• HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 15 20:03:18 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 152002
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    402 PM EDT Sat Mar 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Mar 15 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MID-SOUTH INTO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    ...16Z Update...

    The shortwave trough over Texas and Oklahoma, which is south of
    the primary low circulation now over Wisconsin continues to drive
    much of the convection, severe, and flash flooding across the Lower
    Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys this morning. This shortwave is
    stronger than much of the previous guidance had suggested, which in
    turn has kept the primary area of storms that stretches from
    Louisiana to western Tennessee as of this writing further west.
    Thus, the heaviest rainfall totals this morning have been along the
    Mississippi River, with a secondary area of storms over northern
    Alabama into portions of eastern Tennessee.

    As the shortwave trough continues to get its act together, it will
    begin to shift eastward, resulting in the line of storms also
    moving east, with increasing forward speed. This in turn will
    gradually diminish the flash flooding threat as the line of storms
    will not have time to drop prodigious amounts of rain in these more
    eastward areas of Alabama, Georgia, and the Southern Appalachians.
    Given this, ERO upgrades were proposed along the Mississippi River
    where rainfall amounts over 3 inches in far southeastern Arkansas
    have already occurred, and the storms will continue to impact the
    area for another few hours before the significant eastward shift of
    the line begins. Conversely, because the storms have stayed
    further west than expected, there has been less rain into the
    southern Appalachians as the stronger storms with the eastward
    extent of the rain shield arm have stayed further west towards
    Chattanooga, and impacted the mountains far less. While all of
    these areas will see the main line of storms go through later today
    into tonight, the lack of prior rainfall should reduce the flooding
    impacts from the line significantly. For western North Carolina,
    there should still be an upslope component to the southerly flow
    along the line of storms as it moves through late tonight, which
    may locally enhance the rainfall as well as begin the rain sooner
    due to the added lift. The Slight Risk for this area has been
    maintained, while the Moderate for extreme southwest North Carolina
    and northern Georgia was downgraded with this update.

    The 12Z HREF guidance suite has also followed suit with the
    westward shift in the rainfall. A higher end Moderate has been
    extended southwestward to include northwestern Mississippi along
    the Mississippi River, Memphis, and extends northeastward into the
    Nashville area. Neighborhood probabilities in this area have
    increased to as high as 80% for 5 inches or more of rain. However,
    with the chances for 8 inches or more of rain only at 10-20% at
    most, we remain shy of criteria necessitating a High Risk upgrade.

    ...Pacific Northwest...

    No changes were made to the previous forecast. The heaviest rain
    will begin late this afternoon and persist through much of the
    night. With most of the expected rainfall capable of isolated
    flash flooding not having begun yet, there was no need determined
    for any changes.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 16 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE EAST COAST FROM NORTHEASTERN SOUTH CAROLINA THROUGH SOUTHERN
    NEW ENGLAND, AND FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST
    OREGON...

    ...2030Z Update...

    ...East Coast...

    A highly progressive cold front and negatively tilted longwave
    trough will traverse across much of the East Coast on Sunday. While
    the divergence associated with the trough will support storm
    longevity, instability will be lacking in most areas outside of the
    Southeast. Much of the Eastern Seaboard has also been in a dry
    period, where most rain will be beneficial. Given all of the above
    factors and fast forward speed of the front and associated rain=20
    and storms, the Marginal Risk area was trimmed dramatically with=20
    this update, largely confined to coastal areas, where some
    additional moisture from the Atlantic may locally help to spur on
    stronger storm development as the front approaches the coast.

    This remains a low-end Marginal Risk in all areas, but that is
    especially true in New England, where lack of instability will
    greatly diminish the flash flooding potential due to weak storms.
    The Marginal was maintained here due to the combination of urban
    and upslope/terrain factors, which should at least extend the
    duration of any heavier rainfall in this area. Further south into
    the Carolinas, the moisture availability will be greatly increased
    due to proximity to the Atlantic/Gulf Stream, so despite the storms
    moving through during the first half of the night, the heavier
    rates may lead to isolated instances of flash flooding.

    ...Pacific Northwest...

    A pair of lows moving off the Pacific will be forced into the=20
    coast by the next longwave trough to move into the continental U.S.
    The positive tilt of the trough will aim a continuous stream of
    heavy rain into the southwest corner of Oregon and the northwest
    corner of California. This will result in several inches of rain
    impacting that area. The Marginal Risk is unchanged, as these
    coastal areas will be able to handle the heavy rain with relatively
    few impacts. The most likely areas to see some flash flooding will
    be the rapidly rising streams and creeks that drain the coastal
    mountains and Cascades in this region. The rain will push southward
    into northern California and the Sacramento Valley Sunday night,
    which could cause isolated instances of flash flooding in the
    bigger towns such as Redding. Should the area expecting the
    greatest rainfall (the CA/OR border region) push south into more
    prone areas of northern California, then a Slight Risk upgrade may
    be needed.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7FGdl3nPa83k4HvAgel5u9WRY6ZwwMsMk6DRBZ-ErDZ6= Z12cG6Qeu53AbtR9BQtOZMPg9aQMyHaQHbjk8job256hzj0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7FGdl3nPa83k4HvAgel5u9WRY6ZwwMsMk6DRBZ-ErDZ6= Z12cG6Qeu53AbtR9BQtOZMPg9aQMyHaQHbjk8job_Si6kMU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7FGdl3nPa83k4HvAgel5u9WRY6ZwwMsMk6DRBZ-ErDZ6= Z12cG6Qeu53AbtR9BQtOZMPg9aQMyHaQHbjk8jobi9pNhk4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 16 01:00:54 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 160100
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    900 PM EDT Sat Mar 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Mar 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    ...Middle Tennessee, southern Appalachians to the east-central Gulf
    Coast...

    Heavy rain along with numerous areas of flash flooding were ongoing
    across Middle Tennessee into northern Alabama at 00Z with peak MRMS-
    derived hourly rainfall between 1 to 2 inches at times over the
    past 3 hours, and 3-hourly rainfall of 1-3 inches. This region=20
    contained lower instability with MUCAPE estimates of generally less
    than 500 J/kg, except for a narrow area of Middle Tennessee. The
    ongoing flash flooding in the vicinity of Middle Tennessee was
    co-located with relatively lower flash flood guidance values and=20
    was located on the northern edge of the better instability which=20
    was situated over central Mississippi/Alabama with MLCAPE of 1000=20
    to 2000+ J/kg via SPC mesoanalysis data. Strong low level moisture
    transport along with divergent and diffluent flow aloft, out ahead
    of a shortwave trough approaching the Lower Mississippi Valley,
    will continue to support areas of thunderstorms with embedded
    training through the night, as the precipitation axis shifts
    eastward through 12Z.

    The better instability to the south was co-located with higher=20
    flash flood guidance values and area of flash flooding were more=20
    scattered in nature. While the better forcing ahead of the
    shortwave will be north of the Gulf Coast region, the potential for
    higher rain rates (2-3 in/hr) due to the possibility of embedded=20
    training will exist, driving the Marginal Risk. However, any flash
    flood impacts for southern locations are expected to remain
    isolated at best.

    ...Ohio Valley...

    The potential for 1-3 inches of rain will exist across the region
    with mostly weak instability of less than 500 J/kg. However, strong
    dynamics ahead of the aforementioned upper trough and lower flash
    flood guidance values support a Slight Risk, decreasing to Marginal
    with northern extent. Rainfall rates may briefly exceed 1 in/hr,
    but should generally stay below that through 12Z.

    ...Pacific Northwest...

    The approach of an longwave trough over the eastern Pacific tonight
    will allow for a surface low located ~200 miles west of the coast
    of Oregon to move into Washington by 12Z Sunday. A trailing cold
    front will extend southwestward from the low and should be slow
    moving as a return to low level southerly flow offshore accompanies
    the approach of a shortwave, located near the leading edge of the=20
    offshore longwave trough.

    Within the anomalous moisture axis tied to the frontal boundary,
    precipitable water values are forecast by a consensus of guidance
    to peak between roughly 0.9 and 1.0 inches through 12Z Sunday along
    the coast of far northern California into southern Oregon.=20
    Resulting IVT values of 700-800 kg/m/s (per recent RAP forecasts)=20
    are expected to be long lasting while slowly edging southward=20
    along the southern Oregon coast. 850 mb winds are forecast to peak=20
    in the 60-70 kt range from the southwest overnight along the coast=20
    and 850-700 mb mean layer winds of 50-70 kt will carry moisture=20
    downstream to the Cascades. 12Z HREF and 18Z HRRR/NAM_nest guidance
    support the notion of hourly rainfall increasing overnight with=20
    0.5+ in/hr becoming highly likely in the 06-12Z window. Given the=20
    slow movement of the heavy rainfall axis, terrain influences are=20
    expected to allow for 3 to 6 inch 12-hr totals ending 12Z Sunday=20
    over the favored terrain of southwestern Oregon, and maxima of 2 to
    3 inches for downstream locations in the Cascades below snow=20
    levels (which will decrease with northward extent).

    No changes were made to the previous Marginal Risk area which
    covers much of western Oregon (west of the Cascade ridge) down into
    far northwestern California. Within this risk area will be the
    potential for excess runoff as rainfall totals steadily increase=20
    through the night, containing embedded rates possibly exceeding 0.7
    or 0.8 inches per hour toward the end of the period.

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 16 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE EAST COAST FROM NORTHEASTERN SOUTH CAROLINA THROUGH SOUTHERN
    NEW ENGLAND, AND FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST
    OREGON...

    ...2030Z Update...

    ...East Coast...

    A highly progressive cold front and negatively tilted longwave
    trough will traverse across much of the East Coast on Sunday. While
    the divergence associated with the trough will support storm
    longevity, instability will be lacking in most areas outside of the
    Southeast. Much of the Eastern Seaboard has also been in a dry
    period, where most rain will be beneficial. Given all of the above
    factors and fast forward speed of the front and associated rain
    and storms, the Marginal Risk area was trimmed dramatically with
    this update, largely confined to coastal areas, where some
    additional moisture from the Atlantic may locally help to spur on
    stronger storm development as the front approaches the coast.

    This remains a low-end Marginal Risk in all areas, but that is
    especially true in New England, where lack of instability will
    greatly diminish the flash flooding potential due to weak storms.
    The Marginal was maintained here due to the combination of urban
    and upslope/terrain factors, which should at least extend the
    duration of any heavier rainfall in this area. Further south into
    the Carolinas, the moisture availability will be greatly increased
    due to proximity to the Atlantic/Gulf Stream, so despite the storms
    moving through during the first half of the night, the heavier
    rates may lead to isolated instances of flash flooding.

    ...Pacific Northwest...

    A pair of lows moving off the Pacific will be forced into the
    coast by the next longwave trough to move into the continental U.S.
    The positive tilt of the trough will aim a continuous stream of
    heavy rain into the southwest corner of Oregon and the northwest
    corner of California. This will result in several inches of rain
    impacting that area. The Marginal Risk is unchanged, as these
    coastal areas will be able to handle the heavy rain with relatively
    few impacts. The most likely areas to see some flash flooding will
    be the rapidly rising streams and creeks that drain the coastal
    mountains and Cascades in this region. The rain will push southward
    into northern California and the Sacramento Valley Sunday night,
    which could cause isolated instances of flash flooding in the
    bigger towns such as Redding. Should the area expecting the
    greatest rainfall (the CA/OR border region) push south into more
    prone areas of northern California, then a Slight Risk upgrade may
    be needed.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-40VvAcSpsSrV4214_SGSLHdjK78SjpSN27RlnpG7rR8= h_fnbab69OZORe5ohTihBtip7DF0o7DFtCYqZA5N0DeR6Lw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-40VvAcSpsSrV4214_SGSLHdjK78SjpSN27RlnpG7rR8= h_fnbab69OZORe5ohTihBtip7DF0o7DFtCYqZA5NurSroGo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-40VvAcSpsSrV4214_SGSLHdjK78SjpSN27RlnpG7rR8= h_fnbab69OZORe5ohTihBtip7DF0o7DFtCYqZA5NfpLKWmU$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 16 08:26:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 160825
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    425 AM EDT Sun Mar 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 16 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE EAST COAST FROM SOUTH CAROLINA THROUGH SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND,=20
    AND FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    ...East Coast...

    A progressive cold front and negatively tilted longwave trough=20
    will traverse much of the East Coast today, as the upper-level=20
    pattern becomes a bit less amplified (shortwave over the Southeast=20
    cutting off from northern/polar stream with ridging building over=20
    central CONUS). Convection in association with the front looks to=20
    generally result in areal average totals of 1.0-1.5" (per latest=20
    WPC QPF), but the latest CAMs (00z HREF suite) suggests relatively=20
    high odds (30-50%+) for localized totals in excessive of 2" (per=20
    40-km neighborhood probabilities). The inherited Marginal risk area
    was expanded a bit to generally encompass where 2" exceedance probs
    are 30%+ (but excluding FL and much of southeast GA, as FFGs are=20 particularly high here). While this is a lower-end Marginal risk=20
    for most places, the risk is maximized over coastal NC where 3"=20
    exceedance probs are 40-60%.=20

    ...Southwest Oregon into Northern California...

    A relatively weak and narrow atmospheric river (AR) will continue
    to bring moderate to heavy rainfall to the OR/CA coastal border
    region with additional forecast localized totals today of 2-5".
    Most of this rainfall will be spread out over a 12-18 hour period
    with peak rates staying under 1"/hr due to a lack of instability
    (though 1"/hr rates may be reached for a brief period near the
    CA/OR border along the coast where the HREF indicates MU CAPE up to
    nearly 500 J/kg). Maintained the inherited Marginal risk, though a
    future targeted upgrade to Slight risk remains possible (depending
    on the evolution of rainfall this morning and any upticks in QPF in
    the 12z HREF suite).

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_E215qJVJD0nfnpZo2yNrpfOp15W3GCdbPAZ-yN3Ix7H= vy5vz0ZR3Y8GgUI8yG_DCYUkzwNK3MUyCUwYihYKSwqM4lI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_E215qJVJD0nfnpZo2yNrpfOp15W3GCdbPAZ-yN3Ix7H= vy5vz0ZR3Y8GgUI8yG_DCYUkzwNK3MUyCUwYihYKaUCZqDo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_E215qJVJD0nfnpZo2yNrpfOp15W3GCdbPAZ-yN3Ix7H= vy5vz0ZR3Y8GgUI8yG_DCYUkzwNK3MUyCUwYihYKJaOI3Og$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 16 15:37:44 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 161537
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1137 AM EDT Sun Mar 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Mar 16 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MID-ATLANTIC, AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA=20
    AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    ...16Z Update...

    ...East Coast...

    Very few changes were needed to the inherited Marginal Risk area,
    while it's a low-end Marginal for the DC-Boston corridor, it
    remains a more substantial Marginal Risk area for the Carolinas and
    eastern Virginia. All of the instability remains over the Southeast
    and Midwest, with very little to none for most of the Mid-Atlantic
    and Northeast. Thus, the strongest storms will likely remain from
    the eastern Carolinas to eastern Virginia, with only elevated
    convection making it to New England. While this raises the flash
    flooding potential in the Southeast, this would conversely also=20 substantially cap rainfall rates into the Northeast. Urban=20
    concerns and upslope into the terrain of southern New England and=20
    eastern Pennsylvania should still bring the flash flooding threat=20
    to Marginal levels, so no changes were needed there.

    ...West Coast...

    No changes were needed to the ongoing Marginal Risk area. A long
    fetch of persistent southwest to westerly flow will continue to
    pump plentiful Pacific moisture into the west coast, with rates
    exceeding a half inch per hour at times. Any resultant flooding
    would likely be larger-scale river flooding since the rain rates
    don't necessarily support flash flooding, but rapid rises in
    streams and creeks could locally lead to out-of-bank flooding.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...East Coast...

    A progressive cold front and negatively tilted longwave trough
    will traverse much of the East Coast today, as the upper-level
    pattern becomes a bit less amplified (shortwave over the Southeast
    cutting off from northern/polar stream with ridging building over
    central CONUS). Convection in association with the front looks to
    generally result in areal average totals of 1.0-1.5" (per latest
    WPC QPF), but the latest CAMs (00z HREF suite) suggests relatively
    high odds (30-50%+) for localized totals in excessive of 2" (per
    40-km neighborhood probabilities). The inherited Marginal risk area
    was expanded a bit to generally encompass where 2" exceedance probs
    are 30%+ (but excluding FL and much of southeast GA, as FFGs are
    particularly high here). While this is a lower-end Marginal risk
    for most places, the risk is maximized over coastal NC where 3"
    exceedance probs are 40-60%.

    ...Southwest Oregon into Northern California...

    A relatively weak and narrow atmospheric river (AR) will continue
    to bring moderate to heavy rainfall to the OR/CA coastal border
    region with additional forecast localized totals today of 2-5".
    Most of this rainfall will be spread out over a 12-18 hour period
    with peak rates staying under 1"/hr due to a lack of instability
    (though 1"/hr rates may be reached for a brief period near the
    CA/OR border along the coast where the HREF indicates MU CAPE up to
    nearly 500 J/kg). Maintained the inherited Marginal risk, though a
    future targeted upgrade to Slight risk remains possible (depending
    on the evolution of rainfall this morning and any upticks in QPF in
    the 12z HREF suite).

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6DtrR0urkFQ5UU0BOKkjllczoiDXgR8kNUYIAdgh-LvF= p1ePTE6oydMidfGWXnCVbJRSOXimy8_Qckto8lTDxUdaatY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6DtrR0urkFQ5UU0BOKkjllczoiDXgR8kNUYIAdgh-LvF= p1ePTE6oydMidfGWXnCVbJRSOXimy8_Qckto8lTDi45FU64$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6DtrR0urkFQ5UU0BOKkjllczoiDXgR8kNUYIAdgh-LvF= p1ePTE6oydMidfGWXnCVbJRSOXimy8_Qckto8lTD135REkE$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 16 20:00:19 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 162000
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 PM EDT Sun Mar 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Mar 16 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA AND NORTHEAST NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...20Z Special Update...

    In coordination with AKQ/Wakefield, VA forecast office, a Slight
    Risk upgrade was introduced with this update. The lines of storms
    approaching the Slight Risk area from the west are expected to slow
    and reform on the southern/western end of the line, resulting in
    some training of the storms. While the area has been dry, the urban
    areas within the Slight, namely the Hampton Roads area, could be=20
    at particular risk for flash flooding as the storms will be capable
    of 1-2 inch per hour rates. With potential for training
    thunderstorms, these high rainfall rates could exceed flash flood
    guidance in the area, resulting in very rapid filling of storm=20
    drains and drainage areas, resulting in localized flash and urban=20
    flooding. A Flood Watch has been issued for areas at particular=20
    risk.

    Wegman

    ...16Z Update...

    ...West Coast...

    No changes were needed to the ongoing Marginal Risk area. A long
    fetch of persistent southwest to westerly flow will continue to
    pump plentiful Pacific moisture into the west coast, with rates
    exceeding a half inch per hour at times. Any resultant flooding
    would likely be larger-scale river flooding since the rain rates
    don't necessarily support flash flooding, but rapid rises in
    streams and creeks could locally lead to out-of-bank flooding.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...East Coast...

    A progressive cold front and negatively tilted longwave trough
    will traverse much of the East Coast today, as the upper-level
    pattern becomes a bit less amplified (shortwave over the Southeast
    cutting off from northern/polar stream with ridging building over
    central CONUS). Convection in association with the front looks to
    generally result in areal average totals of 1.0-1.5" (per latest
    WPC QPF), but the latest CAMs (00z HREF suite) suggests relatively
    high odds (30-50%+) for localized totals in excessive of 2" (per
    40-km neighborhood probabilities). The inherited Marginal risk area
    was expanded a bit to generally encompass where 2" exceedance probs
    are 30%+ (but excluding FL and much of southeast GA, as FFGs are
    particularly high here). While this is a lower-end Marginal risk
    for most places, the risk is maximized over coastal NC where 3"
    exceedance probs are 40-60%.

    ...Southwest Oregon into Northern California...

    A relatively weak and narrow atmospheric river (AR) will continue
    to bring moderate to heavy rainfall to the OR/CA coastal border
    region with additional forecast localized totals today of 2-5".
    Most of this rainfall will be spread out over a 12-18 hour period
    with peak rates staying under 1"/hr due to a lack of instability
    (though 1"/hr rates may be reached for a brief period near the
    CA/OR border along the coast where the HREF indicates MU CAPE up to
    nearly 500 J/kg). Maintained the inherited Marginal risk, though a
    future targeted upgrade to Slight risk remains possible (depending
    on the evolution of rainfall this morning and any upticks in QPF in
    the 12z HREF suite).

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7LAd_si0ybsa7cnp24TsCrAgQQdGw8ejPpBzQO8I_5aN= 3akO_MYSw8BFdHMfugJxWQd20t3jzH6nMXKQu-v_lbw22Gc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7LAd_si0ybsa7cnp24TsCrAgQQdGw8ejPpBzQO8I_5aN= 3akO_MYSw8BFdHMfugJxWQd20t3jzH6nMXKQu-v_JpmRWNs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7LAd_si0ybsa7cnp24TsCrAgQQdGw8ejPpBzQO8I_5aN= 3akO_MYSw8BFdHMfugJxWQd20t3jzH6nMXKQu-v_xMP7GeE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 17 01:00:24 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 170100
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    900 PM EDT Sun Mar 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA AND NORTHEAST NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...East Coast...

    Scattered thunderstorms were ongoing at 00Z from central New York
    into far western Virginia, located out ahead of the advancing
    northern portion of a mid-upper level trough seen on water vapor=20
    imagery over southern Ontario. A second axis of scattered
    thunderstorms was noted from the DelMarVa Peninsula into south-
    central Virginia, central North Carolina and the Southeast
    coast...out ahead of an advancing southern portion of the mid-upper
    level trough over the east-central Gulf Coast...with a relative=20
    break between the northern and southern convective areas. MLCAPE=20
    was approximately 500 to 1000 J/kg from eastern Pennsylvania into=20
    the eastern Carolinas.=20

    Mean steering flow was from the southwest with 0-6 km layer winds
    at 50-60 kt, but areas of training were occurring within low level
    axes of convergence, aligned with the mean steering flow,=20
    supporting 1-2 in/hr rainfall rates at times. Of greatest concern=20
    in the short term was an area of expanding thunderstorm intensity=20
    in the vicinity of the Virginia/North Carolina border at 00Z which
    was along a pre-frontal, low level convergence axis that extended=20
    from eastern North Carolina into southeastern Virginia and the=20
    southern DelMarVa Peninsula. Slow movement of this convergence=20
    axis, coupled with strengthening right-entrance region ascent=20
    related to an upper level jet max over the northern Mid-Atlantic=20
    region should provide for a prolonged period of heavy rain with=20
    hourly rates between 1-2 inches at times, leading to additional 3-4
    inch totals (at least locally). The Slight Risk introduced Sunday=20
    afternoon remains centered over southeastern Virginia where a=20
    cluster of urban influences result in a greater potential for rapid
    rises of water due to heavy rainfall, compared to locations north=20
    (DelMarVa into southeastern New Jersey) and south (eastern North=20 Carolina).=20

    Elsewhere, similar areas of training (but with lower hourly
    rainfall totals, capped near 1 inch) are expected into portions of
    Long Island and southern New England later tonight where 2 to 3
    (perhaps up to 4 inches) may occur through 12Z Monday.

    ...West Coast...

    The anomalous moisture plume (+1 to +2 standardized PWAT anomalies) which
    has been focused into northern California and southwestern Oregon
    over the past 12-24 hours has begun to shift south since 18-21Z=20
    Sunday. Various observation networks showed that rainfall totals=20
    over the past 24 hours ranged from 3 to perhaps as high as 10=20
    inches along the southern Oregon Coastal Ranges. As an upper trough
    axis over the eastern Pacific continues to advances southeastward=20
    tonight, the low level moisture axis will continue to weaken and
    drop south ahead of the associated cold front currently located
    across the northern California coast. The greatest additional=20
    rainfall totals are expected in the upslope ranges of the northern=20
    Sierra Nevada where an additional 1 to 3 inches may fall through=20
    12Z, below crashing snow levels behind the cold front. Back to the
    west along the Coastal Ranges, PWATs and low level winds will be
    much weaker compared to earlier on Sunday but steep mid-level lapse
    rates will allow for thunderstorms with brief/intense rainfall to
    become scattered and move onshore ahead of an approaching surface
    low and trailing trough axis.

    Occasional rain rates in excess of 0.5 in/hr will be possible both
    along the Coastal Ranges and into the Sierra Nevada, but with
    additional rainfall totals along the coast being limited to 1 to 2
    inches at most through 12Z Monday. Any areas of existing/ongoing=20
    flooding could be exacerbated with additional, locally heavy,=20
    rainfall.=20

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82okxitDzwzy9HR62iMx4n9XAqaUu1F1coBOmfltiscw= TbXEZA-BmS-1TOo8OqpYu3tjUOLqnGqjtaH8TKzHo39iHks$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82okxitDzwzy9HR62iMx4n9XAqaUu1F1coBOmfltiscw= TbXEZA-BmS-1TOo8OqpYu3tjUOLqnGqjtaH8TKzHPvfqFPg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82okxitDzwzy9HR62iMx4n9XAqaUu1F1coBOmfltiscw= TbXEZA-BmS-1TOo8OqpYu3tjUOLqnGqjtaH8TKzHh35a9xk$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 17 07:35:50 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 170735
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    335 AM EDT Mon Mar 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!42fo7hLDlbLhLVfqZxapF265grQ9FfZeEbpDYSWA3KZp= Gc3qC_poLhY7rxO7_FCZ28htMVFavwVfTbZpiIgM-yQ-MtE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!42fo7hLDlbLhLVfqZxapF265grQ9FfZeEbpDYSWA3KZp= Gc3qC_poLhY7rxO7_FCZ28htMVFavwVfTbZpiIgM1dhQqAM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!42fo7hLDlbLhLVfqZxapF265grQ9FfZeEbpDYSWA3KZp= Gc3qC_poLhY7rxO7_FCZ28htMVFavwVfTbZpiIgMcUPgPdc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 17 15:30:05 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 171529
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1129 AM EDT Mon Mar 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Nq8sF2Ryw5QAMWiz4cKUNXupw8SCxA-g0DFxsHLh-lW= LlDYqzg0DwWsXdIykILWPdiS3HcA97Q4i0H1vlDVV3q3yzo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Nq8sF2Ryw5QAMWiz4cKUNXupw8SCxA-g0DFxsHLh-lW= LlDYqzg0DwWsXdIykILWPdiS3HcA97Q4i0H1vlDVuN8TYJY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Nq8sF2Ryw5QAMWiz4cKUNXupw8SCxA-g0DFxsHLh-lW= LlDYqzg0DwWsXdIykILWPdiS3HcA97Q4i0H1vlDVpzt9WIY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 17 19:07:39 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 171907
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    307 PM EDT Mon Mar 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    A strengthening low pressure system moving into the Plains and
    Upper Midwest on Day 3 may bring a low-end threat of excessive
    rainfall and flooding to portions of eastern Iowa, southern=20
    Wisconsin, and northern Illinois. Elevated convection lifting=20
    east/northeast along the advancing warm front could produce intense
    enough rain rates to cause some runoff issues. However,=20
    uncertainty in the low track (rain/snow line) precludes an=20
    introduction of a Marginal Risk at this time.=20

    Further south along the trailing cold front, a line of showers and thunderstorms is likely to form across portions of the OH/TN=20
    Valleys. QPF amounts look modest at this time and convection should
    be fairly progressive. However, given recent heavy rainfall and=20
    wet antecedent conditions, this area will need to be monitored in=20
    future updates if QPF trends higher or storm motions slow.=20

    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8nzyzVJSdttWqPpxwxOeaj7375UNzjGYSgHPAzzRKNyv= 7aw7uVw6_2bRWK63XO0d4_yYXK9EDyfPBmZ1LyOU6skzqnM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8nzyzVJSdttWqPpxwxOeaj7375UNzjGYSgHPAzzRKNyv= 7aw7uVw6_2bRWK63XO0d4_yYXK9EDyfPBmZ1LyOUw75RzWQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8nzyzVJSdttWqPpxwxOeaj7375UNzjGYSgHPAzzRKNyv= 7aw7uVw6_2bRWK63XO0d4_yYXK9EDyfPBmZ1LyOUR8YWHjQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 18 00:17:51 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 180017
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    817 PM EDT Mon Mar 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    A strengthening low pressure system moving into the Plains and
    Upper Midwest on Day 3 may bring a low-end threat of excessive
    rainfall and flooding to portions of eastern Iowa, southern
    Wisconsin, and northern Illinois. Elevated convection lifting
    east/northeast along the advancing warm front could produce intense
    enough rain rates to cause some runoff issues. However,
    uncertainty in the low track (rain/snow line) precludes an
    introduction of a Marginal Risk at this time.

    Further south along the trailing cold front, a line of showers and thunderstorms is likely to form across portions of the OH/TN
    Valleys. QPF amounts look modest at this time and convection should
    be fairly progressive. However, given recent heavy rainfall and
    wet antecedent conditions, this area will need to be monitored in
    future updates if QPF trends higher or storm motions slow.

    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7uQTIKYNRCN-FgF9R-BJzDkjyWhMpcUc4JjbQMq5bGrZ= cQcj7a08sJ5a2hjjIEZNRzq1D7wMX1Hv-3Wc3Nd2gjn3TkY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7uQTIKYNRCN-FgF9R-BJzDkjyWhMpcUc4JjbQMq5bGrZ= cQcj7a08sJ5a2hjjIEZNRzq1D7wMX1Hv-3Wc3Nd2qALhHio$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7uQTIKYNRCN-FgF9R-BJzDkjyWhMpcUc4JjbQMq5bGrZ= cQcj7a08sJ5a2hjjIEZNRzq1D7wMX1Hv-3Wc3Nd22dn9DEo$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 18 07:40:44 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 180740
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    340 AM EDT Tue Mar 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7UfZWMWtBdvEHyt6je89D2DGMjks7k8UudpoTKgVVz8Z= 5dZ4X5QbethPCWpvpGNHgmoSIaNb_jZitwLymVdRFVAyscU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7UfZWMWtBdvEHyt6je89D2DGMjks7k8UudpoTKgVVz8Z= 5dZ4X5QbethPCWpvpGNHgmoSIaNb_jZitwLymVdRo-eu7ac$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7UfZWMWtBdvEHyt6je89D2DGMjks7k8UudpoTKgVVz8Z= 5dZ4X5QbethPCWpvpGNHgmoSIaNb_jZitwLymVdRYNEeAq8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 18 15:58:08 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 181557
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1157 AM EDT Tue Mar 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5YOuRJGHjBjx8iq7PSR_arkyYFZCXWMiZHDeDa0JuMZ-= IoSL48dEX9PoZQw0gxWX-z2PgcnBkycyUF0Fc7xQLT4derw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5YOuRJGHjBjx8iq7PSR_arkyYFZCXWMiZHDeDa0JuMZ-= IoSL48dEX9PoZQw0gxWX-z2PgcnBkycyUF0Fc7xQSZ_MAb8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5YOuRJGHjBjx8iq7PSR_arkyYFZCXWMiZHDeDa0JuMZ-= IoSL48dEX9PoZQw0gxWX-z2PgcnBkycyUF0Fc7xQp7xGUPI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 18 20:05:09 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 182004
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    404 PM EDT Tue Mar 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Mar 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!83ZneuUGkaeyEXixcrsAnSJw6TIyhF4vMcElf1rgvOGe= Oq1qrD96BfH_wd_tmowf7c8kQ7KAJB74Ru33JsFyjgjGGuU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!83ZneuUGkaeyEXixcrsAnSJw6TIyhF4vMcElf1rgvOGe= Oq1qrD96BfH_wd_tmowf7c8kQ7KAJB74Ru33JsFyPsEL878$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!83ZneuUGkaeyEXixcrsAnSJw6TIyhF4vMcElf1rgvOGe= Oq1qrD96BfH_wd_tmowf7c8kQ7KAJB74Ru33JsFyMI6gUsY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 19 00:21:09 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 190020
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    820 PM EDT Tue Mar 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!88K1LvKwJPYej06gY-C5-xGIUj2ZialMSbffwim87Dru= 3z0sNWM707n4cQYR-2N9F2woO8A0Dok4JyyGt6O3PeycNcg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!88K1LvKwJPYej06gY-C5-xGIUj2ZialMSbffwim87Dru= 3z0sNWM707n4cQYR-2N9F2woO8A0Dok4JyyGt6O3QUpH2GE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!88K1LvKwJPYej06gY-C5-xGIUj2ZialMSbffwim87Dru= 3z0sNWM707n4cQYR-2N9F2woO8A0Dok4JyyGt6O3NGJ8SUE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 19 08:00:48 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 190800
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 AM EDT Wed Mar 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-l4vFBuhIaaugJnX1B_YQYGIME-_NRugUViCYQ1rk0k0= i4bY_CAuBpZZsm4rJmnnCMvghGPBcGFjJjUv7MT8QvuAfH0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-l4vFBuhIaaugJnX1B_YQYGIME-_NRugUViCYQ1rk0k0= i4bY_CAuBpZZsm4rJmnnCMvghGPBcGFjJjUv7MT8Gu7oqb8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-l4vFBuhIaaugJnX1B_YQYGIME-_NRugUViCYQ1rk0k0= i4bY_CAuBpZZsm4rJmnnCMvghGPBcGFjJjUv7MT8J_HmkSw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 19 15:30:22 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 191530
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1130 AM EDT Wed Mar 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8WecvnOn7Aho6DR15_a7yTApc3Kl8pUci0JZCsxzTLd8= opa2uF4g9TYxaQyfpIkbyS7d61juIjz0AlR8OaSftAXNmy4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8WecvnOn7Aho6DR15_a7yTApc3Kl8pUci0JZCsxzTLd8= opa2uF4g9TYxaQyfpIkbyS7d61juIjz0AlR8OaSfzTJuaRc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8WecvnOn7Aho6DR15_a7yTApc3Kl8pUci0JZCsxzTLd8= opa2uF4g9TYxaQyfpIkbyS7d61juIjz0AlR8OaSfz0Vg4QM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 19 19:51:46 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 191951
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    351 PM EDT Wed Mar 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Mar 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-l1vPKKU47uCdtyDqepfcZ6yaguSYhc7QKH6z3kiNv5c= 9OavbnhUlKBjuDPny65sY75MT5vDpWWYmGVzyDhBP4LD3N0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-l1vPKKU47uCdtyDqepfcZ6yaguSYhc7QKH6z3kiNv5c= 9OavbnhUlKBjuDPny65sY75MT5vDpWWYmGVzyDhBpz01AzA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-l1vPKKU47uCdtyDqepfcZ6yaguSYhc7QKH6z3kiNv5c= 9OavbnhUlKBjuDPny65sY75MT5vDpWWYmGVzyDhBwBtLUyY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 20 00:27:48 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 200027
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    827 PM EDT Wed Mar 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4huM0EkuNQvAxVCt_jvW2BrNQ0UA-vY4jcN3NWf4tZNW= _i_Sh2SrCHysYEuFZz509oBFSlUvNEJqn05Q8dhsNMNxSyI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4huM0EkuNQvAxVCt_jvW2BrNQ0UA-vY4jcN3NWf4tZNW= _i_Sh2SrCHysYEuFZz509oBFSlUvNEJqn05Q8dhsgR2JCNU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4huM0EkuNQvAxVCt_jvW2BrNQ0UA-vY4jcN3NWf4tZNW= _i_Sh2SrCHysYEuFZz509oBFSlUvNEJqn05Q8dhsXHFNc1A$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 20 05:50:52 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 200550
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    150 AM EDT Thu Mar 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82vpucN3S1gCUqZsl5W38Fh5vOsDv2Loj-Exk5YGzooK= 9mXfR3klJtbW6JiN268rSHhd5PsliYTRVwQs8WPg13bI_1I$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82vpucN3S1gCUqZsl5W38Fh5vOsDv2Loj-Exk5YGzooK= 9mXfR3klJtbW6JiN268rSHhd5PsliYTRVwQs8WPgWn1lHp4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82vpucN3S1gCUqZsl5W38Fh5vOsDv2Loj-Exk5YGzooK= 9mXfR3klJtbW6JiN268rSHhd5PsliYTRVwQs8WPgkA6ITo8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 20 15:39:38 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 201539
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1139 AM EDT Thu Mar 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Hpcu-LHmX56YPucTcfEENcKQ_pAfHZNBU8WjVuXmA0i= he1Zk5zOKyswtH6tnJ8l818cn7QoJdexUDwK08lCCmMDlc0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Hpcu-LHmX56YPucTcfEENcKQ_pAfHZNBU8WjVuXmA0i= he1Zk5zOKyswtH6tnJ8l818cn7QoJdexUDwK08lCk33ffIg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Hpcu-LHmX56YPucTcfEENcKQ_pAfHZNBU8WjVuXmA0i= he1Zk5zOKyswtH6tnJ8l818cn7QoJdexUDwK08lCa6a_Noc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 20 20:01:10 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 202000
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 PM EDT Thu Mar 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Mar 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_70TzNacalU1Mp76wpvSJT_wySzlY9pfJFIhXeqdTwnh= QcDTkxjyrn5c0LAX8amzlkiM8bkRPwUxdfhirRqOeYZeEj0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_70TzNacalU1Mp76wpvSJT_wySzlY9pfJFIhXeqdTwnh= QcDTkxjyrn5c0LAX8amzlkiM8bkRPwUxdfhirRqO6r1Io0Y$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_70TzNacalU1Mp76wpvSJT_wySzlY9pfJFIhXeqdTwnh= QcDTkxjyrn5c0LAX8amzlkiM8bkRPwUxdfhirRqO_QlCGvE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 21 00:22:02 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 210020
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    820 PM EDT Thu Mar 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8p9xcxZKm6ERMJpKWCaV4iigaDjSfZGwxrH_NxwHEj3u= roVzHWrZVj6i4VRx-VkaKkPj41OTkwDfskweXpMzPhI9Mw4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8p9xcxZKm6ERMJpKWCaV4iigaDjSfZGwxrH_NxwHEj3u= roVzHWrZVj6i4VRx-VkaKkPj41OTkwDfskweXpMzSnNQ3DU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8p9xcxZKm6ERMJpKWCaV4iigaDjSfZGwxrH_NxwHEj3u= roVzHWrZVj6i4VRx-VkaKkPj41OTkwDfskweXpMzOCJB_3A$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 21 07:37:19 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 210737
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    337 AM EDT Fri Mar 21 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS AS WELL AS FOR THE
    WESTERN OLYMPIC PENINSULA OF WASHINGTON STATE...

    ...Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...

    A strong cold front trailing behind a deep low tracking across the
    Upper Midwest will be the primary forcing supporting widespread
    shower and thunderstorm activity across portions of the Mississippi
    and Tennessee Valleys on Sunday. The front will be driven with a
    robust longwave trough moving across the Midwest. Much of the
    Marginal Risk area will be in the favorable RER of the jet. As is
    typical with thunderstorm outbreaks, there will be an LLJ out of
    the Gulf that will be in place ahead of the front. The
    southwesterly LLJ will be parallel to the orientation of the front
    (southwest to northeast), which will support training of the
    leading convection. 5-10 kt southwesterly Corfidi Vectors further
    support the potential for training. Thus, the forward speed of the
    front, which should be slowing...but should be fast enough to limit
    training potential...will be the deciding factor as to how
    widespread the instances of flash flooding will be.=20

    FFGs decrease markedly towards the north into the Ohio Valley, but
    the lack of atmospheric instability in that region will keep most
    of the rainfall in this area to stratiform rain. Further, when the
    front is moving southeastward across the Ohio Valley, the forcing
    and moisture availability will not be as optimized as a bit later
    when the front is further south. Thus, the inherited Marginal Risk
    over much of Kentucky and southern Indiana was trimmed with this
    update. The greater instability and Gulf moisture will be closer to
    the Gulf, where the Marginal Risk remains with this update. The
    flooding threat will be partially offset by the higher FFGs in the
    lower Mississippi Valley, so between that and the forward speed of
    the front, instances of flash flooding should remain isolated,
    favoring a continuation of the Marginal Risk. As always, a slowing
    of the front or additional moisture/instability with future updates
    could require a Slight Risk upgrade. Should the front become more
    progressive then it's possible the Marginal Risk could be
    downgraded or shrunk further.

    ...Olympic Peninsula of Washington...

    A strong trailing cold front will move into the coast of the
    Pacific Northwest on Sunday. IVT values will peak around 600-650
    kg/ms during this time. The western Olympic Peninsula's soils are
    well saturated from repeated rounds of rain over the past few
    weeks, so this round could result in isolated flash flooding on the
    smaller streams and creeks that drain the Olympic Mountains. There
    were no changes to the inherited Marginal Risk. Expect 2 to 4
    inches of new rainfall in the area through the day on Sunday.=20=20

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5tAZpAa9KDH7_5uxhL_XhA60txxKXKBYMNbtnsnqUe7k= FoGloJBr04AwdGzpTM-GzqS_IwN2rzixWwpJsjLhZ-dLqlo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5tAZpAa9KDH7_5uxhL_XhA60txxKXKBYMNbtnsnqUe7k= FoGloJBr04AwdGzpTM-GzqS_IwN2rzixWwpJsjLhEQiPtn8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5tAZpAa9KDH7_5uxhL_XhA60txxKXKBYMNbtnsnqUe7k= FoGloJBr04AwdGzpTM-GzqS_IwN2rzixWwpJsjLh-w4-_LU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 21 15:19:30 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 211519
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1119 AM EDT Fri Mar 21 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS AS WELL AS FOR THE
    WESTERN OLYMPIC PENINSULA OF WASHINGTON STATE...

    ...Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...

    A strong cold front trailing from a deep low tracking across the=20
    Upper Midwest will be the primary forcing supporting widespread=20
    shower and thunderstorm activity across portions of the Mississippi
    and Tennessee Valleys on Sunday. The front will be driven with a=20
    robust longwave trough moving across the Midwest. Much of the=20
    Marginal Risk area will be in the favorable RER of the jet. As is=20
    typical with thunderstorm outbreaks, there will be an LLJ out of=20
    the Gulf that will be in place ahead of the front. The=20
    southwesterly LLJ will be parallel to the orientation of the front=20 (southwest to northeast), which will support training of the=20
    leading convection. 5-10 kt southwesterly Corfidi Vectors further=20
    support the potential for training. Thus, the forward speed of the=20
    front, which should be slowing...but should be fast enough to limit
    training potential...will be the deciding factor as to how=20
    widespread the instances of flash flooding will be.

    FFGs decrease markedly towards the north into the Ohio Valley, but
    the lack of atmospheric instability in that region will keep most
    of the rainfall in this area to stratiform rain. Further, when the
    front is moving southeastward across the Ohio Valley, the forcing
    and moisture availability will not be as optimized as a bit later
    when the front is further south. Thus, the inherited Marginal Risk
    over much of Kentucky and southern Indiana was trimmed with this
    update. The greater instability and Gulf moisture will be closer to
    the Gulf, where the Marginal Risk remains with this update. The
    flooding threat will be partially offset by the higher FFGs in the
    lower Mississippi Valley, so between that and the forward speed of
    the front, instances of flash flooding should remain isolated,
    favoring a continuation of the Marginal Risk. As always, a slowing
    of the front or additional moisture/instability with future updates
    could require a Slight Risk upgrade. Should the front become more
    progressive then it's possible the Marginal Risk could be
    downgraded or shrunk further.

    ...Olympic Peninsula of Washington...

    A strong trailing cold front will move into the coast of the
    Pacific Northwest on Sunday. IVT values will peak around 600-650
    kg/ms during this time. The western Olympic Peninsula's soils are
    well saturated from repeated rounds of rain over the past few
    weeks, so this round could result in isolated flash flooding on the
    smaller streams and creeks that drain the Olympic Mountains. There
    were no changes to the inherited Marginal Risk. Expect 2 to 4
    inches of new rainfall in the area through the day on Sunday.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7vRiTLu4EAvaCeJpqsu6syLa2QstxCjdIG0A0vps_Cw1= mJcCovj_UUcp7ylJVz--aD8Vy3R5safj1O4Pdygt5061v4w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7vRiTLu4EAvaCeJpqsu6syLa2QstxCjdIG0A0vps_Cw1= mJcCovj_UUcp7ylJVz--aD8Vy3R5safj1O4PdygtTNZkgqQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7vRiTLu4EAvaCeJpqsu6syLa2QstxCjdIG0A0vps_Cw1= mJcCovj_UUcp7ylJVz--aD8Vy3R5safj1O4PdygtmmUa5pw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 21 19:55:21 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 211955
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    355 PM EDT Fri Mar 21 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Mar 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE MID-SOUTH, SOUTHEAST, WEST VIRGINIA, & WESTERN WASHINGTON...

    ...Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...
    A progressive, strong cold front trailing from a deep low tracking
    across the Upper Midwest will be the primary focus for shower and=20 thunderstorm activity in this area on Sunday. Due to the strength=20
    of the upper level system driving the front forward, divergence=20
    exists aloft in the front's vicinity. The pre- frontal=20
    southwesterly low-level jet will be parallel to the orientation of=20
    the front (southwest to northeast), which could support training of
    the leading convection. While the forward speed of the front slows
    as the parent cyclone gets more distant, it should move fast=20
    enough to limit training potential.

    While FFGs decrease markedly towards the north into the Ohio=20
    Valley, the lack of atmospheric instability in that region will=20
    keep most of the rainfall in that area to stratiform rain. While=20
    minimal instability outside of southern KY limits the northward=20
    extent of the risk area, recent GFS runs suggest that a new=20
    Marginal Risk was prudent across portions of WV, where flash flood
    guidance values remain relatively low -- ~1.50"/3 hours -- and=20
    frontogenesis may be able to allow rainfall amounts to challenge=20
    the 3 hourly FFG.

    The greater instability and moisture will be closer to the Gulf,=20
    though precipitable water values are expected to remain under 1.5"=20 regionally, which brings into question the degree of convective=20
    coverage expected. The flooding threat will be partially offset by=20
    the higher FFGs in the lower Mississippi Valley, so between that=20
    and the forward speed of the front, instances of flash flooding=20
    should remain isolated and most likely across urban areas. The=20
    above favors a continuation of the Marginal Risk across portions of
    the Mid-South and Southeast.


    ...Western Washington...=20
    A strong trailing cold front will move into the coast of the=20
    Pacific Northwest on Sunday. Low-level inflow from the Pacific
    towards 50 kts with near zero MU CAPE will allow IVT values to=20
    peak around 600-650 kg/ms. This would also allow hourly rain totals
    to be close to 0.5", which could be problematic in any burn scars.
    Soils along the westward facing slopes of WA are well saturated=20
    from repeated rounds of rain over the past few weeks, so this round
    could result in flooding on the rivers, streams, and creeks that=20
    drain the Olympic Mountains, particularly the Skokomish. As=20
    freezing levels rise, the western slopes of the Cascades should be=20
    equally in the mix for higher rainfall amounts, so looped the=20
    Marginal Risk farther inland to encompass that area. Expect 2 to 4=20
    inches of new rainfall in the area through the day on Sunday.

    Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-rIIpULaomWubvGmw8eX4TPrGB8Us527WGo27VrnjKct= 8Okzb8DWoxDVqI-Kt1F0vmhxf0GaBx1G87LjSP6nkTuhDqk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-rIIpULaomWubvGmw8eX4TPrGB8Us527WGo27VrnjKct= 8Okzb8DWoxDVqI-Kt1F0vmhxf0GaBx1G87LjSP6nzTNgC9Q$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-rIIpULaomWubvGmw8eX4TPrGB8Us527WGo27VrnjKct= 8Okzb8DWoxDVqI-Kt1F0vmhxf0GaBx1G87LjSP6nJ0oDCig$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 22 00:10:12 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 220010
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    810 PM EDT Fri Mar 21 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MID-SOUTH, SOUTHEAST, WEST VIRGINIA, & WESTERN WASHINGTON...

    ...Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...
    A progressive, strong cold front trailing from a deep low tracking
    across the Upper Midwest will be the primary focus for shower and
    thunderstorm activity in this area on Sunday. Due to the strength
    of the upper level system driving the front forward, divergence
    exists aloft in the front's vicinity. The pre- frontal
    southwesterly low-level jet will be parallel to the orientation of
    the front (southwest to northeast), which could support training of
    the leading convection. While the forward speed of the front slows
    as the parent cyclone gets more distant, it should move fast
    enough to limit training potential.

