is allowing
    for a continued confluent axis situated from the Central Gulf Coast
    up through the Mid Atlantic states with ample moisture comprised of
    PWAT anomalies running between +1 to +2.5 deviations above normal
    within the aforementioned zone. Prevailing southerly flow in-of the
    Central Gulf Coast will allow for the advection of yet another
    mid-level pulse out of the Gulf by the beginning of the period with
    sights on southeast LA through the Southeast U.S. Increasing instances
    of heavy rainfall from convective development spurred by the
    disturbance and deep moisture presence will invoke yet another
    round of flash flood potential, mainly within those urbanized zones
    littered across southeast LA up through southern MS, much of AL,
    and eventually into GA by the afternoon time frame. Instability
    parameters are well-within the mode to drive heavy rain prospects
    with many of the forecast point soundings indicating appreciable
    tall-skinny CAPE outputs historically prevalent for heavy rainfall
    potential and enhanced rates.=20

    00z HREF neighborhood probs for >3" are running between 40-80% in=20
    the corridor expanding from New Orleans to the I-20 corridor in AL=20
    with the bullseye focused over southwestern AL towards the MS=20
    border. This zone has been consistently signaled as the primary=20
    focus of heavier precipitation in-part to multiple convective=20
    episodes in the period that could very well put down 3-5+" of=20
    rainfall prior to the end of the D1. Despite higher FFG's locally,=20
    rainfall rates between 2-3"/hr with higher intra-hour rates are=20
    likely given the PWAT's between 1.8-2.1" over the course of the D1,
    a good proxy for those higher end totals locally, especially in=20
    any repeatedly impacted areas. This environment is respectable for
    the time of year and regional instability parameters are more than
    sufficient for even scattered heavy cell cores focused away from
    the shortwave migration anticipated. All CAMs have some instances
    of heavy rain across the Southeast U.S. extending to as far north
    as the Tennessee Valley and as far east as southeast GA into
    portions of the SC Low Country. A SLGT risk remains forecast for
    the area of southeast LA up through the Southern Appalachians and
    neighboring Piedmont in SC and all zones in-between. MRGL risk
    expands away on either side encompassing a broad area outside the
    SLGT.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Remnant quasi-stationary front across the Central to Southern Mid
    Atlantic will slowly lift north through the day Monday with
    increasing moisture profiles being advected from southerly low to
    mid-level flow around the northern periphery of a ridge in the
    Western Atlantic. PWAT anomalies will shove closer to +2 to +3
    deviations across a good portion of VA, especially areas south of
    I-66 down to the VA Tidewater where PWATs are forecast to jump
    above 2" as expressed via multiple global ensemble outputs. This
    would set up a pretty deep warm cloud layer sufficient for higher
    rainfall rates for any convective pulses that arise during the
    forecast. The proximity of the front will be a focal point for
    enhanced low-level convergence which can be seen very well within
    the theta_E and omega cross-sections off both the 00z NAM Nest and
    HRRR runs this evening. Pretty much all guidance has a narrow, yet
    prolific corridor of heavy rain of convective origin aligned near
    and just south of the front by later this afternoon and evening
    with a steady stream of rainfall likely to cause some localized
    areas of 2-4+" in the time frame of impact. Pending the model of
    preference, some hit the corridor from Richmond to Hampton Roads
    pretty hard while others are just a bit north, closer to the
    northern neck of the Tidewater. In any case, either pathway would
    be sufficient for flash flood prospects, even with the ongoing
    drought in the area. Rainfall of 1-2"/hr will be likely in the
    heavier cells with even some stronger cores capable of brief
    2-3"/hr periods when you factor the anomalous deep moisture layer
    in place.=20

    If it was not for such elevated FFG's, this would likely be a=20
    higher risk, but for now, maintained continuity with a MRGL, but=20
    will have to monitor for exact placement of the repeating=20
    convection as that could be enough to tip the scales to a focused=20
    higher risk, especially if the immediate Tidewater is impacted as=20
    that area has historically been flash flood prone due to more=20
    sprawling urbanization and poor drainage capabilities.=20

    ...Texas into New Mexico...

    Couple of areas of interest across the Southwestern U.S. into the
    Southern Plains for Monday. The first is within the bounds of a
    remnant MCV that continues to cause issues across Central and
    Northern TX as it drifts over the northern Hill Country, west of
    I-35 between San Angelo and Fort Worth. Spells of heavy rain
    continue to plague this zone with cells popping up over the course
    of the evening as focused low-level convergence and available
    moisture aids in these scattered, slow-moving thunderstorms capable
    of multiple inches of rainfall as they drift over the area. CAMs
    are split on the handling of this feature heading through the
    morning and afternoon today, but the models that do maintain
    organization of the MCV tend to have another scattered to
    widespread convective enhancement during the diurnal instability
    max leading to pockets of enhanced rainfall between 2-4" in wake of
    the cells. Modest neighborhood probs from the 00z HREF for >2"
    (20-40%) exist in this relative corridor of the Concho Valley into north-central Hill Country between San Angelo and Fort Worth. With
    the MCV likely to exhibit little forward propagation, areas that
    were hit this evening could see more in the way of convection this
    afternoon, so long as the MCV holds together and doesn't dissipate
    as indicated via some guidance. Considering the variables at play
    and the potential to be a sneakier setup overall, wanted to gauge a conservative approach and add a MRGL risk to the area referenced
    above to cover for the threat.

    Further west, we have a different setup that will induced by a
    favorably developing upper trough/closed-low scenario coming out of
    a negatively tilted shortwave trough ejecting out of the Desert
    Southwest during the period. Height-falls are all but certain
    within all model output with the shortwave progression likely
    develop something more formidable as it encroaches on NM by later
    this afternoon. Enhanced upper forcing and well-defined surface
    trough bisecting far western TX up through eastern NM and the
    divide will provide the necessary focused ascent features capable
    for scattered to widespread convective development during peak
    diurnal instability and beyond as the upper forcing pattern becomes
    most favorable by the evening. Probabilities for rainfall rates
    1"/hr remain highest within the confines of the surface trough as
    indicated in the latest 00z HREF prob fields. The Sacramento
    Mountains, adjacent High Plains of eastern NM down into the Upper
    Trans Pecos are the most favored areas of heavy rainfall with
    secondary maxima plausible in far west TX across the terrain in the
    Guadalupe Mountains down to portions of the Davis and Delaware
    Mountains in Southwest TX. The previous MRGL risk was expanded to
    include more of the area comprised of at least modest probabilities
    for >1" of precip, as well the more favored areas for rates >1"/hr,
    at times during the period of interest.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF=20
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND CENTRAL TO WEST TEXAS...

    ...Texas...

    The previous D1 evolution will translate into a greater convective
    regime as we head into D2 as the negatively-tilted trough axis
    migrates further east into the Southern High Plains with a broad
    diffluent axis pointed downstream of the mean trough. Increased
    large scale ascent will become fixated over much of west TX,
    spreading through the High Plains as widespread shower and
    thunderstorm activity takes shape during the afternoon Tuesday. A
    plethora of convective activity with relatively slow to modest
    propagation speeds will translate into bouts of heavier rainfall
    across the southern half of the TX Panhandle down through the
    Permian Basin, western Rolling Plains, Concho Valley, and Stockton
    Plateau leading to widespread 1+" totals with embedded 2-3" spots=20
    given the convective regime. This setup is classic for scattered
    flash flood instances, especially in those more urban zones and
    areas of high low water crossing concentrations that are littered
    over the Southern High Plains in west TX. The 00z HREF signal for
    the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period is very aggressive for at least 2" in
    spots over the Permian Basin and adjacent Caprock, including the Lubbock/Midland urban centers. Rainfall will likely be winding down
    in these areas, but the setup will proceed to be more of a
    nocturnal issue as we pivot our attention south over the Big Bend
    and central RGV as a strong mid-level vorticity maxima ejects out
    of Coahuila Tuesday evening and slides east into the Edwards=20
    Plateau and neighboring Hill Country.=20

    There's a general consensus on this setup across guidance with some
    degree of broad heavy convection migrating into the above areas
    enticing a dousing of rainfall as the pattern evolves overnight.
    We'll see the introduction of a LLJ only add to the low-level
    convergence regime spurred on by the expected evolution likely
    allowing quite the rainfall signature in wake of the disturbance's
    trajectory. US57 to I-10 is the prospectus area of interest, which
    includes much of southern and central Hill Country with the very
    end of the period likely to see some of the activity make it
    towards the I-35 corridor near San Antonio. With the time frame
    outside of the CAMs range, greater details aren't available for the
    maximum potential in the forecast, but just given the current
    environment conditions, there could be some localized areas >3" in
    this second round of enhanced convection this period. The SLGT risk
    from the previous forecast remains in effect, but will be
    monitoring for any opportunity of a targeted higher risk, or at
    least a higher-end threshold of the current SLGT.=20

    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...

    Confluent area on the western edge of a broad Western Atlantic
    ridge and a trough centered over the Southern Plains will continue
    for at least one more period with another round of convergence and
    heavy convection focused over the Central Gulf Coast to areas
    inland between southeast MS into the southern half of AL. This area
    will have seen multiple days of impact from heavier convection to
    begin with, so some priming of the soils could enact a greater
    flash flood potential in general. This setup seems to be less
    favored compared to the previous days, but still the guidance
    remains favorable for 2-4" locally in the aforementioned areas
    which would be enough to cause some scattered flash flood concerns
    in those heavier cells that crop up. The general consensus seems to
    target southern AL as the main focus with the area from Biloxi
    over to Mobile and points north as the target of opportunity when
    you assess the HREF blended mean QPF output and associated prob
    fields for the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period. In any case, this is
    still well within the standards of a SLGT risk which was maintained
    from the previous forecast.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE EASTERN
    HALF OF TEXAS, ARKLATEX, AND PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI=20
    VALLEY...

    The broad upper level evolution occurring upstream over the
    Southern Plains will continue to shift east with the large scale
    forcing driving into the eastern half of TX leading to heavy rain
    prospects over the eastern portions of Hill Country, the I-35
    corridor and much of east TX, including the middle and upper TX
    coastal areas. There's still some discrepancy in specifics on where
    the heaviest precip will occur in this setup, but the mean QPF
    output via various ensembles, including the National Blend and
    ensemble bias corrected QPF targets the I-35 corridor over to the
    Lower Mississippi Valley fairly heavily, considering the fact we
    are still at D3. Widespread 1-3" totals are forecast within the=20
    means with the environment favored for heavy precipitation
    basically anywhere over the above areas referenced. A broad SLGT
    risk is in place to encompass the area of potential, however some
    fine tuning is likely to occur as we approach the period,
    especially as we get more CAMs involved and we monitor how the
    upstream pattern is evolving which will be the ultimate player in
    the magnitude of rainfall and where.=20

    Kleebauer=20


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5vooW61LPxNTA-0rBWYxutcGl_LatZ4B4m55FUdt_h4s= qqk0ujyAoMYYcYqd2q2_8dYAvY0zulllZQeBkv8OKhlfMp4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5vooW61LPxNTA-0rBWYxutcGl_LatZ4B4m55FUdt_h4s= qqk0ujyAoMYYcYqd2q2_8dYAvY0zulllZQeBkv8OxEsSSQQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5vooW61LPxNTA-0rBWYxutcGl_LatZ4B4m55FUdt_h4s= qqk0ujyAoMYYcYqd2q2_8dYAvY0zulllZQeBkv8OPuxeBtI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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    --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Mon May 25 15:56:20 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 251556
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1156 AM EDT Mon May 25 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    16Z Update...

    The meteorological rationale provided from night shift remains in
    good shape. Within the large Slight Risk area in the Southeast,=20
    the biggest concern is along the central Gulf Coast and farther=20
    inland into south-central AL. Latest 12Z HREF showed moderate=20
    chance probabilities (40-60%) for rainfall totals >5" from the NOLA
    on north and east into southern MS. Southern AL and the western-
    most portion of the FL Panhandle are also ideally placed within the
    core of the anomalous >500 kg/m/s IVT that most CAMs show keeping=20
    numerous thunderstorms producing 2-3"/hr rainfall rates in the=20
    forecast. NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-10cm soil moisture percentiles are all=20
    over 85%, indicating topsoil in the region will struggle to keep up
    with these Excessive Rainfall rates. Scattered flash flooding is=20
    of greatest concern along the central Gulf Coast this afternoon and
    into this evening, with locally significant flash flooding=20
    possible should pockets of >5" rainfall totals occur.

    In west TX, 12Z HREF and REFS probabilities show that eastern NM
    and central TX are most favored for localized flash flooding (as
    eluded to in the previous discussion), but there are some CAMs=20
    members sporting low chances (10-30%) for >2" of rainfall in West=20
    TX between the two inherited Marginals. Given the messy convective
    setup between the approaching trough to the west and the=20
    stationary cut-off disturbance over central TX, opted to merge the=20
    two Marginals together. In addition, 12Z HREF probabilities showed=20 low-to-moderate chances (30-50%) for additional rainfall totals=20
    along I-35 south of Dallas and low chances (10-20%) for >3" close=20
    to the Austin metro area. The atmosphere may be worked over enough=20
    to keep most thunderstorm activity isolated, but given the=20
    urbanized corridor along I-35 potentially at risk, expanded the=20
    Marginal into these areas for this afternoon and evening.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Gulf Coast to Southern Appalachians...

    Stagnant upper level pattern across much of the CONUS is allowing
    for a continued confluent axis situated from the Central Gulf Coast
    up through the Mid Atlantic states with ample moisture comprised of
    PWAT anomalies running between +1 to +2.5 deviations above normal
    within the aforementioned zone. Prevailing southerly flow in-of the
    Central Gulf Coast will allow for the advection of yet another
    mid-level pulse out of the Gulf by the beginning of the period with
    sights on southeast LA through the Southeast U.S. Increasing instances
    of heavy rainfall from convective development spurred by the
    disturbance and deep moisture presence will invoke yet another
    round of flash flood potential, mainly within those urbanized zones
    littered across southeast LA up through southern MS, much of AL,
    and eventually into GA by the afternoon time frame. Instability
    parameters are well-within the mode to drive heavy rain prospects
    with many of the forecast point soundings indicating appreciable
    tall-skinny CAPE outputs historically prevalent for heavy rainfall
    potential and enhanced rates.

    00z HREF neighborhood probs for >3" are running between 40-80% in
    the corridor expanding from New Orleans to the I-20 corridor in AL
    with the bullseye focused over southwestern AL towards the MS
    border. This zone has been consistently signaled as the primary
    focus of heavier precipitation in-part to multiple convective
    episodes in the period that could very well put down 3-5+" of
    rainfall prior to the end of the D1. Despite higher FFG's locally,
    rainfall rates between 2-3"/hr with higher intra-hour rates are
    likely given the PWAT's between 1.8-2.1" over the course of the D1,
    a good proxy for those higher end totals locally, especially in
    any repeatedly impacted areas. This environment is respectable for
    the time of year and regional instability parameters are more than
    sufficient for even scattered heavy cell cores focused away from
    the shortwave migration anticipated. All CAMs have some instances
    of heavy rain across the Southeast U.S. extending to as far north
    as the Tennessee Valley and as far east as southeast GA into
    portions of the SC Low Country. A SLGT risk remains forecast for
    the area of southeast LA up through the Southern Appalachians and
    neighboring Piedmont in SC and all zones in-between. MRGL risk
    expands away on either side encompassing a broad area outside the
    SLGT.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Remnant quasi-stationary front across the Central to Southern Mid
    Atlantic will slowly lift north through the day Monday with
    increasing moisture profiles being advected from southerly low to
    mid-level flow around the northern periphery of a ridge in the
    Western Atlantic. PWAT anomalies will shove closer to +2 to +3
    deviations across a good portion of VA, especially areas south of
    I-66 down to the VA Tidewater where PWATs are forecast to jump
    above 2" as expressed via multiple global ensemble outputs. This
    would set up a pretty deep warm cloud layer sufficient for higher
    rainfall rates for any convective pulses that arise during the
    forecast. The proximity of the front will be a focal point for
    enhanced low-level convergence which can be seen very well within
    the theta_E and omega cross-sections off both the 00z NAM Nest and
    HRRR runs this evening. Pretty much all guidance has a narrow, yet
    prolific corridor of heavy rain of convective origin aligned near
    and just south of the front by later this afternoon and evening
    with a steady stream of rainfall likely to cause some localized
    areas of 2-4+" in the time frame of impact. Pending the model of
    preference, some hit the corridor from Richmond to Hampton Roads
    pretty hard while others are just a bit north, closer to the
    northern neck of the Tidewater. In any case, either pathway would
    be sufficient for flash flood prospects, even with the ongoing
    drought in the area. Rainfall of 1-2"/hr will be likely in the
    heavier cells with even some stronger cores capable of brief
    2-3"/hr periods when you factor the anomalous deep moisture layer
    in place.

    If it was not for such elevated FFG's, this would likely be a
    higher risk, but for now, maintained continuity with a MRGL, but
    will have to monitor for exact placement of the repeating
    convection as that could be enough to tip the scales to a focused
    higher risk, especially if the immediate Tidewater is impacted as
    that area has historically been flash flood prone due to more
    sprawling urbanization and poor drainage capabilities.

    ...Texas into New Mexico...

    Couple of areas of interest across the Southwestern U.S. into the
    Southern Plains for Monday. The first is within the bounds of a
    remnant MCV that continues to cause issues across Central and
    Northern TX as it drifts over the northern Hill Country, west of
    I-35 between San Angelo and Fort Worth. Spells of heavy rain
    continue to plague this zone with cells popping up over the course
    of the evening as focused low-level convergence and available
    moisture aids in these scattered, slow-moving thunderstorms capable
    of multiple inches of rainfall as they drift over the area. CAMs
    are split on the handling of this feature heading through the
    morning and afternoon today, but the models that do maintain
    organization of the MCV tend to have another scattered to
    widespread convective enhancement during the diurnal instability
    max leading to pockets of enhanced rainfall between 2-4" in wake of
    the cells. Modest neighborhood probs from the 00z HREF for >2"
    (20-40%) exist in this relative corridor of the Concho Valley into north-central Hill Country between San Angelo and Fort Worth. With
    the MCV likely to exhibit little forward propagation, areas that
    were hit this evening could see more in the way of convection this
    afternoon, so long as the MCV holds together and doesn't dissipate
    as indicated via some guidance. Considering the variables at play
    and the potential to be a sneakier setup overall, wanted to gauge a conservative approach and add a MRGL risk to the area referenced
    above to cover for the threat.

    Further west, we have a different setup that will induced by a
    favorably developing upper trough/closed-low scenario coming out of
    a negatively tilted shortwave trough ejecting out of the Desert
    Southwest during the period. Height-falls are all but certain
    within all model output with the shortwave progression likely
    develop something more formidable as it encroaches on NM by later
    this afternoon. Enhanced upper forcing and well-defined surface
    trough bisecting far western TX up through eastern NM and the
    divide will provide the necessary focused ascent features capable
    for scattered to widespread convective development during peak
    diurnal instability and beyond as the upper forcing pattern becomes
    most favorable by the evening. Probabilities for rainfall rates
    1"/hr remain highest within the confines of the surface trough as
    indicated in the latest 00z HREF prob fields. The Sacramento
    Mountains, adjacent High Plains of eastern NM down into the Upper
    Trans Pecos are the most favored areas of heavy rainfall with
    secondary maxima plausible in far west TX across the terrain in the
    Guadalupe Mountains down to portions of the Davis and Delaware
    Mountains in Southwest TX. The previous MRGL risk was expanded to
    include more of the area comprised of at least modest probabilities
    for >1" of precip, as well the more favored areas for rates >1"/hr,
    at times during the period of interest.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND CENTRAL TO WEST TEXAS...

    ...Texas...

    The previous D1 evolution will translate into a greater convective
    regime as we head into D2 as the negatively-tilted trough axis
    migrates further east into the Southern High Plains with a broad
    diffluent axis pointed downstream of the mean trough. Increased
    large scale ascent will become fixated over much of west TX,
    spreading through the High Plains as widespread shower and
    thunderstorm activity takes shape during the afternoon Tuesday. A
    plethora of convective activity with relatively slow to modest
    propagation speeds will translate into bouts of heavier rainfall
    across the southern half of the TX Panhandle down through the
    Permian Basin, western Rolling Plains, Concho Valley, and Stockton
    Plateau leading to widespread 1+" totals with embedded 2-3" spots
    given the convective regime. This setup is classic for scattered
    flash flood instances, especially in those more urban zones and
    areas of high low water crossing concentrations that are littered
    over the Southern High Plains in west TX. The 00z HREF signal for
    the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period is very aggressive for at least 2" in
    spots over the Permian Basin and adjacent Caprock, including the Lubbock/Midland urban centers. Rainfall will likely be winding down
    in these areas, but the setup will proceed to be more of a
    nocturnal issue as we pivot our attention south over the Big Bend
    and central RGV as a strong mid-level vorticity maxima ejects out
    of Coahuila Tuesday evening and slides east into the Edwards
    Plateau and neighboring Hill Country.

    There's a general consensus on this setup across guidance with some
    degree of broad heavy convection migrating into the above areas
    enticing a dousing of rainfall as the pattern evolves overnight.
    We'll see the introduction of a LLJ only add to the low-level
    convergence regime spurred on by the expected evolution likely
    allowing quite the rainfall signature in wake of the disturbance's
    trajectory. US57 to I-10 is the prospectus area of interest, which
    includes much of southern and central Hill Country with the very
    end of the period likely to see some of the activity make it
    towards the I-35 corridor near San Antonio. With the time frame
    outside of the CAMs range, greater details aren't available for the
    maximum potential in the forecast, but just given the current
    environment conditions, there could be some localized areas >3" in
    this second round of enhanced convection this period. The SLGT risk
    from the previous forecast remains in effect, but will be
    monitoring for any opportunity of a targeted higher risk, or at
    least a higher-end threshold of the current SLGT.

    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...

    Confluent area on the western edge of a broad Western Atlantic
    ridge and a trough centered over the Southern Plains will continue
    for at least one more period with another round of convergence and
    heavy convection focused over the Central Gulf Coast to areas
    inland between southeast MS into the southern half of AL. This area
    will have seen multiple days of impact from heavier convection to
    begin with, so some priming of the soils could enact a greater
    flash flood potential in general. This setup seems to be less
    favored compared to the previous days, but still the guidance
    remains favorable for 2-4" locally in the aforementioned areas
    which would be enough to cause some scattered flash flood concerns
    in those heavier cells that crop up. The general consensus seems to
    target southern AL as the main focus with the area from Biloxi
    over to Mobile and points north as the target of opportunity when
    you assess the HREF blended mean QPF output and associated prob
    fields for the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period. In any case, this is
    still well within the standards of a SLGT risk which was maintained
    from the previous forecast.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE EASTERN
    HALF OF TEXAS, ARKLATEX, AND PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    The broad upper level evolution occurring upstream over the
    Southern Plains will continue to shift east with the large scale
    forcing driving into the eastern half of TX leading to heavy rain
    prospects over the eastern portions of Hill Country, the I-35
    corridor and much of east TX, including the middle and upper TX
    coastal areas. There's still some discrepancy in specifics on where
    the heaviest precip will occur in this setup, but the mean QPF
    output via various ensembles, including the National Blend and
    ensemble bias corrected QPF targets the I-35 corridor over to the
    Lower Mississippi Valley fairly heavily, considering the fact we
    are still at D3. Widespread 1-3" totals are forecast within the
    means with the environment favored for heavy precipitation
    basically anywhere over the above areas referenced. A broad SLGT
    risk is in place to encompass the area of potential, however some
    fine tuning is likely to occur as we approach the period,
    especially as we get more CAMs involved and we monitor how the
    upstream pattern is evolving which will be the ultimate player in
    the magnitude of rainfall and where.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7O_806LLx2n-SBLruL4iYyKCMsWDtsCA_ikhm4EYu2Jp= hGuj2Rlko-st3wi_R2O3l2TVsImbnCngDFCKjfjOo9p6ChM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7O_806LLx2n-SBLruL4iYyKCMsWDtsCA_ikhm4EYu2Jp= hGuj2Rlko-st3wi_R2O3l2TVsImbnCngDFCKjfjOH-DeinU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7O_806LLx2n-SBLruL4iYyKCMsWDtsCA_ikhm4EYu2Jp= hGuj2Rlko-st3wi_R2O3l2TVsImbnCngDFCKjfjOqEQ6-6w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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    --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
    * Origin: Capitol City Online (1:2320/107)
  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Mon May 25 19:40:58 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 251940
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    340 PM EDT Mon May 25 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    16Z Update...

    The meteorological rationale provided from night shift remains in
    good shape. Within the large Slight Risk area in the Southeast,
    the biggest concern is along the central Gulf Coast and farther
    inland into south-central AL. Latest 12Z HREF showed moderate
    chance probabilities (40-60%) for rainfall totals >5" from the NOLA
    on north and east into southern MS. Southern AL and the western-
    most portion of the FL Panhandle are also ideally placed within the
    core of the anomalous >500 kg/m/s IVT that most CAMs show keeping
    numerous thunderstorms producing 2-3"/hr rainfall rates in the
    forecast. NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-10cm soil moisture percentiles are all
    over 85%, indicating topsoil in the region will struggle to keep up
    with these Excessive Rainfall rates. Scattered flash flooding is
    of greatest concern along the central Gulf Coast this afternoon and
    into this evening, with locally significant flash flooding
    possible should pockets of >5" rainfall totals occur.

    In west TX, 12Z HREF and REFS probabilities show that eastern NM
    and central TX are most favored for localized flash flooding (as
    eluded to in the previous discussion), but there are some CAMs
    members sporting low chances (10-30%) for >2" of rainfall in West
    TX between the two inherited Marginals. Given the messy convective
    setup between the approaching trough to the west and the
    stationary cut-off disturbance over central TX, opted to merge the
    two Marginals together. In addition, 12Z HREF probabilities showed low-to-moderate chances (30-50%) for additional rainfall totals
    along I-35 south of Dallas and low chances (10-20%) for >3" close
    to the Austin metro area. The atmosphere may be worked over enough
    to keep most thunderstorm activity isolated, but given the
    urbanized corridor along I-35 potentially at risk, expanded the
    Marginal into these areas for this afternoon and evening.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Gulf Coast to Southern Appalachians...

    Stagnant upper level pattern across much of the CONUS is allowing
    for a continued confluent axis situated from the Central Gulf Coast
    up through the Mid Atlantic states with ample moisture comprised of
    PWAT anomalies running between +1 to +2.5 deviations above normal
    within the aforementioned zone. Prevailing southerly flow in-of the
    Central Gulf Coast will allow for the advection of yet another
    mid-level pulse out of the Gulf by the beginning of the period with
    sights on southeast LA through the Southeast U.S. Increasing instances
    of heavy rainfall from convective development spurred by the
    disturbance and deep moisture presence will invoke yet another
    round of flash flood potential, mainly within those urbanized zones
    littered across southeast LA up through southern MS, much of AL,
    and eventually into GA by the afternoon time frame. Instability
    parameters are well-within the mode to drive heavy rain prospects
    with many of the forecast point soundings indicating appreciable
    tall-skinny CAPE outputs historically prevalent for heavy rainfall
    potential and enhanced rates.

    00z HREF neighborhood probs for >3" are running between 40-80% in
    the corridor expanding from New Orleans to the I-20 corridor in AL
    with the bullseye focused over southwestern AL towards the MS
    border. This zone has been consistently signaled as the primary
    focus of heavier precipitation in-part to multiple convective
    episodes in the period that could very well put down 3-5+" of
    rainfall prior to the end of the D1. Despite higher FFG's locally,
    rainfall rates between 2-3"/hr with higher intra-hour rates are
    likely given the PWAT's between 1.8-2.1" over the course of the D1,
    a good proxy for those higher end totals locally, especially in
    any repeatedly impacted areas. This environment is respectable for
    the time of year and regional instability parameters are more than
    sufficient for even scattered heavy cell cores focused away from
    the shortwave migration anticipated. All CAMs have some instances
    of heavy rain across the Southeast U.S. extending to as far north
    as the Tennessee Valley and as far east as southeast GA into
    portions of the SC Low Country. A SLGT risk remains forecast for
    the area of southeast LA up through the Southern Appalachians and
    neighboring Piedmont in SC and all zones in-between. MRGL risk
    expands away on either side encompassing a broad area outside the
    SLGT.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Remnant quasi-stationary front across the Central to Southern Mid
    Atlantic will slowly lift north through the day Monday with
    increasing moisture profiles being advected from southerly low to
    mid-level flow around the northern periphery of a ridge in the
    Western Atlantic. PWAT anomalies will shove closer to +2 to +3
    deviations across a good portion of VA, especially areas south of
    I-66 down to the VA Tidewater where PWATs are forecast to jump
    above 2" as expressed via multiple global ensemble outputs. This
    would set up a pretty deep warm cloud layer sufficient for higher
    rainfall rates for any convective pulses that arise during the
    forecast. The proximity of the front will be a focal point for
    enhanced low-level convergence which can be seen very well within
    the theta_E and omega cross-sections off both the 00z NAM Nest and
    HRRR runs this evening. Pretty much all guidance has a narrow, yet
    prolific corridor of heavy rain of convective origin aligned near
    and just south of the front by later this afternoon and evening
    with a steady stream of rainfall likely to cause some localized
    areas of 2-4+" in the time frame of impact. Pending the model of
    preference, some hit the corridor from Richmond to Hampton Roads
    pretty hard while others are just a bit north, closer to the
    northern neck of the Tidewater. In any case, either pathway would
    be sufficient for flash flood prospects, even with the ongoing
    drought in the area. Rainfall of 1-2"/hr will be likely in the
    heavier cells with even some stronger cores capable of brief
    2-3"/hr periods when you factor the anomalous deep moisture layer
    in place.

    If it was not for such elevated FFG's, this would likely be a
    higher risk, but for now, maintained continuity with a MRGL, but
    will have to monitor for exact placement of the repeating
    convection as that could be enough to tip the scales to a focused
    higher risk, especially if the immediate Tidewater is impacted as
    that area has historically been flash flood prone due to more
    sprawling urbanization and poor drainage capabilities.

    ...Texas into New Mexico...

    Couple of areas of interest across the Southwestern U.S. into the
    Southern Plains for Monday. The first is within the bounds of a
    remnant MCV that continues to cause issues across Central and
    Northern TX as it drifts over the northern Hill Country, west of
    I-35 between San Angelo and Fort Worth. Spells of heavy rain
    continue to plague this zone with cells popping up over the course
    of the evening as focused low-level convergence and available
    moisture aids in these scattered, slow-moving thunderstorms capable
    of multiple inches of rainfall as they drift over the area. CAMs
    are split on the handling of this feature heading through the
    morning and afternoon today, but the models that do maintain
    organization of the MCV tend to have another scattered to
    widespread convective enhancement during the diurnal instability
    max leading to pockets of enhanced rainfall between 2-4" in wake of
    the cells. Modest neighborhood probs from the 00z HREF for >2"
    (20-40%) exist in this relative corridor of the Concho Valley into north-central Hill Country between San Angelo and Fort Worth. With
    the MCV likely to exhibit little forward propagation, areas that
    were hit this evening could see more in the way of convection this
    afternoon, so long as the MCV holds together and doesn't dissipate
    as indicated via some guidance. Considering the variables at play
    and the potential to be a sneakier setup overall, wanted to gauge a conservative approach and add a MRGL risk to the area referenced
    above to cover for the threat.

    Further west, we have a different setup that will induced by a
    favorably developing upper trough/closed-low scenario coming out of
    a negatively tilted shortwave trough ejecting out of the Desert
    Southwest during the period. Height-falls are all but certain
    within all model output with the shortwave progression likely
    develop something more formidable as it encroaches on NM by later
    this afternoon. Enhanced upper forcing and well-defined surface
    trough bisecting far western TX up through eastern NM and the
    divide will provide the necessary focused ascent features capable
    for scattered to widespread convective development during peak
    diurnal instability and beyond as the upper forcing pattern becomes
    most favorable by the evening. Probabilities for rainfall rates
    1"/hr remain highest within the confines of the surface trough as
    indicated in the latest 00z HREF prob fields. The Sacramento
    Mountains, adjacent High Plains of eastern NM down into the Upper
    Trans Pecos are the most favored areas of heavy rainfall with
    secondary maxima plausible in far west TX across the terrain in the
    Guadalupe Mountains down to portions of the Davis and Delaware
    Mountains in Southwest TX. The previous MRGL risk was expanded to
    include more of the area comprised of at least modest probabilities
    for >1" of precip, as well the more favored areas for rates >1"/hr,
    at times during the period of interest.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND CENTRAL TO WEST TEXAS...

    20Z Update...

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Main addition to this forecast cycle was to introduce a Marginal=20
    Risk for portions of the Northern Rockies in collaboration with
    OTX/MSO/TFX. As an anomalous 500mb low dives south from the Pacific
    Northwest to the Southwest Tuesday into Wednesday, a strengthening
    SErly regime will direct well above normal moisture at the=20
    Northern Rockies beginning on Tuesday. By Tuesday afternoon, PWs=20
    will exceed 1.0" in the Lewis Range and northern Bitterroots, which
    are above the 99th climatological percentile for late May. Any=20
    surface based heating will give rise to more instability for=20
    developing convection to utilize, prompting the development of=20
    thunderstorms that could generate 1"/hr rainfall rates. Add in the=20
    proponent of upslope enhancement into the northern Rockies and the=20
    stage is set for numerous thunderstorms over the rugged and complex
    terrain of the Northern Rockies. Localized rainfall totals over 2"
    are possible over northwest MT through Tuesday night. Flash=20
    flooding is possible, most notably in areas near burn scars and=20
    along complex terrain.

    Otherwise, no other additions were made this cycle. The southern
    Gulf Coast is of increasing concerning given the onslaught of=20
    heavy rain these have received in recent days. Southern AL and the
    FL Panhandle remain placed directly beneath a >500 kg/m/s IVT that
    will continue to generate a fire hose of heavy showers and
    thunderstorms. The 12Z HREF did show some low-to-moderate chance
    probabilities (30-45%) for rainfall totals >5" for D2. Elsewhere,
    the Marginal Risk in the OH Valley was expanded northward to
    account for the rainfall footprint growing northward. Texas
    continues to look very active, but guidance remains at odds on=20
    which parts of the TX Hill County on north to the TX Panhandle will
    see the heaviest rainfall. With no clearer picture given this
    forecast cycle, maintained the inherited Slight Risk and only did
    minor tweaks based on latest WPC QPF.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Texas...

    The previous D1 evolution will translate into a greater convective
    regime as we head into D2 as the negatively-tilted trough axis
    migrates further east into the Southern High Plains with a broad
    diffluent axis pointed downstream of the mean trough. Increased
    large scale ascent will become fixated over much of west TX,
    spreading through the High Plains as widespread shower and
    thunderstorm activity takes shape during the afternoon Tuesday. A
    plethora of convective activity with relatively slow to modest
    propagation speeds will translate into bouts of heavier rainfall
    across the southern half of the TX Panhandle down through the
    Permian Basin, western Rolling Plains, Concho Valley, and Stockton
    Plateau leading to widespread 1+" totals with embedded 2-3" spots
    given the convective regime. This setup is classic for scattered
    flash flood instances, especially in those more urban zones and
    areas of high low water crossing concentrations that are littered
    over the Southern High Plains in west TX. The 00z HREF signal for
    the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period is very aggressive for at least 2" in
    spots over the Permian Basin and adjacent Caprock, including the Lubbock/Midland urban centers. Rainfall will likely be winding down
    in these areas, but the setup will proceed to be more of a
    nocturnal issue as we pivot our attention south over the Big Bend
    and central RGV as a strong mid-level vorticity maxima ejects out
    of Coahuila Tuesday evening and slides east into the Edwards
    Plateau and neighboring Hill Country.

    There's a general consensus on this setup across guidance with some
    degree of broad heavy convection migrating into the above areas
    enticing a dousing of rainfall as the pattern evolves overnight.
    We'll see the introduction of a LLJ only add to the low-level
    convergence regime spurred on by the expected evolution likely
    allowing quite the rainfall signature in wake of the disturbance's
    trajectory. US57 to I-10 is the prospectus area of interest, which
    includes much of southern and central Hill Country with the very
    end of the period likely to see some of the activity make it
    towards the I-35 corridor near San Antonio. With the time frame
    outside of the CAMs range, greater details aren't available for the
    maximum potential in the forecast, but just given the current
    environment conditions, there could be some localized areas >3" in
    this second round of enhanced convection this period. The SLGT risk
    from the previous forecast remains in effect, but will be
    monitoring for any opportunity of a targeted higher risk, or at
    least a higher-end threshold of the current SLGT.

    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...

    Confluent area on the western edge of a broad Western Atlantic
    ridge and a trough centered over the Southern Plains will continue
    for at least one more period with another round of convergence and
    heavy convection focused over the Central Gulf Coast to areas
    inland between southeast MS into the southern half of AL. This area
    will have seen multiple days of impact from heavier convection to
    begin with, so some priming of the soils could enact a greater
    flash flood potential in general. This setup seems to be less
    favored compared to the previous days, but still the guidance
    remains favorable for 2-4" locally in the aforementioned areas
    which would be enough to cause some scattered flash flood concerns
    in those heavier cells that crop up. The general consensus seems to
    target southern AL as the main focus with the area from Biloxi
    over to Mobile and points north as the target of opportunity when
    you assess the HREF blended mean QPF output and associated prob
    fields for the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period. In any case, this is
    still well within the standards of a SLGT risk which was maintained
    from the previous forecast.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE EASTERN
    HALF OF TEXAS, ARKLATEX, AND PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    20Z Update...

    Just like for the D2 update, introduced a Marginal Risk for the
    Northern Rockies in collaboration with OTX/MSO/TFX. PWs rise to=20
    over 1.0" throughout much of the region, placing just about the=20
    entire Marginal Risk area in a >99th climatological percentile PW=20
    regime. The southeasterly IVT over eastern MT is also playing a key
    role in the abundance of moisture across the Northern Rockies. Big
    question will be the amount of instability available given=20
    extensive cloud cover. But any added instability through daytime
    heating combined with upsloping flow should trigger additional=20
    thunderstorms capable of producing up to 1"/hr rainfall rates.=20

    Aside from some minor tweaks to the threat areas from the Southern
    Plains to the Mid-Atlantic based off latest WPC QPF, the rationale
    for the forecast provided by the overnight shift remains in good
    standing.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    The broad upper level evolution occurring upstream over the
    Southern Plains will continue to shift east with the large scale
    forcing driving into the eastern half of TX leading to heavy rain
    prospects over the eastern portions of Hill Country, the I-35
    corridor and much of east TX, including the middle and upper TX
    coastal areas. There's still some discrepancy in specifics on where
    the heaviest precip will occur in this setup, but the mean QPF
    output via various ensembles, including the National Blend and
    ensemble bias corrected QPF targets the I-35 corridor over to the
    Lower Mississippi Valley fairly heavily, considering the fact we
    are still at D3. Widespread 1-3" totals are forecast within the
    means with the environment favored for heavy precipitation
    basically anywhere over the above areas referenced. A broad SLGT
    risk is in place to encompass the area of potential, however some
    fine tuning is likely to occur as we approach the period,
    especially as we get more CAMs involved and we monitor how the
    upstream pattern is evolving which will be the ultimate player in
    the magnitude of rainfall and where.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5K2x_MdH8qT3_lF1VA0eaPDlEt5OrsG3kh9YHR4PTNDs= FAEqCqnAXDHO6mtVsfvyRwvgqUJ8SJYR4mVBSwIxVWsARKg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5K2x_MdH8qT3_lF1VA0eaPDlEt5OrsG3kh9YHR4PTNDs= FAEqCqnAXDHO6mtVsfvyRwvgqUJ8SJYR4mVBSwIxhEV85Ng$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5K2x_MdH8qT3_lF1VA0eaPDlEt5OrsG3kh9YHR4PTNDs= FAEqCqnAXDHO6mtVsfvyRwvgqUJ8SJYR4mVBSwIxob9NO6Y$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
    To unsubscribe from WX-STORM and you already have a login, go to https://lists.illinois.edu and use the "Unsubscribe" link. Otherwise email Chris Novy at [email protected] and ask to be removed from WX-STORM.

    --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
    * Origin: Capitol City Online (1:2320/107)
  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue May 26 00:31:51 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 260031
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    831 PM EDT Mon May 25 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    01Z Update...
    Once again...the forecast reasoning has changed little so the
    changes made to the Excessive Rainfall Outlook were largely driven
    by trends seen in radar and satellite imagery. Locally heavy to=20
    excessive rainfall is a concern in portions of Texas near a long-=20
    lived convectively induced vort max over the central part of the=20
    state. While coverage looks to remain limited...localized rainfall=20
    rates on the order of 1 to 2 inches are possible with an associated
    risk of flash flooding. From the Gulf coast northeastward to the=20
    Southern Appalachians and a portion of North Carolina into the=20
    south- central and southeast Virginia...showers and thunderstorms=20
    will continue to impact south- central and southeast Virginia while
    new convection develops across western North Carolina this evening
    ahead of a slow-moving cold front. Intense rainfall rates of 1 to=20
    locally 3 in/hr, combined with some cell-training, will yield=20
    localized totals of 2 to 4 inches. Extreme rainfall rates may=20
    overpower dry antecedent soils, especially in urban corridors.

    Bann


    16Z Update...

    The meteorological rationale provided from night shift remains in
    good shape. Within the large Slight Risk area in the Southeast,
    the biggest concern is along the central Gulf Coast and farther
    inland into south-central AL. Latest 12Z HREF showed moderate
    chance probabilities (40-60%) for rainfall totals >5" from the NOLA
    on north and east into southern MS. Southern AL and the western-
    most portion of the FL Panhandle are also ideally placed within the
    core of the anomalous >500 kg/m/s IVT that most CAMs show keeping
    numerous thunderstorms producing 2-3"/hr rainfall rates in the
    forecast. NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-10cm soil moisture percentiles are all
    over 85%, indicating topsoil in the region will struggle to keep up
    with these Excessive Rainfall rates. Scattered flash flooding is
    of greatest concern along the central Gulf Coast this afternoon and
    into this evening, with locally significant flash flooding
    possible should pockets of >5" rainfall totals occur.

    In west TX, 12Z HREF and REFS probabilities show that eastern NM
    and central TX are most favored for localized flash flooding (as
    eluded to in the previous discussion), but there are some CAMs
    members sporting low chances (10-30%) for >2" of rainfall in West
    TX between the two inherited Marginals. Given the messy convective
    setup between the approaching trough to the west and the
    stationary cut-off disturbance over central TX, opted to merge the
    two Marginals together. In addition, 12Z HREF probabilities showed low-to-moderate chances (30-50%) for additional rainfall totals
    along I-35 south of Dallas and low chances (10-20%) for >3" close
    to the Austin metro area. The atmosphere may be worked over enough
    to keep most thunderstorm activity isolated, but given the
    urbanized corridor along I-35 potentially at risk, expanded the
    Marginal into these areas for this afternoon and evening.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Gulf Coast to Southern Appalachians...

    Stagnant upper level pattern across much of the CONUS is allowing
    for a continued confluent axis situated from the Central Gulf Coast
    up through the Mid Atlantic states with ample moisture comprised of
    PWAT anomalies running between +1 to +2.5 deviations above normal
    within the aforementioned zone. Prevailing southerly flow in-of the
    Central Gulf Coast will allow for the advection of yet another
    mid-level pulse out of the Gulf by the beginning of the period with
    sights on southeast LA through the Southeast U.S. Increasing instances
    of heavy rainfall from convective development spurred by the
    disturbance and deep moisture presence will invoke yet another
    round of flash flood potential, mainly within those urbanized zones
    littered across southeast LA up through southern MS, much of AL,
    and eventually into GA by the afternoon time frame. Instability
    parameters are well-within the mode to drive heavy rain prospects
    with many of the forecast point soundings indicating appreciable
    tall-skinny CAPE outputs historically prevalent for heavy rainfall
    potential and enhanced rates.

    00z HREF neighborhood probs for >3" are running between 40-80% in
    the corridor expanding from New Orleans to the I-20 corridor in AL
    with the bullseye focused over southwestern AL towards the MS
    border. This zone has been consistently signaled as the primary
    focus of heavier precipitation in-part to multiple convective
    episodes in the period that could very well put down 3-5+" of
    rainfall prior to the end of the D1. Despite higher FFG's locally,
    rainfall rates between 2-3"/hr with higher intra-hour rates are
    likely given the PWAT's between 1.8-2.1" over the course of the D1,
    a good proxy for those higher end totals locally, especially in
    any repeatedly impacted areas. This environment is respectable for
    the time of year and regional instability parameters are more than
    sufficient for even scattered heavy cell cores focused away from
    the shortwave migration anticipated. All CAMs have some instances
    of heavy rain across the Southeast U.S. extending to as far north
    as the Tennessee Valley and as far east as southeast GA into
    portions of the SC Low Country. A SLGT risk remains forecast for
    the area of southeast LA up through the Southern Appalachians and
    neighboring Piedmont in SC and all zones in-between. MRGL risk
    expands away on either side encompassing a broad area outside the
    SLGT.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Remnant quasi-stationary front across the Central to Southern Mid
    Atlantic will slowly lift north through the day Monday with
    increasing moisture profiles being advected from southerly low to
    mid-level flow around the northern periphery of a ridge in the
    Western Atlantic. PWAT anomalies will shove closer to +2 to +3
    deviations across a good portion of VA, especially areas south of
    I-66 down to the VA Tidewater where PWATs are forecast to jump
    above 2" as expressed via multiple global ensemble outputs. This
    would set up a pretty deep warm cloud layer sufficient for higher
    rainfall rates for any convective pulses that arise during the
    forecast. The proximity of the front will be a focal point for
    enhanced low-level convergence which can be seen very well within
    the theta_E and omega cross-sections off both the 00z NAM Nest and
    HRRR runs this evening. Pretty much all guidance has a narrow, yet
    prolific corridor of heavy rain of convective origin aligned near
    and just south of the front by later this afternoon and evening
    with a steady stream of rainfall likely to cause some localized
    areas of 2-4+" in the time frame of impact. Pending the model of
    preference, some hit the corridor from Richmond to Hampton Roads
    pretty hard while others are just a bit north, closer to the
    northern neck of the Tidewater. In any case, either pathway would
    be sufficient for flash flood prospects, even with the ongoing
    drought in the area. Rainfall of 1-2"/hr will be likely in the
    heavier cells with even some stronger cores capable of brief
    2-3"/hr periods when you factor the anomalous deep moisture layer
    in place.

    If it was not for such elevated FFG's, this would likely be a
    higher risk, but for now, maintained continuity with a MRGL, but
    will have to monitor for exact placement of the repeating
    convection as that could be enough to tip the scales to a focused
    higher risk, especially if the immediate Tidewater is impacted as
    that area has historically been flash flood prone due to more
    sprawling urbanization and poor drainage capabilities.

    ...Texas into New Mexico...

    Couple of areas of interest across the Southwestern U.S. into the
    Southern Plains for Monday. The first is within the bounds of a
    remnant MCV that continues to cause issues across Central and
    Northern TX as it drifts over the northern Hill Country, west of
    I-35 between San Angelo and Fort Worth. Spells of heavy rain
    continue to plague this zone with cells popping up over the course
    of the evening as focused low-level convergence and available
    moisture aids in these scattered, slow-moving thunderstorms capable
    of multiple inches of rainfall as they drift over the area. CAMs
    are split on the handling of this feature heading through the
    morning and afternoon today, but the models that do maintain
    organization of the MCV tend to have another scattered to
    widespread convective enhancement during the diurnal instability
    max leading to pockets of enhanced rainfall between 2-4" in wake of
    the cells. Modest neighborhood probs from the 00z HREF for >2"
    (20-40%) exist in this relative corridor of the Concho Valley into north-central Hill Country between San Angelo and Fort Worth. With
    the MCV likely to exhibit little forward propagation, areas that
    were hit this evening could see more in the way of convection this
    afternoon, so long as the MCV holds together and doesn't dissipate
    as indicated via some guidance. Considering the variables at play
    and the potential to be a sneakier setup overall, wanted to gauge a conservative approach and add a MRGL risk to the area referenced
    above to cover for the threat.

    Further west, we have a different setup that will induced by a
    favorably developing upper trough/closed-low scenario coming out of
    a negatively tilted shortwave trough ejecting out of the Desert
    Southwest during the period. Height-falls are all but certain
    within all model output with the shortwave progression likely
    develop something more formidable as it encroaches on NM by later
    this afternoon. Enhanced upper forcing and well-defined surface
    trough bisecting far western TX up through eastern NM and the
    divide will provide the necessary focused ascent features capable
    for scattered to widespread convective development during peak
    diurnal instability and beyond as the upper forcing pattern becomes
    most favorable by the evening. Probabilities for rainfall rates
    1"/hr remain highest within the confines of the surface trough as
    indicated in the latest 00z HREF prob fields. The Sacramento
    Mountains, adjacent High Plains of eastern NM down into the Upper
    Trans Pecos are the most favored areas of heavy rainfall with
    secondary maxima plausible in far west TX across the terrain in the
    Guadalupe Mountains down to portions of the Davis and Delaware
    Mountains in Southwest TX. The previous MRGL risk was expanded to
    include more of the area comprised of at least modest probabilities
    for >1" of precip, as well the more favored areas for rates >1"/hr,
    at times during the period of interest.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND CENTRAL TO WEST TEXAS...

    20Z Update...

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Main addition to this forecast cycle was to introduce a Marginal
    Risk for portions of the Northern Rockies in collaboration with
    OTX/MSO/TFX. As an anomalous 500mb low dives south from the Pacific
    Northwest to the Southwest Tuesday into Wednesday, a strengthening
    SErly regime will direct well above normal moisture at the
    Northern Rockies beginning on Tuesday. By Tuesday afternoon, PWs
    will exceed 1.0" in the Lewis Range and northern Bitterroots, which
    are above the 99th climatological percentile for late May. Any
    surface based heating will give rise to more instability for
    developing convection to utilize, prompting the development of
    thunderstorms that could generate 1"/hr rainfall rates. Add in the
    proponent of upslope enhancement into the northern Rockies and the
    stage is set for numerous thunderstorms over the rugged and complex
    terrain of the Northern Rockies. Localized rainfall totals over 2"
    are possible over northwest MT through Tuesday night. Flash
    flooding is possible, most notably in areas near burn scars and
    along complex terrain.

    Otherwise, no other additions were made this cycle. The southern
    Gulf Coast is of increasing concerning given the onslaught of
    heavy rain these have received in recent days. Southern AL and the
    FL Panhandle remain placed directly beneath a >500 kg/m/s IVT that
    will continue to generate a fire hose of heavy showers and
    thunderstorms. The 12Z HREF did show some low-to-moderate chance
    probabilities (30-45%) for rainfall totals >5" for D2. Elsewhere,
    the Marginal Risk in the OH Valley was expanded northward to
    account for the rainfall footprint growing northward. Texas
    continues to look very active, but guidance remains at odds on
    which parts of the TX Hill County on north to the TX Panhandle will
    see the heaviest rainfall. With no clearer picture given this
    forecast cycle, maintained the inherited Slight Risk and only did
    minor tweaks based on latest WPC QPF.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Texas...

    The previous D1 evolution will translate into a greater convective
    regime as we head into D2 as the negatively-tilted trough axis
    migrates further east into the Southern High Plains with a broad
    diffluent axis pointed downstream of the mean trough. Increased
    large scale ascent will become fixated over much of west TX,
    spreading through the High Plains as widespread shower and
    thunderstorm activity takes shape during the afternoon Tuesday. A
    plethora of convective activity with relatively slow to modest
    propagation speeds will translate into bouts of heavier rainfall
    across the southern half of the TX Panhandle down through the
    Permian Basin, western Rolling Plains, Concho Valley, and Stockton
    Plateau leading to widespread 1+" totals with embedded 2-3" spots
    given the convective regime. This setup is classic for scattered
    flash flood instances, especially in those more urban zones and
    areas of high low water crossing concentrations that are littered
    over the Southern High Plains in west TX. The 00z HREF signal for
    the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period is very aggressive for at least 2" in
    spots over the Permian Basin and adjacent Caprock, including the Lubbock/Midland urban centers. Rainfall will likely be winding down
    in these areas, but the setup will proceed to be more of a
    nocturnal issue as we pivot our attention south over the Big Bend
    and central RGV as a strong mid-level vorticity maxima ejects out
    of Coahuila Tuesday evening and slides east into the Edwards
    Plateau and neighboring Hill Country.

    There's a general consensus on this setup across guidance with some
    degree of broad heavy convection migrating into the above areas
    enticing a dousing of rainfall as the pattern evolves overnight.
    We'll see the introduction of a LLJ only add to the low-level
    convergence regime spurred on by the expected evolution likely
    allowing quite the rainfall signature in wake of the disturbance's
    trajectory. US57 to I-10 is the prospectus area of interest, which
    includes much of southern and central Hill Country with the very
    end of the period likely to see some of the activity make it
    towards the I-35 corridor near San Antonio. With the time frame
    outside of the CAMs range, greater details aren't available for the
    maximum potential in the forecast, but just given the current
    environment conditions, there could be some localized areas >3" in
    this second round of enhanced convection this period. The SLGT risk
    from the previous forecast remains in effect, but will be
    monitoring for any opportunity of a targeted higher risk, or at
    least a higher-end threshold of the current SLGT.

    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...

    Confluent area on the western edge of a broad Western Atlantic
    ridge and a trough centered over the Southern Plains will continue
    for at least one more period with another round of convergence and
    heavy convection focused over the Central Gulf Coast to areas
    inland between southeast MS into the southern half of AL. This area
    will have seen multiple days of impact from heavier convection to
    begin with, so some priming of the soils could enact a greater
    flash flood potential in general. This setup seems to be less
    favored compared to the previous days, but still the guidance
    remains favorable for 2-4" locally in the aforementioned areas
    which would be enough to cause some scattered flash flood concerns
    in those heavier cells that crop up. The general consensus seems to
    target southern AL as the main focus with the area from Biloxi
    over to Mobile and points north as the target of opportunity when
    you assess the HREF blended mean QPF output and associated prob
    fields for the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period. In any case, this is
    still well within the standards of a SLGT risk which was maintained
    from the previous forecast.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE EASTERN
    HALF OF TEXAS, ARKLATEX, AND PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    20Z Update...

    Just like for the D2 update, introduced a Marginal Risk for the
    Northern Rockies in collaboration with OTX/MSO/TFX. PWs rise to
    over 1.0" throughout much of the region, placing just about the
    entire Marginal Risk area in a >99th climatological percentile PW
    regime. The southeasterly IVT over eastern MT is also playing a key
    role in the abundance of moisture across the Northern Rockies. Big
    question will be the amount of instability available given
    extensive cloud cover. But any added instability through daytime
    heating combined with upsloping flow should trigger additional
    thunderstorms capable of producing up to 1"/hr rainfall rates.

    Aside from some minor tweaks to the threat areas from the Southern
    Plains to the Mid-Atlantic based off latest WPC QPF, the rationale
    for the forecast provided by the overnight shift remains in good
    standing.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    The broad upper level evolution occurring upstream over the
    Southern Plains will continue to shift east with the large scale
    forcing driving into the eastern half of TX leading to heavy rain
    prospects over the eastern portions of Hill Country, the I-35
    corridor and much of east TX, including the middle and upper TX
    coastal areas. There's still some discrepancy in specifics on where
    the heaviest precip will occur in this setup, but the mean QPF
    output via various ensembles, including the National Blend and
    ensemble bias corrected QPF targets the I-35 corridor over to the
    Lower Mississippi Valley fairly heavily, considering the fact we
    are still at D3. Widespread 1-3" totals are forecast within the
    means with the environment favored for heavy precipitation
    basically anywhere over the above areas referenced. A broad SLGT
    risk is in place to encompass the area of potential, however some
    fine tuning is likely to occur as we approach the period,
    especially as we get more CAMs involved and we monitor how the
    upstream pattern is evolving which will be the ultimate player in
    the magnitude of rainfall and where.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!89ESUK0DP_0ag4t4ogHhGxPuis4e6chJK0IPWxj3rvh9= -TkbE84VoKPwrKUHjcuRTPHx9sPOfpfu3r1ht1A3Vlm7BnE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!89ESUK0DP_0ag4t4ogHhGxPuis4e6chJK0IPWxj3rvh9= -TkbE84VoKPwrKUHjcuRTPHx9sPOfpfu3r1ht1A3FU2IRac$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!89ESUK0DP_0ag4t4ogHhGxPuis4e6chJK0IPWxj3rvh9= -TkbE84VoKPwrKUHjcuRTPHx9sPOfpfu3r1ht1A3VPsyZ_w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue May 26 07:47:12 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 260747
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    347 AM EDT Tue May 26 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND CENTRAL TO WEST TEXAS...

    ...Texas...

    Current WV satellite and upper air analysis indicates a broad,=20
    negatively- tilted trough axis migrating eastward out of the=20
    Southwestern CONUS into the Southern High Plains this evening. A=20
    broad diffluent pattern exists downstream of the mean trough with=20
    several small mid-level perturbations causing a panoply of
    convectively driven cells to materialize across the terrain of
    eastern NM, spreading eastward into the adjacent High Plains as
    surface troughing exists over southwest TX up through the eastern
    NM plains. Increased large scale ascent will become fixated over=20
    much of west TX, spreading further through the High Plains as=20
    widespread shower and thunderstorm activity continues through the
    morning and afternoon hours today. A plethora of convective=20
    activity with relatively slow to modest propagation speeds will=20
    translate into bouts of heavier rainfall across the southern half=20
    of the TX Panhandle down through the Permian Basin and western=20
    Rolling Plains the first half of the period leading to rainfall
    totals between 1-3" over the aforementioned areas. Greatest
    opportunity for flash flooding will exist across urbanized settings
    and areas where copious low water crossings are present, creating
    drainage concerns on a localized scale.=20

    As we step into the late-morning and early afternoon time frame,=20
    the focus will shift south into the Pecos River Valley and adjacent
    Stockton Plateau where convection will initiate off the dryline=20
    situated over the area with assistance from an approaching=20
    shortwave sliding eastward out of Chihuahua. Ample shear and
    favorable instability fields reflect the initiation of
    supercellular storm modes with additional multi-cell development
    along and ahead of the dryline leading to strong cell cores capable
    of heavy rainfall as the environmental moisture anomalies sit
    firmly between +1 to +2 deviations above climo. Storm motion
    vectors maintain a relatively steady forward propagation to the
    east and southeast from the initiation point allowing for a trail
    of significant rain totals between 1-3", locally higher to
    materialize from the southern Permian Basin down through the
    Stockton Plateau, Lower Trans Pecos, and eventually into the mid
    and lower Concho Valley by the evening. This setup is classic for=20
    scattered flash flood instances, especially in those more urban=20
    zones and areas of high low water crossing concentrations that are=20
    littered over the above zones, albeit this potential is greater
    than what will occur a bit further north. This reflected well
    within the 00z HREF neighborhood and EAS prob fields pertaining to
    the >2" threshold where both probabilities remain elevated area
    wide, but a notable maxima is positioned over the Lower Trans Pecos
    and those areas surrounding within the Permian Basin and Concho
    Valley. The maxima extends into the northern Edwards Plateau, a
    likely conjecture that correlates to the proposed motion of the
    expected complex of thunderstorms motioning out from areas to the west-northwest. This zone is part of a larger areal extent of heavy
    rainfall anticipated for the period with a second axis likely to
    materialize after sunset.=20

    Rainfall will likely be winding down in areas west TX that are
    located along and west of the Pecos River after 00z Wednesday, but
    the setup will shift focus into more of a nocturnal issue as we=20
    pivot our attention south over the central RGV as a strong mid-=20
    level vorticity maxima ejects out of Coahuila later this evening=20
    and slides east into the Edwards Plateau and neighboring Hill=20
    Country. There's a general consensus on this setup across guidance
    with some degree of broad heavy convection migrating into the=20
    above areas enticing a dousing of rainfall as the pattern evolves=20
    overnight. We'll see the introduction of a LLJ only add to the low-
    level convergence regime spurred on by the expected evolution=20
    likely allowing quite the rainfall signature in wake of the=20
    disturbance's trajectory. US57 to I-10 is the prospectus area of=20
    interest, which includes much of southern and central Hill Country=20
    with the very end of the period likely to see some of the activity=20
    make it beyond the I-35 corridor near San Antonio and even make
    headway towards Corpus Christi. The highest confidence area
    according to the neighborhood probability fields for >3" remains
    over the Hill Country to the I-35 corridor between Austin to San
    Antonio with the maximum (40-60%) located in those areas just west
    of the metro corridor along and near I-10. Probabilities for >5" do
    drop off significantly to <20% everywhere with a majority of the
    probs closer to 10%, so the magnitude within guidance is relatively
    consistent with a signature of 2-4" with locally up to 5" in the
    hardest hit areas. This is still plentiful to cause problems when
    it occurs, so the threat is well within the bounds of a SLGT, even
    leaning towards the higher end of the threshold for flash flooding.
    This area up through the southern Permian Basin and Stockton
    Plateau will be monitored closely for any potential targeted
    upgrades in future updates.=20

    The SLGT risk encompasses a broad area of TX spanning much of west
    TX all the way to about 75 miles east of I-35 with the northern
    periphery right up against the Red River and the southern points
    running from Corpus Christi to near Laredo.

    ...Southeast to Mid Atlantic...

    Confluent area on the western edge of a broad Western Atlantic
    ridge and a trough centered over the Southern Plains will continue
    for at least one more period with another round of convergence and
    heavy convection focused over the Central Gulf Coast to areas
    inland between southeast MS into the southern half of AL. This area
    will have seen multiple days of impact from heavier convection to
    begin with, so current priming of the soils could enact a greater=20
    flash flood potential in general with an emphasis on areas that
    received 3+ inches over the last 24 hours. Highest probabilities
    for >3" reside across the corridor extending from New Orleans over
    through Mobile into the western FL Panhandle and points just north
    of I-10. This area has received considerable rainfall the past 24
    hours with some places in the FL Panhandle receiving over 6 inches
    of rainfall the past few days. Despite what was a drier environment
    heading into the weekend, this area is sufficiently saturated in
    the top soil layer leading to greater run off capabilities as we
    step through today. The greatest axis of convergence within the
    hi-res suite has been pin-pointed over the western FL Panhandle
    where >5" neighborhood probs are running as high as 40-50% for a
    small area between Pensacola to west of Tallahassee, including
    Panama City beach along the coast. Radar analysis this evening is a
    pretty good indication of the persistent southerly flow off the
    Gulf in this narrow corridor, so this area in particular is one to
    watch for the period. This area over to New Orleans is well defined
    into the SLGT risk with a higher-end of the risk threshold forecast
    for this zone.

    Further north, the confluent pattern on the western edge of the
    ridge up to the frontal alignment in the Mid Atlantic stands to be
    a focal point for another day of scattered to widespread convection
    with general rates between 1-2"/hr across the Appalachian front and
    1-3"/hr in the adjacent lower elevations located over GA/SC/NC/VA.
    These areas have been hit multiple times the past few days with
    several flash flood warnings issued due to the convective impacts
    the past 24 hours. This only stands to continue for another period
    given pattern persistence, so wanted to make sure this was
    reflected in the new D1 issuance. In coordination with several
    offices across the Southeast to Mid Atlantic, a SLGT risk expansion
    was noted up through the aforementioned areas of the Southern
    Appalachians into the neighboring Piedmont of the Carolina's,
    southern VA, and most of the northern half of GA.=20

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Energetic disturbance ejecting out of the Pacific Northwest and
    British Columbia will make headway into the Northern Rockies by
    later this afternoon leading to a period of convective activity to
    spawn along the Lewis Range down into the high valleys of western
    MT. PWATs running over 1" across the Northern Rockies is well above
    climo norms, closer to the 99th percentile as noted by the latest
    NAEFS outputs, more than sufficient to be a problem for any more
    sensitive topographic features present given the complex
    topography. Multiple burn scars in the area will also be under
    threat for seeing rainfall rates between 0.5-1"/hr at times, a
    threshold that could cause rapid run off and debris flows if cells
    linger over the sensitive areas. This is not a widespread flash
    flood prospect, but isolated to widely scattered instances cannot
    be ruled out considering the above environment. A MRGL risk remains
    in place to account for the lower end threat.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE EASTERN
    HALF OF TEXAS, PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND AREAS
    OF THE OHIO VALLEY TO CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    ...Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    The broad upper level evolution occurring upstream over the
    Southern Plains will continue to shift east with the large scale
    forcing driving into the eastern half of TX leading to heavy rain
    prospects over the eastern portions of Hill Country, the I-35
    corridor and much of east TX, including the middle and upper TX
    coastal areas on Wednesday. Environmental conditions for heavy
    rainfall are most favorable along the TX and LA Gulf coast areas
    with a corridor of elevated theta_E's aligned from Corpus Christi
    up through the Lower Sabine to about 100 miles inland. The setup is
    contingent on the behavior of the convective pattern upstream into
    the central portion of the state and the migration of the
    thunderstorm complex exiting out of I-35. The general consensus is
    the maxima for precip will likely occur in proximity to the same
    areas that were hit within the past week; the area along the upper
    TX coast from Houston up to Lake Charles. This is very well defined
    within the probability fields in both the HREF and the AIFS-ENS
    where >3" is likely (60-90%) within the confines of that zone with
    the HREF even signaling modest >5" potential (40-60%) in that same
    zone. There's still some uncertainty in the behavior of any
    mesoscale complexes that end up materializing from all the
    convective development the previous evening and if they cause any
    significant shifts in the potential. In this case, this leads to a
    broad SLGT risk with a MRGL risk encompassing over the Southern
    Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley as broad upper forcing will
    likely spur scattered convection all across areas from western KS
    down through OK in the setup. Areas away from east TX and the Lower
    Mississippi will have more isolated heavy rain prospects,
    comparatively, so the threat remains elevated in the SLGT risk
    within these particular locations.

    ...Ohio Valley...

    Conditions will become increasingly favorable for heavy rainfall
    across the Ohio Valley going into Wednesday from a multitude of
    features that will ultimately couple into something more formidable
    during peak diurnal instability. Sheared vorticity stemming from
    previous period convection will likely settle over the central Ohio
    Valley with a west to east bisecting quasi-stationary front
    positioned just north of the Ohio River basin. A sweeping trough
    exiting out of Ontario will help tighten an axis of confluence
    across the Midwest and Ohio Valley by Wednesday afternoon, enticing
    a squeeze of the thermal gradient and regional instability axis
    that aligns with the frontal placement. Destabilization by the
    afternoon hours will lead to scattered to widespread thunderstorm
    initiation along the boundary with convective episodes likely to
    spawn heavier cells capable of hourly rates between 1-2"/hr as PWAT
    anomalies sit firmly within +2 standard deviations above climo.
    Previous periods of rainfall in the last three to four days have
    really brought down the areal FFG markers for all 1/3/6 hour
    thresholds with a vast majority of places along the Ohio River
    basin and points north running <1"/hr in the hourly exceedance
    indicator. This points to any heavier convective impacts could=20
    cause issues with the remnant soil moisture and hydrologic=20
    concerns that are lingering after the last event. This is
    especially true for eastern OH, southwest PA, and western WV where
    complex topography only exacerbate the potential in these zones.
    3-hour FFG exceedance probabilities from the 00z HREF are between
    20-40% for a large portion of eastern IN through the southern half
    of OH into southwest PA with a maxima of 40-60% located across=20
    northwest WV between US50 and WV7. Considering the antecedent
    conditions and expected widespread convective regime along the
    front, a SLGT risk was added for an increasing threat for flash
    flooding Wednesday.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND
    SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    ...Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    Breakdown of the persistent pattern for areas east of the
    Continental Divide will lead to weaker steering flow, but still=20
    enough moisture, lingering boundaries, and remnant mid-level
    vorticity to spur up bouts of scattered convection all across parts
    of the Central and Southern Plains into the Mississippi Valley.
    This setup is a far cry from what we've experienced the past
    several days, so the prospects of widespread flash flooding are
    much lower comparatively. However, environmental conditions and
    deep moisture presence still remain favorable along the northern
    periphery of the trough lingering across east TX which places the
    best opportunity for convective episodes to be located over the
    aforementioned areas. Ensemble QPF footprint is most notable across
    the Central Gulf coast and upper TX coastal plain, likely in part
    to the positioning of the trough and the fact the most prevalent
    theta_E is situated along the immediate Gulf. It's a period to
    monitor for any small scale features that could enhance convective
    potential further, but for now, a broad MRGL exists to cover for
    the threat.=20

    ...Florida...

    Active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will lead to
    a period of heavy rainfall across the southeast FL coast on
    Thursday afternoon. Consensus within guidance is for an active
    period between 18-00z Thu/Fri that would allow for heavy convection
    with slow forward propagations to impact the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach down to Miami. Globals and regional
    guidance even have some 2+" totals already in the output, and
    that's before the CAM's even have a depiction. Typically, this is a
    sign for heavy rainfall prospects capable of flash flooding,
    especially when you consider the PWATs running +1 to +2 deviations
    across that area of the Peninsula. A MRGL risk remains for that
    urban corridor of southeastern FL.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6OIF5qkPpMHZ33VgZw5z58U4b_yKzz1W5ZdnUkFdzP46= eH2wR6cyjihirTKAuouCYQbcL-VOHfg4A69czO4hhBAPSVc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6OIF5qkPpMHZ33VgZw5z58U4b_yKzz1W5ZdnUkFdzP46= eH2wR6cyjihirTKAuouCYQbcL-VOHfg4A69czO4hXDYOJQA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6OIF5qkPpMHZ33VgZw5z58U4b_yKzz1W5ZdnUkFdzP46= eH2wR6cyjihirTKAuouCYQbcL-VOHfg4A69czO4h-WOeqw0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue May 26 15:59:21 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 261559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Tue May 26 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST, CENTRAL TO WEST TEXAS AND THE OHIO=20
    VALLEY...

    ...Texas...

    Current WV satellite and upper air analysis indicates a broad,
    negatively- tilted trough axis migrating eastward out of the
    Southwestern CONUS into the Southern High Plains this evening. A
    broad diffluent pattern exists downstream of the mean trough with
    several small mid-level perturbations causing a panoply of
    convectively driven cells to materialize across the terrain of
    eastern NM, spreading eastward into the adjacent High Plains as
    surface troughing exists over southwest TX up through the eastern
    NM plains. Increased large scale ascent will become fixated over
    much of west TX, spreading further through the High Plains as
    widespread shower and thunderstorm activity continues through the
    morning and afternoon hours today. A plethora of convective
    activity with relatively slow to modest propagation speeds will
    translate into bouts of heavier rainfall across the southern half
    of the TX Panhandle down through the Permian Basin and western
    Rolling Plains the first half of the period leading to rainfall
    totals between 1-3" over the aforementioned areas. Greatest
    opportunity for flash flooding will exist across urbanized settings
    and areas where copious low water crossings are present, creating
    drainage concerns on a localized scale.

    As we step into the late-morning and early afternoon time frame,
    the focus will shift south into the Pecos River Valley and adjacent
    Stockton Plateau where convection will initiate off the dryline
    situated over the area with assistance from an approaching
    shortwave sliding eastward out of Chihuahua. Ample shear and
    favorable instability fields reflect the initiation of
    supercellular storm modes with additional multi-cell development
    along and ahead of the dryline leading to strong cell cores capable
    of heavy rainfall as the environmental moisture anomalies sit
    firmly between +1 to +2 deviations above climo. Storm motion
    vectors maintain a relatively steady forward propagation to the
    east and southeast from the initiation point allowing for a trail
    of significant rain totals between 1-3", locally higher to
    materialize from the southern Permian Basin down through the
    Stockton Plateau, Lower Trans Pecos, and eventually into the mid
    and lower Concho Valley by the evening. This setup is classic for
    scattered flash flood instances, especially in those more urban
    zones and areas of high low water crossing concentrations that are
    littered over the above zones, albeit this potential is greater
    than what will occur a bit further north. This reflected well
    within the 00z HREF neighborhood and EAS prob fields pertaining to
    the >2" threshold where both probabilities remain elevated area
    wide, but a notable maxima is positioned over the Lower Trans Pecos
    and those areas surrounding within the Permian Basin and Concho
    Valley. The maxima extends into the northern Edwards Plateau, a
    likely conjecture that correlates to the proposed motion of the
    expected complex of thunderstorms motioning out from areas to the west-northwest. This zone is part of a larger areal extent of heavy
    rainfall anticipated for the period with a second axis likely to
    materialize after sunset.

    Rainfall will likely be winding down in areas west TX that are
    located along and west of the Pecos River after 00z Wednesday, but
    the setup will shift focus into more of a nocturnal issue as we
    pivot our attention south over the central RGV as a strong mid-
    level vorticity maxima ejects out of Coahuila later this evening
    and slides east into the Edwards Plateau and neighboring Hill
    Country. There's a general consensus on this setup across guidance
    with some degree of broad heavy convection migrating into the
    above areas enticing a dousing of rainfall as the pattern evolves
    overnight. We'll see the introduction of a LLJ only add to the low-
    level convergence regime spurred on by the expected evolution
    likely allowing quite the rainfall signature in wake of the
    disturbance's trajectory. US57 to I-10 is the prospectus area of
    interest, which includes much of southern and central Hill Country
    with the very end of the period likely to see some of the activity
    make it beyond the I-35 corridor near San Antonio and even make
    headway towards Corpus Christi. The highest confidence area
    according to the neighborhood probability fields for >3" remains
    over the Hill Country to the I-35 corridor between Austin to San
    Antonio with the maximum (40-60%) located in those areas just west
    of the metro corridor along and near I-10. Probabilities for >5" do
    drop off significantly to <20% everywhere with a majority of the
    probs closer to 10%, so the magnitude within guidance is relatively
    consistent with a signature of 2-4" with locally up to 5" in the
    hardest hit areas. This is still plentiful to cause problems when
    it occurs, so the threat is well within the bounds of a SLGT, even
    leaning towards the higher end of the threshold for flash flooding.
    This area up through the southern Permian Basin and Stockton
    Plateau will be monitored closely for any potential targeted
    upgrades in future updates.

    The SLGT risk encompasses a broad area of TX spanning much of west
    TX all the way to about 75 miles east of I-35 with the northern
    periphery right up against the Red River and the southern points
    running from Corpus Christi to near Laredo.

    ...Southeast to Mid Atlantic to Ohio Valley...

    16Z update... A Slight Risk was hoisted for portions of the Ohio
    Valley along the stalled west-east frontal boundary, from southeast
    Missouri to eastern Kentucky. Scattered to widespread convection
    have been lifting through the region this morning over sensitive
    soils. Local 1hr/3hr FFGs are as low as 1/1.5 inches and with
    hourly rates pulsating up to 1.5-2+ inches/hr over this part of the
    country could quickly reach or exceed the FFGs.

    Minor westward adjustment to the Slight Risk over
    eastern Louisiana was made to reflect the latest QPF guidance and
    trends. The Gulf Coast and into western Georgia is where much of
    the CAMs are focusing narrow streaks of heavy to intense rainfall=20
    for this period with accumulations of 2-3+ inches.

    Campbell

    Confluent area on the western edge of a broad Western
    Atlantic ridge and a trough centered over the Southern Plains will
    continue for at least one more period with another round of=20
    convergence and heavy convection focused over the Central Gulf=20
    Coast to areas inland between southeast MS into the southern half=20
    of AL. This area will have seen multiple days of impact from=20
    heavier convection to begin with, so current priming of the soils=20
    could enact a greater flash flood potential in general with an=20
    emphasis on areas that received 3+ inches over the last 24 hours.=20
    Highest probabilities for >3" reside across the corridor extending=20
    from New Orleans over through Mobile into the western FL Panhandle=20
    and points just north of I-10. This area has received considerable=20
    rainfall the past 24 hours with some places in the FL Panhandle=20
    receiving over 6 inches of rainfall the past few days. Despite what
    was a drier environment heading into the weekend, this area is=20
    sufficiently saturated in the top soil layer leading to greater run
    off capabilities as we step through today. The greatest axis of=20
    convergence within the hi- res suite has been pin-pointed over the=20
    western FL Panhandle where >5" neighborhood probs are running as=20
    high as 40-50% for a small area between Pensacola to west of=20
    Tallahassee, including Panama City beach along the coast. Radar=20
    analysis this evening is a pretty good indication of the persistent
    southerly flow off the Gulf in this narrow corridor, so this area=20
    in particular is one to watch for the period. This area over to New
    Orleans is well defined into the SLGT risk with a higher-end of=20
    the risk threshold forecast for this zone.

    Further north, the confluent pattern on the western edge of the
    ridge up to the frontal alignment in the Mid Atlantic stands to be
    a focal point for another day of scattered to widespread convection
    with general rates between 1-2"/hr across the Appalachian front and
    1-3"/hr in the adjacent lower elevations located over GA/SC/NC/VA.
    These areas have been hit multiple times the past few days with
    several flash flood warnings issued due to the convective impacts
    the past 24 hours. This only stands to continue for another period
    given pattern persistence, so wanted to make sure this was
    reflected in the new D1 issuance. In coordination with several
    offices across the Southeast to Mid Atlantic, a SLGT risk expansion
    was noted up through the aforementioned areas of the Southern
    Appalachians into the neighboring Piedmont of the Carolina's,
    southern VA, and most of the northern half of GA.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    16Z update... Convection this morning has been firing up across
    eastern Washington and northern Idaho, areas very similar in=20
    topography with sensitive locations as described below. The western
    boundary of the Marginal Risk was expanded into eastern Washington
    to cover this convection and more expected later in the day.

    Campbell

    Energetic disturbance ejecting out of the Pacific Northwest and
    British Columbia will make headway into the Northern Rockies by
    later this afternoon leading to a period of convective activity to
    spawn along the Lewis Range down into the high valleys of western
    MT. PWATs running over 1" across the Northern Rockies is well above
    climo norms, closer to the 99th percentile as noted by the latest
    NAEFS outputs, more than sufficient to be a problem for any more
    sensitive topographic features present given the complex
    topography. Multiple burn scars in the area will also be under
    threat for seeing rainfall rates between 0.5-1"/hr at times, a
    threshold that could cause rapid run off and debris flows if cells
    linger over the sensitive areas. This is not a widespread flash
    flood prospect, but isolated to widely scattered instances cannot
    be ruled out considering the above environment. A MRGL risk remains
    in place to account for the lower end threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE EASTERN
    HALF OF TEXAS, PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND AREAS
    OF THE OHIO VALLEY TO CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    ...Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    The broad upper level evolution occurring upstream over the
    Southern Plains will continue to shift east with the large scale
    forcing driving into the eastern half of TX leading to heavy rain
    prospects over the eastern portions of Hill Country, the I-35
    corridor and much of east TX, including the middle and upper TX
    coastal areas on Wednesday. Environmental conditions for heavy
    rainfall are most favorable along the TX and LA Gulf coast areas
    with a corridor of elevated theta_E's aligned from Corpus Christi
    up through the Lower Sabine to about 100 miles inland. The setup is
    contingent on the behavior of the convective pattern upstream into
    the central portion of the state and the migration of the
    thunderstorm complex exiting out of I-35. The general consensus is
    the maxima for precip will likely occur in proximity to the same
    areas that were hit within the past week; the area along the upper
    TX coast from Houston up to Lake Charles. This is very well defined
    within the probability fields in both the HREF and the AIFS-ENS
    where >3" is likely (60-90%) within the confines of that zone with
    the HREF even signaling modest >5" potential (40-60%) in that same
    zone. There's still some uncertainty in the behavior of any
    mesoscale complexes that end up materializing from all the
    convective development the previous evening and if they cause any
    significant shifts in the potential. In this case, this leads to a
    broad SLGT risk with a MRGL risk encompassing over the Southern
    Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley as broad upper forcing will
    likely spur scattered convection all across areas from western KS
    down through OK in the setup. Areas away from east TX and the Lower
    Mississippi will have more isolated heavy rain prospects,
    comparatively, so the threat remains elevated in the SLGT risk
    within these particular locations.

    ...Ohio Valley...

    Conditions will become increasingly favorable for heavy rainfall
    across the Ohio Valley going into Wednesday from a multitude of
    features that will ultimately couple into something more formidable
    during peak diurnal instability. Sheared vorticity stemming from
    previous period convection will likely settle over the central Ohio
    Valley with a west to east bisecting quasi-stationary front
    positioned just north of the Ohio River basin. A sweeping trough
    exiting out of Ontario will help tighten an axis of confluence
    across the Midwest and Ohio Valley by Wednesday afternoon, enticing
    a squeeze of the thermal gradient and regional instability axis
    that aligns with the frontal placement. Destabilization by the
    afternoon hours will lead to scattered to widespread thunderstorm
    initiation along the boundary with convective episodes likely to
    spawn heavier cells capable of hourly rates between 1-2"/hr as PWAT
    anomalies sit firmly within +2 standard deviations above climo.
    Previous periods of rainfall in the last three to four days have
    really brought down the areal FFG markers for all 1/3/6 hour
    thresholds with a vast majority of places along the Ohio River
    basin and points north running <1"/hr in the hourly exceedance
    indicator. This points to any heavier convective impacts could
    cause issues with the remnant soil moisture and hydrologic
    concerns that are lingering after the last event. This is
    especially true for eastern OH, southwest PA, and western WV where
    complex topography only exacerbate the potential in these zones.
    3-hour FFG exceedance probabilities from the 00z HREF are between
    20-40% for a large portion of eastern IN through the southern half
    of OH into southwest PA with a maxima of 40-60% located across
    northwest WV between US50 and WV7. Considering the antecedent
    conditions and expected widespread convective regime along the
    front, a SLGT risk was added for an increasing threat for flash
    flooding Wednesday.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND
    SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    ...Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    Breakdown of the persistent pattern for areas east of the
    Continental Divide will lead to weaker steering flow, but still
    enough moisture, lingering boundaries, and remnant mid-level
    vorticity to spur up bouts of scattered convection all across parts
    of the Central and Southern Plains into the Mississippi Valley.
    This setup is a far cry from what we've experienced the past
    several days, so the prospects of widespread flash flooding are
    much lower comparatively. However, environmental conditions and
    deep moisture presence still remain favorable along the northern
    periphery of the trough lingering across east TX which places the
    best opportunity for convective episodes to be located over the
    aforementioned areas. Ensemble QPF footprint is most notable across
    the Central Gulf coast and upper TX coastal plain, likely in part
    to the positioning of the trough and the fact the most prevalent
    theta_E is situated along the immediate Gulf. It's a period to
    monitor for any small scale features that could enhance convective
    potential further, but for now, a broad MRGL exists to cover for
    the threat.

    ...Florida...

    Active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will lead to
    a period of heavy rainfall across the southeast FL coast on
    Thursday afternoon. Consensus within guidance is for an active
    period between 18-00z Thu/Fri that would allow for heavy convection
    with slow forward propagations to impact the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach down to Miami. Globals and regional
    guidance even have some 2+" totals already in the output, and
    that's before the CAM's even have a depiction. Typically, this is a
    sign for heavy rainfall prospects capable of flash flooding,
    especially when you consider the PWATs running +1 to +2 deviations
    across that area of the Peninsula. A MRGL risk remains for that
    urban corridor of southeastern FL.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5DBwJzWoDtRHIInIRvaE4xiXgVRMty5K1ntDb9LkRxzd= iOLB45yBRxW34dtQuNDgGnTmaDBwZOnjoliabsWdNR8vuy8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5DBwJzWoDtRHIInIRvaE4xiXgVRMty5K1ntDb9LkRxzd= iOLB45yBRxW34dtQuNDgGnTmaDBwZOnjoliabsWd4HmABA0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5DBwJzWoDtRHIInIRvaE4xiXgVRMty5K1ntDb9LkRxzd= iOLB45yBRxW34dtQuNDgGnTmaDBwZOnjoliabsWdlbEuE1I$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue May 26 19:13:25 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 261913
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    313 PM EDT Tue May 26 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST, CENTRAL TO WEST TEXAS AND THE OHIO
    VALLEY...

    ...Texas...

    Current WV satellite and upper air analysis indicates a broad,
    negatively- tilted trough axis migrating eastward out of the
    Southwestern CONUS into the Southern High Plains this evening. A
    broad diffluent pattern exists downstream of the mean trough with
    several small mid-level perturbations causing a panoply of
    convectively driven cells to materialize across the terrain of
    eastern NM, spreading eastward into the adjacent High Plains as
    surface troughing exists over southwest TX up through the eastern
    NM plains. Increased large scale ascent will become fixated over
    much of west TX, spreading further through the High Plains as
    widespread shower and thunderstorm activity continues through the
    morning and afternoon hours today. A plethora of convective
    activity with relatively slow to modest propagation speeds will
    translate into bouts of heavier rainfall across the southern half
    of the TX Panhandle down through the Permian Basin and western
    Rolling Plains the first half of the period leading to rainfall
    totals between 1-3" over the aforementioned areas. Greatest
    opportunity for flash flooding will exist across urbanized settings
    and areas where copious low water crossings are present, creating
    drainage concerns on a localized scale.

    As we step into the late-morning and early afternoon time frame,
    the focus will shift south into the Pecos River Valley and adjacent
    Stockton Plateau where convection will initiate off the dryline
    situated over the area with assistance from an approaching
    shortwave sliding eastward out of Chihuahua. Ample shear and
    favorable instability fields reflect the initiation of
    supercellular storm modes with additional multi-cell development
    along and ahead of the dryline leading to strong cell cores capable
    of heavy rainfall as the environmental moisture anomalies sit
    firmly between +1 to +2 deviations above climo. Storm motion
    vectors maintain a relatively steady forward propagation to the
    east and southeast from the initiation point allowing for a trail
    of significant rain totals between 1-3", locally higher to
    materialize from the southern Permian Basin down through the
    Stockton Plateau, Lower Trans Pecos, and eventually into the mid
    and lower Concho Valley by the evening. This setup is classic for
    scattered flash flood instances, especially in those more urban
    zones and areas of high low water crossing concentrations that are
    littered over the above zones, albeit this potential is greater
    than what will occur a bit further north. This reflected well
    within the 00z HREF neighborhood and EAS prob fields pertaining to
    the >2" threshold where both probabilities remain elevated area
    wide, but a notable maxima is positioned over the Lower Trans Pecos
    and those areas surrounding within the Permian Basin and Concho
    Valley. The maxima extends into the northern Edwards Plateau, a
    likely conjecture that correlates to the proposed motion of the
    expected complex of thunderstorms motioning out from areas to the west-northwest. This zone is part of a larger areal extent of heavy
    rainfall anticipated for the period with a second axis likely to
    materialize after sunset.

    Rainfall will likely be winding down in areas west TX that are
    located along and west of the Pecos River after 00z Wednesday, but
    the setup will shift focus into more of a nocturnal issue as we
    pivot our attention south over the central RGV as a strong mid-
    level vorticity maxima ejects out of Coahuila later this evening
    and slides east into the Edwards Plateau and neighboring Hill
    Country. There's a general consensus on this setup across guidance
    with some degree of broad heavy convection migrating into the
    above areas enticing a dousing of rainfall as the pattern evolves
    overnight. We'll see the introduction of a LLJ only add to the low-
    level convergence regime spurred on by the expected evolution
    likely allowing quite the rainfall signature in wake of the
    disturbance's trajectory. US57 to I-10 is the prospectus area of
    interest, which includes much of southern and central Hill Country
    with the very end of the period likely to see some of the activity
    make it beyond the I-35 corridor near San Antonio and even make
    headway towards Corpus Christi. The highest confidence area
    according to the neighborhood probability fields for >3" remains
    over the Hill Country to the I-35 corridor between Austin to San
    Antonio with the maximum (40-60%) located in those areas just west
    of the metro corridor along and near I-10. Probabilities for >5" do
    drop off significantly to <20% everywhere with a majority of the
    probs closer to 10%, so the magnitude within guidance is relatively
    consistent with a signature of 2-4" with locally up to 5" in the
    hardest hit areas. This is still plentiful to cause problems when
    it occurs, so the threat is well within the bounds of a SLGT, even
    leaning towards the higher end of the threshold for flash flooding.
    This area up through the southern Permian Basin and Stockton
    Plateau will be monitored closely for any potential targeted
    upgrades in future updates.

    The SLGT risk encompasses a broad area of TX spanning much of west
    TX all the way to about 75 miles east of I-35 with the northern
    periphery right up against the Red River and the southern points
    running from Corpus Christi to near Laredo.

    ...Southeast to Mid Atlantic to Ohio Valley...

    16Z update... A Slight Risk was hoisted for portions of the Ohio
    Valley along the stalled west-east frontal boundary, from southeast
    Missouri to eastern Kentucky. Scattered to widespread convection
    have been lifting through the region this morning over sensitive
    soils. Local 1hr/3hr FFGs are as low as 1/1.5 inches and with
    hourly rates pulsating up to 1.5-2+ inches/hr over this part of the
    country could quickly reach or exceed the FFGs.

    Minor westward adjustment to the Slight Risk over
    eastern Louisiana was made to reflect the latest QPF guidance and
    trends. The Gulf Coast and into western Georgia is where much of
    the CAMs are focusing narrow streaks of heavy to intense rainfall
    for this period with accumulations of 2-3+ inches.

    Campbell

    Confluent area on the western edge of a broad Western
    Atlantic ridge and a trough centered over the Southern Plains will
    continue for at least one more period with another round of
    convergence and heavy convection focused over the Central Gulf
    Coast to areas inland between southeast MS into the southern half
    of AL. This area will have seen multiple days of impact from
    heavier convection to begin with, so current priming of the soils
    could enact a greater flash flood potential in general with an
    emphasis on areas that received 3+ inches over the last 24 hours.
    Highest probabilities for >3" reside across the corridor extending
    from New Orleans over through Mobile into the western FL Panhandle
    and points just north of I-10. This area has received considerable
    rainfall the past 24 hours with some places in the FL Panhandle
    receiving over 6 inches of rainfall the past few days. Despite what
    was a drier environment heading into the weekend, this area is
    sufficiently saturated in the top soil layer leading to greater run
    off capabilities as we step through today. The greatest axis of
    convergence within the hi- res suite has been pin-pointed over the
    western FL Panhandle where >5" neighborhood probs are running as
    high as 40-50% for a small area between Pensacola to west of
    Tallahassee, including Panama City beach along the coast. Radar
    analysis this evening is a pretty good indication of the persistent
    southerly flow off the Gulf in this narrow corridor, so this area
    in particular is one to watch for the period. This area over to New
    Orleans is well defined into the SLGT risk with a higher-end of
    the risk threshold forecast for this zone.

    Further north, the confluent pattern on the western edge of the
    ridge up to the frontal alignment in the Mid Atlantic stands to be
    a focal point for another day of scattered to widespread convection
    with general rates between 1-2"/hr across the Appalachian front and
    1-3"/hr in the adjacent lower elevations located over GA/SC/NC/VA.
    These areas have been hit multiple times the past few days with
    several flash flood warnings issued due to the convective impacts
    the past 24 hours. This only stands to continue for another period
    given pattern persistence, so wanted to make sure this was
    reflected in the new D1 issuance. In coordination with several
    offices across the Southeast to Mid Atlantic, a SLGT risk expansion
    was noted up through the aforementioned areas of the Southern
    Appalachians into the neighboring Piedmont of the Carolina's,
    southern VA, and most of the northern half of GA.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    16Z update... Convection this morning has been firing up across
    eastern Washington and northern Idaho, areas very similar in
    topography with sensitive locations as described below. The western
    boundary of the Marginal Risk was expanded into eastern Washington
    to cover this convection and more expected later in the day.