    While FFGs decrease markedly towards the north into the Ohio
    Valley, the lack of atmospheric instability in that region will
    keep most of the rainfall in that area to stratiform rain. While
    minimal instability outside of southern KY limits the northward
    extent of the risk area, recent GFS runs suggest that a new
    Marginal Risk was prudent across portions of WV, where flash flood
    guidance values remain relatively low -- ~1.50"/3 hours -- and
    frontogenesis may be able to allow rainfall amounts to challenge
    the 3 hourly FFG.

    The greater instability and moisture will be closer to the Gulf,
    though precipitable water values are expected to remain under 1.5"
    regionally, which brings into question the degree of convective
    coverage expected. The flooding threat will be partially offset by
    the higher FFGs in the lower Mississippi Valley, so between that
    and the forward speed of the front, instances of flash flooding
    should remain isolated and most likely across urban areas. The
    above favors a continuation of the Marginal Risk across portions of
    the Mid-South and Southeast.


    ...Western Washington...
    A strong trailing cold front will move into the coast of the
    Pacific Northwest on Sunday. Low-level inflow from the Pacific
    towards 50 kts with near zero MU CAPE will allow IVT values to
    peak around 600-650 kg/ms. This would also allow hourly rain totals
    to be close to 0.5", which could be problematic in any burn scars.
    Soils along the westward facing slopes of WA are well saturated
    from repeated rounds of rain over the past few weeks, so this round
    could result in flooding on the rivers, streams, and creeks that
    drain the Olympic Mountains, particularly the Skokomish. As
    freezing levels rise, the western slopes of the Cascades should be
    equally in the mix for higher rainfall amounts, so looped the
    Marginal Risk farther inland to encompass that area. Expect 2 to 4
    inches of new rainfall in the area through the day on Sunday.

    Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8g5zQkDZge00KxCy8Y2Snv_-FiWBfGFqpj-xCzHaOsRT= eodKHtXHn64lo42fk754R8488USWuegqhgZIeGznZR3kVIs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8g5zQkDZge00KxCy8Y2Snv_-FiWBfGFqpj-xCzHaOsRT= eodKHtXHn64lo42fk754R8488USWuegqhgZIeGznKS0ONnA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8g5zQkDZge00KxCy8Y2Snv_-FiWBfGFqpj-xCzHaOsRT= eodKHtXHn64lo42fk754R8488USWuegqhgZIeGznTufktoE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 22 07:33:57 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 220733
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    333 AM EDT Sat Mar 22 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS...

    ...Western Washington State...

    The trailing cold front of a low moving into British Columbia will
    move into the Pacific coast of Washington State on Sunday. The
    front will usher in a period of strong westerly fetch off the
    Pacific. This will keep a steady supply of moist upslope flow into
    the Olympics and Washington Cascades. 3 to 5 inches of rain are
    expected into those ranges Sunday and Sunday night. The inherited
    Marginal Risk was largely unchanged, with the greatest chances of
    isolated flash flooding on the west facing slopes of those ranges.
    The Skokomish River remains the river with the highest potential
    for flooding given its low thresholds for flooding. Further, the
    soils are already near saturation in this area given the multiple
    rounds of rain the area has seen over the last several weeks, so
    most of the rainfall expected should convert to runoff.

    ...Portions of the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...

    A slow-moving cold front will move southeastward across portions of
    the Mid-South Sunday afternoon through Sunday night. The front will
    be supported by an LLJ of Gulf moisture, which will be aligned
    southwest to northeast, or parallel to the frontal interface. This
    will support some training convection, despite only modest Gulf
    moisture. The potential for some training over areas that got heavy
    rain a few days ago could lead to isolated instances of flash
    flooding, especially in low-lying flood-prone areas and urban
    areas. FFGs are quite high across the Mississippi Valley but
    decrease markedly across the Tennessee Valley due to recent heavy
    rain. However, the further north you go, the less instability there
    will be, which will effectively cap how strong the storms will be.
    The front will have enough forward speed to also limit the
    potential for training as well. Given all of these above factors,
    there have been few changes to the ERO for this area.

    Further northeast into West Virginia, the latest forecast rainfall
    has come down significantly from previous forecasts. Due to a lack
    of instability. the rainfall is not expected to remain heavy for
    long as individual cells track northeastward along the front.
    Despite very low FFGs, expect much of the rainfall in this area to
    be stratiform, greatly limiting the flash flood potential, despite
    some topography the rain will have to overcome to cause flooding.
    With the broader forecast now under a half inch in much of northern
    West Virginia, the inherited Marginal Risk in this area has been
    downgraded.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    The front that moved across the Lower Mississippi Valley on Sunday
    will continue to the Gulf Coast on Monday before stalling. There
    remains some potential for instability and modest moisture (by Gulf
    Coast standards) to support heavy rainfall from training storms,
    but the primary flash flooding threat will be in the urban areas
    from New Orleans east through Pensacola and the Florida Panhandle.
    The inherited Marginal Risk area was trimmed on the northern end
    where high FFGs and a meager expected rainfall should preclude any
    flash flooding concerns into interior southern Alabama and Georgia.=20

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_HLqEav-LcWSV4UDj7HY1lo1phi8vXHaJsVjHnPLD3bM= oEysa-joR_-5zBqDKhdRgsdTpzXk5BdwbrpnJnJYZSUK3Hc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_HLqEav-LcWSV4UDj7HY1lo1phi8vXHaJsVjHnPLD3bM= oEysa-joR_-5zBqDKhdRgsdTpzXk5BdwbrpnJnJYu88GX0A$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_HLqEav-LcWSV4UDj7HY1lo1phi8vXHaJsVjHnPLD3bM= oEysa-joR_-5zBqDKhdRgsdTpzXk5BdwbrpnJnJYfQMPjEM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 22 15:51:32 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 221544
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1144 AM EDT Sat Mar 22 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Gallina

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS...

    ...Western Washington State...

    The trailing cold front of a low moving into British Columbia will
    move into the Pacific coast of Washington State on Sunday. The
    front will usher in a period of strong westerly fetch off the
    Pacific. This will keep a steady supply of moist upslope flow into
    the Olympics and Washington Cascades. 3 to 5 inches of rain are
    expected into those ranges Sunday and Sunday night. The inherited
    Marginal Risk was largely unchanged, with the greatest chances of
    isolated flash flooding on the west facing slopes of those ranges.
    The Skokomish River remains the river with the highest potential
    for flooding given its low thresholds for flooding. Further, the
    soils are already near saturation in this area given the multiple
    rounds of rain the area has seen over the last several weeks, so
    most of the rainfall expected should convert to runoff.

    ...Portions of the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...

    A slow-moving cold front will move southeastward across portions of
    the Mid-South Sunday afternoon through Sunday night. The front will
    be supported by an LLJ of Gulf moisture, which will be aligned
    southwest to northeast, or parallel to the frontal interface. This
    will support some training convection, despite only modest Gulf
    moisture. The potential for some training over areas that got heavy
    rain a few days ago could lead to isolated instances of flash
    flooding, especially in low-lying flood-prone areas and urban
    areas. FFGs are quite high across the Mississippi Valley but
    decrease markedly across the Tennessee Valley due to recent heavy
    rain. However, the further north you go, the less instability there
    will be, which will effectively cap how strong the storms will be.
    The front will have enough forward speed to also limit the
    potential for training as well. Given all of these above factors,
    there have been few changes to the ERO for this area.

    Further northeast into West Virginia, the latest forecast rainfall
    has come down significantly from previous forecasts. Due to a lack
    of instability. the rainfall is not expected to remain heavy for
    long as individual cells track northeastward along the front.
    Despite very low FFGs, expect much of the rainfall in this area to
    be stratiform, greatly limiting the flash flood potential, despite
    some topography the rain will have to overcome to cause flooding.
    With the broader forecast now under a half inch in much of northern
    West Virginia, the inherited Marginal Risk in this area has been
    downgraded.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    The front that moved across the Lower Mississippi Valley on Sunday
    will continue to the Gulf Coast on Monday before stalling. There
    remains some potential for instability and modest moisture (by Gulf
    Coast standards) to support heavy rainfall from training storms,
    but the primary flash flooding threat will be in the urban areas
    from New Orleans east through Pensacola and the Florida Panhandle.
    The inherited Marginal Risk area was trimmed on the northern end
    where high FFGs and a meager expected rainfall should preclude any
    flash flooding concerns into interior southern Alabama and Georgia.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9q2XvpuIZiKMwNdaNZoheEX8zbIKYITE-r-eMjqR5-77= OVq9r2_Z0EZMVd3K1FIicGoM-zRRpszXXfGd5H2TXVsuzHs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9q2XvpuIZiKMwNdaNZoheEX8zbIKYITE-r-eMjqR5-77= OVq9r2_Z0EZMVd3K1FIicGoM-zRRpszXXfGd5H2TaFTL6Sc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9q2XvpuIZiKMwNdaNZoheEX8zbIKYITE-r-eMjqR5-77= OVq9r2_Z0EZMVd3K1FIicGoM-zRRpszXXfGd5H2T37VofZA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 22 18:44:08 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 221843
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    243 PM EDT Sat Mar 22 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Mar 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Gallina

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS...

    ...Western Washington State and Northwest Oregon...

    21z update:=20
    Little changes were required with the Marginal for the weak AR
    signal pushing through on day 2. Given entire day 2 period is
    within the Hi-Res CAM window, there is a bit higher confidence to
    sculpt the risk area to the terrain and slowly lifting rain/snow
    line across the Cascades in timing/placement. Other changes were to
    including northwest Oregon coastal range as well as carving out
    some of the downstream rain-shadow areas of W WA.=20

    ---Prior Discussion---
    The trailing cold front of a low moving into
    British Columbia will move into the Pacific coast of Washington=20
    State on Sunday. The front will usher in a period of strong=20
    westerly fetch off the Pacific. This will keep a steady supply of=20
    moist upslope flow into the Olympics and Washington Cascades. 3 to
    5 inches of rain are expected into those ranges Sunday and Sunday
    night. The inherited Marginal Risk was largely unchanged, with=20
    the greatest chances of isolated flash flooding on the west facing
    slopes of those ranges. The Skokomish River remains the river=20
    with the highest potential for flooding given its low thresholds=20
    for flooding. Further, the soils are already near saturation in=20
    this area given the multiple rounds of rain the area has seen over
    the last several weeks, so most of the rainfall expected should=20
    convert to runoff.

    ...Portions of the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...

    21z update: As noted below, arrival of instability from warmer Gulf
    air mass continues to be a bit slower filtering into the Cumberland
    Plateau and points north and east. Additionally, the overall
    convective pattern seems to be favoring more of scattered but
    intense convective cells along the frontal zone with some flanking
    development trailing to allow for W to E streaks of enhanced
    rainfall totals across western into Middle Tennessee and points
    southwest into the Lower Mississippi Valley mainly after 21z,
    peaking in the 03-06z period across portions of N MS, before
    becoming much more isolated through the remainder of the period
    downstream. HREF probabilities are also a bit more diminished with
    only a few hints of 2"/hr rates or 2"/3hrs suggesting the overall
    risk category of Marginal is more than necessary. The overall=20
    broader areal coverage can be more attributed to the higherly
    likelihood of those intense totals likely to be in shorter
    duration/sub-hourly manner resulting in isolated FFG exceedance
    with greatest flash flooding risk within urban/traditional poor=20
    drainage areas. If trends continue, the risk area may need to be
    further reduced in coverage or even the category itself.=20

    Gallina


    ---Prior Discussion---
    A slow-moving cold front will move southeastward across portions of
    the Mid-South Sunday afternoon through Sunday night. The front will
    be supported by an LLJ of Gulf moisture, which will be aligned
    southwest to northeast, or parallel to the frontal interface. This
    will support some training convection, despite only modest Gulf
    moisture. The potential for some training over areas that got heavy
    rain a few days ago could lead to isolated instances of flash
    flooding, especially in low-lying flood-prone areas and urban
    areas. FFGs are quite high across the Mississippi Valley but
    decrease markedly across the Tennessee Valley due to recent heavy
    rain. However, the further north you go, the less instability there
    will be, which will effectively cap how strong the storms will be.
    The front will have enough forward speed to also limit the
    potential for training as well. Given all of these above factors,
    there have been few changes to the ERO for this area.

    Further northeast into West Virginia, the latest forecast rainfall
    has come down significantly from previous forecasts. Due to a lack
    of instability. the rainfall is not expected to remain heavy for
    long as individual cells track northeastward along the front.
    Despite very low FFGs, expect much of the rainfall in this area to
    be stratiform, greatly limiting the flash flood potential, despite
    some topography the rain will have to overcome to cause flooding.
    With the broader forecast now under a half inch in much of northern
    West Virginia, the inherited Marginal Risk in this area has been
    downgraded.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE CENTRAL=20
    GULF COAST...

    21z update:
    Frontal zone timing placement appears to be a tad faster and
    continues to diminish the probability for broad swaths of heavy
    rainfall. However, orientation of the front in the morning is
    generally flat to diurnal onshore flow and with weakening deep
    layer flow, there is suggestions that any thunderstorms that do
    develop or maintain throughout the morning may linger over
    susceptible urban centers along I-10/12 from Baton Rouge east into
    Southeast AL/Western FL Panhandle. While the overall trends=20
    continue to decrease, have retained the low-end Marginal Risk to=20
    allow for a cycle or two of Hi-Res CAMs to help resolve these=20
    smaller scale interaction/urban intersection.

    Gallina


    ---Prior Discussion---
    The front that moved across the Lower Mississippi Valley on Sunday
    will continue to the Gulf Coast on Monday before stalling. There
    remains some potential for instability and modest moisture (by Gulf
    Coast standards) to support heavy rainfall from training storms,
    but the primary flash flooding threat will be in the urban areas
    from New Orleans east through Pensacola and the Florida Panhandle.
    The inherited Marginal Risk area was trimmed on the northern end
    where high FFGs and a meager expected rainfall should preclude any
    flash flooding concerns into interior southern Alabama and Georgia.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82wmxy8CcUC0MhMjzJiv5LGANlsbSiz0CG4kc40KOtTS= weudLg5q7A8Tv1mLxkdqEiChvVz1d3sPu10waWa1PptXpdQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82wmxy8CcUC0MhMjzJiv5LGANlsbSiz0CG4kc40KOtTS= weudLg5q7A8Tv1mLxkdqEiChvVz1d3sPu10waWa1NZKGQ0s$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82wmxy8CcUC0MhMjzJiv5LGANlsbSiz0CG4kc40KOtTS= weudLg5q7A8Tv1mLxkdqEiChvVz1d3sPu10waWa1CHn14Ls$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 22 22:47:06 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 222246
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    646 PM EDT Sat Mar 22 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS...

    ...Western Washington State and Northwest Oregon...

    21z update:
    Little changes were required with the Marginal for the weak AR
    signal pushing through on day 2. Given entire day 2 period is
    within the Hi-Res CAM window, there is a bit higher confidence to
    sculpt the risk area to the terrain and slowly lifting rain/snow
    line across the Cascades in timing/placement. Other changes were to
    including northwest Oregon coastal range as well as carving out
    some of the downstream rain-shadow areas of W WA.

    ---Prior Discussion---
    The trailing cold front of a low moving into
    British Columbia will move into the Pacific coast of Washington
    State on Sunday. The front will usher in a period of strong
    westerly fetch off the Pacific. This will keep a steady supply of
    moist upslope flow into the Olympics and Washington Cascades. 3 to
    5 inches of rain are expected into those ranges Sunday and Sunday
    night. The inherited Marginal Risk was largely unchanged, with
    the greatest chances of isolated flash flooding on the west facing
    slopes of those ranges. The Skokomish River remains the river
    with the highest potential for flooding given its low thresholds
    for flooding. Further, the soils are already near saturation in
    this area given the multiple rounds of rain the area has seen over
    the last several weeks, so most of the rainfall expected should
    convert to runoff.

    ...Portions of the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...

    21z update: As noted below, arrival of instability from warmer Gulf
    air mass continues to be a bit slower filtering into the Cumberland
    Plateau and points north and east. Additionally, the overall
    convective pattern seems to be favoring more of scattered but
    intense convective cells along the frontal zone with some flanking
    development trailing to allow for W to E streaks of enhanced
    rainfall totals across western into Middle Tennessee and points
    southwest into the Lower Mississippi Valley mainly after 21z,
    peaking in the 03-06z period across portions of N MS, before
    becoming much more isolated through the remainder of the period
    downstream. HREF probabilities are also a bit more diminished with
    only a few hints of 2"/hr rates or 2"/3hrs suggesting the overall
    risk category of Marginal is more than necessary. The overall
    broader areal coverage can be more attributed to the higherly
    likelihood of those intense totals likely to be in shorter
    duration/sub-hourly manner resulting in isolated FFG exceedance
    with greatest flash flooding risk within urban/traditional poor
    drainage areas. If trends continue, the risk area may need to be
    further reduced in coverage or even the category itself.

    Gallina


    ---Prior Discussion---
    A slow-moving cold front will move southeastward across portions of
    the Mid-South Sunday afternoon through Sunday night. The front will
    be supported by an LLJ of Gulf moisture, which will be aligned
    southwest to northeast, or parallel to the frontal interface. This
    will support some training convection, despite only modest Gulf
    moisture. The potential for some training over areas that got heavy
    rain a few days ago could lead to isolated instances of flash
    flooding, especially in low-lying flood-prone areas and urban
    areas. FFGs are quite high across the Mississippi Valley but
    decrease markedly across the Tennessee Valley due to recent heavy
    rain. However, the further north you go, the less instability there
    will be, which will effectively cap how strong the storms will be.
    The front will have enough forward speed to also limit the
    potential for training as well. Given all of these above factors,
    there have been few changes to the ERO for this area.

    Further northeast into West Virginia, the latest forecast rainfall
    has come down significantly from previous forecasts. Due to a lack
    of instability. the rainfall is not expected to remain heavy for
    long as individual cells track northeastward along the front.
    Despite very low FFGs, expect much of the rainfall in this area to
    be stratiform, greatly limiting the flash flood potential, despite
    some topography the rain will have to overcome to cause flooding.
    With the broader forecast now under a half inch in much of northern
    West Virginia, the inherited Marginal Risk in this area has been
    downgraded.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST...

    21z update:
    Frontal zone timing placement appears to be a tad faster and
    continues to diminish the probability for broad swaths of heavy
    rainfall. However, orientation of the front in the morning is
    generally flat to diurnal onshore flow and with weakening deep
    layer flow, there is suggestions that any thunderstorms that do
    develop or maintain throughout the morning may linger over
    susceptible urban centers along I-10/12 from Baton Rouge east into
    Southeast AL/Western FL Panhandle. While the overall trends
    continue to decrease, have retained the low-end Marginal Risk to
    allow for a cycle or two of Hi-Res CAMs to help resolve these
    smaller scale interaction/urban intersection.

    Gallina


    ---Prior Discussion---
    The front that moved across the Lower Mississippi Valley on Sunday
    will continue to the Gulf Coast on Monday before stalling. There
    remains some potential for instability and modest moisture (by Gulf
    Coast standards) to support heavy rainfall from training storms,
    but the primary flash flooding threat will be in the urban areas
    from New Orleans east through Pensacola and the Florida Panhandle.
    The inherited Marginal Risk area was trimmed on the northern end
    where high FFGs and a meager expected rainfall should preclude any
    flash flooding concerns into interior southern Alabama and Georgia.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8zIpORREKjL7n5nR_BDf8isK3oNZBN_UhCaZiYpRwzK= 3BwUPHVycunQleZoZwk0YSLW3ENDXMs6gEND-WAK30Oxbjc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8zIpORREKjL7n5nR_BDf8isK3oNZBN_UhCaZiYpRwzK= 3BwUPHVycunQleZoZwk0YSLW3ENDXMs6gEND-WAKxnEBZKc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8zIpORREKjL7n5nR_BDf8isK3oNZBN_UhCaZiYpRwzK= 3BwUPHVycunQleZoZwk0YSLW3ENDXMs6gEND-WAKBTIVu9Q$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 23 08:00:26 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 230800
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 AM EDT Sun Mar 23 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE...

    ...Western Washington...

    In coordination with SEW/Seattle, WA forecast office, a Slight Risk
    upgrade was introduced with this forecast update. A strong cold
    front and trailing atmospheric river plume are moving into the
    coast of Washington State now, and will continue to push west into
    the Olympic Mountains and Cascades through the day today. As the
    front moves into the mountains, the combination of forcings from
    the front, the upslope flow, and abundant Pacific moisture both
    with and behind the front will increase the potential for half-inch
    per hour rainfall rates into the mountains. Meanwhile, an=20
    increasingly southerly component of the onshore flow associated=20
    with the following atmospheric river will advect warmer air into=20
    the region. This will result in rising snow levels above 7,000 ft,
    which will increase the potential for resultant flooding from
    higher elevation snowmelt and the heavy rainfall.=20

    IVT values associated with the trailing atmospheric river have
    risen a bit in the latest guidance, peaking in the 625 to 675 kg/ms
    range today. This increase along with slightly greater amounts of
    atmospheric moisture have resulted in higher forecast rainfall
    today, especially during the daylight hours as the front moves
    ashore. The front being either primary or a significant component
    of the forcing will result in the heaviest precipitation into the
    Olympics and Cascades today. Once the front dissipates as it is
    shredded by the mountains, the atmospheric river and upslope flow
    will not have nearly the amount of forcing alone as they had with
    the front. Thus, the potential for heavy rainfall rates above a
    quarter inch per hour should diminish by tonight.=20

    Soils in this area remain nearly saturated from repeated rounds of
    rain across western Washington in recent weeks. Therefore most, if
    not all the rainfall today should convert to runoff. Expect 4 to 6
    inches of rain, with locally higher amounts west of the Olympics,
    and 3-5 inches into the northern Cascades northeast of Seattle. For
    the Seattle area, significantly less rain, on the order of a
    fraction of an inch is expected, as rain shadowing off the Olympics
    will greatly cut into rainfall totals. This will be partially
    offset by the urbanization in the area, so the Marginal Risk
    remains largely unchanged. The Slight Risk upgrade is focused on
    the wettest areas, namely west of the Olympics and the western
    foothills of the northern Cascades into Whatcom and Skagit
    Counties.=20

    ...Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...

    Very few changes were needed with this update across the Lower
    Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys. A progressive cold front moving
    across the middle of the country will continue south and east into
    the Southeast today. This evening through tonight, the front will=20
    run into a strengthening low-level jet (LLJ), which will align
    along the frontal interface as it moves into the Mid-South.
    Scattered showers and thunderstorms will develop ahead of the front
    as a result, which in a few instances may train over the same
    areas, but modest Gulf moisture and instability to 2,000 J/kg
    should limit storm strength, notwithstanding their fast motion. The
    inherited Marginal Risk is largely unchanged, stretching northeast
    from northern Louisiana to the southern Appalachians. Soils have
    largely dried since the last heavy rain event in this area, so any
    flash flooding will be isolated to typical flood prone and urban
    areas.=20

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    In coordination with MOB/Mobile, AL and TAE/Tallahassee, FL
    forecast offices, the inherited Marginal Risk for portions of the
    central Gulf Coast was downgraded with this update. The front
    moving across the Southeast will continue across the Gulf Coast
    Monday morning, and is now largely expected to continue into the
    northern Gulf, as well as towards the Georgia coast during the day.
    Any storms from the overnight period Monday morning will continue
    eastward and remain progressive enough that training is unlikely.
    There will remain some Gulf moisture and instability, but these too
    will be modest, and generally unsupportive of the heavy rainfall
    rates needed to overcome the high FFGs along the Gulf Coast. With
    areal rainfall now generally under a half inch, and in many areas
    under a quarter inch (outside of any heavier rain cores), and the
    expected continued movement of the front and associated storms, the
    flash flooding potential has continued the trend of decreasing from
    previous days. For these reasons, the Marginal was dropped.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Very late Tuesday night (generally from around 06Z Wed on), the
    collision of return flow off the Gulf in the form of 15-25 kt SSW
    flow over Texas will run into a slow-moving warm front along the
    Red River. Model guidance has hinted for a few days now that an
    area of storms, possibly a small MCS, will develop over either
    southeast Oklahoma or northeast Texas along this front. While there
    has been model consistency, the area of storms remains small, and
    somewhat uncertain as to where it will set up. This area of the
    country has been very dry of late, which too precludes much
    flooding. Given the small area that would be impacted, the area
    remains without a Risk area for now, but will continue to be
    monitored for possible introduction of a Marginal with CAMs
    guidance or improved agreement on a wetter forecast.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4GdZmY5W6fvqUQEIKgq2U07eQq0m9uNFr1L7af7uwnde= FXsyrRtO_c46VD7250QyHOP_wt5CyocLL4j3mMfCqooGnQI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4GdZmY5W6fvqUQEIKgq2U07eQq0m9uNFr1L7af7uwnde= FXsyrRtO_c46VD7250QyHOP_wt5CyocLL4j3mMfCufnJlDg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4GdZmY5W6fvqUQEIKgq2U07eQq0m9uNFr1L7af7uwnde= FXsyrRtO_c46VD7250QyHOP_wt5CyocLL4j3mMfCfORquIc$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 23 16:01:04 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 231600
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1200 PM EDT Sun Mar 23 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE...

    16Z Update...
    Overall, made mostly minor adjustments to the previous outlook.=20

    In western Washington, expanded the previous Slight Risk a little=20
    further south along the foothills of the northern Cascades where=20
    the 12Z HREF shows high neighborhood probabilities for 24-hr=20
    amounts exceeding 5 inches and 100 year ARI. These amounts,=20
    combined with rising snow levels are expected to contribute to=20
    increasing runoff concerns through today into early Tuesday. Refer=20
    to WPC MPD #078 for additional details concerning the near-term=20
    heavy rainfall threat across western Washington.=20

    For the lower Mississippi to Tennessee Valley region, extended the
    Marginal a little further west back across northern Louisiana, to
    now include a small portion of eastern Texas as well. The 12Z hi-
    res guidance is now showing some potential for training storms,=20
    producing locally heavy amounts, as storms develop across that=20
    region this evening.

    Pereira


    Previous discussion...

    ...Western Washington...
    In coordination with SEW/Seattle, WA forecast office, a Slight=20
    Risk upgrade was introduced with this forecast update. A strong=20
    cold front and trailing atmospheric river plume are moving into the
    coast of Washington State now, and will continue to push west into
    the Olympic Mountains and Cascades through the day today. As the=20
    front moves into the mountains, the combination of forcings from=20
    the front, the upslope flow, and abundant Pacific moisture both=20
    with and behind the front will increase the potential for half-inch
    per hour rainfall rates into the mountains. Meanwhile, an=20
    increasingly southerly component of the onshore flow associated=20
    with the following atmospheric river will advect warmer air into=20
    the region. This will result in rising snow levels above 7,000 ft,=20
    which will increase the potential for resultant flooding from=20
    higher elevation snowmelt and the heavy rainfall.

    IVT values associated with the trailing atmospheric river have
    risen a bit in the latest guidance, peaking in the 625 to 675 kg/ms
    range today. This increase along with slightly greater amounts of
    atmospheric moisture have resulted in higher forecast rainfall
    today, especially during the daylight hours as the front moves
    ashore. The front being either primary or a significant component
    of the forcing will result in the heaviest precipitation into the
    Olympics and Cascades today. Once the front dissipates as it is
    shredded by the mountains, the atmospheric river and upslope flow
    will not have nearly the amount of forcing alone as they had with
    the front. Thus, the potential for heavy rainfall rates above a
    quarter inch per hour should diminish by tonight.

    Soils in this area remain nearly saturated from repeated rounds of
    rain across western Washington in recent weeks. Therefore most, if
    not all the rainfall today should convert to runoff. Expect 4 to 6
    inches of rain, with locally higher amounts west of the Olympics,
    and 3-5 inches into the northern Cascades northeast of Seattle. For
    the Seattle area, significantly less rain, on the order of a
    fraction of an inch is expected, as rain shadowing off the Olympics
    will greatly cut into rainfall totals. This will be partially
    offset by the urbanization in the area, so the Marginal Risk
    remains largely unchanged. The Slight Risk upgrade is focused on
    the wettest areas, namely west of the Olympics and the western
    foothills of the northern Cascades into Whatcom and Skagit
    Counties.

    ...Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...
    Very few changes were needed with this update across the Lower=20
    Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys. A progressive cold front moving=20
    across the middle of the country will continue south and east into=20
    the Southeast today. This evening through tonight, the front will=20
    run into a strengthening low-level jet (LLJ), which will align=20
    along the frontal interface as it moves into the Mid-South.=20
    Scattered showers and thunderstorms will develop ahead of the front
    as a result, which in a few instances may train over the same=20
    areas, but modest Gulf moisture and instability to 2,000 J/kg=20
    should limit storm strength, notwithstanding their fast motion. The
    inherited Marginal Risk is largely unchanged, stretching northeast
    from northern Louisiana to the southern Appalachians. Soils have=20
    largely dry since the last heavy rain event in this area, so any=20
    flash flooding will be isolated to typical flood prone and urban=20
    areas.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    In coordination with MOB/Mobile, AL and TAE/Tallahassee, FL
    forecast offices, the inherited Marginal Risk for portions of the
    central Gulf Coast was downgraded with this update. The front
    moving across the Southeast will continue across the Gulf Coast
    Monday morning, and is now largely expected to continue into the
    northern Gulf, as well as towards the Georgia coast during the day.
    Any storms from the overnight period Monday morning will continue
    eastward and remain progressive enough that training is unlikely.
    There will remain some Gulf moisture and instability, but these too
    will be modest, and generally unsupportive of the heavy rainfall
    rates needed to overcome the high FFGs along the Gulf Coast. With
    areal rainfall now generally under a half inch, and in many areas
    under a quarter inch (outside of any heavier rain cores), and the
    expected continued movement of the front and associated storms, the
    flash flooding potential has continued the trend of decreasing from
    previous days. For these reasons, the Marginal was dropped.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Very late Tuesday night (generally from around 06Z Wed on), the
    collision of return flow off the Gulf in the form of 15-25 kt SSW
    flow over Texas will run into a slow-moving warm front along the
    Red River. Model guidance has hinted for a few days now that an
    area of storms, possibly a small MCS, will develop over either
    southeast Oklahoma or northeast Texas along this front. While there
    has been model consistency, the area of storms remains small, and
    somewhat uncertain as to where it will set up. This area of the
    country has been very dry of late, which too precludes much
    flooding. Given the small area that would be impacted, the area
    remains without a Risk area for now, but will continue to be
    monitored for possible introduction of a Marginal with CAMs
    guidance or improved agreement on a wetter forecast.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_CGK80PRQYNgIN197wjKjK9QbnOSp8wXgrtTNs6dgeOy= Fl0MpLVxhI7Xrou8dwDFjW_4VrBaidCnNv4ufy5MDCcwgJc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_CGK80PRQYNgIN197wjKjK9QbnOSp8wXgrtTNs6dgeOy= Fl0MpLVxhI7Xrou8dwDFjW_4VrBaidCnNv4ufy5MHAr9msI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_CGK80PRQYNgIN197wjKjK9QbnOSp8wXgrtTNs6dgeOy= Fl0MpLVxhI7Xrou8dwDFjW_4VrBaidCnNv4ufy5M0-B_UTA$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 23 20:05:28 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 232005
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    405 PM EDT Sun Mar 23 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Mar 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE...

    16Z Update...
    Overall, made mostly minor adjustments to the previous outlook.

    In western Washington, expanded the previous Slight Risk a little
    further south along the foothills of the northern Cascades where
    the 12Z HREF shows high neighborhood probabilities for 24-hr
    amounts exceeding 5 inches and 100 year ARI. These amounts,
    combined with rising snow levels are expected to contribute to
    increasing runoff concerns through today into Monday. Refer to WPC
    MPD #078 for additional details concerning the near-term heavy=20
    rainfall threat across western Washington.

    For the lower Mississippi to Tennessee Valley region, extended the
    Marginal a little further west back across northern Louisiana, to
    now include a small portion of eastern Texas as well. The 12Z hi-
    res guidance is now showing some potential for training storms,
    producing locally heavy amounts, as storms develop across that
    region this evening.

    Pereira


    Previous discussion...

    ...Western Washington...
    In coordination with SEW/Seattle, WA forecast office, a Slight
    Risk upgrade was introduced with this forecast update. A strong
    cold front and trailing atmospheric river plume are moving into the
    coast of Washington State now, and will continue to push west into
    the Olympic Mountains and Cascades through the day today. As the
    front moves into the mountains, the combination of forcings from
    the front, the upslope flow, and abundant Pacific moisture both
    with and behind the front will increase the potential for half-inch
    per hour rainfall rates into the mountains. Meanwhile, an
    increasingly southerly component of the onshore flow associated
    with the following atmospheric river will advect warmer air into
    the region. This will result in rising snow levels above 7,000 ft,
    which will increase the potential for resultant flooding from
    higher elevation snowmelt and the heavy rainfall.

    IVT values associated with the trailing atmospheric river have
    risen a bit in the latest guidance, peaking in the 625 to 675 kg/ms
    range today. This increase along with slightly greater amounts of
    atmospheric moisture have resulted in higher forecast rainfall
    today, especially during the daylight hours as the front moves
    ashore. The front being either primary or a significant component
    of the forcing will result in the heaviest precipitation into the
    Olympics and Cascades today. Once the front dissipates as it is
    shredded by the mountains, the atmospheric river and upslope flow
    will not have nearly the amount of forcing alone as they had with
    the front. Thus, the potential for heavy rainfall rates above a
    quarter inch per hour should diminish by tonight.

    Soils in this area remain nearly saturated from repeated rounds of
    rain across western Washington in recent weeks. Therefore most, if
    not all the rainfall today should convert to runoff. Expect 4 to 6
    inches of rain, with locally higher amounts west of the Olympics,
    and 3-5 inches into the northern Cascades northeast of Seattle. For
    the Seattle area, significantly less rain, on the order of a
    fraction of an inch is expected, as rain shadowing off the Olympics
    will greatly cut into rainfall totals. This will be partially
    offset by the urbanization in the area, so the Marginal Risk
    remains largely unchanged. The Slight Risk upgrade is focused on
    the wettest areas, namely west of the Olympics and the western
    foothills of the northern Cascades into Whatcom and Skagit
    Counties.

    ...Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...
    Very few changes were needed with this update across the Lower
    Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys. A progressive cold front moving
    across the middle of the country will continue south and east into
    the Southeast today. This evening through tonight, the front will
    run into a strengthening low-level jet (LLJ), which will align
    along the frontal interface as it moves into the Mid-South.
    Scattered showers and thunderstorms will develop ahead of the front
    as a result, which in a few instances may train over the same
    areas, but modest Gulf moisture and instability to 2,000 J/kg
    should limit storm strength, notwithstanding their fast motion. The
    inherited Marginal Risk is largely unchanged, stretching northeast
    from northern Louisiana to the southern Appalachians. Soils have
    largely dry since the last heavy rain event in this area, so any
    flash flooding will be isolated to typical flood prone and urban
    areas.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE...

    20Z Update...

    ...Western Washington...
    A small Marginal Risk was added to the western foothills of the
    northern Cascades. Latest guidance shows an atmospheric river
    continuing to impact the region, but also gradually waning through
    the early half of the period. The 12Z GFS shows IVTs decreasing
    from 400-500 kg/m/sec early in the period as a ridge continues to
    build and onshore flow into the region diminishes. As the AR
    diminishes, so will the potential for additional heavy
    precipitation. However, the continued moisture flux into the region
    early in the period may be sufficient for additional amounts of 2-3
    inches, as indicated by the 12Z HREF. These amounts along with
    additional snowmelt may prolong runoff concerns.

    Pereira

    Previous Discussion...

    In coordination with MOB/Mobile, AL and TAE/Tallahassee, FL=20
    forecast offices, the inherited Marginal Risk for portions of the=20
    central Gulf Coast was downgraded with this update. The front=20
    moving across the Southeast will continue across the Gulf Coast=20
    Monday morning, and is now largely expected to continue into the=20
    northern Gulf, as well as towards the Georgia coast during the day.
    Any storms from the overnight period Monday morning will continue=20
    eastward and remain progressive enough that training is unlikely.=20
    There will remain some Gulf moisture and instability, but these too
    will be modest, and generally unsupportive of the heavy rainfall=20
    rates needed to overcome the high FFGs along the Gulf Coast. With=20
    areal rainfall now generally under a half inch, and in many areas=20
    under a quarter inch (outside of any heavier rain cores), and the=20
    expected continued movement of the front and associated storms, the
    flash flooding potential has continued the trend of decreasing=20
    from previous days. For these reasons, the Marginal was dropped.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Very late Tuesday night (generally from around 06Z Wed on), the
    collision of return flow off the Gulf in the form of 15-25 kt SSW
    flow over Texas will run into a slow-moving warm front along the
    Red River. Model guidance has hinted for a few days now that an
    area of storms, possibly a small MCS, will develop over either
    southeast Oklahoma or northeast Texas along this front. While there
    has been model consistency, the area of storms remains small, and
    somewhat uncertain as to where it will set up. This area of the
    country has been very dry of late, which too precludes much
    flooding. Given the small area that would be impacted, the area
    remains without a Risk area for now, but will continue to be
    monitored for possible introduction of a Marginal with CAMs
    guidance or improved agreement on a wetter forecast.

    Pereira/Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_9_fUMnVejbN-9OKxsLGykuk6TxQl9YC_MxvC04eToR9= zXXIX6O4v2u_cBbvKjXXLk3WlDWAYTGqiy92zS7iIziMA3M$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_9_fUMnVejbN-9OKxsLGykuk6TxQl9YC_MxvC04eToR9= zXXIX6O4v2u_cBbvKjXXLk3WlDWAYTGqiy92zS7iOUD9oaA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_9_fUMnVejbN-9OKxsLGykuk6TxQl9YC_MxvC04eToR9= zXXIX6O4v2u_cBbvKjXXLk3WlDWAYTGqiy92zS7ivffapxw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 24 00:13:19 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 240013
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    813 PM EDT Sun Mar 23 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE...


    ...Western Washington...
    A Slight Risk remains for western WA for another few hours. In the
    meantime, the combination of forcings from the front, the upslope=20
    flow, and abundant Pacific moisture both with and behind the front=20
    maintains the risk for 0.5"+ per hour rainfall totals. Fairly high=20
    freezing levels maintain the potential for a snowmelt component. The
    potential for heavy rainfall rates above a quarter inch per hour=20
    should diminish this evening.


    ...Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys...
    Scattered showers and thunderstorms near and ahead of the front=20
    have developed, which in a few instances may train over the same=20
    areas. The inherited Marginal Risk has been extended a little more=20
    to the north and northeast based on the available instability,=20
    which is in the process of peaking. Any flash flooding will be=20
    isolated to typical flood prone and urban areas.

    Although not depicted, heavy rain-related issues cannot be ruled
    out for portions of WV within a frontogenetic zone over the next
    several hours, considering the modestness of the available flash=20
    flood guidance and their rugged terrain.

    Roth


    Day 2=20

    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE...

    20Z Update...

    ...Western Washington...
    A small Marginal Risk was added to the western foothills of the
    northern Cascades. Latest guidance shows an atmospheric river
    continuing to impact the region, but also gradually waning through
    the early half of the period. The 12Z GFS shows IVTs decreasing
    from 400-500 kg/m/sec early in the period as a ridge continues to
    build and onshore flow into the region diminishes. As the AR
    diminishes, so will the potential for additional heavy
    precipitation. However, the continued moisture flux into the region
    early in the period may be sufficient for additional amounts of 2-3
    inches, as indicated by the 12Z HREF. These amounts along with
    additional snowmelt may prolong runoff concerns.

    Pereira

    Previous Discussion...

    In coordination with MOB/Mobile, AL and TAE/Tallahassee, FL
    forecast offices, the inherited Marginal Risk for portions of the
    central Gulf Coast was downgraded with this update. The front
    moving across the Southeast will continue across the Gulf Coast
    Monday morning, and is now largely expected to continue into the
    northern Gulf, as well as towards the Georgia coast during the day.
    Any storms from the overnight period Monday morning will continue
    eastward and remain progressive enough that training is unlikely.
    There will remain some Gulf moisture and instability, but these too
    will be modest, and generally unsupportive of the heavy rainfall
    rates needed to overcome the high FFGs along the Gulf Coast. With
    areal rainfall now generally under a half inch, and in many areas
    under a quarter inch (outside of any heavier rain cores), and the
    expected continued movement of the front and associated storms, the
    flash flooding potential has continued the trend of decreasing
    from previous days. For these reasons, the Marginal was dropped.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Very late Tuesday night (generally from around 06Z Wed on), the
    collision of return flow off the Gulf in the form of 15-25 kt SSW
    flow over Texas will run into a slow-moving warm front along the
    Red River. Model guidance has hinted for a few days now that an
    area of storms, possibly a small MCS, will develop over either
    southeast Oklahoma or northeast Texas along this front. While there
    has been model consistency, the area of storms remains small, and
    somewhat uncertain as to where it will set up. This area of the
    country has been very dry of late, which too precludes much
    flooding. Given the small area that would be impacted, the area
    remains without a Risk area for now, but will continue to be
    monitored for possible introduction of a Marginal with CAMs
    guidance or improved agreement on a wetter forecast.

    Pereira/Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5LxRT0zAFcaLaOQMhQwTzn64tyAaPrfUNJhm1itp3kH5= tHRBlUGuNK2n-o57VePCA81htLbXD-8h98REeO2GY9Lf7YM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5LxRT0zAFcaLaOQMhQwTzn64tyAaPrfUNJhm1itp3kH5= tHRBlUGuNK2n-o57VePCA81htLbXD-8h98REeO2Gn7zsDaM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5LxRT0zAFcaLaOQMhQwTzn64tyAaPrfUNJhm1itp3kH5= tHRBlUGuNK2n-o57VePCA81htLbXD-8h98REeO2GcxtZtbk$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 24 07:40:34 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 240740
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    340 AM EDT Mon Mar 24 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST WASHINGTON STATE...

    ...Olympic Peninsula and Northern Cascades in Northwest=20
    Washington... A Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall will continue=20
    during Day 1 over the Olympic Ranges and across the foothills and=20
    western slopes of the northern Cascades, as the modest Atmospheric
    River slowly diminishes today and Monday night. Given continuation
    of the AR event, this too is a continuation of the previous=20
    (yesterday's) ERO, albeit with a drop in the category across the=20
    board. In other words, a Marginal Risk is in effect across areas=20
    where there was a Slight in yesterday's D1 ERO, while areas in=20
    yesterday's Marginal are now within the <5% probability of=20
    exceeding flash flood guidance.=20

    Latest guidance shows an atmospheric river continuing to impact=20
    the region, but also gradually waning through the period. The 00Z=20
    GEFS shows IVTs decreasing from ~500 kg/m/sec early in the period=20
    to 300-350 kg/m/sec, as a ridge continues to build and onshore=20
    flow into the region diminishes. As the AR diminishes, so will the=20
    potential for additional heavy precipitation. However, the continued
    moisture flux into the region early in the period may be sufficient
    for additional amounts of 2-3 inches, as indicated by the 00Z=20
    HREF. These amounts along with additional snowmelt may prolong=20
    runoff concerns.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4blI30We_bX3_nZkXsvEhBt0K81wkFBg7wDUQ_Cfaz1M= RhRssFYkVfQ3kWR3A5mF_upBgQ_NaMBSYvmGO6zR-rc88ts$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4blI30We_bX3_nZkXsvEhBt0K81wkFBg7wDUQ_Cfaz1M= RhRssFYkVfQ3kWR3A5mF_upBgQ_NaMBSYvmGO6zRepbyZT8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4blI30We_bX3_nZkXsvEhBt0K81wkFBg7wDUQ_Cfaz1M= RhRssFYkVfQ3kWR3A5mF_upBgQ_NaMBSYvmGO6zRJpoYumU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 24 13:25:06 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 241324
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    924 AM EDT Mon Mar 24 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1315Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST WASHINGTON STATE AND ALONG THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    13Z Update...
    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    Merging and training cells associated with a pair of linear
    complexes moving east across southern Louisiana into southern
    Mississippi and Alabama are supporting short-term heavy rainfall=20
    rates and a flash flooding threat. A Marginal Risk was added for=20
    areas where these storms may pose an isolated flash flooding threat
    into the late morning. Refer to WPC MPD #082 for additional=20
    information regarding the near-term heavy rainfall and flooding=20
    threat.

    Pereira

    Previous Discussion...
    ...Olympic Peninsula and Northern Cascades in Northwest
    Washington... A Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall will continue
    during Day 1 over the Olympic Ranges and across the foothills and
    western slopes of the northern Cascades, as the modest Atmospheric
    River slowly diminishes today and Monday night. Given continuation
    of the AR event, this too is a continuation of the previous
    (yesterday's) ERO, albeit with a drop in the category across the
    board. In other words, a Marginal Risk is in effect across areas
    where there was a Slight in yesterday's D1 ERO, while areas in
    yesterday's Marginal are now within the <5% probability of
    exceeding flash flood guidance.

    Latest guidance shows an atmospheric river continuing to impact
    the region, but also gradually waning through the period. The 00Z
    GEFS shows IVTs decreasing from ~500 kg/m/sec early in the period
    to 300-350 kg/m/sec, as a ridge continues to build and onshore
    flow into the region diminishes. As the AR diminishes, so will the
    potential for additional heavy precipitation. However, the continued
    moisture flux into the region early in the period may be sufficient
    for additional amounts of 2-3 inches, as indicated by the 00Z
    HREF. These amounts along with additional snowmelt may prolong
    runoff concerns.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_3XdrUfC-_Ou980ijPppXcTFlj-ijttQMFTb--nuq74B= 8iW3LP_n1bZ7NRC8ybZac8bm1EXG8YFrR8nsDOjYA8EvWuI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_3XdrUfC-_Ou980ijPppXcTFlj-ijttQMFTb--nuq74B= 8iW3LP_n1bZ7NRC8ybZac8bm1EXG8YFrR8nsDOjYUgyYkWc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_3XdrUfC-_Ou980ijPppXcTFlj-ijttQMFTb--nuq74B= 8iW3LP_n1bZ7NRC8ybZac8bm1EXG8YFrR8nsDOjYJ_qhx7o$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 24 15:58:27 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 241557
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1157 AM EDT Mon Mar 24 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST WASHINGTON STATE AND ALONG THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    16Z Update...
    Based on current radar trends and the 12Z HREF, made only minor=20
    adjustments, including to the recently introduced Marginal Risk=20
    area along the Gulf Coast.

    13Z Update...
    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    Merging and training cells associated with a pair of linear
    complexes moving east across southern Louisiana into southern
    Mississippi and Alabama are supporting short-term heavy rainfall
    rates and a flash flooding threat. A Marginal Risk was added for
    areas where these storms may pose an isolated flash flooding threat
    into the late morning. Refer to WPC MPD #082 for additional
    information regarding the near-term heavy rainfall and flooding
    threat.

    Pereira

    Previous Discussion...
    ...Olympic Peninsula and Northern Cascades in Northwest
    Washington... A Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall will continue
    during Day 1 over the Olympic Ranges and across the foothills and
    western slopes of the northern Cascades, as the modest Atmospheric
    River slowly diminishes today and Monday night. Given continuation
    of the AR event, this too is a continuation of the previous
    (yesterday's) ERO, albeit with a drop in the category across the
    board. In other words, a Marginal Risk is in effect across areas
    where there was a Slight in yesterday's D1 ERO, while areas in
    yesterday's Marginal are now within the <5% probability of
    exceeding flash flood guidance.