    Campbell

    Energetic disturbance ejecting out of the Pacific Northwest and
    British Columbia will make headway into the Northern Rockies by
    later this afternoon leading to a period of convective activity to
    spawn along the Lewis Range down into the high valleys of western
    MT. PWATs running over 1" across the Northern Rockies is well above
    climo norms, closer to the 99th percentile as noted by the latest
    NAEFS outputs, more than sufficient to be a problem for any more
    sensitive topographic features present given the complex
    topography. Multiple burn scars in the area will also be under
    threat for seeing rainfall rates between 0.5-1"/hr at times, a
    threshold that could cause rapid run off and debris flows if cells
    linger over the sensitive areas. This is not a widespread flash
    flood prospect, but isolated to widely scattered instances cannot
    be ruled out considering the above environment. A MRGL risk remains
    in place to account for the lower end threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE EASTERN
    HALF OF TEXAS, PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND AREAS
    OF THE OHIO VALLEY TO CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    21Z update... A new Marginal Risk area was raised for eastern
    Washington, northern Idaho and western Montana. Deep moisture over
    the region maintaining above climo PW values for late May. A wave
    making its way through the region along with differential heating=20
    will help trigger convection capable of rain rates upwards of 0.50
    to 1+ inches/hr in isolated areas. These rates, if falling over=20
    recent burn scars and other sensitive locations have the potential=20
    to cause isolated flash flooding and/or debris flows in steep=20
    terrain. However a limiting factor will be that the areal coverage=20
    of thunder will be less than that of the Day 1 period.

    Campbell

    ...Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    The broad upper level evolution occurring upstream over the
    Southern Plains will continue to shift east with the large scale
    forcing driving into the eastern half of TX leading to heavy rain
    prospects over the eastern portions of Hill Country, the I-35
    corridor and much of east TX, including the middle and upper TX
    coastal areas on Wednesday. Environmental conditions for heavy
    rainfall are most favorable along the TX and LA Gulf coast areas
    with a corridor of elevated theta_E's aligned from Corpus Christi
    up through the Lower Sabine to about 100 miles inland. The setup is
    contingent on the behavior of the convective pattern upstream into
    the central portion of the state and the migration of the
    thunderstorm complex exiting out of I-35. The general consensus is
    the maxima for precip will likely occur in proximity to the same
    areas that were hit within the past week; the area along the upper
    TX coast from Houston up to Lake Charles. This is very well defined
    within the probability fields in both the HREF and the AIFS-ENS
    where >3" is likely (60-90%) within the confines of that zone with
    the HREF even signaling modest >5" potential (40-60%) in that same
    zone. There's still some uncertainty in the behavior of any
    mesoscale complexes that end up materializing from all the
    convective development the previous evening and if they cause any
    significant shifts in the potential. In this case, this leads to a
    broad SLGT risk with a MRGL risk encompassing over the Southern
    Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley as broad upper forcing will
    likely spur scattered convection all across areas from western KS
    down through OK in the setup. Areas away from east TX and the Lower
    Mississippi will have more isolated heavy rain prospects,
    comparatively, so the threat remains elevated in the SLGT risk
    within these particular locations.

    ...Ohio Valley...

    21Z update... A minor westward nudge was made across Indiana along
    with a south and east expansion across West Virginia to account for
    the latest model trends and WPC QPF.

    Campbell

    Conditions will become increasingly favorable for heavy rainfall
    across the Ohio Valley going into Wednesday from a multitude of
    features that will ultimately couple into something more formidable
    during peak diurnal instability. Sheared vorticity stemming from
    previous period convection will likely settle over the central Ohio
    Valley with a west to east bisecting quasi-stationary front
    positioned just north of the Ohio River basin. A sweeping trough
    exiting out of Ontario will help tighten an axis of confluence
    across the Midwest and Ohio Valley by Wednesday afternoon, enticing
    a squeeze of the thermal gradient and regional instability axis
    that aligns with the frontal placement. Destabilization by the
    afternoon hours will lead to scattered to widespread thunderstorm
    initiation along the boundary with convective episodes likely to
    spawn heavier cells capable of hourly rates between 1-2"/hr as PWAT
    anomalies sit firmly within +2 standard deviations above climo.
    Previous periods of rainfall in the last three to four days have
    really brought down the areal FFG markers for all 1/3/6 hour
    thresholds with a vast majority of places along the Ohio River
    basin and points north running <1"/hr in the hourly exceedance
    indicator. This points to any heavier convective impacts could
    cause issues with the remnant soil moisture and hydrologic
    concerns that are lingering after the last event. This is
    especially true for eastern OH, southwest PA, and western WV where
    complex topography only exacerbate the potential in these zones.
    3-hour FFG exceedance probabilities from the 00z HREF are between
    20-40% for a large portion of eastern IN through the southern half
    of OH into southwest PA with a maxima of 40-60% located across
    northwest WV between US50 and WV7. Considering the antecedent
    conditions and expected widespread convective regime along the
    front, a SLGT risk was added for an increasing threat for flash
    flooding Wednesday.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, NORTHERN ROCKIES, LOWER=20
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    21Z update... A new Marginal Risk area was raised for eastern
    Washington, northern Idaho and western Montana to carry on the
    elevated threat potential described in the Day 1 and Day 2 periods. A
    minor westward expansion of the Marginal Risk was made for Palm=20
    Beach County to account for trends and the new WPC QPF, elsewhere=20
    remains in good order.

    Campbell

    ...Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    Breakdown of the persistent pattern for areas east of the
    Continental Divide will lead to weaker steering flow, but still
    enough moisture, lingering boundaries, and remnant mid-level
    vorticity to spur up bouts of scattered convection all across parts
    of the Central and Southern Plains into the Mississippi Valley.
    This setup is a far cry from what we've experienced the past
    several days, so the prospects of widespread flash flooding are
    much lower comparatively. However, environmental conditions and
    deep moisture presence still remain favorable along the northern
    periphery of the trough lingering across east TX which places the
    best opportunity for convective episodes to be located over the
    aforementioned areas. Ensemble QPF footprint is most notable across
    the Central Gulf coast and upper TX coastal plain, likely in part
    to the positioning of the trough and the fact the most prevalent
    theta_E is situated along the immediate Gulf. It's a period to
    monitor for any small scale features that could enhance convective
    potential further, but for now, a broad MRGL exists to cover for
    the threat.

    ...Florida...

    Active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will lead=20
    to a period of heavy rainfall across the southeast FL coast on=20
    Thursday afternoon. Consensus within guidance is for an active=20
    period between 18-00z Thu/Fri that would allow for heavy convection
    with slow forward propagations to impact the South Florida metro=20
    corridor from West Palm Beach down to Miami. Globals and regional=20
    guidance even have some 2+" totals already in the output, and=20
    that's before the CAM's even have a depiction. Typically, this is a
    sign for heavy rainfall prospects capable of flash flooding,=20
    especially when you consider the PWATs running +1 to +2 deviations=20
    across that area of the Peninsula. A MRGL risk remains for that=20
    urban corridor of southeastern FL.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!44uTkCHcIo4eHQNe-jM3-ev03m3YBBZg-WUaA5afz1oL= UMdO8YltvTDlvECpz2WAExdnMZ9iTYUMZnlAY0QVgzD0ywk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!44uTkCHcIo4eHQNe-jM3-ev03m3YBBZg-WUaA5afz1oL= UMdO8YltvTDlvECpz2WAExdnMZ9iTYUMZnlAY0QVccEzjfg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!44uTkCHcIo4eHQNe-jM3-ev03m3YBBZg-WUaA5afz1oL= UMdO8YltvTDlvECpz2WAExdnMZ9iTYUMZnlAY0QVv80Q9dE$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed May 27 00:17:51 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 270017
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    817 PM EDT Tue May 26 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN TEXAS...

    ...Texas into Southern Oklahoma...

    ...0100 UTC Update...

    Based on the latest observational trends -- satellite, radar,=20
    mesoanalysis, etc. -- have pared the back edges of the outlook=20
    areas across West TX. Also nudged the southern periphery of the=20
    Slight Risk area a little farther south across South TX (Brush=20
    Country), based on the latest HRRR trends and elevated 18Z HREF=20
    exceedance probabilities. Over this region, still quite a bit of=20
    untapped deep-layer instability (mixed-layer CAPEs ~3,000 J/Kg),=20
    along with PWATs between 1.9-2.1 per the latest SPC mesoanalysis.=20
    Continued low-mid level shear (esp directional) will likely=20
    maintain progressive linear segments/QLCS, however given the degree
    of instability and TPW, sub-hourly rainfall rates of 2-3 inches=20
    will be possible underneath the strongest cells.=20

    Hurley

    ...Southeast to Mid Atlantic to Ohio Valley...

    ...0100 UTC Update...

    Weak mid-level lapse rates (<6.5 C/km per SPC mesoanalysis) is
    leading to a increasing lower-layer stability across much of this=20
    region following sunset. MUCAPEs still 1500-3000 J/Kg over much of
    the area is still sufficient for areas of heavy rainfall,
    especially considering the overall weak flow (southerly Corfidi
    vectors 5-10 kts) and PWATs between 1.7-2.0+ inches over most
    areas. However the area(s) of convective clusters within an overall
    diffuse Warm Conveyor Belt (WCB) are rather disorganized, and as we
    continue to progress farther beyond peak diurnal heating, expect
    any short-term runoff issues to be more localized/isolated. As a
    result, all Slight Risk areas were removed.=20

    Hurley

    ...Northern Rockies...

    16Z update... Convection this morning has been firing up across
    eastern Washington and northern Idaho, areas very similar in
    topography with sensitive locations as described below. The western
    boundary of the Marginal Risk was expanded into eastern Washington
    to cover this convection and more expected later in the day.

    Campbell

    Energetic disturbance ejecting out of the Pacific Northwest and
    British Columbia will make headway into the Northern Rockies by
    later this afternoon leading to a period of convective activity to
    spawn along the Lewis Range down into the high valleys of western
    MT. PWATs running over 1" across the Northern Rockies is well above
    climo norms, closer to the 99th percentile as noted by the latest
    NAEFS outputs, more than sufficient to be a problem for any more
    sensitive topographic features present given the complex
    topography. Multiple burn scars in the area will also be under
    threat for seeing rainfall rates between 0.5-1"/hr at times, a
    threshold that could cause rapid run off and debris flows if cells
    linger over the sensitive areas. This is not a widespread flash
    flood prospect, but isolated to widely scattered instances cannot
    be ruled out considering the above environment. A MRGL risk remains
    in place to account for the lower end threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE EASTERN
    HALF OF TEXAS, PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND AREAS
    OF THE OHIO VALLEY TO CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    21Z update... A new Marginal Risk area was raised for eastern
    Washington, northern Idaho and western Montana. Deep moisture over
    the region maintaining above climo PW values for late May. A wave
    making its way through the region along with differential heating
    will help trigger convection capable of rain rates upwards of 0.50
    to 1+ inches/hr in isolated areas. These rates, if falling over
    recent burn scars and other sensitive locations have the potential
    to cause isolated flash flooding and/or debris flows in steep
    terrain. However a limiting factor will be that the areal coverage
    of thunder will be less than that of the Day 1 period.

    Campbell

    ...Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    The broad upper level evolution occurring upstream over the
    Southern Plains will continue to shift east with the large scale
    forcing driving into the eastern half of TX leading to heavy rain
    prospects over the eastern portions of Hill Country, the I-35
    corridor and much of east TX, including the middle and upper TX
    coastal areas on Wednesday. Environmental conditions for heavy
    rainfall are most favorable along the TX and LA Gulf coast areas
    with a corridor of elevated theta_E's aligned from Corpus Christi
    up through the Lower Sabine to about 100 miles inland. The setup is
    contingent on the behavior of the convective pattern upstream into
    the central portion of the state and the migration of the
    thunderstorm complex exiting out of I-35. The general consensus is
    the maxima for precip will likely occur in proximity to the same
    areas that were hit within the past week; the area along the upper
    TX coast from Houston up to Lake Charles. This is very well defined
    within the probability fields in both the HREF and the AIFS-ENS
    where >3" is likely (60-90%) within the confines of that zone with
    the HREF even signaling modest >5" potential (40-60%) in that same
    zone. There's still some uncertainty in the behavior of any
    mesoscale complexes that end up materializing from all the
    convective development the previous evening and if they cause any
    significant shifts in the potential. In this case, this leads to a
    broad SLGT risk with a MRGL risk encompassing over the Southern
    Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley as broad upper forcing will
    likely spur scattered convection all across areas from western KS
    down through OK in the setup. Areas away from east TX and the Lower
    Mississippi will have more isolated heavy rain prospects,
    comparatively, so the threat remains elevated in the SLGT risk
    within these particular locations.

    ...Ohio Valley...

    21Z update... A minor westward nudge was made across Indiana along
    with a south and east expansion across West Virginia to account for
    the latest model trends and WPC QPF.

    Campbell

    Conditions will become increasingly favorable for heavy rainfall
    across the Ohio Valley going into Wednesday from a multitude of
    features that will ultimately couple into something more formidable
    during peak diurnal instability. Sheared vorticity stemming from
    previous period convection will likely settle over the central Ohio
    Valley with a west to east bisecting quasi-stationary front
    positioned just north of the Ohio River basin. A sweeping trough
    exiting out of Ontario will help tighten an axis of confluence
    across the Midwest and Ohio Valley by Wednesday afternoon, enticing
    a squeeze of the thermal gradient and regional instability axis
    that aligns with the frontal placement. Destabilization by the
    afternoon hours will lead to scattered to widespread thunderstorm
    initiation along the boundary with convective episodes likely to
    spawn heavier cells capable of hourly rates between 1-2"/hr as PWAT
    anomalies sit firmly within +2 standard deviations above climo.
    Previous periods of rainfall in the last three to four days have
    really brought down the areal FFG markers for all 1/3/6 hour
    thresholds with a vast majority of places along the Ohio River
    basin and points north running <1"/hr in the hourly exceedance
    indicator. This points to any heavier convective impacts could
    cause issues with the remnant soil moisture and hydrologic
    concerns that are lingering after the last event. This is
    especially true for eastern OH, southwest PA, and western WV where
    complex topography only exacerbate the potential in these zones.
    3-hour FFG exceedance probabilities from the 00z HREF are between
    20-40% for a large portion of eastern IN through the southern half
    of OH into southwest PA with a maxima of 40-60% located across
    northwest WV between US50 and WV7. Considering the antecedent
    conditions and expected widespread convective regime along the
    front, a SLGT risk was added for an increasing threat for flash
    flooding Wednesday.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, NORTHERN ROCKIES, LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    21Z update... A new Marginal Risk area was raised for eastern
    Washington, northern Idaho and western Montana to carry on the
    elevated threat potential described in the Day 1 and Day 2 periods. A
    minor westward expansion of the Marginal Risk was made for Palm
    Beach County to account for trends and the new WPC QPF, elsewhere
    remains in good order.

    Campbell

    ...Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    Breakdown of the persistent pattern for areas east of the
    Continental Divide will lead to weaker steering flow, but still
    enough moisture, lingering boundaries, and remnant mid-level
    vorticity to spur up bouts of scattered convection all across parts
    of the Central and Southern Plains into the Mississippi Valley.
    This setup is a far cry from what we've experienced the past
    several days, so the prospects of widespread flash flooding are
    much lower comparatively. However, environmental conditions and
    deep moisture presence still remain favorable along the northern
    periphery of the trough lingering across east TX which places the
    best opportunity for convective episodes to be located over the
    aforementioned areas. Ensemble QPF footprint is most notable across
    the Central Gulf coast and upper TX coastal plain, likely in part
    to the positioning of the trough and the fact the most prevalent
    theta_E is situated along the immediate Gulf. It's a period to
    monitor for any small scale features that could enhance convective
    potential further, but for now, a broad MRGL exists to cover for
    the threat.

    ...Florida...

    Active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will lead
    to a period of heavy rainfall across the southeast FL coast on
    Thursday afternoon. Consensus within guidance is for an active
    period between 18-00z Thu/Fri that would allow for heavy convection
    with slow forward propagations to impact the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach down to Miami. Globals and regional
    guidance even have some 2+" totals already in the output, and
    that's before the CAM's even have a depiction. Typically, this is a
    sign for heavy rainfall prospects capable of flash flooding,
    especially when you consider the PWATs running +1 to +2 deviations
    across that area of the Peninsula. A MRGL risk remains for that
    urban corridor of southeastern FL.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!689rZTLUPfUFczU_W5h6qGAxhZIWFLPXrlwueQ7mE7W8= EIbf8F-HOPSijYEt0DnX-Kyx5k8mme5MaMm3ghvd-0tHE3s$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!689rZTLUPfUFczU_W5h6qGAxhZIWFLPXrlwueQ7mE7W8= EIbf8F-HOPSijYEt0DnX-Kyx5k8mme5MaMm3ghvdsriwC_U$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!689rZTLUPfUFczU_W5h6qGAxhZIWFLPXrlwueQ7mE7W8= EIbf8F-HOPSijYEt0DnX-Kyx5k8mme5MaMm3ghvdAREg5OQ$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed May 27 07:13:24 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 270713
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    313 AM EDT Wed May 27 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST TEXAS, CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND AREAS OF THE OHIO VALLEY=20
    TO CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    ...Texas to Central Gulf Coast...

    Radar this evening is pretty telling with the current evolution
    over TX revealing quite the complex of thunderstorms migrating=20
    eastward out Hill Country into the I-35 corridor. These storms will
    continue to shove eastward with assistance from both a relatively=20
    solid mean steering flow and outflow propagation stemming from the=20
    organized convection. Aloft, two notable features are depicted via=20
    WV satellite and UA analysis across the Southern Plains. The first=20
    is a well-defined negatively tilted trough oriented over NM into=20
    the TX Panhandle that will be slow to deviate from its current
    positioning over the course of the D1, even some prospects of the
    upper pattern closing off across the Panhandle area of TX/OK which
    would allow for some general enhancement of organized convective
    clusters under the primary circulation stemming from any upper
    low (ULL). In any case, this general upper pattern across the=20
    region will entice broad cyclonic flow across the south-central=20
    portion of the CONUS leading to convective development around the=20
    periphery of the trough/ULL with an extension of activity likely to
    be situated from southeastern CO, across KS and OK, and eventually
    swinging back into the Lower Mississippi Valley. Instability maxima
    will still be located further to the south and east within closer
    proxy to the Gulf, however the upper levels and generally above
    normal PWAT anomalies over the entire scope of the Southern Plains
    should still act as a favorable environment for locally heavy
    rainfall leading to some flash flood prospects over the arcing area
    referenced above.=20

    That said, one of the wild cards at play in this setup is the=20 maturation/development of any MCV structures that would locally=20
    enhance convective episodes and likely trigger a more beneficial=20
    low-level convergence pattern capable of better flash flood=20
    prospects. This has been an output via some of the CAMs this=20
    evening, most notably the HRRR where MCV development across OK=20
    would trigger some locally enhanced precip maxima located within=20
    the broad cyclonic presence. These features are tough to forecast=20
    in the short term with more of a nowcasting component likely to be=20 instituted before committing to anything more concrete in the=20
    forecast, so this will bear watching over the course of the D1.

    The more notable feature of interest for this evening and carrying
    through the D1 will likely be the evolution of a trailing vorticity
    maxima ejecting out of Coahuila this evening with the current
    radar/sat composite indicating a cluster of thunderstorms currently
    migrating east out of the Mexican state. The current MCS over Texas
    has a defined southern edge arcing back into south TX with a strong
    cell currently situated above 50 miles to the east of Laredo.
    Recent 00z CAMs indicate the Mexican disturbance following the tail
    end of the complex over TX and focusing on a heavy rain core
    trailing across south TX with a due east push of the mid-level
    disturbance. Consensus on heavy rainfall for the period will begin
    across southeast TX with the highlight likely to start around
    Corpus Christi and surrounds with moderate to heavy rain lingering
    across the Upper TX coast. As the outflow from the current complex
    shoves east, the environment will become stabilized behind the
    complex leading to a weakening convective regime as the disturbance
    to the south begins to enter into the region. There's some
    discrepancy on the specifics of the convective placement as we step
    through the morning, but the trends are for the immediate TX Gulf
    coast into southern LA as being the most notable areas of interest
    with the evolution of expected heavy rainfall during the D1. This
    is reflected well within the neighborhood prob fields off the
    latest HREF signaling >3" running between 40-70% across the entire
    stretch from Port O'Connor all the way towards New Orleans.
    Downstream prospects are more in due part to the continued
    southerly flow continuing to advect deep moisture into the region
    allowing for an environment capable of producing heavy convection
    during peak afternoon heating. The migration of the outflow on the
    northern edge of the current complex will likely skirt the southern
    portion of LA with some models maintaining its presence as far east
    as southeastern LA before it finally dwindles. In any case, the
    environmental favorability in the period lies within that coastal
    plain where elevated theta_E's lend to a heightened threat for
    heavy rainfall in anything that crops up with hourly rates likely
    to reach 2-3"/hr in the heavier cell cores.=20

    Considering the complex evolutions referenced above for both areas
    of interest, the highest probabilities aligning with the Upper TX
    and Central Gulf coast allows for a continued SLGT risk positioning
    in these locations with a broad MRGL encompassing the overall
    cyclonic pattern oriented over the Southern Plains to Lower
    Mississippi Valley. Will still need to monitor the evolution
    closely as deviations in the outflow positioning, or the
    introduction of either closed ULL reflections or MVC's over the
    Southern Plains could very well aid in additional upgrades in any
    areas encompassed by these features.=20

    ...Ohio Valley to Central Appalachians...

    Latest surface analysis over the Ohio Valley to Mid Atlantic
    indicates a defined quasi-stationary front bisecting northern KY
    through southern WV into central VA with pockets of showers
    currently migrating northeast within the mean flow around a broad
    ridge extension off the Atlantic seaboard. This frontal alignment
    and lingering mid-level vorticity analyzed over the Ohio Valley
    will lead to scattered to widespread convective regime over the
    course of today with a heightened threat for locally heavy rainfall
    occurring by late-morning and afternoon as environmental
    destabilization takes shape. The frontal placement will be
    important with regards to eventual convective initiation as this
    will become a focal point for any future development over the
    course of the afternoon. Model consensus is the boundary wavering
    slowly to the north during the morning as a weak disturbance begins
    to ride along the boundary leading to some minor regional
    amplification and a slow push north of the front to about the
    latitude of I-70. A sweeping trough exiting out of Ontario will
    also help tighten an axis of confluence across the Midwest and=20
    Ohio Valley by later in the afternoon, enticing a squeeze of the=20
    thermal gradient and regional instability axis that aligns with the
    frontal placement.=20

    Instability markers by the afternoon hours will run between=20
    2000-3000 J/kg for MUCAPE with weak shear presence leading to=20
    scattered to widespread thunderstorm initiation along and south of=20
    the front with generally modest cell motions to the southeast after development. PWAT anomalies will sit firmly within +2 standard=20
    deviations above climo within the proposed area of impact, a factor
    that will correlate to strong cell cores capable of heavier
    downpours with hourly rates between 1-2"/hr. Previous periods of=20
    rainfall in the last three to four days have really brought down=20
    the areal FFG markers for all 1/3/6 hour thresholds with a vast=20
    majority of places along the Ohio River basin and points north=20
    running <1"/hr in the hourly exceedance indicator. This points to=20
    any heavier convective impacts could cause issues with the remnant=20
    soil moisture and hydrologic concerns that are lingering after the=20
    last event. This is especially true for eastern OH, southwest PA,=20
    and western WV where complex topography only exacerbate the=20
    potential in these zones. The latest 00z HREF continues to paint a
    favorable concept of heavier rain prospects along and south of I-70
    with a corridor of heavier rainfall likely to occur over southeast
    IN through southern OH into northwest WV. EAS probs for >1" are
    actually pretty elevated (50-80%) in the zone along I-79 over
    towards the Appalachian front in WV with modest probs of 25-40%
    located along the aforementioned line extending through IN/OH. A
    lot of the flash flood focus will likely correlate with the hourly
    rates and overlap of heavy rain over areas still saturated from
    previous periods. Considering the antecedent conditions and=20
    expected widespread convective regime along the front, the SLGT=20
    risk was maintained for an increasing threat for flash flooding
    during the period.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Relatively buoyant environment within a deep, anomalous moisture
    presence across the Northern Rockies along with regional ascent
    provided by sheared vorticity maxima maneuvering through the area
    will allow for another round of widely scattered convection to
    materialize across the Lewis Range in northwest MT. Instability and
    regional forcing will be a bit less than the previous period,
    however sensitivities remain from remnant burn scars present=20
    within the mountainous terrain in the aforementioned area which is=20
    a cause for concern for any cells that happen to occur over the=20
    burn scars themselves. Hourly rates between 0.5-1"/hr in the=20
    stronger cell cores would be capable of providing localized flash=20
    flood impacts over those more sensitive grounds and this setup will
    maintain the prospects given the anomalous moisture presence as=20
    PWATs remain above the 90th percentile over the entire stretch of=20
    the Northern Rockies. The previous MRGL risk inherited was=20
    maintained given the relative continuity.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, NORTHERN ROCKIES, LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    ...Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    A bit of an omega block pattern is shaping up across the CONUS with
    a broad upper trough axis fixated over the Central and Southern
    Plains with with ridging in place over the top. This will cause a
    rather chaotic flow under the mean trough with deep moisture and
    several smaller mid-level perturbations basically "stuck" under the
    the overall trough axis. Ample instability with deep moisture
    presence will certain be a cause for continuing at least a
    scattered heavy rain footprint across areas under the influence of
    the trough. Scattered elevated probabilities between 30-60% exists
    for localized amounts >2" from KS all the way into the Southeast
    U.S. with the maxima split between KS and the Central Gulf coast.
    The two areas are different in the reasoning as the primary center
    of the trough will be fixed over KS leading to the best upper
    forcing pattern and stagnant flow remaining parked over the area as
    we move through D2. Pending the amount of rain that falls over the
    course of D1, a targeted upgrade is possible, but maintained the
    MRGL and will reassess as we move forward in future updates to see
    if an upgrade is warranted. The Central Gulf coast will remain in a
    favorable instability maxima with weak flow likely a component that
    could lead to isolated heavy totals stemming from slow-moving
    convection. The area from the Upper TX coast over through southern
    GA has been leaning wet over the past week, so antecedent
    conditions are a little more unforgiving for these types of setups.
    In any case, the threat remains modest, at best, so the MRGL risk
    was sufficient for the pattern with any upgrades likely to stem
    from more near term sampling of the radar trends.

    ...Florida...

    Active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will lead
    to a period of heavy rainfall across the southeast FL coast on
    Thursday afternoon. Consensus within guidance is for an active
    period between 18-00z Thu/Fri that would allow for heavy convection
    with slow forward propagations to impact the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach down to Miami. Latest 00z HREF is
    modestly robust with the signature for at least 3" off the
    neighborhood probabilities with a steady 60-90% output along the
    southeastern coast of FL with the maxima generally confined to the
    Miami Metro up to West Palm Beach. This correlates strongly with
    what has been advertised via regional and global guidance the past
    few days with the deterministic CAMs even indicating some 4-6"
    bullseye's within the main QPF footprint. This is a relatively
    classic pattern capable of locally significant rainfall within a
    deep moisture presence as PWAT anomalies sit between +1 to +2
    standard deviations within the various ensemble packages. A MRGL
    risk remains in effect for the period across the South Florida
    metro corridor.=20

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Maturing ULL over the west coast will allow for a broad axis of
    diffluent flow across the interior northwest with the highlight of
    scattered convection likely to pivot further west into eastern WA,
    northern ID, and the western slopes of the Northern Rockies.
    Signals are not as prevalent compared to previous periods, however
    the environmental conditions are still favorable, especially when
    it comes to PWAT anomalies still generally running between the
    90-95th percentile across northeast WA into northern ID. Burn scar
    remnants will likely be the most susceptible to seeing impacts, so
    the threat remains low-end and generally localized. Maintained
    continuity from the previous forecast with a MRGL risk in place
    across the aforementioned areas.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST U.S...

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will lead
    to a persistent quasi-stationary turned cold front to press south
    over the course of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to
    spawn along and ahead of the front with dry air advecting behind
    the front leading to a cutoff of activity. Jury is still out on
    specifics with the placement of the front generally over the
    Carolina's by Friday morning with slow push south as the day wears
    on. Frontal alignment is more of a arcing back into the Tennessee
    Valley as the persistent troughing in the South-Central Plains will
    likely maintain some southerly flow for areas along and west of the Mississippi. Anywhere within proximity to this front will be
    subject to various convective outputs with some heavier cells
    likely intertwined in over the pattern. No discernible areas of
    interest are present at this juncture, however the environmental
    favorability likely points to the best chances occurring across=20
    the Southeast into the lower Tennessee Valley. A broad MRGL is=20
    forecast for the above areas through the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!83IdOxNqj5XiuOidgDhWctuiMl81zG38y_OF47G8OhYl= 77XXATImHkmS7N6EYCBC0zUlUsgNlBTgrPGnnRjl3qAqAds$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!83IdOxNqj5XiuOidgDhWctuiMl81zG38y_OF47G8OhYl= 77XXATImHkmS7N6EYCBC0zUlUsgNlBTgrPGnnRjl214-Nv8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!83IdOxNqj5XiuOidgDhWctuiMl81zG38y_OF47G8OhYl= 77XXATImHkmS7N6EYCBC0zUlUsgNlBTgrPGnnRjlaxhCRdc$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed May 27 12:25:58 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 271225
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    825 AM EDT Wed May 27 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 1223Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST TEXAS, CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND AREAS OF THE OHIO VALLEY
    TO CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    12Z Special...
    Minor adjustment was made to the southern extent of the Marginal
    Risk across South Texas to reflect ongoing convection. Refer to MPD
    #256 for further details regarding the near-term heavy rain/flash
    flooding threat across this region.

    Pereira

    ...Texas to Central Gulf Coast...

    Radar this evening is pretty telling with the current evolution
    over TX revealing quite the complex of thunderstorms migrating
    eastward out Hill Country into the I-35 corridor. These storms will
    continue to shove eastward with assistance from both a relatively
    solid mean steering flow and outflow propagation stemming from the
    organized convection. Aloft, two notable features are depicted via
    WV satellite and UA analysis across the Southern Plains. The first
    is a well-defined negatively tilted trough oriented over NM into
    the TX Panhandle that will be slow to deviate from its current
    positioning over the course of the D1, even some prospects of the
    upper pattern closing off across the Panhandle area of TX/OK which
    would allow for some general enhancement of organized convective
    clusters under the primary circulation stemming from any upper
    low (ULL). In any case, this general upper pattern across the
    region will entice broad cyclonic flow across the south-central
    portion of the CONUS leading to convective development around the
    periphery of the trough/ULL with an extension of activity likely to
    be situated from southeastern CO, across KS and OK, and eventually
    swinging back into the Lower Mississippi Valley. Instability maxima
    will still be located further to the south and east within closer
    proxy to the Gulf, however the upper levels and generally above
    normal PWAT anomalies over the entire scope of the Southern Plains
    should still act as a favorable environment for locally heavy
    rainfall leading to some flash flood prospects over the arcing area
    referenced above.

    That said, one of the wild cards at play in this setup is the maturation/development of any MCV structures that would locally
    enhance convective episodes and likely trigger a more beneficial
    low-level convergence pattern capable of better flash flood
    prospects. This has been an output via some of the CAMs this
    evening, most notably the HRRR where MCV development across OK
    would trigger some locally enhanced precip maxima located within
    the broad cyclonic presence. These features are tough to forecast
    in the short term with more of a nowcasting component likely to be
    instituted before committing to anything more concrete in the
    forecast, so this will bear watching over the course of the D1.

    The more notable feature of interest for this evening and carrying
    through the D1 will likely be the evolution of a trailing vorticity
    maxima ejecting out of Coahuila this evening with the current
    radar/sat composite indicating a cluster of thunderstorms currently
    migrating east out of the Mexican state. The current MCS over Texas
    has a defined southern edge arcing back into south TX with a strong
    cell currently situated above 50 miles to the east of Laredo.
    Recent 00z CAMs indicate the Mexican disturbance following the tail
    end of the complex over TX and focusing on a heavy rain core
    trailing across south TX with a due east push of the mid-level
    disturbance. Consensus on heavy rainfall for the period will begin
    across southeast TX with the highlight likely to start around
    Corpus Christi and surrounds with moderate to heavy rain lingering
    across the Upper TX coast. As the outflow from the current complex
    shoves east, the environment will become stabilized behind the
    complex leading to a weakening convective regime as the disturbance
    to the south begins to enter into the region. There's some
    discrepancy on the specifics of the convective placement as we step
    through the morning, but the trends are for the immediate TX Gulf
    coast into southern LA as being the most notable areas of interest
    with the evolution of expected heavy rainfall during the D1. This
    is reflected well within the neighborhood prob fields off the
    latest HREF signaling >3" running between 40-70% across the entire
    stretch from Port O'Connor all the way towards New Orleans.
    Downstream prospects are more in due part to the continued
    southerly flow continuing to advect deep moisture into the region
    allowing for an environment capable of producing heavy convection
    during peak afternoon heating. The migration of the outflow on the
    northern edge of the current complex will likely skirt the southern
    portion of LA with some models maintaining its presence as far east
    as southeastern LA before it finally dwindles. In any case, the
    environmental favorability in the period lies within that coastal
    plain where elevated theta_E's lend to a heightened threat for
    heavy rainfall in anything that crops up with hourly rates likely
    to reach 2-3"/hr in the heavier cell cores.

    Considering the complex evolutions referenced above for both areas
    of interest, the highest probabilities aligning with the Upper TX
    and Central Gulf coast allows for a continued SLGT risk positioning
    in these locations with a broad MRGL encompassing the overall
    cyclonic pattern oriented over the Southern Plains to Lower
    Mississippi Valley. Will still need to monitor the evolution
    closely as deviations in the outflow positioning, or the
    introduction of either closed ULL reflections or MVC's over the
    Southern Plains could very well aid in additional upgrades in any
    areas encompassed by these features.

    ...Ohio Valley to Central Appalachians...

    Latest surface analysis over the Ohio Valley to Mid Atlantic
    indicates a defined quasi-stationary front bisecting northern KY
    through southern WV into central VA with pockets of showers
    currently migrating northeast within the mean flow around a broad
    ridge extension off the Atlantic seaboard. This frontal alignment
    and lingering mid-level vorticity analyzed over the Ohio Valley
    will lead to scattered to widespread convective regime over the
    course of today with a heightened threat for locally heavy rainfall
    occurring by late-morning and afternoon as environmental
    destabilization takes shape. The frontal placement will be
    important with regards to eventual convective initiation as this
    will become a focal point for any future development over the
    course of the afternoon. Model consensus is the boundary wavering
    slowly to the north during the morning as a weak disturbance begins
    to ride along the boundary leading to some minor regional
    amplification and a slow push north of the front to about the
    latitude of I-70. A sweeping trough exiting out of Ontario will
    also help tighten an axis of confluence across the Midwest and
    Ohio Valley by later in the afternoon, enticing a squeeze of the
    thermal gradient and regional instability axis that aligns with the
    frontal placement.

    Instability markers by the afternoon hours will run between
    2000-3000 J/kg for MUCAPE with weak shear presence leading to
    scattered to widespread thunderstorm initiation along and south of
    the front with generally modest cell motions to the southeast after development. PWAT anomalies will sit firmly within +2 standard
    deviations above climo within the proposed area of impact, a factor
    that will correlate to strong cell cores capable of heavier
    downpours with hourly rates between 1-2"/hr. Previous periods of
    rainfall in the last three to four days have really brought down
    the areal FFG markers for all 1/3/6 hour thresholds with a vast
    majority of places along the Ohio River basin and points north
    running <1"/hr in the hourly exceedance indicator. This points to
    any heavier convective impacts could cause issues with the remnant
    soil moisture and hydrologic concerns that are lingering after the
    last event. This is especially true for eastern OH, southwest PA,
    and western WV where complex topography only exacerbate the
    potential in these zones. The latest 00z HREF continues to paint a
    favorable concept of heavier rain prospects along and south of I-70
    with a corridor of heavier rainfall likely to occur over southeast
    IN through southern OH into northwest WV. EAS probs for >1" are
    actually pretty elevated (50-80%) in the zone along I-79 over
    towards the Appalachian front in WV with modest probs of 25-40%
    located along the aforementioned line extending through IN/OH. A
    lot of the flash flood focus will likely correlate with the hourly
    rates and overlap of heavy rain over areas still saturated from
    previous periods. Considering the antecedent conditions and
    expected widespread convective regime along the front, the SLGT
    risk was maintained for an increasing threat for flash flooding
    during the period.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Relatively buoyant environment within a deep, anomalous moisture
    presence across the Northern Rockies along with regional ascent
    provided by sheared vorticity maxima maneuvering through the area
    will allow for another round of widely scattered convection to
    materialize across the Lewis Range in northwest MT. Instability and
    regional forcing will be a bit less than the previous period,
    however sensitivities remain from remnant burn scars present
    within the mountainous terrain in the aforementioned area which is
    a cause for concern for any cells that happen to occur over the
    burn scars themselves. Hourly rates between 0.5-1"/hr in the
    stronger cell cores would be capable of providing localized flash
    flood impacts over those more sensitive grounds and this setup will
    maintain the prospects given the anomalous moisture presence as
    PWATs remain above the 90th percentile over the entire stretch of
    the Northern Rockies. The previous MRGL risk inherited was
    maintained given the relative continuity.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, NORTHERN ROCKIES, LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    ...Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    A bit of an omega block pattern is shaping up across the CONUS with
    a broad upper trough axis fixated over the Central and Southern
    Plains with with ridging in place over the top. This will cause a
    rather chaotic flow under the mean trough with deep moisture and
    several smaller mid-level perturbations basically "stuck" under the
    the overall trough axis. Ample instability with deep moisture
    presence will certain be a cause for continuing at least a
    scattered heavy rain footprint across areas under the influence of
    the trough. Scattered elevated probabilities between 30-60% exists
    for localized amounts >2" from KS all the way into the Southeast
    U.S. with the maxima split between KS and the Central Gulf coast.
    The two areas are different in the reasoning as the primary center
    of the trough will be fixed over KS leading to the best upper
    forcing pattern and stagnant flow remaining parked over the area as
    we move through D2. Pending the amount of rain that falls over the
    course of D1, a targeted upgrade is possible, but maintained the
    MRGL and will reassess as we move forward in future updates to see
    if an upgrade is warranted. The Central Gulf coast will remain in a
    favorable instability maxima with weak flow likely a component that
    could lead to isolated heavy totals stemming from slow-moving
    convection. The area from the Upper TX coast over through southern
    GA has been leaning wet over the past week, so antecedent
    conditions are a little more unforgiving for these types of setups.
    In any case, the threat remains modest, at best, so the MRGL risk
    was sufficient for the pattern with any upgrades likely to stem
    from more near term sampling of the radar trends.

    ...Florida...

    Active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will lead
    to a period of heavy rainfall across the southeast FL coast on
    Thursday afternoon. Consensus within guidance is for an active
    period between 18-00z Thu/Fri that would allow for heavy convection
    with slow forward propagations to impact the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach down to Miami. Latest 00z HREF is
    modestly robust with the signature for at least 3" off the
    neighborhood probabilities with a steady 60-90% output along the
    southeastern coast of FL with the maxima generally confined to the
    Miami Metro up to West Palm Beach. This correlates strongly with
    what has been advertised via regional and global guidance the past
    few days with the deterministic CAMs even indicating some 4-6"
    bullseye's within the main QPF footprint. This is a relatively
    classic pattern capable of locally significant rainfall within a
    deep moisture presence as PWAT anomalies sit between +1 to +2
    standard deviations within the various ensemble packages. A MRGL
    risk remains in effect for the period across the South Florida
    metro corridor.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Maturing ULL over the west coast will allow for a broad axis of
    diffluent flow across the interior northwest with the highlight of
    scattered convection likely to pivot further west into eastern WA,
    northern ID, and the western slopes of the Northern Rockies.
    Signals are not as prevalent compared to previous periods, however
    the environmental conditions are still favorable, especially when
    it comes to PWAT anomalies still generally running between the
    90-95th percentile across northeast WA into northern ID. Burn scar
    remnants will likely be the most susceptible to seeing impacts, so
    the threat remains low-end and generally localized. Maintained
    continuity from the previous forecast with a MRGL risk in place
    across the aforementioned areas.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST U.S...

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will lead
    to a persistent quasi-stationary turned cold front to press south
    over the course of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to
    spawn along and ahead of the front with dry air advecting behind
    the front leading to a cutoff of activity. Jury is still out on
    specifics with the placement of the front generally over the
    Carolina's by Friday morning with slow push south as the day wears
    on. Frontal alignment is more of a arcing back into the Tennessee
    Valley as the persistent troughing in the South-Central Plains will
    likely maintain some southerly flow for areas along and west of the Mississippi. Anywhere within proximity to this front will be
    subject to various convective outputs with some heavier cells
    likely intertwined in over the pattern. No discernible areas of
    interest are present at this juncture, however the environmental
    favorability likely points to the best chances occurring across
    the Southeast into the lower Tennessee Valley. A broad MRGL is
    forecast for the above areas through the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6PgLaAcngv_H1C1xVx4w4cIw63vPSsurejfw9zVeiste= XNIEhS4eJBDAL5MdwjgdSRBI7EzdVL9MGtF1ZuZOYaGLnHs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6PgLaAcngv_H1C1xVx4w4cIw63vPSsurejfw9zVeiste= XNIEhS4eJBDAL5MdwjgdSRBI7EzdVL9MGtF1ZuZOOi30qwM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6PgLaAcngv_H1C1xVx4w4cIw63vPSsurejfw9zVeiste= XNIEhS4eJBDAL5MdwjgdSRBI7EzdVL9MGtF1ZuZOj3tk-9I$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed May 27 15:50:14 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 271550
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1150 AM EDT Wed May 27 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST TEXAS, CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND AREAS OF THE OHIO VALLEY
    TO CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    16Z update... A modest eastward adjustment of the Marginal Risk was
    made across eastern Maryland and into the Virginia Outer banks and
    western Delaware for ongoing convection. Refer to MPD #258 for=20
    further details for the near-term heavy rain/flash flooding threat.
    Multiple cells are expected to focus/repeat over portions of=20
    northern West Virginia with rainfall rates upwards of 1.5-2 in/hr=20
    this afternoon and evening which would place this part of the=20
    region in the higher end of the flash flooding threat within the=20
    Slight Risk area.=20

    Campbell

    12Z Special...
    Minor adjustment was made to the southern extent of the Marginal
    Risk across South Texas to reflect ongoing convection. Refer to MPD
    #256 for further details regarding the near-term heavy rain/flash
    flooding threat across this region.

    Pereira

    ...Texas to Central Gulf Coast...

    Radar this evening is pretty telling with the current evolution
    over TX revealing quite the complex of thunderstorms migrating
    eastward out Hill Country into the I-35 corridor. These storms will
    continue to shove eastward with assistance from both a relatively
    solid mean steering flow and outflow propagation stemming from the
    organized convection. Aloft, two notable features are depicted via
    WV satellite and UA analysis across the Southern Plains. The first
    is a well-defined negatively tilted trough oriented over NM into
    the TX Panhandle that will be slow to deviate from its current
    positioning over the course of the D1, even some prospects of the
    upper pattern closing off across the Panhandle area of TX/OK which
    would allow for some general enhancement of organized convective
    clusters under the primary circulation stemming from any upper
    low (ULL). In any case, this general upper pattern across the
    region will entice broad cyclonic flow across the south-central
    portion of the CONUS leading to convective development around the
    periphery of the trough/ULL with an extension of activity likely to
    be situated from southeastern CO, across KS and OK, and eventually
    swinging back into the Lower Mississippi Valley. Instability maxima
    will still be located further to the south and east within closer
    proxy to the Gulf, however the upper levels and generally above
    normal PWAT anomalies over the entire scope of the Southern Plains
    should still act as a favorable environment for locally heavy
    rainfall leading to some flash flood prospects over the arcing area
    referenced above.

    That said, one of the wild cards at play in this setup is the maturation/development of any MCV structures that would locally
    enhance convective episodes and likely trigger a more beneficial
    low-level convergence pattern capable of better flash flood
    prospects. This has been an output via some of the CAMs this
    evening, most notably the HRRR where MCV development across OK
    would trigger some locally enhanced precip maxima located within
    the broad cyclonic presence. These features are tough to forecast
    in the short term with more of a nowcasting component likely to be
    instituted before committing to anything more concrete in the
    forecast, so this will bear watching over the course of the D1.

    The more notable feature of interest for this evening and carrying
    through the D1 will likely be the evolution of a trailing vorticity
    maxima ejecting out of Coahuila this evening with the current
    radar/sat composite indicating a cluster of thunderstorms currently
    migrating east out of the Mexican state. The current MCS over Texas
    has a defined southern edge arcing back into south TX with a strong
    cell currently situated above 50 miles to the east of Laredo.
    Recent 00z CAMs indicate the Mexican disturbance following the tail
    end of the complex over TX and focusing on a heavy rain core
    trailing across south TX with a due east push of the mid-level
    disturbance. Consensus on heavy rainfall for the period will begin
    across southeast TX with the highlight likely to start around
    Corpus Christi and surrounds with moderate to heavy rain lingering
    across the Upper TX coast. As the outflow from the current complex
    shoves east, the environment will become stabilized behind the
    complex leading to a weakening convective regime as the disturbance
    to the south begins to enter into the region. There's some
    discrepancy on the specifics of the convective placement as we step
    through the morning, but the trends are for the immediate TX Gulf
    coast into southern LA as being the most notable areas of interest
    with the evolution of expected heavy rainfall during the D1. This
    is reflected well within the neighborhood prob fields off the
    latest HREF signaling >3" running between 40-70% across the entire
    stretch from Port O'Connor all the way towards New Orleans.
    Downstream prospects are more in due part to the continued
    southerly flow continuing to advect deep moisture into the region
    allowing for an environment capable of producing heavy convection
    during peak afternoon heating. The migration of the outflow on the
    northern edge of the current complex will likely skirt the southern
    portion of LA with some models maintaining its presence as far east
    as southeastern LA before it finally dwindles. In any case, the
    environmental favorability in the period lies within that coastal
    plain where elevated theta_E's lend to a heightened threat for
    heavy rainfall in anything that crops up with hourly rates likely
    to reach 2-3"/hr in the heavier cell cores.