    Latest guidance shows an atmospheric river continuing to impact
    the region, but also gradually waning through the period. The 00Z
    GEFS shows IVTs decreasing from ~500 kg/m/sec early in the period
    to 300-350 kg/m/sec, as a ridge continues to build and onshore
    flow into the region diminishes. As the AR diminishes, so will the
    potential for additional heavy precipitation. However, the continued
    moisture flux into the region early in the period may be sufficient
    for additional amounts of 2-3 inches, as indicated by the 00Z
    HREF. These amounts along with additional snowmelt may prolong
    runoff concerns.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-6CzIikUhgXggkC7ULHO43M1qER8JqCoqlHJGJsnBWiv= aeZdeOv8Nt2zlv0zgwbAzKYJ-AsW6OhrgTZs6XYcV1zoR7c$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-6CzIikUhgXggkC7ULHO43M1qER8JqCoqlHJGJsnBWiv= aeZdeOv8Nt2zlv0zgwbAzKYJ-AsW6OhrgTZs6XYcD35-LOs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-6CzIikUhgXggkC7ULHO43M1qER8JqCoqlHJGJsnBWiv= aeZdeOv8Nt2zlv0zgwbAzKYJ-AsW6OhrgTZs6XYclRd5P24$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 24 20:10:15 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 242008
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    408 PM EDT Mon Mar 24 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Mar 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST WASHINGTON STATE AND ALONG THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    16Z Update...
    Based on current radar trends and the 12Z HREF, made only minor
    adjustments, including to the recently introduced Marginal Risk
    area along the Gulf Coast.

    13Z Update...
    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    Merging and training cells associated with a pair of linear
    complexes moving east across southern Louisiana into southern
    Mississippi and Alabama are supporting short-term heavy rainfall
    rates and a flash flooding threat. A Marginal Risk was added for
    areas where these storms may pose an isolated flash flooding threat
    into the late morning. Refer to WPC MPD #082 for additional
    information regarding the near-term heavy rainfall and flooding
    threat.

    Pereira

    Previous Discussion...
    ...Olympic Peninsula and Northern Cascades in Northwest
    Washington... A Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall will continue
    during Day 1 over the Olympic Ranges and across the foothills and
    western slopes of the northern Cascades, as the modest Atmospheric
    River slowly diminishes today and Monday night. Given continuation
    of the AR event, this too is a continuation of the previous
    (yesterday's) ERO, albeit with a drop in the category across the
    board. In other words, a Marginal Risk is in effect across areas
    where there was a Slight in yesterday's D1 ERO, while areas in
    yesterday's Marginal are now within the <5% probability of
    exceeding flash flood guidance.

    Latest guidance shows an atmospheric river continuing to impact
    the region, but also gradually waning through the period. The 00Z
    GEFS shows IVTs decreasing from ~500 kg/m/sec early in the period
    to 300-350 kg/m/sec, as a ridge continues to build and onshore
    flow into the region diminishes. As the AR diminishes, so will the
    potential for additional heavy precipitation. However, the continued
    moisture flux into the region early in the period may be sufficient
    for additional amounts of 2-3 inches, as indicated by the 00Z
    HREF. These amounts along with additional snowmelt may prolong
    runoff concerns.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7_XqcMDOY-q_ytKp1ITrlV8X9qREnMUL61epWI872ju9= MZ3lG4riQW1KPBBoV0FEGcJLAPn7MNJZss3OCnzrIT8rnfI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7_XqcMDOY-q_ytKp1ITrlV8X9qREnMUL61epWI872ju9= MZ3lG4riQW1KPBBoV0FEGcJLAPn7MNJZss3OCnzrWwnJMpA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7_XqcMDOY-q_ytKp1ITrlV8X9qREnMUL61epWI872ju9= MZ3lG4riQW1KPBBoV0FEGcJLAPn7MNJZss3OCnzrDhFLgZg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 25 00:56:16 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 250055
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    855 PM EDT Mon Mar 24 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!50j7YKMlmiT7OXEj2NaGC_ykiNHIKAFSasufxryo8bC-= JEimwv23pj5ww9PkLf4S2GzFRyFfqCgvgIeF0BOilF5V8Nk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!50j7YKMlmiT7OXEj2NaGC_ykiNHIKAFSasufxryo8bC-= JEimwv23pj5ww9PkLf4S2GzFRyFfqCgvgIeF0BOinxtfwig$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!50j7YKMlmiT7OXEj2NaGC_ykiNHIKAFSasufxryo8bC-= JEimwv23pj5ww9PkLf4S2GzFRyFfqCgvgIeF0BOidiZOlHM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 25 08:22:32 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 250822
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    422 AM EDT Tue Mar 25 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flooding guidance is
    less than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS...

    Diffuse mid-upper level trough moving slowly eastward across the
    Southwest-Four Corners Region will lead to an uptick in upper
    diffluence across northern Mexico and SC-South TX Wed and Wed
    night, with a WNW-ESE lobe of mid level vorticity (shear axis)
    lifting northeast across the outlook area along the elevated warm
    between 18Z Wed and 12Z Thu. Strengthening low-level inflow (30-40
    kts at 850 mb) will boost the low-level moisture transport, with
    TPW values climbing between 1.75-2.00".=20

    Convection initiating across the Sierra Madre in northeast Mexico=20
    will cross into SC and South TX Wed afternoon and overnight, and=20
    while considerable shear in the low-mid levels should keep the=20
    convection moving along, the slow progression of the mid-upper=20
    trough will likely result in slow-moving and/or repetitive areas=20
    of more organized convection, as evidenced by the higher-end QPF=20
    totals per the latest (00Z Tue) guidance...as much as 5-7+ inches=20
    per the Regional GEM, ECMWF, and FV3. Dry antecedent soils and=20
    initially high FFG values (3-4" over a large portion of the outlook
    area) will likely result in a more limited or localized flash=20
    flood threat, and as a result, have hoisted a Marginal Risk across=20
    these areas in the Day 2 ERO.=20

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS AND MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF COAST...

    ...Southern Texas...
    Aforementioned southern stream trough pivots slowly eastward across
    the Southern Plains Thu-Thu night. Rather healthy, deep-layer exit
    region forcing continues, with low-mid level moisture flux
    anomalies increasing to near 3 standard deviations above normal
    (TPW anomalies per the 00Z 3/25 GEFS) while 1.75-2.00" TPW values
    overspread the outlook areas. Continued healthy low-level inflow=20
    off the Gulf, becoming more parallel to the mean 850-300 mb flow=20
    with time by late Thursday, will lead to an increase in upward=20
    propagation and thus potential for cell training Thursday evening=20
    and overnight. This as low-level inflow taps the more unstable=20
    airmass (1000-1500 J/Kg mixed-layer CAPEs) across the western Gulf.

    The guidance is beginning to converge with the heavy rainfall
    signal with the 00Z 3/25 models, as the GFS, ECMWF, GEM (esp. GEM
    Regional), and UKMet now all show a corridor of 4-8+ inches of=20
    rain across portions of SC-South TX into the Gulf Coast during the
    24hr period from 12Z Thu-12Z Fri. While there is still some areal
    and timing differences, the growing model consistency (especially
    among these global runs) has bolstered the confidence for a more
    targeted Slight Risk area, including areas closer to the Coast=20
    that for now would likely end up being a higher-end Slight Risk=20
    despite the dry antecedent soils.=20

    These areas (closer to the Gulf coast) would also be an area to=20
    watch for a potential upgrade to Moderate Risk during subsequent=20
    outlooks, given the closer proximity to the more unstable airmass=20
    just off the coast and thus the greater potential for multiple=20
    hours of 2.0+ in/hr rainfall rates (higher probability of >6" of=20
    total rainfall), especially late Thu-Thu night with any cell=20
    training.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals=20
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Among the 00Z 3/25 models, the Regional GEM is by far the wettest,
    with isolated totals of 6-8+ inches. Despite the lack of=20
    instability, the wet antecedent soils along with the potential of
    0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates could lead to localized short-term
    runoff issues, particularly along small streams and over burn
    scars.=20

    Hurley



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6fq8bDC2j2ogS7-BjZUAwo57YQeQ5ssRcbX5jHRkrVd9= nDJeq9BajFUTD-fAIRKthcCTIGgs0ycI2BOC5LIZAU3tXlg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6fq8bDC2j2ogS7-BjZUAwo57YQeQ5ssRcbX5jHRkrVd9= nDJeq9BajFUTD-fAIRKthcCTIGgs0ycI2BOC5LIZ8YVI80o$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6fq8bDC2j2ogS7-BjZUAwo57YQeQ5ssRcbX5jHRkrVd9= nDJeq9BajFUTD-fAIRKthcCTIGgs0ycI2BOC5LIZ2yIFtOI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 25 15:45:42 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 251545
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1145 AM EDT Tue Mar 25 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHEAST TEXAS INTO SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    Convection is expected to develop by 06z tonight across portions of
    southern OK near and just north of a stationary front. Southerly
    flow should advect enough moisture northward to generate upwards=20
    of 1000-2000 j/kg of CAPE with a base just above the boundary=20
    layer. This elevated convection will track off to the southeast,=20
    generally parallel to the low level convergence axis...which=20
    supports some training potential. The 3km NAM is the wettest model,
    but we have seen elevated convective setups like this verify=20
    towards the higher end of the model spread, and the 3km NAM has=20
    performed decently at these events in the past. So while it depicts
    a lower probability outcome based on all available guidance, and a
    swath of 1-3" is most likely, can not rule out a localized swath=20
    of 3-6" of rain across portions of northeast TX into southern OK=20
    late tonight into Wednesday morning.

    Overall the flash flood risk at any location is low given the dry=20
    antecedent conditions and narrow nature of any heavy rainfall
    swath. However intense rainfall rates and some training could allow
    for a localized flash flood threat to evolve, particularly if the=20
    heavy rain overlaps any more sensitive urban or low lying area. We=20
    opted to introduce a focused Marginal risk area to account for this
    isolated potential.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS...

    Diffuse mid-upper level trough moving slowly eastward across the
    Southwest-Four Corners Region will lead to an uptick in upper
    diffluence across northern Mexico and SC-South TX Wed and Wed
    night, with a WNW-ESE lobe of mid level vorticity (shear axis)
    lifting northeast across the outlook area along the elevated warm
    between 18Z Wed and 12Z Thu. Strengthening low-level inflow (30-40
    kts at 850 mb) will boost the low-level moisture transport, with
    TPW values climbing between 1.75-2.00".

    Convection initiating across the Sierra Madre in northeast Mexico
    will cross into SC and South TX Wed afternoon and overnight, and
    while considerable shear in the low-mid levels should keep the
    convection moving along, the slow progression of the mid-upper
    trough will likely result in slow-moving and/or repetitive areas
    of more organized convection, as evidenced by the higher-end QPF
    totals per the latest (00Z Tue) guidance...as much as 5-7+ inches
    per the Regional GEM, ECMWF, and FV3. Dry antecedent soils and
    initially high FFG values (3-4" over a large portion of the outlook
    area) will likely result in a more limited or localized flash
    flood threat, and as a result, have hoisted a Marginal Risk across
    these areas in the Day 2 ERO.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS AND MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF COAST...

    ...Southern Texas...
    Aforementioned southern stream trough pivots slowly eastward across
    the Southern Plains Thu-Thu night. Rather healthy, deep-layer exit
    region forcing continues, with low-mid level moisture flux
    anomalies increasing to near 3 standard deviations above normal
    (TPW anomalies per the 00Z 3/25 GEFS) while 1.75-2.00" TPW values
    overspread the outlook areas. Continued healthy low-level inflow
    off the Gulf, becoming more parallel to the mean 850-300 mb flow
    with time by late Thursday, will lead to an increase in upward
    propagation and thus potential for cell training Thursday evening
    and overnight. This as low-level inflow taps the more unstable
    airmass (1000-1500 J/Kg mixed-layer CAPEs) across the western Gulf.

    The guidance is beginning to converge with the heavy rainfall
    signal with the 00Z 3/25 models, as the GFS, ECMWF, GEM (esp. GEM
    Regional), and UKMet now all show a corridor of 4-8+ inches of
    rain across portions of SC-South TX into the Gulf Coast during the
    24hr period from 12Z Thu-12Z Fri. While there is still some areal
    and timing differences, the growing model consistency (especially
    among these global runs) has bolstered the confidence for a more
    targeted Slight Risk area, including areas closer to the Coast
    that for now would likely end up being a higher-end Slight Risk
    despite the dry antecedent soils.

    These areas (closer to the Gulf coast) would also be an area to
    watch for a potential upgrade to Moderate Risk during subsequent
    outlooks, given the closer proximity to the more unstable airmass
    just off the coast and thus the greater potential for multiple
    hours of 2.0+ in/hr rainfall rates (higher probability of >6" of
    total rainfall), especially late Thu-Thu night with any cell
    training.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Among the 00Z 3/25 models, the Regional GEM is by far the wettest,
    with isolated totals of 6-8+ inches. Despite the lack of
    instability, the wet antecedent soils along with the potential of
    0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates could lead to localized short-term
    runoff issues, particularly along small streams and over burn
    scars.

    Hurley



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8gG64hXKmmRWAwunjQRiDraY9tGOsHiWWPHgfAlB8JIk= 4Kvkv-rrFsQEbbMchNKLa3GlknXOZmmjSMQaBE-ukEVdIPI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8gG64hXKmmRWAwunjQRiDraY9tGOsHiWWPHgfAlB8JIk= 4Kvkv-rrFsQEbbMchNKLa3GlknXOZmmjSMQaBE-ugJD6klQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8gG64hXKmmRWAwunjQRiDraY9tGOsHiWWPHgfAlB8JIk= 4Kvkv-rrFsQEbbMchNKLa3GlknXOZmmjSMQaBE-uRrNVL9Q$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 25 18:34:42 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 251834
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    234 PM EDT Tue Mar 25 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1831Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHEAST TEXAS INTO SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA AND SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    ...Florida...

    Introduced a focused Marginal Risk area mainly in the urban corridor=20
    along the southeast Florida coast from this afternoon into early=20
    evening. Radar has shown an evolution similar to the 12Z run of the
    HREF with convection expanding north and eastward along the=20
    urbanized I-95 corridor...and at least enough of a signal in the 1-
    and 2-inch per hour probabilities to warrant a Marginal Risk area.
    Refer to Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0083 for further=20
    details.=20

    Bann

    ...Texas/Oklahoma...

    Convection is expected to develop by 06z tonight across portions of
    southern OK near and just north of a stationary front. Southerly
    flow should advect enough moisture northward to generate upwards
    of 1000-2000 j/kg of CAPE with a base just above the boundary
    layer. This elevated convection will track off to the southeast,
    generally parallel to the low level convergence axis...which
    supports some training potential. The 3km NAM is the wettest model,
    but we have seen elevated convective setups like this verify
    towards the higher end of the model spread, and the 3km NAM has
    performed decently at these events in the past. So while it depicts
    a lower probability outcome based on all available guidance, and a
    swath of 1-3" is most likely, can not rule out a localized swath
    of 3-6" of rain across portions of northeast TX into southern OK
    late tonight into Wednesday morning.

    Overall the flash flood risk at any location is low given the dry
    antecedent conditions and narrow nature of any heavy rainfall
    swath. However intense rainfall rates and some training could allow
    for a localized flash flood threat to evolve, particularly if the
    heavy rain overlaps any more sensitive urban or low lying area. We
    opted to introduce a focused Marginal risk area to account for this
    isolated potential.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS...

    Diffuse mid-upper level trough moving slowly eastward across the
    Southwest-Four Corners Region will lead to an uptick in upper
    diffluence across northern Mexico and SC-South TX Wed and Wed
    night, with a WNW-ESE lobe of mid level vorticity (shear axis)
    lifting northeast across the outlook area along the elevated warm
    between 18Z Wed and 12Z Thu. Strengthening low-level inflow (30-40
    kts at 850 mb) will boost the low-level moisture transport, with
    TPW values climbing between 1.75-2.00".

    Convection initiating across the Sierra Madre in northeast Mexico
    will cross into SC and South TX Wed afternoon and overnight, and
    while considerable shear in the low-mid levels should keep the
    convection moving along, the slow progression of the mid-upper
    trough will likely result in slow-moving and/or repetitive areas
    of more organized convection, as evidenced by the higher-end QPF
    totals per the latest (00Z Tue) guidance...as much as 5-7+ inches
    per the Regional GEM, ECMWF, and FV3. Dry antecedent soils and
    initially high FFG values (3-4" over a large portion of the outlook
    area) will likely result in a more limited or localized flash
    flood threat, and as a result, have hoisted a Marginal Risk across
    these areas in the Day 2 ERO.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS AND MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF COAST...

    ...Southern Texas...
    Aforementioned southern stream trough pivots slowly eastward across
    the Southern Plains Thu-Thu night. Rather healthy, deep-layer exit
    region forcing continues, with low-mid level moisture flux
    anomalies increasing to near 3 standard deviations above normal
    (TPW anomalies per the 00Z 3/25 GEFS) while 1.75-2.00" TPW values
    overspread the outlook areas. Continued healthy low-level inflow
    off the Gulf, becoming more parallel to the mean 850-300 mb flow
    with time by late Thursday, will lead to an increase in upward
    propagation and thus potential for cell training Thursday evening
    and overnight. This as low-level inflow taps the more unstable
    airmass (1000-1500 J/Kg mixed-layer CAPEs) across the western Gulf.

    The guidance is beginning to converge with the heavy rainfall
    signal with the 00Z 3/25 models, as the GFS, ECMWF, GEM (esp. GEM
    Regional), and UKMet now all show a corridor of 4-8+ inches of
    rain across portions of SC-South TX into the Gulf Coast during the
    24hr period from 12Z Thu-12Z Fri. While there is still some areal
    and timing differences, the growing model consistency (especially
    among these global runs) has bolstered the confidence for a more
    targeted Slight Risk area, including areas closer to the Coast
    that for now would likely end up being a higher-end Slight Risk
    despite the dry antecedent soils.

    These areas (closer to the Gulf coast) would also be an area to
    watch for a potential upgrade to Moderate Risk during subsequent
    outlooks, given the closer proximity to the more unstable airmass
    just off the coast and thus the greater potential for multiple
    hours of 2.0+ in/hr rainfall rates (higher probability of >6" of
    total rainfall), especially late Thu-Thu night with any cell
    training.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Among the 00Z 3/25 models, the Regional GEM is by far the wettest,
    with isolated totals of 6-8+ inches. Despite the lack of
    instability, the wet antecedent soils along with the potential of
    0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates could lead to localized short-term
    runoff issues, particularly along small streams and over burn
    scars.

    Hurley



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ve3IecHqx3CSJsoyLBirTeXLXy41_c2m2iUlDZk_9dO= zBhZhy3rNtNK38SuzscDR0LdaxX9JSn_WOS5acN3cRqwXKQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ve3IecHqx3CSJsoyLBirTeXLXy41_c2m2iUlDZk_9dO= zBhZhy3rNtNK38SuzscDR0LdaxX9JSn_WOS5acN3eQqC8O4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ve3IecHqx3CSJsoyLBirTeXLXy41_c2m2iUlDZk_9dO= zBhZhy3rNtNK38SuzscDR0LdaxX9JSn_WOS5acN3Ku5OWLY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 25 20:33:52 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 252033
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    433 PM EDT Tue Mar 25 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1831Z Tue Mar 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHEAST TEXAS INTO SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA AND SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    ...Florida...

    Introduced a focused Marginal Risk area mainly in the urban corridor
    along the southeast Florida coast from this afternoon into early
    evening. Radar has shown an evolution similar to the 12Z run of the
    HREF with convection expanding north and eastward along the
    urbanized I-95 corridor...and at least enough of a signal in the 1-
    and 2-inch per hour probabilities to warrant a Marginal Risk area.
    Refer to Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0083 for further
    details.

    Bann

    ...Texas/Oklahoma...

    Convection is expected to develop by 06z tonight across portions of
    southern OK near and just north of a stationary front. Southerly
    flow should advect enough moisture northward to generate upwards
    of 1000-2000 j/kg of CAPE with a base just above the boundary
    layer. This elevated convection will track off to the southeast,
    generally parallel to the low level convergence axis...which
    supports some training potential. The 3km NAM is the wettest model,
    but we have seen elevated convective setups like this verify
    towards the higher end of the model spread, and the 3km NAM has
    performed decently at these events in the past. So while it depicts
    a lower probability outcome based on all available guidance, and a
    swath of 1-3" is most likely, can not rule out a localized swath
    of 3-6" of rain across portions of northeast TX into southern OK
    late tonight into Wednesday morning.

    Overall the flash flood risk at any location is low given the dry
    antecedent conditions and narrow nature of any heavy rainfall
    swath. However intense rainfall rates and some training could allow
    for a localized flash flood threat to evolve, particularly if the
    heavy rain overlaps any more sensitive urban or low lying area. We
    opted to introduce a focused Marginal risk area to account for this
    isolated potential.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS...

    Model guidance continues to speed up the timing of the onset of the
    heavy rainfall event over southern TX. It now appears likely that=20
    organized convection will begin growing upscale by later Wednesday=20
    afternoon or evening. This area has been very dry and could use the
    rain, unfortunately this setup looks good enough to be a case=20
    where it's beneficial rain initially, but then quickly overwhelms=20
    even the dry soil conditions. Model soundings by Wed=20
    afternoon/evening show a deeply saturated profile with good=20
    directional shear and moderate instability. This should support=20
    some convective clusters with some weak mesocyclones and right=20
    mover motions are very slow. Combine that with the front nearby and
    anticipate upscale growth of slow moving convective clusters=20
    through Wed night within an environment capable of 2-3" per hour=20
    rainfall. Activity may eventually grow upscale enough that it=20
    begins propagating east and possibly offshore, however even if that
    eventually transpires, there will still be a prolonged period=20
    where training convection is a possibility.

    Overall there is above average model agreement on this overall
    evolution, with only the 3km and 12km NAM really standing out as=20
    outliers, and those are two of the less reliable models for=20
    situations such as this. While confidence on the event happening=20
    is above average, there is still uncertainty on the exact axis of=20
    heaviest rainfall, which will probably be somewhat narrow in=20
    nature. For now the MDT risk is centered around the highest HREF=20 probabilities, and generally on the southern gradient of the global
    model QPF solutions. Flash flood coverage over this area is=20
    expected to increase Wednesday night into Thursday morning, and=20
    locally significant impacts are possible.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    A Marginal risk was added across portions of western OR and WA.=20
    Convection is expected to develop over portions of southwest OR by
    21z Wed and then track off to the north through the afternoon and=20
    evening hours. An anomalous amounts of CAPE is forecast,=20
    potentially upwards of 2000 j/kg, and PWs are forecast over the=20 climatological 90th percentile. This combination of CAPE and PWs=20
    supports intense rainfall rates. These cells should be quick moving
    and the bigger hazard is probably severe weather (as highlighted=20
    by the SPC Slight risk), however the intense rainfall rates=20
    producing over 1" in an hour may be enough for localized flash=20
    flood concerns. Areas of terrain, urban areas, and low lying areas
    will be most prone to localized flash flooding driven by these=20
    short duration intense rainfall rates.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS AND MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF=20
    COAST...

    ...South Texas...=20
    The event described in the day 2 discussion over south TX will=20
    continue into Thursday. There is a bit more uncertainty on the=20
    details by this time as convective evolution will likely be=20
    impacted by mesoscale influences of the day 2 convection. On the=20
    synoptic scale, ingredients are likely even more favorable for=20
    heavy rainfall on day 3 then they were on day 2. Large scale=20
    forcing should reload and be even a bit stronger as the mid level=20
    trough axis and associated shortwave energy moves across the area.
    The CSU machine learning ERO is showing higher end MDT risk=20
    probabilities (albeit probably a bit too far north), likely=20
    indicating the favorable ingredients that will be in place for=20
    excessive rainfall.

    However, the extent of the excessive rainfall risk will likely be=20
    at least partially dependent on mesoscale factors...such as the=20
    outflow location form the day 2 convection and its impact on=20
    instability. The expectation is that the outflow boundary will be=20
    near the coast by this time, and so that is where the greatest=20
    focus for training convection is expected on Thursday, and thus=20
    where the MDT risk is in place. There is some chance this is=20
    offshore by 12z Thursday, but the current consensus suggests it=20
    may struggle to clear the coast, leaving coastal areas susceptible=20
    to additional heavy rainfall and flash flooding. Even if=20
    instability is eroded by Thursday, the increase in forcing and=20
    southerly flow should be enough to destabilize portions of the area
    again with time, and so do think at least some flash flood risk=20
    exists even in a scenario where convection initially propagates=20
    offshore.=20

    Overall confidence is high in a flash flood event, but confidence=20
    in the details by Thursday remains low. In a worst case scenario=20
    outflow stalls near the coast allowing for repeat convection and a=20 significant flash flood event could evolve. In a best case=20
    scenario convection propagates offshore, but redevelopment later in
    the day still results in some flash flood threat, albeit probably=20
    less significant. When combining day 2 and 3 it seems probable that
    some areas receive 5-10" of rain over south TX, and localized=20
    amounts of 10-15" are certainly possible. Confidence is increasing=20
    in the coverage of flash flooding and the possibility of at least=20
    localized significant impacts, warranting the Moderate risks on=20
    both days 2 and 3.

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    A Marginal risk was added across portions of northern MO, southern
    IA, IL and central/southern IN. A stationary front draped across=20
    this region will gradually lift north as a warm front through the=20
    period. Southerly flow will result in an uptick in instability and=20
    moisture, and at least scattered convection is expected Thursday=20
    into Thursday night. There is at least some chance for organized=20
    convective development near the front, which could briefly train=20
    from west to east. Global model QPF is locally as high as 1-3"=20
    along this corridor, and given the expected convective nature of=20
    activity, this would suggest isolated amounts over 3" are probable.
    A localized, and generally minor, flash flood risk could result.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Among the 00Z 3/25 models, the Regional GEM is by far the wettest,
    with isolated totals of 6-8+ inches. Despite the lack of
    instability, the wet antecedent soils along with the potential of
    0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates could lead to localized short-term
    runoff issues, particularly along small streams and over burn
    scars.

    Chenard/Hurley



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!42GJRTg4E5rIYUctHlq-E1ZL3qYiS3Xv2n5STHxEl8a2= jk5777bSV-F3Nis9Xiv8lXe1FYHvN38TYlJQHiVe2A4ds1M$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!42GJRTg4E5rIYUctHlq-E1ZL3qYiS3Xv2n5STHxEl8a2= jk5777bSV-F3Nis9Xiv8lXe1FYHvN38TYlJQHiVe4DE8L_g$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!42GJRTg4E5rIYUctHlq-E1ZL3qYiS3Xv2n5STHxEl8a2= jk5777bSV-F3Nis9Xiv8lXe1FYHvN38TYlJQHiVe7EN2mdQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 26 00:53:41 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 260053
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    853 PM EDT Tue Mar 25 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHEAST TEXAS INTO SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA AND OVER PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST FLORIDA...

    ...Florida...

    Maintained the Marginal Risk area across the southeast Florida=20
    peninsula after realigning it based on even trends in satellite and
    radar imagery. Even though loss of daytime heating should result in
    diminishing risk of excessive rainfall due to loss of daytime
    heating by late evening...it was too early to entirely remove the=20
    Marginal risk area as additional showers and thunderstorms capable
    of producing downpours in a highly urbanized area...a few places
    which had locally heavy rainfall earlier in the day. The
    expectation is that the risk of excessive rainfall will diminish by
    26/04Z.

    ...Texas/Oklahoma...

    Convection has initiated across portions of southern OK near and=20
    just north of a stationary front. Southerly flow should continue to
    advect moisture northward and result in upwards of 1000-2000 j/kg=20
    of CAPE with a base just above the boundary layer. This elevated=20
    convection will track off to the southeast, generally parallel to=20
    the low level convergence axis...which supports some training=20
    potential. The 3km NAM remained the wettest model, but we have=20
    seen elevated convective setups like this verify towards the higher
    end of the model spread, and the 3km NAM has performed decently at
    these events in the past. So while it depicts a lower probability=20
    outcome based on all available guidance, and a swath of 1-3" is=20
    most likely, can not rule out a localized swath of 3-6" of rain=20
    across portions of northeast TX into southern OK late tonight into=20
    Wednesday morning.

    Overall the flash flood risk at any location is low given the dry
    antecedent conditions and narrow nature of any heavy rainfall
    swath. However intense rainfall rates and some training could allow
    for a localized flash flood threat to evolve, particularly if the
    heavy rain overlaps any more sensitive urban or low lying area. We
    opted to maintain a focused Marginal risk area to account for this
    isolated potential.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS...

    Model guidance continues to speed up the timing of the onset of the
    heavy rainfall event over southern TX. It now appears likely that
    organized convection will begin growing upscale by later Wednesday
    afternoon or evening. This area has been very dry and could use the
    rain, unfortunately this setup looks good enough to be a case
    where it's beneficial rain initially, but then quickly overwhelms
    even the dry soil conditions. Model soundings by Wed
    afternoon/evening show a deeply saturated profile with good
    directional shear and moderate instability. This should support
    some convective clusters with some weak mesocyclones and right
    mover motions are very slow. Combine that with the front nearby and
    anticipate upscale growth of slow moving convective clusters
    through Wed night within an environment capable of 2-3" per hour
    rainfall. Activity may eventually grow upscale enough that it
    begins propagating east and possibly offshore, however even if that
    eventually transpires, there will still be a prolonged period
    where training convection is a possibility.

    Overall there is above average model agreement on this overall
    evolution, with only the 3km and 12km NAM really standing out as
    outliers, and those are two of the less reliable models for
    situations such as this. While confidence on the event happening
    is above average, there is still uncertainty on the exact axis of
    heaviest rainfall, which will probably be somewhat narrow in
    nature. For now the MDT risk is centered around the highest HREF
    probabilities, and generally on the southern gradient of the global
    model QPF solutions. Flash flood coverage over this area is
    expected to increase Wednesday night into Thursday morning, and
    locally significant impacts are possible.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    A Marginal risk was added across portions of western OR and WA.
    Convection is expected to develop over portions of southwest OR by
    21z Wed and then track off to the north through the afternoon and
    evening hours. An anomalous amounts of CAPE is forecast,
    potentially upwards of 2000 j/kg, and PWs are forecast over the
    climatological 90th percentile. This combination of CAPE and PWs
    supports intense rainfall rates. These cells should be quick moving
    and the bigger hazard is probably severe weather (as highlighted
    by the SPC Slight risk), however the intense rainfall rates
    producing over 1" in an hour may be enough for localized flash
    flood concerns. Areas of terrain, urban areas, and low lying areas
    will be most prone to localized flash flooding driven by these
    short duration intense rainfall rates.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS AND MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF
    COAST...

    ...South Texas...
    The event described in the day 2 discussion over south TX will
    continue into Thursday. There is a bit more uncertainty on the
    details by this time as convective evolution will likely be
    impacted by mesoscale influences of the day 2 convection. On the
    synoptic scale, ingredients are likely even more favorable for
    heavy rainfall on day 3 then they were on day 2. Large scale
    forcing should reload and be even a bit stronger as the mid level
    trough axis and associated shortwave energy moves across the area.
    The CSU machine learning ERO is showing higher end MDT risk
    probabilities (albeit probably a bit too far north), likely
    indicating the favorable ingredients that will be in place for
    excessive rainfall.

    However, the extent of the excessive rainfall risk will likely be
    at least partially dependent on mesoscale factors...such as the
    outflow location form the day 2 convection and its impact on
    instability. The expectation is that the outflow boundary will be
    near the coast by this time, and so that is where the greatest
    focus for training convection is expected on Thursday, and thus
    where the MDT risk is in place. There is some chance this is
    offshore by 12z Thursday, but the current consensus suggests it
    may struggle to clear the coast, leaving coastal areas susceptible
    to additional heavy rainfall and flash flooding. Even if
    instability is eroded by Thursday, the increase in forcing and
    southerly flow should be enough to destabilize portions of the area
    again with time, and so do think at least some flash flood risk
    exists even in a scenario where convection initially propagates
    offshore.

    Overall confidence is high in a flash flood event, but confidence
    in the details by Thursday remains low. In a worst case scenario
    outflow stalls near the coast allowing for repeat convection and a
    significant flash flood event could evolve. In a best case
    scenario convection propagates offshore, but redevelopment later in
    the day still results in some flash flood threat, albeit probably
    less significant. When combining day 2 and 3 it seems probable that
    some areas receive 5-10" of rain over south TX, and localized
    amounts of 10-15" are certainly possible. Confidence is increasing
    in the coverage of flash flooding and the possibility of at least
    localized significant impacts, warranting the Moderate risks on
    both days 2 and 3.

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    A Marginal risk was added across portions of northern MO, southern
    IA, IL and central/southern IN. A stationary front draped across
    this region will gradually lift north as a warm front through the
    period. Southerly flow will result in an uptick in instability and
    moisture, and at least scattered convection is expected Thursday
    into Thursday night. There is at least some chance for organized
    convective development near the front, which could briefly train
    from west to east. Global model QPF is locally as high as 1-3"
    along this corridor, and given the expected convective nature of
    activity, this would suggest isolated amounts over 3" are probable.
    A localized, and generally minor, flash flood risk could result.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Among the 00Z 3/25 models, the Regional GEM is by far the wettest,
    with isolated totals of 6-8+ inches. Despite the lack of
    instability, the wet antecedent soils along with the potential of
    0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates could lead to localized short-term
    runoff issues, particularly along small streams and over burn
    scars.

    Chenard/Hurley



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-yuoHLbc56qURo5AhLBqRGSFda8VJSSVTahtEZZ8WXD3= BsAgyJ42oNZgbfrTdawuPrJkqUcXNgMtDQscyyVJXsTmipg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-yuoHLbc56qURo5AhLBqRGSFda8VJSSVTahtEZZ8WXD3= BsAgyJ42oNZgbfrTdawuPrJkqUcXNgMtDQscyyVJTP67O2s$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-yuoHLbc56qURo5AhLBqRGSFda8VJSSVTahtEZZ8WXD3= BsAgyJ42oNZgbfrTdawuPrJkqUcXNgMtDQscyyVJBlwrrXk$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 26 08:19:14 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 260819
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    419 AM EDT Wed Mar 26 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS...

    Model guidance continues to become better clustered in terms of the
    timing and areal extent of a heavy rainfall signal across SC-South
    TX later this afternoon and overnight. Increasing upper level
    difluence and DPVA ahead of a slow moving upper trough will
    initiate organized convection across along the Rio Grande in SW TX
    later this afternoon, which will begin to grow upscale toward the
    evening hours given the uptick in SSE low-level inflow (25-40+ kts
    at 850 mb). This area has been very dry and could use the rain,=20 unfortunately this setup looks good enough to be a case where it's=20 beneficial rain initially, but then quickly overwhelms even the dry
    soil conditions. Model soundings by Wed afternoon/evening show a=20
    deeply saturated profile with good directional shear and moderate=20 instability. This should support some convective clusters with some
    weak mesocyclones and right mover motions are very slow. Combine=20
    that with the front nearby and anticipate upscale growth of slow=20
    moving convective clusters through Wed night within an environment=20
    capable of 2-3" per hour rainfall. Activity may eventually grow=20
    upscale enough that it begins propagating east and possibly=20
    offshore, however even if that eventually transpires, there will=20
    still be a prolonged period where training convection is a=20
    possibility.

    Overall there is above average model agreement on this overall
    evolution. Moreover, the latest (00Z) HREF probabilities have
    bumped up over the past few runs, including probabilities >50% of
    greater than 5" of rain in 24hrs (which is a good proxy for a
    Moderate Risk area based on verification). There is also a chance=20
    for an upgrade to High Risk within the Moderate Risk area, albeit=20
    quite narrow. This is where the HREF has 70+ probs of rainfall=20
    exceeding 5"/24hrs, along with 40-50% probs of >8"/24hrs.

    While confidence on the event happening is above average, there is
    still uncertainty on the exact axis of heaviest rainfall, which=20
    will probably be somewhat narrow in nature. The 00Z ECMWF in fact
    came down considerably with the QPF during day 1, and as with its=20
    previous run, again has more of a diffuse look with multiple axes=20
    of heavier rain on either side of the Moderate Risk area. So again,
    the MDT risk is centered around the highest HREF probabilities,=20
    and generally on the southern gradient of the global model QPF=20
    solutions. In fact, changes made to the previous (Day 2) ERO=20
    include pulling the southern boundaries of the Moderate, Slight,=20
    and Marginal Risk areas a bit farther south across South TX. Flash=20
    flood coverage over this area is expected to increase Wednesday=20
    night into Thursday morning, and locally significant impacts are=20
    possible.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    A Marginal risk continues across portions of western OR and WA.=20
    Convection is expected to develop over portions of southwest OR by=20
    21z Wed and then track off to the north through the afternoon and=20
    evening hours. An anomalous amounts of CAPE is forecast,=20
    potentially upwards of 2000 j/kg, and PWs are forecast over the=20 climatological 90th percentile. This combination of CAPE and PWs=20
    supports intense rainfall rates. These cells should be quick moving
    and the bigger hazard is probably severe weather (as highlighted=20
    by the SPC Slight risk), however the intense rainfall rates=20
    producing over 1" in an hour may be enough for localized flash=20
    flood concerns. Areas of terrain, urban areas, and low lying areas=20
    will be most prone to localized flash flooding driven by these=20
    short duration intense rainfall rates.

    Hurley/Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS AND MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF
    COAST...

    ...South Texas...
    Minimal changes were made to the Day 2 ERO areas inherited from
    yesterday's Day 3 outlook. Based on the latest guidance trends, we
    did nudge the Moderate Risk a bit farther up the Middle TX Coast.=20

    The event described in the day 1 discussion over south TX will=20
    continue into Thursday. There is a bit more uncertainty on the=20
    details by this time as convective evolution will likely be=20
    impacted by mesoscale influences of the day 1 convection. On the=20
    synoptic scale, ingredients are likely even more favorable for=20
    heavy rainfall on day 3 then they were on day 2. Large scale=20
    forcing should reload and be even a bit stronger as the mid level=20
    trough axis and associated shortwave energy moves across the area
    (enhancing the upper divergence/DPVA).=20

    However, the extent of the excessive rainfall risk will likely be=20
    at least partially dependent on mesoscale factors...such as the=20
    outflow location form the day 1 convection and its impact on=20
    instability. The expectation is that the outflow boundary will be=20
    near the coast by this time, and so that is where the greatest=20
    focus for training convection is expected on Thursday, and thus=20
    where the MDT risk is in place. There is some chance this is=20
    offshore by 12z Thursday, but the current consensus suggests it may
    struggle to clear the coast, leaving coastal areas susceptible to=20
    additional heavy rainfall and flash flooding. Even if instability=20
    is eroded by Thursday, the increase in forcing and southerly flow=20
    should be enough to destabilize portions of the area again with=20
    time, and so do think at least some flash flood risk exists even in
    a scenario where convection initially propagates offshore,
    especially Thu night with the uptick in S-SSE low-level flow.=20

    Overall confidence is high in a flash flood event, but confidence
    in the details by Thursday-Thu night remains low. In a worst case=20
    scenario outflow stalls near the coast allowing for repeat=20
    convection and a significant flash flood event could evolve. In a=20
    best case scenario convection propagates offshore, but=20
    redevelopment later in the day still results in some flash flood=20
    threat, albeit probably less significant. When combining day 2 and=20
    3 it seems probable that some areas receive 5-10" of rain over=20
    south TX, and localized amounts of 10-15" are certainly possible.=20
    Confidence is increasing in the coverage of flash flooding and the=20 possibility of at least localized significant impacts, warranting=20
    the Moderate risks on both days 2 and 3.=20

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    A Marginal risk continues from yesterday's Day 3 ERO across portions
    of northern MO, southern IA, IL and central/southern IN. A=20
    stationary front draped across this region will gradually lift=20
    north as a warm front through the period. Southerly flow will=20
    result in an uptick in instability and moisture, and at least=20
    scattered convection is expected Thursday into Thursday night.=20
    There is at least some chance for organized convective development=20
    near the front, which could briefly train from west to east. Global
    model QPF is locally as high as 1-3" along this corridor, and=20
    given the expected convective nature of activity, this would=20
    suggest isolated amounts over 3" are probable. A localized, and=20
    generally minor, flash flood risk could result.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Among the 00Z 3/25 models, the Regional GEM is by far the wettest,
    with isolated totals of 6-8+ inches. Despite the lack of
    instability, the wet antecedent soils along with the potential of
    0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates could lead to localized short-term
    runoff issues, particularly along small streams and over burn
    scars.

    Chenard/Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA...

    Slow-moving mid-upper trough will push the area of most favorable
    deep-layer forcing (upper divergence/diffluence and DPVA) farther
    east along the Gulf Coast. Coincident with the favorable synoptic-scale forcing, TPWs between 1.75-2.00", along with mixed layer CAPEs
    around 1000-1500 J/Kg, will result in a more enhanced excessive=20
    rainfall threat (i.e. Slight) across the Upper TX Coast to=20
    Southwest and South-Central LA. Attributing to a lower risk
    (Slight) compared to the previous days (Moderate) will be the
    weakening low-level flow, which given the more limited deep-layer
    shear, would more likely result in more effective convective outflows
    and thus shorter duration of the more intense updrafts and heavier
    rainfall cores.

    Hurley

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7NK-saiDrwa8j4Iolu3QyTLbM2aXTkmKcCWBaWjo3kQQ= H5DsgA6l5GYXtlZ75ZE55wYF1E81Js3doHtpAPeWYKAmY_A$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7NK-saiDrwa8j4Iolu3QyTLbM2aXTkmKcCWBaWjo3kQQ= H5DsgA6l5GYXtlZ75ZE55wYF1E81Js3doHtpAPeWGY-2cgM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7NK-saiDrwa8j4Iolu3QyTLbM2aXTkmKcCWBaWjo3kQQ= H5DsgA6l5GYXtlZ75ZE55wYF1E81Js3doHtpAPeW24CXIu8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 26 16:01:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 261600
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1200 PM EDT Wed Mar 26 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS...

    ...16Z Update...

    The forecast remains on track for a corridor of very heavy rainfall
    to develop this afternoon across the Moderate risk area in South
    Texas. 12Z soundings at CRP and BRO depict an increasingly moist,
    unstable, and uncapped vertical profile which will foster=20
    widespread thunderstorm coverage today in the presence of=20
    diffluent upper-level flow. The main adjustment this afternoon=20
    includes a slight southward expansion of the Moderate Risk area in
    South Texas based on the 12Z HREF blended mean and neighborhood=20 probabilities.

    Asherman

    Model guidance continues to become better clustered in terms of the
    timing and areal extent of a heavy rainfall signal across SC-South
    TX later this afternoon and overnight. Increasing upper level
    difluence and DPVA ahead of a slow moving upper trough will
    initiate organized convection across along the Rio Grande in SW TX
    later this afternoon, which will begin to grow upscale toward the
    evening hours given the uptick in SSE low-level inflow (25-40+ kts
    at 850 mb). This area has been very dry and could use the rain,
    unfortunately this setup looks good enough to be a case where it's
    beneficial rain initially, but then quickly overwhelms even the dry
    soil conditions. Model soundings by Wed afternoon/evening show a
    deeply saturated profile with good directional shear and moderate
    instability. This should support some convective clusters with some
    weak mesocyclones and right mover motions are very slow. Combine
    that with the front nearby and anticipate upscale growth of slow
    moving convective clusters through Wed night within an environment
    capable of 2-3" per hour rainfall. Activity may eventually grow
    upscale enough that it begins propagating east and possibly
    offshore, however even if that eventually transpires, there will
    still be a prolonged period where training convection is a
    possibility.

    Overall there is above average model agreement on this overall
    evolution. Moreover, the latest (00Z) HREF probabilities have
    bumped up over the past few runs, including probabilities >50% of
    greater than 5" of rain in 24hrs (which is a good proxy for a
    Moderate Risk area based on verification). This is where the HREF=20
    has 70+ probs of rainfall exceeding 5"/24hrs, along with 40-50%=20
    probs of >8"/24hrs.

    While confidence on the event happening is above average, there is
    still uncertainty on the exact axis of heaviest rainfall, which
    will probably be somewhat narrow in nature. The 00Z ECMWF in fact
    came down considerably with the QPF during day 1, and as with its
    previous run, again has more of a diffuse look with multiple axes
    of heavier rain on either side of the Moderate Risk area. So again,
    the MDT risk is centered around the highest HREF probabilities,
    and generally on the southern gradient of the global model QPF
    solutions. In fact, changes made to the previous (Day 2) ERO
    include pulling the southern boundaries of the Moderate, Slight,
    and Marginal Risk areas a bit farther south across South TX. Flash
    flood coverage over this area is expected to increase Wednesday
    night into Thursday morning, and locally significant impacts are
    possible.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    A Marginal risk continues across portions of western OR and WA.
    Convection is expected to develop over portions of southwest OR by
    21z Wed and then track off to the north through the afternoon and
    evening hours. An anomalous amounts of CAPE is forecast,
    potentially upwards of 2000 j/kg, and PWs are forecast over the
    climatological 90th percentile. This combination of CAPE and PWs
    supports intense rainfall rates. These cells should be quick moving
    and the bigger hazard is probably severe weather (as highlighted
    by the SPC Slight risk), however the intense rainfall rates
    producing over 1" in an hour may be enough for localized flash
    flood concerns. Areas of terrain, urban areas, and low lying areas
    will be most prone to localized flash flooding driven by these
    short duration intense rainfall rates.

    Hurley/Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS AND MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF
    COAST...

    ...South Texas...
    Minimal changes were made to the Day 2 ERO areas inherited from
    yesterday's Day 3 outlook. Based on the latest guidance trends, we
    did nudge the Moderate Risk a bit farther up the Middle TX Coast.

    The event described in the day 1 discussion over south TX will
    continue into Thursday. There is a bit more uncertainty on the
    details by this time as convective evolution will likely be
    impacted by mesoscale influences of the day 1 convection. On the
    synoptic scale, ingredients are likely even more favorable for
    heavy rainfall on day 3 then they were on day 2. Large scale
    forcing should reload and be even a bit stronger as the mid level
    trough axis and associated shortwave energy moves across the area
    (enhancing the upper divergence/DPVA).

    However, the extent of the excessive rainfall risk will likely be
    at least partially dependent on mesoscale factors...such as the
    outflow location form the day 1 convection and its impact on
    instability. The expectation is that the outflow boundary will be
    near the coast by this time, and so that is where the greatest
    focus for training convection is expected on Thursday, and thus
    where the MDT risk is in place. There is some chance this is
    offshore by 12z Thursday, but the current consensus suggests it may
    struggle to clear the coast, leaving coastal areas susceptible to
    additional heavy rainfall and flash flooding. Even if instability
    is eroded by Thursday, the increase in forcing and southerly flow
    should be enough to destabilize portions of the area again with
    time, and so do think at least some flash flood risk exists even in
    a scenario where convection initially propagates offshore,
    especially Thu night with the uptick in S-SSE low-level flow.

    Overall confidence is high in a flash flood event, but confidence
    in the details by Thursday-Thu night remains low. In a worst case
    scenario outflow stalls near the coast allowing for repeat
    convection and a significant flash flood event could evolve. In a
    best case scenario convection propagates offshore, but
    redevelopment later in the day still results in some flash flood
    threat, albeit probably less significant. When combining day 2 and
    3 it seems probable that some areas receive 5-10" of rain over
    south TX, and localized amounts of 10-15" are certainly possible.
    Confidence is increasing in the coverage of flash flooding and the
    possibility of at least localized significant impacts, warranting
    the Moderate risks on both days 2 and 3.

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    A Marginal risk continues from yesterday's Day 3 ERO across portions
    of northern MO, southern IA, IL and central/southern IN. A
    stationary front draped across this region will gradually lift
    north as a warm front through the period. Southerly flow will
    result in an uptick in instability and moisture, and at least
    scattered convection is expected Thursday into Thursday night.
    There is at least some chance for organized convective development
    near the front, which could briefly train from west to east. Global
    model QPF is locally as high as 1-3" along this corridor, and
    given the expected convective nature of activity, this would
    suggest isolated amounts over 3" are probable. A localized, and
    generally minor, flash flood risk could result.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Among the 00Z 3/25 models, the Regional GEM is by far the wettest,
    with isolated totals of 6-8+ inches. Despite the lack of
    instability, the wet antecedent soils along with the potential of
    0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates could lead to localized short-term
    runoff issues, particularly along small streams and over burn
    scars.

    Chenard/Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA...

    Slow-moving mid-upper trough will push the area of most favorable
    deep-layer forcing (upper divergence/diffluence and DPVA) farther
    east along the Gulf Coast. Coincident with the favorable synoptic-scale forcing, TPWs between 1.75-2.00", along with mixed layer CAPEs
    around 1000-1500 J/Kg, will result in a more enhanced excessive
    rainfall threat (i.e. Slight) across the Upper TX Coast to
    Southwest and South-Central LA. Attributing to a lower risk
    (Slight) compared to the previous days (Moderate) will be the
    weakening low-level flow, which given the more limited deep-layer
    shear, would more likely result in more effective convective outflows
    and thus shorter duration of the more intense updrafts and heavier
    rainfall cores.