    Considering the complex evolutions referenced above for both areas
    of interest, the highest probabilities aligning with the Upper TX
    and Central Gulf coast allows for a continued SLGT risk positioning
    in these locations with a broad MRGL encompassing the overall
    cyclonic pattern oriented over the Southern Plains to Lower
    Mississippi Valley. Will still need to monitor the evolution
    closely as deviations in the outflow positioning, or the
    introduction of either closed ULL reflections or MVC's over the
    Southern Plains could very well aid in additional upgrades in any
    areas encompassed by these features.

    ...Ohio Valley to Central Appalachians...

    Latest surface analysis over the Ohio Valley to Mid Atlantic
    indicates a defined quasi-stationary front bisecting northern KY
    through southern WV into central VA with pockets of showers
    currently migrating northeast within the mean flow around a broad
    ridge extension off the Atlantic seaboard. This frontal alignment
    and lingering mid-level vorticity analyzed over the Ohio Valley
    will lead to scattered to widespread convective regime over the
    course of today with a heightened threat for locally heavy rainfall
    occurring by late-morning and afternoon as environmental
    destabilization takes shape. The frontal placement will be
    important with regards to eventual convective initiation as this
    will become a focal point for any future development over the
    course of the afternoon. Model consensus is the boundary wavering
    slowly to the north during the morning as a weak disturbance begins
    to ride along the boundary leading to some minor regional
    amplification and a slow push north of the front to about the
    latitude of I-70. A sweeping trough exiting out of Ontario will
    also help tighten an axis of confluence across the Midwest and
    Ohio Valley by later in the afternoon, enticing a squeeze of the
    thermal gradient and regional instability axis that aligns with the
    frontal placement.

    Instability markers by the afternoon hours will run between
    2000-3000 J/kg for MUCAPE with weak shear presence leading to
    scattered to widespread thunderstorm initiation along and south of
    the front with generally modest cell motions to the southeast after development. PWAT anomalies will sit firmly within +2 standard
    deviations above climo within the proposed area of impact, a factor
    that will correlate to strong cell cores capable of heavier
    downpours with hourly rates between 1-2"/hr. Previous periods of
    rainfall in the last three to four days have really brought down
    the areal FFG markers for all 1/3/6 hour thresholds with a vast
    majority of places along the Ohio River basin and points north
    running <1"/hr in the hourly exceedance indicator. This points to
    any heavier convective impacts could cause issues with the remnant
    soil moisture and hydrologic concerns that are lingering after the
    last event. This is especially true for eastern OH, southwest PA,
    and western WV where complex topography only exacerbate the
    potential in these zones. The latest 00z HREF continues to paint a
    favorable concept of heavier rain prospects along and south of I-70
    with a corridor of heavier rainfall likely to occur over southeast
    IN through southern OH into northwest WV. EAS probs for >1" are
    actually pretty elevated (50-80%) in the zone along I-79 over
    towards the Appalachian front in WV with modest probs of 25-40%
    located along the aforementioned line extending through IN/OH. A
    lot of the flash flood focus will likely correlate with the hourly
    rates and overlap of heavy rain over areas still saturated from
    previous periods. Considering the antecedent conditions and
    expected widespread convective regime along the front, the SLGT
    risk was maintained for an increasing threat for flash flooding
    during the period.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Relatively buoyant environment within a deep, anomalous moisture
    presence across the Northern Rockies along with regional ascent
    provided by sheared vorticity maxima maneuvering through the area
    will allow for another round of widely scattered convection to
    materialize across the Lewis Range in northwest MT. Instability and
    regional forcing will be a bit less than the previous period,
    however sensitivities remain from remnant burn scars present
    within the mountainous terrain in the aforementioned area which is
    a cause for concern for any cells that happen to occur over the
    burn scars themselves. Hourly rates between 0.5-1"/hr in the
    stronger cell cores would be capable of providing localized flash
    flood impacts over those more sensitive grounds and this setup will
    maintain the prospects given the anomalous moisture presence as
    PWATs remain above the 90th percentile over the entire stretch of
    the Northern Rockies. The previous MRGL risk inherited was
    maintained given the relative continuity.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, NORTHERN ROCKIES, LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    ...Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    A bit of an omega block pattern is shaping up across the CONUS with
    a broad upper trough axis fixated over the Central and Southern
    Plains with with ridging in place over the top. This will cause a
    rather chaotic flow under the mean trough with deep moisture and
    several smaller mid-level perturbations basically "stuck" under the
    the overall trough axis. Ample instability with deep moisture
    presence will certain be a cause for continuing at least a
    scattered heavy rain footprint across areas under the influence of
    the trough. Scattered elevated probabilities between 30-60% exists
    for localized amounts >2" from KS all the way into the Southeast
    U.S. with the maxima split between KS and the Central Gulf coast.
    The two areas are different in the reasoning as the primary center
    of the trough will be fixed over KS leading to the best upper
    forcing pattern and stagnant flow remaining parked over the area as
    we move through D2. Pending the amount of rain that falls over the
    course of D1, a targeted upgrade is possible, but maintained the
    MRGL and will reassess as we move forward in future updates to see
    if an upgrade is warranted. The Central Gulf coast will remain in a
    favorable instability maxima with weak flow likely a component that
    could lead to isolated heavy totals stemming from slow-moving
    convection. The area from the Upper TX coast over through southern
    GA has been leaning wet over the past week, so antecedent
    conditions are a little more unforgiving for these types of setups.
    In any case, the threat remains modest, at best, so the MRGL risk
    was sufficient for the pattern with any upgrades likely to stem
    from more near term sampling of the radar trends.

    ...Florida...

    Active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will lead
    to a period of heavy rainfall across the southeast FL coast on
    Thursday afternoon. Consensus within guidance is for an active
    period between 18-00z Thu/Fri that would allow for heavy convection
    with slow forward propagations to impact the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach down to Miami. Latest 00z HREF is
    modestly robust with the signature for at least 3" off the
    neighborhood probabilities with a steady 60-90% output along the
    southeastern coast of FL with the maxima generally confined to the
    Miami Metro up to West Palm Beach. This correlates strongly with
    what has been advertised via regional and global guidance the past
    few days with the deterministic CAMs even indicating some 4-6"
    bullseye's within the main QPF footprint. This is a relatively
    classic pattern capable of locally significant rainfall within a
    deep moisture presence as PWAT anomalies sit between +1 to +2
    standard deviations within the various ensemble packages. A MRGL
    risk remains in effect for the period across the South Florida
    metro corridor.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Maturing ULL over the west coast will allow for a broad axis of
    diffluent flow across the interior northwest with the highlight of
    scattered convection likely to pivot further west into eastern WA,
    northern ID, and the western slopes of the Northern Rockies.
    Signals are not as prevalent compared to previous periods, however
    the environmental conditions are still favorable, especially when
    it comes to PWAT anomalies still generally running between the
    90-95th percentile across northeast WA into northern ID. Burn scar
    remnants will likely be the most susceptible to seeing impacts, so
    the threat remains low-end and generally localized. Maintained
    continuity from the previous forecast with a MRGL risk in place
    across the aforementioned areas.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST U.S...

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will lead
    to a persistent quasi-stationary turned cold front to press south
    over the course of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to
    spawn along and ahead of the front with dry air advecting behind
    the front leading to a cutoff of activity. Jury is still out on
    specifics with the placement of the front generally over the
    Carolina's by Friday morning with slow push south as the day wears
    on. Frontal alignment is more of a arcing back into the Tennessee
    Valley as the persistent troughing in the South-Central Plains will
    likely maintain some southerly flow for areas along and west of the Mississippi. Anywhere within proximity to this front will be
    subject to various convective outputs with some heavier cells
    likely intertwined in over the pattern. No discernible areas of
    interest are present at this juncture, however the environmental
    favorability likely points to the best chances occurring across
    the Southeast into the lower Tennessee Valley. A broad MRGL is
    forecast for the above areas through the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8yJKAZc6wzUGD9JJAVeeEZfl5uZh1tTnEGJ91hAaKEF= dHE3yhgH8MRbuH2pG7ByU1wIm2o9jiVQTPXmM6F8nJ7MQaM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8yJKAZc6wzUGD9JJAVeeEZfl5uZh1tTnEGJ91hAaKEF= dHE3yhgH8MRbuH2pG7ByU1wIm2o9jiVQTPXmM6F8oWasIcw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8yJKAZc6wzUGD9JJAVeeEZfl5uZh1tTnEGJ91hAaKEF= dHE3yhgH8MRbuH2pG7ByU1wIm2o9jiVQTPXmM6F8xVLrFPY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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    * Origin: Capitol City Online (1:2320/107)
  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed May 27 20:01:04 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 272000
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 PM EDT Wed May 27 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST TEXAS, CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND AREAS OF THE OHIO VALLEY
    TO CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    16Z update... A modest eastward adjustment of the Marginal Risk was
    made across eastern Maryland and into the Virginia Outer banks and
    western Delaware for ongoing convection. Refer to MPD #258 for
    further details for the near-term heavy rain/flash flooding threat.
    Multiple cells are expected to focus/repeat over portions of
    northern West Virginia with rainfall rates upwards of 1.5-2 in/hr
    this afternoon and evening which would place this part of the
    region in the higher end of the flash flooding threat within the
    Slight Risk area.

    Campbell

    12Z Special...
    Minor adjustment was made to the southern extent of the Marginal
    Risk across South Texas to reflect ongoing convection. Refer to MPD
    #256 for further details regarding the near-term heavy rain/flash
    flooding threat across this region.

    Pereira

    ...Texas to Central Gulf Coast...

    Radar this evening is pretty telling with the current evolution
    over TX revealing quite the complex of thunderstorms migrating
    eastward out Hill Country into the I-35 corridor. These storms will
    continue to shove eastward with assistance from both a relatively
    solid mean steering flow and outflow propagation stemming from the
    organized convection. Aloft, two notable features are depicted via
    WV satellite and UA analysis across the Southern Plains. The first
    is a well-defined negatively tilted trough oriented over NM into
    the TX Panhandle that will be slow to deviate from its current
    positioning over the course of the D1, even some prospects of the
    upper pattern closing off across the Panhandle area of TX/OK which
    would allow for some general enhancement of organized convective
    clusters under the primary circulation stemming from any upper
    low (ULL). In any case, this general upper pattern across the
    region will entice broad cyclonic flow across the south-central
    portion of the CONUS leading to convective development around the
    periphery of the trough/ULL with an extension of activity likely to
    be situated from southeastern CO, across KS and OK, and eventually
    swinging back into the Lower Mississippi Valley. Instability maxima
    will still be located further to the south and east within closer
    proxy to the Gulf, however the upper levels and generally above
    normal PWAT anomalies over the entire scope of the Southern Plains
    should still act as a favorable environment for locally heavy
    rainfall leading to some flash flood prospects over the arcing area
    referenced above.

    That said, one of the wild cards at play in this setup is the maturation/development of any MCV structures that would locally
    enhance convective episodes and likely trigger a more beneficial
    low-level convergence pattern capable of better flash flood
    prospects. This has been an output via some of the CAMs this
    evening, most notably the HRRR where MCV development across OK
    would trigger some locally enhanced precip maxima located within
    the broad cyclonic presence. These features are tough to forecast
    in the short term with more of a nowcasting component likely to be
    instituted before committing to anything more concrete in the
    forecast, so this will bear watching over the course of the D1.

    The more notable feature of interest for this evening and carrying
    through the D1 will likely be the evolution of a trailing vorticity
    maxima ejecting out of Coahuila this evening with the current
    radar/sat composite indicating a cluster of thunderstorms currently
    migrating east out of the Mexican state. The current MCS over Texas
    has a defined southern edge arcing back into south TX with a strong
    cell currently situated above 50 miles to the east of Laredo.
    Recent 00z CAMs indicate the Mexican disturbance following the tail
    end of the complex over TX and focusing on a heavy rain core
    trailing across south TX with a due east push of the mid-level
    disturbance. Consensus on heavy rainfall for the period will begin
    across southeast TX with the highlight likely to start around
    Corpus Christi and surrounds with moderate to heavy rain lingering
    across the Upper TX coast. As the outflow from the current complex
    shoves east, the environment will become stabilized behind the
    complex leading to a weakening convective regime as the disturbance
    to the south begins to enter into the region. There's some
    discrepancy on the specifics of the convective placement as we step
    through the morning, but the trends are for the immediate TX Gulf
    coast into southern LA as being the most notable areas of interest
    with the evolution of expected heavy rainfall during the D1. This
    is reflected well within the neighborhood prob fields off the
    latest HREF signaling >3" running between 40-70% across the entire
    stretch from Port O'Connor all the way towards New Orleans.
    Downstream prospects are more in due part to the continued
    southerly flow continuing to advect deep moisture into the region
    allowing for an environment capable of producing heavy convection
    during peak afternoon heating. The migration of the outflow on the
    northern edge of the current complex will likely skirt the southern
    portion of LA with some models maintaining its presence as far east
    as southeastern LA before it finally dwindles. In any case, the
    environmental favorability in the period lies within that coastal
    plain where elevated theta_E's lend to a heightened threat for
    heavy rainfall in anything that crops up with hourly rates likely
    to reach 2-3"/hr in the heavier cell cores.

    Considering the complex evolutions referenced above for both areas
    of interest, the highest probabilities aligning with the Upper TX
    and Central Gulf coast allows for a continued SLGT risk positioning
    in these locations with a broad MRGL encompassing the overall
    cyclonic pattern oriented over the Southern Plains to Lower
    Mississippi Valley. Will still need to monitor the evolution
    closely as deviations in the outflow positioning, or the
    introduction of either closed ULL reflections or MVC's over the
    Southern Plains could very well aid in additional upgrades in any
    areas encompassed by these features.

    ...Ohio Valley to Central Appalachians...

    Latest surface analysis over the Ohio Valley to Mid Atlantic
    indicates a defined quasi-stationary front bisecting northern KY
    through southern WV into central VA with pockets of showers
    currently migrating northeast within the mean flow around a broad
    ridge extension off the Atlantic seaboard. This frontal alignment
    and lingering mid-level vorticity analyzed over the Ohio Valley
    will lead to scattered to widespread convective regime over the
    course of today with a heightened threat for locally heavy rainfall
    occurring by late-morning and afternoon as environmental
    destabilization takes shape. The frontal placement will be
    important with regards to eventual convective initiation as this
    will become a focal point for any future development over the
    course of the afternoon. Model consensus is the boundary wavering
    slowly to the north during the morning as a weak disturbance begins
    to ride along the boundary leading to some minor regional
    amplification and a slow push north of the front to about the
    latitude of I-70. A sweeping trough exiting out of Ontario will
    also help tighten an axis of confluence across the Midwest and
    Ohio Valley by later in the afternoon, enticing a squeeze of the
    thermal gradient and regional instability axis that aligns with the
    frontal placement.

    Instability markers by the afternoon hours will run between
    2000-3000 J/kg for MUCAPE with weak shear presence leading to
    scattered to widespread thunderstorm initiation along and south of
    the front with generally modest cell motions to the southeast after development. PWAT anomalies will sit firmly within +2 standard
    deviations above climo within the proposed area of impact, a factor
    that will correlate to strong cell cores capable of heavier
    downpours with hourly rates between 1-2"/hr. Previous periods of
    rainfall in the last three to four days have really brought down
    the areal FFG markers for all 1/3/6 hour thresholds with a vast
    majority of places along the Ohio River basin and points north
    running <1"/hr in the hourly exceedance indicator. This points to
    any heavier convective impacts could cause issues with the remnant
    soil moisture and hydrologic concerns that are lingering after the
    last event. This is especially true for eastern OH, southwest PA,
    and western WV where complex topography only exacerbate the
    potential in these zones. The latest 00z HREF continues to paint a
    favorable concept of heavier rain prospects along and south of I-70
    with a corridor of heavier rainfall likely to occur over southeast
    IN through southern OH into northwest WV. EAS probs for >1" are
    actually pretty elevated (50-80%) in the zone along I-79 over
    towards the Appalachian front in WV with modest probs of 25-40%
    located along the aforementioned line extending through IN/OH. A
    lot of the flash flood focus will likely correlate with the hourly
    rates and overlap of heavy rain over areas still saturated from
    previous periods. Considering the antecedent conditions and
    expected widespread convective regime along the front, the SLGT
    risk was maintained for an increasing threat for flash flooding
    during the period.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Relatively buoyant environment within a deep, anomalous moisture
    presence across the Northern Rockies along with regional ascent
    provided by sheared vorticity maxima maneuvering through the area
    will allow for another round of widely scattered convection to
    materialize across the Lewis Range in northwest MT. Instability and
    regional forcing will be a bit less than the previous period,
    however sensitivities remain from remnant burn scars present
    within the mountainous terrain in the aforementioned area which is
    a cause for concern for any cells that happen to occur over the
    burn scars themselves. Hourly rates between 0.5-1"/hr in the
    stronger cell cores would be capable of providing localized flash
    flood impacts over those more sensitive grounds and this setup will
    maintain the prospects given the anomalous moisture presence as
    PWATs remain above the 90th percentile over the entire stretch of
    the Northern Rockies. The previous MRGL risk inherited was
    maintained given the relative continuity.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, PACIFIC NORTHWEST INTO THE=20
    NORTHERN ROCKIES, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST=20
    FLORIDA...

    ...Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    21z update... The region with a highlighted threat for excessive=20
    rainfall and isolated flash flooding remain in good order,=20
    requiring no adjustments at this time.

    Campbell

    A bit of an omega block pattern is shaping up across the CONUS with
    a broad upper trough axis fixated over the Central and Southern
    Plains with with ridging in place over the top. This will cause a
    rather chaotic flow under the mean trough with deep moisture and
    several smaller mid-level perturbations basically "stuck" under the
    the overall trough axis. Ample instability with deep moisture
    presence will certain be a cause for continuing at least a
    scattered heavy rain footprint across areas under the influence of
    the trough. Scattered elevated probabilities between 30-60% exists
    for localized amounts >2" from KS all the way into the Southeast
    U.S. with the maxima split between KS and the Central Gulf coast.
    The two areas are different in the reasoning as the primary center
    of the trough will be fixed over KS leading to the best upper
    forcing pattern and stagnant flow remaining parked over the area as
    we move through D2. Pending the amount of rain that falls over the
    course of D1, a targeted upgrade is possible, but maintained the
    MRGL and will reassess as we move forward in future updates to see
    if an upgrade is warranted. The Central Gulf coast will remain in a
    favorable instability maxima with weak flow likely a component that
    could lead to isolated heavy totals stemming from slow-moving
    convection. The area from the Upper TX coast over through southern
    GA has been leaning wet over the past week, so antecedent
    conditions are a little more unforgiving for these types of setups.
    In any case, the threat remains modest, at best, so the MRGL risk
    was sufficient for the pattern with any upgrades likely to stem
    from more near term sampling of the radar trends.

    ...Florida...

    21Z update... No changes were made for this period.

    Campbell

    Active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will lead
    to a period of heavy rainfall across the southeast FL coast on
    Thursday afternoon. Consensus within guidance is for an active
    period between 18-00z Thu/Fri that would allow for heavy convection
    with slow forward propagations to impact the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach down to Miami. Latest 00z HREF is
    modestly robust with the signature for at least 3" off the
    neighborhood probabilities with a steady 60-90% output along the
    southeastern coast of FL with the maxima generally confined to the
    Miami Metro up to West Palm Beach. This correlates strongly with
    what has been advertised via regional and global guidance the past
    few days with the deterministic CAMs even indicating some 4-6"
    bullseye's within the main QPF footprint. This is a relatively
    classic pattern capable of locally significant rainfall within a
    deep moisture presence as PWAT anomalies sit between +1 to +2
    standard deviations within the various ensemble packages. A MRGL
    risk remains in effect for the period across the South Florida
    metro corridor.

    ...Washington/Oregon into the Northern Rockies...

    21Z update... A substantial expansion of the Northern Rockies
    Marginal Risk was made to include most of eastern Washington up to
    the Continental Divide and south into the Oregon Cascades and=20
    surrounding areas on both sides of the Divide. Anomalous PW values=20
    have been observed across the region, with some nearing the=20
    climatology max for late May. Should thunderstorms hold together,=20
    especially west of the Cascades, there will be an elevated threat=20
    for local flash flooding.=20

    Campbell

    Maturing ULL over the west coast will allow for a broad axis of
    diffluent flow across the interior northwest with the highlight of
    scattered convection likely to pivot further west into eastern WA,
    northern ID, and the western slopes of the Northern Rockies.
    Signals are not as prevalent compared to previous periods, however
    the environmental conditions are still favorable, especially when
    it comes to PWAT anomalies still generally running between the
    90-95th percentile across northeast WA into northern ID. Burn scar
    remnants will likely be the most susceptible to seeing impacts, so
    the threat remains low-end and generally localized. Maintained
    continuity from the previous forecast with a MRGL risk in place
    across the aforementioned areas.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST U.S. AND FOR EASTERN WASHINGTON INTO THE NORTHERN
    ROCKIES...

    21z update... A Marginal Risk was raised for portions of eastern
    Washington, northern Idaho and northwest Montana where there has
    been an elevated threat for localized excessive rainfall and
    isolated flash flooding as described in the Day 1 and Day 2
    sections. Guidance is signaling a notable increase in QPF amounts=20
    and coverage for parts of northern Idaho and into Montana, thus
    continuing the flooding threat for this time period.

    Further south, guidance still varied on where the highest QPF was
    placed; however there was consensus for an increase in amounts=20
    across southern Missouri, central/eastern Tennessee and western=20
    South Carolina. This trend supported an adjustment of the northern
    boundary of the Marginal Risk area.

    Campbell

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will lead
    to a persistent quasi-stationary turned cold front to press south
    over the course of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to
    spawn along and ahead of the front with dry air advecting behind
    the front leading to a cutoff of activity. Jury is still out on
    specifics with the placement of the front generally over the
    Carolina's by Friday morning with slow push south as the day wears
    on. Frontal alignment is more of a arcing back into the Tennessee
    Valley as the persistent troughing in the South-Central Plains will
    likely maintain some southerly flow for areas along and west of the Mississippi. Anywhere within proximity to this front will be
    subject to various convective outputs with some heavier cells
    likely intertwined in over the pattern. No discernible areas of
    interest are present at this juncture, however the environmental
    favorability likely points to the best chances occurring across
    the Southeast into the lower Tennessee Valley. A broad MRGL is
    forecast for the above areas through the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5yj2em7sTq2jXfUJLzuQZZxF0ebB7IVqFBCKwz7gqjwl= X17Z3ZYHo7-nuoWvjAJ5PAQWspdK8QFp327uCrP1IXWeVko$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5yj2em7sTq2jXfUJLzuQZZxF0ebB7IVqFBCKwz7gqjwl= X17Z3ZYHo7-nuoWvjAJ5PAQWspdK8QFp327uCrP1a5Kx-yM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5yj2em7sTq2jXfUJLzuQZZxF0ebB7IVqFBCKwz7gqjwl= X17Z3ZYHo7-nuoWvjAJ5PAQWspdK8QFp327uCrP1vzqJ7CA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 28 00:54:48 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 280054
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    854 PM EDT Wed May 27 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    WEST VIRGINIA AND ACROSS SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    ...0100 UTC Update...

    Have trimmed quite a bit of real estate with both the Slight and
    Marginal areas, based on the latest observational trends, including mesoanalysis (dCAPE/dt), along with the recent HRRRs and 18Z HREF
    QPF exceedance probabilities. The remaining Slight Risk area over
    central WV (and a small sliver of northeast KY/southeast OH) is
    essentially for the near term...through 03-04Z...given the current
    radar trends and lingering deep-layer instability (MUCAPEs ~1000
    J/Kg). The other remaining Slight Risk area (southwest LA) was
    supported by the latest HREF and RRFS exceedance probabilities,
    along with the recent HRRR output.

    Hurley

    Elsewhere (Northern Rockies), the Marginal Risk area remains
    (previous discussion below)...

    Relatively buoyant environment within a deep, anomalous moisture=20
    presence across the Northern Rockies along with regional ascent=20
    provided by sheared vorticity maxima maneuvering through the area=20
    will allow for another round of widely scattered convection to=20
    materialize across the Lewis Range in northwest MT. Instability and
    regional forcing will be a bit less than the previous period,=20
    however sensitivities remain from remnant burn scars present within
    the mountainous terrain in the aforementioned area which is a=20
    cause for concern for any cells that happen to occur over the burn=20
    scars themselves. Hourly rates between 0.5-1"/hr in the stronger=20
    cell cores would be capable of providing localized flash flood=20
    impacts over those more sensitive grounds and this setup will=20
    maintain the prospects given the anomalous moisture presence as=20
    PWATs remain above the 90th percentile over the entire stretch of=20
    the Northern Rockies. The previous MRGL risk inherited was=20
    maintained given the relative continuity.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, PACIFIC NORTHWEST INTO THE
    NORTHERN ROCKIES, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST
    FLORIDA...

    ...Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    21z update... The region with a highlighted threat for excessive
    rainfall and isolated flash flooding remain in good order,
    requiring no adjustments at this time.

    Campbell

    A bit of an omega block pattern is shaping up across the CONUS with
    a broad upper trough axis fixated over the Central and Southern
    Plains with with ridging in place over the top. This will cause a
    rather chaotic flow under the mean trough with deep moisture and
    several smaller mid-level perturbations basically "stuck" under the
    the overall trough axis. Ample instability with deep moisture
    presence will certain be a cause for continuing at least a
    scattered heavy rain footprint across areas under the influence of
    the trough. Scattered elevated probabilities between 30-60% exists
    for localized amounts >2" from KS all the way into the Southeast
    U.S. with the maxima split between KS and the Central Gulf coast.
    The two areas are different in the reasoning as the primary center
    of the trough will be fixed over KS leading to the best upper
    forcing pattern and stagnant flow remaining parked over the area as
    we move through D2. Pending the amount of rain that falls over the
    course of D1, a targeted upgrade is possible, but maintained the
    MRGL and will reassess as we move forward in future updates to see
    if an upgrade is warranted. The Central Gulf coast will remain in a
    favorable instability maxima with weak flow likely a component that
    could lead to isolated heavy totals stemming from slow-moving
    convection. The area from the Upper TX coast over through southern
    GA has been leaning wet over the past week, so antecedent
    conditions are a little more unforgiving for these types of setups.
    In any case, the threat remains modest, at best, so the MRGL risk
    was sufficient for the pattern with any upgrades likely to stem
    from more near term sampling of the radar trends.

    ...Florida...

    21Z update... No changes were made for this period.

    Campbell

    Active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will lead
    to a period of heavy rainfall across the southeast FL coast on
    Thursday afternoon. Consensus within guidance is for an active
    period between 18-00z Thu/Fri that would allow for heavy convection
    with slow forward propagations to impact the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach down to Miami. Latest 00z HREF is
    modestly robust with the signature for at least 3" off the
    neighborhood probabilities with a steady 60-90% output along the
    southeastern coast of FL with the maxima generally confined to the
    Miami Metro up to West Palm Beach. This correlates strongly with
    what has been advertised via regional and global guidance the past
    few days with the deterministic CAMs even indicating some 4-6"
    bullseye's within the main QPF footprint. This is a relatively
    classic pattern capable of locally significant rainfall within a
    deep moisture presence as PWAT anomalies sit between +1 to +2
    standard deviations within the various ensemble packages. A MRGL
    risk remains in effect for the period across the South Florida
    metro corridor.

    ...Washington/Oregon into the Northern Rockies...

    21Z update... A substantial expansion of the Northern Rockies
    Marginal Risk was made to include most of eastern Washington up to
    the Continental Divide and south into the Oregon Cascades and
    surrounding areas on both sides of the Divide. Anomalous PW values
    have been observed across the region, with some nearing the
    climatology max for late May. Should thunderstorms hold together,
    especially west of the Cascades, there will be an elevated threat
    for local flash flooding.

    Campbell

    Maturing ULL over the west coast will allow for a broad axis of
    diffluent flow across the interior northwest with the highlight of
    scattered convection likely to pivot further west into eastern WA,
    northern ID, and the western slopes of the Northern Rockies.
    Signals are not as prevalent compared to previous periods, however
    the environmental conditions are still favorable, especially when
    it comes to PWAT anomalies still generally running between the
    90-95th percentile across northeast WA into northern ID. Burn scar
    remnants will likely be the most susceptible to seeing impacts, so
    the threat remains low-end and generally localized. Maintained
    continuity from the previous forecast with a MRGL risk in place
    across the aforementioned areas.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST U.S. AND FOR EASTERN WASHINGTON INTO THE NORTHERN
    ROCKIES...

    21z update... A Marginal Risk was raised for portions of eastern
    Washington, northern Idaho and northwest Montana where there has
    been an elevated threat for localized excessive rainfall and
    isolated flash flooding as described in the Day 1 and Day 2
    sections. Guidance is signaling a notable increase in QPF amounts
    and coverage for parts of northern Idaho and into Montana, thus
    continuing the flooding threat for this time period.

    Further south, guidance still varied on where the highest QPF was
    placed; however there was consensus for an increase in amounts
    across southern Missouri, central/eastern Tennessee and western
    South Carolina. This trend supported an adjustment of the northern
    boundary of the Marginal Risk area.

    Campbell

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will lead
    to a persistent quasi-stationary turned cold front to press south
    over the course of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to
    spawn along and ahead of the front with dry air advecting behind
    the front leading to a cutoff of activity. Jury is still out on
    specifics with the placement of the front generally over the
    Carolina's by Friday morning with slow push south as the day wears
    on. Frontal alignment is more of a arcing back into the Tennessee
    Valley as the persistent troughing in the South-Central Plains will
    likely maintain some southerly flow for areas along and west of the Mississippi. Anywhere within proximity to this front will be
    subject to various convective outputs with some heavier cells
    likely intertwined in over the pattern. No discernible areas of
    interest are present at this juncture, however the environmental
    favorability likely points to the best chances occurring across
    the Southeast into the lower Tennessee Valley. A broad MRGL is
    forecast for the above areas through the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7tUfWqqUeqFMBccGFZelwSR1F32kIUZycXlDz4scVJYG= OB7encO21_oSFocdLVZhLhcKbxwcq5Wj5JUfV7IrZE2tarw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7tUfWqqUeqFMBccGFZelwSR1F32kIUZycXlDz4scVJYG= OB7encO21_oSFocdLVZhLhcKbxwcq5Wj5JUfV7Ir-CiWWcQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7tUfWqqUeqFMBccGFZelwSR1F32kIUZycXlDz4scVJYG= OB7encO21_oSFocdLVZhLhcKbxwcq5Wj5JUfV7IrqXGPscE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 28 07:21:35 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 280721
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    321 AM EDT Thu May 28 2026

    Day 1 Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF=20
    THE SOUTHEAST TO MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, SOUTHEAST FLORIDA, AND=20
    FOR PORTIONS OF THE NORTHWEST...

    ...Central Plains to Southeast...

    A bit of an omega block pattern is shaping up across the CONUS=20
    with a broad upper trough axis fixated over the Central and=20
    Southern Plains with ridging in place over the top. This will cause
    a rather chaotic flow under the mean trough and several smaller=20
    mid- level perturbations basically "stuck" within the overall=20
    trough axis. Ample instability with deep moisture presence will=20
    certainly continue to support at least a scattered heavy rain=20
    footprint across areas underneath influence of the trough.=20
    Scattered elevated probabilities between 30-70% exists for=20
    localized amounts >3" from KS all the way into the Southeast U.S.=20
    with the maxima split between eastern KS to northern AR and the=20
    Central Gulf coast. For KS/AR, parked underneath the upper trough,=20
    upper forcing and stagnant flow are more favorable for heavier=20
    rainfall totals. Maintaining a marginal risk at this time as the=20
    heaviest rainfall over the past 12 or so hours was more southwest=20
    of where the guidance is showing today and the rest of the region=20
    is still somewhat dry and can probably support some heavier totals.
    Along the Gulf Coast and into the Southeast, instability will be=20
    maximized in this area with weak flow supporting slow- moving=20
    convection and heavier rainfall over those isolated areas.=20
    Antecedent conditions across much of this region are also very wet,
    so it may not take much to cause issue. Given the still fairly=20
    isolated nature, maintaining a broad marginal risk, with any=20
    possible upgrades today stemming more from near term radar trends.=20

    ...Florida...

    An active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will=20
    lead to periods of heavy rainfall across southeast Florida this=20
    afternoon. Greatest concern remains over the South Florida metro=20
    corridor from West Palm Beach to Miami. Latest HREF is robust with=20
    showing greater than 50% probabilities for 3" in 24-hours, with=20
    even some modest, albeit localized, probabilities for 5". This=20
    correlates well with CAM guidance, with some indicating bullseyes=20
    of greater than 3" within the larger QPF footprint. Locally=20
    significant rainfall is likely in this relatively classic pattern=20
    with ample moisture and instability present. A marginal risk=20
    remains in effect across Southeast Florida.=20

    ...Washington/Oregon...

    A deep upper level low over the West will allow for a broad axis=20
    of diffluent flow across the interior Northwest. Precipitable water
    values 1-1.5" are in the 90-90th percentile, and with sufficient=20 instability, should support convection capable of producing heavy=20
    rainfall. Flooding and flash flooding are a concern for mainly the=20
    more vulnerable areas - urban, small stream, and low lying areas.=20
    HREF 24-hr probabilities for greater than 3" are between 40-70% for
    especially the Oregon cascades. Given the favorable environment=20
    though, a marginal risk extends all the way from far northern=20
    California northward to the eastern half of Washington state. A=20
    previous marginal risk for parts of the northern Rockies was=20
    trimmed out for this update given the lack of QPF signal.

    Santorelli


    Day 2 Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PARTS OF=20
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES AS WELL AS MUCH OF THE SOUTHEAST TO MIDDLE=20
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Eastern Washington to Northern Rockies...

    A marginal risk is in place across far northeast Washington to=20
    northwest Montana due to an increase in the heavy rainfall signal=20
    for this period as the upper low over the West on Day 1, pivots=20
    slightly northeastward, placing this region in an area with better=20
    upper forcing and advection of moisture. The presence of anomalous=20
    moisture and some instability may present a threat for localized=20
    heavy rainfall and flash flooding, especially for burn scar=20
    locations within this region.=20

    ...Middle Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will=20
    allow for a slow moving cold front to press south over the course=20
    of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to spawn along and=20
    ahead of the front and dry air advecting behind the front leading=20
    to a quick cutoff of activity. The front will arc back into the=20
    Tennessee Valley to Middle Mississippi Valley, supported by the=20
    persistent troughing over the south-central Plains. A moist and=20
    unstable environment near and south of this front will support=20
    scattered convection, with some heavier cells likely within the=20
    pattern. It is still too hard to pick out any discernible areas of=20
    interest, so maintained a very broad marginal risk over this area=20
    which is quite wet and will continue to be in the Day 1 period.

    Santorelli


    Day 3 Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE=20
    NORTHERN ROCKIES TO HIGH PLAINS AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 and 2 periods=20
    will weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern=20
    Rockies to High Plains region on Day 3/Saturday. Moisture anomalies
    will continue to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate
    to heavy rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely=20
    across western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of=20
    instability to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats=20
    should be mainly localized with particular attention to burn scar=20
    locations. A fairly broad marginal risk is in place across much of=20
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as=20
    well.

    ...Southeast...

    Same story as Days 1 and 2, with ample moisture and instability=20
    present near and south of a cold front that may stall over the=20
    region on Saturday supporting convection, across much of the=20
    Southeast. Some of this region, especially western parts of South=20
    Carolina and into the Appalachians has been very wet as of late and
    is well primed, so may be more favorable for flooding concerns.=20
    The marginal risk though continues towards the coast due to the=20
    presence of a weak frontal wave in the region. The Marginal Risk=20
    extends from the Southeast coast, westward into northeast Alabama=20
    and southeast Tennessee.=20

    Santorelli



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-YssY9nv8nNmRWt9Iy4hs-WJzue9EUqyhWBfiUQAj2Mm= jm7shMhPqRSxkaqTtxJPiBQQ4eYOipJmw8XpHK0_TuDwfxo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-YssY9nv8nNmRWt9Iy4hs-WJzue9EUqyhWBfiUQAj2Mm= jm7shMhPqRSxkaqTtxJPiBQQ4eYOipJmw8XpHK0_JVzP_k8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-YssY9nv8nNmRWt9Iy4hs-WJzue9EUqyhWBfiUQAj2Mm= jm7shMhPqRSxkaqTtxJPiBQQ4eYOipJmw8XpHK0_548tKWQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 28 07:34:23 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 280734=20
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    334 AM EDT Thu May 28 2026

    Day 1=20
    Valid 12Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF=20
    THE SOUTHEAST TO MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, SOUTHEAST FLORIDA, AND=20
    FOR PORTIONS OF THE NORTHWEST...

    ...Central Plains to Southeast...

    A bit of an omega block pattern is shaping up across the CONUS=20
    with a broad upper trough axis fixated over the Central and=20
    Southern Plains with ridging in place over the top. This will cause
    a rather chaotic flow under the mean trough and several smaller=20
    mid- level perturbations basically "stuck" within the overall=20
    trough axis. Ample instability with deep moisture presence will=20
    certainly continue to support at least a scattered heavy rain=20
    footprint across areas underneath influence of the trough.=20
    Scattered elevated probabilities between 30-70% exists for=20
    localized amounts >3" from KS all the way into the Southeast U.S.=20
    with the maxima split between eastern KS to northern AR and the=20
    Central Gulf coast. For KS/AR, parked underneath the upper trough,=20
    upper forcing and stagnant flow are more favorable for heavier=20
    rainfall totals. Maintaining a marginal risk at this time as the=20
    heaviest rainfall over the past 12 or so hours was more southwest=20
    of where the guidance is showing today and the rest of the region=20
    is still somewhat dry and can probably support some heavier totals.
    Along the Gulf Coast and into the Southeast, instability will be=20
    maximized in this area with weak flow supporting slow- moving=20
    convection and heavier rainfall over those isolated areas.=20
    Antecedent conditions across much of this region are also very wet,
    so it may not take much to cause issue. Given the still fairly=20
    isolated nature, maintaining a broad marginal risk, with any=20
    possible upgrades today stemming more from near term radar trends.=20

    ...Florida...

    An active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will=20
    lead to periods of heavy rainfall across southeast Florida this=20
    afternoon. Greatest concern remains over the South Florida metro=20
    corridor from West Palm Beach to Miami. Latest HREF is robust with=20
    showing greater than 50% probabilities for 3" in 24-hours, with=20
    even some modest, albeit localized, probabilities for 5". This=20
    correlates well with CAM guidance, with some indicating bullseyes=20
    of greater than 3" within the larger QPF footprint. Locally=20
    significant rainfall is likely in this relatively classic pattern=20
    with ample moisture and instability present. A marginal risk=20
    remains in effect across Southeast Florida.=20

    ...Washington/Oregon...

    A deep upper level low over the West will allow for a broad axis=20
    of diffluent flow across the interior Northwest. Precipitable water
    values 1-1.5" are in the 90-90th percentile, and with sufficient=20 instability, should support convection capable of producing heavy=20
    rainfall. Flooding and flash flooding are a concern for mainly the=20
    more vulnerable areas - urban, small stream, and low lying areas.=20
    HREF 24-hr probabilities for greater than 3" are between 40-70% for
    especially the Oregon cascades. Given the favorable environment=20
    though, a marginal risk extends all the way from far northern=20
    California northward to the eastern half of Washington state. A=20
    previous marginal risk for parts of the northern Rockies was=20
    trimmed out for this update given the lack of QPF signal.

    Santorelli


    Day 2=20
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PARTS OF=20
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES AS WELL AS MUCH OF THE SOUTHEAST TO MIDDLE=20
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Eastern Washington to Northern Rockies...

    A marginal risk is in place across far northeast Washington to=20
    northwest Montana due to an increase in the heavy rainfall signal=20
    for this period as the upper low over the West on Day 1, pivots=20
    slightly northeastward, placing this region in an area with better=20
    upper forcing and advection of moisture. The presence of anomalous=20
    moisture and some instability may present a threat for localized=20
    heavy rainfall and flash flooding, especially for burn scar=20
    locations within this region.=20

    ...Middle Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will=20
    allow for a slow moving cold front to press south over the course=20
    of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to spawn along and=20
    ahead of the front and dry air advecting behind the front leading=20
    to a quick cutoff of activity. The front will arc back into the=20
    Tennessee Valley to Middle Mississippi Valley, supported by the=20
    persistent troughing over the south-central Plains. A moist and=20
    unstable environment near and south of this front will support=20
    scattered convection, with some heavier cells likely within the=20
    pattern. It is still too hard to pick out any discernible areas of=20
    interest, so maintained a very broad marginal risk over this area=20
    which is quite wet and will continue to be in the Day 1 period.

    Santorelli


    Day 3=20
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE=20
    NORTHERN ROCKIES TO HIGH PLAINS AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 and 2 periods=20
    will weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern=20
    Rockies to High Plains region on Day 3/Saturday. Moisture anomalies
    will continue to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate
    to heavy rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely=20
    across western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of=20
    instability to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats=20
    should be mainly localized with particular attention to burn scar=20
    locations. A fairly broad marginal risk is in place across much of=20
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as=20
    well.

    ...Southeast...

    Same story as Days 1 and 2, with ample moisture and instability=20
    present near and south of a cold front that may stall over the=20
    region on Saturday supporting convection, across much of the=20
    Southeast. Some of this region, especially western parts of South=20
    Carolina and into the Appalachians has been very wet as of late and
    is well primed, so may be more favorable for flooding concerns.=20
    The marginal risk though continues towards the coast due to the=20
    presence of a weak frontal wave in the region. The Marginal Risk=20
    extends from the Southeast coast, westward into northeast Alabama=20
    and southeast Tennessee.=20

    Santorelli


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4S4m498bm9JZqtey54vA7g3YIEMhtMsEwPHurMkE1cTF= J6alatFR33U3zbQbPFdJZ4265Tyx9piJmqI6sbUDbu7dhhQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4S4m498bm9JZqtey54vA7g3YIEMhtMsEwPHurMkE1cTF= J6alatFR33U3zbQbPFdJZ4265Tyx9piJmqI6sbUD579Gtl4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4S4m498bm9JZqtey54vA7g3YIEMhtMsEwPHurMkE1cTF= J6alatFR33U3zbQbPFdJZ4265Tyx9piJmqI6sbUD-Ft8gWE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 28 15:58:35 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 281558
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1158 AM EDT Thu May 28 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHTS RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST, CENTRAL KANSAS, AND IN THE OZARKS OF MISSOURI AND=20
    ARKANSAS...

    16Z Update...

    Slight Risks were introduced for the 16Z update in parts of the
    central KS, the Ozarks, and along the central Gulf Coast. The
    Marginal Risks in the Pacific NW and South FL remain in good shape.

    ...Central Gulf Coast...

    The 12Z LIX sounding was effectively a tropical sounding with=20
    plenty of MLCAPE present (>2,000 J/kg). Winds within the depth of=20
    the cloud layer were almost uniformly out of the south with=20
    training thunderstorms a concern from NOLA non north and east along
    the I-59 corridor. Soils remain highly saturated and primed for=20
    flash flooding with rainfall rates that could top 3"/hr in the=20
    heaviest thunderstorm activity. Storms are at least moving along at
    a steady clip, which should help to reduce the areal extent for=20
    flash flooding. That said, these storms may exacerbate the flooding
    the region has experienced in recent days. For these reasons, a=20
    Slight Risk was introduced.

    ...Ozarks & Central Arkansas...

    A narrow NW-SE corridor of anomalous PWs (>2.0" PWs that top the
    99.5 climatological percentile per ECMWF) is caught between a
    strong ridge of high pressure in the Upper MS Valley and a
    negatively tilted 850-300mb trough oriented from southern KS to the
    ArkLaTex. Strong vertical ascent ahead of the 850-300mb trough
    axis coupled with MLCAPE between 500-1,000 J/kg will give more
    support to these highly saturated profiles. Area-averaged=20
    soundings over northern AR show >85% RH values between 1000-500mb=20
    and warm cloud layers >13,000ft this afternoon and evening. Soils=20
    are most sensitive in central AR, while the Ozarks are historically
    a "flashy" area that, even with some drier soil moisture values in
    southern MO are prone to flash flooding given rainfall rates could
    surpass 2"/hr. The 12Z HREF does show high chance probabilities=20
    70%) for rainfall amounts >3" in southwest MO and northern AR,=20
    with low chance probabilities (20-35%) for >5" amounts. In=20
    collaboration with WFOs in northern AR and southern MO, opted to=20
    upgrade to a Slight Risk for the 16Z update.

    ...Central KS...

    A pivoting 700mb low rotating through southern KS will direct a=20
    plume of highly anomalous moisture for late May/early June over the
    heart of KS. Per RAP mesoanalysis, PWs are already >1.5" and could
    surpass 1.75" this afternoon. Central KS is ideally placed just=20
    ahead of a negatively tilted 850-300mb trough that is generating=20
    excellent upper-level divergence. Additional storms will form this=20
    afternoon with HRRR area-averaged soundings showing >500 J/kg of=20
    MLCAPE, >85% RH values within the mean 1000-500mb layer, and warm=20
    cloud layers up to 12,000ft deep. Wind more uniformly out of the SE
    are also supporting the potential for training storms, evident=20
    from upshear corfidi vectors that are as low as 10 kts. New 12Z=20
    HREF probabilities show high chance (>70%) for rainfall totals >3"=20
    from Wichita on north and west with low-to-moderate chances=20
    (20-40%) for localized amounts >5". Soils in the area are parched,=20
    but these kind of rates can still support flash flooding,=20
    particularly where repeating rounds of storms occur and in more
    urbanized settings. In collaboration with ICT, decided to upgrade=20
    to a Slight Risk for the 16Z update.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Florida...

    An active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will
    lead to periods of heavy rainfall across southeast Florida this
    afternoon. Greatest concern remains over the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach to Miami. Latest HREF is robust with
    showing greater than 50% probabilities for 3" in 24-hours, with
    even some modest, albeit localized, probabilities for 5". This
    correlates well with CAM guidance, with some indicating bullseyes
    of greater than 3" within the larger QPF footprint. Locally
    significant rainfall is likely in this relatively classic pattern
    with ample moisture and instability present. A marginal risk
    remains in effect across Southeast Florida.

    ...Washington/Oregon...

    A deep upper level low over the West will allow for a broad axis
    of diffluent flow across the interior Northwest. Precipitable water
    values 1-1.5" are in the 90-90th percentile, and with sufficient
    instability, should support convection capable of producing heavy
    rainfall. Flooding and flash flooding are a concern for mainly the
    more vulnerable areas - urban, small stream, and low lying areas.
    HREF 24-hr probabilities for greater than 3" are between 40-70% for
    especially the Oregon cascades. Given the favorable environment
    though, a marginal risk extends all the way from far northern
    California northward to the eastern half of Washington state. A
    previous marginal risk for parts of the northern Rockies was
    trimmed out for this update given the lack of QPF signal.

    Santorelli


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES AS WELL AS MUCH OF THE SOUTHEAST TO MIDDLE
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Eastern Washington to Northern Rockies...

    A marginal risk is in place across far northeast Washington to
    northwest Montana due to an increase in the heavy rainfall signal
    for this period as the upper low over the West on Day 1, pivots
    slightly northeastward, placing this region in an area with better
    upper forcing and advection of moisture. The presence of anomalous
    moisture and some instability may present a threat for localized
    heavy rainfall and flash flooding, especially for burn scar
    locations within this region.

    ...Middle Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will
    allow for a slow moving cold front to press south over the course
    of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to spawn along and
    ahead of the front and dry air advecting behind the front leading
    to a quick cutoff of activity. The front will arc back into the
    Tennessee Valley to Middle Mississippi Valley, supported by the
    persistent troughing over the south-central Plains. A moist and
    unstable environment near and south of this front will support
    scattered convection, with some heavier cells likely within the
    pattern. It is still too hard to pick out any discernible areas of
    interest, so maintained a very broad marginal risk over this area
    which is quite wet and will continue to be in the Day 1 period.

    Santorelli


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN ROCKIES TO HIGH PLAINS AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 and 2 periods
    will weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern
    Rockies to High Plains region on Day 3/Saturday. Moisture anomalies
    will continue to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate
    to heavy rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely
    across western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of
    instability to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats
    should be mainly localized with particular attention to burn scar
    locations. A fairly broad marginal risk is in place across much of
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as
    well.

    ...Southeast...

    Same story as Days 1 and 2, with ample moisture and instability
    present near and south of a cold front that may stall over the
    region on Saturday supporting convection, across much of the
    Southeast. Some of this region, especially western parts of South
    Carolina and into the Appalachians has been very wet as of late and
    is well primed, so may be more favorable for flooding concerns.
    The marginal risk though continues towards the coast due to the
    presence of a weak frontal wave in the region. The Marginal Risk
    extends from the Southeast coast, westward into northeast Alabama
    and southeast Tennessee.

    Santorelli


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4fwOagQdvMAvdhwdiWuACYpzSRpajxTud1ZSNHEoICMB= KaGZTX_8w1-Yt_3v1NQmkPXRbOI22hCVWe1Tb7hPMHp2Yok$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4fwOagQdvMAvdhwdiWuACYpzSRpajxTud1ZSNHEoICMB= KaGZTX_8w1-Yt_3v1NQmkPXRbOI22hCVWe1Tb7hPRCwgUmM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4fwOagQdvMAvdhwdiWuACYpzSRpajxTud1ZSNHEoICMB= KaGZTX_8w1-Yt_3v1NQmkPXRbOI22hCVWe1Tb7hPZvQTtL8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 28 19:59:27 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 281959
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    359 PM EDT Thu May 28 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu May 28 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHTS RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST, CENTRAL KANSAS, AND IN THE OZARKS OF MISSOURI AND
    ARKANSAS...

    16Z Update...

    Slight Risks were introduced for the 16Z update in parts of the
    central KS, the Ozarks, and along the central Gulf Coast. The
    Marginal Risks in the Pacific NW and South FL remain in good shape.

    ...Central Gulf Coast...

    The 12Z LIX sounding was effectively a tropical sounding with
    plenty of MLCAPE present (>2,000 J/kg). Winds within the depth of
    the cloud layer were almost uniformly out of the south with
    training thunderstorms a concern from NOLA non north and east along
    the I-59 corridor. Soils remain highly saturated and primed for
    flash flooding with rainfall rates that could top 3"/hr in the
    heaviest thunderstorm activity. Storms are at least moving along at
    a steady clip, which should help to reduce the areal extent for
    flash flooding. That said, these storms may exacerbate the flooding
    the region has experienced in recent days. For these reasons, a
    Slight Risk was introduced.

    ...Ozarks & Central Arkansas...

    A narrow NW-SE corridor of anomalous PWs (>2.0" PWs that top the
    99.5 climatological percentile per ECMWF) is caught between a
    strong ridge of high pressure in the Upper MS Valley and a
    negatively tilted 850-300mb trough oriented from southern KS to the
    ArkLaTex. Strong vertical ascent ahead of the 850-300mb trough
    axis coupled with MLCAPE between 500-1,000 J/kg will give more
    support to these highly saturated profiles. Area-averaged
    soundings over northern AR show >85% RH values between 1000-500mb
    and warm cloud layers >13,000ft this afternoon and evening. Soils
    are most sensitive in central AR, while the Ozarks are historically
    a "flashy" area that, even with some drier soil moisture values in
    southern MO are prone to flash flooding given rainfall rates could
    surpass 2"/hr. The 12Z HREF does show high chance probabilities
    70%) for rainfall amounts >3" in southwest MO and northern AR,
    with low chance probabilities (20-35%) for >5" amounts. In
    collaboration with WFOs in northern AR and southern MO, opted to
    upgrade to a Slight Risk for the 16Z update.

    ...Central KS...

    A pivoting 700mb low rotating through southern KS will direct a
    plume of highly anomalous moisture for late May/early June over the
    heart of KS. Per RAP mesoanalysis, PWs are already >1.5" and could
    surpass 1.75" this afternoon. Central KS is ideally placed just
    ahead of a negatively tilted 850-300mb trough that is generating
    excellent upper-level divergence. Additional storms will form this
    afternoon with HRRR area-averaged soundings showing >500 J/kg of
    MLCAPE, >85% RH values within the mean 1000-500mb layer, and warm
    cloud layers up to 12,000ft deep. Wind more uniformly out of the SE
    are also supporting the potential for training storms, evident
    from upshear corfidi vectors that are as low as 10 kts. New 12Z
    HREF probabilities show high chance (>70%) for rainfall totals >3"
    from Wichita on north and west with low-to-moderate chances
    (20-40%) for localized amounts >5". Soils in the area are parched,
    but these kind of rates can still support flash flooding,
    particularly where repeating rounds of storms occur and in more
    urbanized settings. In collaboration with ICT, decided to upgrade
    to a Slight Risk for the 16Z update.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Florida...

    An active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will
    lead to periods of heavy rainfall across southeast Florida this
    afternoon. Greatest concern remains over the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach to Miami. Latest HREF is robust with
    showing greater than 50% probabilities for 3" in 24-hours, with
    even some modest, albeit localized, probabilities for 5". This
    correlates well with CAM guidance, with some indicating bullseyes
    of greater than 3" within the larger QPF footprint. Locally
    significant rainfall is likely in this relatively classic pattern
    with ample moisture and instability present. A marginal risk
    remains in effect across Southeast Florida.

    ...Washington/Oregon...

    A deep upper level low over the West will allow for a broad axis
    of diffluent flow across the interior Northwest. Precipitable water
    values 1-1.5" are in the 90-90th percentile, and with sufficient
    instability, should support convection capable of producing heavy
    rainfall. Flooding and flash flooding are a concern for mainly the
    more vulnerable areas - urban, small stream, and low lying areas.
    HREF 24-hr probabilities for greater than 3" are between 40-70% for
    especially the Oregon cascades. Given the favorable environment
    though, a marginal risk extends all the way from far northern
    California northward to the eastern half of Washington state. A
    previous marginal risk for parts of the northern Rockies was
    trimmed out for this update given the lack of QPF signal.

    Santorelli


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST...

    20Z Update...

    In collaboration with several Southeast WFOs, a Slight Risk was=20
    introduced from eastern AL to the GA/SC border. The region is=20
    caught out ahead of a sheared 500mb vorticity maximum approaching=20
    from the west. This feature is caught between a closed low=20
    traversing the Great Basin, an upper level ridge in the Midwest,=20
    and a strong trough in the Northeast. At lower levels, weak high=20
    pressure over the FL Straits and troughing in the western Gulf is=20
    producing a lengthy moisture fetch with origins in the Caribbean=20
    Sea. By 00Z Sat, ECMWF SATs shows a >90th climatological percentile
    IVT oriented N-S and directed at the Southeast. This culminates in
    a tropical air-mass sporting 2.0-2.2" PWs that is directed at a=20
    stationary front in draped from the TN Valley to the SC coast.=20
    Instability will be highest over AL on east into central and=20
    southern GA with MUCAPE between 1,000-2,000 J/kg most often. MUCAPE
    up to 1,000 J/kg will be available Friday night from the Savannah=20
    River to coastal SC.=20

    Area-averaged soundings show warm cloud layers as deep as 13,000ft
    over eastern GA at the same time as a weak, yet negatively-tilted=20
    250mb trough fosters synoptic-scale ascent aloft. Guidance shows
    a cluster of heavy thunderstorms forming that will slowly make
    their way east. The Slight Risk area resides just south of the
    stalled front where greater instability will reside and atop some
    of the more saturated soils in the region. The strongest storms
    will have the capability to produce max rates up to 3"/hr rainfall
    rates from eastern AL on east to the Savannah River Friday=20
    afternoon and through Friday night. With increased confidence in=20
    locally considerable rainfall rates over sensitive soils, a Slight
    Risk was introduced.

    Otherwise, some minor tweaks to the inherited Marginal Risk areas
    were made in the Central Plains and Northern Rockies to account for
    the latest WPC QPF.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Eastern Washington to Northern Rockies...

    A marginal risk is in place across far northeast Washington to
    northwest Montana due to an increase in the heavy rainfall signal
    for this period as the upper low over the West on Day 1, pivots
    slightly northeastward, placing this region in an area with better
    upper forcing and advection of moisture. The presence of anomalous
    moisture and some instability may present a threat for localized
    heavy rainfall and flash flooding, especially for burn scar
    locations within this region.

    ...Middle Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will
    allow for a slow moving cold front to press south over the course
    of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to spawn along and
    ahead of the front and dry air advecting behind the front leading
    to a quick cutoff of activity. The front will arc back into the
    Tennessee Valley to Middle Mississippi Valley, supported by the
    persistent troughing over the south-central Plains. A moist and
    unstable environment near and south of this front will support
    scattered convection, with some heavier cells likely within the
    pattern. It is still too hard to pick out any discernible areas of
    interest, so maintained a very broad marginal risk over this area
    which is quite wet and will continue to be in the Day 1 period.

    Santorelli


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN ROCKIES TO HIGH PLAINS AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    20Z Update...

    There was consideration given to a Slight Risk over eastern GA on=20
    east though much of coastal SC given the same setup supporting a=20
    Slight Risk farther west on Friday should move east Saturday=20
    morning. However, lingering model spread in both amounts and the=20
    axis of heavier rainfall (as far north as northern SC, as far south
    as the FL Panhandle) made it difficult to pinpoint a more "at-
    risk" area. The coastal areas of the Southeast will be monitored=20
    closely in the coming forecast cycles, but opted to maintain a=20
    Marginal Risk given the lingering uncertainty. Meanwhile, in the=20
    Northern Rockies, plenty of precipitation is likely coming to the=20
    region on Saturday. The primary reason for no Slight Risk is due to
    the potential for large sums of clouds possibly reducing the=20
    instability available. This should be a beneficial soaking rain=20
    event for drought-stricken central MT, but localized areas of flash
    flooding are possible in poor drainage areas and along complex=20
    terrain.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 and 2 periods
    will weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern
    Rockies to High Plains region on Day 3/Saturday. Moisture anomalies
    will continue to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate
    to heavy rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely
    across western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of
    instability to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats
    should be mainly localized with particular attention to burn scar
    locations. A fairly broad marginal risk is in place across much of
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as
    well.

    ...Southeast...

    Same story as Days 1 and 2, with ample moisture and instability
    present near and south of a cold front that may stall over the
    region on Saturday supporting convection, across much of the
    Southeast. Some of this region, especially western parts of South
    Carolina and into the Appalachians has been very wet as of late and
    is well primed, so may be more favorable for flooding concerns.
    The marginal risk though continues towards the coast due to the
    presence of a weak frontal wave in the region. The Marginal Risk
    extends from the Southeast coast, westward into northeast Alabama
    and southeast Tennessee.

    Santorelli


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6MurZtKwKkG4-mKOaqnZctHaTF8ZbCkJsZS0M4cM25wo= Jo6kOtaYNRbYm4OQhQcWXT9xD83QqIUi4jCNpbklVRh7dTw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6MurZtKwKkG4-mKOaqnZctHaTF8ZbCkJsZS0M4cM25wo= Jo6kOtaYNRbYm4OQhQcWXT9xD83QqIUi4jCNpbklANEudFM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6MurZtKwKkG4-mKOaqnZctHaTF8ZbCkJsZS0M4cM25wo= Jo6kOtaYNRbYm4OQhQcWXT9xD83QqIUi4jCNpbkl2kVdMfo$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu May 28 21:40:20 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 282140
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    540 PM EDT Thu May 28 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 2135Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHTS RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST, CENTRAL KANSAS, AND IN THE OZARKS OF MISSOURI AND
    ARKANSAS...

    21Z Update...

    Slight Risk area over southeast LA and southern MS was removed=20
    based on the latest observational/mesoanalysis and guidance trends.
    Elsewhere, have expanded the Marginal Risk a little farther east of
    the Cascades across central-eastern OR, also based on the latest=20 observational and forecast trends, as noted in Mesoscale=20
    Precipitation Discussion (MPD) #268.

    Hurley

    ...Central Gulf Coast...

    The 12Z LIX sounding was effectively a tropical sounding with
    plenty of MLCAPE present (>2,000 J/kg). Winds within the depth of
    the cloud layer were almost uniformly out of the south with
    training thunderstorms a concern from NOLA non north and east along
    the I-59 corridor. Soils remain highly saturated and primed for
    flash flooding with rainfall rates that could top 3"/hr in the
    heaviest thunderstorm activity. Storms are at least moving along at
    a steady clip, which should help to reduce the areal extent for
    flash flooding. That said, these storms may exacerbate the flooding
    the region has experienced in recent days. For these reasons, a
    Slight Risk was introduced.

    ...Ozarks & Central Arkansas...

    A narrow NW-SE corridor of anomalous PWs (>2.0" PWs that top the
    99.5 climatological percentile per ECMWF) is caught between a
    strong ridge of high pressure in the Upper MS Valley and a
    negatively tilted 850-300mb trough oriented from southern KS to the
    ArkLaTex. Strong vertical ascent ahead of the 850-300mb trough
    axis coupled with MLCAPE between 500-1,000 J/kg will give more
    support to these highly saturated profiles. Area-averaged
    soundings over northern AR show >85% RH values between 1000-500mb
    and warm cloud layers >13,000ft this afternoon and evening. Soils
    are most sensitive in central AR, while the Ozarks are historically
    a "flashy" area that, even with some drier soil moisture values in
    southern MO are prone to flash flooding given rainfall rates could
    surpass 2"/hr. The 12Z HREF does show high chance probabilities
    70%) for rainfall amounts >3" in southwest MO and northern AR,
    with low chance probabilities (20-35%) for >5" amounts. In
    collaboration with WFOs in northern AR and southern MO, opted to
    upgrade to a Slight Risk for the 16Z update.

    ...Central KS...

    A pivoting 700mb low rotating through southern KS will direct a
    plume of highly anomalous moisture for late May/early June over the
    heart of KS. Per RAP mesoanalysis, PWs are already >1.5" and could
    surpass 1.75" this afternoon. Central KS is ideally placed just
    ahead of a negatively tilted 850-300mb trough that is generating
    excellent upper-level divergence. Additional storms will form this
    afternoon with HRRR area-averaged soundings showing >500 J/kg of
    MLCAPE, >85% RH values within the mean 1000-500mb layer, and warm
    cloud layers up to 12,000ft deep. Wind more uniformly out of the SE
    are also supporting the potential for training storms, evident
    from upshear corfidi vectors that are as low as 10 kts. New 12Z
    HREF probabilities show high chance (>70%) for rainfall totals >3"
    from Wichita on north and west with low-to-moderate chances
    (20-40%) for localized amounts >5". Soils in the area are parched,
    but these kind of rates can still support flash flooding,
    particularly where repeating rounds of storms occur and in more
    urbanized settings. In collaboration with ICT, decided to upgrade
    to a Slight Risk for the 16Z update.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Florida...

    An active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will
    lead to periods of heavy rainfall across southeast Florida this
    afternoon. Greatest concern remains over the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach to Miami. Latest HREF is robust with
    showing greater than 50% probabilities for 3" in 24-hours, with
    even some modest, albeit localized, probabilities for 5". This
    correlates well with CAM guidance, with some indicating bullseyes
    of greater than 3" within the larger QPF footprint. Locally
    significant rainfall is likely in this relatively classic pattern
    with ample moisture and instability present. A marginal risk
    remains in effect across Southeast Florida.

    ...Washington/Oregon...

    A deep upper level low over the West will allow for a broad axis
    of diffluent flow across the interior Northwest. Precipitable water
    values 1-1.5" are in the 90-90th percentile, and with sufficient
    instability, should support convection capable of producing heavy
    rainfall. Flooding and flash flooding are a concern for mainly the
    more vulnerable areas - urban, small stream, and low lying areas.
    HREF 24-hr probabilities for greater than 3" are between 40-70% for
    especially the Oregon cascades. Given the favorable environment
    though, a marginal risk extends all the way from far northern
    California northward to the eastern half of Washington state. A
    previous marginal risk for parts of the northern Rockies was
    trimmed out for this update given the lack of QPF signal.

    Santorelli


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST...

    20Z Update...

    In collaboration with several Southeast WFOs, a Slight Risk was
    introduced from eastern AL to the GA/SC border. The region is
    caught out ahead of a sheared 500mb vorticity maximum approaching
    from the west. This feature is caught between a closed low
    traversing the Great Basin, an upper level ridge in the Midwest,
    and a strong trough in the Northeast. At lower levels, weak high
    pressure over the FL Straits and troughing in the western Gulf is
    producing a lengthy moisture fetch with origins in the Caribbean
    Sea. By 00Z Sat, ECMWF SATs shows a >90th climatological percentile
    IVT oriented N-S and directed at the Southeast. This culminates in
    a tropical air-mass sporting 2.0-2.2" PWs that is directed at a
    stationary front in draped from the TN Valley to the SC coast.
    Instability will be highest over AL on east into central and
    southern GA with MUCAPE between 1,000-2,000 J/kg most often. MUCAPE
    up to 1,000 J/kg will be available Friday night from the Savannah
    River to coastal SC.

    Area-averaged soundings show warm cloud layers as deep as 13,000ft
    over eastern GA at the same time as a weak, yet negatively-tilted
    250mb trough fosters synoptic-scale ascent aloft. Guidance shows
    a cluster of heavy thunderstorms forming that will slowly make
    their way east. The Slight Risk area resides just south of the
    stalled front where greater instability will reside and atop some
    of the more saturated soils in the region. The strongest storms
    will have the capability to produce max rates up to 3"/hr rainfall
    rates from eastern AL on east to the Savannah River Friday
    afternoon and through Friday night. With increased confidence in
    locally considerable rainfall rates over sensitive soils, a Slight
    Risk was introduced.

    Otherwise, some minor tweaks to the inherited Marginal Risk areas
    were made in the Central Plains and Northern Rockies to account for
    the latest WPC QPF.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Eastern Washington to Northern Rockies...

    A marginal risk is in place across far northeast Washington to
    northwest Montana due to an increase in the heavy rainfall signal
    for this period as the upper low over the West on Day 1, pivots
    slightly northeastward, placing this region in an area with better
    upper forcing and advection of moisture. The presence of anomalous
    moisture and some instability may present a threat for localized
    heavy rainfall and flash flooding, especially for burn scar
    locations within this region.

    ...Middle Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will
    allow for a slow moving cold front to press south over the course
    of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to spawn along and
    ahead of the front and dry air advecting behind the front leading
    to a quick cutoff of activity. The front will arc back into the
    Tennessee Valley to Middle Mississippi Valley, supported by the
    persistent troughing over the south-central Plains. A moist and
    unstable environment near and south of this front will support
    scattered convection, with some heavier cells likely within the
    pattern. It is still too hard to pick out any discernible areas of
    interest, so maintained a very broad marginal risk over this area
    which is quite wet and will continue to be in the Day 1 period.

    Santorelli


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN ROCKIES TO HIGH PLAINS AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    20Z Update...

    There was consideration given to a Slight Risk over eastern GA on
    east though much of coastal SC given the same setup supporting a
    Slight Risk farther west on Friday should move east Saturday
    morning. However, lingering model spread in both amounts and the
    axis of heavier rainfall (as far north as northern SC, as far south
    as the FL Panhandle) made it difficult to pinpoint a more "at-
    risk" area. The coastal areas of the Southeast will be monitored
    closely in the coming forecast cycles, but opted to maintain a
    Marginal Risk given the lingering uncertainty. Meanwhile, in the
    Northern Rockies, plenty of precipitation is likely coming to the
    region on Saturday. The primary reason for no Slight Risk is due to
    the potential for large sums of clouds possibly reducing the
    instability available. This should be a beneficial soaking rain
    event for drought-stricken central MT, but localized areas of flash
    flooding are possible in poor drainage areas and along complex
    terrain.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 and 2 periods
    will weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern
    Rockies to High Plains region on Day 3/Saturday. Moisture anomalies
    will continue to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate
    to heavy rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely
    across western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of
    instability to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats
    should be mainly localized with particular attention to burn scar
    locations. A fairly broad marginal risk is in place across much of
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as
    well.

    ...Southeast...

    Same story as Days 1 and 2, with ample moisture and instability
    present near and south of a cold front that may stall over the
    region on Saturday supporting convection, across much of the
    Southeast. Some of this region, especially western parts of South
    Carolina and into the Appalachians has been very wet as of late and
    is well primed, so may be more favorable for flooding concerns.
    The marginal risk though continues towards the coast due to the
    presence of a weak frontal wave in the region. The Marginal Risk
    extends from the Southeast coast, westward into northeast Alabama
    and southeast Tennessee.

    Santorelli


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8d3O9omLKAbtvgtNTk6Uhheml2ux8RrWX3zmMaIA7s0i= NFp5SUmEmkZU7jgkQID15EEsbBp-K3CXliA1vpRMFgsd-Y0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8d3O9omLKAbtvgtNTk6Uhheml2ux8RrWX3zmMaIA7s0i= NFp5SUmEmkZU7jgkQID15EEsbBp-K3CXliA1vpRMO2TWeGQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8d3O9omLKAbtvgtNTk6Uhheml2ux8RrWX3zmMaIA7s0i= NFp5SUmEmkZU7jgkQID15EEsbBp-K3CXliA1vpRM0LlNj7s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 29 00:56:25 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 290056
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    856 PM EDT Thu May 28 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Fri May 29 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PARTS OF THE
    MID-SOUTH AND OZARKS...

    01Z Update...

    Have dropped the Marginal Risk across much of the Southeast
    (outside of SE FL), given the lack of deep layer forcing, decaying
    diurnal heating and sea breezes, and weak mid level lapse rates.
    Despite better forcing (along mid level deformation axis/TROWAL
    zone), diminishing deep-layer instability has also allowed for the
    Slight Risk over KS to drop to a Marginal. Otherwise, the Slight
    over central-northern AR into southwest and south-central MO
    continues, based on the latest observational trends (radar,
    satellite, mesoanalysis), along with recent HRRR trends and
    elevated QPF exceedance probabilities from the 18Z HREF.=20

    Have also expanded the Marginal Risk over the northern Rockies and Intermountain West areas, based largely on current observational
    trends.=20

    Hurley

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Florida...

    An active sea breeze pattern with weakening steering flow will
    lead to periods of heavy rainfall across southeast Florida this
    afternoon. Greatest concern remains over the South Florida metro
    corridor from West Palm Beach to Miami. Latest HREF is robust with
    showing greater than 50% probabilities for 3" in 24-hours, with
    even some modest, albeit localized, probabilities for 5". This
    correlates well with CAM guidance, with some indicating bullseyes
    of greater than 3" within the larger QPF footprint. Locally
    significant rainfall is likely in this relatively classic pattern
    with ample moisture and instability present. A marginal risk
    remains in effect across Southeast Florida.

    ...Washington/Oregon...

    A deep upper level low over the West will allow for a broad axis
    of diffluent flow across the interior Northwest. Precipitable water
    values 1-1.5" are in the 90-90th percentile, and with sufficient
    instability, should support convection capable of producing heavy
    rainfall. Flooding and flash flooding are a concern for mainly the
    more vulnerable areas - urban, small stream, and low lying areas.
    HREF 24-hr probabilities for greater than 3" are between 40-70% for
    especially the Oregon cascades. Given the favorable environment
    though, a marginal risk extends all the way from far northern
    California northward to the eastern half of Washington state. A
    previous marginal risk for parts of the northern Rockies was
    trimmed out for this update given the lack of QPF signal.

    Santorelli


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST...

    20Z Update...

    In collaboration with several Southeast WFOs, a Slight Risk was
    introduced from eastern AL to the GA/SC border. The region is
    caught out ahead of a sheared 500mb vorticity maximum approaching
    from the west. This feature is caught between a closed low
    traversing the Great Basin, an upper level ridge in the Midwest,
    and a strong trough in the Northeast. At lower levels, weak high
    pressure over the FL Straits and troughing in the western Gulf is
    producing a lengthy moisture fetch with origins in the Caribbean
    Sea. By 00Z Sat, ECMWF SATs shows a >90th climatological percentile
    IVT oriented N-S and directed at the Southeast. This culminates in
    a tropical air-mass sporting 2.0-2.2" PWs that is directed at a
    stationary front in draped from the TN Valley to the SC coast.
    Instability will be highest over AL on east into central and
    southern GA with MUCAPE between 1,000-2,000 J/kg most often. MUCAPE
    up to 1,000 J/kg will be available Friday night from the Savannah
    River to coastal SC.

    Area-averaged soundings show warm cloud layers as deep as 13,000ft
    over eastern GA at the same time as a weak, yet negatively-tilted
    250mb trough fosters synoptic-scale ascent aloft. Guidance shows
    a cluster of heavy thunderstorms forming that will slowly make
    their way east. The Slight Risk area resides just south of the
    stalled front where greater instability will reside and atop some
    of the more saturated soils in the region. The strongest storms
    will have the capability to produce max rates up to 3"/hr rainfall
    rates from eastern AL on east to the Savannah River Friday
    afternoon and through Friday night. With increased confidence in
    locally considerable rainfall rates over sensitive soils, a Slight
    Risk was introduced.

    Otherwise, some minor tweaks to the inherited Marginal Risk areas
    were made in the Central Plains and Northern Rockies to account for
    the latest WPC QPF.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Eastern Washington to Northern Rockies...

    A marginal risk is in place across far northeast Washington to
    northwest Montana due to an increase in the heavy rainfall signal
    for this period as the upper low over the West on Day 1, pivots
    slightly northeastward, placing this region in an area with better
    upper forcing and advection of moisture. The presence of anomalous
    moisture and some instability may present a threat for localized
    heavy rainfall and flash flooding, especially for burn scar
    locations within this region.

    ...Middle Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...

    Strong Canadian high pressure pressing in from the north will
    allow for a slow moving cold front to press south over the course
    of Thursday into Friday with convection likely to spawn along and
    ahead of the front and dry air advecting behind the front leading
    to a quick cutoff of activity. The front will arc back into the
    Tennessee Valley to Middle Mississippi Valley, supported by the
    persistent troughing over the south-central Plains. A moist and
    unstable environment near and south of this front will support
    scattered convection, with some heavier cells likely within the
    pattern. It is still too hard to pick out any discernible areas of
    interest, so maintained a very broad marginal risk over this area
    which is quite wet and will continue to be in the Day 1 period.

    Santorelli


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN ROCKIES TO HIGH PLAINS AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    20Z Update...

    There was consideration given to a Slight Risk over eastern GA on
    east though much of coastal SC given the same setup supporting a
    Slight Risk farther west on Friday should move east Saturday
    morning. However, lingering model spread in both amounts and the
    axis of heavier rainfall (as far north as northern SC, as far south
    as the FL Panhandle) made it difficult to pinpoint a more "at-
    risk" area. The coastal areas of the Southeast will be monitored
    closely in the coming forecast cycles, but opted to maintain a
    Marginal Risk given the lingering uncertainty. Meanwhile, in the
    Northern Rockies, plenty of precipitation is likely coming to the
    region on Saturday. The primary reason for no Slight Risk is due to
    the potential for large sums of clouds possibly reducing the
    instability available. This should be a beneficial soaking rain
    event for drought-stricken central MT, but localized areas of flash
    flooding are possible in poor drainage areas and along complex
    terrain.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 and 2 periods
    will weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern
    Rockies to High Plains region on Day 3/Saturday. Moisture anomalies
    will continue to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate
    to heavy rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely
    across western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of
    instability to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats
    should be mainly localized with particular attention to burn scar
    locations. A fairly broad marginal risk is in place across much of
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as
    well.

    ...Southeast...

    Same story as Days 1 and 2, with ample moisture and instability
    present near and south of a cold front that may stall over the
    region on Saturday supporting convection, across much of the
    Southeast. Some of this region, especially western parts of South
    Carolina and into the Appalachians has been very wet as of late and
    is well primed, so may be more favorable for flooding concerns.
    The marginal risk though continues towards the coast due to the
    presence of a weak frontal wave in the region. The Marginal Risk
    extends from the Southeast coast, westward into northeast Alabama
    and southeast Tennessee.

    Santorelli


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!902C38snp3pXPRtfz4A7rnbHIikqtOm0XpqTP14K8Nsg= Bnuw6ZPa_lURLpQ-OZwotaY6YscB2EwW1OAb1kCjLiu7AOE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!902C38snp3pXPRtfz4A7rnbHIikqtOm0XpqTP14K8Nsg= Bnuw6ZPa_lURLpQ-OZwotaY6YscB2EwW1OAb1kCj0sgGPBE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!902C38snp3pXPRtfz4A7rnbHIikqtOm0XpqTP14K8Nsg= Bnuw6ZPa_lURLpQ-OZwotaY6YscB2EwW1OAb1kCjzdjNcCU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 29 08:29:13 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 290829
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    429 AM EDT Fri May 29 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST...

    Largely maintained the previous Slight Risk area that was introduced
    in the Southeast US. A sheared 500mb vorticity maximum approaching
    from the west will be encountering a moist airmass with increasing
    amount of instability later during the day and evening. The latest
    numerical guidance kept expected precipitable water values in the=20
    2 to 2.25 inch range along and south of a quasi-stationary front=20
    draped across the region from the TN Valley to the SC coast.=20
    Instability will be highest over AL on east into central and=20
    southern GA with MUCAPE between 1,000-2,000 J/kg most often. MUCAPE
    up to 1,000 J/kg will be available later tonight from the Savannah
    River to coastal SC. This combination should be enough to support=20
    and sustain localized rainfall rates in excess of 2 inches per hour
    where warm rain processes predominate from eastern AL eastward to=20
    the Savannah River this afternoon and tonight.

    ...Middle Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...

    The western portion of the front affecting the Southeast US will
    extend into portions of the Middle Mississippi Valley and provide
    the focus for showers and thunderstorms...some of which may produce
    locally heavy rainfall from the Tennessee Valley into the Middle
    Mississippi Valley into tonight.

    ...Eastern Washington to Northern Rockies...

    A marginal risk remained in place across far northeast Washington=20
    to northwest Montana due to an increase in the heavy rainfall=20
    signal for this period as an upper low over the West on Day 1
    places this region in an area with better upper forcing and=20
    advection of moisture. The presence of anomalous moisture and some=20 instability may present a threat for localized heavy rainfall and=20
    flash flooding, especially for burn scar locations within this=20
    region.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE=20
    NORTHERN ROCKIES TO HIGH PLAINS AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...

    Latest numerical guidance has shifted a majority of the rainfall
    eastward enough compared with previous runs to preclude an upgrade
    to a Slight risk. In addition...the spread of model=20
    guidance both in terms of placement and amounts precluded an
    upgrade. As mentioned previously...some of the region, especially=20
    western parts of South Carolina and into the Appalachians, has=20
    been very wet as of late and is well primed, so may by more
    vulnerable to flooding concerns.

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 period will=20
    weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern Rockies to
    High Plains region on Saturday. Moisture anomalies will continue=20
    to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate to heavy=20
    rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely across=20
    western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of instability=20
    to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats should be mainly=20
    localized with particular attention to burn scar locations. A=20
    fairly broad marginal risk remained in place across much of=20
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as=20
    well.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES AND THE SOUTHEAST UNITED STATES...

    ...Northern Rockies and Adjacent High Plains...
    The upper level low which has been supporting the prolonged wet
    period over the Northern Rockies will continue to move northward=20
    across Montana slowly on Sunday. This results in surface low=20
    pressure and associated surface front to makes its way out over the
    Plains and gradually weaken while the mid and upper level=20
    circulation keeps precipitation lingering over Montana and far=20
    northern Wyoming. Moisture remains anomalously high but instability
    still looks to be dependent upon cloud cover. As in the Day 2=20
    period...any flood or flash flood threats should be mainly=20
    localized with particular attention to burn scar locations.=20

    ...Southeast...
    Until surface high pressure builds far enough southward into the
    Southeast states to decrease coverage of lingering convection on
    Sunday evening...the antecedent conditions keep a risk of flooding
    concerns over the area.=20=20

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!43Ee_BhAegIoLhjRiEH4J7W9ckg7tNRpnR0rt_Vdjcnc= zWZ8gKRiuMLnnxaWkhAQhBOooFBAuVjkJ0OdEEQyjfXv58k$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!43Ee_BhAegIoLhjRiEH4J7W9ckg7tNRpnR0rt_Vdjcnc= zWZ8gKRiuMLnnxaWkhAQhBOooFBAuVjkJ0OdEEQygPehz1c$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!43Ee_BhAegIoLhjRiEH4J7W9ckg7tNRpnR0rt_Vdjcnc= zWZ8gKRiuMLnnxaWkhAQhBOooFBAuVjkJ0OdEEQy2RqMZEY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 29 15:59:02 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 291558
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1158 AM EDT Fri May 29 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    16z Update: Main change is an expansion of the Slight risk across=20
    TN, far southern KY, northern AR and southern MO. Overall would=20
    generally consider the flash flood risk isolated, but a few=20
    clusters of more concentrated impacts appear probable. FFG=20
    exceedance probabilities from both the 12z HREF and REFS show a=20
    broad corridor of 15-30% values approximately aligned with the=20
    adjusted Slight risk area, with 3" neighborhood exceedance=20
    probabilities of ~40-70%. So while coverage of these higher amounts
    should stay localized, weak flow and broad lower level convergence
    will support a few convective clusters capable of 2" per hour=20
    rainfall and totals exceeding 3".

    Made some tweaks to confine the Marginal risk over New England to=20
    just NH into western Maine. A widespread 1-2" of rain is expected=20
    as a strong mid/upper low dives southeast into the region, with=20
    both the HREF and REFS supporting localized totals over 3". Hourly=20
    rainfall rates will generally stay below 1", however could locally=20
    exceed 1" as the low drops south tonight and we get some enhanced=20 convergence closer to the NH and ME coasts. A few spots could see=20
    event total rainfall around or just above 3", which combined with=20
    1" per hour rates, could be enough to result in localized flash=20
    flood impacts.

    A Small Marginal risk was added for dryline convection across west
    TX. Storm motions should be quick enough to limit the risk,=20
    however, a few supercells could briefly anchor to the dryline and=20
    locally enhance rainfall totals.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Largely maintained the previous Slight Risk area that was introduced
    in the Southeast US. A sheared 500mb vorticity maximum approaching
    from the west will be encountering a moist airmass with increasing
    amount of instability later during the day and evening. The latest
    numerical guidance kept expected precipitable water values in the
    2 to 2.25 inch range along and south of a quasi-stationary front
    draped across the region from the TN Valley to the SC coast.
    Instability will be highest over AL on east into central and
    southern GA with MUCAPE between 1,000-2,000 J/kg most often. MUCAPE
    up to 1,000 J/kg will be available later tonight from the Savannah
    River to coastal SC. This combination should be enough to support
    and sustain localized rainfall rates in excess of 2 inches per hour
    where warm rain processes predominate from eastern AL eastward to
    the Savannah River this afternoon and tonight.

    ...Middle Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...

    The western portion of the front affecting the Southeast US will
    extend into portions of the Middle Mississippi Valley and provide
    the focus for showers and thunderstorms...some of which may produce
    locally heavy rainfall from the Tennessee Valley into the Middle
    Mississippi Valley into tonight.

    ...Eastern Washington to Northern Rockies...

    A marginal risk remained in place across far northeast Washington
    to northwest Montana due to an increase in the heavy rainfall
    signal for this period as an upper low over the West on Day 1
    places this region in an area with better upper forcing and
    advection of moisture. The presence of anomalous moisture and some
    instability may present a threat for localized heavy rainfall and
    flash flooding, especially for burn scar locations within this
    region.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN ROCKIES TO HIGH PLAINS AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...

    Latest numerical guidance has shifted a majority of the rainfall
    eastward enough compared with previous runs to preclude an upgrade
    to a Slight risk. In addition...the spread of model
    guidance both in terms of placement and amounts precluded an
    upgrade. As mentioned previously...some of the region, especially
    western parts of South Carolina and into the Appalachians, has
    been very wet as of late and is well primed, so may by more
    vulnerable to flooding concerns.

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 period will
    weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern Rockies to
    High Plains region on Saturday. Moisture anomalies will continue
    to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate to heavy
    rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely across
    western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of instability
    to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats should be mainly
    localized with particular attention to burn scar locations. A
    fairly broad marginal risk remained in place across much of
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as
    well.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES AND THE SOUTHEAST UNITED STATES...

    ...Northern Rockies and Adjacent High Plains...
    The upper level low which has been supporting the prolonged wet
    period over the Northern Rockies will continue to move northward
    across Montana slowly on Sunday. This results in surface low
    pressure and associated surface front to makes its way out over the
    Plains and gradually weaken while the mid and upper level
    circulation keeps precipitation lingering over Montana and far
    northern Wyoming. Moisture remains anomalously high but instability
    still looks to be dependent upon cloud cover. As in the Day 2
    period...any flood or flash flood threats should be mainly
    localized with particular attention to burn scar locations.

    ...Southeast...
    Until surface high pressure builds far enough southward into the
    Southeast states to decrease coverage of lingering convection on
    Sunday evening...the antecedent conditions keep a risk of flooding
    concerns over the area.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6tDTSy2GuRSwMzlbmb9eX0AALj8Qvra6J170FFwY7PLx= dHV8eCYBFUMuTbMasaV4UAfdQVVBNYBd58PH0rzBdQrW9-s$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6tDTSy2GuRSwMzlbmb9eX0AALj8Qvra6J170FFwY7PLx= dHV8eCYBFUMuTbMasaV4UAfdQVVBNYBd58PH0rzBJGiZY-Y$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6tDTSy2GuRSwMzlbmb9eX0AALj8Qvra6J170FFwY7PLx= dHV8eCYBFUMuTbMasaV4UAfdQVVBNYBd58PH0rzBDFcy11k$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Fri May 29 20:08:40 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 292008
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    408 PM EDT Fri May 29 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri May 29 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    16z Update: Main change is an expansion of the Slight risk across
    TN, far southern KY, northern AR and southern MO. Overall would
    generally consider the flash flood risk isolated, but a few
    clusters of more concentrated impacts appear probable. FFG
    exceedance probabilities from both the 12z HREF and REFS show a
    broad corridor of 15-30% values approximately aligned with the
    adjusted Slight risk area, with 3" neighborhood exceedance
    probabilities of ~40-70%. So while coverage of these higher amounts
    should stay localized, weak flow and broad lower level convergence
    will support a few convective clusters capable of 2" per hour
    rainfall and totals exceeding 3".

    Made some tweaks to confine the Marginal risk over New England to
    just NH into western Maine. A widespread 1-2" of rain is expected
    as a strong mid/upper low dives southeast into the region, with
    both the HREF and REFS supporting localized totals over 3". Hourly
    rainfall rates will generally stay below 1", however could locally
    exceed 1" as the low drops south tonight and we get some enhanced
    convergence closer to the NH and ME coasts. A few spots could see
    event total rainfall around or just above 3", which combined with
    1" per hour rates, could be enough to result in localized flash
    flood impacts.

    A Small Marginal risk was added for dryline convection across west
    TX. Storm motions should be quick enough to limit the risk,
    however, a few supercells could briefly anchor to the dryline and
    locally enhance rainfall totals.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Largely maintained the previous Slight Risk area that was introduced
    in the Southeast US. A sheared 500mb vorticity maximum approaching
    from the west will be encountering a moist airmass with increasing
    amount of instability later during the day and evening. The latest
    numerical guidance kept expected precipitable water values in the
    2 to 2.25 inch range along and south of a quasi-stationary front
    draped across the region from the TN Valley to the SC coast.
    Instability will be highest over AL on east into central and
    southern GA with MUCAPE between 1,000-2,000 J/kg most often. MUCAPE
    up to 1,000 J/kg will be available later tonight from the Savannah
    River to coastal SC. This combination should be enough to support
    and sustain localized rainfall rates in excess of 2 inches per hour
    where warm rain processes predominate from eastern AL eastward to
    the Savannah River this afternoon and tonight.

    ...Middle Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...

    The western portion of the front affecting the Southeast US will
    extend into portions of the Middle Mississippi Valley and provide
    the focus for showers and thunderstorms...some of which may produce
    locally heavy rainfall from the Tennessee Valley into the Middle
    Mississippi Valley into tonight.

    ...Eastern Washington to Northern Rockies...

    A marginal risk remained in place across far northeast Washington
    to northwest Montana due to an increase in the heavy rainfall
    signal for this period as an upper low over the West on Day 1
    places this region in an area with better upper forcing and
    advection of moisture. The presence of anomalous moisture and some
    instability may present a threat for localized heavy rainfall and
    flash flooding, especially for burn scar locations within this
    region.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    MONTANA...

    20z Update: Upgraded to a Slight risk across portions of MT where=20
    isolated to scattered flash flooding is possible. The eastern half
    of the Slight risk area should see the highest rainfall rates,=20
    with HREF neighborhood probabilities of exceeding 1"/hr in the=20
    30-50% range, and 2"/hr around 10%. This results in HREF FFG=20
    exceedance probabilities broadly over 25%. There should be enough=20
    coverage of higher rainfall rates to result in some flash flood=20
    risk. Instability is less the farther west you go in MT, but=20
    rainfall coverage will be greater, resulting in higher areal=20
    averaged rainfall. The flood risk should gradually transition from
    flash flood to areal flood/river flood as you go west across the=20
    state.

    Elsewhere, the Marginal risk was broadened across the Northern
    Plains into the MS Valley along an elongated moisture axis.
    Convective details are uncertain at this lead time, but that=20
    entire corridor will have above average moisture and some=20
    forcing.The most organized convective threat may end up over=20
    portions of NE and SD Saturday night as stronger forcing ejects=20
    into the area. However, there are also signals of organized=20
    convective clusters within the moisture axis anywhere from AR to=20
    IA. While convection is unlikely along this entire axis...where it
    does develop rainfall rate potential will be high enough for=20
    localized flash flooding.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southeast...

    Latest numerical guidance has shifted a majority of the rainfall
    eastward enough compared with previous runs to preclude an upgrade
    to a Slight risk. In addition...the spread of model
    guidance both in terms of placement and amounts precluded an
    upgrade. As mentioned previously...some of the region, especially
    western parts of South Carolina and into the Appalachians, has
    been very wet as of late and is well primed, so may by more
    vulnerable to flooding concerns.

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 period will
    weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern Rockies to
    High Plains region on Saturday. Moisture anomalies will continue
    to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate to heavy
    rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely across
    western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of instability
    to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats should be mainly
    localized with particular attention to burn scar locations. A
    fairly broad marginal risk remained in place across much of
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as
    well.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL STRETCHING FROM
    MONTANA TO NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    20Z Update: Expanded the Marginal risk to cover most of the
    anomalous moisture plume that will extend from MT into the=20
    Southeast U.S. in between troughing over the West and Northeast.=20
    Large scale forcing is more subtle outside of the Northern=20 Plains/Rockies...but there should be some weak shortwaves=20
    embedded within the weak flow. Global deterministic models,=20
    ensemble means and AI models show a broad convective threat along=20
    this entire corridor, with no clear area of higher focus. Thus at=20
    the moment a large Marginal seems to handle the localized flash=20
    flood risk that should exist. Some fine tuning of the Marginal=20
    and/or focused Slight risk upgrades will be possible as we get=20
    closer and convective mode/evolution becomes clearer.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Rockies and Adjacent High Plains...
    The upper level low which has been supporting the prolonged wet
    period over the Northern Rockies will continue to move northward
    across Montana slowly on Sunday. This results in surface low
    pressure and associated surface front to makes its way out over the
    Plains and gradually weaken while the mid and upper level
    circulation keeps precipitation lingering over Montana and far
    northern Wyoming. Moisture remains anomalously high but instability
    still looks to be dependent upon cloud cover. As in the Day 2
    period...any flood or flash flood threats should be mainly
    localized with particular attention to burn scar locations.