    Hurley

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!51nzhViuXbuQ0J1nKHvqbN1vP0-Xf3rMqEWKdRUz8IyE= dYDF08OLSkM7d3H5_w-KshIq9f6Nswo1NwGsCUU-MOqS6T4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!51nzhViuXbuQ0J1nKHvqbN1vP0-Xf3rMqEWKdRUz8IyE= dYDF08OLSkM7d3H5_w-KshIq9f6Nswo1NwGsCUU-OHMksw8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!51nzhViuXbuQ0J1nKHvqbN1vP0-Xf3rMqEWKdRUz8IyE= dYDF08OLSkM7d3H5_w-KshIq9f6Nswo1NwGsCUU-HcqLQY0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 26 20:47:26 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 262047
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    447 PM EDT Wed Mar 26 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Mar 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS...

    ...16Z Update...
    The forecast remains on track for a corridor of very heavy=20
    rainfall to develop this afternoon across the Moderate risk area in
    South Texas. 12Z soundings at CRP and BRO depict an increasingly=20
    moist, unstable, and uncapped vertical profile which will foster=20
    widespread thunderstorm coverage today in the presence of diffluent
    upper-level flow. The main adjustment this afternoon includes a=20
    slight southward expansion of the Moderate Risk area in South Texas
    based on the 12Z HREF blended mean and neighborhood probabilities.

    Asherman

    ...Previous Discussion...
    Model guidance continues to become better clustered in terms of=20
    the timing and areal extent of a heavy rainfall signal across SC-
    South TX later this afternoon and overnight. Increasing upper level
    difluence and DPVA ahead of a slow moving upper trough will=20
    initiate organized convection across along the Rio Grande in SW TX=20
    later this afternoon, which will begin to grow upscale toward the=20
    evening hours given the uptick in SSE low-level inflow (25-40+ kts=20
    at 850 mb). This area has been very dry and could use the rain,=20 unfortunately this setup looks good enough to be a case where it's=20 beneficial rain initially, but then quickly overwhelms even the dry
    soil conditions. Model soundings by Wed afternoon/evening show a=20
    deeply saturated profile with good directional shear and moderate=20 instability. This should support some convective clusters with some
    weak mesocyclones and right mover motions are very slow. Combine=20
    that with the front nearby and anticipate upscale growth of slow=20
    moving convective clusters through Wed night within an environment=20
    capable of 2-3" per hour rainfall. Activity may eventually grow=20
    upscale enough that it begins propagating east and possibly=20
    offshore, however even if that eventually transpires, there will=20
    still be a prolonged period where training convection is a=20
    possibility.

    Overall there is above average model agreement on this overall
    evolution. Moreover, the latest (00Z) HREF probabilities have
    bumped up over the past few runs, including probabilities >50% of
    greater than 5" of rain in 24hrs (which is a good proxy for a
    Moderate Risk area based on verification). This is where the HREF
    has 70+ probs of rainfall exceeding 5"/24hrs, along with 40-50%
    probs of >8"/24hrs.

    While confidence on the event happening is above average, there is
    still uncertainty on the exact axis of heaviest rainfall, which
    will probably be somewhat narrow in nature. The 00Z ECMWF in fact
    came down considerably with the QPF during day 1, and as with its
    previous run, again has more of a diffuse look with multiple axes
    of heavier rain on either side of the Moderate Risk area. So again,
    the MDT risk is centered around the highest HREF probabilities,
    and generally on the southern gradient of the global model QPF
    solutions. In fact, changes made to the previous (Day 2) ERO
    include pulling the southern boundaries of the Moderate, Slight,
    and Marginal Risk areas a bit farther south across South TX. Flash
    flood coverage over this area is expected to increase Wednesday
    night into Thursday morning, and locally significant impacts are
    possible.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    A Marginal risk continues across portions of western OR and WA.
    Convection is expected to develop over portions of southwest OR by
    21z Wed and then track off to the north through the afternoon and
    evening hours. An anomalous amounts of CAPE is forecast,
    potentially upwards of 2000 j/kg, and PWs are forecast over the
    climatological 90th percentile. This combination of CAPE and PWs
    supports intense rainfall rates. These cells should be quick moving
    and the bigger hazard is probably severe weather (as highlighted
    by the SPC Slight risk), however the intense rainfall rates
    producing over 1" in an hour may be enough for localized flash
    flood concerns. Areas of terrain, urban areas, and low lying areas
    will be most prone to localized flash flooding driven by these
    short duration intense rainfall rates.

    Hurley/Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS AND MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF
    COAST...

    ...20Z Update...

    ...South Texas...
    The primary change to the Day 2 ERO includes a southward expansion
    of the Moderate Risk, and tightening of the Marginal and Slight=20
    Risk areas over Southeast Texas to reflect a southeastward shift in
    the highest QPF axis. While overall confidence in a flash flooding
    event is high, uncertainty remains regarding the convective=20
    evolution beyond 12z tomorrow, which will depend on outflow=20
    boundary placement originating from convection this afternoon and=20
    tonight.

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    Marginal flash flooding issues remain possible beginning tomorrow=20
    morning as showers and thunderstorms periodically train along a=20
    slowly returning warm front. The northern portion of the inherited=20
    Marginal Risk area was trimmed to reflect the corridor of higher=20
    HREF neighborhood probabilities of 2-3" rainfall exceedence.=20

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Minor adjustments overall to the overnight thinking regarding the
    Marginal Risk area associated with another modest atmospheric=20
    river. Rainfall totals of 3-5" through Friday morning may support
    isolated issues owing to saturated soils across the region.=20

    Asherman

    ...Previous Discussion...
    The event described in the day 1 discussion over south TX will=20
    continue into Thursday. There is a bit more uncertainty on the=20
    details by this time as convective evolution will likely be=20
    impacted by mesoscale influences of the day 1 convection. On the=20
    synoptic scale, ingredients are likely even more favorable for=20
    heavy rainfall on day 3 then they were on day 2. Large scale=20
    forcing should reload and be even a bit stronger as the mid level=20
    trough axis and associated shortwave energy moves across the area=20
    (enhancing the upper divergence/DPVA).

    However, the extent of the excessive rainfall risk will likely be
    at least partially dependent on mesoscale factors...such as the
    outflow location form the day 1 convection and its impact on
    instability. The expectation is that the outflow boundary will be
    near the coast by this time, and so that is where the greatest
    focus for training convection is expected on Thursday, and thus
    where the MDT risk is in place. There is some chance this is
    offshore by 12z Thursday, but the current consensus suggests it may
    struggle to clear the coast, leaving coastal areas susceptible to
    additional heavy rainfall and flash flooding. Even if instability
    is eroded by Thursday, the increase in forcing and southerly flow
    should be enough to destabilize portions of the area again with
    time, and so do think at least some flash flood risk exists even in
    a scenario where convection initially propagates offshore,
    especially Thu night with the uptick in S-SSE low-level flow.

    Overall confidence is high in a flash flood event, but confidence
    in the details by Thursday-Thu night remains low. In a worst case
    scenario outflow stalls near the coast allowing for repeat
    convection and a significant flash flood event could evolve. In a
    best case scenario convection propagates offshore, but
    redevelopment later in the day still results in some flash flood
    threat, albeit probably less significant. When combining day 2 and
    3 it seems probable that some areas receive 5-10" of rain over
    south TX, and localized amounts of 10-15" are certainly possible.
    Confidence is increasing in the coverage of flash flooding and the
    possibility of at least localized significant impacts, warranting
    the Moderate risks on both days 2 and 3.

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    A Marginal risk continues from yesterday's Day 3 ERO across portions
    of northern MO, southern IA, IL and central/southern IN. A
    stationary front draped across this region will gradually lift
    north as a warm front through the period. Southerly flow will
    result in an uptick in instability and moisture, and at least
    scattered convection is expected Thursday into Thursday night.
    There is at least some chance for organized convective development
    near the front, which could briefly train from west to east. Global
    model QPF is locally as high as 1-3" along this corridor, and
    given the expected convective nature of activity, this would
    suggest isolated amounts over 3" are probable. A localized, and
    generally minor, flash flood risk could result.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Among the 00Z 3/25 models, the Regional GEM is by far the wettest,
    with isolated totals of 6-8+ inches. Despite the lack of
    instability, the wet antecedent soils along with the potential of
    0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates could lead to localized short-term
    runoff issues, particularly along small streams and over burn
    scars.

    Chenard/Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA...

    ...20Z Update...
    Adjusted the northern extent of the Slight Risk a bit to reflect=20
    the theme of QPF focusing closer to the coastline as suggested by
    several of the global models, although spread remains regarding the
    placement and magnitude of the highest QPF amounts.=20

    Asherman

    ...Previous Discussion...
    Slow-moving mid-upper trough will push the area of most favorable=20
    deep-layer forcing (upper divergence/diffluence and DPVA) farther=20
    east along the Gulf Coast. Coincident with the favorable synoptic-
    scale forcing, TPWs between 1.75-2.00", along with mixed layer=20
    CAPEs around 1000-1500 J/Kg, will result in a more enhanced=20
    excessive rainfall threat (i.e. Slight) across the Upper TX Coast=20
    to Southwest and South-Central LA. Attributing to a lower risk=20
    (Slight) compared to the previous days (Moderate) will be the=20
    weakening low-level flow, which given the more limited deep-layer=20
    shear, would more likely result in more effective convective=20
    outflows and thus shorter duration of the more intense updrafts and
    heavier rainfall cores.

    Hurley

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71cR8YFnpdWdWAHS5Jh-PhkqKRuXXzul6IkG_CBagwb0= 5VZT0DcodidzuebWsTmDP5I8f7j2YO4ub3HRTbuza5rEURE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71cR8YFnpdWdWAHS5Jh-PhkqKRuXXzul6IkG_CBagwb0= 5VZT0DcodidzuebWsTmDP5I8f7j2YO4ub3HRTbuzek4oxLk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71cR8YFnpdWdWAHS5Jh-PhkqKRuXXzul6IkG_CBagwb0= 5VZT0DcodidzuebWsTmDP5I8f7j2YO4ub3HRTbuzGi7PgY8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 27 00:51:44 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 270049
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    849 PM EDT Wed Mar 26 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS...

    Only minor adjustment needed to the previous outlook across
    portions of south central and deep south Texas based on short term
    trends in satellite and radar imagery. 18Z soundings at CRP and=20
    BRO depicted an increasingly moist, unstable, and uncapped=20
    vertical profile which should continue to foster increasing
    coverage of showers and thunderstorms capable of producing
    torrential downpours later tonight/early Thursday morning.
    Meso-analysis showed diffluent upper- level flow, DPVA and ample=20
    moisture transport into the southern end of the Moderate risk area=20
    already underway. A deeply saturated profile with good directional shear...moderate instability with the front nearby should result=20=20
    upscale growth of slow moving convective clusters throughout the
    upcoming night. The 18Z HREF neighborhood probabilities of 3=20
    inches of rainfall in an hour peaking in the 15 to 20 percent range
    mainly in parts of Jim Hogg and Duval counties...with an axis of
    the probability of rainfall exceeding 5 inches during the period=20
    from 27/00Z through 27/12Z aligned southwest to northeast across
    the southern parts of the Moderate Risk area. These totals seem to
    be within reach given the 1.9 inch precipitable water at=20
    Brownsville and 1.7 inch precipitable water value at Corpus Christi
    from their 27/00Z soundings...especially if/where convective=20
    training occurs.=20

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    A Marginal risk remained in place across portions of western Oregon
    and western Washington. Convection is expected to develop over=20
    portions this evening and then track off to the north. 00Z
    soundings from Salem and Medford OR both showed roughly 600 to 800
    J per kg of CAPE and precipitable water values running between 0.75
    and 1.00 inches which should support locally heavy intense=20
    rainfall rates. The big limiting factor should be quick moving
    cells which should limit accumulations. Any rainfall rates=20
    producing over 1" in an hour...however...may be enough for=20
    localized flash flood concerns. Areas of terrain, urban areas, and=20
    low lying areas will be most prone to localized flash flooding=20
    driven by these short duration intense rainfall rates. As a=20
    result...no changes were made to the on-going Marginal Risk area at
    this point.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND SOUTH TEXAS AND MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF
    COAST...

    ...20Z Update...

    ...South Texas...
    The primary change to the Day 2 ERO includes a southward expansion
    of the Moderate Risk, and tightening of the Marginal and Slight
    Risk areas over Southeast Texas to reflect a southeastward shift in
    the highest QPF axis. While overall confidence in a flash flooding
    event is high, uncertainty remains regarding the convective
    evolution beyond 12z tomorrow, which will depend on outflow
    boundary placement originating from convection this afternoon and
    tonight.

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    Marginal flash flooding issues remain possible beginning tomorrow
    morning as showers and thunderstorms periodically train along a
    slowly returning warm front. The northern portion of the inherited
    Marginal Risk area was trimmed to reflect the corridor of higher
    HREF neighborhood probabilities of 2-3" rainfall exceedence.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Minor adjustments overall to the overnight thinking regarding the
    Marginal Risk area associated with another modest atmospheric
    river. Rainfall totals of 3-5" through Friday morning may support
    isolated issues owing to saturated soils across the region.

    Asherman

    ...Previous Discussion...
    The event described in the day 1 discussion over south TX will
    continue into Thursday. There is a bit more uncertainty on the
    details by this time as convective evolution will likely be
    impacted by mesoscale influences of the day 1 convection. On the
    synoptic scale, ingredients are likely even more favorable for
    heavy rainfall on day 3 then they were on day 2. Large scale
    forcing should reload and be even a bit stronger as the mid level
    trough axis and associated shortwave energy moves across the area
    (enhancing the upper divergence/DPVA).

    However, the extent of the excessive rainfall risk will likely be
    at least partially dependent on mesoscale factors...such as the
    outflow location form the day 1 convection and its impact on
    instability. The expectation is that the outflow boundary will be
    near the coast by this time, and so that is where the greatest
    focus for training convection is expected on Thursday, and thus
    where the MDT risk is in place. There is some chance this is
    offshore by 12z Thursday, but the current consensus suggests it may
    struggle to clear the coast, leaving coastal areas susceptible to
    additional heavy rainfall and flash flooding. Even if instability
    is eroded by Thursday, the increase in forcing and southerly flow
    should be enough to destabilize portions of the area again with
    time, and so do think at least some flash flood risk exists even in
    a scenario where convection initially propagates offshore,
    especially Thu night with the uptick in S-SSE low-level flow.

    Overall confidence is high in a flash flood event, but confidence
    in the details by Thursday-Thu night remains low. In a worst case
    scenario outflow stalls near the coast allowing for repeat
    convection and a significant flash flood event could evolve. In a
    best case scenario convection propagates offshore, but
    redevelopment later in the day still results in some flash flood
    threat, albeit probably less significant. When combining day 2 and
    3 it seems probable that some areas receive 5-10" of rain over
    south TX, and localized amounts of 10-15" are certainly possible.
    Confidence is increasing in the coverage of flash flooding and the
    possibility of at least localized significant impacts, warranting
    the Moderate risks on both days 2 and 3.

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    A Marginal risk continues from yesterday's Day 3 ERO across portions
    of northern MO, southern IA, IL and central/southern IN. A
    stationary front draped across this region will gradually lift
    north as a warm front through the period. Southerly flow will
    result in an uptick in instability and moisture, and at least
    scattered convection is expected Thursday into Thursday night.
    There is at least some chance for organized convective development
    near the front, which could briefly train from west to east. Global
    model QPF is locally as high as 1-3" along this corridor, and
    given the expected convective nature of activity, this would
    suggest isolated amounts over 3" are probable. A localized, and
    generally minor, flash flood risk could result.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Among the 00Z 3/25 models, the Regional GEM is by far the wettest,
    with isolated totals of 6-8+ inches. Despite the lack of
    instability, the wet antecedent soils along with the potential of
    0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates could lead to localized short-term
    runoff issues, particularly along small streams and over burn
    scars.

    Chenard/Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA...

    ...20Z Update...
    Adjusted the northern extent of the Slight Risk a bit to reflect
    the theme of QPF focusing closer to the coastline as suggested by
    several of the global models, although spread remains regarding the
    placement and magnitude of the highest QPF amounts.

    Asherman

    ...Previous Discussion...
    Slow-moving mid-upper trough will push the area of most favorable
    deep-layer forcing (upper divergence/diffluence and DPVA) farther
    east along the Gulf Coast. Coincident with the favorable synoptic-
    scale forcing, TPWs between 1.75-2.00", along with mixed layer
    CAPEs around 1000-1500 J/Kg, will result in a more enhanced
    excessive rainfall threat (i.e. Slight) across the Upper TX Coast
    to Southwest and South-Central LA. Attributing to a lower risk
    (Slight) compared to the previous days (Moderate) will be the
    weakening low-level flow, which given the more limited deep-layer
    shear, would more likely result in more effective convective
    outflows and thus shorter duration of the more intense updrafts and
    heavier rainfall cores.

    Hurley

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_czVf942gNOFeTr_bGyMMhfcCi7nGDpD3ffRbWVd4g8H= u4i21UyHTHA8PZiMDfzGJkHIjkoAJeuumJ7KGtVBctnZ77E$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_czVf942gNOFeTr_bGyMMhfcCi7nGDpD3ffRbWVd4g8H= u4i21UyHTHA8PZiMDfzGJkHIjkoAJeuumJ7KGtVBQ-320mU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_czVf942gNOFeTr_bGyMMhfcCi7nGDpD3ffRbWVd4g8H= u4i21UyHTHA8PZiMDfzGJkHIjkoAJeuumJ7KGtVBE2xH2co$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 27 08:28:21 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 270827
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    427 AM EDT Thu Mar 27 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS AND THE MIDDLE/LOWER TEXAS GULF COAST...

    ...South Texas...
    Periods of heavy rainfall over South TX will continue into today=20
    and tonight, as ample moisture, shear, and instability (which will
    reload today via both daytime heating and decreasing lapse rates=20
    aloft) remain in place. That said, spatially uncertainty remains
    relatively high for a Day 1 outlook, as mesoscale factors this=20
    morning may have a large impact on the ultimate evolution of=20
    convection (best expressed by the lack of consistency from hourly
    runs of the HRRR, as well as the 00z HRRR being an outlier from
    most of the other CAMs with regard to QPF maxima). On the synoptic
    scale, ingredients are more favorable for heavy rainfall than
    yesterday, and large scale forcing should reload with the mid-=20
    level trough axis and associated shortwave energy moving across=20
    the area (enhancing the upper divergence/DPVA).

    However, the extent of the excessive rainfall risk will be at=20
    least partially dependent on mesoscale factors, and observational
    trends have already diverged somewhat significantly from the 00z
    HREF consensus (with convection propagating farther south than
    indicated, to near Brownsville). Despite these trends, the
    inherited Moderate risk remains largely unchanged, as localized=20
    3-5" totals over the past 12-24 hours have occurred within the
    inherited area where additional training is expected. In fact, the
    one area of expansion of the Moderate risk was to bring the contour
    farther inland where FFGs have been depressed. While there is still=20
    some chance that the bulk of convection is offshore by 12z,
    observational and model trends suggests it may struggle to clear=20
    the coast, leaving coastal areas susceptible to additional heavy=20
    rainfall and flash flooding.=20

    While a break in convective activity is somewhat likely by late
    morning to midday, there is high confidence that scattered to
    numerous instances of flash flooding will become likely again by
    this afternoon and evening. In a worst case scenario, the outflow=20
    stalls near the coast allowing for repeat convection and a=20
    significant flash flood event could evolve (though an increase in
    CAMs suggesting that the convection propagates fully offshore has
    reduced this risk a bit). When combining rainfall that has already
    occurred with what is forecast, it seems probable that some areas=20
    receive 5-8" of storm totals, and localized amounts of 8-12" are=20
    certainly possible.=20

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    A Marginal risk was maintained (and shifted a bit west with
    observational and model trends) across portions of northern MO,=20
    southern IA, IL and central/southern IN. Warm-air advection and=20
    overrunning near a stationary front draped across this region will
    gradually lift north as a warm front through the period. In the
    meantime, a short period of training this morning may result in
    short-term 1-3" totals (per HREF PMM). A localized, and generally=20
    minor, flash flood risk could result.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Despite the relative lack of instability, the wet antecedent soils
    (along with the potential of 0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates) could=20
    lead to localized short-term runoff issues, particularly along=20
    small streams and over burn scars.

    Churchill/Chenard/Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA...

    An inherited Slight risk area was maintained (and shifted a bit
    west based on model trends) as a slow-moving mid-upper trough will
    push the area of most favorable deep-layer forcing (upper divergence
    and DPVA) farther east along the Gulf Coast. Coincident with the=20
    favorable synoptic-scale forcing, TPWs between 1.75-2.00", along=20
    with mixed layer CAPE around 1000-1500 J/Kg, will result in a more
    enhanced excessive rainfall threat (i.e. Slight) across the Upper=20
    TX Coast to Southwest and South-Central LA. Attributing to a lower
    risk (Slight) compared to the previous days (Moderate) will be the
    weakening low-level flow, which given the more limited deep-layer=20
    shear, would more likely result in more effective convective=20
    outflows and thus shorter duration of the more intense updrafts and
    heavier rainfall cores (as well as generally drier antecedent
    conditions). Considerable uncertainty still exists, as convective
    details remain unclear at this point even on Day 1, but confidence
    in 2-4" localized totals is increasing per the latest guidance.=20

    Churchill/Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    A continuation of the decreasing flash flood risk is expected from
    Day 2 into Day 3, as guidance largely indicates localized totals=20
    of only 1-3" (mostly concentrated near the Central Gulf Coast=20
    where FFGs are rather high). The inherited Marginal risk area was
    trimmed rather significantly to the north (into the Mid-South), as
    forcing and instability look rather minimal (with the ECMWF being=20
    the wettest global model only indicating localized totals of 1-2").
    A localized flash flood threat should result for areas confined
    closer to the Gulf Coast (and mostly limited to more sensitive
    urban areas).=20


    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7Ou2h6avDsX78Z3Qd3A2WISfGNVRhwCegxWnSpBcbRS1= 25hGTh1ciTVyI0LBYbguNdSaL1Ksmqzt6jHrs3fBc2XrShQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7Ou2h6avDsX78Z3Qd3A2WISfGNVRhwCegxWnSpBcbRS1= 25hGTh1ciTVyI0LBYbguNdSaL1Ksmqzt6jHrs3fBu64n3KM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7Ou2h6avDsX78Z3Qd3A2WISfGNVRhwCegxWnSpBcbRS1= 25hGTh1ciTVyI0LBYbguNdSaL1Ksmqzt6jHrs3fBNCQfhhE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 27 15:30:43 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 271530
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1130 AM EDT Thu Mar 27 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS AND THE MIDDLE/LOWER TEXAS GULF COAST...

    ...South Texas...
    Complicated and messy forecast going through the rest of the period
    across portions of South Texas through the Middle Texas Gulf Coast
    but potential exists for numerous flash floods, some of which could
    be locally significant. For this update, the Moderate Risk was=20
    adjusted southward based on both current observations and radar=20
    trends as well as the 12Z guidance including the HREF that shifted
    the axis of heaviest rainfall southward. MPD #088 was issued just=20
    a bit ago to cover the ongoing and near- term flash flood threat.=20

    Heading into this afternoon through tonight, guidance seems to be=20
    keying on a convective complex developing and tracking=20
    east/northeast through South Texas. While instability is modest, a better
    shear environment and an increase in the PWs will support greater=20
    storm organization and higher rain rates. There are some=20
    suggestions for repeating/training clusters, particularly in the=20
    southern extent of the updated Moderate Risk area, where localized=20
    higher end additional QPF is possible (4-6").=20

    This may result in numerous flash floods and locally significant
    flooding into tonight. The previous discussion follows...

    Periods of heavy rainfall over South TX will continue into today
    and tonight, as ample moisture, shear, and instability (which will
    reload today via both daytime heating and decreasing lapse rates
    aloft) remain in place. That said, spatially uncertainty remains
    relatively high for a Day 1 outlook, as mesoscale factors this
    morning may have a large impact on the ultimate evolution of
    convection (best expressed by the lack of consistency from hourly
    runs of the HRRR, as well as the 00z HRRR being an outlier from
    most of the other CAMs with regard to QPF maxima). On the synoptic
    scale, ingredients are more favorable for heavy rainfall than
    yesterday, and large scale forcing should reload with the mid-
    level trough axis and associated shortwave energy moving across
    the area (enhancing the upper divergence/DPVA).

    However, the extent of the excessive rainfall risk will be at
    least partially dependent on mesoscale factors, and observational
    trends have already diverged somewhat significantly from the 00z
    HREF consensus (with convection propagating farther south than
    indicated, to near Brownsville). Despite these trends, the
    inherited Moderate risk remains largely unchanged, as localized
    3-5" totals over the past 12-24 hours have occurred within the
    inherited area where additional training is expected. In fact, the
    one area of expansion of the Moderate risk was to bring the contour
    farther inland where FFGs have been depressed. While there is still
    some chance that the bulk of convection is offshore by 12z,
    observational and model trends suggests it may struggle to clear
    the coast, leaving coastal areas susceptible to additional heavy
    rainfall and flash flooding.

    While a break in convective activity is somewhat likely by late
    morning to midday, there is high confidence that scattered to
    numerous instances of flash flooding will become likely again by
    this afternoon and evening. In a worst case scenario, the outflow
    stalls near the coast allowing for repeat convection and a
    significant flash flood event could evolve (though an increase in
    CAMs suggesting that the convection propagates fully offshore has
    reduced this risk a bit). When combining rainfall that has already
    occurred with what is forecast, it seems probable that some areas
    receive 5-8" of storm totals, and localized amounts of 8-12" are
    certainly possible.

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    A Marginal risk was maintained (and shifted a bit west with
    observational and model trends) across portions of northern MO,
    southern IA, IL and central/southern IN. Warm-air advection and
    overrunning near a stationary front draped across this region will
    gradually lift north as a warm front through the period. Through
    the rest of the period, additional rainfall amounts up to 1"
    (locally up to 2") will be possible, resulting in a localized and
    generally minor flash flood risk.=20

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Despite the relative lack of instability, the wet antecedent soils
    (along with the potential of 0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates) could
    lead to localized short-term runoff issues, particularly along
    small streams and over burn scars.

    Churchill/Chenard/Hurley/Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA...

    An inherited Slight risk area was maintained (and shifted a bit
    west based on model trends) as a slow-moving mid-upper trough will
    push the area of most favorable deep-layer forcing (upper divergence
    and DPVA) farther east along the Gulf Coast. Coincident with the
    favorable synoptic-scale forcing, TPWs between 1.75-2.00", along
    with mixed layer CAPE around 1000-1500 J/Kg, will result in a more
    enhanced excessive rainfall threat (i.e. Slight) across the Upper
    TX Coast to Southwest and South-Central LA. Attributing to a lower
    risk (Slight) compared to the previous days (Moderate) will be the
    weakening low-level flow, which given the more limited deep-layer
    shear, would more likely result in more effective convective
    outflows and thus shorter duration of the more intense updrafts and
    heavier rainfall cores (as well as generally drier antecedent
    conditions). Considerable uncertainty still exists, as convective
    details remain unclear at this point even on Day 1, but confidence
    in 2-4" localized totals is increasing per the latest guidance.

    Churchill/Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    A continuation of the decreasing flash flood risk is expected from
    Day 2 into Day 3, as guidance largely indicates localized totals
    of only 1-3" (mostly concentrated near the Central Gulf Coast
    where FFGs are rather high). The inherited Marginal risk area was
    trimmed rather significantly to the north (into the Mid-South), as
    forcing and instability look rather minimal (with the ECMWF being
    the wettest global model only indicating localized totals of 1-2").
    A localized flash flood threat should result for areas confined
    closer to the Gulf Coast (and mostly limited to more sensitive
    urban areas).


    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8-5kVmISDd641aZ8Q4DrqiNS5AQNhIUjoMKCI71H372t= 5J1zBNH-5KXBhFbKBzQ54Yy9N7yCsLfbJPzOOORTCa5yBF8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8-5kVmISDd641aZ8Q4DrqiNS5AQNhIUjoMKCI71H372t= 5J1zBNH-5KXBhFbKBzQ54Yy9N7yCsLfbJPzOOORTKSDF5ak$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8-5kVmISDd641aZ8Q4DrqiNS5AQNhIUjoMKCI71H372t= 5J1zBNH-5KXBhFbKBzQ54Yy9N7yCsLfbJPzOOORTM3cN9hY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 27 18:21:54 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 271820
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    220 PM EDT Thu Mar 27 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Mar 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS AND THE MIDDLE/LOWER TEXAS GULF COAST...

    ...South Texas...
    Complicated and messy forecast going through the rest of the period
    across portions of South Texas through the Middle Texas Gulf Coast
    but potential exists for numerous flash floods, some of which could
    be locally significant. For this update, the Moderate Risk was
    adjusted southward based on both current observations and radar
    trends as well as the 12Z guidance including the HREF that shifted
    the axis of heaviest rainfall southward. MPD #088 was issued just
    a bit ago to cover the ongoing and near- term flash flood threat.

    Heading into this afternoon through tonight, guidance seems to be
    keying on a convective complex developing and tracking
    east/northeast through South Texas. While instability is modest, a better
    shear environment and an increase in the PWs will support greater
    storm organization and higher rain rates. There are some
    suggestions for repeating/training clusters, particularly in the
    southern extent of the updated Moderate Risk area, where localized
    higher end additional QPF is possible (4-6").

    This may result in numerous flash floods and locally significant
    flooding into tonight. The previous discussion follows...

    Periods of heavy rainfall over South TX will continue into today
    and tonight, as ample moisture, shear, and instability (which will
    reload today via both daytime heating and decreasing lapse rates
    aloft) remain in place. That said, spatially uncertainty remains
    relatively high for a Day 1 outlook, as mesoscale factors this
    morning may have a large impact on the ultimate evolution of
    convection (best expressed by the lack of consistency from hourly
    runs of the HRRR, as well as the 00z HRRR being an outlier from
    most of the other CAMs with regard to QPF maxima). On the synoptic
    scale, ingredients are more favorable for heavy rainfall than
    yesterday, and large scale forcing should reload with the mid-
    level trough axis and associated shortwave energy moving across
    the area (enhancing the upper divergence/DPVA).

    However, the extent of the excessive rainfall risk will be at
    least partially dependent on mesoscale factors, and observational
    trends have already diverged somewhat significantly from the 00z
    HREF consensus (with convection propagating farther south than
    indicated, to near Brownsville). Despite these trends, the
    inherited Moderate risk remains largely unchanged, as localized
    3-5" totals over the past 12-24 hours have occurred within the
    inherited area where additional training is expected. In fact, the
    one area of expansion of the Moderate risk was to bring the contour
    farther inland where FFGs have been depressed. While there is still
    some chance that the bulk of convection is offshore by 12z,
    observational and model trends suggests it may struggle to clear
    the coast, leaving coastal areas susceptible to additional heavy
    rainfall and flash flooding.

    While a break in convective activity is somewhat likely by late
    morning to midday, there is high confidence that scattered to
    numerous instances of flash flooding will become likely again by
    this afternoon and evening. In a worst case scenario, the outflow
    stalls near the coast allowing for repeat convection and a
    significant flash flood event could evolve (though an increase in
    CAMs suggesting that the convection propagates fully offshore has
    reduced this risk a bit). When combining rainfall that has already
    occurred with what is forecast, it seems probable that some areas
    receive 5-8" of storm totals, and localized amounts of 8-12" are
    certainly possible.

    ...MS and OH Valley...
    A Marginal risk was maintained (and shifted a bit west with
    observational and model trends) across portions of northern MO,
    southern IA, IL and central/southern IN. Warm-air advection and
    overrunning near a stationary front draped across this region will
    gradually lift north as a warm front through the period. Through
    the rest of the period, additional rainfall amounts up to 1"
    (locally up to 2") will be possible, resulting in a localized and
    generally minor flash flood risk.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Another modest Atmospheric River (narrow ribbon of 500+ kg/m/s
    IVTs) will result in pockets of 3-5+ inch 24 hour rainfall totals
    along the West Coast from Northern CA northward through OR-WA.
    Despite the relative lack of instability, the wet antecedent soils
    (along with the potential of 0.3-0.5 in/hr rainfall rates) could
    lead to localized short-term runoff issues, particularly along
    small streams and over burn scars.

    Churchill/Chenard/Hurley/Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA...

    The Slight Risk was maintained but confidence has lowered compared
    to the previous cycle. The recent set of guidance and=20
    probabilities for higher QPF have lowered, keeping the bulk of the=20
    heaviest rainfall off the Gulf Coast as well as a subtle shift to=20
    the west along the TX Gulf Coast. For now, opting to keep the=20
    Slight in place but if trends continue in the next update,=20
    probabilities for excessive rainfall and flash flooding may drop=20
    below Slight Risk levels. Previous discussion follows...

    An inherited Slight risk area was maintained (and shifted a bit
    west based on model trends) as a slow-moving mid-upper trough will
    push the area of most favorable deep-layer forcing (upper divergence
    and DPVA) farther east along the Gulf Coast. Coincident with the
    favorable synoptic-scale forcing, TPWs between 1.75-2.00", along
    with mixed layer CAPE around 1000-1500 J/Kg, will result in a more
    enhanced excessive rainfall threat (i.e. Slight) across the Upper
    TX Coast to Southwest and South-Central LA. Attributing to a lower
    risk (Slight) compared to the previous days (Moderate) will be the
    weakening low-level flow, which given the more limited deep-layer
    shear, would more likely result in more effective convective
    outflows and thus shorter duration of the more intense updrafts and
    heavier rainfall cores (as well as generally drier antecedent
    conditions). Considerable uncertainty still exists, as convective
    details remain unclear at this point even on Day 1, but confidence
    in 2-4" localized totals is increasing per the latest guidance.

    Churchill/Hurley/Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    A continuation of the decreasing flash flood risk is expected from
    Day 2 into Day 3, as guidance largely indicates localized totals
    of only 1-2" (mostly concentrated near the Gulf Coast where FFGs=20
    are rather high). The inherited Marginal risk area was trimmed=20
    further, as forcing and instability look rather minimal. A=20
    localized flash flood threat should result for areas confined=20
    closer to the Gulf Coast (and mostly limited to more sensitive=20
    urban areas).


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5cp1VjqUTCO1oc5UlwD_PKTbp0iXXbBliFCJvBTRIB8e= yXZDW2rKrg4kGt6mxR2S8devNSfkB9R49QBcepzufMsgJqI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5cp1VjqUTCO1oc5UlwD_PKTbp0iXXbBliFCJvBTRIB8e= yXZDW2rKrg4kGt6mxR2S8devNSfkB9R49QBcepzuD1cZoZw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5cp1VjqUTCO1oc5UlwD_PKTbp0iXXbBliFCJvBTRIB8e= yXZDW2rKrg4kGt6mxR2S8devNSfkB9R49QBcepzum5kAxTM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 28 00:51:30 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 280050
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    850 PM EDT Thu Mar 27 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS AND THE MIDDLE/LOWER TEXAS GULF COAST...

    ...South Texas...
    Maintained the Moderate Risk area of excessive rainfall in the face
    of a complicated and messy forecast going through the rest of the
    night across portions of South Texas through the Middle Texas Gulf
    Coast but potential exists for numerous flash floods, some of=20
    which. Adjustments were made to the outlook areas based on radar
    and satellite trends through the late afternoon and early evening
    and changes in Flash Flood Guidance over the past 24 hours. For=20
    this update, the western boundary of the Moderate Risk was adjusted eastward...but adjustments were tempered by guidance which showed=20
    at least some potential for renewed convection associated with a=20
    wave moving out of Mexico later tonight. Mesoscale Precipitation
    Discussion 090 was issued just a bit ago to cover the ongoing and=20
    near- term flash flood threat and a convective complex developing=20
    and tracking east/northeast through South Texas. While instability=20
    remained modest, a better shear environment and an increase in the=20
    PWs should support greater storm organization and higher rain=20
    rates. There are some suggestions for repeating/training clusters,=20 particularly in the southern extent of the updated Moderate Risk=20
    area, where localized higher end additional QPF is possible (4-6").

    This may result in numerous flash floods and locally significant
    flooding into tonight. The previous discussion follows...

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA...

    The Slight Risk was maintained but confidence has lowered compared
    to the previous cycle. The recent set of guidance and
    probabilities for higher QPF have lowered, keeping the bulk of the
    heaviest rainfall off the Gulf Coast as well as a subtle shift to
    the west along the TX Gulf Coast. For now, opting to keep the
    Slight in place but if trends continue in the next update,
    probabilities for excessive rainfall and flash flooding may drop
    below Slight Risk levels. Previous discussion follows...

    An inherited Slight risk area was maintained (and shifted a bit
    west based on model trends) as a slow-moving mid-upper trough will
    push the area of most favorable deep-layer forcing (upper divergence
    and DPVA) farther east along the Gulf Coast. Coincident with the
    favorable synoptic-scale forcing, TPWs between 1.75-2.00", along
    with mixed layer CAPE around 1000-1500 J/Kg, will result in a more
    enhanced excessive rainfall threat (i.e. Slight) across the Upper
    TX Coast to Southwest and South-Central LA. Attributing to a lower
    risk (Slight) compared to the previous days (Moderate) will be the
    weakening low-level flow, which given the more limited deep-layer
    shear, would more likely result in more effective convective
    outflows and thus shorter duration of the more intense updrafts and
    heavier rainfall cores (as well as generally drier antecedent
    conditions). Considerable uncertainty still exists, as convective
    details remain unclear at this point even on Day 1, but confidence
    in 2-4" localized totals is increasing per the latest guidance.

    Churchill/Hurley/Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    A continuation of the decreasing flash flood risk is expected from
    Day 2 into Day 3, as guidance largely indicates localized totals
    of only 1-2" (mostly concentrated near the Gulf Coast where FFGs
    are rather high). The inherited Marginal risk area was trimmed
    further, as forcing and instability look rather minimal. A
    localized flash flood threat should result for areas confined
    closer to the Gulf Coast (and mostly limited to more sensitive
    urban areas).


    Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!90747zaJiiKiv1baKP884IiPj-EwOLBfifKmh5G79J-q= QX4R9SPLRamjO0TpoxJaPh4tSgo8JWrwdQsMA_m1ib-S6gE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!90747zaJiiKiv1baKP884IiPj-EwOLBfifKmh5G79J-q= QX4R9SPLRamjO0TpoxJaPh4tSgo8JWrwdQsMA_m15pbWJKs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!90747zaJiiKiv1baKP884IiPj-EwOLBfifKmh5G79J-q= QX4R9SPLRamjO0TpoxJaPh4tSgo8JWrwdQsMA_m1dfER3fI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 28 08:16:42 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 280815
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    415 AM EDT Fri Mar 28 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    An inherited Slight risk area was maintained (and adjusted) once=20
    again for this update, as a slow-moving mid-upper trough will push=20
    the area of most favorable deep-layer forcing (upper divergence and
    DPVA) farther east along the Gulf Coast. However, considerably=20
    uncertainty remains (especially for an initial Day 1 outlook) as=20
    much is dependent on the evolution of convection this morning, as=20
    convection continues to consolidate farther south than virtually=20
    all of the guidance indicated at this time yesterday (resulting in=20
    the heaviest rainfall totals of 6"+ over the past 24-48 hours=20
    occurring over far South TX). Should a similar error occur today,=20
    a Slight risk may well not verify (as the consolidating MCS at the=20
    time of writing over far South TX will propagate offshore and may=20
    prevent critically necessary moisture flux transport northward into
    the Gulf coast, as best depicted by the 00z HRRR). In addition,=20
    attributing to a lower risk (Slight) compared to the previous days=20 (Moderate) will be the weakening low-level flow, which given the=20
    more limited deep-layer shear, would more likely result in more=20
    effective convective outflows and thus shorter duration of the more
    intense updrafts and heavier rainfall cores (as well as generally=20
    drier antecedent conditions).=20

    However, should more intense convection initiate and sustain=20
    itself farther north (as much of the rest of the 00z HREF
    indicates), then localized totals of 3-6"+ totals will be possible
    from Southeast TX and the Upper TX coast through much of=20
    southeastern LA (per 00z HREF PMM QPF and associated 40-km=20
    neighborhood probabilities for 3" and 5" exceedance of ~30-60% and=20
    ~20-40%, respectively). Meteorological factors supporting this
    potential include favorable synoptic-scale forcing (particularly
    the continued impressive divergence aloft), precipitable water
    values between 1.75-2.00", and CAPE building to 1000-1500 J/kg.
    These same factors may still fuel intense convection offshore which
    ultimately fail to materialize further inland, thus the Slight=20
    risk is considered to be conditional. On that note, the Marginal=20
    risk was also expanded southwestward to include South TX, given the
    ongoing flooding and low-end potential for convective=20
    redevelopment once again with daytime heating (though this=20
    convection should be much less intense with the bulk of the forcing
    shifting eastward).=20

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    A continuation of the decreasing flash flood risk is expected from
    Day 1 into Day 2, as ensemble guidance indicates the potential for
    localized totals of 1-3" (mostly concentrated near the Gulf Coast=20
    where FFGs are rather high). The limited inherited Marginal risk=20
    area was maintained for this update, as forcing and instability
    continue to look rather minimal (and most deterministic guidance at
    this point indicates localized totals of less than 1" for the most
    part, including the new WPC forecast, but decided to maintain the
    Marginal for at least one more cycle to allow for new CAM data).=20
    Any localized flash flood threat should mostly be confined closer=20
    to the Gulf Coast (and limited to more sensitive urban areas).

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    A much broader inherited Marginal risk area (relative to Day 2) has
    been largely maintained (and expanded a bit), as multiple shortwave
    troughs emerging from the Intermountain West and phase with the
    polar jet and an associated longwave trough. This complex
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of convection
    across much of the eastern CONUS, including portions of the MS, TN,
    and OH Valleys. Despite the complexity of the synoptic and
    mesoscale details, global models are in fairly good agreement in
    indicating a convection breaking out across a broad warm sector
    (characterized by PWATs of 1.5-2.0", SB CAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg, and
    effective bulk shear of 40-60 kts). Most deterministic solutions
    depict 1-3" localized totals (with 2-3" amounts most commonly
    located farther south across the Lower MS Valley and Mid-South,
    where better instability and moisture tend to be located) with both
    the GEFS and ECENS indicating 2" exceedance potential (with the
    GEFS favoring portions of the Mid-South from north MS into West and
    Middle TN, while the ECENS favors locations farther southwest into
    the MS Delta). These types of probabilities from the ensemble
    guidance suggest that CAMs may well depict 2-4" localized totals,
    and a targeted Slight risk introduction may be necessary in
    subsequent outlooks (once better ensemble agreement and/or a
    strengthening trend is more evident in the global guidance).=20

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!43ObZUJ4PBQQ481zEMSGQHKWXuNJ4ukJp3phI4tVwSNi= OPfikJzR6lc4-f-ak1Er6Mm6iR_jh-23LeXqgX_jDNtD7g0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!43ObZUJ4PBQQ481zEMSGQHKWXuNJ4ukJp3phI4tVwSNi= OPfikJzR6lc4-f-ak1Er6Mm6iR_jh-23LeXqgX_jNfqHCU0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!43ObZUJ4PBQQ481zEMSGQHKWXuNJ4ukJp3phI4tVwSNi= OPfikJzR6lc4-f-ak1Er6Mm6iR_jh-23LeXqgX_jcXaGXzQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 28 15:25:28 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 281525
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1125 AM EDT Fri Mar 28 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    16Z Update: Maintained the Slight Risk for the Day 1 ERO Update
    with minimal adjustments. It's still rather uncertain how
    today/tonight will play out but given the environmental setup
    (mid/upper level trough approaching and favorable moisture
    transport) and the most recent model guidance still pointing
    towards some scattered higher end QPF, saw no reason to
    dramatically change the messaging and ERO risk level. Finer details
    and mesoscale interactions will be driving how this will evolve,
    but the latest HREF probs point toward upper TX coast and coastal
    LA as the primary focus area for repeating/training convection.
    Neighborhood probs for 5" approach 40-50% along the coastal areas
    with a low-end (10-15%) signal for 8" accumulations through 12Z
    Saturday. Overall, this lines up with the previous forecast and
    ERO, so saw no reason to significantly alter what was inherited.
    Previous discussion follows...

    An inherited Slight risk area was maintained (and adjusted) once
    again for this update, as a slow-moving mid-upper trough will push
    the area of most favorable deep-layer forcing (upper divergence and
    DPVA) farther east along the Gulf Coast. However, considerably
    uncertainty remains (especially for an initial Day 1 outlook) as
    much is dependent on the evolution of convection this morning, as
    convection continues to consolidate farther south than virtually
    all of the guidance indicated at this time yesterday (resulting in
    the heaviest rainfall totals of 6"+ over the past 24-48 hours
    occurring over far South TX). Should a similar error occur today,
    a Slight risk may well not verify (as the consolidating MCS at the
    time of writing over far South TX will propagate offshore and may
    prevent critically necessary moisture flux transport northward into
    the Gulf coast, as best depicted by the 00z HRRR). In addition,
    attributing to a lower risk (Slight) compared to the previous days
    (Moderate) will be the weakening low-level flow, which given the
    more limited deep-layer shear, would more likely result in more
    effective convective outflows and thus shorter duration of the more
    intense updrafts and heavier rainfall cores (as well as generally
    drier antecedent conditions).

    However, should more intense convection initiate and sustain
    itself farther north (as much of the rest of the 00z HREF
    indicates), then localized totals of 3-6"+ totals will be possible
    from Southeast TX and the Upper TX coast through much of
    southeastern LA (per 00z HREF PMM QPF and associated 40-km
    neighborhood probabilities for 3" and 5" exceedance of ~30-60% and
    ~20-40%, respectively). Meteorological factors supporting this
    potential include favorable synoptic-scale forcing (particularly
    the continued impressive divergence aloft), precipitable water
    values between 1.75-2.00", and CAPE building to 1000-1500 J/kg.
    These same factors may still fuel intense convection offshore which
    ultimately fail to materialize further inland, thus the Slight
    risk is considered to be conditional. On that note, the Marginal
    risk was also expanded southwestward to include South TX, given the
    ongoing flooding and low-end potential for convective
    redevelopment once again with daytime heating (though this
    convection should be much less intense with the bulk of the forcing
    shifting eastward).

    Churchill/Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    A continuation of the decreasing flash flood risk is expected from
    Day 1 into Day 2, as ensemble guidance indicates the potential for
    localized totals of 1-3" (mostly concentrated near the Gulf Coast
    where FFGs are rather high). The limited inherited Marginal risk
    area was maintained for this update, as forcing and instability
    continue to look rather minimal (and most deterministic guidance at
    this point indicates localized totals of less than 1" for the most
    part, including the new WPC forecast, but decided to maintain the
    Marginal for at least one more cycle to allow for new CAM data).
    Any localized flash flood threat should mostly be confined closer
    to the Gulf Coast (and limited to more sensitive urban areas).

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    A much broader inherited Marginal risk area (relative to Day 2) has
    been largely maintained (and expanded a bit), as multiple shortwave
    troughs emerging from the Intermountain West and phase with the
    polar jet and an associated longwave trough. This complex
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of convection
    across much of the eastern CONUS, including portions of the MS, TN,
    and OH Valleys. Despite the complexity of the synoptic and
    mesoscale details, global models are in fairly good agreement in
    indicating a convection breaking out across a broad warm sector
    (characterized by PWATs of 1.5-2.0", SB CAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg, and
    effective bulk shear of 40-60 kts). Most deterministic solutions
    depict 1-3" localized totals (with 2-3" amounts most commonly
    located farther south across the Lower MS Valley and Mid-South,
    where better instability and moisture tend to be located) with both
    the GEFS and ECENS indicating 2" exceedance potential (with the
    GEFS favoring portions of the Mid-South from north MS into West and
    Middle TN, while the ECENS favors locations farther southwest into
    the MS Delta). These types of probabilities from the ensemble
    guidance suggest that CAMs may well depict 2-4" localized totals,
    and a targeted Slight risk introduction may be necessary in
    subsequent outlooks (once better ensemble agreement and/or a
    strengthening trend is more evident in the global guidance).

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7HNnSOJeBjVWt59rpDVllGQqo8iKX31b6lMBdnX91Bp8= FfKLvh3yfp6QqzSVf7GCeT-kLTtJiS2Dxqk2QTfK8FJZcys$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7HNnSOJeBjVWt59rpDVllGQqo8iKX31b6lMBdnX91Bp8= FfKLvh3yfp6QqzSVf7GCeT-kLTtJiS2Dxqk2QTfKwJJWjHU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7HNnSOJeBjVWt59rpDVllGQqo8iKX31b6lMBdnX91Bp8= FfKLvh3yfp6QqzSVf7GCeT-kLTtJiS2Dxqk2QTfKhx59v8g$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 28 19:11:42 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 281911
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    311 PM EDT Fri Mar 28 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Mar 28 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    16Z Update: Maintained the Slight Risk for the Day 1 ERO Update
    with minimal adjustments. It's still rather uncertain how
    today/tonight will play out but given the environmental setup
    (mid/upper level trough approaching and favorable moisture
    transport) and the most recent model guidance still pointing
    towards some scattered higher end QPF, saw no reason to
    dramatically change the messaging and ERO risk level. Finer details
    and mesoscale interactions will be driving how this will evolve,
    but the latest HREF probs point toward upper TX coast and coastal
    LA as the primary focus area for repeating/training convection.
    Neighborhood probs for 5" approach 40-50% along the coastal areas
    with a low-end (10-15%) signal for 8" accumulations through 12Z
    Saturday. Overall, this lines up with the previous forecast and
    ERO, so saw no reason to significantly alter what was inherited.
    Previous discussion follows...

    An inherited Slight risk area was maintained (and adjusted) once
    again for this update, as a slow-moving mid-upper trough will push
    the area of most favorable deep-layer forcing (upper divergence and
    DPVA) farther east along the Gulf Coast. However, considerably
    uncertainty remains (especially for an initial Day 1 outlook) as
    much is dependent on the evolution of convection this morning, as
    convection continues to consolidate farther south than virtually
    all of the guidance indicated at this time yesterday (resulting in
    the heaviest rainfall totals of 6"+ over the past 24-48 hours
    occurring over far South TX). Should a similar error occur today,
    a Slight risk may well not verify (as the consolidating MCS at the
    time of writing over far South TX will propagate offshore and may
    prevent critically necessary moisture flux transport northward into
    the Gulf coast, as best depicted by the 00z HRRR). In addition,
    attributing to a lower risk (Slight) compared to the previous days
    (Moderate) will be the weakening low-level flow, which given the
    more limited deep-layer shear, would more likely result in more
    effective convective outflows and thus shorter duration of the more
    intense updrafts and heavier rainfall cores (as well as generally
    drier antecedent conditions).

    However, should more intense convection initiate and sustain
    itself farther north (as much of the rest of the 00z HREF
    indicates), then localized totals of 3-6"+ totals will be possible
    from Southeast TX and the Upper TX coast through much of
    southeastern LA (per 00z HREF PMM QPF and associated 40-km
    neighborhood probabilities for 3" and 5" exceedance of ~30-60% and
    ~20-40%, respectively). Meteorological factors supporting this
    potential include favorable synoptic-scale forcing (particularly
    the continued impressive divergence aloft), precipitable water
    values between 1.75-2.00", and CAPE building to 1000-1500 J/kg.
    These same factors may still fuel intense convection offshore which
    ultimately fail to materialize further inland, thus the Slight
    risk is considered to be conditional. On that note, the Marginal
    risk was also expanded southwestward to include South TX, given the
    ongoing flooding and low-end potential for convective
    redevelopment once again with daytime heating (though this
    convection should be much less intense with the bulk of the forcing
    shifting eastward).

    Churchill/Taylor


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    A continuation of the decreasing flash flood risk is expected from
    Day 1 into Day 2, as ensemble guidance indicates the potential for
    localized totals of 1-3" (mostly concentrated near the Gulf Coast
    where FFGs are rather high). The limited inherited Marginal risk
    area was maintained for this update, as forcing and instability
    continue to look rather minimal (and most deterministic guidance at
    this point indicates localized totals of less than 1" for the most
    part, including the new WPC forecast, but decided to maintain the
    Marginal. Any localized flash flood threat should mostly be=20
    confined closer to the Gulf Coast (and limited to more sensitive=20
    urban areas).

    Churchill/Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    20Z Update:

    A broad area of convection is expected Sunday into Sunday night
    with a pair of shortwaves moving into the Central U.S. during the=20
    period. The forcing for ascent and associated moisture transport=20
    suggests several areas of heavier precipitation from the Lower MS=20
    Valley northward into the Ohio Valley. The overlap of the best=20
    instability and forcing right now points toward portions of the TN=20
    Valley into the Mid South region and this coincides where the=20
    ensembles show the greatest potential for some higher rainfall=20
    totals (2-4"). Ultimately, a Slight Risk may be needed in future=20
    updates if confidence increases but for now, confidence in exact
    placement is low as well as the forward progression of convection
    that may be just fast enough to limit duration of heavy rainfall at
    any location for too long. Previous discussion follows...

    A much broader inherited Marginal risk area (relative to Day 2) has
    been largely maintained (and expanded a bit), as multiple shortwave
    troughs emerging from the Intermountain West and phase with the
    polar jet and an associated longwave trough. This complex
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of convection
    across much of the eastern CONUS, including portions of the MS, TN,
    and OH Valleys. Despite the complexity of the synoptic and
    mesoscale details, global models are in fairly good agreement in
    indicating a convection breaking out across a broad warm sector
    (characterized by PWATs of 1.5-2.0", SB CAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg, and
    effective bulk shear of 40-60 kts). Most deterministic solutions
    depict 1-3" localized totals (with 2-3" amounts most commonly
    located farther south across the Lower MS Valley and Mid-South,
    where better instability and moisture tend to be located) with both
    the GEFS and ECENS indicating 2" exceedance potential (with the
    GEFS favoring portions of the Mid-South from north MS into West and
    Middle TN, while the ECENS favors locations farther southwest into
    the MS Delta). These types of probabilities from the ensemble
    guidance suggest that CAMs may well depict 2-4" localized totals,
    and a targeted Slight risk introduction may be necessary in
    subsequent outlooks (once better ensemble agreement and/or a
    strengthening trend is more evident in the global guidance).

    Churchill/Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7yxIo2W8AU8LBDwp3YW8gnXnTJQ8izwlY3clRUSsy8Ml= fzcuvOoDg5JicQVckJLvAM_yDf7V-6PGDb-DkenzYPS0qW4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7yxIo2W8AU8LBDwp3YW8gnXnTJQ8izwlY3clRUSsy8Ml= fzcuvOoDg5JicQVckJLvAM_yDf7V-6PGDb-DkenzP2Tyclw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7yxIo2W8AU8LBDwp3YW8gnXnTJQ8izwlY3clRUSsy8Ml= fzcuvOoDg5JicQVckJLvAM_yDf7V-6PGDb-DkenzGVLxfQA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 29 00:52:32 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 290052
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    852 PM EDT Fri Mar 28 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER TEXAS COAST THROUGH SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    01Z Update: Maintained the Slight Risk for the Day 1 ERO Update for
    portions of the Upper Texas coast region and areas inland across
    southeast Texas/southwest Louisiana while trimming the Slight and
    Marginal risk areas farther south. Trends in satellite and radar
    imagery showed a vort max lifting northeastward which was helping
    to support the area of rain approaching the Texas/Louisiana border.
    The 28/18Z HREF neighborhood probabilities still focused on
    southwest Louisiana into the overnight hours for 1- and 2-inch
    per hour rates with 25 pct chances of 3 inch per hour totals in the
    29/00Z - 29/12Z period. Towards the coastal areas...the
    probabilities increase to more than inland and more than 40=20
    percent along the Louisiana coast. In addition...latest radar and
    satellite imagery was beginning to show that additional convection
    was percolating just off the Upper Texas coast...similar to what
    the HRRR started suggesting earlier in the day.
    Consequently...maintained the Slight Risk area a bit farther south
    and west than the HREF was showing. An isolated...but
    persistent...cell over Kenedy county such that we maintained the
    Marginal risk that far south for the time being.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    A continuation of the decreasing flash flood risk is expected from
    Day 1 into Day 2, as ensemble guidance indicates the potential for
    localized totals of 1-3" (mostly concentrated near the Gulf Coast
    where FFGs are rather high). The limited inherited Marginal risk
    area was maintained for this update, as forcing and instability
    continue to look rather minimal (and most deterministic guidance at
    this point indicates localized totals of less than 1" for the most
    part, including the new WPC forecast, but decided to maintain the
    Marginal. Any localized flash flood threat should mostly be
    confined closer to the Gulf Coast (and limited to more sensitive
    urban areas).

    Churchill/Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    20Z Update:

    A broad area of convection is expected Sunday into Sunday night
    with a pair of shortwaves moving into the Central U.S. during the
    period. The forcing for ascent and associated moisture transport
    suggests several areas of heavier precipitation from the Lower MS
    Valley northward into the Ohio Valley. The overlap of the best
    instability and forcing right now points toward portions of the TN
    Valley into the Mid South region and this coincides where the
    ensembles show the greatest potential for some higher rainfall
    totals (2-4"). Ultimately, a Slight Risk may be needed in future
    updates if confidence increases but for now, confidence in exact
    placement is low as well as the forward progression of convection
    that may be just fast enough to limit duration of heavy rainfall at
    any location for too long. Previous discussion follows...

    A much broader inherited Marginal risk area (relative to Day 2) has
    been largely maintained (and expanded a bit), as multiple shortwave
    troughs emerging from the Intermountain West and phase with the
    polar jet and an associated longwave trough. This complex
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of convection
    across much of the eastern CONUS, including portions of the MS, TN,
    and OH Valleys. Despite the complexity of the synoptic and
    mesoscale details, global models are in fairly good agreement in
    indicating a convection breaking out across a broad warm sector
    (characterized by PWATs of 1.5-2.0", SB CAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg, and
    effective bulk shear of 40-60 kts). Most deterministic solutions
    depict 1-3" localized totals (with 2-3" amounts most commonly
    located farther south across the Lower MS Valley and Mid-South,
    where better instability and moisture tend to be located) with both
    the GEFS and ECENS indicating 2" exceedance potential (with the
    GEFS favoring portions of the Mid-South from north MS into West and
    Middle TN, while the ECENS favors locations farther southwest into
    the MS Delta). These types of probabilities from the ensemble
    guidance suggest that CAMs may well depict 2-4" localized totals,
    and a targeted Slight risk introduction may be necessary in
    subsequent outlooks (once better ensemble agreement and/or a
    strengthening trend is more evident in the global guidance).

    Churchill/Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9JQGOwLEFx6jhw-6Qrff86ehRgH0JcXnTTheZBnD7aTI= 64QLHUbj87sXDuCcazt-QFMb43s0jNJkhbG8gCGezq431oQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9JQGOwLEFx6jhw-6Qrff86ehRgH0JcXnTTheZBnD7aTI= 64QLHUbj87sXDuCcazt-QFMb43s0jNJkhbG8gCGe22-rtyk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9JQGOwLEFx6jhw-6Qrff86ehRgH0JcXnTTheZBnD7aTI= 64QLHUbj87sXDuCcazt-QFMb43s0jNJkhbG8gCGeXwzs7io$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 29 08:00:55 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 290800
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 AM EDT Sat Mar 29 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    A lingering shortwave trough over the central Gulf Coast will
    support a continuation of the decreasing flash flood risk (relative
    to the past couple of days), as WPC QPF calls for areal average
    totals on the order of 1-3" (concentrated in the vicinity of
    coastal MS and adjacent portions of southeast LA). The 00z HREF
    indicates surprisingly high odds of 5" exceedance (as high as
    20-40% per a 40-km neighborhood method), especially considering=20
    the overall decreasing trend in the forecast over the past couple=20
    of days. Much of this is attributable to convective feedback from=20
    the FV3 (large area of 9"+ totals, and not an uncommon phenomenon=20
    from this particular CAM), but both the ARW and ARW2 also indicate=20
    4-6"+ totals (though both of these models have been less than=20
    stellar with the convection associated with this trough over the=20
    past couple of days). Meanwhile, the 00z HRRR (as well as the NAM-
    nest, for what it's worth) depicts much less significant totals=20
    over land, indicating that some of the highest totals stay just=20
    offshore (as well as a secondary maxima well north into central MS=20
    with 2-4" localized totals). All this is to say, spatial
    uncertainty remains higher than usual (as depicted by relatively=20
    low probabilities of 2" exceedance, 10-20%, via 10-100 km Ensemble=20
    Agreement Scale neighborhood probabilities). Given 3-6 hr FFGs=20
    mostly in the 4-5" range along the coast (where the most intense=20
    convection is most likely to occur, if it doesn't stay offshore=20
    altogether), the limited inherited Marginal risk area was=20
    maintained for this update (owing to the CAM model trends described
    above, with forcing and instability continuing to look fairly=20
    lackluster). Any localized flash flood threat should mostly be=20
    confined closer to the Gulf Coast (and mostly limited to more=20
    sensitive urban areas, which could be locally significant if=20
    impacted by 5"+ totals).

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    A much broader inherited Marginal risk area (relative to Day 1)=20
    has been largely maintained, as a pair of shortwave troughs=20
    emerge from the Intermountain West into the Central U.S. on=20
    Sunday, eventually partially phasing with the polar jet (and an=20
    associated longwave trough) by Sunday night. This complex
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of convection=20
    across much of the eastern half of the CONUS, including portions of
    the MS, TN, and OH Valleys. Despite the complexity of the synoptic
    and mesoscale details, models remain in fairly good agreement in
    indicating convection breaking out across a broad warm sector=20
    (characterized by PWATs of 1.5-2.0", SB CAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg, and
    effective bulk shear of 40-60 kts) supportive of discrete and=20
    multi-cell clusters initially, and likely transitioning to more a=20
    more linear QLCS orientation along the front into the evening (as=20
    best depicted by the 00z FV3 and NAM-nest, which are the only CAMs=20
    which extend through the full period at 00z). While WPC areal=20
    average QPF calls generally for only 1-2" totals, most=20
    deterministic solutions from the global models are likely well
    underdone on localized totals, as CAMs will be needed to better=20
    model the discrete convective initiation that is anticipated prior=20
    to the main QLCS passage (with the FV3, NAM- nest, and CMC-reg all
    indicating the potential for 3-5" totals, with probabilities=20
    likely maximized in the vicinity of the Mid-South and MS Delta=20
    regions where instability and moisture are more ideal... and this=20
    is where a targeted Slight Risk is most likely to be introduced in=20
    future updates, possibly as early as later today).=20

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

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

    The aforementioned pair of shortwave troughs are progged to fully
    separate by Day 3, as the northern stream shortwave continues to
    phase with the polar jet (and associated parent longwave trough)
    into the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast, while the southern shortwave=20
    likely hangs back into the Mid-South and Lower MS Valley. This is
    anticipated to result in a weaker setup overall for excessive
    rainfall on Monday into Monday night, as the best dynamics and
    upper-level forcing over the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic is
    displaced from the best moisture and instability over portions of
    the Southeast (where forcing from the secondary shortwave should
    still be sufficient for organized convective activity). The
    inherited Marginal risk was maintained for this portion of the
    Southeast (including much of AL/GA with surrounding portions of
    TN/NC/SC and MS), where GEFS/ECENS exceedance probabilities suggest
    the best potential for 2-4" localized totals. Farther northeast
    into the Mid-Atlantic and southern portions of New England, while=20
    total tropospheric moisture will certainly be lower (~1.25" versus=20
    1.5"+), these values are either equally or more anomalous than in=20
    the Southeast (90th percentile or higher). Despite this, have=20
    decided not to introduce a Marginal risk at this time, due to the=20 combination of marginal instability and progressive storm motions.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7ySHET_UOKcBpZiwXHZFctCMzbrfgv82JkRnW4ofnAJc= 84794xj0c_3QY1DQO_PL24XfwJHQFJ4XTLUapEGde-bmO9w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7ySHET_UOKcBpZiwXHZFctCMzbrfgv82JkRnW4ofnAJc= 84794xj0c_3QY1DQO_PL24XfwJHQFJ4XTLUapEGdQ_U0JqA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7ySHET_UOKcBpZiwXHZFctCMzbrfgv82JkRnW4ofnAJc= 84794xj0c_3QY1DQO_PL24XfwJHQFJ4XTLUapEGdC1cxIUs$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 29 15:52:56 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 291552
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1152 AM EDT Sat Mar 29 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN AND NEAR
    SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA...

    A convergence zone/segment of the polar front across the northern
    Gulf and southeast TX is expected to lift northeast and north into
    Louisiana with time and act as a focus for convection today into=20
    tonight. Aloft, a mid- level shortwave is moving across southeast=20
    AR and acting as a mechanism for divergence aloft near the Gulf=20
    Coast. Precipitable water values of 1.75"+ are expected within an=20 environment of 5640-5670 meter 1000-500 hPa thickness, implying=20
    complete saturation. ML CAPE is expected to rise to 2000 J/kg or so
    during the day today...recent GOES-East imagery shows pockets of
    clearing over Louisiana and southwest Mississippi at the present=20
    time which should allow for an additional 1000 J/kg or so of ML=20
    CAPE to form today (sitting presently at 500-1000 J/kg across=20
    southern LA and the southwest half of MS). A north-northeast/south-
    southwest oriented convergence zone at 850 hPa moves from west to=20
    east across Louisiana and Mississippi today and tonight, which=20
    should provide an uptick to low-level winds and effective bulk=20
    shear, values of which are already sufficient for organized=20
    convection in and near southern LA & southern MS.

    Hourly rain totals to 2.5" should be easy to achieve in this=20
    environment -- should storms backbuild/train for a prolonged=20
    period, even higher hourly totals would be possible. The 12z HREF=20
    showed a 40%+ chance of 8"+ totals across southeast LA -- there is
    the potential for local amounts in the 10" range. Convection south
    of High Island TX and west of Galveston TX has been difficult to=20
    dislodge, with back building convection evident. The usual=20
    expectation would be for the offshore convection to fade in the=20
    next couple hours and send outflow boundaries ashore or that the
    axis of 850 hPa convergence moving across LA would force new=20
    convection inland, which is hinted at in the 12z HREF probability=20
    fields of 0.5"+ in an hour and this expectation may be starting to
    materialize in recent radar imagery.=20

    There is concern about the exact location and track of any=20
    organized convective rainfall areas. When cell training/=20
    backbuilding establishes itself across southern LA, after roughly=20
    four hours it could bore a hole in the instability field. Once this
    happens, backbuilding would become more likely and the 1000-500=20
    hPa thickness field suggests a southeast propagation to some=20
    portion of the mass of convection would be expected -- this should
    cause a northward bound on the location of highest rainfall=20
    potential. A significant enough threat exists for high totals this=20
    afternoon through tonight that an upgrade to a Moderate Risk=20
    appeared prudent based on the above, which was coordinated with=20
    LIX/the Slidell LA forecast office and also supports their ongoing=20
    flood watch. The potential for significant impact/inundation from=20
    flash flooding over urban areas can't be ruled out.

    Roth


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    A much broader inherited Marginal risk area (relative to Day 1)
    has been largely maintained, as a pair of shortwave troughs
    emerge from the Intermountain West into the Central U.S. on
    Sunday, eventually partially phasing with the polar jet (and an
    associated longwave trough) by Sunday night. This complex
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of convection
    across much of the eastern half of the CONUS, including portions of
    the MS, TN, and OH Valleys. Despite the complexity of the synoptic
    and mesoscale details, models remain in fairly good agreement in
    indicating convection breaking out across a broad warm sector
    (characterized by PWATs of 1.5-2.0", SB CAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg, and
    effective bulk shear of 40-60 kts) supportive of discrete and
    multi-cell clusters initially, and likely transitioning to more a
    more linear QLCS orientation along the front into the evening (as
    best depicted by the 00z FV3 and NAM-nest, which are the only CAMs
    which extend through the full period at 00z). While WPC areal
    average QPF calls generally for only 1-2" totals, most
    deterministic solutions from the global models are likely well
    underdone on localized totals, as CAMs will be needed to better
    model the discrete convective initiation that is anticipated prior
    to the main QLCS passage (with the FV3, NAM- nest, and CMC-reg all
    indicating the potential for 3-5" totals, with probabilities
    likely maximized in the vicinity of the Mid-South and MS Delta
    regions where instability and moisture are more ideal... and this
    is where a targeted Slight Risk is most likely to be introduced in
    future updates, possibly as early as later today).

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

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

    The aforementioned pair of shortwave troughs are progged to fully
    separate by Day 3, as the northern stream shortwave continues to
    phase with the polar jet (and associated parent longwave trough)
    into the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast, while the southern shortwave
    likely hangs back into the Mid-South and Lower MS Valley. This is
    anticipated to result in a weaker setup overall for excessive
    rainfall on Monday into Monday night, as the best dynamics and
    upper-level forcing over the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic is
    displaced from the best moisture and instability over portions of
    the Southeast (where forcing from the secondary shortwave should
    still be sufficient for organized convective activity). The
    inherited Marginal risk was maintained for this portion of the
    Southeast (including much of AL/GA with surrounding portions of
    TN/NC/SC and MS), where GEFS/ECENS exceedance probabilities suggest
    the best potential for 2-4" localized totals. Farther northeast
    into the Mid-Atlantic and southern portions of New England, while
    total tropospheric moisture will certainly be lower (~1.25" versus
    1.5"+), these values are either equally or more anomalous than in
    the Southeast (90th percentile or higher). Despite this, have
    decided not to introduce a Marginal risk at this time, due to the
    combination of marginal instability and progressive storm motions.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6mHmWvuZZ0xXBIOq9AK3p-S1jIiLihAsaYu0Cv4Iuzvl= _E-iaIL2ulRwGL7A-CBdd84tUVcmgHJxetgx4lBsQTZqx_w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6mHmWvuZZ0xXBIOq9AK3p-S1jIiLihAsaYu0Cv4Iuzvl= _E-iaIL2ulRwGL7A-CBdd84tUVcmgHJxetgx4lBsw_GDuzg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6mHmWvuZZ0xXBIOq9AK3p-S1jIiLihAsaYu0Cv4Iuzvl= _E-iaIL2ulRwGL7A-CBdd84tUVcmgHJxetgx4lBsPyAgQ7Q$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 29 19:40:59 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 291939
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    339 PM EDT Sat Mar 29 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Mar 29 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN AND NEAR
    SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA...

    A convergence zone/segment of the polar front across the northern
    Gulf and southeast TX is expected to lift northeast and north into
    Louisiana with time and act as a focus for convection today into
    tonight. Aloft, a mid- level shortwave is moving across southeast
    AR and acting as a mechanism for divergence aloft near the Gulf
    Coast. Precipitable water values of 1.75"+ are expected within an
    environment of 5640-5670 meter 1000-500 hPa thickness, implying
    complete saturation. ML CAPE is expected to rise to 2000 J/kg or so
    during the day today. A north-northeast/south- southwest oriented=20 convergence zone at 850 hPa moves from west to east across=20
    Louisiana and Mississippi today and tonight, which should provide=20
    an uptick to low-level winds and effective bulk shear, values of=20
    which are already sufficient for organized convection in and near=20
    southern LA & southern MS.

    Hourly rain totals to 2.5" should be easy to achieve in this
    environment -- should storms backbuild/train for a prolonged
    period, even higher hourly totals would be possible. The 12z HREF
    showed a 40%+ chance of 8"+ totals across southeast LA -- there is
    the potential for local amounts in the 10" range. Offshore=20
    convection continues to fade offshore the upper TX Coast while the
    axis of 850 hPa convergence moving across LA and its former MCV=20
    spawn new convection inland, which was hinted at in the 12z HREF=20
    probability fields of 0.5"+ in an hour which seem to be handling=20
    the situation fairly well, thus far.

    When cell training or backbuilding establishes itself across=20
    southern LA, after roughly four hours it could bore a hole in the=20 instability field. Once this happens, backbuilding would become=20
    more likely and the 1000-500 hPa thickness field suggests a=20
    southeast propagation to some portion of the mass of convection=20
    would be expected -- this should cause a northward bound on the=20
    location of highest rainfall potential. A significant enough threat
    exists for high totals this afternoon through tonight that an=20
    upgrade to a Moderate Risk appeared prudent based on the above,=20
    which was coordinated with LIX/the Slidell LA forecast office and=20
    also supports their ongoing flood watch. The potential for=20
    significant impact/inundation from flash flooding over urban areas=20
    can't be ruled out.

    Roth


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

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

    Central Gulf Coast through the Ohio Valley into the Great Lakes...
    A pair of shortwave troughs emerge from the Intermountain West=20
    into the Central U.S. on Sunday, eventually partially phasing with=20
    the polar jet (and an associated longwave trough) by Sunday night.=20
    This complex interaction is expected to result in a broad area of=20
    convection across much of the eastern half of the CONUS, including=20
    portions of the MS, TN, and OH Valleys.=20

    Despite the complexity of the synoptic and mesoscale details,=20
    models remain in fairly good agreement in indicating convection=20
    breaking out across a broad warm sector. Broad inflow from the Gulf
    with precipitable water values of 1.25-1.75" and ML CAPE=20
    potentially as high as 4000 J/kg is supportive of discrete and=20
    multi-cell clusters initially, and likely transitioning to more a=20
    more linear QLCS orientation along the front into the evening.=20
    Hourly rain totals to 2.5" are supported by the ingredients above,=20
    with the 12z Canadian Regional indicating the potential for 6",=20
    which would be possible where storms train or two or more=20
    mesocyclones align. The model guidance is coming up on amounts as=20 anticipated/we get more into the mesoscale model window, with=20
    global guidance in the 2-3" range and mesoscale guidance higher.=20
    With probabilities of 3"+ maximized in the vicinity of the Mid-=20
    South, went ahead with an upgrade to a Slight Risk from the AR/LA=20
    border into central MS.


    Florida Peninsula/Southeasternmost Georgia...=20
    A frontal boundary at 850 hPa slowly lifts through the state,=20
    bringing precipitable water values to 1.5-1.75". MU CAPE maximizes
    above 2000+ J/kg in South Florida. There appears to be enough=20
    effective bulk shear for thunderstorm organization as well. The
    model guidance --- mostly mesoscale -- indicates the potential for
    local amounts in the 5" range. This led to the introduction of a
    new Marginal Risk area.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST & NORTHEAST...

    Southeast...
    The aforementioned pair of shortwave troughs are progged to fully
    separate by Day 3, as the northern stream shortwave continues to
    phase with the parent longwave trough into the Mid-=20
    Atlantic/Northeast, while the southern shortwave likely hangs back=20
    into the Mid-South and Lower MS Valley. The best moisture and=20
    instability lies over portions of the Southeast (where forcing=20
    from the secondary shortwave should still be sufficient for=20
    organized convective activity). The inherited Marginal risk was=20
    generally maintained for this portion of the Southeast (including=20
    much of AL/GA with surrounding portions of TN/NC/SC and MS), where=20 GEFS/ECENS exceedance probabilities suggest the best potential for=20
    2-4" localized totals.=20


    Northeast...
    Thunderstorms with heavy rainfall are expected during the afternoon
    and evening hours ahead of a northern stream shortwave as MU CAPE=20
    peaks around 1000 J/kg and precipitable water values peak in the=20
    1.25-1.5" range. Sufficient inflow and effective bulk shear is=20
    available for organized convection for much of the period, with=20
    activity expected to be in decline past Tuesday 06z. Hourly rain=20
    totals up to 2" are possible where convection trains, which would=20
    challenge the flash flood guidance across urban portions of the=20
    Mid-Atlantic States. This led to the introduction of a new Marginal
    Risk area.


    Near the western CA/OR border...=20
    A cyclone bring low-level inflow up to 40 kts and some limited=20
    instability, up to 250 J/kg MU CAPE, into the region. The guidance=20
    generally agrees on ~3" of QPF this period. However, precipitable=20
    water values should stay below 0.75" and freezing levels are low,=20
    generally 2000-4000 feet above ground level in westernmost OR and=20 northwesternmost CA. Mostly as a nod to continuity, a Marginal Risk
    area was not re-introduced here, but there is a non-zero chance of
    0.5"+ rain totals, which would be problematic in and near burn=20
    scar locations.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5d8ivkAwFdsqxZUh3vjzq4puHf-pu-DFEBIWH-BSya14= 7CKx6mdlNThd7L8Z7s0ZotvSLwlGZGBWHEvzYG0J_YMcc5o$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5d8ivkAwFdsqxZUh3vjzq4puHf-pu-DFEBIWH-BSya14= 7CKx6mdlNThd7L8Z7s0ZotvSLwlGZGBWHEvzYG0JU2g32mo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5d8ivkAwFdsqxZUh3vjzq4puHf-pu-DFEBIWH-BSya14= 7CKx6mdlNThd7L8Z7s0ZotvSLwlGZGBWHEvzYG0JY2z_klQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 30 00:51:41 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 300050
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    850 PM EDT Sat Mar 29 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN AND NEAR
    SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA...

    ...01Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...
    Maintained the Moderate Risk area over southeast Louisiana in
    deference to the 18Z HREF probabilities showing additional
    convection across southeast Louisiana overnight...despite some=20
    very short- term decreases in rainfall rates that correlated with=20
    decreases in instability in the Hi-Res CAMS. Slow moving
    thunderstorms along and near I-10 earlier this afternoon had a
    history of 2.5 to 3 inch per hour rates. However...radar was
    beginning to show rainfall rates diminishing as the SPC
    Mesoanalysis page was beginning to show weakening instability in
    that part of the state. If convection behaves as the HREF
    shows...storms will be moving back into a region characterized by a
    nearly saturated environment with a tall...skinny instability
    profile. The 00Z sounding from Slidell...to the east of the=20=20=20
    afternoon convection...was nearly saturated through a deep layer=20
    with Precipitable Water value of 1.8 inches. With radar and=20
    satellite imagery showing at least two convectively induced=20
    vorticity centers and the support of an upper level jet to=20
    potentially support additional convection that overlaps with=20
    convection earlier in the day...maintained the Moderate risk area.=20
    There were a few modifications to the western side of the Marginal=20
    and Slight risk areas based on early evening satellite and radar=20 imagery...with few changes made elsewhere.

    Bann

    ...16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    A convergence zone/segment of the polar front across the northern
    Gulf and southeast TX is expected to lift northeast and north into
    Louisiana with time and act as a focus for convection today into
    tonight. Aloft, a mid- level shortwave is moving across southeast
    AR and acting as a mechanism for divergence aloft near the Gulf
    Coast. Precipitable water values of 1.75"+ are expected within an
    environment of 5640-5670 meter 1000-500 hPa thickness, implying
    complete saturation. ML CAPE is expected to rise to 2000 J/kg or so
    during the day today. A north-northeast/south- southwest oriented
    convergence zone at 850 hPa moves from west to east across
    Louisiana and Mississippi today and tonight, which should provide
    an uptick to low-level winds and effective bulk shear, values of
    which are already sufficient for organized convection in and near
    southern LA & southern MS.

    Hourly rain totals to 2.5" should be easy to achieve in this
    environment -- should storms backbuild/train for a prolonged
    period, even higher hourly totals would be possible. The 12z HREF
    showed a 40%+ chance of 8"+ totals across southeast LA -- there is
    the potential for local amounts in the 10" range. Offshore
    convection continues to fade offshore the upper TX Coast while the
    axis of 850 hPa convergence moving across LA and its former MCV
    spawn new convection inland, which was hinted at in the 12z HREF
    probability fields of 0.5"+ in an hour which seem to be handling
    the situation fairly well, thus far.

    When cell training or backbuilding establishes itself across
    southern LA, after roughly four hours it could bore a hole in the
    instability field. Once this happens, backbuilding would become
    more likely and the 1000-500 hPa thickness field suggests a
    southeast propagation to some portion of the mass of convection
    would be expected -- this should cause a northward bound on the
    location of highest rainfall potential. A significant enough threat
    exists for high totals this afternoon through tonight that an
    upgrade to a Moderate Risk appeared prudent based on the above,
    which was coordinated with LIX/the Slidell LA forecast office and
    also supports their ongoing flood watch. The potential for
    significant impact/inundation from flash flooding over urban areas
    can't be ruled out.

    Roth


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    ARKLAMISS...

    Central Gulf Coast through the Ohio Valley into the Great Lakes...
    A pair of shortwave troughs emerge from the Intermountain West
    into the Central U.S. on Sunday, eventually partially phasing with
    the polar jet (and an associated longwave trough) by Sunday night.
    This complex interaction is expected to result in a broad area of
    convection across much of the eastern half of the CONUS, including
    portions of the MS, TN, and OH Valleys.

    Despite the complexity of the synoptic and mesoscale details,
    models remain in fairly good agreement in indicating convection
    breaking out across a broad warm sector. Broad inflow from the Gulf
    with precipitable water values of 1.25-1.75" and ML CAPE
    potentially as high as 4000 J/kg is supportive of discrete and
    multi-cell clusters initially, and likely transitioning to more a
    more linear QLCS orientation along the front into the evening.
    Hourly rain totals to 2.5" are supported by the ingredients above,
    with the 12z Canadian Regional indicating the potential for 6",
    which would be possible where storms train or two or more
    mesocyclones align. The model guidance is coming up on amounts as anticipated/we get more into the mesoscale model window, with
    global guidance in the 2-3" range and mesoscale guidance higher.
    With probabilities of 3"+ maximized in the vicinity of the Mid-
    South, went ahead with an upgrade to a Slight Risk from the AR/LA
    border into central MS.


    Florida Peninsula/Southeasternmost Georgia...
    A frontal boundary at 850 hPa slowly lifts through the state,
    bringing precipitable water values to 1.5-1.75". MU CAPE maximizes
    above 2000+ J/kg in South Florida. There appears to be enough
    effective bulk shear for thunderstorm organization as well. The
    model guidance --- mostly mesoscale -- indicates the potential for
    local amounts in the 5" range. This led to the introduction of a
    new Marginal Risk area.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST & NORTHEAST...

    Southeast...
    The aforementioned pair of shortwave troughs are progged to fully
    separate by Day 3, as the northern stream shortwave continues to
    phase with the parent longwave trough into the Mid-
    Atlantic/Northeast, while the southern shortwave likely hangs back
    into the Mid-South and Lower MS Valley. The best moisture and
    instability lies over portions of the Southeast (where forcing
    from the secondary shortwave should still be sufficient for
    organized convective activity). The inherited Marginal risk was
    generally maintained for this portion of the Southeast (including
    much of AL/GA with surrounding portions of TN/NC/SC and MS), where
    GEFS/ECENS exceedance probabilities suggest the best potential for
    2-4" localized totals.


    Northeast...
    Thunderstorms with heavy rainfall are expected during the afternoon
    and evening hours ahead of a northern stream shortwave as MU CAPE
    peaks around 1000 J/kg and precipitable water values peak in the
    1.25-1.5" range. Sufficient inflow and effective bulk shear is
    available for organized convection for much of the period, with
    activity expected to be in decline past Tuesday 06z. Hourly rain
    totals up to 2" are possible where convection trains, which would
    challenge the flash flood guidance across urban portions of the
    Mid-Atlantic States. This led to the introduction of a new Marginal
    Risk area.


    Near the western CA/OR border...
    A cyclone bring low-level inflow up to 40 kts and some limited
    instability, up to 250 J/kg MU CAPE, into the region. The guidance
    generally agrees on ~3" of QPF this period. However, precipitable
    water values should stay below 0.75" and freezing levels are low,
    generally 2000-4000 feet above ground level in westernmost OR and northwesternmost CA. Mostly as a nod to continuity, a Marginal Risk
    area was not re-introduced here, but there is a non-zero chance of
    0.5"+ rain totals, which would be problematic in and near burn
    scar locations.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_z6sqvtoLPB6353I0tZjPoS88_UQ-Zgb3DUKdS8627rz= wzZA_faYlFgIS2N8YRrWTUwWOW0mWLszjJxXoPyWrM39yEg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_z6sqvtoLPB6353I0tZjPoS88_UQ-Zgb3DUKdS8627rz= wzZA_faYlFgIS2N8YRrWTUwWOW0mWLszjJxXoPyWIcV8f34$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_z6sqvtoLPB6353I0tZjPoS88_UQ-Zgb3DUKdS8627rz= wzZA_faYlFgIS2N8YRrWTUwWOW0mWLszjJxXoPyWVyBxrpQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 30 08:16:44 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 300815
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    415 AM EDT Sun Mar 30 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    ...Central Gulf Coast through the Ohio Valley...=20
    A pair of shortwave troughs emerge from the Intermountain West=20
    into the Central U.S. today, eventually partially phasing with the
    polar jet (and an associated longwave trough) by later tonight.=20
    This complex interaction is expected to result in a broad area of=20
    organized convective activity across much of the eastern half of=20
    the CONUS, including portions of the MS, TN, and OH Valleys.=20

    Despite the continued complexity of the synoptic and mesoscale=20
    details, models remain in fairly good agreement in indicating=20
    convection breaking out across the broad warm sector today,
    initially mostly discrete (and supportive of splitting supercells=20
    and multicell clusters) and evolving into a QLCS ahead of the
    associated cold front by this evening. Broad inflow from the Gulf
    will result in precipitable water values of 1.25-1.75" (at or above
    the 90th percentile, per CFSR climatology) and SB CAPE of 2000-4000
    J/kg, as deep layer (0-6 km) shear increases to 40-60 kts. Hourly
    rainfall rates of up to 2-3"/hr are possible in this environment,
    initially highly localized in association with established
    supercells, then more numerous to widespread with the passage of
    the QLCS. Localized totals of 2-4" are generally expected within
    the Slight for the whole of the event (with the majority falling in
    a 3-6 hour period in association with the QLCS passage), with
    totals near the upper-end of the range (~4") being possible where=20
    storms train and/or where two or more mesocyclones align.


    ...Florida Peninsula/Southeasternmost Georgia...
    A frontal boundary at 850 hPa slowly lifts through the state,
    bringing precipitable water values to 1.5-1.75". MU CAPE maximizes
    above 2000+ J/kg in South Florida. There appears to be enough
    effective bulk shear for thunderstorm organization as well. The
    model guidance --- mostly mesoscale -- indicates the potential for
    local amounts in the 5" range. The Marginal risk was maintained.=20

    Churchill/Roth


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST & NORTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...
    The aforementioned pair of shortwave troughs are progged to fully
    separate by Day 2, as the northern stream shortwave continues to
    phase with the parent longwave trough into the Mid-Atlantic and
    Northeast, while the southern shortwave likely hangs back into the
    Mid-South and Lower MS Valley. The best moisture and instability=20
    lies over portions of the Southeast (where forcing from the=20
    secondary shortwave should still be sufficient for organized=20
    convective activity). The Marginal risk was generally maintained=20
    for this portion of the Southeast (including much of AL/GA with=20
    surrounding portions of East TN, southern MS and the FL Panhandle).=20 Localized totals of up to 2-3" are generally expected (per GEFS and
    ECENS exceedance probabilities), though the inclusion of the full
    CAM suite later today will probably push higher-end totals to 3-4"
    (still mostly supportive of only a Marginal risk, given associated
    3-6 hour FFGs of 2.5-4.0".=20=20


    ...Northeast...
    Thunderstorms with heavy rainfall are expected during the afternoon
    and evening hours ahead of a northern stream shortwave as MU CAPE
    peaks around 1000 J/kg and precipitable water values peak in the
    1.25-1.5" range. Sufficient inflow and effective bulk shear is
    available for organized convection for much of the period, with
    activity expected to be in decline past Tuesday 06z. Hourly rain
    totals up to 2" are possible where convection trains, which could
    challenge the flash flood guidance across urban portions of the=20
    Mid-Atlantic States. The inherited Marginal risk was maintained.

    Churchill/Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTHEAST NEBRASKA, SOUTHWEST IOWA, NORTHEAST KANSAS, AND
    NORTHWEST MISSOURI...

    A blocking pattern begins to emerge by Day 3, as the aforementioned
    shortwaves lift northeastward into Canada with large-scale ridging
    quickly builds across the eastern CONUS from the North Atlantic.
    Meanwhile, large-scale troughing becomes amplified out West, with a
    potent upper-low expected to develop over the Northern Rockies and
    Plains (translating across the Rockies from the Pacific Northwest).
    While global model suites are in overall good agreement with the
    evolution of the synoptic scale, the GFS/GEFS is oddly an outlier
    lacking substantial convection with the associated surface low
    (which is depicted as a sub 990 mb low from the 00z GFS, ECMWF, and
    CMC). Most deterministic solutions depict localized totals of 2-3"
    (including the downscaled ECMWF, the UKMET, and the CMC-reg) with
    remarkably good spatial agreement for this range, so the inherited
    Marginal risk was maintained.=20

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_KW2ET6ArPSYhXThDDMyH0DZPuux9enBPzGnvVUuVgTA= R7-BjJarQDkYN_331ZRkPJU36GAsw84GLGjAwjsOQf2E62c$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_KW2ET6ArPSYhXThDDMyH0DZPuux9enBPzGnvVUuVgTA= R7-BjJarQDkYN_331ZRkPJU36GAsw84GLGjAwjsOpttfOVo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_KW2ET6ArPSYhXThDDMyH0DZPuux9enBPzGnvVUuVgTA= R7-BjJarQDkYN_331ZRkPJU36GAsw84GLGjAwjsOQU9DWzY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 30 15:46:28 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 301545
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1145 AM EDT Sun Mar 30 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    ...Central Gulf Coast through the Ohio Valley...
    A pair of shortwave troughs emerge from the Intermountain West
    into the Central U.S. today, eventually partially phasing with an=20
    associated longwave trough by later tonight. This complex=20
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of organized=20
    convective activity across much of the eastern half of the CONUS,=20
    including portions of the MS, TN, and OH Valleys.

    Despite the continued complexity of the synoptic and mesoscale
    details, models remain in fairly good agreement in indicating
    convection breaking out across the broad warm sector today,
    initially mostly discrete (and supportive of splitting supercells
    and multicell clusters) and evolving into a QLCS/LEWP ahead of the
    associated cold front by this evening. Broad inflow from the Gulf
    will result in precipitable water values of 1.25-1.75" (at or above
    the 90th percentile, per CFSR climatology) and SB CAPE of 2000-4000
    J/kg, as deep layer (0-6 km) shear increases to 40-60 kts. Hourly
    rainfall of up to 3"/hr are possible in this environment,=20
    initially highly localized in association with established=20
    supercells, then more numerous to widespread with the passage of=20
    the QLCS/LEWP. Localized totals of 2-4" are generally expected=20
    within the Slight for the whole of the event (with the majority=20
    falling in a 3-6 hour period in association with the QLCS passage),
    with totals near the upper-end of the range (~4") being possible=20
    where storms train and/or where two or more mesocyclones align.
    While there were some changes per the new guidance, in general,
    continuity was maintained.


    ...Florida Peninsula/Southeasternmost Georgia...
    A frontal boundary at 850 hPa slowly lifts through the state,
    bringing precipitable water values to 1.5-1.75". ML CAPE should
    maximize in the 2000-3000 J/kg, particularly in the southern
    Florida peninsula. There appears to be enough effective bulk shear
    for some degree of thunderstorm organization as well. The model=20
    guidance --- mostly mesoscale -- indicates the potential for local
    amounts in the 5-6" range. The Marginal risk was maintained with
    minimal change.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST & NORTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...
    The aforementioned pair of shortwave troughs are progged to fully
    separate, as the northern stream shortwave continues to phase with
    the parent longwave trough into the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast,=20
    while the southern shortwave likely hangs back into the Mid-South=20
    and Lower MS Valley. The best moisture and instability lies over=20
    portions of the Southeast (where forcing from the secondary=20
    shortwave should still be sufficient for organized convective=20
    activity). The Marginal risk was generally maintained for this=20
    portion of the Southeast (including much of AL/GA with surrounding=20
    portions of East TN, southern MS and the FL Panhandle). Localized=20
    totals of up to 2-3" are generally expected (per GEFS and ECENS=20
    exceedance probabilities), though the inclusion of the full CAM=20
    suite later today will probably push higher-end totals to 3-4"=20
    (still mostly supportive of only a Marginal risk, given associated=20
    3-6 hour FFGs of 2.5-4.0".


    ...Northeast...
    Thunderstorms with heavy rainfall are expected during the afternoon
    and evening hours ahead of a northern stream shortwave as MU CAPE
    peaks around 1000 J/kg and precipitable water values peak in the
    1.25-1.5" range. Sufficient inflow and effective bulk shear is
    available for organized convection for much of the period, with
    activity expected to be in decline past Tuesday 06z. Hourly rain
    totals up to 2" are possible where convection trains, which could
    challenge the flash flood guidance across urban portions of the
    Mid-Atlantic States. The inherited Marginal risk was maintained.

    Churchill/Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTHEAST NEBRASKA, SOUTHWEST IOWA, NORTHEAST KANSAS, AND
    NORTHWEST MISSOURI...

    A blocking pattern begins to emerge by Day 3, as the aforementioned
    shortwaves lift northeastward into Canada with large-scale ridging
    quickly builds across the eastern CONUS from the North Atlantic.
    Meanwhile, large-scale troughing becomes amplified out West, with a
    potent upper-low expected to develop over the Northern Rockies and
    Plains (translating across the Rockies from the Pacific Northwest).
    While global model suites are in overall good agreement with the
    evolution of the synoptic scale, the GFS/GEFS is oddly an outlier
    lacking substantial convection with the associated surface low
    (which is depicted as a sub 990 mb low from the 00z GFS, ECMWF, and
    CMC). Most deterministic solutions depict localized totals of 2-3"
    (including the downscaled ECMWF, the UKMET, and the CMC-reg) with
    remarkably good spatial agreement for this range, so the inherited
    Marginal risk was maintained.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5dAw5rNCRY_16EEarRgSgKwiSTdTcipkKnmfEa_VEHwc= yJAGV3rB-WK8syt3J92t9vg8diiuYfS1U7dEr2QikC5caCA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5dAw5rNCRY_16EEarRgSgKwiSTdTcipkKnmfEa_VEHwc= yJAGV3rB-WK8syt3J92t9vg8diiuYfS1U7dEr2Qi5UTEmK8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5dAw5rNCRY_16EEarRgSgKwiSTdTcipkKnmfEa_VEHwc= yJAGV3rB-WK8syt3J92t9vg8diiuYfS1U7dEr2QiEcWjbbY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 30 17:00:35 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 301700
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    100 PM EDT Sun Mar 30 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1655Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS AND CENTRAL GULF
    COAST...

    ...Central Gulf Coast through the Ohio Valley...
    A pair of shortwave troughs emerge from the Intermountain West
    into the Central U.S. today, eventually partially phasing with an
    associated longwave trough by later tonight. This complex
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of organized
    convective activity across much of the eastern half of the CONUS,
    including portions of the MS, TN, and OH Valleys.

    Despite the continued complexity of the synoptic and mesoscale
    details, models remain in fairly good agreement in indicating
    convection breaking out across the broad warm sector today,
    initially mostly discrete (and supportive of splitting supercells
    and multicell clusters) and evolving into a QLCS/LEWP ahead of the
    associated cold front by this evening. Broad inflow from the Gulf
    will result in precipitable water values of 1.25-1.75" (at or above
    the 90th percentile, per CFSR climatology) and SB CAPE of 2000-4000
    J/kg, as deep layer (0-6 km) shear increases to 40-60 kts. Hourly
    rainfall of up to 3"/hr are possible in this environment,
    initially highly localized in association with established
    supercells, then more numerous to widespread with the passage of
    the QLCS/LEWP. Localized totals of 2-4" are generally expected
    within the Slight for the whole of the event (with the majority
    falling in a 3-6 hour period in association with the QLCS passage),
    with totals near the upper-end of the range (~4") being possible
    where storms train and/or where two or more mesocyclones align.
    While there were some changes per the new guidance, in general,
    continuity was maintained.

    Ongoing organized convection in the general vicinity of Mobile thus
    far hasn't been disrupted by diurnal convection in its vicinity,
    which threatens mergers as disorganized convection moves more
    northward while organized convection moves more eastward. Cold
    cloud tops continue to show expansion with the convective area. Introduced
    a Slight Risk on this special issuance from southern MS across
    southern AL into the FL Panhandle. Hourly rain totals to 3" with=20
    additional local amounts to 6" remain possible for as long as this
    convective mass can persist.