    ...Southeast...
    Until surface high pressure builds far enough southward into the
    Southeast states to decrease coverage of lingering convection on
    Sunday evening...the antecedent conditions keep a risk of flooding
    concerns over the area.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7q9UGCqtgog0Bl9yr0qtN1mXWiwnPCr5fHYjbfw-Cr5r= TuEBoNKevXGcaHyWgXzN_4fOwpnpXJyu4QWBZxRmBQxj8vo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7q9UGCqtgog0Bl9yr0qtN1mXWiwnPCr5fHYjbfw-Cr5r= TuEBoNKevXGcaHyWgXzN_4fOwpnpXJyu4QWBZxRmbfh3WaE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7q9UGCqtgog0Bl9yr0qtN1mXWiwnPCr5fHYjbfw-Cr5r= TuEBoNKevXGcaHyWgXzN_4fOwpnpXJyu4QWBZxRmHsc1SjQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sat May 30 00:48:22 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 300048
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    848 PM EDT Fri May 29 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sat May 30 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    01Z Update: As has been the case, late-period changes to the Day 1
    ERO were primarily to remove areas from the Slight and Marginal
    Risk area that have been worked over and/or have seen a diminished
    threat given the loss of diurnal heating. Observational trends
    along with the elevated 18Z HREF neighborhood probabilities of 3+=20
    inches of additional rainfall through 12Z have resulted in a
    continuation of the Slight Risk across much of GA into eastern AL
    and eastern TN. Still sufficient deep-layer instability over these
    areas to pose a more heightened risk of excessive rainfall, with
    mixed-layer CAPEs between 1000-2000 J/Kg. Peak neighborhood
    probabilities of >3" through 12Z per the 18Z HREF are between
    40-60% in this region.=20

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    MONTANA...

    20z Update: Upgraded to a Slight risk across portions of MT where
    isolated to scattered flash flooding is possible. The eastern half
    of the Slight risk area should see the highest rainfall rates,
    with HREF neighborhood probabilities of exceeding 1"/hr in the
    30-50% range, and 2"/hr around 10%. This results in HREF FFG
    exceedance probabilities broadly over 25%. There should be enough
    coverage of higher rainfall rates to result in some flash flood
    risk. Instability is less the farther west you go in MT, but
    rainfall coverage will be greater, resulting in higher areal
    averaged rainfall. The flood risk should gradually transition from
    flash flood to areal flood/river flood as you go west across the
    state.

    Elsewhere, the Marginal risk was broadened across the Northern
    Plains into the MS Valley along an elongated moisture axis.
    Convective details are uncertain at this lead time, but that
    entire corridor will have above average moisture and some
    forcing.The most organized convective threat may end up over
    portions of NE and SD Saturday night as stronger forcing ejects
    into the area. However, there are also signals of organized
    convective clusters within the moisture axis anywhere from AR to
    IA. While convection is unlikely along this entire axis...where it
    does develop rainfall rate potential will be high enough for
    localized flash flooding.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southeast...

    Latest numerical guidance has shifted a majority of the rainfall
    eastward enough compared with previous runs to preclude an upgrade
    to a Slight risk. In addition...the spread of model
    guidance both in terms of placement and amounts precluded an
    upgrade. As mentioned previously...some of the region, especially
    western parts of South Carolina and into the Appalachians, has
    been very wet as of late and is well primed, so may by more
    vulnerable to flooding concerns.

    ...Northern Rockies to High Plains...

    The upper level low over the West during the Day 1 period will
    weaken and shift northeastward, moving over the Northern Rockies to
    High Plains region on Saturday. Moisture anomalies will continue
    to be in the 90-90th percentile, supporting moderate to heavy
    rainfall, with widespread QPF greater than 0.5-1" likely across
    western and central Montana. There may not be a lot of instability
    to work with, so any flood or flash flood threats should be mainly
    localized with particular attention to burn scar locations. A
    fairly broad marginal risk remained in place across much of
    western and central Montana, into parts of northern Wyoming as
    well.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL STRETCHING FROM
    MONTANA TO NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    20Z Update: Expanded the Marginal risk to cover most of the
    anomalous moisture plume that will extend from MT into the
    Southeast U.S. in between troughing over the West and Northeast.
    Large scale forcing is more subtle outside of the Northern
    Plains/Rockies...but there should be some weak shortwaves
    embedded within the weak flow. Global deterministic models,
    ensemble means and AI models show a broad convective threat along
    this entire corridor, with no clear area of higher focus. Thus at
    the moment a large Marginal seems to handle the localized flash
    flood risk that should exist. Some fine tuning of the Marginal
    and/or focused Slight risk upgrades will be possible as we get
    closer and convective mode/evolution becomes clearer.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Rockies and Adjacent High Plains...
    The upper level low which has been supporting the prolonged wet
    period over the Northern Rockies will continue to move northward
    across Montana slowly on Sunday. This results in surface low
    pressure and associated surface front to makes its way out over the
    Plains and gradually weaken while the mid and upper level
    circulation keeps precipitation lingering over Montana and far
    northern Wyoming. Moisture remains anomalously high but instability
    still looks to be dependent upon cloud cover. As in the Day 2
    period...any flood or flash flood threats should be mainly
    localized with particular attention to burn scar locations.

    ...Southeast...
    Until surface high pressure builds far enough southward into the
    Southeast states to decrease coverage of lingering convection on
    Sunday evening...the antecedent conditions keep a risk of flooding
    concerns over the area.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7we_l73PKnUB_0qo1S853oUXeFktdonbUW7532LZT3zF= xlRciigC8ZJcAESLQZxz6VgitXrohvclL-9DYzsJzizNMSw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7we_l73PKnUB_0qo1S853oUXeFktdonbUW7532LZT3zF= xlRciigC8ZJcAESLQZxz6VgitXrohvclL-9DYzsJQwcDIPk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7we_l73PKnUB_0qo1S853oUXeFktdonbUW7532LZT3zF= xlRciigC8ZJcAESLQZxz6VgitXrohvclL-9DYzsJ_TmjDc4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sat May 30 08:30:21 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 300830
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    430 AM EDT Sat May 30 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    MONTANA...

    ...Northern Rockies to the Plains...

    Maintained the Slight risk across portions of Montana as a mid-=20
    and upper-level system makes its way northward slowly today. The=20
    system should foster locally intense rainfall rates...especially in
    the eastern portion of the Slight Risk area...given moderately=20
    steep lapse rates and some potential for enough breaks in cloud=20
    cover. The HREF neighborhood probabilities of exceeding 1"/hr in=20
    the 30-50% range, and 2"/hr around 10%. This results in HREF FFG=20
    exceedance probabilities broadly over 25 percent. The RRFS shows a=20
    similar evolution in roughly the same area but was not quite as=20
    high with its probability of exceedance or with the probability of=20
    1 inch per hour rainfall. Farther west;..the instability is=20
    expected to be weaker but the greater coverage of rainfall looks=20
    to offset the instability shortfall. As mentioned previously...the=20
    flood risk should gradually transition from flash flood to areal=20
    flood/river flood as you go west across the state.

    A Marginal Risk area extending eastward from Montana and then
    southward from the Northern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley was
    largely left in place given the signal in the HREF for locally
    heavy rainfall rates within an elongated moisture plume originating
    from the Southeast US. It was done so despite convective details=20
    remaining uncertain. The most organized convective threat may end=20
    up over portions of NE and SD given a highly difluent flow aloft=20
    and low level convergent flow. However, there are also signals of=20
    organized convective clusters within the moisture axis anywhere=20
    from Arkansas to Iowa, While convection is unlikely along this=20
    entire axis...where it does develop rainfall rate potential will be
    high enough for localized flash flooding.

    ...Southeast...

    Latest numerical guidance continued to show locally heavy rainfall
    today and tonight along and south of a boundary moving in from the
    north. There was a bit of a westward expansion in the western
    extent shown by the HREF and RRFS of the 1-inch per hour
    probabilities and the probability of exceedance. As a result...the
    Marginal Risk was expanded westward in parts of Georgia to Alabama.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL STRETCHING FROM
    MONTANA TO NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    Any heavy to excessive rainfall should be located in or near a
    plume of anomalous moisture plume that will extend from Montana=20
    into the Southeast United State. Large scale forcing is more=20
    subtle outside of the Northern Plains/Rockies...but there should be
    some weak shortwave energy embedded within the weak flow that will
    make them difficult or impossible to time. As this shortwave energy
    encounters a late day atmosphere with MUCAPE values in excess of
    3000 J per kg from the Plains into the Mississippi Valley and parts
    of the Southeast US...storms have the potential to produce very
    intense rainfall rates that approach or exceed flash flood
    guidance along this entire corridor. A large and generally
    unfocused Marginal Risk area still seems to handle the localized
    nature of flash flood risk that should exist.=20

    The Montana portion of the Marginal Risk has the strongest synoptic
    forcing as a mid- and upper-level system gradually moves north of
    the border...keeping the western part of the state in lingering=20
    wrap-around rainfall before gradually tapering off.

    Bann



    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.=20

    There are some hints in the guidance that the overall risk of
    excessive rainfall is non-zero over the Plains from Kansas into
    Colorado as models show a low level axis of moisture and
    instability moving northward on Monday afternoon. The ensemble and deterministic QPF is fairly low...perhaps due to a component of low
    level flow off the moisture. In addition...lingering deep moisture
    may fuel some late day thunderstorms on Monday that are capable of
    locally heavy rainfall but the model spread limits confidence.




    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ooCQvdZ7TKESW2BfQNpFrjo_QsIGuGe6af90oR9ceMN= YUfhNMrlwEVhcNd2Pi25re6rqB5M6QbMytD6KrD9ocsSA1Q$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ooCQvdZ7TKESW2BfQNpFrjo_QsIGuGe6af90oR9ceMN= YUfhNMrlwEVhcNd2Pi25re6rqB5M6QbMytD6KrD9gMj5WEg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ooCQvdZ7TKESW2BfQNpFrjo_QsIGuGe6af90oR9ceMN= YUfhNMrlwEVhcNd2Pi25re6rqB5M6QbMytD6KrD9uoIy-s4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sat May 30 15:55:03 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 301554
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1154 AM EDT Sat May 30 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    MONTANA...

    16Z Update...

    ...Tennessee Valley...

    Current radar and RAP mesoanalysis show a weak 925 mb circulation over
    central TN that is caught between the front to the north and the low-
    level WSWrly over MS/AL. The 12Z BMX sounding shows the atmosphere
    remains weakly capped with a 1.9" PW, and >500 MLCAPE, RH at low=20
    and mid levels >90%, and a warm cloud layer approaching 12,000ft=20
    in depth. A nearby outflow boundary is also moving south into=20
    southern TN this morning and is likely to trigger additional heavy thunderstorms this afternoon. There is not much in the way of=20
    vertical wind shear, so storms will be fairly short lived. But up=20
    to 2.5"/hr rainfall rates this afternoon and evening atop soils=20
    that remain quite saturated led to an extension of the Marginal=20
    Risk in the Southeast as far north and west as south-central TN.

    Otherwise, some minor tweaks were made to the Marginal in the=20
    Southeast and Northern and Central Plains, as well as the Slight=20
    Risk in MT based on latest 12Z HREF and 12Z CAMs guidance. The=20
    threat areas and rationale provided by night shift remain in good=20
    shape as of this update.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Northern Rockies to the Plains...

    Maintained the Slight risk across portions of Montana as a mid-
    and upper-level system makes its way northward slowly today. The
    system should foster locally intense rainfall rates...especially in
    the eastern portion of the Slight Risk area...given moderately
    steep lapse rates and some potential for enough breaks in cloud
    cover. The HREF neighborhood probabilities of exceeding 1"/hr in
    the 30-50% range, and 2"/hr around 10%. This results in HREF FFG
    exceedance probabilities broadly over 25 percent. The RRFS shows a
    similar evolution in roughly the same area but was not quite as
    high with its probability of exceedance or with the probability of
    1 inch per hour rainfall. Farther west;..the instability is
    expected to be weaker but the greater coverage of rainfall looks
    to offset the instability shortfall. As mentioned previously...the
    flood risk should gradually transition from flash flood to areal
    flood/river flood as you go west across the state.

    A Marginal Risk area extending eastward from Montana and then
    southward from the Northern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley was
    largely left in place given the signal in the HREF for locally
    heavy rainfall rates within an elongated moisture plume originating
    from the Southeast US. It was done so despite convective details
    remaining uncertain. The most organized convective threat may end
    up over portions of NE and SD given a highly difluent flow aloft
    and low level convergent flow. However, there are also signals of
    organized convective clusters within the moisture axis anywhere
    from Arkansas to Iowa, While convection is unlikely along this
    entire axis...where it does develop rainfall rate potential will be
    high enough for localized flash flooding.

    ...Southeast...

    Latest numerical guidance continued to show locally heavy rainfall
    today and tonight along and south of a boundary moving in from the
    north. There was a bit of a westward expansion in the western
    extent shown by the HREF and RRFS of the 1-inch per hour
    probabilities and the probability of exceedance. As a result...the
    Marginal Risk was expanded westward in parts of Georgia to Alabama.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL STRETCHING FROM
    MONTANA TO NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    Any heavy to excessive rainfall should be located in or near a
    plume of anomalous moisture plume that will extend from Montana
    into the Southeast United State. Large scale forcing is more
    subtle outside of the Northern Plains/Rockies...but there should be
    some weak shortwave energy embedded within the weak flow that will
    make them difficult or impossible to time. As this shortwave energy
    encounters a late day atmosphere with MUCAPE values in excess of
    3000 J per kg from the Plains into the Mississippi Valley and parts
    of the Southeast US...storms have the potential to produce very
    intense rainfall rates that approach or exceed flash flood
    guidance along this entire corridor. A large and generally
    unfocused Marginal Risk area still seems to handle the localized
    nature of flash flood risk that should exist.

    The Montana portion of the Marginal Risk has the strongest synoptic
    forcing as a mid- and upper-level system gradually moves north of
    the border...keeping the western part of the state in lingering
    wrap-around rainfall before gradually tapering off.

    Bann



    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    There are some hints in the guidance that the overall risk of
    excessive rainfall is non-zero over the Plains from Kansas into
    Colorado as models show a low level axis of moisture and
    instability moving northward on Monday afternoon. The ensemble and deterministic QPF is fairly low...perhaps due to a component of low
    level flow off the moisture. In addition...lingering deep moisture
    may fuel some late day thunderstorms on Monday that are capable of
    locally heavy rainfall but the model spread limits confidence.




    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-mbo0MaiJ5BqRgXFgubIleaJdsnRfvdronGdFD9oOiNv= s0bTXAUXgyAms06Z25bbvrqnU2YjkO_IZAYVsSrdSTz-Bzc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-mbo0MaiJ5BqRgXFgubIleaJdsnRfvdronGdFD9oOiNv= s0bTXAUXgyAms06Z25bbvrqnU2YjkO_IZAYVsSrdrBsNpUI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-mbo0MaiJ5BqRgXFgubIleaJdsnRfvdronGdFD9oOiNv= s0bTXAUXgyAms06Z25bbvrqnU2YjkO_IZAYVsSrd79g1XEg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sat May 30 20:00:39 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 302000
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 PM EDT Sat May 30 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat May 30 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    MONTANA...

    16Z Update...

    ...Tennessee Valley...

    Current radar and RAP mesoanalysis show a weak 925 mb circulation over
    central TN that is caught between the front to the north and the low-
    level WSWrly over MS/AL. The 12Z BMX sounding shows the atmosphere
    remains weakly capped with a 1.9" PW, and >500 MLCAPE, RH at low
    and mid levels >90%, and a warm cloud layer approaching 12,000ft
    in depth. A nearby outflow boundary is also moving south into
    southern TN this morning and is likely to trigger additional heavy thunderstorms this afternoon. There is not much in the way of
    vertical wind shear, so storms will be fairly short lived. But up
    to 2.5"/hr rainfall rates this afternoon and evening atop soils
    that remain quite saturated led to an extension of the Marginal
    Risk in the Southeast as far north and west as south-central TN.

    Otherwise, some minor tweaks were made to the Marginal in the
    Southeast and Northern and Central Plains, as well as the Slight
    Risk in MT based on latest 12Z HREF and 12Z CAMs guidance. The
    threat areas and rationale provided by night shift remain in good
    shape as of this update.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Northern Rockies to the Plains...

    Maintained the Slight risk across portions of Montana as a mid-
    and upper-level system makes its way northward slowly today. The
    system should foster locally intense rainfall rates...especially in
    the eastern portion of the Slight Risk area...given moderately
    steep lapse rates and some potential for enough breaks in cloud
    cover. The HREF neighborhood probabilities of exceeding 1"/hr in
    the 30-50% range, and 2"/hr around 10%. This results in HREF FFG
    exceedance probabilities broadly over 25 percent. The RRFS shows a
    similar evolution in roughly the same area but was not quite as
    high with its probability of exceedance or with the probability of
    1 inch per hour rainfall. Farther west;..the instability is
    expected to be weaker but the greater coverage of rainfall looks
    to offset the instability shortfall. As mentioned previously...the
    flood risk should gradually transition from flash flood to areal
    flood/river flood as you go west across the state.

    A Marginal Risk area extending eastward from Montana and then
    southward from the Northern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley was
    largely left in place given the signal in the HREF for locally
    heavy rainfall rates within an elongated moisture plume originating
    from the Southeast US. It was done so despite convective details
    remaining uncertain. The most organized convective threat may end
    up over portions of NE and SD given a highly difluent flow aloft
    and low level convergent flow. However, there are also signals of
    organized convective clusters within the moisture axis anywhere
    from Arkansas to Iowa, While convection is unlikely along this
    entire axis...where it does develop rainfall rate potential will be
    high enough for localized flash flooding.

    ...Southeast...

    Latest numerical guidance continued to show locally heavy rainfall
    today and tonight along and south of a boundary moving in from the
    north. There was a bit of a westward expansion in the western
    extent shown by the HREF and RRFS of the 1-inch per hour
    probabilities and the probability of exceedance. As a result...the
    Marginal Risk was expanded westward in parts of Georgia to Alabama.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHEAST...

    20Z Update...

    ...Southeast...

    A nearby frontal boundary will become the focus for yet more strong thunderstorms over much of the Southeast on Sunday. Just south of
    the front in southern SC, southern GA, and northern FL, this region
    is a reservoir of >2.0" PWs that are available thanks in large part
    to a southerly IVT that contains moisture originating from the
    western Caribbean Sea. Area-averaged soundings suggest a
    sufficiently unstable atmosphere (>1,000 K/kg MLCAPE), well
    saturated 1000-500mb columns, and warm cloud layers up to 14,000ft
    deep in some cases. The key in determining the full extent of the
    flash flooding threat will be how much cloud debris from Saturday
    and Saturday night's thunderstorm activity lingers into Sunday.
    That said, weak capping inversions should allow for storms to
    develop as early as late morning and soils in the area remain
    rather saturated following such an active week-long stretch of
    heavy rainfall. In collaboration with several Southeast WFOs, a
    Slight Risk was added this cycle given the potential for scattered
    instances of flash flooding.

    ...West Texas...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced this cycle given the growing
    consensus of global models and CAMs that were hinting at
    thunderstorms firing over the Davis Mountains and along the
    dryline. PWs surge to >1.0" in these areas as low-level SErly flow
    introduces additional 850mb moisture flux into the region and a
    sheared 500mb vort max approaching from northern Mexico. Sufficient
    instability also appears to be present with MUCAPE up to 1,000=20
    J/kg expected to be available. West Texas continues to have locally
    sensitive soils in wake of recent rainfall as well. Given these=20
    factors, a Marginal Risk was introduced for a localized flash=20
    flood threat in West Texas Sunday afternoon and evening.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    Any heavy to excessive rainfall should be located in or near a
    plume of anomalous moisture plume that will extend from Montana
    into the Southeast United State. Large scale forcing is more
    subtle outside of the Northern Plains/Rockies...but there should be
    some weak shortwave energy embedded within the weak flow that will
    make them difficult or impossible to time. As this shortwave energy
    encounters a late day atmosphere with MUCAPE values in excess of
    3000 J per kg from the Plains into the Mississippi Valley and parts
    of the Southeast US...storms have the potential to produce very
    intense rainfall rates that approach or exceed flash flood
    guidance along this entire corridor. A large and generally
    unfocused Marginal Risk area still seems to handle the localized
    nature of flash flood risk that should exist.

    The Montana portion of the Marginal Risk has the strongest synoptic
    forcing as a mid- and upper-level system gradually moves north of
    the border...keeping the western part of the state in lingering
    wrap-around rainfall before gradually tapering off.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    There remain some hints in latest 12Z guidance that the overall=20
    risk of excessive rainfall is non-zero over the Plains from Kansas=20
    into Colorado. Models show a low level axis of moisture and=20
    instability moving northward on Monday afternoon but the placement
    of the heaviest thunderstorm activity remains unclear. In=20
    addition, portions of the Mid-South may also be at-risk for
    Excessive Rainfall, but guidance remains murky on where storms will
    initiate. Given these reasons, the Day 3 ERO remains free of
    risk areas for the time being.

    Bann/Mullinax


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71fcvUA7T4rijAy10z8vAOrXCJZ707ogkhxHTiW-Y8EQ= sG356EKkUb4fRaOij9JKD7UOnZA6yG2R1Flw_VZ3pndJcOs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71fcvUA7T4rijAy10z8vAOrXCJZ707ogkhxHTiW-Y8EQ= sG356EKkUb4fRaOij9JKD7UOnZA6yG2R1Flw_VZ3djfuxgo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71fcvUA7T4rijAy10z8vAOrXCJZ707ogkhxHTiW-Y8EQ= sG356EKkUb4fRaOij9JKD7UOnZA6yG2R1Flw_VZ3rpnxz6w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sat May 30 22:46:33 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 302246
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    646 PM EDT Sat May 30 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 2241Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    MONTANA INTO WESTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...

    23z Update: Based on observational trends we expanded the Slight=20
    risk into portions of western SD and the Marginal risk into=20
    northeast CO. Ongoing convection in these areas is showing some=20
    signs of training resulting in an isolated to scattered flash flood
    risk. The greater coverage of higher rainfall rates is expected=20
    over western SD, and do expect to see some FFG exceedance here=20
    over the next several hours as convection gradually shifts east=20
    while also backbuilding into the southerly low level flow. Recent=20
    HRRR runs indicate localized totals around 3" and that seems=20
    plausible.

    Chenard

    16Z Update...

    ...Tennessee Valley...

    Current radar and RAP mesoanalysis show a weak 925 mb circulation over
    central TN that is caught between the front to the north and the low-
    level WSWrly over MS/AL. The 12Z BMX sounding shows the atmosphere
    remains weakly capped with a 1.9" PW, and >500 MLCAPE, RH at low
    and mid levels >90%, and a warm cloud layer approaching 12,000ft
    in depth. A nearby outflow boundary is also moving south into
    southern TN this morning and is likely to trigger additional heavy thunderstorms this afternoon. There is not much in the way of
    vertical wind shear, so storms will be fairly short lived. But up
    to 2.5"/hr rainfall rates this afternoon and evening atop soils
    that remain quite saturated led to an extension of the Marginal
    Risk in the Southeast as far north and west as south-central TN.

    Otherwise, some minor tweaks were made to the Marginal in the
    Southeast and Northern and Central Plains, as well as the Slight
    Risk in MT based on latest 12Z HREF and 12Z CAMs guidance. The
    threat areas and rationale provided by night shift remain in good
    shape as of this update.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Northern Rockies to the Plains...

    Maintained the Slight risk across portions of Montana as a mid-
    and upper-level system makes its way northward slowly today. The
    system should foster locally intense rainfall rates...especially in
    the eastern portion of the Slight Risk area...given moderately
    steep lapse rates and some potential for enough breaks in cloud
    cover. The HREF neighborhood probabilities of exceeding 1"/hr in
    the 30-50% range, and 2"/hr around 10%. This results in HREF FFG
    exceedance probabilities broadly over 25 percent. The RRFS shows a
    similar evolution in roughly the same area but was not quite as
    high with its probability of exceedance or with the probability of
    1 inch per hour rainfall. Farther west;..the instability is
    expected to be weaker but the greater coverage of rainfall looks
    to offset the instability shortfall. As mentioned previously...the
    flood risk should gradually transition from flash flood to areal
    flood/river flood as you go west across the state.

    A Marginal Risk area extending eastward from Montana and then
    southward from the Northern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley was
    largely left in place given the signal in the HREF for locally
    heavy rainfall rates within an elongated moisture plume originating
    from the Southeast US. It was done so despite convective details
    remaining uncertain. The most organized convective threat may end
    up over portions of NE and SD given a highly difluent flow aloft
    and low level convergent flow. However, there are also signals of
    organized convective clusters within the moisture axis anywhere
    from Arkansas to Iowa, While convection is unlikely along this
    entire axis...where it does develop rainfall rate potential will be
    high enough for localized flash flooding.

    ...Southeast...

    Latest numerical guidance continued to show locally heavy rainfall
    today and tonight along and south of a boundary moving in from the
    north. There was a bit of a westward expansion in the western
    extent shown by the HREF and RRFS of the 1-inch per hour
    probabilities and the probability of exceedance. As a result...the
    Marginal Risk was expanded westward in parts of Georgia to Alabama.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHEAST...

    20Z Update...

    ...Southeast...

    A nearby frontal boundary will become the focus for yet more strong thunderstorms over much of the Southeast on Sunday. Just south of
    the front in southern SC, southern GA, and northern FL, this region
    is a reservoir of >2.0" PWs that are available thanks in large part
    to a southerly IVT that contains moisture originating from the
    western Caribbean Sea. Area-averaged soundings suggest a
    sufficiently unstable atmosphere (>1,000 K/kg MLCAPE), well
    saturated 1000-500mb columns, and warm cloud layers up to 14,000ft
    deep in some cases. The key in determining the full extent of the
    flash flooding threat will be how much cloud debris from Saturday
    and Saturday night's thunderstorm activity lingers into Sunday.
    That said, weak capping inversions should allow for storms to
    develop as early as late morning and soils in the area remain
    rather saturated following such an active week-long stretch of
    heavy rainfall. In collaboration with several Southeast WFOs, a
    Slight Risk was added this cycle given the potential for scattered
    instances of flash flooding.

    ...West Texas...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced this cycle given the growing
    consensus of global models and CAMs that were hinting at
    thunderstorms firing over the Davis Mountains and along the
    dryline. PWs surge to >1.0" in these areas as low-level SErly flow
    introduces additional 850mb moisture flux into the region and a
    sheared 500mb vort max approaching from northern Mexico. Sufficient
    instability also appears to be present with MUCAPE up to 1,000
    J/kg expected to be available. West Texas continues to have locally
    sensitive soils in wake of recent rainfall as well. Given these
    factors, a Marginal Risk was introduced for a localized flash
    flood threat in West Texas Sunday afternoon and evening.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    Any heavy to excessive rainfall should be located in or near a
    plume of anomalous moisture plume that will extend from Montana
    into the Southeast United State. Large scale forcing is more
    subtle outside of the Northern Plains/Rockies...but there should be
    some weak shortwave energy embedded within the weak flow that will
    make them difficult or impossible to time. As this shortwave energy
    encounters a late day atmosphere with MUCAPE values in excess of
    3000 J per kg from the Plains into the Mississippi Valley and parts
    of the Southeast US...storms have the potential to produce very
    intense rainfall rates that approach or exceed flash flood
    guidance along this entire corridor. A large and generally
    unfocused Marginal Risk area still seems to handle the localized
    nature of flash flood risk that should exist.

    The Montana portion of the Marginal Risk has the strongest synoptic
    forcing as a mid- and upper-level system gradually moves north of
    the border...keeping the western part of the state in lingering
    wrap-around rainfall before gradually tapering off.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    There remain some hints in latest 12Z guidance that the overall
    risk of excessive rainfall is non-zero over the Plains from Kansas
    into Colorado. Models show a low level axis of moisture and
    instability moving northward on Monday afternoon but the placement
    of the heaviest thunderstorm activity remains unclear. In
    addition, portions of the Mid-South may also be at-risk for
    Excessive Rainfall, but guidance remains murky on where storms will
    initiate. Given these reasons, the Day 3 ERO remains free of
    risk areas for the time being.

    Bann/Mullinax


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_UzOi-uR3qnixupTFdhLgdgZWf88dCkaeV4eJuU9CQst= 4JG3TgD-Iy8uDrtDmItBxaU2pnRRGg-LUOpNw3dS4VxJpzk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_UzOi-uR3qnixupTFdhLgdgZWf88dCkaeV4eJuU9CQst= 4JG3TgD-Iy8uDrtDmItBxaU2pnRRGg-LUOpNw3dS1h5Vqdg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_UzOi-uR3qnixupTFdhLgdgZWf88dCkaeV4eJuU9CQst= 4JG3TgD-Iy8uDrtDmItBxaU2pnRRGg-LUOpNw3dSWHj7k8g$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sun May 31 00:49:09 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 310048
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    848 PM EDT Sat May 30 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    MONTANA INTO WESTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...

    The Slight risk is maintained into tonight across much of central
    and eastern MT into western SD. Highest rainfall rate potential
    (1-2" per hour) will be across southeastern MT into western SD and
    far northwest NE where instability persists along with periodic=20
    backbuilding cells. Elsewhere a broad Marginal risk extends from SD
    into NE/IA and south across portions of KS and MO. Overall should=20
    be an active overnight of convection across this corridor as=20
    mid/upper level forcing overruns the axis of better=20
    moisture/instability and we see a nocturnal increase in the low=20
    level jet. Cells should be moving enough to keep the flash flood=20
    risk localized in nature, although there could be one or more=20
    smaller scale backbuilding clusters that develop and locally=20
    enhance the flash flood risk. Confidence in exactly where this=20
    occurs remains too low to introduce any additional Slight risk=20
    areas.

    Chenard

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHEAST...

    20Z Update...

    ...Southeast...

    A nearby frontal boundary will become the focus for yet more strong thunderstorms over much of the Southeast on Sunday. Just south of
    the front in southern SC, southern GA, and northern FL, this region
    is a reservoir of >2.0" PWs that are available thanks in large part
    to a southerly IVT that contains moisture originating from the
    western Caribbean Sea. Area-averaged soundings suggest a
    sufficiently unstable atmosphere (>1,000 K/kg MLCAPE), well
    saturated 1000-500mb columns, and warm cloud layers up to 14,000ft
    deep in some cases. The key in determining the full extent of the
    flash flooding threat will be how much cloud debris from Saturday
    and Saturday night's thunderstorm activity lingers into Sunday.
    That said, weak capping inversions should allow for storms to
    develop as early as late morning and soils in the area remain
    rather saturated following such an active week-long stretch of
    heavy rainfall. In collaboration with several Southeast WFOs, a
    Slight Risk was added this cycle given the potential for scattered
    instances of flash flooding.

    ...West Texas...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced this cycle given the growing
    consensus of global models and CAMs that were hinting at
    thunderstorms firing over the Davis Mountains and along the
    dryline. PWs surge to >1.0" in these areas as low-level SErly flow
    introduces additional 850mb moisture flux into the region and a
    sheared 500mb vort max approaching from northern Mexico. Sufficient
    instability also appears to be present with MUCAPE up to 1,000
    J/kg expected to be available. West Texas continues to have locally
    sensitive soils in wake of recent rainfall as well. Given these
    factors, a Marginal Risk was introduced for a localized flash
    flood threat in West Texas Sunday afternoon and evening.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    Any heavy to excessive rainfall should be located in or near a
    plume of anomalous moisture plume that will extend from Montana
    into the Southeast United State. Large scale forcing is more
    subtle outside of the Northern Plains/Rockies...but there should be
    some weak shortwave energy embedded within the weak flow that will
    make them difficult or impossible to time. As this shortwave energy
    encounters a late day atmosphere with MUCAPE values in excess of
    3000 J per kg from the Plains into the Mississippi Valley and parts
    of the Southeast US...storms have the potential to produce very
    intense rainfall rates that approach or exceed flash flood
    guidance along this entire corridor. A large and generally
    unfocused Marginal Risk area still seems to handle the localized
    nature of flash flood risk that should exist.

    The Montana portion of the Marginal Risk has the strongest synoptic
    forcing as a mid- and upper-level system gradually moves north of
    the border...keeping the western part of the state in lingering
    wrap-around rainfall before gradually tapering off.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    There remain some hints in latest 12Z guidance that the overall
    risk of excessive rainfall is non-zero over the Plains from Kansas
    into Colorado. Models show a low level axis of moisture and
    instability moving northward on Monday afternoon but the placement
    of the heaviest thunderstorm activity remains unclear. In
    addition, portions of the Mid-South may also be at-risk for
    Excessive Rainfall, but guidance remains murky on where storms will
    initiate. Given these reasons, the Day 3 ERO remains free of
    risk areas for the time being.

    Bann/Mullinax


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7z1PV5kibJsw7ioDubbxKV9f0LcD__edHvdTUpu-3RsP= m7eIp4X-trpImGSHuM6M6ZKt6uZFTFGNoTyfs4kED5Vzino$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7z1PV5kibJsw7ioDubbxKV9f0LcD__edHvdTUpu-3RsP= m7eIp4X-trpImGSHuM6M6ZKt6uZFTFGNoTyfs4kEeTraVI8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7z1PV5kibJsw7ioDubbxKV9f0LcD__edHvdTUpu-3RsP= m7eIp4X-trpImGSHuM6M6ZKt6uZFTFGNoTyfs4kEYy7Pq4w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sun May 31 08:25:11 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 310825
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    425 AM EDT Sun May 31 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES AND THE SOUTHEAST UNITED STATES...

    Northern Rockies...
    With rainfall on-going from Saturday due to a slow moving mid- and
    upper-level system over the northern Rockies...opted to keep=20
    portions of Montana and nearby Wyoming and the far western Dakotas=20
    in a Slight Risk area during the new Day 1 period. The expectation=20
    is that rainfall intensities will not be as high as they were on=20
    Saturday but the cumulative effect of an additional 1+ inch amounts
    on top of what has already fallen has the potential to produce=20
    flooding concerns today. The Slight risk area was extended into far
    western South Dakota where MRMS showed 3+ inches having fallen on=20
    Saturday evening and was susceptible to flooding from even modest=20
    rainfall amounts.

    Southeast US...
    Also introduced a Slight Risk area over portions of the Southeast
    US where some model agreement has developed...although the
    agreement was far from unanimous. Neither the HREF or RRFS showed=20
    a strong signal for exceedance of flash flood guidance but showed=20
    about 20 percent neighborhood probabilities of rainfall exceeding 2
    inches. At the same time...a spaghetti plot of SREF QPF showed=20
    decent amount of ARW members with QPF at 2 inch and 3 inch amounts.
    That was largely supported by the GEFS. Given the 2 to 2.25 inch=20 precipitable water values and the amount of instability in the area
    that could support intense rainfall rates...opted to include a=20
    Slight Risk at this point.

    Elsewhere...maintained the broad and largely unfocused Marginal
    Risk area in between given the lack of clear forcing mechanism, the
    light flow aloft and the broad pool of instability along and south
    of a quasi-stationary boundary.=20=20

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES AND PARTS OF THE PLAINS...

    Northern Rockies...=20
    Introduced a Marginal Risk area in the northern Rockies where=20 moisture/precipitation lingers as a slow moving mid- and upper-=20
    level system pulls away. The concern is not so much for rainfall=20
    intensity at this point but for the cumulative effect of the=20
    additional rain on top of what has fallen in the previous few days.
    The concern is also fairly limited in terms of duration as=20
    rainfall does come to an end during the middle- to latter-part of=20
    the period.

    Western High Plains...
    Also introduced a Marginal Risk area mainly in the western portion
    of Kansas/Nebraska as an axis of low level moisture begins to=20
    return northward during the day. Placement of the QPF and any=20
    associated risk of excessive rainfall remains somewhat tenuous.=20
    Concern is that the instability should be enough that the QPF=20
    amounts approaching or exceeding 2 inches from the UKMET/NAM and=20
    GFS would be delivered quickly. A

    Southeast US...
    Portions of the Mid-South/Southeast may also be at-risk for=20
    Excessive Rainfall, but guidance remains murky on where storms will
    initiate. Given these reasons, the Day 2 ERO remains free of risk=20
    areas for the time being.

    Mullinax/Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND A SMALL PORTION OF WEST TEXAS...

    A plume of Gulf-sourced moisture will be drawn northward into the=20
    southern Rockies/drifting east over the southern High Plains/west=20
    Texas to maintain a Slight Risk area for excessive rainfall on
    Tuesday into Tuesday night from portions of New Mexico into west=20
    Texas. Farther north...warm moist air will advect along a low=20
    level convergence zone with early June heating that has the=20
    potential for locally heavy rainfall over portions of the western
    High Plains into the Dakotas.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-5hgMhGXcmwogx9qw1GvsYWjfqEWvzjzCRYMvm-gVaMM= iTn_Ilt-NiNA-GKncC5W-DljKUwIbhYxciMyP_xn4g6g-qU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-5hgMhGXcmwogx9qw1GvsYWjfqEWvzjzCRYMvm-gVaMM= iTn_Ilt-NiNA-GKncC5W-DljKUwIbhYxciMyP_xntiwh_xg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-5hgMhGXcmwogx9qw1GvsYWjfqEWvzjzCRYMvm-gVaMM= iTn_Ilt-NiNA-GKncC5W-DljKUwIbhYxciMyP_xnjcuZ0AY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sun May 31 15:58:33 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 311558
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1158 AM EDT Sun May 31 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    MONTANA TO THE BLACK HILLS, CENTRAL MISSOURI, AND THE SOUTHEAST=20
    UNITED STATES...

    Missouri...
    Raised a Slight Risk for central Missouri.
    Ongoing progressive activity across a stationary front is=20
    generally producing 1-2" rainfall over central Missouri. 12Z=20
    guidance is in pretty good agreement on an MCS tracking over=20
    Missouri late tonight. That should be fairly progressive as well,=20
    but veering of the low level flow may make for inflow parallel to=20
    the orientation and increased duration overnight. Much of this area
    has lower FFG (generally 2"/3hr), so the combination of these two=20
    rounds could cause scattered flash flooding. Will need to monitor=20 CAMs/boundaries for further details to this overnight activity. The
    RRFS is hotter than other models as usual, but the 12Z is notable=20
    a broader span of coverage from the KC metro to the StL metro, so=20
    either of those could be in greater play tonight and warrant a=20
    Slight expansion to them.

    Montana to the Black Hills...=20
    Maintained the Slight Risk for portions of Montana and nearby=20
    Wyoming and the far western Dakotas, now including more of the
    Black Hills. Rainfall intensity will remain lower than yesterday,=20
    but an additional 1-2" brings flooding concerns, especially where
    the 3hr FFG is below 1.5" in north-central MT and western SD.

    Southeast US...
    Maintained the Slight Risk along a cold front over southern=20
    GA/northern FL into southeast AL given agreement of 12Z CAM=20
    guidance focusing 1-3"+ QPF on this area. PW rises from 2 to 2.25"=20
    and MLCAPE should reach 2000 J/kg this afternoon supporting heavy=20
    rain. Repeating activity is expected with 20kt Wly deep layer flow=20
    keeping activity alive along the frontal forcing. Activity over the
    eastern FL peninsula will need to be monitored. As of now the
    Marginal Risk was expanded over Cape Canaveral on account of sea
    breeze based convection possibly getting held up there. The focus
    may be just west of Miami, but will continue to monitor.

    Elsewhere...trimmed the broad Marginal Risk where possible
    including in eastern MS and western KY. Expanded east a bit in
    MN/IA and southeastern KY given 12Z consensus. Frontal and low
    levels boundaries will provide some focus in the Gulf-sourced
    moisture plume and the broad pool of instability.


    Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES AND PARTS OF THE PLAINS...

    Northern Rockies...
    Introduced a Marginal Risk area in the northern Rockies where moisture/precipitation lingers as a slow moving mid- and upper-
    level system pulls away. The concern is not so much for rainfall
    intensity at this point but for the cumulative effect of the
    additional rain on top of what has fallen in the previous few days.
    The concern is also fairly limited in terms of duration as
    rainfall does come to an end during the middle- to latter-part of
    the period.

    Western High Plains...
    Also introduced a Marginal Risk area mainly in the western portion
    of Kansas/Nebraska as an axis of low level moisture begins to
    return northward during the day. Placement of the QPF and any
    associated risk of excessive rainfall remains somewhat tenuous.
    Concern is that the instability should be enough that the QPF
    amounts approaching or exceeding 2 inches from the UKMET/NAM and
    GFS would be delivered quickly. A

    Southeast US...
    Portions of the Mid-South/Southeast may also be at-risk for
    Excessive Rainfall, but guidance remains murky on where storms will
    initiate. Given these reasons, the Day 2 ERO remains free of risk
    areas for the time being.

    Mullinax/Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND A SMALL PORTION OF WEST TEXAS...

    A plume of Gulf-sourced moisture will be drawn northward into the
    southern Rockies/drifting east over the southern High Plains/west
    Texas to maintain a Slight Risk area for excessive rainfall on
    Tuesday into Tuesday night from portions of New Mexico into west
    Texas. Farther north...warm moist air will advect along a low
    level convergence zone with early June heating that has the
    potential for locally heavy rainfall over portions of the western
    High Plains into the Dakotas.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ymt8JEilN9FzXPn-rMFVf3zsl3CYXiqobx09aCDIx1s= I2wDmU0S7q7pE5YqYvMZDfOeRkFvkadA4bMXJgHzcZUn1xc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ymt8JEilN9FzXPn-rMFVf3zsl3CYXiqobx09aCDIx1s= I2wDmU0S7q7pE5YqYvMZDfOeRkFvkadA4bMXJgHzVYSVTtY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ymt8JEilN9FzXPn-rMFVf3zsl3CYXiqobx09aCDIx1s= I2wDmU0S7q7pE5YqYvMZDfOeRkFvkadA4bMXJgHzFfx-OaY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Sun May 31 19:58:51 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 311958
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    358 PM EDT Sun May 31 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    MONTANA TO THE BLACK HILLS, CENTRAL MISSOURI, AND THE SOUTHEAST
    UNITED STATES...

    Missouri...
    Raised a Slight Risk for central Missouri.
    Ongoing progressive activity across a stationary front is
    generally producing 1-2" rainfall over central Missouri. 12Z
    guidance is in pretty good agreement on an MCS tracking over
    Missouri late tonight. That should be fairly progressive as well,
    but veering of the low level flow may make for inflow parallel to
    the orientation and increased duration overnight. Much of this area
    has lower FFG (generally 2"/3hr), so the combination of these two
    rounds could cause scattered flash flooding. Will need to monitor CAMs/boundaries for further details to this overnight activity. The
    RRFS is hotter than other models as usual, but the 12Z is notable
    a broader span of coverage from the KC metro to the StL metro, so
    either of those could be in greater play tonight and warrant a
    Slight expansion to them.

    Montana to the Black Hills...
    Maintained the Slight Risk for portions of Montana and nearby
    Wyoming and the far western Dakotas, now including more of the
    Black Hills. Rainfall intensity will remain lower than yesterday,
    but an additional 1-2" brings flooding concerns, especially where
    the 3hr FFG is below 1.5" in north-central MT and western SD.

    Southeast US...
    Maintained the Slight Risk along a cold front over southern
    GA/northern FL into southeast AL given agreement of 12Z CAM
    guidance focusing 1-3"+ QPF on this area. PW rises from 2 to 2.25"
    and MLCAPE should reach 2000 J/kg this afternoon supporting heavy
    rain. Repeating activity is expected with 20kt Wly deep layer flow
    keeping activity alive along the frontal forcing. Activity over the
    eastern FL peninsula will need to be monitored. As of now the
    Marginal Risk was expanded over Cape Canaveral on account of sea
    breeze based convection possibly getting held up there. The focus
    may be just west of Miami, but will continue to monitor.

    Elsewhere...trimmed the broad Marginal Risk where possible
    including in eastern MS and western KY. Expanded east a bit in
    MN/IA and southeastern KY given 12Z consensus. Frontal and low
    levels boundaries will provide some focus in the Gulf-sourced
    moisture plume and the broad pool of instability.


    Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES, GREAT PLAINS, AND MID-SOUTH...

    Northern Rockies...
    Precipitation lingers over northwest Montana as a slow moving mid-
    and upper-level system lingers over the Canadian border. The=20
    cumulative effect of the additional 1-2" rain (12Z HREF and REFS=20
    consensus) maintains a limited risk for additional flooding=20
    concerns.

    Central Plains...=20
    Expanded the Marginal Risk more into Northeast Colorado and into
    more of north-central Oklahoma while trimming out the heart of the
    Nebraska Sandhills. SSEly low level flow will increase over the=20
    central Plains through the morning and promote strong diurnal
    heating. Late afternoon High Plains activity should track east over
    the central Plains.

    Mid-South...
    MCS activity is expected tonight over Missouri. This should=20=20
    track from southeastern MO and over much of the Mid-South through=20
    the morning with potential for additional evening activity along
    remnant boundaries. Moist low level flow veers westerly late=20
    tonight over the region which should be parallel to at least=20
    segments of the activity and increase heavy rainfall duration at=20
    least locally. 12Z CAM consensus paints a fairly decent heavy QPF=20
    footprint across the Mid-South with 1-3"+ likely through the day.=20
    The 18Z HRRR essentially agrees with the tracks of 12Z CAMs along
    with the later additional activity. Raised a Marginal Risk for the
    Mid- South on account of the ingredients and CAM output along with
    3hr FFG around 2.5".

    West Texas into New Mexico...
    South-southeasterly low level flow intensifies Monday afternoon,
    promoting decent westward expansion of Gulf moisture across the
    Pecos River Valley to the Sacramento Mountains and south to the Big
    Bend. Diurnally driven activity is a sure bet on the Davis and
    Sacramento Mtns. How much activity spreads from the terrain remains
    to be seen. For now the Marginal Risk was trimmed a bit on the
    north and expanded over the Big Bend based on 12Z CAM consensus.


    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    Southeasterly low level flow backs further easterly Tuesday
    bringing more Gulf-sourced moisture across West Texas and southeast
    New Mexico than was present on Monday. Terrain driven activity
    should spread across this area with QPF generally in the 1-2"
    range. Slow moving activity should result in scattered flash
    flooding, especially over sensitive areas such as burn scars and
    steeper terrain. The Slight Risk was trimmed a bit to exclude El
    Paso based on 12Z consensus QPF.=20

    ...Great Plains...
    Warm moist air surges up the Plains in earnest starting Monday
    night. Sufficient shear from a trough over the Northern Rockies,
    forcing along a low level convergence zones, and early June=20
    heating should promote heavy/potentially organized thunderstorms
    throughout the Great Plains. A Marginal Risk is maintained from the
    Dakotas to the Texas Panhandle.

    ...North Florida through the Gulf Coast...
    A Marginal Risk has been raised from east Texas through the
    Florida/Georgia border. A slow moving cold front stretching from=20
    Georgia to east Texas Tuesday morning drifts south through the Gulf
    Coast Tuesday night. High moisture laden air pools ahead of the=20
    front with a 2" PW swath from north FL to east Texas in the=20
    afternoon which is 2 sigma above normal. Repeating heavy=20
    thunderstorms should occur along this corridor and result in a=20
    localized flash flood risk.=20


    Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5dH2Bd3SeNtiNDxGNM8CxUf-KHXepOvkJihalbviu7h0= pWVkxWPB_FDcUPdtfSxqvd0iLCufCL-SJwVc1V7C2mqB43M$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5dH2Bd3SeNtiNDxGNM8CxUf-KHXepOvkJihalbviu7h0= pWVkxWPB_FDcUPdtfSxqvd0iLCufCL-SJwVc1V7CXT7F73E$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5dH2Bd3SeNtiNDxGNM8CxUf-KHXepOvkJihalbviu7h0= pWVkxWPB_FDcUPdtfSxqvd0iLCufCL-SJwVc1V7CUjoLXPQ$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Mon Jun 1 00:53:53 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 010053
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    853 PM EDT Sun May 31 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN KS AND CENTRAL MISSOURI...

    ...Kansas and Missouri...
    Expanded the Slight risk with this update across most of central=20
    MO and portions of eastern KS. As of 01z a surface low is situated=20
    near the KS/OK border, with extreme instability (MLCAPE of=20
    4000-5000 j/kg) over eastern KS and southwestern MO. Recent=20
    observations show increasing low level convergence ahead of this=20
    low over eastern KS, and expect convection to initiate along this=20 convergence axis this evening. Supercells will be possible, locally
    enhancing rainfall rates. Storm motion vectors are off to the=20
    northeast at ~30 kts, however right moving supercell motions are=20
    only around 10 kts. There is a lot of mid/upper level dry air which
    may support cell forward propagation, but given the instability in
    place and supercell motions, there is probably still an=20
    opportunity for isolated to scattered flash flooding from this=20
    activity.=20

    While not the strongest low level jet, there will likely be enough
    of a nocturnal uptick in low level moisture transport to result in
    upscale growth of convection as it moves into MO during the=20
    overnight hours. The orientation of convection and weak corfidi=20
    vectors suggest some training potential, and think scattered flash=20
    flooding is probable, with rainfall locally exceeding 3".

    ...Southeast...
    Localized flash flooding will remain possible this evening over=20
    the Southeast. A developing surface low off the coast may locally=20
    enhance convection for a few hours near the SC coast, but=20
    confidence on this remains low, as the better activity could very=20
    well remain offshore.

    ...West TX...=20
    A localized flash flood risk continues along the dryline in west=20
    TX, although this activity should weaken and diminish shortly.

    ...Dakotas...
    Enhanced convergence near an occluded front will result in an=20
    isolated flash flood risk this evening across portions of the=20
    Dakotas, where convection is showing signs of some backbuilding.=20
    Higher rainfall totals and any flash flooding should stay small=20
    scale, and thus the Marginal risk should cover the threat.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES, GREAT PLAINS, AND MID-SOUTH...

    Northern Rockies...
    Precipitation lingers over northwest Montana as a slow moving mid-
    and upper-level system lingers over the Canadian border. The
    cumulative effect of the additional 1-2" rain (12Z HREF and REFS
    consensus) maintains a limited risk for additional flooding
    concerns.

    Central Plains...
    Expanded the Marginal Risk more into Northeast Colorado and into
    more of north-central Oklahoma while trimming out the heart of the
    Nebraska Sandhills. SSEly low level flow will increase over the
    central Plains through the morning and promote strong diurnal
    heating. Late afternoon High Plains activity should track east over
    the central Plains.

    Mid-South...
    MCS activity is expected tonight over Missouri. This should
    track from southeastern MO and over much of the Mid-South through
    the morning with potential for additional evening activity along
    remnant boundaries. Moist low level flow veers westerly late
    tonight over the region which should be parallel to at least
    segments of the activity and increase heavy rainfall duration at
    least locally. 12Z CAM consensus paints a fairly decent heavy QPF
    footprint across the Mid-South with 1-3"+ likely through the day.
    The 18Z HRRR essentially agrees with the tracks of 12Z CAMs along
    with the later additional activity. Raised a Marginal Risk for the
    Mid- South on account of the ingredients and CAM output along with
    3hr FFG around 2.5".

    West Texas into New Mexico...
    South-southeasterly low level flow intensifies Monday afternoon,
    promoting decent westward expansion of Gulf moisture across the
    Pecos River Valley to the Sacramento Mountains and south to the Big
    Bend. Diurnally driven activity is a sure bet on the Davis and
    Sacramento Mtns. How much activity spreads from the terrain remains
    to be seen. For now the Marginal Risk was trimmed a bit on the
    north and expanded over the Big Bend based on 12Z CAM consensus.


    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    Southeasterly low level flow backs further easterly Tuesday
    bringing more Gulf-sourced moisture across West Texas and southeast
    New Mexico than was present on Monday. Terrain driven activity
    should spread across this area with QPF generally in the 1-2"
    range. Slow moving activity should result in scattered flash
    flooding, especially over sensitive areas such as burn scars and
    steeper terrain. The Slight Risk was trimmed a bit to exclude El
    Paso based on 12Z consensus QPF.

    ...Great Plains...
    Warm moist air surges up the Plains in earnest starting Monday
    night. Sufficient shear from a trough over the Northern Rockies,
    forcing along a low level convergence zones, and early June
    heating should promote heavy/potentially organized thunderstorms
    throughout the Great Plains. A Marginal Risk is maintained from the
    Dakotas to the Texas Panhandle.

    ...North Florida through the Gulf Coast...
    A Marginal Risk has been raised from east Texas through the
    Florida/Georgia border. A slow moving cold front stretching from
    Georgia to east Texas Tuesday morning drifts south through the Gulf
    Coast Tuesday night. High moisture laden air pools ahead of the
    front with a 2" PW swath from north FL to east Texas in the
    afternoon which is 2 sigma above normal. Repeating heavy
    thunderstorms should occur along this corridor and result in a
    localized flash flood risk.


    Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7_CplQTtWXo-TGDR802zm7ssyqtYuKAbTZJpwjPmXMmw= ijGGM0x3MoK6mOZZzoCLItIkOb5KYXzG-iYi0Yaqe3EHLFU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7_CplQTtWXo-TGDR802zm7ssyqtYuKAbTZJpwjPmXMmw= ijGGM0x3MoK6mOZZzoCLItIkOb5KYXzG-iYi0YaqG5CqvvA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7_CplQTtWXo-TGDR802zm7ssyqtYuKAbTZJpwjPmXMmw= ijGGM0x3MoK6mOZZzoCLItIkOb5KYXzG-iYi0YaqsZuUyT8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Mon Jun 1 08:08:08 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 010807
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    407 AM EDT Mon Jun 1 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES, GREAT PLAINS, AND MID-SOUTH...

    ...Northern Rockies...
    A closed mid-level system will continue to slowly move across=20
    Montana during the period, bringing an additional 1 to 2 inches of
    rainfall. The Marginal Risk for isolated / localized flooding was=20
    maintained with minimal adjustments based on the 00Z guidance.

    ...Mid-South...
    Early morning MCS across eastern Kansas and Missouri is expected=20
    to continue to move east/southeast through this morning toward the=20
    TN Valley and Mid-South. Forward propagation after 12Z should=20
    overall limit widespread heavy rainfall, but some elements may=20
    locally train/repeat over the same area bringing a risk of flash=20
    flooding, particularly early in the period across eastern Missouri.
    While that activity is likely to wane by late morning, additional=20 thunderstorms are expected to fire up along remnant outflow=20
    boundaries to the south and west across Mississippi and Alabama.=20
    Pockets of 1-2" in a short duration may result in isolated flooding,
    with the overall threat maintained at the Marginal Risk level.=20

    ...Central Plains...
    Broad upper level forcing across the region along with modest
    southeasterly low level flow will bring isolated to scattered
    diurnally driven convection today across the High Plains that will
    gradually track eastward through south central Nebraska and western
    to central Kansas into this evening and overnight. The Marginal=20
    Risk was maintained with a few adjustments based on the latest=20
    model guidance.=20

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    Modest forcing for ascent across the region combined with low level southeasterly flow will bring westward Gulf moisture. Diurnal
    convection is expected across the Davis and Sacramento Mtns. Based
    on the 00Z hi-res models, some of this convection may spread away
    from the terrain, but overall expected to be isolated in coverage
    with a localized flash flood risk today.=20


    Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    WEST TEXAS INTO NEW MEXICO...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    By Tuesday, the latest model guidance suggests greater moisture
    will expand westward toward the region (compared to today) with PW
    anomalies approaching 1.5 to 2 std deviations above normal. Another
    round of terrain driven convection is expected that spreads east
    across the area. Overall, pockets of 1 to 2 inches are possible
    with resulting isolated/scattered flash flooding, particularly for
    any sensitive locations such as burn scars and steeper terrain.=20

    ...Great Plains...
    Large scale forcing for ascent across the High Plains will work
    with an increasing amount of low level moisture to produce several
    clusters of thunderstorms during the period capable of producing
    heavy rainfall - one area of concern is across eastern to central
    Kansas where the latest guidance has pointed toward the potential
    for several repeating clusters of intense rain rates. Some of this
    additional rainfall may fall on areas expected to see heavy
    rainfall today. A second area of concern is the Northern Plains=20
    where there is likely to be better forcing with the proximity to=20
    the mid/upper level feature. Here, moisture isn't as high and storm
    motions may be faster, but potential exists for intense rain rates
    and locally heavy rainfall. Both of these areas (Dakotas and=20
    western/central KS) may need upgrades to Slight Risk if trends=20
    continue with future model cycles but for now, have maintained the=20
    Marginal given some of the uncertainty heading into Tuesday.=20

    ...North Florida through the Gulf Coast...
    A cold front will slowly advance southward across the region during
    the day Tuesday, with copious amounts of moisture pooling along and
    ahead of it. Thunderstorms are likely to develop, particularly=20
    focused on the Florida Panhandle to northeast Florida where the=20
    latest guidance points to the potential of 1-3" locally. Localized=20
    / isolated flash flooding will be possible due to the expected=20
    intense rain rates and overall slower storm motions.=20

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF WEST
    TEXAS...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    A greater signal exists for a stronger mid-level shortwave to move
    across the southern High Plains on Wednesday. This feature,=20
    combined with the continued relatively higher moisture in place,=20
    should result in robust convection to develop across far eastern=20
    New Mexico into western Texas, particularly across the TX Panhandle.
    A Slight Risk was maintained for the potential of isolated to=20
    scattered flash flooding, some of which may fall on similar areas=20
    as Tuesday.=20

    ...Great Plains...
    The active pattern across the Plains is expected again on
    Wednesday with a plume of relatively higher moisture extending from
    Texas all the way north into the Northern Plains. Daytime
    convection is expected to fire up across the Plains and then move east/southeast into the evening/overnight hours. Several organized
    clusters of convection are likely with pockets of locally heavy
    rainfall. For now, a broad Marginal Risk remains in place for
    isolated instances of flash flooding.=20


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4A1PknCIOhTinqgw64mF-nMrl-flB-G8EMffCQYE2dWC= X_E9yHrBNtJfSuknPPp-b3bPXZrm3DIfc3s-3Ux2fg09uRA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4A1PknCIOhTinqgw64mF-nMrl-flB-G8EMffCQYE2dWC= X_E9yHrBNtJfSuknPPp-b3bPXZrm3DIfc3s-3Ux27ctk39g$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4A1PknCIOhTinqgw64mF-nMrl-flB-G8EMffCQYE2dWC= X_E9yHrBNtJfSuknPPp-b3bPXZrm3DIfc3s-3Ux26AzMTDo$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Mon Jun 1 15:54:55 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 011554
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1154 AM EDT Mon Jun 1 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES, GREAT PLAINS, AND MID-SOUTH...

    16Z Update...

    ...Central Gulf Coast...

    The Marginal Risk area over the Mid-South was expanded southward=20
    to the central Gulf Coast for this update. Soils remains quite=20
    saturated in eastern LA, southern MS, southern AL, and the western=20
    FL Panhandle with NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-40cm soil moisture percentiles=20
    above the 80th percentile. The MCS propagating south from western=20
    TN is likely to continue triggering additional storms this=20
    afternoon and evening, likely along its remnant outflow boundary.=20
    Plus, radar and surface observations show the sea breeze moving=20
    inland over eastern LA, which is likely to kick-start more storms=20
    this afternoon. The 12Z LIX sounding measured a 2.11" PW and MLCAPE
    approaching 2,000 J/kg. Steering flow is light, so storms will be=20
    pulse-like in nature. However, given the moisture and instability=20
    present, combined with the lingering sensitive soils, storms could=20
    produce >3" amounts locally. This is supported by the new 12Z HREF=20
    guidance showing moderate-to-high chances (50-80%) for rainfall=20
    totals >3" through this evening along the I-10 corridor in=20
    southeast LA. Localized flash flooding is possible this afternoon,=20 particularly in areas that drain poorly, where soils are overly=20
    saturated, and in more urbanized settings.

    Aside from some minor tweaks to the Marginal Risks in northern MT,
    the central Plains, and west TX/eastern NM, the latest forecast=20
    guidance continues to support the Marginal Risk outlooks this=20
    afternoon.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Northern Rockies...
    A closed mid-level system will continue to slowly move across
    Montana during the period, bringing an additional 1 to 2 inches of
    rainfall. The Marginal Risk for isolated / localized flooding was
    maintained with minimal adjustments based on the 00Z guidance.

    ...Mid-South...
    Early morning MCS across eastern Kansas and Missouri is expected
    to continue to move east/southeast through this morning toward the
    TN Valley and Mid-South. Forward propagation after 12Z should
    overall limit widespread heavy rainfall, but some elements may
    locally train/repeat over the same area bringing a risk of flash
    flooding, particularly early in the period across eastern Missouri.
    While that activity is likely to wane by late morning, additional
    thunderstorms are expected to fire up along remnant outflow
    boundaries to the south and west across Mississippi and Alabama.
    Pockets of 1-2" in a short duration may result in isolated flooding,
    with the overall threat maintained at the Marginal Risk level.

    ...Central Plains...
    Broad upper level forcing across the region along with modest
    southeasterly low level flow will bring isolated to scattered
    diurnally driven convection today across the High Plains that will
    gradually track eastward through south central Nebraska and western
    to central Kansas into this evening and overnight. The Marginal
    Risk was maintained with a few adjustments based on the latest
    model guidance.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    Modest forcing for ascent across the region combined with low level southeasterly flow will bring westward Gulf moisture. Diurnal
    convection is expected across the Davis and Sacramento Mtns. Based
    on the 00Z hi-res models, some of this convection may spread away
    from the terrain, but overall expected to be isolated in coverage
    with a localized flash flood risk today.


    Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    WEST TEXAS INTO NEW MEXICO...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    By Tuesday, the latest model guidance suggests greater moisture
    will expand westward toward the region (compared to today) with PW
    anomalies approaching 1.5 to 2 std deviations above normal. Another
    round of terrain driven convection is expected that spreads east
    across the area. Overall, pockets of 1 to 2 inches are possible
    with resulting isolated/scattered flash flooding, particularly for
    any sensitive locations such as burn scars and steeper terrain.

    ...Great Plains...
    Large scale forcing for ascent across the High Plains will work
    with an increasing amount of low level moisture to produce several
    clusters of thunderstorms during the period capable of producing
    heavy rainfall - one area of concern is across eastern to central
    Kansas where the latest guidance has pointed toward the potential
    for several repeating clusters of intense rain rates. Some of this
    additional rainfall may fall on areas expected to see heavy
    rainfall today. A second area of concern is the Northern Plains
    where there is likely to be better forcing with the proximity to
    the mid/upper level feature. Here, moisture isn't as high and storm
    motions may be faster, but potential exists for intense rain rates
    and locally heavy rainfall. Both of these areas (Dakotas and
    western/central KS) may need upgrades to Slight Risk if trends
    continue with future model cycles but for now, have maintained the
    Marginal given some of the uncertainty heading into Tuesday.

    ...North Florida through the Gulf Coast...
    A cold front will slowly advance southward across the region during
    the day Tuesday, with copious amounts of moisture pooling along and
    ahead of it. Thunderstorms are likely to develop, particularly
    focused on the Florida Panhandle to northeast Florida where the
    latest guidance points to the potential of 1-3" locally. Localized
    / isolated flash flooding will be possible due to the expected
    intense rain rates and overall slower storm motions.

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF WEST
    TEXAS...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    A greater signal exists for a stronger mid-level shortwave to move
    across the southern High Plains on Wednesday. This feature,
    combined with the continued relatively higher moisture in place,
    should result in robust convection to develop across far eastern
    New Mexico into western Texas, particularly across the TX Panhandle.
    A Slight Risk was maintained for the potential of isolated to
    scattered flash flooding, some of which may fall on similar areas
    as Tuesday.

    ...Great Plains...
    The active pattern across the Plains is expected again on
    Wednesday with a plume of relatively higher moisture extending from
    Texas all the way north into the Northern Plains. Daytime
    convection is expected to fire up across the Plains and then move east/southeast into the evening/overnight hours. Several organized
    clusters of convection are likely with pockets of locally heavy
    rainfall. For now, a broad Marginal Risk remains in place for
    isolated instances of flash flooding.


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_4WJSzCFUpuoTXlkGPl30hfwsBgMKPZB7gW8ZyGatsA-= fSEhkN9wtd1DETA-nd_vy6FOw8y2-lJS9b8cgOnZJEqHJr4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_4WJSzCFUpuoTXlkGPl30hfwsBgMKPZB7gW8ZyGatsA-= fSEhkN9wtd1DETA-nd_vy6FOw8y2-lJS9b8cgOnZXtDkL9I$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_4WJSzCFUpuoTXlkGPl30hfwsBgMKPZB7gW8ZyGatsA-= fSEhkN9wtd1DETA-nd_vy6FOw8y2-lJS9b8cgOnZTZldCy4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Mon Jun 1 20:00:28 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 012000
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 PM EDT Mon Jun 1 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES, GREAT PLAINS, AND MID-SOUTH...

    16Z Update...

    ...Central Gulf Coast...

    The Marginal Risk area over the Mid-South was expanded southward
    to the central Gulf Coast for this update. Soils remains quite
    saturated in eastern LA, southern MS, southern AL, and the western
    FL Panhandle with NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-40cm soil moisture percentiles
    above the 80th percentile. The MCS propagating south from western
    TN is likely to continue triggering additional storms this
    afternoon and evening, likely along its remnant outflow boundary.
    Plus, radar and surface observations show the sea breeze moving
    inland over eastern LA, which is likely to kick-start more storms
    this afternoon. The 12Z LIX sounding measured a 2.11" PW and MLCAPE
    approaching 2,000 J/kg. Steering flow is light, so storms will be
    pulse-like in nature. However, given the moisture and instability
    present, combined with the lingering sensitive soils, storms could
    produce >3" amounts locally. This is supported by the new 12Z HREF
    guidance showing moderate-to-high chances (50-80%) for rainfall
    totals >3" through this evening along the I-10 corridor in
    southeast LA. Localized flash flooding is possible this afternoon,
    particularly in areas that drain poorly, where soils are overly
    saturated, and in more urbanized settings.

    Aside from some minor tweaks to the Marginal Risks in northern MT,
    the central Plains, and west TX/eastern NM, the latest forecast
    guidance continues to support the Marginal Risk outlooks this
    afternoon.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Northern Rockies...
    A closed mid-level system will continue to slowly move across
    Montana during the period, bringing an additional 1 to 2 inches of
    rainfall. The Marginal Risk for isolated / localized flooding was
    maintained with minimal adjustments based on the 00Z guidance.

    ...Mid-South...
    Early morning MCS across eastern Kansas and Missouri is expected
    to continue to move east/southeast through this morning toward the
    TN Valley and Mid-South. Forward propagation after 12Z should
    overall limit widespread heavy rainfall, but some elements may
    locally train/repeat over the same area bringing a risk of flash
    flooding, particularly early in the period across eastern Missouri.
    While that activity is likely to wane by late morning, additional
    thunderstorms are expected to fire up along remnant outflow
    boundaries to the south and west across Mississippi and Alabama.
    Pockets of 1-2" in a short duration may result in isolated flooding,
    with the overall threat maintained at the Marginal Risk level.

    ...Central Plains...
    Broad upper level forcing across the region along with modest
    southeasterly low level flow will bring isolated to scattered
    diurnally driven convection today across the High Plains that will
    gradually track eastward through south central Nebraska and western
    to central Kansas into this evening and overnight. The Marginal
    Risk was maintained with a few adjustments based on the latest
    model guidance.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    Modest forcing for ascent across the region combined with low level southeasterly flow will bring westward Gulf moisture. Diurnal
    convection is expected across the Davis and Sacramento Mtns. Based
    on the 00Z hi-res models, some of this convection may spread away
    from the terrain, but overall expected to be isolated in coverage
    with a localized flash flood risk today.


    Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    WEST TEXAS INTO NEW MEXICO AND NORTH DAKOTA...

    20Z Update...

    ...North Dakota...

    Guidance started coming into better agreement on the clustering of
    thunderstorm activity across ND Tuesday afternoon and into Tuesday
    night. A tongue of >1.2" PWs, which is above the 90th
    climatological percentile, will reside over the Northern Plains
    with MUCAPE >1,000 J/kg supplying plenty of instability. Various
    model model members using area-averaged sounding Tuesday afternoon
    show increasingly saturated profiles with within a highly sheared
    environment. Thunderstorms are likely to contain mesocyclones that
    enhance rainfall rates, with discrete cells initially transitioning
    to more linear structures overnight as the low-level jet
    strengthens across the Dakotas. 12Z HREF probabilities show
    moderate-to-high chance probabilities (50-70%) for >3" of rainfall in east-central ND with the bulk of the rainfall occurring 21Z Tues and
    later. FFGs may recover somewhat, but given the potential for up to
    2"/hr rainfall rates in an area susceptible to those kind of
    Excessive Rainfall rates, a Slight Risk was introduced in the heart
    of ND this forecast cycle.=20

    Elsewhere, the inherited Slight Risk in eastern NM/west TX and the
    Marginals in place across the South were adjusted for the latest
    WPC QPF and some 12Z CAMs. The meteorological rationale provided=20
    by the overnight shift remains on track at this time.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    By Tuesday, the latest model guidance suggests greater moisture
    will expand westward toward the region (compared to today) with PW
    anomalies approaching 1.5 to 2 std deviations above normal. Another
    round of terrain driven convection is expected that spreads east
    across the area. Overall, pockets of 1 to 2 inches are possible
    with resulting isolated/scattered flash flooding, particularly for
    any sensitive locations such as burn scars and steeper terrain.

    ...Great Plains...
    Large scale forcing for ascent across the High Plains will work
    with an increasing amount of low level moisture to produce several
    clusters of thunderstorms during the period capable of producing
    heavy rainfall - one area of concern is across eastern to central
    Kansas where the latest guidance has pointed toward the potential
    for several repeating clusters of intense rain rates. Some of this
    additional rainfall may fall on areas expected to see heavy
    rainfall today. A second area of concern is the Northern Plains
    where there is likely to be better forcing with the proximity to
    the mid/upper level feature. Here, moisture isn't as high and storm
    motions may be faster, but potential exists for intense rain rates
    and locally heavy rainfall. Both of these areas (Dakotas and
    western/central KS) may need upgrades to Slight Risk if trends
    continue with future model cycles but for now, have maintained the
    Marginal given some of the uncertainty heading into Tuesday.

    ...North Florida through the Gulf Coast...
    A cold front will slowly advance southward across the region during
    the day Tuesday, with copious amounts of moisture pooling along and
    ahead of it. Thunderstorms are likely to develop, particularly
    focused on the Florida Panhandle to northeast Florida where the
    latest guidance points to the potential of 1-3" locally. Localized
    / isolated flash flooding will be possible due to the expected
    intense rain rates and overall slower storm motions.

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF WEST
    TEXAS...

    20Z Update...

    Reviewing 12Z guidance, the Slight Risk in West TX and eastern NM
    was expanded farther north into the TX Panhandle with WPC QPF and
    several model members showing a slightly farther northward
    extension of heavier rainfall totals. Otherwise, the forecast
    reasoning in the previous discussion remains valid with eastern NM
    into west TX most prone to flash flooding on Wednesday.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    A greater signal exists for a stronger mid-level shortwave to move
    across the southern High Plains on Wednesday. This feature,
    combined with the continued relatively higher moisture in place,
    should result in robust convection to develop across far eastern
    New Mexico into western Texas, particularly across the TX Panhandle.
    A Slight Risk was maintained for the potential of isolated to
    scattered flash flooding, some of which may fall on similar areas
    as Tuesday.

    ...Great Plains...
    The active pattern across the Plains is expected again on
    Wednesday with a plume of relatively higher moisture extending from
    Texas all the way north into the Northern Plains. Daytime
    convection is expected to fire up across the Plains and then move east/southeast into the evening/overnight hours. Several organized
    clusters of convection are likely with pockets of locally heavy
    rainfall. For now, a broad Marginal Risk remains in place for
    isolated instances of flash flooding.


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6hBqam4Oyf3WWKj0Kz6NeBFu5lw5r93LUY0z0-JNBY1m= E-BYou0SmX2zL2cD0S0lYIsNHLt-NpVeTKYmwVYJFhvCEAI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6hBqam4Oyf3WWKj0Kz6NeBFu5lw5r93LUY0z0-JNBY1m= E-BYou0SmX2zL2cD0S0lYIsNHLt-NpVeTKYmwVYJO9TxD6Y$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6hBqam4Oyf3WWKj0Kz6NeBFu5lw5r93LUY0z0-JNBY1m= E-BYou0SmX2zL2cD0S0lYIsNHLt-NpVeTKYmwVYJv1CM2C0$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue Jun 2 00:58:49 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 020058
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    858 PM EDT Mon Jun 1 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES, GREAT PLAINS, MID-SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST...

    We will maintain the Marginal risk areas with this update. The=20
    most organized convection overnight will likely be across KS and=20
    NE as upscale convective growth into one or two MCSs seems likely.=20
    Slow supercell movement has initially resulted in heavy rainfall=20
    totals over southwest KS, although do generally expect to see some=20
    increased forward motion off to the east with time as things grow=20
    upscale. Organized convection will also move across NE through the=20
    overnight hours. Both areas should see an eastward movement of=20
    activity helping limit overall duration...although some=20
    backbuilding will be possible. Overall expect the flash flood risk
    to remain isolated, but localized flood impacts are probable.

    Convection over portions of AR/LA/MS/AL should persist a bit=20
    longer into the night than typically supported diurnally as quite=20
    a bit of instability remains to go along with a few weak boundaries
    and a shortwave over the lower MS Valley. Generally expect this=20
    activity to be moving, although cell mergers could continue to=20
    result in a localized flash flood risk.

    The coverage of convection is decreasing over southeast NM and west
    TX, but a few stronger cells may persist for a few more hours and
    result in an isolated flash flood risk.

    Not really any flash flood threat over MT, but continued=20
    stratiform rain over saturated ground may continue to result in=20
    some minor areal flooding.

    Added a small Marginal to portions of SC and adjacent GA where some
    locally heavy convection is occurring, and we should see some=20
    additional development over the next few hours. An axis of=20
    enhanced low level convergence, combined with MLCAPE over 1000=20
    j/kg and PWs around 1.8" to 1.9", will support locally heavy rates
    and an isolated flash flood risk where any cell mergers occur.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    WEST TEXAS INTO NEW MEXICO AND NORTH DAKOTA...

    20Z Update...

    ...North Dakota...

    Guidance started coming into better agreement on the clustering of
    thunderstorm activity across ND Tuesday afternoon and into Tuesday
    night. A tongue of >1.2" PWs, which is above the 90th
    climatological percentile, will reside over the Northern Plains
    with MUCAPE >1,000 J/kg supplying plenty of instability. Various
    model model members using area-averaged sounding Tuesday afternoon
    show increasingly saturated profiles with within a highly sheared
    environment. Thunderstorms are likely to contain mesocyclones that
    enhance rainfall rates, with discrete cells initially transitioning
    to more linear structures overnight as the low-level jet
    strengthens across the Dakotas. 12Z HREF probabilities show
    moderate-to-high chance probabilities (50-70%) for >3" of rainfall in east-central ND with the bulk of the rainfall occurring 21Z Tues and
    later. FFGs may recover somewhat, but given the potential for up to
    2"/hr rainfall rates in an area susceptible to those kind of
    Excessive Rainfall rates, a Slight Risk was introduced in the heart
    of ND this forecast cycle.

    Elsewhere, the inherited Slight Risk in eastern NM/west TX and the
    Marginals in place across the South were adjusted for the latest
    WPC QPF and some 12Z CAMs. The meteorological rationale provided
    by the overnight shift remains on track at this time.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    By Tuesday, the latest model guidance suggests greater moisture
    will expand westward toward the region (compared to today) with PW
    anomalies approaching 1.5 to 2 std deviations above normal. Another
    round of terrain driven convection is expected that spreads east
    across the area. Overall, pockets of 1 to 2 inches are possible
    with resulting isolated/scattered flash flooding, particularly for
    any sensitive locations such as burn scars and steeper terrain.

    ...Great Plains...
    Large scale forcing for ascent across the High Plains will work
    with an increasing amount of low level moisture to produce several
    clusters of thunderstorms during the period capable of producing
    heavy rainfall - one area of concern is across eastern to central
    Kansas where the latest guidance has pointed toward the potential
    for several repeating clusters of intense rain rates. Some of this
    additional rainfall may fall on areas expected to see heavy
    rainfall today. A second area of concern is the Northern Plains
    where there is likely to be better forcing with the proximity to
    the mid/upper level feature. Here, moisture isn't as high and storm
    motions may be faster, but potential exists for intense rain rates
    and locally heavy rainfall. Both of these areas (Dakotas and
    western/central KS) may need upgrades to Slight Risk if trends
    continue with future model cycles but for now, have maintained the
    Marginal given some of the uncertainty heading into Tuesday.

    ...North Florida through the Gulf Coast...
    A cold front will slowly advance southward across the region during
    the day Tuesday, with copious amounts of moisture pooling along and
    ahead of it. Thunderstorms are likely to develop, particularly
    focused on the Florida Panhandle to northeast Florida where the
    latest guidance points to the potential of 1-3" locally. Localized
    / isolated flash flooding will be possible due to the expected
    intense rain rates and overall slower storm motions.

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF WEST
    TEXAS...

    20Z Update...

    Reviewing 12Z guidance, the Slight Risk in West TX and eastern NM
    was expanded farther north into the TX Panhandle with WPC QPF and
    several model members showing a slightly farther northward
    extension of heavier rainfall totals. Otherwise, the forecast
    reasoning in the previous discussion remains valid with eastern NM
    into west TX most prone to flash flooding on Wednesday.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    A greater signal exists for a stronger mid-level shortwave to move
    across the southern High Plains on Wednesday. This feature,
    combined with the continued relatively higher moisture in place,
    should result in robust convection to develop across far eastern
    New Mexico into western Texas, particularly across the TX Panhandle.
    A Slight Risk was maintained for the potential of isolated to
    scattered flash flooding, some of which may fall on similar areas
    as Tuesday.

    ...Great Plains...
    The active pattern across the Plains is expected again on
    Wednesday with a plume of relatively higher moisture extending from
    Texas all the way north into the Northern Plains. Daytime
    convection is expected to fire up across the Plains and then move east/southeast into the evening/overnight hours. Several organized
    clusters of convection are likely with pockets of locally heavy
    rainfall. For now, a broad Marginal Risk remains in place for
    isolated instances of flash flooding.


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-r_xv5Bug02gOzVJFkI6nGflap0D26qRPGMuNdV2_y9_= dLIYAELaoXnUN6xGgrTqnmE5mqNOtYSnCeChUgMw-sAlvoY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-r_xv5Bug02gOzVJFkI6nGflap0D26qRPGMuNdV2_y9_= dLIYAELaoXnUN6xGgrTqnmE5mqNOtYSnCeChUgMw6P2VTKQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-r_xv5Bug02gOzVJFkI6nGflap0D26qRPGMuNdV2_y9_= dLIYAELaoXnUN6xGgrTqnmE5mqNOtYSnCeChUgMw33E7tZo$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue Jun 2 08:09:37 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 020809
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    409 AM EDT Tue Jun 2 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    WEST TEXAS INTO NEW MEXICO AND NORTH DAKOTA...

    ...Dakotas...
    A mid to upper level system and associated surface front will=20
    approach the region during the period. Ahead of it, warm moist air=20
    will expand across the area with the latest guidance showing=20
    precipitable water values over 1.2" and by afternoon, MUCAPE values
    in excess of 1000 J/kg. Deep convection firing up in the afternoon
    will initially be more discrete but is expected to evolve into=20
    linear segments as the evening commences with a ramp up late in the
    period possible with the developing low-level jet.=20

    The 00Z HREF shows the threat for rainfall totals in excess of 3"=20
    across the Slight Risk area with the greatest potential across=20
    central to northeastern ND (50-80 percent). Isolated maximum hourly
    rainfall totals of 2 inches will be possible. For these reasons,=20
    the Slight Risk for flash flooding looks appropriate and no=20
    significant changes were made for this update.=20

    ...Eastern New Mexico into West Texas...
    Another day of isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the
    region is expected as moist southeasterly flow expands further
    westward into eastern New Mexico. With cool temperatures aloft
    given the baggy trough in place, this should be sufficient for
    greater coverage of thunderstorms, initially tied to the terrain
    and then moving eastward toward the NM/TX border. Peak hourly
    rainfall totals in excess of 1 inch will be possible across eastern
    NM and total amounts of 1" to locally 3" will be possible. The
    Slight Risk is maintained for the potential of isolated to widely
    scattered flash flooding particularly for sensitive areas like=20
    burn scars and steeper terrain.=20

    ...Gulf Coast into South Florida...
    A frontal boundary analyzed early this morning across the Gulf=20
    Coast is expected to slowly drop southward through the period.
    Along and ahead of this feature, precipitable water values range
    from 1.5" to locally over 2", which is around 1.5 std above normal
    for some locations. The frontal position, combined with a favorable
    upper pattern, will provide the forcing for ascent today. With
    expected instability values exceeding 1500 J/kg (MUCAPE) during
    peak heating, scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms are
    likely.=20

    The latest HREF probabilities show potential for hourly rain=20
    totals between 1-2" (up to 50 percent probability), peaking during=20
    the afternoon to early evening hours. Totals of 1-3" are expected=20
    within the risk area, with isolated totals of 3-5" possible in the=20 strongest/slowest thunderstorms, most likely to occur across=20
    portions of FL Panhandle and across South Florida. Isolated to=20
    scattered instances of flash flooding are possible given the=20
    potential for intense rain rates, particularly over sensitive
    locations like urban corridors.


    Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS WEST TEXAS
    INTO NEW MEXICO...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    Weak troughing aloft and the remaining relatively higher moisture
    in place across the region will likely promote the development of
    isolated to scattered thunderstorms again on Wednesday. The focus
    for the greatest concentration of thunderstorms and rainfall=20
    totals will shift a bit further east this day, likely along the=20
    NM/TX border into the TX Panhandle where amounts of 1-2" with=20
    isolated 3" totals likely. Isolated to scattered instances of flash
    flooding will be possible.=20

    ...Great Plains...
    An axis of higher moisture will be present ahead of an advancing
    cold front moving across the Northern Plains. Moist unstable air
    ahead of it will promote the development of several clusters of
    thunderstorms capable of producing intense rain rates between
    1-2"/hr. Isolated to scattered flash flooding is anticipated with=20
    a possible upgrade to a Slight Risk needed for parts of eastern ND
    and far western MN if trends continue for a more concentrated area
    of thunderstorms and heavy rainfall.


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026 - 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF THE PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, AND TEXAS...

    ...Northern Plains into the Upper Midwest...=20
    Shortwave energy ejects into the Plains during the period with the
    frontal boundary expected to become increasingly west to east=20
    oriented as it drapes across the Upper Midwest by Thursday. This=20
    will allow the moisture to pool ahead of it while also creating a=20
    more favorable setup for training/repeating thunderstorms that are=20
    expected to develop during the peak heating and continue into the
    overnight hours with the surging low level jet. While there=20
    remains uncertainty on placement (north solutions versus some that=20
    are further south), the ingredients appear to be in place for heavy
    rainfall from portions of the Dakotas eastward toward Minnesota.=20
    For now, a Marginal Risk remains in place but an upgrade to a=20
    Slight Risk may be needed in future updates if trends continue for=20
    a training thunderstorm scenario.


    ...Plains to Texas...=20
    A mid to upper level system slowly moving east out of western
    Mexico will approach the region during the period. As it does so,
    it will continue to pull into the area copious amounts of Gulf=20
    moisture. This will bring additional rounds of thunderstorms to the
    area, some of which will be locally heavy given the PWs in place=20
    and potential for repeating rounds. For now, will keep a Marginal=20
    Risk in place, but if greater organization of storms or confidence=20
    on specific areas rises, a Slight Risk may be needed for portions=20
    of western to central Texas with future updates.=20


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8HvHKQHbKlVjkJCTWqyVJlR9I1ZYt3MYGMW3Q2S9KaXC= 9BJVRxEB8jsw0tNMeNiWLQD33PnuofOKbCCYMJE-v6dOmdA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8HvHKQHbKlVjkJCTWqyVJlR9I1ZYt3MYGMW3Q2S9KaXC= 9BJVRxEB8jsw0tNMeNiWLQD33PnuofOKbCCYMJE-jU_yalw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8HvHKQHbKlVjkJCTWqyVJlR9I1ZYt3MYGMW3Q2S9KaXC= 9BJVRxEB8jsw0tNMeNiWLQD33PnuofOKbCCYMJE-cgpYe0g$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue Jun 2 15:57:11 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 021556
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1156 AM EDT Tue Jun 2 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    WEST TEXAS INTO NEW MEXICO AND NORTH DAKOTA...

    ...16Z Update...

    The prior forecast reasoning remains on track particularly=20
    along/north of the Gulf Coast and into Florida. Elsewhere,=20
    scattered to widespread storm development is expected broadly=20
    across much of the Plains both ahead of an upper-low/accompanying=20
    surface front over the northern Plains into the Upper Midwest as=20
    well as further south with moist southeasterly upslope flow along=20
    the higher terrain east of the Rockies. For the southern High=20
    Plains, weak steering flow may lead to some clustering and=20 sporadic/repetitive storm movements which may increase rain totals=20
    locally. The greatest storm coverage looks to focus along the=20
    leading edge of higher/more anomalous moisture reaching into=20
    southeastern New Mexico with potential upscale growth and movement=20
    directed southeasterly along this axis. However, at least based on=20
    the latest hi-res guidance, this happens to mostly overlap sandy=20
    soils with higher FFGs that should help to limit impacts. The=20
    greatest threat overall will likely coincide with the more=20
    sensitive burn scars.=20

    To the north, stronger dynamic forcing ahead of the upper-low will
    contribute to some robust thunderstorm development. Southwesterly=20
    flow somewhat parallel to the slowly progressing front will lead to longer-duration rainfall and help promote increased rain totals in
    the 2" range, with locally higher totals of 3-4" possible. Of note
    is the potential suggested in some of the hi-res guidance for an=20
    initial round of storms over northeastern North Dakota preceding=20
    additional development later along the front, which coincides with=20
    the greatest HREF probabilities for totals higher than 3".=20

    Storms may also focus along and north of an area of low pressure=20
    and attendant surface boundary into the central High Plains with=20
    easterly storm progression reaching into the central Plains during=20
    the overnight hours. Lower instability compared to further south=20
    and less dynamic forcing compared to further north leads to greater
    uncertainty with both the intensity and coverage of storms, though
    some locally heavier totals and at least an isolated risk of flash
    flooding is noted here as well.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Dakotas...
    A mid to upper level system and associated surface front will
    approach the region during the period. Ahead of it, warm moist air
    will expand across the area with the latest guidance showing
    precipitable water values over 1.2" and by afternoon, MUCAPE values
    in excess of 1000 J/kg. Deep convection firing up in the afternoon
    will initially be more discrete but is expected to evolve into
    linear segments as the evening commences with a ramp up late in the
    period possible with the developing low-level jet.

    The 00Z HREF shows the threat for rainfall totals in excess of 3"
    across the Slight Risk area with the greatest potential across
    central to northeastern ND (50-80 percent). Isolated maximum hourly
    rainfall totals of 2 inches will be possible. For these reasons,
    the Slight Risk for flash flooding looks appropriate and no
    significant changes were made for this update.

    ...Eastern New Mexico into West Texas...
    Another day of isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the
    region is expected as moist southeasterly flow expands further
    westward into eastern New Mexico. With cool temperatures aloft
    given the baggy trough in place, this should be sufficient for
    greater coverage of thunderstorms, initially tied to the terrain
    and then moving eastward toward the NM/TX border. Peak hourly
    rainfall totals in excess of 1 inch will be possible across eastern
    NM and total amounts of 1" to locally 3" will be possible. The
    Slight Risk is maintained for the potential of isolated to widely
    scattered flash flooding particularly for sensitive areas like
    burn scars and steeper terrain.

    ...Gulf Coast into South Florida...
    A frontal boundary analyzed early this morning across the Gulf
    Coast is expected to slowly drop southward through the period.
    Along and ahead of this feature, precipitable water values range
    from 1.5" to locally over 2", which is around 1.5 std above normal
    for some locations. The frontal position, combined with a favorable
    upper pattern, will provide the forcing for ascent today. With
    expected instability values exceeding 1500 J/kg (MUCAPE) during
    peak heating, scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms are
    likely.

    The latest HREF probabilities show potential for hourly rain
    totals between 1-2" (up to 50 percent probability), peaking during
    the afternoon to early evening hours. Totals of 1-3" are expected
    within the risk area, with isolated totals of 3-5" possible in the strongest/slowest thunderstorms, most likely to occur across
    portions of FL Panhandle and across South Florida. Isolated to
    scattered instances of flash flooding are possible given the
    potential for intense rain rates, particularly over sensitive
    locations like urban corridors.


    Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS WEST TEXAS
    INTO NEW MEXICO...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    Weak troughing aloft and the remaining relatively higher moisture
    in place across the region will likely promote the development of
    isolated to scattered thunderstorms again on Wednesday. The focus
    for the greatest concentration of thunderstorms and rainfall
    totals will shift a bit further east this day, likely along the
    NM/TX border into the TX Panhandle where amounts of 1-2" with
    isolated 3" totals likely. Isolated to scattered instances of flash
    flooding will be possible.

    ...Great Plains...
    An axis of higher moisture will be present ahead of an advancing
    cold front moving across the Northern Plains. Moist unstable air
    ahead of it will promote the development of several clusters of
    thunderstorms capable of producing intense rain rates between
    1-2"/hr. Isolated to scattered flash flooding is anticipated with
    a possible upgrade to a Slight Risk needed for parts of eastern ND
    and far western MN if trends continue for a more concentrated area
    of thunderstorms and heavy rainfall.


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026 - 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, AND TEXAS...

    ...Northern Plains into the Upper Midwest...
    Shortwave energy ejects into the Plains during the period with the
    frontal boundary expected to become increasingly west to east
    oriented as it drapes across the Upper Midwest by Thursday. This
    will allow the moisture to pool ahead of it while also creating a
    more favorable setup for training/repeating thunderstorms that are
    expected to develop during the peak heating and continue into the
    overnight hours with the surging low level jet. While there
    remains uncertainty on placement (north solutions versus some that
    are further south), the ingredients appear to be in place for heavy
    rainfall from portions of the Dakotas eastward toward Minnesota.
    For now, a Marginal Risk remains in place but an upgrade to a
    Slight Risk may be needed in future updates if trends continue for
    a training thunderstorm scenario.


    ...Plains to Texas...
    A mid to upper level system slowly moving east out of western
    Mexico will approach the region during the period. As it does so,
    it will continue to pull into the area copious amounts of Gulf
    moisture. This will bring additional rounds of thunderstorms to the
    area, some of which will be locally heavy given the PWs in place
    and potential for repeating rounds. For now, will keep a Marginal
    Risk in place, but if greater organization of storms or confidence
    on specific areas rises, a Slight Risk may be needed for portions
    of western to central Texas with future updates.


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5UC_unOMDE4ujCxA7FfxgI9OcTVNH1qdYFL3mSpDMRZq= _qbhEcU1s_tKED907FUJj-X-jI2F1dYt3JA4uDA78aQq1xU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5UC_unOMDE4ujCxA7FfxgI9OcTVNH1qdYFL3mSpDMRZq= _qbhEcU1s_tKED907FUJj-X-jI2F1dYt3JA4uDA73cke1o4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5UC_unOMDE4ujCxA7FfxgI9OcTVNH1qdYFL3mSpDMRZq= _qbhEcU1s_tKED907FUJj-X-jI2F1dYt3JA4uDA7a10nde4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Tue Jun 2 19:59:16 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 021959
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    359 PM EDT Tue Jun 2 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 02 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    WEST TEXAS INTO NEW MEXICO AND NORTH DAKOTA...

    ...16Z Update...