    ...Florida Peninsula/Southeasternmost Georgia...
    A frontal boundary at 850 hPa slowly lifts through the state,
    bringing precipitable water values to 1.5-1.75". ML CAPE should
    maximize in the 2000-3000 J/kg, particularly in the southern
    Florida peninsula. There appears to be enough effective bulk shear
    for some degree of thunderstorm organization as well. The model
    guidance --- mostly mesoscale -- indicates the potential for local
    amounts in the 5-6" range. The Marginal risk was maintained with
    minimal change.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST & NORTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...
    The aforementioned pair of shortwave troughs are progged to fully
    separate, as the northern stream shortwave continues to phase with
    the parent longwave trough into the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast,
    while the southern shortwave likely hangs back into the Mid-South
    and Lower MS Valley. The best moisture and instability lies over
    portions of the Southeast (where forcing from the secondary
    shortwave should still be sufficient for organized convective
    activity). The Marginal risk was generally maintained for this
    portion of the Southeast (including much of AL/GA with surrounding
    portions of East TN, southern MS and the FL Panhandle). Localized
    totals of up to 2-3" are generally expected (per GEFS and ECENS
    exceedance probabilities), though the inclusion of the full CAM
    suite later today will probably push higher-end totals to 3-4"
    (still mostly supportive of only a Marginal risk, given associated
    3-6 hour FFGs of 2.5-4.0".


    ...Northeast...
    Thunderstorms with heavy rainfall are expected during the afternoon
    and evening hours ahead of a northern stream shortwave as MU CAPE
    peaks around 1000 J/kg and precipitable water values peak in the
    1.25-1.5" range. Sufficient inflow and effective bulk shear is
    available for organized convection for much of the period, with
    activity expected to be in decline past Tuesday 06z. Hourly rain
    totals up to 2" are possible where convection trains, which could
    challenge the flash flood guidance across urban portions of the
    Mid-Atlantic States. The inherited Marginal risk was maintained.

    Churchill/Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF SOUTHEAST NEBRASKA, SOUTHWEST IOWA, NORTHEAST KANSAS, AND
    NORTHWEST MISSOURI...

    A blocking pattern begins to emerge by Day 3, as the aforementioned
    shortwaves lift northeastward into Canada with large-scale ridging
    quickly builds across the eastern CONUS from the North Atlantic.
    Meanwhile, large-scale troughing becomes amplified out West, with a
    potent upper-low expected to develop over the Northern Rockies and
    Plains (translating across the Rockies from the Pacific Northwest).
    While global model suites are in overall good agreement with the
    evolution of the synoptic scale, the GFS/GEFS is oddly an outlier
    lacking substantial convection with the associated surface low
    (which is depicted as a sub 990 mb low from the 00z GFS, ECMWF, and
    CMC). Most deterministic solutions depict localized totals of 2-3"
    (including the downscaled ECMWF, the UKMET, and the CMC-reg) with
    remarkably good spatial agreement for this range, so the inherited
    Marginal risk was maintained.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_XKqfIoJHoJRmO0w7Ld0CBsta3eaiAIDlUSZ__l8Jfez= YYOe7Xt_hLYKGbjyXYpuxfjKAwd54mxNrU0uM-sifhCOvXc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_XKqfIoJHoJRmO0w7Ld0CBsta3eaiAIDlUSZ__l8Jfez= YYOe7Xt_hLYKGbjyXYpuxfjKAwd54mxNrU0uM-siX0_LYnM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_XKqfIoJHoJRmO0w7Ld0CBsta3eaiAIDlUSZ__l8Jfez= YYOe7Xt_hLYKGbjyXYpuxfjKAwd54mxNrU0uM-sixrPZKp0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 30 19:40:03 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 301939
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    339 PM EDT Sun Mar 30 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Mar 30 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS AND CENTRAL GULF
    COAST...

    ...Central Gulf Coast through the Ohio Valley...
    A pair of shortwave troughs emerge from the Intermountain West
    into the Central U.S. today, eventually partially phasing with an
    associated longwave trough by later tonight. This complex
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of organized
    convective activity across much of the eastern half of the CONUS,
    including portions of the MS, TN, and OH Valleys.

    Despite the continued complexity of the synoptic and mesoscale
    details, models remain in fairly good agreement in indicating
    convection breaking out across the broad warm sector today,
    initially mostly discrete (and supportive of splitting supercells
    and multicell clusters) and evolving into a QLCS/LEWP ahead of the
    associated cold front by this evening. Broad inflow from the Gulf
    will result in precipitable water values of 1.25-1.75" (at or above
    the 90th percentile, per CFSR climatology) and SB CAPE of 2000-4000
    J/kg, as deep layer (0-6 km) shear increases to 40-60 kts. Hourly
    rainfall of up to 3"/hr are possible in this environment,
    initially highly localized in association with established
    supercells, then more numerous to widespread with the passage of
    the QLCS/LEWP. Localized totals of 2-4" are generally expected
    within the Slight for the whole of the event (with the majority
    falling in a 3-6 hour period in association with the QLCS passage),
    with totals near the upper-end of the range (~4") being possible
    where storms train and/or where two or more mesocyclones align.
    While there were some changes per the new guidance, in general,
    continuity was maintained.

    Ongoing organized convection midday in the general vicinity of=20
    Mobile hadn't been disrupted by diurnal convection in its=20
    vicinity, which threatened mergers as disorganized convection=20
    moves more northward while organized convection moves more=20
    eastward. Cold cloud tops continued to show expansion with the=20
    convective area midday, which led to the introduction of a midday Slight
    Risk from southern MS across southern AL into the FL Panhandle.=20
    Hourly rain totals to 3" with additional local amounts to 6" remain
    possible for as long as this convective mass can persist.



    ...Florida Peninsula/Southeasternmost Georgia...
    A frontal boundary at 850 hPa slowly lifts through the state,
    bringing precipitable water values to 1.5-1.75". ML CAPE should
    maximize in the 2000-3000 J/kg, particularly in the southern
    Florida peninsula. There appears to be enough effective bulk shear
    for some degree of thunderstorm organization as well. The model
    guidance --- mostly mesoscale -- indicates the potential for local
    amounts in the 5-6" range. The Marginal risk was maintained with
    minimal change.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...Central Gulf Coast/Southeast... T
    A pair of shortwave troughs are progged to fully separate, as the=20
    northern stream shortwave continues to phase with the parent=20
    longwave trough into the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, while the=20
    southern shortwave likely hangs back into the Mid-South and Lower=20
    MS Valley. The best moisture and instability lies over portions of=20
    the Southeast (where forcing from the secondary shortwave should=20
    still be sufficient for organized convective activity). The=20
    Marginal risk was generally maintained from continuity. However,=20
    due to recent convective events along the Central Gulf Coast,=20
    upgraded to a Slight Risk for portions of southernmost MS, AL, and=20
    the western FL Panhandle which should have increased sensitivity/=20
    soil saturation. Localized totals of 2-4" are generally expected.


    ...Northeast...
    Thunderstorms with heavy rainfall are expected during the afternoon
    and evening hours ahead of a northern stream shortwave as MU CAPE
    peaks around 1000 J/kg and precipitable water values peak in the
    1.25-1.5" range. Sufficient inflow and effective bulk shear is
    available for organized convection for much of the period, with
    activity expected to be in decline past Tuesday 06z. Hourly rain
    totals up to 2" are possible where convection trains, which could
    challenge the flash flood guidance across urban portions of the
    Mid-Atlantic States. The inherited Marginal risk showed minimal
    change.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS & MIDWEST...

    A blocking pattern begins to emerge by Tuesday, as the=20
    aforementioned shortwaves lift northeastward into Canada with=20
    large-scale ridging quickly builds across the eastern United States=20
    from the North Atlantic. Meanwhile, large-scale troughing becomes=20
    amplified out West, with a potent upper-low expected to develop=20
    over the Northern Rockies and Plains (translating across the=20
    Rockies from the Pacific Northwest). While 12z global model suites
    are in overall good agreement with the evolution of the synoptic=20
    scale, the GFS/NAM are drier than the rest of the guidance with the
    associated surface low (which is depicted as a sub 990 mb low from
    the GFS, ECMWF, and CMC). Within the GFS/NAM guidance, the idea of
    light QPF is internally inconsistent as the forecast precipitable=20
    water values (1-1.25") combined with the 1000-500 hPa thickness=20
    values near 5610 meters suggest a nearly saturated atmosphere, and=20
    there appears to be sufficient instability in the vicinity and=20
    effective bulk shear for convective organization, so the wetter
    guidance was more believable. However, nearly as soon as the
    necessary ingredients are in place, they take off to the east due
    to system progression. Most deterministic solutions follow that
    idea and depict localized totals of 2"+ (including the downscaled=20
    ECMWF, the UKMET, and the CMC- reg) with remarkably good spatial=20
    agreement for this range. The ingredients above suggest hourly=20
    rainfall up to 1.75" with local amounts in the 3-4" where/when=20
    cells have the opportunity train or backbuild, so the inherited=20
    Marginal risk remains, though the area showed some expansion.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4ni4sHhV49ci2CE2a0CxYm37e8fAlw1V3iPIV6JDK4uI= dx7a43OKv6zsuULteWt8RyhSCCoBrcKNLv9Fi7WkgkbhSJU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4ni4sHhV49ci2CE2a0CxYm37e8fAlw1V3iPIV6JDK4uI= dx7a43OKv6zsuULteWt8RyhSCCoBrcKNLv9Fi7WkebZrp1Y$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4ni4sHhV49ci2CE2a0CxYm37e8fAlw1V3iPIV6JDK4uI= dx7a43OKv6zsuULteWt8RyhSCCoBrcKNLv9Fi7WksBOLiRU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 31 00:47:03 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 310046
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    846 PM EDT Sun Mar 30 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE, AND OHIO VALLEYS AND CENTRAL GULF
    COAST...

    ...Central Gulf Coast through the Ohio Valley...

    01Z Update...
    With diminishing convection along the immediate Upper Gulf
    coast...removed the Slight risk area introduced earlier in the day.
    Was not inclined to remove the Marginal risk area which surrounded
    the Slight risk given how hydrologically sensitive the area became
    as a result of prolific rain-makers earlier today. The latest model
    guidance kept the bulk of QPF well to the north and west during the
    overnight hours. Even so...any convection still lingering near the
    coast of Alabama westward into southeast Louisiana could result in
    additional excessive rainfall concerns. Also trimmed the Marginal=20
    risk area from the western Florida peninsula based on trends in=20
    radar imagery. The remainder of the previously-issued outlook still
    covered the higher model QPF and any associated potential for=20
    excessive rainfall.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    A pair of shortwave troughs emerge from the Intermountain West
    into the Central U.S. today, eventually partially phasing with an
    associated longwave trough by later tonight. This complex
    interaction is expected to result in a broad area of organized
    convective activity across much of the eastern half of the CONUS,
    including portions of the MS, TN, and OH Valleys.

    Despite the continued complexity of the synoptic and mesoscale
    details, models remain in fairly good agreement in indicating
    convection breaking out across the broad warm sector today,
    initially mostly discrete (and supportive of splitting supercells
    and multicell clusters) and evolving into a QLCS/LEWP ahead of the
    associated cold front by this evening. Broad inflow from the Gulf
    will result in precipitable water values of 1.25-1.75" (at or above
    the 90th percentile, per CFSR climatology) and SB CAPE of 2000-4000
    J/kg, as deep layer (0-6 km) shear increases to 40-60 kts. Hourly
    rainfall of up to 3"/hr are possible in this environment,
    initially highly localized in association with established
    supercells, then more numerous to widespread with the passage of
    the QLCS/LEWP. Localized totals of 2-4" are generally expected
    within the Slight for the whole of the event (with the majority
    falling in a 3-6 hour period in association with the QLCS passage),
    with totals near the upper-end of the range (~4") being possible
    where storms train and/or where two or more mesocyclones align.
    While there were some changes per the new guidance, in general,
    continuity was maintained.

    Ongoing organized convection midday in the general vicinity of
    Mobile hadn't been disrupted by diurnal convection in its
    vicinity, which threatened mergers as disorganized convection
    moves more northward while organized convection moves more
    eastward. Cold cloud tops continued to show expansion with the
    convective area midday, which led to the introduction of a midday Slight
    Risk from southern MS across southern AL into the FL Panhandle.
    Hourly rain totals to 3" with additional local amounts to 6" remain
    possible for as long as this convective mass can persist.

    ...Florida Peninsula/Southeasternmost Georgia...
    A frontal boundary at 850 hPa slowly lifts through the state,
    bringing precipitable water values to 1.5-1.75". ML CAPE should
    maximize in the 2000-3000 J/kg, particularly in the southern=20
    Florida peninsula. There appears to be enough effective bulk shear=20
    for some degree of thunderstorm organization as well. The model=20
    guidance --- mostly mesoscale -- indicates the potential for local=20
    amounts in the 5-6" range. The Marginal risk was maintained with=20
    minimal change.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...Central Gulf Coast/Southeast... T
    A pair of shortwave troughs are progged to fully separate, as the
    northern stream shortwave continues to phase with the parent
    longwave trough into the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, while the
    southern shortwave likely hangs back into the Mid-South and Lower
    MS Valley. The best moisture and instability lies over portions of
    the Southeast (where forcing from the secondary shortwave should
    still be sufficient for organized convective activity). The
    Marginal risk was generally maintained from continuity. However,
    due to recent convective events along the Central Gulf Coast,
    upgraded to a Slight Risk for portions of southernmost MS, AL, and
    the western FL Panhandle which should have increased sensitivity/
    soil saturation. Localized totals of 2-4" are generally expected.


    ...Northeast...
    Thunderstorms with heavy rainfall are expected during the afternoon
    and evening hours ahead of a northern stream shortwave as MU CAPE
    peaks around 1000 J/kg and precipitable water values peak in the
    1.25-1.5" range. Sufficient inflow and effective bulk shear is
    available for organized convection for much of the period, with
    activity expected to be in decline past Tuesday 06z. Hourly rain
    totals up to 2" are possible where convection trains, which could
    challenge the flash flood guidance across urban portions of the
    Mid-Atlantic States. The inherited Marginal risk showed minimal
    change.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS & MIDWEST...

    A blocking pattern begins to emerge by Tuesday, as the
    aforementioned shortwaves lift northeastward into Canada with
    large-scale ridging quickly builds across the eastern United States
    from the North Atlantic. Meanwhile, large-scale troughing becomes
    amplified out West, with a potent upper-low expected to develop
    over the Northern Rockies and Plains (translating across the
    Rockies from the Pacific Northwest). While 12z global model suites
    are in overall good agreement with the evolution of the synoptic
    scale, the GFS/NAM are drier than the rest of the guidance with the
    associated surface low (which is depicted as a sub 990 mb low from
    the GFS, ECMWF, and CMC). Within the GFS/NAM guidance, the idea of
    light QPF is internally inconsistent as the forecast precipitable
    water values (1-1.25") combined with the 1000-500 hPa thickness
    values near 5610 meters suggest a nearly saturated atmosphere, and
    there appears to be sufficient instability in the vicinity and
    effective bulk shear for convective organization, so the wetter
    guidance was more believable. However, nearly as soon as the
    necessary ingredients are in place, they take off to the east due
    to system progression. Most deterministic solutions follow that
    idea and depict localized totals of 2"+ (including the downscaled
    ECMWF, the UKMET, and the CMC- reg) with remarkably good spatial
    agreement for this range. The ingredients above suggest hourly
    rainfall up to 1.75" with local amounts in the 3-4" where/when
    cells have the opportunity train or backbuild, so the inherited
    Marginal risk remains, though the area showed some expansion.

    Roth/Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7FvVhN_Zi3kSrAApoHVfw4cT23o-VFAP-yoODJhaeXki= Z2eR4kcCzHkDeRWZTb0X8EbaXIAA2j6t02ykCV-wktI6fKI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7FvVhN_Zi3kSrAApoHVfw4cT23o-VFAP-yoODJhaeXki= Z2eR4kcCzHkDeRWZTb0X8EbaXIAA2j6t02ykCV-waHrYPDc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7FvVhN_Zi3kSrAApoHVfw4cT23o-VFAP-yoODJhaeXki= Z2eR4kcCzHkDeRWZTb0X8EbaXIAA2j6t02ykCV-wG577xqU$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 31 07:40:55 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 310740
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    340 AM EDT Mon Mar 31 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ..Central Gulf Coast..

    A fairly amplified longwave pattern over CONUS with a deep low=20
    over Ontario will allow for a trailing cold front to slowly
    propagate east-southeastward through the Deep South with a defined
    convective footprint along and ahead of the frontal boundary.
    Recent trends have shifted the previous QPF max closer to
    southeastern LA within the axis of the stronger LLJ providing the
    best regional shear and low-level convergence progs near the
    southwestern edge of the front. 00z HREF neighborhood probs for >2"
    are running between 60-90% within the confines of the southeastern
    parishes, including the urban corridor between Baton Rouge to New
    Orleans. Considering the urban factors and the previous heavy rain
    impacts over the past 36 hrs, especially within Baton Rouge, the
    prospects for flash flooding are relatively elevated. Local PWATs
    will trend between 1.7-2.0" when assessing the HREF mean, a
    suitable environment for increased rates approaching up to 2"/hr.
    This falls within the lower threshold for flash flood potential
    according to the recent FFG's in place.=20

    The threat remains focused within the zone of southeastern LA and
    southern MS where the best frontal convergence and instability is
    co-located within the bounds of the front. Heavier QPE footprint=20
    lingering over towards MOB from the past 12 hrs will allow for a
    heightened concern for flash flooding as the convective
    cluster/line progresses eastward. Thankfully, models have backed
    off a bit on the heavier precip being located over the areas that
    were heavily impacted this afternoon/evening. There's still an
    opportunity for a few heavier cells to impact that portion of the
    I-10 corridor from Biloxi to Mobile, so wanted to maintain some
    continuity from the previous forecast SLGT in the area to cover for
    the sensitivity factors. The main change was the broad SLGT
    coverage was shifted westward into the southeastern LA parishes and
    southern MS to encompass the highest probs for 2-4" of rainfall,
    most of which is forecast to fall within a 3-6 hr time frame
    between 12-18z. A broad MRGL exists over the Deep South into the
    southern Appalachians for isolated threats of heavier precip within
    the confines of the terrain of eastern TN, north GA, and the
    western edge of Upstate SC.=20

    ..Mid Atlantic..

    The deep longwave pattern across the eastern half of the CONUS will
    translate into a bout of heavier rain across the Mid Atlantic=20
    later this afternoon and evening thanks to strengthening right-
    entrance region jet dynamics that will develop over the course of=20
    the period. Recent guidance has been keen on an increasingly potent
    upper jet motioning across the eastern Great Lakes with forecast
    speeds approaching 140-150kts as it traverses north of the
    northeastern CONUS during the middle of the period. Considering the
    deep layer ascent provided by the jet being coupled with sufficient
    low to mid-level moisture advection occurring along and ahead of
    the front/mean trough progression, the pattern will yield a
    blossoming of convection beginning over the northern Mid Atlantic,
    eventually building southward towards a weak frontal wave
    approaching from the southwest as it exits out of the Tennessee
    Valley. A line of heavy rain is likely over parts of northern VA up
    through the Delmarva into eastern PA and NJ with the northern
    extent reaching the lower Hudson into NYC and eastern LI as the low
    rides northeastward. The max potential for this convective
    signature is capped due to the progressive nature of the precip
    field with most of the rain falling in a 3 hr window as it advances
    eastward. Neighborhood probs are elevated for >1" totals (60-90%)
    within a corridor from northern VA up through NYC, however the
    probabilities drop off considerably when moving closer to 2"
    (10-30%), a testament to the progressive nature of the pattern. The
    areal footprint of urbanization is one of the main reasons why the
    threat of flash flooding exists in this scenario leading to a MRGL
    risk maintained over the above corridor. There was an expansion
    further southwest into northern VA and the DC metro to account for
    recent trends within the probability fields and the bias for
    convection to develop further southwest within a frontal dynamic.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS & MIDWEST...

    A strong mid-level trough ejecting out of the western CONUS will
    aid in initiating a deep surface cyclone across the High Plains of
    the Central U.S. by late-Tuesday through Wednesday morning. The
    process is manifested through a well-defined axis of difluence
    downstream of the mean trough/closed-low reflection over the
    Rockies, kicking eastward into the plains. Current deterministic
    output indicates sub-990mb pressures with continued intensification
    through the end of the period generating significant low-level
    moisture advection within the lead side of the circulation when
    assessing the forecast 850-700mb RH field. A textbook warm conveyor
    belt signature will mature with a connection based from the Gulf
    driving warm, moist air poleward and enhancing a blossoming QPF
    shield by the time we reach Tuesday evening. The primary focus for
    heavy rainfall will ensue after sunset as the initiation of a
    powerful LLJ across the Central Plains on the order of 65-75kts
    will create an axis of growing low to mid-level shear juxtaposed
    within a budding warm sector downstream of the primary circulation.
    As the surface cyclone matures, a more defined cold front will
    develop along the tail end of the low as it moves into the Plains
    creating a focus for convective development as it maneuvers towards
    the warm sector. Most guidance now indicate a rapid development of
    convection across portions of northern KS into southeast NE
    advancing east-northeast within the bounds of the cold front and
    warm sector of the cyclone.=20

    The normally conservative NBM probs for >1" have grown to 50-60%=20
    within a area focused over northeastern KS, southeast NE, into=20
    western IA with some 30-50% probs extending southwest within the=20
    southern edge of the convective flare up along the cold front. Most deterministic output signals 1-2" with locally higher totals=20
    embedded within those above zones. ML output has been fairly=20
    consistent with that area being the primary focus for the heaviest=20
    QPF core which makes sense synoptically considering the expected=20
    rapid cyclone intensification. Warm front over the Mississippi=20
    Valley will have to be monitored for some enhanced convective=20
    concerns as it motions to the north with some guidance dropping=20
    appreciable precip in an area that has some relatively lower FFG=20
    signals. The previous MRGL was maintained with some expansion south
    and east to address the extension of the forecast heavier=20
    convection across the maturing warm sector and within the axis of=20
    strongest isentropic ascent over western IL.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    The D3 period will represent the initial stages of a prolonged
    heavy rain event that will reside over the Lower Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys with a multitude of frontal waves riding along a
    persistent quasi-stationary front that will undulate at times when
    interacting with the aforementioned surface waves. The general
    longwave pattern will become increasingly favorable for a "highway"
    of moisture and mid-level impulses to eject northeastward out of
    the southern Rockies/Plains and up through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valleys beginning Wednesday afternoon, onward. The consensus among
    all ensembles and much of the deterministic fields are the first
    wave of the pattern to maneuver over the mid-Mississippi Valley
    around the base of a broad trough located over the Plains/Midwest
    creating ample surface-based ascent to couple with the powerful
    upper jet component situated over the Central CONUS in response to
    the evolving pattern the day prior.=20

    At the surface, a cold front will run into a stout western ridge=20
    extension from a surface high located over the Western Atlantic=20
    into the Canadian Maritimes. The pattern essentially comes to a=20
    stalemate thanks to an expected +2 to +3 standard deviation height=20
    anomaly centered over the Western Atlantic. This ridge will counter
    the deepening trough over the Central U.S. creating a funneling=20
    affect for deep moisture advection through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valley's, along with ample mid-level impulses that will be preside
    over the same areas. The gridlocked setup will create a formidable
    moderate to heavy rain event across the above areas with=20
    depictions from guidance indicating a widespread 2-4" with some=20
    areas exceeding 5" increasingly likely within the corridor impacted
    by the multitude of convective elements spawning southwest to=20
    northeast in proxy to the quasi- stationary front. A Moderate Risk=20
    remains over an area situated from northeast AR up through the mid-
    Mississippi Valley of western TN/KY into southern IN. A broad=20
    Slight Risk encompasses the MDT with a footprint extending as far=20
    north as Lower Michigan.=20

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor=20
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer=20


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4mqiTrg1LxmTpB-JaN_V9zGEapMVAk-y7bKNlSfBvm2W= R-eGGKrVKabe8RHZMLSwE1fE6RbGxoZHLHL5SQGE-qw4X1s$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4mqiTrg1LxmTpB-JaN_V9zGEapMVAk-y7bKNlSfBvm2W= R-eGGKrVKabe8RHZMLSwE1fE6RbGxoZHLHL5SQGE-PBgFnk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4mqiTrg1LxmTpB-JaN_V9zGEapMVAk-y7bKNlSfBvm2W= R-eGGKrVKabe8RHZMLSwE1fE6RbGxoZHLHL5SQGEcBZ6kxw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 31 16:00:55 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 311600
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1200 PM EDT Mon Mar 31 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...16z update...

    Areas of concern with this afternoon update are portions of the
    central Gulf Coast, Southern Appalachians and the Mid-Atlantic. The
    southern periphery of the convective line propagating across the=20
    Gulf Coast/Southeast should push off of the Louisiana coast this
    afternoon. This morning's guidance has shown a slightly more
    progressive evolution of this complex than previous runs, however
    rates should be high enough (0.5in.--0.25in.) over parts of=20
    southern Alabama/Mississippi, which have already received some
    rainfall, to support a low end Slight Risk for those areas for=20
    this afternoon. Some preceding cells out ahead of the approaching=20
    line could organize and prime soils over portions of northern-=20
    central Georgia.

    Latest hi res guidance increased qpf over much of the Mid-Atlantic
    highlighted by the Marginal Risk area. This is considered a higher
    end Marginal Risk area given the recent model trends, and despite
    relatively low soil moisture and below average stream flows.

    Kebede

    ..Central Gulf Coast..

    A fairly amplified longwave pattern over CONUS with a deep low
    over Ontario will allow for a trailing cold front to slowly
    propagate east-southeastward through the Deep South with a defined
    convective footprint along and ahead of the frontal boundary.
    Recent trends have shifted the previous QPF max closer to
    southeastern LA within the axis of the stronger LLJ providing the
    best regional shear and low-level convergence progs near the
    southwestern edge of the front. 00z HREF neighborhood probs for >2"
    are running between 60-90% within the confines of the southeastern
    parishes, including the urban corridor between Baton Rouge to New
    Orleans. Considering the urban factors and the previous heavy rain
    impacts over the past 36 hrs, especially within Baton Rouge, the
    prospects for flash flooding are relatively elevated. Local PWATs
    will trend between 1.7-2.0" when assessing the HREF mean, a
    suitable environment for increased rates approaching up to 2"/hr.
    This falls within the lower threshold for flash flood potential
    according to the recent FFG's in place.

    The threat remains focused within the zone of southeastern LA and
    southern MS where the best frontal convergence and instability is
    co-located within the bounds of the front. Heavier QPE footprint
    lingering over towards MOB from the past 12 hrs will allow for a
    heightened concern for flash flooding as the convective
    cluster/line progresses eastward. Thankfully, models have backed
    off a bit on the heavier precip being located over the areas that
    were heavily impacted this afternoon/evening. There's still an
    opportunity for a few heavier cells to impact that portion of the
    I-10 corridor from Biloxi to Mobile, so wanted to maintain some
    continuity from the previous forecast SLGT in the area to cover for
    the sensitivity factors. The main change was the broad SLGT
    coverage was shifted westward into the southeastern LA parishes and
    southern MS to encompass the highest probs for 2-4" of rainfall,
    most of which is forecast to fall within a 3-6 hr time frame
    between 12-18z. A broad MRGL exists over the Deep South into the
    southern Appalachians for isolated threats of heavier precip within
    the confines of the terrain of eastern TN, north GA, and the
    western edge of Upstate SC.

    ..Mid Atlantic..

    The deep longwave pattern across the eastern half of the CONUS will
    translate into a bout of heavier rain across the Mid Atlantic
    later this afternoon and evening thanks to strengthening right-
    entrance region jet dynamics that will develop over the course of
    the period. Recent guidance has been keen on an increasingly potent
    upper jet motioning across the eastern Great Lakes with forecast
    speeds approaching 140-150kts as it traverses north of the
    northeastern CONUS during the middle of the period. Considering the
    deep layer ascent provided by the jet being coupled with sufficient
    low to mid-level moisture advection occurring along and ahead of
    the front/mean trough progression, the pattern will yield a
    blossoming of convection beginning over the northern Mid Atlantic,
    eventually building southward towards a weak frontal wave
    approaching from the southwest as it exits out of the Tennessee
    Valley. A line of heavy rain is likely over parts of northern VA up
    through the Delmarva into eastern PA and NJ with the northern
    extent reaching the lower Hudson into NYC and eastern LI as the low
    rides northeastward. The max potential for this convective
    signature is capped due to the progressive nature of the precip
    field with most of the rain falling in a 3 hr window as it advances
    eastward. Neighborhood probs are elevated for >1" totals (60-90%)
    within a corridor from northern VA up through NYC, however the
    probabilities drop off considerably when moving closer to 2"
    (10-30%), a testament to the progressive nature of the pattern. The
    areal footprint of urbanization is one of the main reasons why the
    threat of flash flooding exists in this scenario leading to a MRGL
    risk maintained over the above corridor. There was an expansion
    further southwest into northern VA and the DC metro to account for
    recent trends within the probability fields and the bias for
    convection to develop further southwest within a frontal dynamic.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS & MIDWEST...

    A strong mid-level trough ejecting out of the western CONUS will
    aid in initiating a deep surface cyclone across the High Plains of
    the Central U.S. by late-Tuesday through Wednesday morning. The
    process is manifested through a well-defined axis of difluence
    downstream of the mean trough/closed-low reflection over the
    Rockies, kicking eastward into the plains. Current deterministic
    output indicates sub-990mb pressures with continued intensification
    through the end of the period generating significant low-level
    moisture advection within the lead side of the circulation when
    assessing the forecast 850-700mb RH field. A textbook warm conveyor
    belt signature will mature with a connection based from the Gulf
    driving warm, moist air poleward and enhancing a blossoming QPF
    shield by the time we reach Tuesday evening. The primary focus for
    heavy rainfall will ensue after sunset as the initiation of a
    powerful LLJ across the Central Plains on the order of 65-75kts
    will create an axis of growing low to mid-level shear juxtaposed
    within a budding warm sector downstream of the primary circulation.
    As the surface cyclone matures, a more defined cold front will
    develop along the tail end of the low as it moves into the Plains
    creating a focus for convective development as it maneuvers towards
    the warm sector. Most guidance now indicate a rapid development of
    convection across portions of northern KS into southeast NE
    advancing east-northeast within the bounds of the cold front and
    warm sector of the cyclone.

    The normally conservative NBM probs for >1" have grown to 50-60%
    within a area focused over northeastern KS, southeast NE, into
    western IA with some 30-50% probs extending southwest within the
    southern edge of the convective flare up along the cold front. Most deterministic output signals 1-2" with locally higher totals
    embedded within those above zones. ML output has been fairly
    consistent with that area being the primary focus for the heaviest
    QPF core which makes sense synoptically considering the expected
    rapid cyclone intensification. Warm front over the Mississippi
    Valley will have to be monitored for some enhanced convective
    concerns as it motions to the north with some guidance dropping
    appreciable precip in an area that has some relatively lower FFG
    signals. The previous MRGL was maintained with some expansion south
    and east to address the extension of the forecast heavier
    convection across the maturing warm sector and within the axis of
    strongest isentropic ascent over western IL.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    The D3 period will represent the initial stages of a prolonged
    heavy rain event that will reside over the Lower Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys with a multitude of frontal waves riding along a
    persistent quasi-stationary front that will undulate at times when
    interacting with the aforementioned surface waves. The general
    longwave pattern will become increasingly favorable for a "highway"
    of moisture and mid-level impulses to eject northeastward out of
    the southern Rockies/Plains and up through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valleys beginning Wednesday afternoon, onward. The consensus among
    all ensembles and much of the deterministic fields are the first
    wave of the pattern to maneuver over the mid-Mississippi Valley
    around the base of a broad trough located over the Plains/Midwest
    creating ample surface-based ascent to couple with the powerful
    upper jet component situated over the Central CONUS in response to
    the evolving pattern the day prior.

    At the surface, a cold front will run into a stout western ridge
    extension from a surface high located over the Western Atlantic
    into the Canadian Maritimes. The pattern essentially comes to a
    stalemate thanks to an expected +2 to +3 standard deviation height
    anomaly centered over the Western Atlantic. This ridge will counter
    the deepening trough over the Central U.S. creating a funneling
    affect for deep moisture advection through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valley's, along with ample mid-level impulses that will be preside
    over the same areas. The gridlocked setup will create a formidable
    moderate to heavy rain event across the above areas with
    depictions from guidance indicating a widespread 2-4" with some
    areas exceeding 5" increasingly likely within the corridor impacted
    by the multitude of convective elements spawning southwest to
    northeast in proxy to the quasi- stationary front. A Moderate Risk
    remains over an area situated from northeast AR up through the mid-
    Mississippi Valley of western TN/KY into southern IN. A broad
    Slight Risk encompasses the MDT with a footprint extending as far
    north as Lower Michigan.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ZX0RaEEa7uKDlr-CxUkYRLN7mkJYE1r3c6_OhlHdyDR= SFUYHhqqAlW3YpYXuj7ploNzTBa7dS0jGf6ZZ9zwQIt6mpk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ZX0RaEEa7uKDlr-CxUkYRLN7mkJYE1r3c6_OhlHdyDR= SFUYHhqqAlW3YpYXuj7ploNzTBa7dS0jGf6ZZ9zw2Sk_V7A$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ZX0RaEEa7uKDlr-CxUkYRLN7mkJYE1r3c6_OhlHdyDR= SFUYHhqqAlW3YpYXuj7ploNzTBa7dS0jGf6ZZ9zwTvgq_ZE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 31 20:29:37 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 312029
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    429 PM EDT Mon Mar 31 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Mar 31 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...16z update...

    Areas of concern with this afternoon update are portions of the
    central Gulf Coast, Southern Appalachians and the Mid-Atlantic. The
    southern periphery of the convective line propagating across the
    Gulf Coast/Southeast should push off of the Louisiana coast this
    afternoon. This morning's guidance has shown a slightly more
    progressive evolution of this complex than previous runs, however
    rates should be high enough (0.5in.--0.25in.) over parts of
    southern Alabama/Mississippi, which have already received some
    rainfall, to support a low end Slight Risk for those areas for
    this afternoon. Some preceding cells out ahead of the approaching
    line could organize and prime soils over portions of northern-
    central Georgia.

    Latest hi res guidance increased qpf over much of the Mid-Atlantic
    highlighted by the Marginal Risk area. This is considered a higher
    end Marginal Risk area given the recent model trends, and despite
    relatively low soil moisture and below average stream flows.

    Kebede

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ..Central Gulf Coast..

    A fairly amplified longwave pattern over CONUS with a deep low
    over Ontario will allow for a trailing cold front to slowly
    propagate east-southeastward through the Deep South with a defined
    convective footprint along and ahead of the frontal boundary.
    Recent trends have shifted the previous QPF max closer to
    southeastern LA within the axis of the stronger LLJ providing the
    best regional shear and low-level convergence progs near the
    southwestern edge of the front. 00z HREF neighborhood probs for >2"
    are running between 60-90% within the confines of the southeastern
    parishes, including the urban corridor between Baton Rouge to New
    Orleans. Considering the urban factors and the previous heavy rain
    impacts over the past 36 hrs, especially within Baton Rouge, the
    prospects for flash flooding are relatively elevated. Local PWATs
    will trend between 1.7-2.0" when assessing the HREF mean, a
    suitable environment for increased rates approaching up to 2"/hr.
    This falls within the lower threshold for flash flood potential
    according to the recent FFG's in place.

    The threat remains focused within the zone of southeastern LA and
    southern MS where the best frontal convergence and instability is
    co-located within the bounds of the front. Heavier QPE footprint
    lingering over towards MOB from the past 12 hrs will allow for a
    heightened concern for flash flooding as the convective
    cluster/line progresses eastward. Thankfully, models have backed
    off a bit on the heavier precip being located over the areas that
    were heavily impacted this afternoon/evening. There's still an
    opportunity for a few heavier cells to impact that portion of the
    I-10 corridor from Biloxi to Mobile, so wanted to maintain some
    continuity from the previous forecast SLGT in the area to cover for
    the sensitivity factors. The main change was the broad SLGT
    coverage was shifted westward into the southeastern LA parishes and
    southern MS to encompass the highest probs for 2-4" of rainfall,
    most of which is forecast to fall within a 3-6 hr time frame
    between 12-18z. A broad MRGL exists over the Deep South into the
    southern Appalachians for isolated threats of heavier precip within
    the confines of the terrain of eastern TN, north GA, and the
    western edge of Upstate SC.

    ..Mid Atlantic..

    The deep longwave pattern across the eastern half of the CONUS will
    translate into a bout of heavier rain across the Mid Atlantic
    later this afternoon and evening thanks to strengthening right-
    entrance region jet dynamics that will develop over the course of
    the period. Recent guidance has been keen on an increasingly potent
    upper jet motioning across the eastern Great Lakes with forecast
    speeds approaching 140-150kts as it traverses north of the
    northeastern CONUS during the middle of the period. Considering the
    deep layer ascent provided by the jet being coupled with sufficient
    low to mid-level moisture advection occurring along and ahead of
    the front/mean trough progression, the pattern will yield a
    blossoming of convection beginning over the northern Mid Atlantic,
    eventually building southward towards a weak frontal wave
    approaching from the southwest as it exits out of the Tennessee
    Valley. A line of heavy rain is likely over parts of northern VA up
    through the Delmarva into eastern PA and NJ with the northern
    extent reaching the lower Hudson into NYC and eastern LI as the low
    rides northeastward. The max potential for this convective
    signature is capped due to the progressive nature of the precip
    field with most of the rain falling in a 3 hr window as it advances
    eastward. Neighborhood probs are elevated for >1" totals (60-90%)
    within a corridor from northern VA up through NYC, however the
    probabilities drop off considerably when moving closer to 2"
    (10-30%), a testament to the progressive nature of the pattern. The
    areal footprint of urbanization is one of the main reasons why the
    threat of flash flooding exists in this scenario leading to a MRGL
    risk maintained over the above corridor. There was an expansion
    further southwest into northern VA and the DC metro to account for
    recent trends within the probability fields and the bias for
    convection to develop further southwest within a frontal dynamic.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS & MIDWEST...

    ...2030z update...

    The Marginal Risk area was maintained over the Central Plains and
    Middle Mississippi Valley, with an expansion into central/eastern
    Oklahoma based on the latest model trends. The setup remains mostly
    the same. The heaviest rainfall is likely late Tuesday night into=20
    early Wednesday morning.

    Kebede

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A strong mid-level trough ejecting out of the western CONUS will
    aid in initiating a deep surface cyclone across the High Plains of
    the Central U.S. by late-Tuesday through Wednesday morning. The
    process is manifested through a well-defined axis of difluence
    downstream of the mean trough/closed-low reflection over the
    Rockies, kicking eastward into the plains. Current deterministic
    output indicates sub-990mb pressures with continued intensification
    through the end of the period generating significant low-level
    moisture advection within the lead side of the circulation when
    assessing the forecast 850-700mb RH field. A textbook warm conveyor
    belt signature will mature with a connection based from the Gulf
    driving warm, moist air poleward and enhancing a blossoming QPF
    shield by the time we reach Tuesday evening. The primary focus for
    heavy rainfall will ensue after sunset as the initiation of a
    powerful LLJ across the Central Plains on the order of 65-75kts
    will create an axis of growing low to mid-level shear juxtaposed
    within a budding warm sector downstream of the primary circulation.
    As the surface cyclone matures, a more defined cold front will
    develop along the tail end of the low as it moves into the Plains
    creating a focus for convective development as it maneuvers towards
    the warm sector. Most guidance now indicate a rapid development of
    convection across portions of northern KS into southeast NE
    advancing east-northeast within the bounds of the cold front and
    warm sector of the cyclone.

    The normally conservative NBM probs for >1" have grown to 50-60%
    within a area focused over northeastern KS, southeast NE, into
    western IA with some 30-50% probs extending southwest within the
    southern edge of the convective flare up along the cold front. Most deterministic output signals 1-2" with locally higher totals
    embedded within those above zones. ML output has been fairly
    consistent with that area being the primary focus for the heaviest
    QPF core which makes sense synoptically considering the expected
    rapid cyclone intensification. Warm front over the Mississippi
    Valley will have to be monitored for some enhanced convective
    concerns as it motions to the north with some guidance dropping
    appreciable precip in an area that has some relatively lower FFG
    signals. The previous MRGL was maintained with some expansion south
    and east to address the extension of the forecast heavier
    convection across the maturing warm sector and within the axis of
    strongest isentropic ascent over western IL.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    ...2030z update...

    The Moderate Risk outlook was expanded into southern Indiana and=20
    western Tennessee while remaining mostly the same across other=20
    areas. Guidance continues to indicate substantial moisture
    transport into a highly unstable region beneath an area of strong
    diffluence aloft. There's widespread potential for exceeding 25=20
    year ARIs, with some embedded 100 year ARIs co-located with the Moderate Ri= sk=20
    area during the next 7 day period ending Monday April 7th. These
    ARI values are especially notable considering that the rainfall
    event is only forecast to unfold over a 4 day stretch (Wednesday--
    Saturday) within those 7 days.


    Kebede

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The D3 period will represent the initial stages of a prolonged
    heavy rain event that will reside over the Lower Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys with a multitude of frontal waves riding along a
    persistent quasi-stationary front that will undulate at times when
    interacting with the aforementioned surface waves. The general
    longwave pattern will become increasingly favorable for a "highway"
    of moisture and mid-level impulses to eject northeastward out of
    the southern Rockies/Plains and up through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valleys beginning Wednesday afternoon, onward. The consensus among
    all ensembles and much of the deterministic fields are the first
    wave of the pattern to maneuver over the mid-Mississippi Valley
    around the base of a broad trough located over the Plains/Midwest
    creating ample surface-based ascent to couple with the powerful
    upper jet component situated over the Central CONUS in response to
    the evolving pattern the day prior.

    At the surface, a cold front will run into a stout western ridge
    extension from a surface high located over the Western Atlantic
    into the Canadian Maritimes. The pattern essentially comes to a
    stalemate thanks to an expected +2 to +3 standard deviation height
    anomaly centered over the Western Atlantic. This ridge will counter
    the deepening trough over the Central U.S. creating a funneling
    affect for deep moisture advection through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valley's, along with ample mid-level impulses that will be preside
    over the same areas. The gridlocked setup will create a formidable
    moderate to heavy rain event across the above areas with
    depictions from guidance indicating a widespread 2-4" with some
    areas exceeding 5" increasingly likely within the corridor impacted
    by the multitude of convective elements spawning southwest to
    northeast in proxy to the quasi- stationary front. A Moderate Risk
    remains over an area situated from northeast AR up through the mid-
    Mississippi Valley of western TN/KY into southern IN. A broad
    Slight Risk encompasses the MDT with a footprint extending as far
    north as Lower Michigan.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4iek5tCWSX5cDpE3U37Dx41_yd1tI2nr9Vg9QudGe4la= Z2NOfR5VYQtTCZZDArL0ecLzonzAf-llVOp0STg6CrrugLQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4iek5tCWSX5cDpE3U37Dx41_yd1tI2nr9Vg9QudGe4la= Z2NOfR5VYQtTCZZDArL0ecLzonzAf-llVOp0STg6ioMDwOc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4iek5tCWSX5cDpE3U37Dx41_yd1tI2nr9Vg9QudGe4la= Z2NOfR5VYQtTCZZDArL0ecLzonzAf-llVOp0STg6P63s2a4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 1 00:51:51 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 010051
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    851 PM EDT Mon Mar 31 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM PORTIONS OF
    THE MID ATLANTIC TO COASTAL REGIONS OF FAR SOUTHWEST NEW ENGLAND...

    ...01Z Update...
    Removed the Marginal and Slight Risk areas from the Gulf coast
    region now that the large scale forcing has shifted the focus for
    active convection well eastward. The risk of excessive rainfall
    continues from parts of the Mid-Atlantic regional northeastward in
    parts of far southern New York and adjacent portions of Connecticut
    as a cold front moving through the area provides the focus for
    storms. The airmass ahead of the front was sufficiently moist and
    unstable enough to support some 1+ inch per hour rates...but the
    forward propagation looks to limit the risk of run-off problems
    except for areas of poor drainage and in highly urbanized areas.

    Bann


    ...16z update...

    Areas of concern with this afternoon update are portions of the
    central Gulf Coast, Southern Appalachians and the Mid-Atlantic. The
    southern periphery of the convective line propagating across the
    Gulf Coast/Southeast should push off of the Louisiana coast this
    afternoon. This morning's guidance has shown a slightly more
    progressive evolution of this complex than previous runs, however
    rates should be high enough (0.5in.--0.25in.) over parts of
    southern Alabama/Mississippi, which have already received some
    rainfall, to support a low end Slight Risk for those areas for
    this afternoon. Some preceding cells out ahead of the approaching
    line could organize and prime soils over portions of northern-
    central Georgia.

    Latest hi res guidance increased qpf over much of the Mid-Atlantic
    highlighted by the Marginal Risk area. This is considered a higher
    end Marginal Risk area given the recent model trends, and despite
    relatively low soil moisture and below average stream flows.

    Kebede

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ..Central Gulf Coast..

    A fairly amplified longwave pattern over CONUS with a deep low
    over Ontario will allow for a trailing cold front to slowly
    propagate east-southeastward through the Deep South with a defined
    convective footprint along and ahead of the frontal boundary.
    Recent trends have shifted the previous QPF max closer to
    southeastern LA within the axis of the stronger LLJ providing the
    best regional shear and low-level convergence progs near the
    southwestern edge of the front. 00z HREF neighborhood probs for >2"
    are running between 60-90% within the confines of the southeastern
    parishes, including the urban corridor between Baton Rouge to New
    Orleans. Considering the urban factors and the previous heavy rain
    impacts over the past 36 hrs, especially within Baton Rouge, the
    prospects for flash flooding are relatively elevated. Local PWATs
    will trend between 1.7-2.0" when assessing the HREF mean, a
    suitable environment for increased rates approaching up to 2"/hr.
    This falls within the lower threshold for flash flood potential
    according to the recent FFG's in place.

    The threat remains focused within the zone of southeastern LA and
    southern MS where the best frontal convergence and instability is
    co-located within the bounds of the front. Heavier QPE footprint
    lingering over towards MOB from the past 12 hrs will allow for a
    heightened concern for flash flooding as the convective
    cluster/line progresses eastward. Thankfully, models have backed
    off a bit on the heavier precip being located over the areas that
    were heavily impacted this afternoon/evening. There's still an
    opportunity for a few heavier cells to impact that portion of the
    I-10 corridor from Biloxi to Mobile, so wanted to maintain some
    continuity from the previous forecast SLGT in the area to cover for
    the sensitivity factors. The main change was the broad SLGT
    coverage was shifted westward into the southeastern LA parishes and
    southern MS to encompass the highest probs for 2-4" of rainfall,
    most of which is forecast to fall within a 3-6 hr time frame
    between 12-18z. A broad MRGL exists over the Deep South into the
    southern Appalachians for isolated threats of heavier precip within
    the confines of the terrain of eastern TN, north GA, and the
    western edge of Upstate SC.

    ..Mid Atlantic..

    The deep longwave pattern across the eastern half of the CONUS will
    translate into a bout of heavier rain across the Mid Atlantic
    later this afternoon and evening thanks to strengthening right-
    entrance region jet dynamics that will develop over the course of
    the period. Recent guidance has been keen on an increasingly potent
    upper jet motioning across the eastern Great Lakes with forecast
    speeds approaching 140-150kts as it traverses north of the
    northeastern CONUS during the middle of the period. Considering the
    deep layer ascent provided by the jet being coupled with sufficient
    low to mid-level moisture advection occurring along and ahead of
    the front/mean trough progression, the pattern will yield a
    blossoming of convection beginning over the northern Mid Atlantic,
    eventually building southward towards a weak frontal wave
    approaching from the southwest as it exits out of the Tennessee
    Valley. A line of heavy rain is likely over parts of northern VA up
    through the Delmarva into eastern PA and NJ with the northern
    extent reaching the lower Hudson into NYC and eastern LI as the low
    rides northeastward. The max potential for this convective
    signature is capped due to the progressive nature of the precip
    field with most of the rain falling in a 3 hr window as it advances
    eastward. Neighborhood probs are elevated for >1" totals (60-90%)
    within a corridor from northern VA up through NYC, however the
    probabilities drop off considerably when moving closer to 2"
    (10-30%), a testament to the progressive nature of the pattern. The
    areal footprint of urbanization is one of the main reasons why the
    threat of flash flooding exists in this scenario leading to a MRGL
    risk maintained over the above corridor. There was an expansion
    further southwest into northern VA and the DC metro to account for
    recent trends within the probability fields and the bias for
    convection to develop further southwest within a frontal dynamic.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS & MIDWEST...