    The prior forecast reasoning remains on track particularly
    along/north of the Gulf Coast and into Florida. Elsewhere,
    scattered to widespread storm development is expected broadly
    across much of the Plains both ahead of an upper-low/accompanying
    surface front over the northern Plains into the Upper Midwest as
    well as further south with moist southeasterly upslope flow along
    the higher terrain east of the Rockies. For the southern High
    Plains, weak steering flow may lead to some clustering and
    sporadic/repetitive storm movements which may increase rain totals
    locally. The greatest storm coverage looks to focus along the
    leading edge of higher/more anomalous moisture reaching into
    southeastern New Mexico with potential upscale growth and movement
    directed southeasterly along this axis. However, at least based on
    the latest hi-res guidance, this happens to mostly overlap sandy
    soils with higher FFGs that should help to limit impacts. The
    greatest threat overall will likely coincide with the more
    sensitive burn scars.

    To the north, stronger dynamic forcing ahead of the upper-low will
    contribute to some robust thunderstorm development. Southwesterly
    flow somewhat parallel to the slowly progressing front will lead to longer-duration rainfall and help promote increased rain totals in
    the 2" range, with locally higher totals of 3-4" possible. Of note
    is the potential suggested in some of the hi-res guidance for an
    initial round of storms over northeastern North Dakota preceding
    additional development later along the front, which coincides with
    the greatest HREF probabilities for totals higher than 3".

    Storms may also focus along and north of an area of low pressure
    and attendant surface boundary into the central High Plains with
    easterly storm progression reaching into the central Plains during
    the overnight hours. Lower instability compared to further south
    and less dynamic forcing compared to further north leads to greater
    uncertainty with both the intensity and coverage of storms, though
    some locally heavier totals and at least an isolated risk of flash
    flooding is noted here as well.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Dakotas...
    A mid to upper level system and associated surface front will
    approach the region during the period. Ahead of it, warm moist air
    will expand across the area with the latest guidance showing
    precipitable water values over 1.2" and by afternoon, MUCAPE values
    in excess of 1000 J/kg. Deep convection firing up in the afternoon
    will initially be more discrete but is expected to evolve into
    linear segments as the evening commences with a ramp up late in the
    period possible with the developing low-level jet.

    The 00Z HREF shows the threat for rainfall totals in excess of 3"
    across the Slight Risk area with the greatest potential across
    central to northeastern ND (50-80 percent). Isolated maximum hourly
    rainfall totals of 2 inches will be possible. For these reasons,
    the Slight Risk for flash flooding looks appropriate and no
    significant changes were made for this update.

    ...Eastern New Mexico into West Texas...
    Another day of isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the
    region is expected as moist southeasterly flow expands further
    westward into eastern New Mexico. With cool temperatures aloft
    given the baggy trough in place, this should be sufficient for
    greater coverage of thunderstorms, initially tied to the terrain
    and then moving eastward toward the NM/TX border. Peak hourly
    rainfall totals in excess of 1 inch will be possible across eastern
    NM and total amounts of 1" to locally 3" will be possible. The
    Slight Risk is maintained for the potential of isolated to widely
    scattered flash flooding particularly for sensitive areas like
    burn scars and steeper terrain.

    ...Gulf Coast into South Florida...
    A frontal boundary analyzed early this morning across the Gulf
    Coast is expected to slowly drop southward through the period.
    Along and ahead of this feature, precipitable water values range
    from 1.5" to locally over 2", which is around 1.5 std above normal
    for some locations. The frontal position, combined with a favorable
    upper pattern, will provide the forcing for ascent today. With
    expected instability values exceeding 1500 J/kg (MUCAPE) during
    peak heating, scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms are
    likely.

    The latest HREF probabilities show potential for hourly rain
    totals between 1-2" (up to 50 percent probability), peaking during
    the afternoon to early evening hours. Totals of 1-3" are expected
    within the risk area, with isolated totals of 3-5" possible in the strongest/slowest thunderstorms, most likely to occur across
    portions of FL Panhandle and across South Florida. Isolated to
    scattered instances of flash flooding are possible given the
    potential for intense rain rates, particularly over sensitive
    locations like urban corridors.


    Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS WEST TEXAS=20
    INTO NEW MEXICO AND THE EASTERN DAKOTAS...


    ...2030Z Update...

    A few changes as well as a categorical upgrade have been provided=20
    for this update. First, the Slight Risk covering portions of the=20
    southern High Plains has been extended northeastward to include the
    eastern Texas Panhandle as well as portions of western Oklahoma.=20
    The now available hi-res guidance is suggestive of locally heavy=20
    rainfall totals in the 3-4" range along a north/south oriented axis
    of higher moisture south of an area of low pressure and attendant=20
    surface boundary. HREF probabilities of >3" are in the 25-45% range
    with low-end probabilities (15%) for > 5". The hi- res guidance is
    a bit more ambiguous to the southwest over west Texas and=20
    southeastern New Mexico, with the greatest potential for heavy=20
    rainfall similar to Tuesday across southwest Texas into=20
    southeastern New Mexico where an axis of higher/more anomalous=20
    moisture will reach further to the west into the higher Plains=20
    terrain and ahead of the Sacramento mountains. There may ultimately
    be a lull in storm coverage/intensity and attendant flash flood=20
    risk between these regions where relatively lower moisture is=20
    present, but have left a broad Slight Risk for now with the=20
    potential to further refine the outlook with additional forecast=20 guidance.=20

    Second, a Slight Risk has been introduced for portions of the=20
    northern Plains covering southeastern North Dakota, northeastern=20
    South Dakota, and far western Minnesota. A more focused area of=20
    convection is expected ahead of a wave of low pressure along the=20
    cold front with the potential for upscale growth into an organized=20 convective system. Now available hi-res guidance shows the=20
    potential for totals into the 2-3"+ range with low to moderate HREF probabilities of 3"+. The one caveat is that the more progressive=20
    nature of the front and subsequent convection compared to Tuesday=20
    may limit rainfall duration. However, there remains the potential=20
    for backbuilding convection to the southwest to compensate for the=20
    faster progression of the convection particularly if the surface=20
    wave helps to locally slow the front's southerly progress.

    Finally, a Marginal Risk has been included for South Florida.=20
    Another day of afternoon thunderstorms with the potential of=20
    localized totals into the 3-5" range could lead to isolated=20
    flooding concerns for urban areas.=20

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    Weak troughing aloft and the remaining relatively higher moisture=20
    in place across the region will likely promote the development of=20
    isolated to scattered thunderstorms again on Wednesday. The focus=20
    for the greatest concentration of thunderstorms and rainfall totals
    will shift a bit further east this day, likely along the NM/TX=20
    border into the TX Panhandle where amounts of 1-2" with isolated 3"
    totals likely. Isolated to scattered instances of flash flooding=20
    will be possible.

    ...Great Plains...
    An axis of higher moisture will be present ahead of an advancing=20
    cold front moving across the Northern Plains. Moist unstable air=20
    ahead of it will promote the development of several clusters of=20 thunderstorms capable of producing intense rain rates between=20
    1-2"/hr. Isolated to scattered flash flooding is anticipated with a
    possible upgrade to a Slight Risk needed for parts of eastern ND=20
    and far western MN if trends continue for a more concentrated area=20
    of thunderstorms and heavy rainfall.

    Taylor

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026 - 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, AND TEXAS...

    ...2030Z Update...

    The previous forecast remains supported by the latest model=20
    guidance. There continues to be a signal for locally heavier=20
    rainfall ahead of the front across portions of the northern=20
    Plains/Upper Midwest potentially supportive of an upgrade to a=20
    Slight Risk. However, ensemble probabilities for rainfall totals=20
    greater than 1 inch remain very low. Additionally, spatial=20
    disparity of heavier totals in the deterministic guidance due to=20
    uncertainty of the position of the front do not provide enough=20
    confidence for an upgrade at this time.=20

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains into the Upper Midwest...
    Shortwave energy ejects into the Plains during the period with the
    frontal boundary expected to become increasingly west to east=20
    oriented as it drapes across the Upper Midwest by Thursday. This=20
    will allow the moisture to pool ahead of it while also creating a=20
    more favorable setup for training/repeating thunderstorms that are=20
    expected to develop during the peak heating and continue into the=20
    overnight hours with the surging low level jet. While there remains
    uncertainty on placement (north solutions versus some that are=20
    further south), the ingredients appear to be in place for heavy=20
    rainfall from portions of the Dakotas eastward toward Minnesota.=20
    For now, a Marginal Risk remains in place but an upgrade to a=20
    Slight Risk may be needed in future updates if trends continue for=20
    a training thunderstorm scenario.


    ...Plains to Texas...
    A mid to upper level system slowly moving east out of western=20
    Mexico will approach the region during the period. As it does so,=20
    it will continue to pull into the area copious amounts of Gulf=20
    moisture. This will bring additional rounds of thunderstorms to the
    area, some of which will be locally heavy given the PWs in place=20
    and potential for repeating rounds. For now, will keep a Marginal=20
    Risk in place, but if greater organization of storms or confidence=20
    on specific areas rises, a Slight Risk may be needed for portions=20
    of western to central Texas with future updates.


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-HeQtqxv74UNm4fh2isYZXgizocYTk7h5hYbLJlLRKnC= xgxN4eZB_x0Q11xE-n9YamixZP8lZrfQ-2YR1b5jdVBGglI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-HeQtqxv74UNm4fh2isYZXgizocYTk7h5hYbLJlLRKnC= xgxN4eZB_x0Q11xE-n9YamixZP8lZrfQ-2YR1b5jGkGHkIk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-HeQtqxv74UNm4fh2isYZXgizocYTk7h5hYbLJlLRKnC= xgxN4eZB_x0Q11xE-n9YamixZP8lZrfQ-2YR1b5jFwxgWRg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed Jun 3 00:28:16 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 030028
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    828 PM EDT Tue Jun 2 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    WEST TEXAS INTO NEW MEXICO AND THE DAKOTAS...

    01Z Update: Main change from the previous D1 is the expansion of
    the SLGT risk further south into SD to cover for what has been an
    active afternoon and evening of heavy convection across the Black
    Hills area. Multiple shortwaves will continue to eject east-
    northeast out of the Front Range of WY leading to ongoing periods
    of thunderstorms to impact areas across southwest WY. Several flash
    flood warnings have already been issued over the region, so it
    stands to say the short term hydrologic state is at a point of
    favor when it comes to run off capabilities. The terrain is already
    a concern in the general sense, so this only added to the threat
    overnight. We will eventually see storms grow upscale and migrate
    eastward as cold pool mergers eventually transition convective
    modes to more multi-cell varieties, so the threat will dwindle=20
    after 06-09z, however the threat will remain elevated until the=20
    very end of the period which allowed for an expansion of the SLGT=20
    through a large portion of SD.=20

    Further south into the Southern High Plains, continued threat of
    heavy convection will occur this evening as large scale forcing
    will only stand to increase overnight with a rarer nocturnal
    convective evolution forecast across eastern NM into the western
    portion of the TX Panhandle down into parts of Southwest TX. The
    main focus will reside along the Rio Grande from El Paso down to
    the western Big Bend area where a robust instability maximum awaits
    allowing for stronger convective episodes to materialize and likely
    proceed without much in the way of forfeiting any instability in
    the process after the loss of diurnal destabilization. MUCAPE
    between 2000-3000 J/kg will reside between the Pecos river to the
    Rio Grande with a secondary max co-located between the Upper Trans
    Pecos to the Permian Basin which will align with the second area of
    interest across TX/NM. Cold pool mergers and sustained thunderstorm capabilities will drive an extended period of heavy rainfall
    through the above areas. The SLGT was generally maintained outside
    a minor adjustment southward along the Rio Grande in Southwest TX.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS WEST TEXAS
    INTO NEW MEXICO AND THE EASTERN DAKOTAS...


    ...2030Z Update...

    A few changes as well as a categorical upgrade have been provided
    for this update. First, the Slight Risk covering portions of the
    southern High Plains has been extended northeastward to include the
    eastern Texas Panhandle as well as portions of western Oklahoma.
    The now available hi-res guidance is suggestive of locally heavy
    rainfall totals in the 3-4" range along a north/south oriented axis
    of higher moisture south of an area of low pressure and attendant
    surface boundary. HREF probabilities of >3" are in the 25-45% range
    with low-end probabilities (15%) for > 5". The hi- res guidance is
    a bit more ambiguous to the southwest over west Texas and
    southeastern New Mexico, with the greatest potential for heavy
    rainfall similar to Tuesday across southwest Texas into
    southeastern New Mexico where an axis of higher/more anomalous
    moisture will reach further to the west into the higher Plains
    terrain and ahead of the Sacramento mountains. There may ultimately
    be a lull in storm coverage/intensity and attendant flash flood
    risk between these regions where relatively lower moisture is
    present, but have left a broad Slight Risk for now with the
    potential to further refine the outlook with additional forecast
    guidance.

    Second, a Slight Risk has been introduced for portions of the
    northern Plains covering southeastern North Dakota, northeastern
    South Dakota, and far western Minnesota. A more focused area of
    convection is expected ahead of a wave of low pressure along the
    cold front with the potential for upscale growth into an organized
    convective system. Now available hi-res guidance shows the
    potential for totals into the 2-3"+ range with low to moderate HREF probabilities of 3"+. The one caveat is that the more progressive
    nature of the front and subsequent convection compared to Tuesday
    may limit rainfall duration. However, there remains the potential
    for backbuilding convection to the southwest to compensate for the
    faster progression of the convection particularly if the surface
    wave helps to locally slow the front's southerly progress.

    Finally, a Marginal Risk has been included for South Florida.
    Another day of afternoon thunderstorms with the potential of
    localized totals into the 3-5" range could lead to isolated
    flooding concerns for urban areas.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...
    Weak troughing aloft and the remaining relatively higher moisture
    in place across the region will likely promote the development of
    isolated to scattered thunderstorms again on Wednesday. The focus
    for the greatest concentration of thunderstorms and rainfall totals
    will shift a bit further east this day, likely along the NM/TX
    border into the TX Panhandle where amounts of 1-2" with isolated 3"
    totals likely. Isolated to scattered instances of flash flooding
    will be possible.

    ...Great Plains...
    An axis of higher moisture will be present ahead of an advancing
    cold front moving across the Northern Plains. Moist unstable air
    ahead of it will promote the development of several clusters of
    thunderstorms capable of producing intense rain rates between
    1-2"/hr. Isolated to scattered flash flooding is anticipated with a
    possible upgrade to a Slight Risk needed for parts of eastern ND
    and far western MN if trends continue for a more concentrated area
    of thunderstorms and heavy rainfall.

    Taylor

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026 - 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, AND TEXAS...

    ...2030Z Update...

    The previous forecast remains supported by the latest model
    guidance. There continues to be a signal for locally heavier
    rainfall ahead of the front across portions of the northern
    Plains/Upper Midwest potentially supportive of an upgrade to a
    Slight Risk. However, ensemble probabilities for rainfall totals
    greater than 1 inch remain very low. Additionally, spatial
    disparity of heavier totals in the deterministic guidance due to
    uncertainty of the position of the front do not provide enough
    confidence for an upgrade at this time.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains into the Upper Midwest...
    Shortwave energy ejects into the Plains during the period with the
    frontal boundary expected to become increasingly west to east
    oriented as it drapes across the Upper Midwest by Thursday. This
    will allow the moisture to pool ahead of it while also creating a
    more favorable setup for training/repeating thunderstorms that are
    expected to develop during the peak heating and continue into the
    overnight hours with the surging low level jet. While there remains
    uncertainty on placement (north solutions versus some that are
    further south), the ingredients appear to be in place for heavy
    rainfall from portions of the Dakotas eastward toward Minnesota.
    For now, a Marginal Risk remains in place but an upgrade to a
    Slight Risk may be needed in future updates if trends continue for
    a training thunderstorm scenario.


    ...Plains to Texas...
    A mid to upper level system slowly moving east out of western
    Mexico will approach the region during the period. As it does so,
    it will continue to pull into the area copious amounts of Gulf
    moisture. This will bring additional rounds of thunderstorms to the
    area, some of which will be locally heavy given the PWs in place
    and potential for repeating rounds. For now, will keep a Marginal
    Risk in place, but if greater organization of storms or confidence
    on specific areas rises, a Slight Risk may be needed for portions
    of western to central Texas with future updates.


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7SbaNZPaMf-rwb5ROj9fQyQhMCjtDX1Ddy1YjdGUMpPo= GRzbERjZ3G15v97amYqT5uHGOGvQe9-1M6qJXmzSiCbOGNA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7SbaNZPaMf-rwb5ROj9fQyQhMCjtDX1Ddy1YjdGUMpPo= GRzbERjZ3G15v97amYqT5uHGOGvQe9-1M6qJXmzS2d_cZyY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7SbaNZPaMf-rwb5ROj9fQyQhMCjtDX1Ddy1YjdGUMpPo= GRzbERjZ3G15v97amYqT5uHGOGvQe9-1M6qJXmzShL9FGFA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed Jun 3 08:01:39 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 030801
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    401 AM EDT Wed Jun 3 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND WEST TEXAS INTO EASTERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...Northern Plains...
    Multiple areas of convection producing heavy rainfall and intense
    rainfall are expected across portions of the eastern Dakotas into
    far western Minnesota during the period. This activity is tied to
    an advancing cold front with an axis of anomalous moisture along
    and ahead of it. While the setup isn't the most favorable for=20 training/backbuilding and generally favors more progressive storm
    motions, the ingredients do support the latest HREF probabilities
    for isolated totals in the 3-5" range. The Slight Risk was=20
    minimally adjusted to the latest trends.=20

    ...Texas into Oklahoma...
    A surface boundary in the vicinity of the area along with a feed=20
    of Gulf moisture from the southeast will continue the unsettled=20
    weather pattern. Convection is likely to be ongoing at the start of
    the period across far eastern NM into western TX, capable of=20
    producing locally heavy rainfall and rain rates between 1-2"/hr.=20
    This activity may then subside by mid day. Convection is then=20
    expected to blossom further to the northeast across the TX=20
    Panhandle and west-central Oklahoma. The Slight Risk in that area=20
    looks good and lines up well with the latest HREF probabilities=20
    for 3 inches (50-70 percent) and 5 inches (25 percent).=20

    ...South Florida and the Keys...
    Approaching frontal boundary and tropical moisture in place will=20
    contribute to another day of higher coverage and intensity of=20
    thunderstorms across portions of South Florida urban corridor. HREF probabilities are elevated for localized 3-5" totals (along with=20
    hourly rain totals locally between 2-3") where thunderstorms=20
    persist/repeat, so a Marginal Risk has been maintained. There is=20
    some signal that the intense rain rates and heavy rainfall may=20
    approach the entirety of the Keys, so have opted to expand the=20
    Marginal through Key West.=20


    Taylor

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026 - 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE=20
    PLAINS TO THE UPPER MIDWEST AND SOUTH FLORIDA ...

    ...Plains to Upper Midwest...
    The cold front is expected to set up across Minnesota into the
    Plains during the period, acting as the focus for organized
    convection. A ramp up in the low-level jet late in the period will
    likely be the primary concern for training/repeating rounds of
    heavy rainfall as daytime convection should be mainly progressive
    and more discrete in nature. The deterministic guidance remains
    disperse and ensemble probabilities low to provide confidence for=20
    any upgrade to Slight Risk at this time, but areas from southwest=20
    Minnesota into portions of Iowa and eastern South Dakota are of=20
    concern. For now, the Marginal Risk was maintained and adjusted to=20
    the latest trends, trimming some from the western to northern=20
    boundary.=20

    Further south into the Plains and Texas, the continued moist
    southeasterly flow and approaching mid level system out of Mexico
    will bring a greater coverage of thunderstorms and the threat of
    locally heavy rainfall. Overall organization of the convection is
    expected to be on the lower side, but the PW anomalies support
    potential for locally intense rain rates and the Marginal Risk.=20

    ...South Florida...
    Frontal boundary stalling in the vicinity of the area will remain
    the focus for scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms
    capable of producing intense rain rates and locally heavy rainfall
    over the highly urbanized corridor. The risk for Thursday shifts a
    bit further south across South Florida, mainly centering across the
    Miami metro.=20

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026 - 12Z Sat Jun 06 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, TEXAS, AND GULF COAST...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Low pressure moving across the region with its associated cold
    front will be the focus for thunderstorm development Friday into
    Friday night with southwesterly flow bringing in an axis of
    relatively higher moisture. Aspects of this setup will favor
    some training/repeating thunderstorms but the overall motion will
    probably lean more progressive. If the front ends up more west to
    east oriented and allows for a better setup for training, portions
    of the area could need an upgrade to a Slight, but confidence on
    that is too low at this point.

    ...Texas into Gulf Coast...
    The mid/upper level feature over Mexico moves into Texas during
    this period, continuing another day of generally unsettled weather
    and scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms. If deeper
    instability can materialized, pockets of locally heavy rainfall
    will be possible due to the intense rain rates. Right now, the
    latest deterministic guidance and ensemble probabilities point
    toward central to south TX with greater potential.=20

    Along coastal Louisiana, a surface trough interacting with the
    higher moisture in place will bring a higher coverage of
    thunderstorms with the potential for intense rain rates and
    localized heavy rainfall.=20


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5aSBhE9Egj2mGpznpWFI2J0aMeF5v-BihOXl34nF-qlS= nZiKzyn0o5QfFUJ2hQQF-bYqZjbHwjqc6oylouIQfg6LB6U$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5aSBhE9Egj2mGpznpWFI2J0aMeF5v-BihOXl34nF-qlS= nZiKzyn0o5QfFUJ2hQQF-bYqZjbHwjqc6oylouIQx0XbOfY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5aSBhE9Egj2mGpznpWFI2J0aMeF5v-BihOXl34nF-qlS= nZiKzyn0o5QfFUJ2hQQF-bYqZjbHwjqc6oylouIQBi6c7Lo$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed Jun 3 15:20:06 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 031519
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1119 AM EDT Wed Jun 3 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND WEST TEXAS INTO EASTERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The overall forecast philosophy is on track and minimal changes are
    made based on latest convective trends.

    ...New Mexico/West Texas into Oklahoma...
    An ongoing convective complex in west/southwest Texas near the
    Transpecos was slow-moving, but persistent, and will pose a flash
    flood risk across southern portions of the Slight Risk in that
    area this morning. Throughout the day (especially from afternoon
    onward), scattered thunderstorm activity will develop across higher
    terrain of central New Mexico and migrate southeastward through the
    Slight Risk area into the early overnight hours. Areas of FFG
    exceedence are expected, and sensitive terrain/burn scars may also
    experience impacts from nearby thunderstorms. The Slight Risk area
    has been expanded slightly northwestward to address the potential
    for scattered thunderstorm activity in more of central/southwest=20
    New Mexico that could pose a flash flood risk. More isolated
    thunderstorm activity could form across the Texas South Plains into
    western Oklahoma during the day, with isolated flash flooding
    possible given expected slow storm movement and 1.25 inch PW
    values.

    ...Elsewhere...
    The ongoing forecast is on track. Latest guidance (particularly
    CAMs) depict heavier downpours in southwestern Florida near the
    Naples/Cape Coral vicinity along with southeastern coastal areas.=20
    Isolated instances of flash flooding should occur across south=20
    Florida -- focused along typical sensitive low spots and urban=20
    areas. The Marginal Risk area was expanded northwestward to account
    for flash flood risk along the southwest Florida coast.

    The Marginal and Slight Risk areas in the Dakotas/western Minnesota
    is also unchanged. A fairly narrow corridor of moisture/instability
    will support scattered thunderstorm activity this afternoon along
    and ahead of a slow-moving surface cold front. Localized areas of
    training are expected, and with FFG already low in some areas
    (around 1 inch/hr), FFG exceedence could occur on a scattered
    basis.=20=20

    See the previous discussion below for more details.

    Cook/Thompson

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains...
    Multiple areas of convection producing heavy rainfall and intense
    rainfall are expected across portions of the eastern Dakotas into
    far western Minnesota during the period. This activity is tied to
    an advancing cold front with an axis of anomalous moisture along
    and ahead of it. While the setup isn't the most favorable for=20 training/backbuilding and generally favors more progressive storm
    motions, the ingredients do support the latest HREF probabilities
    for isolated totals in the 3-5" range. The Slight Risk was=20
    minimally adjusted to the latest trends.=20

    ...Texas into Oklahoma...
    A surface boundary in the vicinity of the area along with a feed=20
    of Gulf moisture from the southeast will continue the unsettled=20
    weather pattern. Convection is likely to be ongoing at the start of
    the period across far eastern NM into western TX, capable of=20
    producing locally heavy rainfall and rain rates between 1-2"/hr.=20
    This activity may then subside by mid day. Convection is then=20
    expected to blossom further to the northeast across the TX=20
    Panhandle and west-central Oklahoma. The Slight Risk in that area=20
    looks good and lines up well with the latest HREF probabilities=20
    for 3 inches (50-70 percent) and 5 inches (25 percent).=20

    ...South Florida and the Keys...
    Approaching frontal boundary and tropical moisture in place will=20
    contribute to another day of higher coverage and intensity of=20
    thunderstorms across portions of South Florida urban corridor. HREF probabilities are elevated for localized 3-5" totals (along with=20
    hourly rain totals locally between 2-3") where thunderstorms=20
    persist/repeat, so a Marginal Risk has been maintained. There is=20
    some signal that the intense rain rates and heavy rainfall may=20
    approach the entirety of the Keys, so have opted to expand the=20
    Marginal through Key West.=20


    Taylor

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026 - 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE=20
    PLAINS TO THE UPPER MIDWEST AND SOUTH FLORIDA ...

    ...Plains to Upper Midwest...
    The cold front is expected to set up across Minnesota into the
    Plains during the period, acting as the focus for organized
    convection. A ramp up in the low-level jet late in the period will
    likely be the primary concern for training/repeating rounds of
    heavy rainfall as daytime convection should be mainly progressive
    and more discrete in nature. The deterministic guidance remains
    disperse and ensemble probabilities low to provide confidence for=20
    any upgrade to Slight Risk at this time, but areas from southwest=20
    Minnesota into portions of Iowa and eastern South Dakota are of=20
    concern. For now, the Marginal Risk was maintained and adjusted to=20
    the latest trends, trimming some from the western to northern=20
    boundary.=20

    Further south into the Plains and Texas, the continued moist
    southeasterly flow and approaching mid level system out of Mexico
    will bring a greater coverage of thunderstorms and the threat of
    locally heavy rainfall. Overall organization of the convection is
    expected to be on the lower side, but the PW anomalies support
    potential for locally intense rain rates and the Marginal Risk.=20

    ...South Florida...
    Frontal boundary stalling in the vicinity of the area will remain
    the focus for scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms
    capable of producing intense rain rates and locally heavy rainfall
    over the highly urbanized corridor. The risk for Thursday shifts a
    bit further south across South Florida, mainly centering across the
    Miami metro.=20

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026 - 12Z Sat Jun 06 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, TEXAS, AND GULF COAST...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Low pressure moving across the region with its associated cold
    front will be the focus for thunderstorm development Friday into
    Friday night with southwesterly flow bringing in an axis of
    relatively higher moisture. Aspects of this setup will favor
    some training/repeating thunderstorms but the overall motion will
    probably lean more progressive. If the front ends up more west to
    east oriented and allows for a better setup for training, portions
    of the area could need an upgrade to a Slight, but confidence on
    that is too low at this point.

    ...Texas into Gulf Coast...
    The mid/upper level feature over Mexico moves into Texas during
    this period, continuing another day of generally unsettled weather
    and scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms. If deeper
    instability can materialized, pockets of locally heavy rainfall
    will be possible due to the intense rain rates. Right now, the
    latest deterministic guidance and ensemble probabilities point
    toward central to south TX with greater potential.=20

    Along coastal Louisiana, a surface trough interacting with the
    higher moisture in place will bring a higher coverage of
    thunderstorms with the potential for intense rain rates and
    localized heavy rainfall.=20


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_Da8cVEhdAFQz9kfcPUT6eV_9kKn9P_sAoaVyR6TOXNT= v5ePF9324pTJMCwvUsvVUXCjKwcSsBwMssSAvzBZhP0HKLw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_Da8cVEhdAFQz9kfcPUT6eV_9kKn9P_sAoaVyR6TOXNT= v5ePF9324pTJMCwvUsvVUXCjKwcSsBwMssSAvzBZP_EoXtE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_Da8cVEhdAFQz9kfcPUT6eV_9kKn9P_sAoaVyR6TOXNT= v5ePF9324pTJMCwvUsvVUXCjKwcSsBwMssSAvzBZ2ZfVvmI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Wed Jun 3 19:02:11 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 031902
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    302 PM EDT Wed Jun 3 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 03 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND WEST TEXAS INTO EASTERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The overall forecast philosophy is on track and minimal changes are
    made based on latest convective trends.

    ...New Mexico/West Texas into Oklahoma...
    An ongoing convective complex in west/southwest Texas near the
    Transpecos was slow-moving, but persistent, and will pose a flash
    flood risk across southern portions of the Slight Risk in that
    area this morning. Throughout the day (especially from afternoon
    onward), scattered thunderstorm activity will develop across higher
    terrain of central New Mexico and migrate southeastward through the
    Slight Risk area into the early overnight hours. Areas of FFG
    exceedence are expected, and sensitive terrain/burn scars may also
    experience impacts from nearby thunderstorms. The Slight Risk area
    has been expanded slightly northwestward to address the potential
    for scattered thunderstorm activity in more of central/southwest=20
    New Mexico that could pose a flash flood risk. More isolated
    thunderstorm activity could form across the Texas South Plains into
    western Oklahoma during the day, with isolated flash flooding
    possible given expected slow storm movement and 1.25 inch PW
    values.

    ...Elsewhere...
    The ongoing forecast is on track. Latest guidance (particularly
    CAMs) depict heavier downpours in southwestern Florida near the
    Naples/Cape Coral vicinity along with southeastern coastal areas.=20
    Isolated instances of flash flooding should occur across south=20
    Florida -- focused along typical sensitive low spots and urban=20
    areas. The Marginal Risk area was expanded northwestward to account
    for flash flood risk along the southwest Florida coast.

    The Marginal and Slight Risk areas in the Dakotas/western Minnesota
    is also unchanged. A fairly narrow corridor of moisture/instability
    will support scattered thunderstorm activity this afternoon along
    and ahead of a slow-moving surface cold front. Localized areas of
    training are expected, and with FFG already low in some areas
    (around 1 inch/hr), FFG exceedence could occur on a scattered
    basis.=20=20

    See the previous discussion below for more details.

    Cook/Thompson

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains...
    Multiple areas of convection producing heavy rainfall and intense
    rainfall are expected across portions of the eastern Dakotas into
    far western Minnesota during the period. This activity is tied to
    an advancing cold front with an axis of anomalous moisture along
    and ahead of it. While the setup isn't the most favorable for=20 training/backbuilding and generally favors more progressive storm
    motions, the ingredients do support the latest HREF probabilities
    for isolated totals in the 3-5" range. The Slight Risk was=20
    minimally adjusted to the latest trends.=20

    ...Texas into Oklahoma...
    A surface boundary in the vicinity of the area along with a feed=20
    of Gulf moisture from the southeast will continue the unsettled=20
    weather pattern. Convection is likely to be ongoing at the start of
    the period across far eastern NM into western TX, capable of=20
    producing locally heavy rainfall and rain rates between 1-2"/hr.=20
    This activity may then subside by mid day. Convection is then=20
    expected to blossom further to the northeast across the TX=20
    Panhandle and west-central Oklahoma. The Slight Risk in that area=20
    looks good and lines up well with the latest HREF probabilities=20
    for 3 inches (50-70 percent) and 5 inches (25 percent).=20

    ...South Florida and the Keys...
    Approaching frontal boundary and tropical moisture in place will=20
    contribute to another day of higher coverage and intensity of=20
    thunderstorms across portions of South Florida urban corridor. HREF probabilities are elevated for localized 3-5" totals (along with=20
    hourly rain totals locally between 2-3") where thunderstorms=20
    persist/repeat, so a Marginal Risk has been maintained. There is=20
    some signal that the intense rain rates and heavy rainfall may=20
    approach the entirety of the Keys, so have opted to expand the=20
    Marginal through Key West.=20


    Taylor

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026 - 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN NEBRASKA AND WESTERN IOWA...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    A Slight Risk was introduced for portions of eastern Nebraska and
    western Iowa for this update. Models are in general concensus that
    a weak mid-level wave will track northeastward from Kansas during
    the afternoon and evening hours. Convection will become scattered
    to widespread across the Slight Risk area as low-level flow
    increases downstream of a surface dryline and low over central
    NE/KS. Some negatives are apparent in the overall flash flood
    scenario, including modest/dry soil moistures and some lingering
    uncertainty with respect to specific axes of heaviest rainfall.
    Nevertheless, areas of 2-4 inch rainfall totals are likely --
    locally higher where convective training/backbuilding can
    materialize. Flash flood could occur on an isolated to scattered
    basis in that regime.

    Elsewhere, the Marginal Risk in eastern South Dakota has been=20
    expanded northward and westward across the remainder of the state.
    Scattered storms should develop in western South Dakota (where FFGs
    are locally low) and migrate eastward, focusing along a surface
    front in northeastern portions of the state. Lingering uncertainty
    regarding the extent of convection precludes a Slight Risk upgrade
    for that area in this outlook.=20

    Some consideration for removal of Marginal Risk was considered for
    portions of Oklahoma. Convective coverage seems to be a mitigating
    factor for flash flood potential in that area. The remainder of
    Marginal Risk areas were kept in place for this outlook, with
    scattered thunderstorm activity expected across southern New
    Mexico, west Texas, and near populated areas of southeastern
    Florida.

    See the previous discussion below for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Plains to Upper Midwest...
    The cold front is expected to set up across Minnesota into the
    Plains during the period, acting as the focus for organized
    convection. A ramp up in the low-level jet late in the period will
    likely be the primary concern for training/repeating rounds of
    heavy rainfall as daytime convection should be mainly progressive
    and more discrete in nature. The deterministic guidance remains
    disperse and ensemble probabilities low to provide confidence for=20
    any upgrade to Slight Risk at this time, but areas from southwest=20
    Minnesota into portions of Iowa and eastern South Dakota are of=20
    concern. For now, the Marginal Risk was maintained and adjusted to=20
    the latest trends, trimming some from the western to northern=20
    boundary.=20

    Further south into the Plains and Texas, the continued moist
    southeasterly flow and approaching mid level system out of Mexico
    will bring a greater coverage of thunderstorms and the threat of
    locally heavy rainfall. Overall organization of the convection is
    expected to be on the lower side, but the PW anomalies support
    potential for locally intense rain rates and the Marginal Risk.=20

    ...South Florida...
    Frontal boundary stalling in the vicinity of the area will remain
    the focus for scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms
    capable of producing intense rain rates and locally heavy rainfall
    over the highly urbanized corridor. The risk for Thursday shifts a
    bit further south across South Florida, mainly centering across the
    Miami metro.=20

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026 - 12Z Sat Jun 06 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, TEXAS, AND GULF COAST...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    The ongoing forecast is on track with only minimal changes needed
    to the Marginal Risk area across the central Gulf Coast. Weak
    mid/upper troughing across the southern Rockies and Texas will
    promote another round of thunderstorm activity across a large part
    of Texas and southern New Mexico, with attendant flash flooding
    expected due to slow storm motions and abundant moisture. A second
    area of flash flood potential will exist as a disturbances moves
    toward portions of southeastern Louisiana and Mississippi late in
    the period, increasing rainfall potential across areas that have
    already been wet over the past 1-2 weeks. Lastly, scattered
    thunderstorm activity will exist ahead of a front from Iowa into
    Wisconsin and vicinity, spreading 1-2 inches of rain with local
    amounts reaching 4 inches. Storms in that area should be
    progressive in nature due to 20-30 knot mid/upper level flow,
    though localized backbuilding and mergers may increase totals
    locally. Marginal Risk is maintained for this scenario, though some
    parts of the region may necessitate an upgrade to Slight Risk in
    later forecast cycles.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Low pressure moving across the region with its associated cold
    front will be the focus for thunderstorm development Friday into
    Friday night with southwesterly flow bringing in an axis of
    relatively higher moisture. Aspects of this setup will favor
    some training/repeating thunderstorms but the overall motion will
    probably lean more progressive. If the front ends up more west to
    east oriented and allows for a better setup for training, portions
    of the area could need an upgrade to a Slight, but confidence on
    that is too low at this point.

    ...Texas into Gulf Coast...
    The mid/upper level feature over Mexico moves into Texas during
    this period, continuing another day of generally unsettled weather
    and scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms. If deeper
    instability can materialized, pockets of locally heavy rainfall
    will be possible due to the intense rain rates. Right now, the
    latest deterministic guidance and ensemble probabilities point
    toward central to south TX with greater potential.=20

    Along coastal Louisiana, a surface trough interacting with the
    higher moisture in place will bring a higher coverage of
    thunderstorms with the potential for intense rain rates and
    localized heavy rainfall.=20


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9mMEv93FuKxs525EusKL522MJ7Nty5RI6wv3wzjWNvu4= UmVr7TCZ9wCbXv-7sLCzppfmhtfp2dGVZb07choss8KNuNU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9mMEv93FuKxs525EusKL522MJ7Nty5RI6wv3wzjWNvu4= UmVr7TCZ9wCbXv-7sLCzppfmhtfp2dGVZb07chos5yETsy0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9mMEv93FuKxs525EusKL522MJ7Nty5RI6wv3wzjWNvu4= UmVr7TCZ9wCbXv-7sLCzppfmhtfp2dGVZb07chosAKc9uVo$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to [email protected] on Thu Jun 4 00:42:50 2026
    FOUS30 KWBC 040042
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    842 PM EDT Wed Jun 3 2026

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Jun 04 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026

    ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN PLAINS, BACK INTO EASTERN NEW MEXICO...

    01Z Update: Frenetic pattern will continue this evening with
    multiple areas of nocturnal convection driving threats of flash
    flooding across both the Northern and Southern Plains, as well as
    some isolated concerns the next 6 hours over parts of the Gulf
    Coast and southeastern FL.=20

    Main areas of concern will continue to be the respective plains
    areas with multiple shortwave perturbations and organized
    convective clusters likely to drive some enhanced flash flood
    scenarios over the course of the evening. Prominent instability
    axis' across the Northern Plains within a narrow theta_E ridge
    extending through the Missouri River basin will aid in a maturation
    of convective development with the overnight period likely
    correlating to a shift in multi-cell mergers and organized
    thunderstorms shifting eastward as they grow upscale before
    petering out once they cross the Missouri River. Progressive nature
    of the cells are the main deterrent for potentially greater
    impacts, but PWAT anomalies between +2 and +3 standard deviations
    lend credence to a moisture rich environment capable of heavy
    convective cores that would lead to widely scattered flash flood
    prospects. The most aggressive CAMs have the main axis running from
    northern NE up through eastern SD, aligned within that primary
    theta_E ridge positioned ahead of a weak frontal boundary to the
    west that will make only minor headway over the next 12 hours. The
    previous SLGT risk for the Northern Plains was trimmed to account
    for the reputable changes within the latest hi-res deterministic
    and matching the trends on radar the past few hours. It is still
    present for the SD/NE border up through eastern SD in an eastern
    edge entering far western MN. For more information on this threat,
    please see Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion (MPD) #0311.=20

    Over the Southern High Plains, yet another round of convection over
    the higher terrain of NM will likely carry eastward to some degree
    leading to nocturnal thunderstorms across the eastern NM High
    Plains. This threat will also trickle into the western Panhandle of
    TX with a threat of locally heavy rainfall once again for areas
    west of the line from Amarillo to Lubbock with the greatest
    potential closer to the border near and south of I-40. Models have
    been mixed with the signals for heavy rainfall this evening, a far
    cry from the overwhelming signals from last evening. In any case,
    the steering pattern and environmental conditioning were still
    favorable for heavy rain prospects across Southwest TX up through
    the High Plains leading to a continuation of the SLGT with some
    scaling back on the eastern flank of the risk as convective
    development and future impacts are much less of a concern as you
    get west of the AMA-LUB-MAF line. A second area of concern is
    currently ongoing across southwest KS into northwest OK where heavy thunderstorms are aligned south to north along a surface trough
    extending away from a low positioned further northwest. This area
    of thunderstorms will continue for at least the first 2-4 hours of
    the period before dwindling, but will have to monitor the evolution
    to see if it holds further into KS. As of this time, not
    anticipating significant changes to what the hi-res have been
    insinuating, but the current radar favored a maintenance of the
    SLGT risk over the area with some minor expansion to encompass the
    ongoing threat.=20

    Isolated heavy thunderstorms are plausible across the Gulf coast
    and southeast FL coast, as well for the evening period before
    diminishing beyond 06z. Southeast FL could hold the threat for
    longer due to frictional convergence regime in proximity to a
    decaying cold front bisecting the area. Any areas within the two
    zones will likely be highly isolated for flash flood prospects, but
    the threat is ongoing, so maintained general continuity while
    precip lingers and models maintain the threat.=20

    Kleebauer
    =20

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 04 2026 - 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN NEBRASKA AND WESTERN IOWA...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    A Slight Risk was introduced for portions of eastern Nebraska and
    western Iowa for this update. Models are in general consensus that
    a weak mid-level wave will track northeastward from Kansas during
    the afternoon and evening hours. Convection will become scattered
    to widespread across the Slight Risk area as low-level flow
    increases downstream of a surface dryline and low over central
    NE/KS. Some negatives are apparent in the overall flash flood
    scenario, including modest/dry soil moistures and some lingering
    uncertainty with respect to specific axes of heaviest rainfall.
    Nevertheless, areas of 2-4 inch rainfall totals are likely --
    locally higher where convective training/backbuilding can
    materialize. Flash flood could occur on an isolated to scattered
    basis in that regime.

    Elsewhere, the Marginal Risk in eastern South Dakota has been
    expanded northward and westward across the remainder of the state.
    Scattered storms should develop in western South Dakota (where FFGs
    are locally low) and migrate eastward, focusing along a surface
    front in northeastern portions of the state. Lingering uncertainty
    regarding the extent of convection precludes a Slight Risk upgrade
    for that area in this outlook.

    Some consideration for removal of Marginal Risk was considered for
    portions of Oklahoma. Convective coverage seems to be a mitigating
    factor for flash flood potential in that area. The remainder of
    Marginal Risk areas were kept in place for this outlook, with
    scattered thunderstorm activity expected across southern New
    Mexico, west Texas, and near populated areas of southeastern
    Florida.

    See the previous discussion below for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Plains to Upper Midwest...
    The cold front is expected to set up across Minnesota into the
    Plains during the period, acting as the focus for organized
    convection. A ramp up in the low-level jet late in the period will
    likely be the primary concern for training/repeating rounds of
    heavy rainfall as daytime convection should be mainly progressive
    and more discrete in nature. The deterministic guidance remains
    disperse and ensemble probabilities low to provide confidence for
    any upgrade to Slight Risk at this time, but areas from southwest
    Minnesota into portions of Iowa and eastern South Dakota are of
    concern. For now, the Marginal Risk was maintained and adjusted to
    the latest trends, trimming some from the western to northern
    boundary.

    Further south into the Plains and Texas, the continued moist
    southeasterly flow and approaching mid level system out of Mexico
    will bring a greater coverage of thunderstorms and the threat of
    locally heavy rainfall. Overall organization of the convection is
    expected to be on the lower side, but the PW anomalies support
    potential for locally intense rain rates and the Marginal Risk.

    ...South Florida...
    Frontal boundary stalling in the vicinity of the area will remain
    the focus for scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms
    capable of producing intense rain rates and locally heavy rainfall
    over the highly urbanized corridor. The risk for Thursday shifts a
    bit further south across South Florida, mainly centering across the
    Miami metro.

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 05 2026 - 12Z Sat Jun 06 2026

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, TEXAS, AND GULF COAST...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    The ongoing forecast is on track with only minimal changes needed
    to the Marginal Risk area across the central Gulf Coast. Weak
    mid/upper troughing across the southern Rockies and Texas will
    promote another round of thunderstorm activity across a large part
    of Texas and southern New Mexico, with attendant flash flooding
    expected due to slow storm motions and abundant moisture. A second
    area of flash flood potential will exist as a disturbances moves
    toward portions of southeastern Louisiana and Mississippi late in
    the period, increasing rainfall potential across areas that have
    already been wet over the past 1-2 weeks. Lastly, scattered
    thunderstorm activity will exist ahead of a front from Iowa into
    Wisconsin and vicinity, spreading 1-2 inches of rain with local
    amounts reaching 4 inches. Storms in that area should be
    progressive in nature due to 20-30 knot mid/upper level flow,
    though localized backbuilding and mergers may increase totals
    locally. Marginal Risk is maintained for this scenario, though some
    parts of the region may necessitate an upgrade to Slight Risk in
    later forecast cycles.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Low pressure moving across the region with its associated cold
    front will be the focus for thunderstorm development Friday into
    Friday night with southwesterly flow bringing in an axis of
    relatively higher moisture. Aspects of this setup will favor
    some training/repeating thunderstorms but the overall motion will
    probably lean more progressive. If the front ends up more west to
    east oriented and allows for a better setup for training, portions
    of the area could need an upgrade to a Slight, but confidence on
    that is too low at this point.

    ...Texas into Gulf Coast...
    The mid/upper level feature over Mexico moves into Texas during
    this period, continuing another day of generally unsettled weather
    and scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms. If deeper
    instability can materialized, pockets of locally heavy rainfall
    will be possible due to the intense rain rates. Right now, the
    latest deterministic guidance and ensemble probabilities point
    toward central to south TX with greater potential.

    Along coastal Louisiana, a surface trough interacting with the
    higher moisture in place will bring a higher coverage of
    thunderstorms with the potential for intense rain rates and
    localized heavy rainfall.


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5iRRROblTcZclQyQuCyLfXjW0-2ngfPb-m2dFHIw5HN-= tfDT4lllMZtA0nZ_lq-9VcMUHX410O2ErsvN4AqBjvTop1Y$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5iRRROblTcZclQyQuCyLfXjW0-2ngfPb-m2dFHIw5HN-= tfDT4lllMZtA0nZ_lq-9VcMUHX410O2ErsvN4AqBSrlLTcE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5iRRROblTcZclQyQuCyLfXjW0-2ngfPb-m2dFHIw5HN-= tfDT4lllMZtA0nZ_lq-9VcMUHX410O2ErsvN4AqB0Yf6bA0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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