    ...2030z update...

    The Marginal Risk area was maintained over the Central Plains and
    Middle Mississippi Valley, with an expansion into central/eastern
    Oklahoma based on the latest model trends. The setup remains mostly
    the same. The heaviest rainfall is likely late Tuesday night into
    early Wednesday morning.

    Kebede

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A strong mid-level trough ejecting out of the western CONUS will
    aid in initiating a deep surface cyclone across the High Plains of
    the Central U.S. by late-Tuesday through Wednesday morning. The
    process is manifested through a well-defined axis of difluence
    downstream of the mean trough/closed-low reflection over the
    Rockies, kicking eastward into the plains. Current deterministic
    output indicates sub-990mb pressures with continued intensification
    through the end of the period generating significant low-level
    moisture advection within the lead side of the circulation when
    assessing the forecast 850-700mb RH field. A textbook warm conveyor
    belt signature will mature with a connection based from the Gulf
    driving warm, moist air poleward and enhancing a blossoming QPF
    shield by the time we reach Tuesday evening. The primary focus for
    heavy rainfall will ensue after sunset as the initiation of a
    powerful LLJ across the Central Plains on the order of 65-75kts
    will create an axis of growing low to mid-level shear juxtaposed
    within a budding warm sector downstream of the primary circulation.
    As the surface cyclone matures, a more defined cold front will
    develop along the tail end of the low as it moves into the Plains
    creating a focus for convective development as it maneuvers towards
    the warm sector. Most guidance now indicate a rapid development of
    convection across portions of northern KS into southeast NE
    advancing east-northeast within the bounds of the cold front and
    warm sector of the cyclone.

    The normally conservative NBM probs for >1" have grown to 50-60%
    within a area focused over northeastern KS, southeast NE, into
    western IA with some 30-50% probs extending southwest within the
    southern edge of the convective flare up along the cold front. Most deterministic output signals 1-2" with locally higher totals
    embedded within those above zones. ML output has been fairly
    consistent with that area being the primary focus for the heaviest
    QPF core which makes sense synoptically considering the expected
    rapid cyclone intensification. Warm front over the Mississippi
    Valley will have to be monitored for some enhanced convective
    concerns as it motions to the north with some guidance dropping
    appreciable precip in an area that has some relatively lower FFG
    signals. The previous MRGL was maintained with some expansion south
    and east to address the extension of the forecast heavier
    convection across the maturing warm sector and within the axis of
    strongest isentropic ascent over western IL.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    ...2030z update...

    The Moderate Risk outlook was expanded into southern Indiana and
    western Tennessee while remaining mostly the same across other
    areas. Guidance continues to indicate substantial moisture
    transport into a highly unstable region beneath an area of strong
    diffluence aloft. There's widespread potential for exceeding 25
    year ARIs, with some embedded 100 year ARIs co-located with the Moderate Ri=
    sk
    area during the next 7 day period ending Monday April 7th. These
    ARI values are especially notable considering that the rainfall
    event is only forecast to unfold over a 4 day stretch (Wednesday--
    Saturday) within those 7 days.


    Kebede

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The D3 period will represent the initial stages of a prolonged
    heavy rain event that will reside over the Lower Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys with a multitude of frontal waves riding along a
    persistent quasi-stationary front that will undulate at times when
    interacting with the aforementioned surface waves. The general
    longwave pattern will become increasingly favorable for a "highway"
    of moisture and mid-level impulses to eject northeastward out of
    the southern Rockies/Plains and up through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valleys beginning Wednesday afternoon, onward. The consensus among
    all ensembles and much of the deterministic fields are the first
    wave of the pattern to maneuver over the mid-Mississippi Valley
    around the base of a broad trough located over the Plains/Midwest
    creating ample surface-based ascent to couple with the powerful
    upper jet component situated over the Central CONUS in response to
    the evolving pattern the day prior.

    At the surface, a cold front will run into a stout western ridge
    extension from a surface high located over the Western Atlantic
    into the Canadian Maritimes. The pattern essentially comes to a
    stalemate thanks to an expected +2 to +3 standard deviation height
    anomaly centered over the Western Atlantic. This ridge will counter
    the deepening trough over the Central U.S. creating a funneling
    affect for deep moisture advection through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valley's, along with ample mid-level impulses that will be preside
    over the same areas. The gridlocked setup will create a formidable
    moderate to heavy rain event across the above areas with
    depictions from guidance indicating a widespread 2-4" with some
    areas exceeding 5" increasingly likely within the corridor impacted
    by the multitude of convective elements spawning southwest to
    northeast in proxy to the quasi- stationary front. A Moderate Risk
    remains over an area situated from northeast AR up through the mid-
    Mississippi Valley of western TN/KY into southern IN. A broad
    Slight Risk encompasses the MDT with a footprint extending as far
    north as Lower Michigan.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8k7415eBljZwIh-7P3VUuQlMXCsAUT5SJOYL7LC9Q4fr= PRW47s-MtkwVvDPFXlLPsLRi3rqnxyLiiHs4coyMhN4GARA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8k7415eBljZwIh-7P3VUuQlMXCsAUT5SJOYL7LC9Q4fr= PRW47s-MtkwVvDPFXlLPsLRi3rqnxyLiiHs4coyMgG--vzs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8k7415eBljZwIh-7P3VUuQlMXCsAUT5SJOYL7LC9Q4fr= PRW47s-MtkwVvDPFXlLPsLRi3rqnxyLiiHs4coyMHcs1Xw8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 1 07:46:03 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 010745
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    345 AM EDT Tue Apr 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS & MIDWEST...

    Consensus continues to be strong for the overall evolution of a
    broad surface cyclone developing in-of the High Plains to Midwest
    over the next 24-36 hrs. A strong mid- level trough has ejected
    into central CA and will maneuver eastward out of the western=20
    CONUS, aiding in the initiation of a deep surface cyclone across=20
    the Colorado Front Range by later this morning, intensifying=20
    during its life cycle through Wednesday morning and beyond. The=20
    process is manifested through a well- defined axis of difluence=20
    downstream of a robust mean trough/closed-low reflection over the=20
    Rockies, kicking eastward into the High Plains of the Dakotas.=20
    Current deterministic output indicates sub-990mb pressures by later
    this afternoon with significant low-level moisture advection=20
    within the lead side of the circulation when assessing the forecast
    850-700mb RH field. A textbook warm conveyor belt signature will=20
    mature with a connection based from the Gulf driving warm, moist=20
    air poleward and enhancing a blossoming QPF shield by the time we=20
    reach this evening. The primary focus for heavy rainfall will ensue
    after sunset as the initiation of a powerful LLJ across the=20
    Central Plains on the order of 65-75kts will create an axis of=20
    growing low to mid-level shear juxtaposed within a budding warm=20
    sector downstream of the primary circulation. As the surface=20
    cyclone matures, a more defined cold front will develop along the=20
    tail end of the low as it moves into the Plains creating a focus=20
    for convective development as it maneuvers towards the warm sector.

    All major deterministic, including the latest 00Z CAMs output indicate
    a rapid development of convection across portions of northern KS=20
    into southeast NE advancing east- northeast within the bounds of=20
    the cold front and warm sector of the cyclone. There is also some=20
    growing consensus of a further south and southwest extension of=20
    the convective field within eastern KS down into OK due to the
    ejection of a weak mid-level perturbation caught up in the mean
    flow that intersects the prolific LLJ bisecting the areas above.
    This correlates well with the current ML output that has been
    steady with a small sector of convection displaced from the main
    line that will ultimately develop over KS into NE and IA.=20=20

    HREF neighborhood and EAS probs for the primary axis of convection
    over northeast KS and points northeast are very much elevated with
    a core of 50-70%+ for at least 2" total via neighborhood
    probabilities and 40-60% for at least 1" total via a the more
    conservative EAS, a testament to a solid overlapping signal for
    heavy rainfall within the above zone. A wide swath of 30-50% probs
    for at least 2"/3-hrs is also situated within the primary zone of
    interest, alluding to modest FFG exceedance probabilities for the
    3-hr time frames between 00-12z Wednesday. Further south, the
    probabilities are lower, but still within the lower bounds to at
    least consider the potential. Latest First Guess Fields have been
    steady to include that area across OK and eastern KS and a few CAMs
    are worthy of the consideration. These types of synoptic and
    mesoscale setups being depicted could offer some surprises due to=20
    the increasingly favorable thermodynamic and kinematic evolutions=20
    forecast within a rapidly improving environment, so to refrain=20
    from missing out on potential, was sure to maintain the previous=20
    MRGL risk with only minor adjustments within the southern and=20
    northern bounds of the risk area attributing to current=20
    probabilities and CAMs signals.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    The D2 period will represent the initial stages of a prolonged=20
    heavy rain event that will reside over the Lower Mississippi and=20
    Ohio Valleys with a multitude of frontal waves riding along a=20
    persistent quasi-stationary front that will undulate at times when=20 interacting with the aforementioned surface waves. The general=20
    longwave pattern will become increasingly favorable for a "highway"
    of moisture and mid-level impulses to eject northeastward out of=20
    the southern Rockies/Plains and up through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valleys beginning Wednesday afternoon, onward. The consensus among
    all ensembles and much of the deterministic fields are the first=20
    wave of the pattern to maneuver over the mid-Mississippi Valley=20
    around the base of a broad trough located over the Plains/Midwest=20
    creating ample surface-based ascent to couple with the powerful=20
    upper jet component situated over the Central CONUS in response to=20
    the evolving pattern the day prior.

    At the surface, a cold front will run into a stout western ridge
    extension from a surface high located over the Western Atlantic
    into the Canadian Maritimes. The pattern essentially comes to a
    stalemate thanks to an expected +2 to +3 standard deviation height
    anomaly centered over the Western Atlantic. This ridge will counter
    the deepening trough over the Central U.S. creating a funneling
    affect for deep moisture advection through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valley's, along with ample mid-level impulses that will be preside
    over the same areas. The gridlocked setup will create a formidable
    moderate to heavy rain event across the above areas with
    depictions from guidance indicating a widespread 2-4" with some
    areas exceeding 5" increasingly likely within the corridor impacted
    by the multitude of convective elements spawning southwest to
    northeast in proxy to the quasi- stationary front.

    Latest prob fields based within the NBM blend and relevant EC/GEFS
    ensembles signal a high likelihood of totals >3" over the span of
    18z Wed to 12z Thu with more rain continuing beyond the D2 period.
    The maxima is focused within a narrow corridor from central and
    northeast AR up through the mid-Mississippi Valley encompassing far southeastern MO, western KY, and southern IN with the probability
    for >2" running between 60-80% and >3" settling between 40-60%
    without a full implementation of the CAMs into the blend. Rainfall
    rates will be generally between 1-2"/hr at peak intensity when
    assessing the current HREF/NBM outputs, however, there's a chance
    for higher rates located within the southwestern flank of the
    stationary boundary (Much of Arkansas up into western KY) as=20
    assessment of the PWAT advection regime signals potential for
    localized PWATs exceeding 2" at times during organized convection. Historically, this tends to lead to locally higher rates with
    prospects of 2-3"/hr possible, especially when accounting for
    intra-hour rates during maturing convection. In all, the setup is
    very much conducive for substantial rainfall totals in a span of
    12-hrs that will allow for high flash flood concerns within urban
    zones and an increasing potential for significant flash and river
    flooding outside those areas just due to the overall QPF footprint
    anticipated.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    The D3 period is a general extension of the D2 time frame with the
    synoptic scale pattern yielding very little difference in what is
    driving the setup. The biggest change from day to day with the
    positioning of the quasi-stationary front will be the northern
    extent becoming a bit more elongated from west-southwest to east-
    northeast as we move through KY leading to a better push of
    moisture and surface based ascent focused across more of the
    western 1/3rd of KY up through the Ohio River basin. This will=20
    encompass areas like Louisville to Cincinnati that might be on the
    edge of the heavier QPF footprint on D2, but will be within the
    northern periphery of the heavier precip come D3. The key to the
    extent of the significant flood prospects will be where the D2 and
    D3 overlap in the overall QPF distribution. There is a considerable probabilistic output within the 01z NBM for D3 totals to exceed 2"
    with a wide swath of 60-80% probs for the threshold situated from
    southwest AR all the way up through southern OH, an area that will
    experience significant rainfall the period prior. The 72-hr
    probability for >6" of total rainfall is between 30-60% across
    northeast AR up through northwest TN and western KY with the max
    prob field positioned between Paducah, KY down to Jonesboro, AR.
    This corridor is located within a notorious flood plane thanks to a
    litany of streams and river channels with the Mississippi River the
    main stem that bisects the region.=20

    The forecasted surface wave in question is well-defined when=20
    assessing the global deterministic 500mb vorticity pattern. A=20
    developing 250mb jet coupling is also being orchestrated by some=20
    of the global deterministic with, at minimum a substantial right-=20
    entrance region jet dynamic well- positioned over much of the=20
    Mississippi Valley. This setup is textbook for a continuation of=20
    the "meteorological highway" of moisture and mid-level vorticity=20
    advection that historically has caused significant flash flood=20
    issues over the Lower Mississippi and Ohio Valley's. This is only=20
    day 2 of the forecasted 4 day event, so the priming of soils will=20
    have been underway and only getting progressively worse as time=20
    moves on.=20

    The previous MDT risk inherited from the D4 was relatively
    maintained, however there was some expansion of the MDT to the
    northwest to account for a small trend within the forecasted
    alignment of the quasi-stationary front and amplitude of expected
    surface wave ejecting out of the southern plains. This period is
    considered to be a higher-end Moderate, meaning the prospects for a
    targeted high risk are within reason pending the previous period's
    QPF outcome and the convective expectation as we get closer to the
    D3 time frame. The area of vested interest for a potential upgrade
    includes that corridor of northeast Arkansas up through western
    Tennessee, far southeast Missouri, western Kentucky, and slivers of
    both southern Illinois and Indiana.=20

    This setup is shaping up to be a more extreme flooding scenario
    considering the multi-day prospects and forecasted 72 to 96 hr
    rainfall totals reaching 10-15+ inches in the hardest hit
    locations. Be sure to prepare if you live in a flood zone anywhere
    from Arkansas, northeast through the Ohio/Tennessee Valley's.=20
    Anyone surrounding will want to monitor this setup closely as small
    changes could have heightened impacts given the forecasted setup.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!63R-smzn5VHTIgV1wv7DsjE8KNj__hI1jV2FZrl9JC_u= lIjvH8ToqNQ0tSpY7dAMc0eDrzKxPP65Dt0oYKHzv-e_z3Q$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!63R-smzn5VHTIgV1wv7DsjE8KNj__hI1jV2FZrl9JC_u= lIjvH8ToqNQ0tSpY7dAMc0eDrzKxPP65Dt0oYKHzF4yrOAI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!63R-smzn5VHTIgV1wv7DsjE8KNj__hI1jV2FZrl9JC_u= lIjvH8ToqNQ0tSpY7dAMc0eDrzKxPP65Dt0oYKHzN6_mVwE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 1 15:59:05 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 011557
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1157 AM EDT Tue Apr 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS & MIDWEST...

    16Z Update: Upon examination of the 12Z CAM guidance suite and in
    consultation with the affected WFOs, a Slight Risk is now in effect
    across extreme northeast Kansas, extreme southeast Nebraska, and
    portions of northwest Missouri. A nocturnal MCS is likely to
    develop to the northeast of the main surface low across central
    Kansas, with the CAM guidance in agreement on indicating a band of
    heavy convection with short term training potential, mainly during
    the 3Z to 12Z time period. Three-hourly HREF neighborhood=20
    probabilities of flash flood guidance exceedance are on the order=20
    of 15-30 percent across portions of this region, with rainfall
    totals up to 3 inches possible by 12Z and 1-2 inch per hour rates
    possible. The MCS should weaken and become more progressive after
    12Z Wednesday. Otherwise, the forecast remains on track and the
    previous discussion is appended below for reference. /Hamrick --------------------

    Consensus continues to be strong for the overall evolution of a
    broad surface cyclone developing in-of the High Plains to Midwest
    over the next 24-36 hrs. A strong mid- level trough has ejected
    into central CA and will maneuver eastward out of the western
    CONUS, aiding in the initiation of a deep surface cyclone across
    the Colorado Front Range by later this morning, intensifying
    during its life cycle through Wednesday morning and beyond. The
    process is manifested through a well- defined axis of difluence
    downstream of a robust mean trough/closed-low reflection over the
    Rockies, kicking eastward into the High Plains of the Dakotas.
    Current deterministic output indicates sub-990mb pressures by later
    this afternoon with significant low-level moisture advection
    within the lead side of the circulation when assessing the forecast
    850-700mb RH field. A textbook warm conveyor belt signature will
    mature with a connection based from the Gulf driving warm, moist
    air poleward and enhancing a blossoming QPF shield by the time we
    reach this evening. The primary focus for heavy rainfall will ensue
    after sunset as the initiation of a powerful LLJ across the
    Central Plains on the order of 65-75kts will create an axis of
    growing low to mid-level shear juxtaposed within a budding warm
    sector downstream of the primary circulation. As the surface
    cyclone matures, a more defined cold front will develop along the
    tail end of the low as it moves into the Plains creating a focus
    for convective development as it maneuvers towards the warm sector.

    All major deterministic, including the latest 00Z CAMs output indicate
    a rapid development of convection across portions of northern KS
    into southeast NE advancing east- northeast within the bounds of
    the cold front and warm sector of the cyclone. There is also some
    growing consensus of a further south and southwest extension of
    the convective field within eastern KS down into OK due to the
    ejection of a weak mid-level perturbation caught up in the mean
    flow that intersects the prolific LLJ bisecting the areas above.
    This correlates well with the current ML output that has been
    steady with a small sector of convection displaced from the main
    line that will ultimately develop over KS into NE and IA.

    HREF neighborhood and EAS probs for the primary axis of convection
    over northeast KS and points northeast are very much elevated with
    a core of 50-70%+ for at least 2" total via neighborhood
    probabilities and 40-60% for at least 1" total via a the more
    conservative EAS, a testament to a solid overlapping signal for
    heavy rainfall within the above zone. A wide swath of 30-50% probs
    for at least 2"/3-hrs is also situated within the primary zone of
    interest, alluding to modest FFG exceedance probabilities for the
    3-hr time frames between 00-12z Wednesday. Further south, the
    probabilities are lower, but still within the lower bounds to at
    least consider the potential. Latest First Guess Fields have been
    steady to include that area across OK and eastern KS and a few CAMs
    are worthy of the consideration. These types of synoptic and
    mesoscale setups being depicted could offer some surprises due to
    the increasingly favorable thermodynamic and kinematic evolutions
    forecast within a rapidly improving environment, so to refrain
    from missing out on potential, was sure to maintain the previous
    MRGL risk with only minor adjustments within the southern and
    northern bounds of the risk area attributing to current
    probabilities and CAMs signals.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    The D2 period will represent the initial stages of a prolonged
    heavy rain event that will reside over the Lower Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys with a multitude of frontal waves riding along a
    persistent quasi-stationary front that will undulate at times when
    interacting with the aforementioned surface waves. The general
    longwave pattern will become increasingly favorable for a "highway"
    of moisture and mid-level impulses to eject northeastward out of
    the southern Rockies/Plains and up through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valleys beginning Wednesday afternoon, onward. The consensus among
    all ensembles and much of the deterministic fields are the first
    wave of the pattern to maneuver over the mid-Mississippi Valley
    around the base of a broad trough located over the Plains/Midwest
    creating ample surface-based ascent to couple with the powerful
    upper jet component situated over the Central CONUS in response to
    the evolving pattern the day prior.

    At the surface, a cold front will run into a stout western ridge
    extension from a surface high located over the Western Atlantic
    into the Canadian Maritimes. The pattern essentially comes to a
    stalemate thanks to an expected +2 to +3 standard deviation height
    anomaly centered over the Western Atlantic. This ridge will counter
    the deepening trough over the Central U.S. creating a funneling
    affect for deep moisture advection through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valley's, along with ample mid-level impulses that will be preside
    over the same areas. The gridlocked setup will create a formidable
    moderate to heavy rain event across the above areas with
    depictions from guidance indicating a widespread 2-4" with some
    areas exceeding 5" increasingly likely within the corridor impacted
    by the multitude of convective elements spawning southwest to
    northeast in proxy to the quasi- stationary front.

    Latest prob fields based within the NBM blend and relevant EC/GEFS
    ensembles signal a high likelihood of totals >3" over the span of
    18z Wed to 12z Thu with more rain continuing beyond the D2 period.
    The maxima is focused within a narrow corridor from central and
    northeast AR up through the mid-Mississippi Valley encompassing far southeastern MO, western KY, and southern IN with the probability
    for >2" running between 60-80% and >3" settling between 40-60%
    without a full implementation of the CAMs into the blend. Rainfall
    rates will be generally between 1-2"/hr at peak intensity when
    assessing the current HREF/NBM outputs, however, there's a chance
    for higher rates located within the southwestern flank of the
    stationary boundary (Much of Arkansas up into western KY) as
    assessment of the PWAT advection regime signals potential for
    localized PWATs exceeding 2" at times during organized convection. Historically, this tends to lead to locally higher rates with
    prospects of 2-3"/hr possible, especially when accounting for
    intra-hour rates during maturing convection. In all, the setup is
    very much conducive for substantial rainfall totals in a span of
    12-hrs that will allow for high flash flood concerns within urban
    zones and an increasing potential for significant flash and river
    flooding outside those areas just due to the overall QPF footprint
    anticipated.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    The D3 period is a general extension of the D2 time frame with the
    synoptic scale pattern yielding very little difference in what is
    driving the setup. The biggest change from day to day with the
    positioning of the quasi-stationary front will be the northern
    extent becoming a bit more elongated from west-southwest to east-
    northeast as we move through KY leading to a better push of
    moisture and surface based ascent focused across more of the
    western 1/3rd of KY up through the Ohio River basin. This will
    encompass areas like Louisville to Cincinnati that might be on the
    edge of the heavier QPF footprint on D2, but will be within the
    northern periphery of the heavier precip come D3. The key to the
    extent of the significant flood prospects will be where the D2 and
    D3 overlap in the overall QPF distribution. There is a considerable probabilistic output within the 01z NBM for D3 totals to exceed 2"
    with a wide swath of 60-80% probs for the threshold situated from
    southwest AR all the way up through southern OH, an area that will
    experience significant rainfall the period prior. The 72-hr
    probability for >6" of total rainfall is between 30-60% across
    northeast AR up through northwest TN and western KY with the max
    prob field positioned between Paducah, KY down to Jonesboro, AR.
    This corridor is located within a notorious flood plane thanks to a
    litany of streams and river channels with the Mississippi River the
    main stem that bisects the region.

    The forecasted surface wave in question is well-defined when
    assessing the global deterministic 500mb vorticity pattern. A
    developing 250mb jet coupling is also being orchestrated by some
    of the global deterministic with, at minimum a substantial right-
    entrance region jet dynamic well- positioned over much of the
    Mississippi Valley. This setup is textbook for a continuation of
    the "meteorological highway" of moisture and mid-level vorticity
    advection that historically has caused significant flash flood
    issues over the Lower Mississippi and Ohio Valley's. This is only
    day 2 of the forecasted 4 day event, so the priming of soils will
    have been underway and only getting progressively worse as time
    moves on.

    The previous MDT risk inherited from the D4 was relatively
    maintained, however there was some expansion of the MDT to the
    northwest to account for a small trend within the forecasted
    alignment of the quasi-stationary front and amplitude of expected
    surface wave ejecting out of the southern plains. This period is
    considered to be a higher-end Moderate, meaning the prospects for a
    targeted high risk are within reason pending the previous period's
    QPF outcome and the convective expectation as we get closer to the
    D3 time frame. The area of vested interest for a potential upgrade
    includes that corridor of northeast Arkansas up through western
    Tennessee, far southeast Missouri, western Kentucky, and slivers of
    both southern Illinois and Indiana.

    This setup is shaping up to be a more extreme flooding scenario
    considering the multi-day prospects and forecasted 72 to 96 hr
    rainfall totals reaching 10-15+ inches in the hardest hit
    locations. Be sure to prepare if you live in a flood zone anywhere
    from Arkansas, northeast through the Ohio/Tennessee Valley's.
    Anyone surrounding will want to monitor this setup closely as small
    changes could have heightened impacts given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!87Bc0r3qSyB51niqWsShBOJEtQrWyHVCVI8fMcJKCcjX= Aab8OD6mnVHKduGojo-xUrwtR_IJyi1zwqIRQhg1kMniAa4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!87Bc0r3qSyB51niqWsShBOJEtQrWyHVCVI8fMcJKCcjX= Aab8OD6mnVHKduGojo-xUrwtR_IJyi1zwqIRQhg1M1KhuRI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!87Bc0r3qSyB51niqWsShBOJEtQrWyHVCVI8fMcJKCcjX= Aab8OD6mnVHKduGojo-xUrwtR_IJyi1zwqIRQhg1iM89B8Y$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 1 19:27:33 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 011926
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    326 PM EDT Tue Apr 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    16Z Update: Upon examination of the 12Z CAM guidance suite and in
    consultation with the affected WFOs, a Slight Risk is now in effect
    across extreme northeast Kansas, extreme southeast Nebraska, and
    portions of northwest Missouri. A nocturnal MCS is likely to
    develop to the northeast of the main surface low across central
    Kansas, with the CAM guidance in agreement on indicating a band of
    heavy convection with short term training potential, mainly during
    the 3Z to 12Z time period. Three-hourly HREF neighborhood
    probabilities of flash flood guidance exceedance are on the order
    of 15-30 percent across portions of this region, with rainfall
    totals up to 3 inches possible by 12Z and 1-2 inch per hour rates
    possible. The MCS should weaken and become more progressive after
    12Z Wednesday. Otherwise, the forecast remains on track and the
    previous discussion is appended below for reference. /Hamrick --------------------

    Consensus continues to be strong for the overall evolution of a
    broad surface cyclone developing in-of the High Plains to Midwest
    over the next 24-36 hrs. A strong mid- level trough has ejected
    into central CA and will maneuver eastward out of the western
    CONUS, aiding in the initiation of a deep surface cyclone across
    the Colorado Front Range by later this morning, intensifying
    during its life cycle through Wednesday morning and beyond. The
    process is manifested through a well- defined axis of difluence
    downstream of a robust mean trough/closed-low reflection over the
    Rockies, kicking eastward into the High Plains of the Dakotas.
    Current deterministic output indicates sub-990mb pressures by later
    this afternoon with significant low-level moisture advection
    within the lead side of the circulation when assessing the forecast
    850-700mb RH field. A textbook warm conveyor belt signature will
    mature with a connection based from the Gulf driving warm, moist
    air poleward and enhancing a blossoming QPF shield by the time we
    reach this evening. The primary focus for heavy rainfall will ensue
    after sunset as the initiation of a powerful LLJ across the
    Central Plains on the order of 65-75kts will create an axis of
    growing low to mid-level shear juxtaposed within a budding warm
    sector downstream of the primary circulation. As the surface
    cyclone matures, a more defined cold front will develop along the
    tail end of the low as it moves into the Plains creating a focus
    for convective development as it maneuvers towards the warm sector.

    All major deterministic, including the latest 00Z CAMs output indicate
    a rapid development of convection across portions of northern KS
    into southeast NE advancing east- northeast within the bounds of
    the cold front and warm sector of the cyclone. There is also some
    growing consensus of a further south and southwest extension of
    the convective field within eastern KS down into OK due to the
    ejection of a weak mid-level perturbation caught up in the mean
    flow that intersects the prolific LLJ bisecting the areas above.
    This correlates well with the current ML output that has been
    steady with a small sector of convection displaced from the main
    line that will ultimately develop over KS into NE and IA.

    HREF neighborhood and EAS probs for the primary axis of convection
    over northeast KS and points northeast are very much elevated with
    a core of 50-70%+ for at least 2" total via neighborhood
    probabilities and 40-60% for at least 1" total via a the more
    conservative EAS, a testament to a solid overlapping signal for
    heavy rainfall within the above zone. A wide swath of 30-50% probs
    for at least 2"/3-hrs is also situated within the primary zone of
    interest, alluding to modest FFG exceedance probabilities for the
    3-hr time frames between 00-12z Wednesday. Further south, the
    probabilities are lower, but still within the lower bounds to at
    least consider the potential. Latest First Guess Fields have been
    steady to include that area across OK and eastern KS and a few CAMs
    are worthy of the consideration. These types of synoptic and
    mesoscale setups being depicted could offer some surprises due to
    the increasingly favorable thermodynamic and kinematic evolutions
    forecast within a rapidly improving environment, so to refrain
    from missing out on potential, was sure to maintain the previous
    MRGL risk with only minor adjustments within the southern and
    northern bounds of the risk area attributing to current
    probabilities and CAMs signals.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 2 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 3 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    ARKANSAS TO SOUTHERN INDIANA...

    19Z Update: The overall forecast remains in good shape compared to
    the overnight issuance with only some minor adjustments needed. The
    12Z CAM guidance generally has the heaviest QPF signal on the
    southern edge of the MCS events that will develop along the stalled
    out frontal boundary, and combining this fact along with historical
    trends for max QPF to occur slightly south of the multi-model
    consensus in many cases, the updated Marginal Risk area was
    adjusted to the southeast by about a row of counties across western
    Tennessee, western Kentucky, and eastern Arkansas. The HREF flash
    flood guidance exceedance probabilities are generally highest
    during the 00Z to 9Z time period Thursday, when multiple rounds of
    training convection are expected to produce widespread 2 to 4 inch
    rainfall totals, with isolated 4 to 6 inch totals possible. It
    appears more likely the 3-hourly guidance values will be exceeded
    compared to the 1-hourly guidance, so this will likely be more of=20
    a prolonged duration event. This will also saturate the soils and
    elevate stream and river flows ahead of the additional heavy
    rainfall expected during the Day 3 period 12Z Thursday to 12Z
    Friday, with a major flooding event looking more likely. The=20
    previous forecast discussion from overnight is appended below for=20
    reference. /Hamrick
    -------------------


    The D2 period will represent the initial stages of a prolonged
    heavy rain event that will reside over the Lower Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys with a multitude of frontal waves riding along a
    persistent quasi-stationary front that will undulate at times when
    interacting with the aforementioned surface waves. The general
    longwave pattern will become increasingly favorable for a "highway"
    of moisture and mid-level impulses to eject northeastward out of
    the southern Rockies/Plains and up through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valleys beginning Wednesday afternoon, onward. The consensus among
    all ensembles and much of the deterministic fields are the first
    wave of the pattern to maneuver over the mid-Mississippi Valley
    around the base of a broad trough located over the Plains/Midwest
    creating ample surface-based ascent to couple with the powerful
    upper jet component situated over the Central CONUS in response to
    the evolving pattern the day prior.

    At the surface, a cold front will run into a stout western ridge
    extension from a surface high located over the Western Atlantic
    into the Canadian Maritimes. The pattern essentially comes to a
    stalemate thanks to an expected +2 to +3 standard deviation height
    anomaly centered over the Western Atlantic. This ridge will counter
    the deepening trough over the Central U.S. creating a funneling
    affect for deep moisture advection through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valley's, along with ample mid-level impulses that will be preside
    over the same areas. The gridlocked setup will create a formidable
    moderate to heavy rain event across the above areas with
    depictions from guidance indicating a widespread 2-4" with some
    areas exceeding 5" increasingly likely within the corridor impacted
    by the multitude of convective elements spawning southwest to
    northeast in proxy to the quasi- stationary front.

    Latest prob fields based within the NBM blend and relevant EC/GEFS
    ensembles signal a high likelihood of totals >3" over the span of
    18z Wed to 12z Thu with more rain continuing beyond the D2 period.
    The maxima is focused within a narrow corridor from central and
    northeast AR up through the mid-Mississippi Valley encompassing far southeastern MO, western KY, and southern IN with the probability
    for >2" running between 60-80% and >3" settling between 40-60%
    without a full implementation of the CAMs into the blend. Rainfall
    rates will be generally between 1-2"/hr at peak intensity when
    assessing the current HREF/NBM outputs, however, there's a chance
    for higher rates located within the southwestern flank of the
    stationary boundary (Much of Arkansas up into western KY) as
    assessment of the PWAT advection regime signals potential for
    localized PWATs exceeding 2" at times during organized convection. Historically, this tends to lead to locally higher rates with
    prospects of 2-3"/hr possible, especially when accounting for
    intra-hour rates during maturing convection. In all, the setup is
    very much conducive for substantial rainfall totals in a span of
    12-hrs that will allow for high flash flood concerns within urban
    zones and an increasing potential for significant flash and river
    flooding outside those areas just due to the overall QPF footprint
    anticipated.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    The D3 period is a general extension of the D2 time frame with the
    synoptic scale pattern yielding very little difference in what is
    driving the setup. The biggest change from day to day with the
    positioning of the quasi-stationary front will be the northern
    extent becoming a bit more elongated from west-southwest to east-
    northeast as we move through KY leading to a better push of
    moisture and surface based ascent focused across more of the
    western 1/3rd of KY up through the Ohio River basin. This will
    encompass areas like Louisville to Cincinnati that might be on the
    edge of the heavier QPF footprint on D2, but will be within the
    northern periphery of the heavier precip come D3. The key to the
    extent of the significant flood prospects will be where the D2 and
    D3 overlap in the overall QPF distribution. There is a considerable probabilistic output within the 01z NBM for D3 totals to exceed 2"
    with a wide swath of 60-80% probs for the threshold situated from
    southwest AR all the way up through southern OH, an area that will
    experience significant rainfall the period prior. The 72-hr
    probability for >6" of total rainfall is between 30-60% across
    northeast AR up through northwest TN and western KY with the max
    prob field positioned between Paducah, KY down to Jonesboro, AR.
    This corridor is located within a notorious flood plane thanks to a
    litany of streams and river channels with the Mississippi River the
    main stem that bisects the region.

    The forecasted surface wave in question is well-defined when
    assessing the global deterministic 500mb vorticity pattern. A
    developing 250mb jet coupling is also being orchestrated by some
    of the global deterministic with, at minimum a substantial right-
    entrance region jet dynamic well- positioned over much of the
    Mississippi Valley. This setup is textbook for a continuation of
    the "meteorological highway" of moisture and mid-level vorticity
    advection that historically has caused significant flash flood
    issues over the Lower Mississippi and Ohio Valley's. This is only
    day 2 of the forecasted 4 day event, so the priming of soils will
    have been underway and only getting progressively worse as time
    moves on.

    The previous MDT risk inherited from the D4 was relatively
    maintained, however there was some expansion of the MDT to the
    northwest to account for a small trend within the forecasted
    alignment of the quasi-stationary front and amplitude of expected
    surface wave ejecting out of the southern plains. This period is
    considered to be a higher-end Moderate, meaning the prospects for a
    targeted high risk are within reason pending the previous period's
    QPF outcome and the convective expectation as we get closer to the
    D3 time frame. The area of vested interest for a potential upgrade
    includes that corridor of northeast Arkansas up through western
    Tennessee, far southeast Missouri, western Kentucky, and slivers of
    both southern Illinois and Indiana.

    This setup is shaping up to be a more extreme flooding scenario
    considering the multi-day prospects and forecasted 72 to 96 hr
    rainfall totals reaching 10-15+ inches in the hardest hit
    locations. Be sure to prepare if you live in a flood zone anywhere
    from Arkansas, northeast through the Ohio/Tennessee Valley's.
    Anyone surrounding will want to monitor this setup closely as small
    changes could have heightened impacts given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6DJ7URAiOE65RVal2TxnJ5GbHQAlewluIXCIq34PsZFi= KDs9Rwd4T_-3d4SgGkzWWm8fvRGfoCw87VtalCyJZhszmIA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6DJ7URAiOE65RVal2TxnJ5GbHQAlewluIXCIq34PsZFi= KDs9Rwd4T_-3d4SgGkzWWm8fvRGfoCw87VtalCyJw_gydxc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6DJ7URAiOE65RVal2TxnJ5GbHQAlewluIXCIq34PsZFi= KDs9Rwd4T_-3d4SgGkzWWm8fvRGfoCw87VtalCyJQ1Dts_Q$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 1 20:21:58 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 012020
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    420 PM EDT Tue Apr 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Apr 1 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 2 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    16Z Update: Upon examination of the 12Z CAM guidance suite and in
    consultation with the affected WFOs, a Slight Risk is now in effect
    across extreme northeast Kansas, extreme southeast Nebraska, and
    portions of northwest Missouri. A nocturnal MCS is likely to
    develop to the northeast of the main surface low across central
    Kansas, with the CAM guidance in agreement on indicating a band of
    heavy convection with short term training potential, mainly during
    the 3Z to 12Z time period. Three-hourly HREF neighborhood
    probabilities of flash flood guidance exceedance are on the order
    of 15-30 percent across portions of this region, with rainfall
    totals up to 3 inches possible by 12Z and 1-2 inch per hour rates
    possible. The MCS should weaken and become more progressive after
    12Z Wednesday. Otherwise, the forecast remains on track and the
    previous discussion is appended below for reference. /Hamrick --------------------

    Consensus continues to be strong for the overall evolution of a
    broad surface cyclone developing in-of the High Plains to Midwest
    over the next 24-36 hrs. A strong mid- level trough has ejected
    into central CA and will maneuver eastward out of the western
    CONUS, aiding in the initiation of a deep surface cyclone across
    the Colorado Front Range by later this morning, intensifying
    during its life cycle through Wednesday morning and beyond. The
    process is manifested through a well- defined axis of difluence
    downstream of a robust mean trough/closed-low reflection over the
    Rockies, kicking eastward into the High Plains of the Dakotas.
    Current deterministic output indicates sub-990mb pressures by later
    this afternoon with significant low-level moisture advection
    within the lead side of the circulation when assessing the forecast
    850-700mb RH field. A textbook warm conveyor belt signature will
    mature with a connection based from the Gulf driving warm, moist
    air poleward and enhancing a blossoming QPF shield by the time we
    reach this evening. The primary focus for heavy rainfall will ensue
    after sunset as the initiation of a powerful LLJ across the
    Central Plains on the order of 65-75kts will create an axis of
    growing low to mid-level shear juxtaposed within a budding warm
    sector downstream of the primary circulation. As the surface
    cyclone matures, a more defined cold front will develop along the
    tail end of the low as it moves into the Plains creating a focus
    for convective development as it maneuvers towards the warm sector.

    All major deterministic, including the latest 00Z CAMs output indicate
    a rapid development of convection across portions of northern KS
    into southeast NE advancing east- northeast within the bounds of
    the cold front and warm sector of the cyclone. There is also some
    growing consensus of a further south and southwest extension of
    the convective field within eastern KS down into OK due to the
    ejection of a weak mid-level perturbation caught up in the mean
    flow that intersects the prolific LLJ bisecting the areas above.
    This correlates well with the current ML output that has been
    steady with a small sector of convection displaced from the main
    line that will ultimately develop over KS into NE and IA.

    HREF neighborhood and EAS probs for the primary axis of convection
    over northeast KS and points northeast are very much elevated with
    a core of 50-70%+ for at least 2" total via neighborhood
    probabilities and 40-60% for at least 1" total via a the more
    conservative EAS, a testament to a solid overlapping signal for
    heavy rainfall within the above zone. A wide swath of 30-50% probs
    for at least 2"/3-hrs is also situated within the primary zone of
    interest, alluding to modest FFG exceedance probabilities for the
    3-hr time frames between 00-12z Wednesday. Further south, the
    probabilities are lower, but still within the lower bounds to at
    least consider the potential. Latest First Guess Fields have been
    steady to include that area across OK and eastern KS and a few CAMs
    are worthy of the consideration. These types of synoptic and
    mesoscale setups being depicted could offer some surprises due to
    the increasingly favorable thermodynamic and kinematic evolutions
    forecast within a rapidly improving environment, so to refrain
    from missing out on potential, was sure to maintain the previous
    MRGL risk with only minor adjustments within the southern and
    northern bounds of the risk area attributing to current
    probabilities and CAMs signals.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 2 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 3 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    ARKANSAS TO SOUTHERN INDIANA...

    19Z Update: The overall forecast remains in good shape compared to
    the overnight issuance with only some minor adjustments needed. The
    12Z CAM guidance generally has the heaviest QPF signal on the
    southern edge of the MCS events that will develop along the stalled
    out frontal boundary, and combining this fact along with historical
    trends for max QPF to occur slightly south of the multi-model
    consensus in many cases, the updated Marginal Risk area was
    adjusted to the southeast by about a row of counties across western
    Tennessee, western Kentucky, and eastern Arkansas. The HREF flash
    flood guidance exceedance probabilities are generally highest
    during the 00Z to 9Z time period Thursday, when multiple rounds of
    training convection are expected to produce widespread 2 to 4 inch
    rainfall totals, with isolated 4 to 6 inch totals possible. It
    appears more likely the 3-hourly guidance values will be exceeded
    compared to the 1-hourly guidance, so this will likely be more of
    a prolonged duration event. This will also saturate the soils and
    elevate stream and river flows ahead of the additional heavy
    rainfall expected during the Day 3 period 12Z Thursday to 12Z
    Friday, with a major flooding event looking more likely. The
    previous forecast discussion from overnight is appended below for
    reference. /Hamrick
    -------------------


    The D2 period will represent the initial stages of a prolonged
    heavy rain event that will reside over the Lower Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys with a multitude of frontal waves riding along a
    persistent quasi-stationary front that will undulate at times when
    interacting with the aforementioned surface waves. The general
    longwave pattern will become increasingly favorable for a "highway"
    of moisture and mid-level impulses to eject northeastward out of
    the southern Rockies/Plains and up through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valleys beginning Wednesday afternoon, onward. The consensus among
    all ensembles and much of the deterministic fields are the first
    wave of the pattern to maneuver over the mid-Mississippi Valley
    around the base of a broad trough located over the Plains/Midwest
    creating ample surface-based ascent to couple with the powerful
    upper jet component situated over the Central CONUS in response to
    the evolving pattern the day prior.

    At the surface, a cold front will run into a stout western ridge
    extension from a surface high located over the Western Atlantic
    into the Canadian Maritimes. The pattern essentially comes to a
    stalemate thanks to an expected +2 to +3 standard deviation height
    anomaly centered over the Western Atlantic. This ridge will counter
    the deepening trough over the Central U.S. creating a funneling
    affect for deep moisture advection through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valley's, along with ample mid-level impulses that will be preside
    over the same areas. The gridlocked setup will create a formidable
    moderate to heavy rain event across the above areas with
    depictions from guidance indicating a widespread 2-4" with some
    areas exceeding 5" increasingly likely within the corridor impacted
    by the multitude of convective elements spawning southwest to
    northeast in proxy to the quasi- stationary front.

    Latest prob fields based within the NBM blend and relevant EC/GEFS
    ensembles signal a high likelihood of totals >3" over the span of
    18z Wed to 12z Thu with more rain continuing beyond the D2 period.
    The maxima is focused within a narrow corridor from central and
    northeast AR up through the mid-Mississippi Valley encompassing far southeastern MO, western KY, and southern IN with the probability
    for >2" running between 60-80% and >3" settling between 40-60%
    without a full implementation of the CAMs into the blend. Rainfall
    rates will be generally between 1-2"/hr at peak intensity when
    assessing the current HREF/NBM outputs, however, there's a chance
    for higher rates located within the southwestern flank of the
    stationary boundary (Much of Arkansas up into western KY) as
    assessment of the PWAT advection regime signals potential for
    localized PWATs exceeding 2" at times during organized convection. Historically, this tends to lead to locally higher rates with
    prospects of 2-3"/hr possible, especially when accounting for
    intra-hour rates during maturing convection. In all, the setup is
    very much conducive for substantial rainfall totals in a span of
    12-hrs that will allow for high flash flood concerns within urban
    zones and an increasing potential for significant flash and river
    flooding outside those areas just due to the overall QPF footprint
    anticipated.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 3 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 4 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR EXTREME SOUTHEAST
    MISSOURI TO WESTERN KENTUCKY WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    20Z Update: Major and potentially catastrophic flooding is=20
    becoming more likely across portions of the Mid-South from=20
    northeastern Arkansas to western Kentucky, including portions of=20 northwestern Tennessee and southeastern Missouri. Very heavy=20
    rainfall in the 12 hours preceding this time period will greatly=20
    saturate the soils over the region and thus dramatically reduce=20
    flash flood guidance, which will easily be exceeded Thursday into=20
    Thursday night. There is strong model consensus for several inches=20
    of additional rainfall during the Day 3 period over many of the=20
    same areas. Additional shortwave energy tracking along the stalled=20
    out frontal boundary will serve as forcing mechanisms for more MCS=20
    activity with multiple rounds of convective training likely, with=20
    rainfall rates exceeding an inch per hour for potentially multiple=20 consecutive hours. Major rises on area creeks and streams are=20
    expected. After consultation with the affected field offices, river
    forecast centers, and the National Water Center, a High Risk area=20
    has been introduced for this update. The previous forecast=20
    discussion is appended below for reference. /Hamrick
    ------------------


    The D3 period is a general extension of the D2 time frame with the
    synoptic scale pattern yielding very little difference in what is
    driving the setup. The biggest change from day to day with the
    positioning of the quasi-stationary front will be the northern
    extent becoming a bit more elongated from west-southwest to east-
    northeast as we move through KY leading to a better push of
    moisture and surface based ascent focused across more of the
    western 1/3rd of KY up through the Ohio River basin. This will
    encompass areas like Louisville to Cincinnati that might be on the
    edge of the heavier QPF footprint on D2, but will be within the
    northern periphery of the heavier precip come D3. The key to the
    extent of the significant flood prospects will be where the D2 and
    D3 overlap in the overall QPF distribution. There is a considerable probabilistic output within the 01z NBM for D3 totals to exceed 2"
    with a wide swath of 60-80% probs for the threshold situated from
    southwest AR all the way up through southern OH, an area that will
    experience significant rainfall the period prior. The 72-hr
    probability for >6" of total rainfall is between 30-60% across
    northeast AR up through northwest TN and western KY with the max
    prob field positioned between Paducah, KY down to Jonesboro, AR.
    This corridor is located within a notorious flood plane thanks to a
    litany of streams and river channels with the Mississippi River the
    main stem that bisects the region.

    The forecasted surface wave in question is well-defined when
    assessing the global deterministic 500mb vorticity pattern. A
    developing 250mb jet coupling is also being orchestrated by some
    of the global deterministic with, at minimum a substantial right-
    entrance region jet dynamic well- positioned over much of the
    Mississippi Valley. This setup is textbook for a continuation of
    the "meteorological highway" of moisture and mid-level vorticity
    advection that historically has caused significant flash flood
    issues over the Lower Mississippi and Ohio Valley's. This is only
    day 2 of the forecasted 4 day event, so the priming of soils will
    have been underway and only getting worse as time moves on.

    The previous MDT risk inherited from the D4 was relatively
    maintained, however there was some expansion of the MDT to the
    northwest to account for a small trend within the forecasted
    alignment of the quasi-stationary front and amplitude of expected
    surface wave ejecting out of the southern plains. This period is
    considered to be a higher-end Moderate, meaning the prospects for a
    targeted high risk are within reason pending the previous period's
    QPF outcome and the convective expectation as we get closer to the
    D3 time frame. The area of vested interest for a potential upgrade
    includes that corridor of northeast Arkansas up through western
    Tennessee, far southeast Missouri, western Kentucky, and slivers of
    both southern Illinois and Indiana.

    This setup is shaping up to be a more extreme flooding scenario
    considering the multi-day prospects and forecasted 72 to 96 hr
    rainfall totals reaching 10-15+ inches in the hardest hit
    locations. Be sure to prepare if you live in a flood zone anywhere
    from Arkansas, northeast through the Ohio/Tennessee Valley's.
    Anyone surrounding will want to monitor this setup closely as small
    changes could have heightened impacts given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4HMnVsW7CVKCRFVdwLD_VwYn04jAq3NoyWNVnVz5bCVe= 8suFInM_yAKIV8JgtzfonxYZxUuEXoO-ZIOQxV8RulkIvoc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4HMnVsW7CVKCRFVdwLD_VwYn04jAq3NoyWNVnVz5bCVe= 8suFInM_yAKIV8JgtzfonxYZxUuEXoO-ZIOQxV8RQ-jinvE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4HMnVsW7CVKCRFVdwLD_VwYn04jAq3NoyWNVnVz5bCVe= 8suFInM_yAKIV8JgtzfonxYZxUuEXoO-ZIOQxV8RYmXiu2w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 2 00:56:11 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 020055
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    855 PM EDT Tue Apr 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    01Z Update: Minor modifications were made to the Day 1 ERO, based
    on the latest observational/mesoanalysis trends and more recent
    HRRR and WoFS guidance. The Slight continues with minor adjustments
    across across northeast KS, far southeast NE, and northern MO. Recent
    RAP runs continue to show the nose of 2000+ J/Kg nudging into the
    Slight Risk area after 03Z, coinciding with the highest HREF 1-3hr
    rainfall exceedance probabilities.=20

    Hurley

    16Z Update: Upon examination of the 12Z CAM guidance suite and in
    consultation with the affected WFOs, a Slight Risk is now in effect
    across extreme northeast Kansas, extreme southeast Nebraska, and
    portions of northwest Missouri. A nocturnal MCS is likely to
    develop to the northeast of the main surface low across central
    Kansas, with the CAM guidance in agreement on indicating a band of
    heavy convection with short term training potential, mainly during
    the 3Z to 12Z time period. Three-hourly HREF neighborhood
    probabilities of flash flood guidance exceedance are on the order
    of 15-30 percent across portions of this region, with rainfall
    totals up to 3 inches possible by 12Z and 1-2 inch per hour rates
    possible. The MCS should weaken and become more progressive after
    12Z Wednesday. Otherwise, the forecast remains on track and the
    previous discussion is appended below for reference. /Hamrick

    Hamrick

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    ARKANSAS TO SOUTHERN INDIANA...

    19Z Update: The overall forecast remains in good shape compared to
    the overnight issuance with only some minor adjustments needed. The
    12Z CAM guidance generally has the heaviest QPF signal on the
    southern edge of the MCS events that will develop along the stalled
    out frontal boundary, and combining this fact along with historical
    trends for max QPF to occur slightly south of the multi-model
    consensus in many cases, the updated Marginal Risk area was
    adjusted to the southeast by about a row of counties across western
    Tennessee, western Kentucky, and eastern Arkansas. The HREF flash
    flood guidance exceedance probabilities are generally highest
    during the 00Z to 9Z time period Thursday, when multiple rounds of
    training convection are expected to produce widespread 2 to 4 inch
    rainfall totals, with isolated 4 to 6 inch totals possible. It
    appears more likely the 3-hourly guidance values will be exceeded
    compared to the 1-hourly guidance, so this will likely be more of
    a prolonged duration event. This will also saturate the soils and
    elevate stream and river flows ahead of the additional heavy
    rainfall expected during the Day 3 period 12Z Thursday to 12Z
    Friday, with a major flooding event looking more likely. The
    previous forecast discussion from overnight is appended below for
    reference. /Hamrick
    -------------------


    The D2 period will represent the initial stages of a prolonged
    heavy rain event that will reside over the Lower Mississippi and
    Ohio Valleys with a multitude of frontal waves riding along a
    persistent quasi-stationary front that will undulate at times when
    interacting with the aforementioned surface waves. The general
    longwave pattern will become increasingly favorable for a "highway"
    of moisture and mid-level impulses to eject northeastward out of
    the southern Rockies/Plains and up through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valleys beginning Wednesday afternoon, onward. The consensus among
    all ensembles and much of the deterministic fields are the first
    wave of the pattern to maneuver over the mid-Mississippi Valley
    around the base of a broad trough located over the Plains/Midwest
    creating ample surface-based ascent to couple with the powerful
    upper jet component situated over the Central CONUS in response to
    the evolving pattern the day prior.

    At the surface, a cold front will run into a stout western ridge
    extension from a surface high located over the Western Atlantic
    into the Canadian Maritimes. The pattern essentially comes to a
    stalemate thanks to an expected +2 to +3 standard deviation height
    anomaly centered over the Western Atlantic. This ridge will counter
    the deepening trough over the Central U.S. creating a funneling
    affect for deep moisture advection through the Mississippi and Ohio
    Valley's, along with ample mid-level impulses that will be preside
    over the same areas. The gridlocked setup will create a formidable
    moderate to heavy rain event across the above areas with
    depictions from guidance indicating a widespread 2-4" with some
    areas exceeding 5" increasingly likely within the corridor impacted
    by the multitude of convective elements spawning southwest to
    northeast in proxy to the quasi- stationary front.

    Latest prob fields based within the NBM blend and relevant EC/GEFS
    ensembles signal a high likelihood of totals >3" over the span of
    18z Wed to 12z Thu with more rain continuing beyond the D2 period.
    The maxima is focused within a narrow corridor from central and
    northeast AR up through the mid-Mississippi Valley encompassing far southeastern MO, western KY, and southern IN with the probability
    for >2" running between 60-80% and >3" settling between 40-60%
    without a full implementation of the CAMs into the blend. Rainfall
    rates will be generally between 1-2"/hr at peak intensity when
    assessing the current HREF/NBM outputs, however, there's a chance
    for higher rates located within the southwestern flank of the
    stationary boundary (Much of Arkansas up into western KY) as
    assessment of the PWAT advection regime signals potential for
    localized PWATs exceeding 2" at times during organized convection. Historically, this tends to lead to locally higher rates with
    prospects of 2-3"/hr possible, especially when accounting for
    intra-hour rates during maturing convection. In all, the setup is
    very much conducive for substantial rainfall totals in a span of
    12-hrs that will allow for high flash flood concerns within urban
    zones and an increasing potential for significant flash and river
    flooding outside those areas just due to the overall QPF footprint
    anticipated.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR EXTREME SOUTHEAST
    MISSOURI TO WESTERN KENTUCKY WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    20Z Update: Major and potentially catastrophic flooding is
    becoming more likely across portions of the Mid-South from
    northeastern Arkansas to western Kentucky, including portions of
    northwestern Tennessee and southeastern Missouri. Very heavy
    rainfall in the 12 hours preceding this time period will greatly
    saturate the soils over the region and thus dramatically reduce
    flash flood guidance, which will easily be exceeded Thursday into
    Thursday night. There is strong model consensus for several inches
    of additional rainfall during the Day 3 period over many of the
    same areas. Additional shortwave energy tracking along the stalled
    out frontal boundary will serve as forcing mechanisms for more MCS
    activity with multiple rounds of convective training likely, with
    rainfall rates exceeding an inch per hour for potentially multiple
    consecutive hours. Major rises on area creeks and streams are
    expected. After consultation with the affected field offices, river
    forecast centers, and the National Water Center, a High Risk area
    has been introduced for this update. The previous forecast
    discussion is appended below for reference. /Hamrick
    ------------------


    The D3 period is a general extension of the D2 time frame with the
    synoptic scale pattern yielding very little difference in what is
    driving the setup. The biggest change from day to day with the
    positioning of the quasi-stationary front will be the northern
    extent becoming a bit more elongated from west-southwest to east-
    northeast as we move through KY leading to a better push of
    moisture and surface based ascent focused across more of the
    western 1/3rd of KY up through the Ohio River basin. This will
    encompass areas like Louisville to Cincinnati that might be on the
    edge of the heavier QPF footprint on D2, but will be within the
    northern periphery of the heavier precip come D3. The key to the
    extent of the significant flood prospects will be where the D2 and
    D3 overlap in the overall QPF distribution. There is a considerable probabilistic output within the 01z NBM for D3 totals to exceed 2"
    with a wide swath of 60-80% probs for the threshold situated from
    southwest AR all the way up through southern OH, an area that will
    experience significant rainfall the period prior. The 72-hr
    probability for >6" of total rainfall is between 30-60% across
    northeast AR up through northwest TN and western KY with the max
    prob field positioned between Paducah, KY down to Jonesboro, AR.
    This corridor is located within a notorious flood plane thanks to a
    litany of streams and river channels with the Mississippi River the
    main stem that bisects the region.

    The forecasted surface wave in question is well-defined when
    assessing the global deterministic 500mb vorticity pattern. A
    developing 250mb jet coupling is also being orchestrated by some
    of the global deterministic with, at minimum a substantial right-
    entrance region jet dynamic well- positioned over much of the
    Mississippi Valley. This setup is textbook for a continuation of
    the "meteorological highway" of moisture and mid-level vorticity
    advection that historically has caused significant flash flood
    issues over the Lower Mississippi and Ohio Valley's. This is only
    day 2 of the forecasted 4 day event, so the priming of soils will
    have been underway and only getting worse as time moves on.

    The previous MDT risk inherited from the D4 was relatively
    maintained, however there was some expansion of the MDT to the
    northwest to account for a small trend within the forecasted
    alignment of the quasi-stationary front and amplitude of expected
    surface wave ejecting out of the southern plains. This period is
    considered to be a higher-end Moderate, meaning the prospects for a
    targeted high risk are within reason pending the previous period's
    QPF outcome and the convective expectation as we get closer to the
    D3 time frame. The area of vested interest for a potential upgrade
    includes that corridor of northeast Arkansas up through western
    Tennessee, far southeast Missouri, western Kentucky, and slivers of
    both southern Illinois and Indiana.

    This setup is shaping up to be a more extreme flooding scenario
    considering the multi-day prospects and forecasted 72 to 96 hr
    rainfall totals reaching 10-15+ inches in the hardest hit
    locations. Be sure to prepare if you live in a flood zone anywhere
    from Arkansas, northeast through the Ohio/Tennessee Valley's.
    Anyone surrounding will want to monitor this setup closely as small
    changes could have heightened impacts given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6gDdOMtY-JoyneIz9R630xKxbuU9JItS4tLBwv43R_3f= JbSPbHZ94exRhcFY07OrlFELj00A0_iAYuZmMGWxS0B7ELI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6gDdOMtY-JoyneIz9R630xKxbuU9JItS4tLBwv43R_3f= JbSPbHZ94exRhcFY07OrlFELj00A0_iAYuZmMGWx0TlWqKs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6gDdOMtY-JoyneIz9R630xKxbuU9JItS4tLBwv43R_3f= JbSPbHZ94exRhcFY07OrlFELj00A0_iAYuZmMGWxkEEPng4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 2 07:40:21 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 020739
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    339 AM EDT Wed Apr 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM SOUTHERN ARKANSAS
    TO SOUTHERN INDIANA...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S..

    The setup for the D1 period is already underway with a broad upper
    trough pattern across the Central and Western CONUS taking shape=20
    and interacting with a building Western Atlantic ridge that's=20
    already flexing its muscle in the overall longwave pattern. A=20
    deepening surface low over the Plains will migrate in-of the Upper=20
    Midwest with a cold front advancement towards the Mississippi=20
    Valley as we move into the first half of the period. The issue=20
    becomes two-fold by later this afternoon as the frontal boundary
    slows its forward momentum due to the surface reflection over the
    Midwest becoming vertically stacked and losing its vigor in=20
    progressing the pattern. Meanwhile, the ridge over the Atlantic=20
    will continue to strengthen leading to a stout western edge of the=20
    surface ridge pattern acting as a "wall" to prevent much more=20
    motion of the surface front migrating out of the Plains. By the=20
    evening, the front will likely be deemed quasi-stationary, meaning=20
    the overall advancement of the boundary will be limited and will=20
    only move based on subtle surface wave propagations that ride along
    the boundary, or from well-defined cold pools that originate from=20
    organized convective clusters that form within the vicinity. In=20
    this case, both of these outcomes are likely to play a significant=20
    role in location of the frontal positioning, as well as an=20
    inflection point for daily organized convection across the Lower=20
    Mississippi Valley up through the western half of the Ohio Valley=20
    for D1.

    Assessment of the 500mb vorticity field based off the past several deterministic outputs indicates the first in a set of 3 distinct
    surface waves that will originate out of the Southern Rockies and
    Plains that will eject northeastward out of the base of the mean
    trough and migrate right up the stationary boundary in place. This
    is a textbook signal for enhanced convective development with a
    sharp low to mid-level moisture advection regime along and ahead of
    the surface amplification, much of which is aided by a budding LLJ
    presence within the eastern flank of the surface wave. The latest
    CAMs and global deterministic are in agreement on a large areal
    extent of southwest to northeast oriented convection that will
    likely spawn between 18-00z this afternoon and evening, mainly once
    the primary mid-level perturbation enters the picture and provides
    sufficient ascent to trigger convection along the surface front.
    00z HREF probabilities for >2" PWATs are generally modest between
    25-50% across the Lower Mississippi Valley with the primary axis
    located across southern and eastern AR. >1.5" PWATs is very high,
    however across the same areas with a northern expansion all the
    way beyond the Ohio River near IL/IN/KY/OH by later in the evening.
    This is thanks to the strengthening nocturnal LLJ pattern that will
    transpire ~00z, maintaining a nearly steady state as we move
    through the overnight hours Wednesday into Thursday.=20

    Considering the variables above, a significant precip core is
    anticipated extending from the ArklaTex, north into the north-
    central Ohio Valley with a sharp eastern edge defined by the
    greater subsidence provided by the western fringes of the low to
    mid-level ridge anchored over and off the Southeast U.S. coast.
    This sharp delineation is typically an artifact of strong surface
    based convergence present just upstream, especially within a primed
    upper pattern fighting against the ridge itself. Across AR up
    through western TN and KY, a well-defined axis of heavy precip is
    progged across all major NWP, a testament to the agreement on the
    placement of the primary convective cell motions, but also where
    there is an expectation for the future cell mergers and forward
    propagation to occur leading to repeated rainfall threats during
    the course of Wednesday evening to Thursday morning. HREF
    neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall indicate a large
    corridor of 70-90+% probs located across south-central and eastern
    AR, extending northeast up through western TN and the far
    southwestern KY area to the south of PAH. The >5" probs are also
    elevated within that same zone running 25-50% across that corridor
    leading to general continuity in what has been forecast the past
    several cycles. EAS probabilities are also very impressive for >2"
    over much of the above area with 60-80% located over almost all of
    western TN, including the Memphis metro. These types of outputs
    from the prob fields are historically aligned with higher-end risk
    days, especially over regions that have already primed soils or
    exhibit large scale urban footprints privy to runoff potential.=20
    This setup is shifting towards the significant category in terms of
    expectation for the first day of a long-lasting period of enhanced
    rainfall concerns thanks to the pattern hitting a "longwave=20
    roadblock".

    Totals for the D1 period are likely to reach 2-4" across a large
    domain with localized totals of 5-8" plausible in areas that see
    greater training and focused cell mergers once the storm mode
    shifts from supercellular to more of a multi-cell cluster after=20
    cold pool mergers late in the evening. The previous Moderate Risk
    was relatively maintained, but did extend the risk a bit further
    east due to CAMs output signaling a greater risk of outflow=20
    dominant regimes pushing the eastern extent of the heavier precip=20
    further into northern MS and western TN. A high-end Moderate is=20
    most likely from the Pine Bluff, AR up through the southwestern KY,
    northwest TN border south of Paducah. The Memphis, TN metro and=20
    the eastern side of Little Rock, AR is the most likely large metro=20
    corridors under the greatest threat for significant flash flood=20
    prospects when assessing the latest probabilities and general QPF=20
    output. Further north into KY and IN, a Moderate Risk still exists=20
    for most of western KY up into southern IN as guidance indicates a=20
    secondary maxima of QPF due to cell initiation late Wednesday into=20
    early Thursday along the leading edge of the surface wave as it=20
    migrates northeast. Some guidance is very aggressive with precip=20
    outputs >2" over a short time scale, enough to cause flash flood=20
    concerns within any urban corridors and valleys located within the=20
    river flood plane. Considering the signals for >1" at the very=20
    least, the Moderate Risk was drawn north to account for the=20
    potential with a general expectation this setup will evolve into=20
    that area as we work into the D2.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR EXTREME SOUTHEAST
    MISSOURI TO WESTERN KENTUCKY WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S..

    The D2 period will be an ongoing atmospheric evolution with the
    first half of the time frame being a continuation of the
    significant rainfall from the D1 as the succession of cold pool
    mergers and convective clusters propagate across the Ohio and
    Tennessee Valleys before finally fading as they lose steam moving
    into the wall of subsidence to the east. Scattered showers and
    storms will still be ongoing within the confines of the quasi-
    stationary front just due to continued low-level convergence and
    smaller mid-level perturbations ripping through the "atmospheric
    speedway" setup from southwest to northeast across the Southern
    Plains up through the Ohio Valley. Despite the expectation for
    lower rates during the early to mid-afternoon period on Thursday,
    any additional rainfall will act as a priming mechanism for what
    will transpire later in the evening as the second of 3 major
    surface waves takes shape across the Lower Mississippi to Ohio
    Valleys.=20

    The introduction of yet another stout LLJ pattern and attendant
    low-level moisture flux will yield another round of widespread
    convection within proxy to the surface front that will modestly
    undulate north to south within the confines of the aforementioned
    areas. The positioning of the front will make all the difference in
    the inevitable convective cell motions and subsequent QPF
    distribution, something that will be important when assessing where
    the worst flooding will occur as the grounds around much of the Low
    to Mid-Mississippi Valley and western Ohio Valley will be flood
    prone from the previous convective impacts. As of this time, there
    is ample agreement from global deterministic, as well as the
    relevant ensemble packages for an axis of heavy precipitation to
    impact a zone spanning central and northeastern Arkansas up through
    western Tennessee and Kentucky with the northern edge of the
    heavier precip aligned with the KY/OH border near the Ohio River
    basin. Additional amounts of 2-4" with locally up to 7" will=20
    impact those above zones, overlapping several areas that will have=20
    seen significant rainfall the previous 24 hrs. 01z NBM=20
    probabilities for rainfall amounts >6" over the D1-2 period are now
    upwards of 40-60% located from Pine Bluff, AR up through western=20
    KY between Paducah and Bowling Green. The area with the highest=20 probabilities is across western TN, just north of the Memphis=20
    metro, but very close by the major metro center. Considering the=20
    elevated theta_e alignment and +2 to +3 deviation PWATs present,=20
    rainfall rates within matured convective cores will likely breach=20
    1"/hr with 2-3"/hr within reason, especially in the early evening=20
    when instability is highest and the LLJ is at peak intensity. The=20
    deep moist convergence regime will be well-established and cell=20
    motions will remain generally parallel to the frontal boundary=20
    thanks to the stagnant synoptic scale pattern in place. This will=20
    lead to significant, life-threatening flash flooding to impact a=20
    large area where FFG's will likely lean critically low.=20

    Considering all the above variables, there was no reason to remove
    the High Risk. Instead, the risk area was expanded to account for
    the latest probabilities and relevant run to run continuity from
    the pertinent NWP. A Moderate Risk spans from southwestern Arkansas
    to the northeast, just outside Cincinnati on the Kentucky side of
    the Ohio River. Memphis, Little Rock, Pine Bluff, Bowling Green,
    Louisville, and Evansville are all major urban corridors within the
    Moderate Risk with areas like Paducah and Union City the larger
    towns/metros embedded within the High Risk. The travel routes most
    susceptible to flash flooding will be along the I-69 and I-55
    interstates within western KY, western TN, and northeastern AR.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A LARGE
    PORTION OF THE LOWER AND MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS...

    The final surface wave within the atmospheric parade across the
    Southern Plains to Mississippi Valley will show itself by late-
    Friday morning through the remainder of the period. This wave will
    likely be the strongest of the 3 allowing a much more amplified
    surface evolution that will shift the focus of heavier precip
    further northwest while also providing some vigor in the overall
    QPF distribution. The trend the past 24 hrs is for a zone of
    significant (3-6+") totals to be recognized across portions of the
    Southern Plains up through the Ozarks and Mid-Mississippi Valley=20
    of Missouri, spanning as far north as south-central Illinois. When=20
    assessing the theta_e environment, there is a noticeable push north
    of more modestly unstable air with the most pertinent area of=20
    available instability situated across southern MO down through AR,=20 southeastern OK, and even northeastern TX. A sharp uptick in=20
    regional PWATs with deviations between +2.5-3.5 anomaly-wise are=20
    forecast within that zone correlating with a substantial rise in=20
    area convection blossoming late Friday afternoon, onward. This=20
    setup is fortunately further west compared to the previous periods,
    so the overlap of the heaviest rainfall is not anticipated to be=20
    as problematic as the previous period.

    Having said that, the pattern will yield high precip totals due to
    widespread convective schema, falling over some areas that will
    have seen appreciable rain, and over other areas that are more
    prone to flooding due to complex terrain situated over the Ozarks.
    The pattern is such that several areas from northeast of DFW up
    through IL will see rainfall amounts of 3-6" with locally higher
    beginning Friday afternoon with the heaviest rainfall likely to
    occur by the evening with the implementation of yet another LLJ
    structure thanks to the surface wave mentioned previously. Further
    to the west, another closed upper reflection across the Southwest
    U.S. will only entice greater upper forcing within a broad axis of
    difluence situated over the Plains. This setup is more privy to
    convection forming as far west as the Western Rolling Plains of TX
    to points east and northeast. Even there, modest 1-2" with locally
    higher totals are forecast in-of those zones. As a result, there
    was a general expansion of the Slight Risk further southwest into
    Central TX, an expansion of the Moderate Risk to include the
    eastern Red River Basin up through the southeast half of Missouri
    into southern Illinois, and a high-end Moderate impacting
    southeastern OK up through western AR and much of southern and
    southeast MO. The threat of widespread flash flooding is
    increasing for areas within the Moderate risk and aforementioned
    higher-end Moderate designation. Be sure to stay up to date for the
    latest changes as we move through the remainder of the week as this
    pattern remains very active and prone to significant life-
    threatening flash flood concerns.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9UQF_xWxLOmVDXI82EXeXPBy9I8nBWrPG0fXHj4PAwhI= m5Pv_muJDpcSKgbD33YZKOBMQxeFUWJvPhzDerVlh9zVEkI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9UQF_xWxLOmVDXI82EXeXPBy9I8nBWrPG0fXHj4PAwhI= m5Pv_muJDpcSKgbD33YZKOBMQxeFUWJvPhzDerVlcBlLtVU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9UQF_xWxLOmVDXI82EXeXPBy9I8nBWrPG0fXHj4PAwhI= m5Pv_muJDpcSKgbD33YZKOBMQxeFUWJvPhzDerVlBRI_SG0$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 2 15:34:01 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 021533
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1133 AM EDT Wed Apr 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN=20
    ARKANSAS TO CENTRAL KENTUCKY...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS..

    ...16Z Update...

    Generally minor updates were made to the ongoing ERO risk areas,
    but they were numerous. Most of the changes were based on changes
    among the latest CAMs regarding where the heaviest precipitation is
    expected through tonight. In summary though, little has changed
    with the prior forecast reasoning across the Moderate Risk area.=20

    A High Risk upgrade was precluded for this update for a few
    reasons: First, generally the least coverage of expected rainfall=20
    of 2 inches or more compared with subsequent days, second, dry=20
    antecedent soil conditions and relatively low river levels prior to
    the start of this event, and third, a good portion of the event=20
    occurs into the Day 2/Thursday period, so the time for heavy rain=20
    to cause flooding will be limited as the storms associated with the
    front are progressive/fast-moving for the first half of today as=20
    they're moving into place. There is little doubt that portions of
    the moderate risk area will see training storms resulting in flash
    flooding, but the coverage of flash flooding are not expected to rise
    to High Risk levels today and tonight.

    A squall line and attendant cold front moving across Missouri and=20 northwestern Arkansas will stall along the southern portion of the=20
    line (where the Moderate Risk remains and been expanded), whereas=20
    the northern portion of the line should continue moving eastward=20
    with the upper level energy, which should limit the training=20
    potential. It's important to note that some of the guidance in=20
    southern Indiana suggests a second round of storms develops and=20
    follows closely behind the initial line. However, this second round
    of storms is also rather fast moving. Thus, think there should only
    be a few hours of heavy rain potential, which suggests the Slight
    would be the more appropriate category for that area.

    Elsewhere, the Moderate Risk was expanded east to include metro
    Nashville due to the slowing of the line and much greater potential
    for training than areas further north. For similar reasons, the
    Moderate risk was also expanded east to include much of south-
    central Kentucky.=20

    The CAMs guidance is in very good agreement that the line will
    stall over the northwest corner of Mississippi and is unlikely to
    progress much further south and east in northern Mississippi
    through 12Z (but likely will after 12Z and into the Day 2 period).
    Thus, the risk areas were both trimmed back about a row of counties
    and intentionally left with a really tight gradient between the
    Moderate risk to the northwest and nothing. This reflects the high
    likelihood that the forward progress of the storms stops, resulting
    in towns getting little or no rainfall close to others that get
    flooding rains only a short distance away.

    The warm front of the developing Plains low causing all of this
    rainfall appears more likely to get hung up across western New York
    tonight. This could result in multiple hours of moderate rainfall
    in the Buffalo area and along the Lake Ontario shoreline. Thus, the
    Slight Risk area was expanded east. For northern New York into
    Vermont, temperatures should remain cold enough that a significant
    portion of the precipitation falls as snow or a wintry mix, which
    should prevent flooding concerns at least until after 12Z, so the
    Marginal Risk area was trimmed.

    The broad synoptic setup described in the previous discussion below
    remains valid and has been included for reference.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The setup for the D1 period is already underway with a broad upper
    trough pattern across the Central and Western CONUS taking shape
    and interacting with a building Western Atlantic ridge that's
    already flexing its muscle in the overall longwave pattern. A
    deepening surface low over the Plains will migrate in-of the Upper
    Midwest with a cold front advancement towards the Mississippi
    Valley as we move into the first half of the period. The issue
    becomes two-fold by later this afternoon as the frontal boundary
    slows its forward momentum due to the surface reflection over the
    Midwest becoming vertically stacked and losing its vigor in
    progressing the pattern. Meanwhile, the ridge over the Atlantic
    will continue to strengthen leading to a stout western edge of the
    surface ridge pattern acting as a "wall" to prevent much more
    motion of the surface front migrating out of the Plains. By the
    evening, the front will likely be deemed quasi-stationary, meaning
    the overall advancement of the boundary will be limited and will
    only move based on subtle surface wave propagations that ride along
    the boundary, or from well-defined cold pools that originate from
    organized convective clusters that form within the vicinity. In
    this case, both of these outcomes are likely to play a significant
    role in location of the frontal positioning, as well as an
    inflection point for daily organized convection across the Lower
    Mississippi Valley up through the western half of the Ohio Valley
    for D1.

    Assessment of the 500mb vorticity field based off the past several deterministic outputs indicates the first in a set of 3 distinct
    surface waves that will originate out of the Southern Rockies and
    Plains that will eject northeastward out of the base of the mean
    trough and migrate right up the stationary boundary in place. This
    is a textbook signal for enhanced convective development with a
    sharp low to mid-level moisture advection regime along and ahead of
    the surface amplification, much of which is aided by a budding LLJ
    presence within the eastern flank of the surface wave. The latest
    CAMs and global deterministic are in agreement on a large areal
    extent of southwest to northeast oriented convection that will
    likely spawn between 18-00z this afternoon and evening, mainly once
    the primary mid-level perturbation enters the picture and provides
    sufficient ascent to trigger convection along the surface front.
    00z HREF probabilities for >2" PWATs are generally modest between
    25-50% across the Lower Mississippi Valley with the primary axis
    located across southern and eastern AR. >1.5" PWATs is very high,
    however across the same areas with a northern expansion all the
    way beyond the Ohio River near IL/IN/KY/OH by later in the evening.
    This is thanks to the strengthening nocturnal LLJ pattern that will
    transpire ~00z, maintaining a nearly steady state as we move
    through the overnight hours Wednesday into Thursday.

    Considering the variables above, a significant precip core is
    anticipated extending from the ArklaTex, north into the north-
    central Ohio Valley with a sharp eastern edge defined by the
    greater subsidence provided by the western fringes of the low to
    mid-level ridge anchored over and off the Southeast U.S. coast.
    This sharp delineation is typically an artifact of strong surface
    based convergence present just upstream, especially within a primed
    upper pattern fighting against the ridge itself. Across AR up
    through western TN and KY, a well-defined axis of heavy precip is
    progged across all major NWP, a testament to the agreement on the
    placement of the primary convective cell motions, but also where
    there is an expectation for the future cell mergers and forward
    propagation to occur leading to repeated rainfall threats during
    the course of Wednesday evening to Thursday morning. HREF
    neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall indicate a large
    corridor of 70-90+% probs located across south-central and eastern
    AR, extending northeast up through western TN and the far
    southwestern KY area to the south of PAH. The >5" probs are also
    elevated within that same zone running 25-50% across that corridor
    leading to general continuity in what has been forecast the past
    several cycles. EAS probabilities are also very impressive for >2"
    over much of the above area with 60-80% located over almost all of
    western TN, including the Memphis metro. These types of outputs
    from the prob fields are historically aligned with higher-end risk
    days, especially over regions that have already primed soils or
    exhibit large scale urban footprints privy to runoff potential.
    This setup is shifting towards the significant category in terms of
    expectation for the first day of a long-lasting period of enhanced
    rainfall concerns thanks to the pattern hitting a "longwave
    roadblock".

    Totals for the D1 period are likely to reach 2-4" across a large
    domain with localized totals of 5-8" plausible in areas that see
    greater training and focused cell mergers once the storm mode
    shifts from supercellular to more of a multi-cell cluster after
    cold pool mergers late in the evening. The previous Moderate Risk
    was relatively maintained, but did extend the risk a bit further
    east due to CAMs output signaling a greater risk of outflow
    dominant regimes pushing the eastern extent of the heavier precip
    further into northern MS and western TN. A high-end Moderate is
    most likely from the Pine Bluff, AR up through the southwestern KY,
    northwest TN border south of Paducah. The Memphis, TN metro and
    the eastern side of Little Rock, AR is the most likely large metro
    corridors under the greatest threat for significant flash flood
    prospects when assessing the latest probabilities and general QPF
    output. Further north into KY and IN, a Moderate Risk still exists
    for most of western KY up into southern IN as guidance indicates a
    secondary maxima of QPF due to cell initiation late Wednesday into
    early Thursday along the leading edge of the surface wave as it
    migrates northeast. Some guidance is very aggressive with precip
    outputs >2" over a short time scale, enough to cause flash flood
    concerns within any urban corridors and valleys located within the
    river flood plane. Considering the signals for >1" at the very
    least, the Moderate Risk was drawn north to account for the
    potential with a general expectation this setup will evolve into
    that area as we work into the D2.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR EXTREME SOUTHEAST
    MISSOURI TO WESTERN KENTUCKY WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S..

    The D2 period will be an ongoing atmospheric evolution with the
    first half of the time frame being a continuation of the
    significant rainfall from the D1 as the succession of cold pool
    mergers and convective clusters propagate across the Ohio and
    Tennessee Valleys before finally fading as they lose steam moving
    into the wall of subsidence to the east. Scattered showers and
    storms will still be ongoing within the confines of the quasi-
    stationary front just due to continued low-level convergence and
    smaller mid-level perturbations ripping through the "atmospheric
    speedway" setup from southwest to northeast across the Southern
    Plains up through the Ohio Valley. Despite the expectation for
    lower rates during the early to mid-afternoon period on Thursday,
    any additional rainfall will act as a priming mechanism for what
    will transpire later in the evening as the second of 3 major
    surface waves takes shape across the Lower Mississippi to Ohio
    Valleys.

    The introduction of yet another stout LLJ pattern and attendant
    low-level moisture flux will yield another round of widespread
    convection within proxy to the surface front that will modestly
    undulate north to south within the confines of the aforementioned
    areas. The positioning of the front will make all the difference in
    the inevitable convective cell motions and subsequent QPF
    distribution, something that will be important when assessing where
    the worst flooding will occur as the grounds around much of the Low
    to Mid-Mississippi Valley and western Ohio Valley will be flood
    prone from the previous convective impacts. As of this time, there
    is ample agreement from global deterministic, as well as the
    relevant ensemble packages for an axis of heavy precipitation to
    impact a zone spanning central and northeastern Arkansas up through
    western Tennessee and Kentucky with the northern edge of the
    heavier precip aligned with the KY/OH border near the Ohio River
    basin. Additional amounts of 2-4" with locally up to 7" will
    impact those above zones, overlapping several areas that will have
    seen significant rainfall the previous 24 hrs. 01z NBM
    probabilities for rainfall amounts >6" over the D1-2 period are now
    upwards of 40-60% located from Pine Bluff, AR up through western
    KY between Paducah and Bowling Green. The area with the highest
    probabilities is across western TN, just north of the Memphis
    metro, but very close by the major metro center. Considering the
    elevated theta_e alignment and +2 to +3 deviation PWATs present,
    rainfall rates within matured convective cores will likely breach
    1"/hr with 2-3"/hr within reason, especially in the early evening
    when instability is highest and the LLJ is at peak intensity. The
    deep moist convergence regime will be well-established and cell
    motions will remain generally parallel to the frontal boundary
    thanks to the stagnant synoptic scale pattern in place. This will
    lead to significant, life-threatening flash flooding to impact a
    large area where FFG's will likely lean critically low.

    Considering all the above variables, there was no reason to remove
    the High Risk. Instead, the risk area was expanded to account for
    the latest probabilities and relevant run to run continuity from
    the pertinent NWP. A Moderate Risk spans from southwestern Arkansas
    to the northeast, just outside Cincinnati on the Kentucky side of
    the Ohio River. Memphis, Little Rock, Pine Bluff, Bowling Green,
    Louisville, and Evansville are all major urban corridors within the
    Moderate Risk with areas like Paducah and Union City the larger
    towns/metros embedded within the High Risk. The travel routes most
    susceptible to flash flooding will be along the I-69 and I-55
    interstates within western KY, western TN, and northeastern AR.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A LARGE
    PORTION OF THE LOWER AND MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS...

    The final surface wave within the atmospheric parade across the
    Southern Plains to Mississippi Valley will show itself by late-
    Friday morning through the remainder of the period. This wave will
    likely be the strongest of the 3 allowing a much more amplified
    surface evolution that will shift the focus of heavier precip
    further northwest while also providing some vigor in the overall
    QPF distribution. The trend the past 24 hrs is for a zone of
    significant (3-6+") totals to be recognized across portions of the
    Southern Plains up through the Ozarks and Mid-Mississippi Valley
    of Missouri, spanning as far north as south-central Illinois. When
    assessing the theta_e environment, there is a noticeable push north
    of more modestly unstable air with the most pertinent area of
    available instability situated across southern MO down through AR,
    southeastern OK, and even northeastern TX. A sharp uptick in
    regional PWATs with deviations between +2.5-3.5 anomaly-wise are
    forecast within that zone correlating with a substantial rise in
    area convection blossoming late Friday afternoon, onward. This
    setup is fortunately further west compared to the previous periods,
    so the overlap of the heaviest rainfall is not anticipated to be
    as problematic as the previous period.

    Having said that, the pattern will yield high precip totals due to
    widespread convective schema, falling over some areas that will
    have seen appreciable rain, and over other areas that are more
    prone to flooding due to complex terrain situated over the Ozarks.
    The pattern is such that several areas from northeast of DFW up
    through IL will see rainfall amounts of 3-6" with locally higher
    beginning Friday afternoon with the heaviest rainfall likely to
    occur by the evening with the implementation of yet another LLJ
    structure thanks to the surface wave mentioned previously. Further
    to the west, another closed upper reflection across the Southwest
    U.S. will only entice greater upper forcing within a broad axis of
    difluence situated over the Plains. This setup is more privy to
    convection forming as far west as the Western Rolling Plains of TX
    to points east and northeast. Even there, modest 1-2" with locally
    higher totals are forecast in-of those zones. As a result, there
    was a general expansion of the Slight Risk further southwest into
    Central TX, an expansion of the Moderate Risk to include the
    eastern Red River Basin up through the southeast half of Missouri
    into southern Illinois, and a high-end Moderate impacting
    southeastern OK up through western AR and much of southern and
    southeast MO. The threat of widespread flash flooding is
    increasing for areas within the Moderate risk and aforementioned
    higher-end Moderate designation. Be sure to stay up to date for the
    latest changes as we move through the remainder of the week as this
    pattern remains very active and prone to significant life-
    threatening flash flood concerns.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!75Z_HZvNwcXtZt3FUBzTbo9ssKTXfYumauZ3wudaDxH5= ld1BVAuXyz7jNfG-lSQdmkOVdLcJotUshwPHjlLqZkU11Go$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!75Z_HZvNwcXtZt3FUBzTbo9ssKTXfYumauZ3wudaDxH5= ld1BVAuXyz7jNfG-lSQdmkOVdLcJotUshwPHjlLqBSnnbsQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!75Z_HZvNwcXtZt3FUBzTbo9ssKTXfYumauZ3wudaDxH5= ld1BVAuXyz7jNfG-lSQdmkOVdLcJotUshwPHjlLqMWTHS3k$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 2 20:06:26 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 022006
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    406 PM EDT Wed Apr 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    ARKANSAS TO CENTRAL KENTUCKY...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS..

    ...16Z Update...

    Generally minor updates were made to the ongoing ERO risk areas,
    but they were numerous. Most of the changes were based on changes
    among the latest CAMs regarding where the heaviest precipitation is
    expected through tonight. In summary though, little has changed
    with the prior forecast reasoning across the Moderate Risk area.

    A High Risk upgrade was precluded for this update for a few
    reasons: First, generally the least coverage of expected rainfall
    of 2 inches or more compared with subsequent days, second, dry
    antecedent soil conditions and relatively low river levels prior to
    the start of this event, and third, a good portion of the event
    occurs into the Day 2/Thursday period, so the time for heavy rain
    to cause flooding will be limited as the storms associated with the
    front are progressive/fast-moving for the first half of today as
    they're moving into place. There is little doubt that portions of
    the moderate risk area will see training storms resulting in flash
    flooding, but the coverage of flash flooding are not expected to rise
    to High Risk levels today and tonight.

    A squall line and attendant cold front moving across Missouri and
    northwestern Arkansas will stall along the southern portion of the
    line (where the Moderate Risk remains and been expanded), whereas
    the northern portion of the line should continue moving eastward
    with the upper level energy, which should limit the training
    potential. It's important to note that some of the guidance in
    southern Indiana suggests a second round of storms develops and
    follows closely behind the initial line. However, this second round
    of storms is also rather fast moving. Thus, think there should only
    be a few hours of heavy rain potential, which suggests the Slight
    would be the more appropriate category for that area.

    Elsewhere, the Moderate Risk was expanded east to include metro
    Nashville due to the slowing of the line and much greater potential
    for training than areas further north. For similar reasons, the
    Moderate risk was also expanded east to include much of south-
    central Kentucky.

    The CAMs guidance is in very good agreement that the line will
    stall over the northwest corner of Mississippi and is unlikely to
    progress much further south and east in northern Mississippi
    through 12Z (but likely will after 12Z and into the Day 2 period).
    Thus, the risk areas were both trimmed back about a row of counties
    and intentionally left with a really tight gradient between the
    Moderate risk to the northwest and nothing. This reflects the high
    likelihood that the forward progress of the storms stops, resulting
    in towns getting little or no rainfall close to others that get
    flooding rains only a short distance away.

    The warm front of the developing Plains low causing all of this
    rainfall appears more likely to get hung up across western New York
    tonight. This could result in multiple hours of moderate rainfall
    in the Buffalo area and along the Lake Ontario shoreline. Thus, the
    Slight Risk area was expanded east. For northern New York into
    Vermont, temperatures should remain cold enough that a significant
    portion of the precipitation falls as snow or a wintry mix, which
    should prevent flooding concerns at least until after 12Z, so the
    Marginal Risk area was trimmed.

    The broad synoptic setup described in the previous discussion below
    remains valid and has been included for reference.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The setup for the D1 period is already underway with a broad upper
    trough pattern across the Central and Western CONUS taking shape
    and interacting with a building Western Atlantic ridge that's
    already flexing its muscle in the overall longwave pattern. A
    deepening surface low over the Plains will migrate in-of the Upper
    Midwest with a cold front advancement towards the Mississippi
    Valley as we move into the first half of the period. The issue
    becomes two-fold by later this afternoon as the frontal boundary
    slows its forward momentum due to the surface reflection over the
    Midwest becoming vertically stacked and losing its vigor in
    progressing the pattern. Meanwhile, the ridge over the Atlantic
    will continue to strengthen leading to a stout western edge of the
    surface ridge pattern acting as a "wall" to prevent much more
    motion of the surface front migrating out of the Plains. By the
    evening, the front will likely be deemed quasi-stationary, meaning
    the overall advancement of the boundary will be limited and will
    only move based on subtle surface wave propagations that ride along
    the boundary, or from well-defined cold pools that originate from
    organized convective clusters that form within the vicinity. In
    this case, both of these outcomes are likely to play a significant
    role in location of the frontal positioning, as well as an
    inflection point for daily organized convection across the Lower
    Mississippi Valley up through the western half of the Ohio Valley
    for D1.

    Assessment of the 500mb vorticity field based off the past several deterministic outputs indicates the first in a set of 3 distinct
    surface waves that will originate out of the Southern Rockies and
    Plains that will eject northeastward out of the base of the mean
    trough and migrate right up the stationary boundary in place. This
    is a textbook signal for enhanced convective development with a
    sharp low to mid-level moisture advection regime along and ahead of
    the surface amplification, much of which is aided by a budding LLJ
    presence within the eastern flank of the surface wave. The latest
    CAMs and global deterministic are in agreement on a large areal
    extent of southwest to northeast oriented convection that will
    likely spawn between 18-00z this afternoon and evening, mainly once
    the primary mid-level perturbation enters the picture and provides
    sufficient ascent to trigger convection along the surface front.
    00z HREF probabilities for >2" PWATs are generally modest between
    25-50% across the Lower Mississippi Valley with the primary axis
    located across southern and eastern AR. >1.5" PWATs is very high,
    however across the same areas with a northern expansion all the
    way beyond the Ohio River near IL/IN/KY/OH by later in the evening.
    This is thanks to the strengthening nocturnal LLJ pattern that will
    transpire ~00z, maintaining a nearly steady state as we move
    through the overnight hours Wednesday into Thursday.

    Considering the variables above, a significant precip core is
    anticipated extending from the ArklaTex, north into the north-
    central Ohio Valley with a sharp eastern edge defined by the
    greater subsidence provided by the western fringes of the low to
    mid-level ridge anchored over and off the Southeast U.S. coast.
    This sharp delineation is typically an artifact of strong surface
    based convergence present just upstream, especially within a primed
    upper pattern fighting against the ridge itself. Across AR up
    through western TN and KY, a well-defined axis of heavy precip is
    progged across all major NWP, a testament to the agreement on the
    placement of the primary convective cell motions, but also where
    there is an expectation for the future cell mergers and forward
    propagation to occur leading to repeated rainfall threats during
    the course of Wednesday evening to Thursday morning. HREF
    neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall indicate a large
    corridor of 70-90+% probs located across south-central and eastern
    AR, extending northeast up through western TN and the far
    southwestern KY area to the south of PAH. The >5" probs are also
    elevated within that same zone running 25-50% across that corridor
    leading to general continuity in what has been forecast the past
    several cycles. EAS probabilities are also very impressive for >2"
    over much of the above area with 60-80% located over almost all of
    western TN, including the Memphis metro. These types of outputs
    from the prob fields are historically aligned with higher-end risk
    days, especially over regions that have already primed soils or
    exhibit large scale urban footprints privy to runoff potential.
    This setup is shifting towards the significant category in terms of
    expectation for the first day of a long-lasting period of enhanced
    rainfall concerns thanks to the pattern hitting a "longwave
    roadblock".

    Totals for the D1 period are likely to reach 2-4" across a large
    domain with localized totals of 5-8" plausible in areas that see
    greater training and focused cell mergers once the storm mode
    shifts from supercellular to more of a multi-cell cluster after
    cold pool mergers late in the evening. The previous Moderate Risk
    was relatively maintained, but did extend the risk a bit further
    east due to CAMs output signaling a greater risk of outflow
    dominant regimes pushing the eastern extent of the heavier precip
    further into northern MS and western TN. A high-end Moderate is
    most likely from the Pine Bluff, AR up through the southwestern KY,
    northwest TN border south of Paducah. The Memphis, TN metro and
    the eastern side of Little Rock, AR is the most likely large metro
    corridors under the greatest threat for significant flash flood
    prospects when assessing the latest probabilities and general QPF
    output. Further north into KY and IN, a Moderate Risk still exists
    for most of western KY up into southern IN as guidance indicates a
    secondary maxima of QPF due to cell initiation late Wednesday into
    early Thursday along the leading edge of the surface wave as it
    migrates northeast. Some guidance is very aggressive with precip
    outputs >2" over a short time scale, enough to cause flash flood
    concerns within any urban corridors and valleys located within the
    river flood plane. Considering the signals for >1" at the very
    least, the Moderate Risk was drawn north to account for the
    potential with a general expectation this setup will evolve into
    that area as we work into the D2.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR EXTREME SOUTHEAST
    MISSOURI TO WESTERN KENTUCKY WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S...

    20Z Update: The updated ERO does not require many changes with the
    arrival of the 12Z models and CAM guidance. There was a very slight
    southward adjustment of about 10-20 miles with the inherited High
    Risk area to include the greater Memphis area. There is strong
    model agreement for additional 3-5 inch rainfall totals on top of
    extremely heavy rainfall expected Wednesday night across much of
    this same area. This will result in severely reduced flash flood
    guidance values that will easily be exceeded with this next round
    of intense rainfall. There may be a lull in the activity during
    portions of the day Thursday, but the rainfall intensity should
    rapidly increase once again Thursday night as more MCSs train over
    the same areas. The one model that differs from the overall model
    consensus is the NAM conest which depicts considerably lighter QPF
    on the order of 1-2 inches over this region, but this is considered
    a lower probability solution at this time.=20=20

    Elsewhere across the nation, a Marginal Risk area has been added
    across portions of far eastern Colorado, northwestern Kansas, and
    southwestern Nebraska as a shortwave moves through the region with
    moderate to locally heavy rainfall developing ahead of a surface
    low forming in the lee of the central Rockies. Although no
    widespread flooding is expected, some of the storms may briefly
    train and possibly result in some nuisance level flooding on a
    localized basis. The previous forecast discussion is appended below
    for reference. /Hamrick

    ------------------

    The D2 period will be an ongoing atmospheric evolution with the
    first half of the time frame being a continuation of the
    significant rainfall from the D1 as the succession of cold pool
    mergers and convective clusters propagate across the Ohio and
    Tennessee Valleys before finally fading as they lose steam moving
    into the wall of subsidence to the east. Scattered showers and
    storms will still be ongoing within the confines of the quasi-
    stationary front just due to continued low-level convergence and
    smaller mid-level perturbations ripping through the "atmospheric
    speedway" setup from southwest to northeast across the Southern
    Plains up through the Ohio Valley. Despite the expectation for
    lower rates during the early to mid-afternoon period on Thursday,
    any additional rainfall will act as a priming mechanism for what
    will transpire later in the evening as the second of 3 major
    surface waves takes shape across the Lower Mississippi to Ohio
    Valleys.

    The introduction of yet another stout LLJ pattern and attendant
    low-level moisture flux will yield another round of widespread
    convection within proxy to the surface front that will modestly
    undulate north to south within the confines of the aforementioned
    areas. The positioning of the front will make all the difference in
    the inevitable convective cell motions and subsequent QPF
    distribution, something that will be important when assessing where
    the worst flooding will occur as the grounds around much of the Low
    to Mid-Mississippi Valley and western Ohio Valley will be flood
    prone from the previous convective impacts. As of this time, there
    is ample agreement from global deterministic, as well as the
    relevant ensemble packages for an axis of heavy precipitation to
    impact a zone spanning central and northeastern Arkansas up through
    western Tennessee and Kentucky with the northern edge of the
    heavier precip aligned with the KY/OH border near the Ohio River
    basin. Additional amounts of 2-4" with locally up to 7" will
    impact those above zones, overlapping several areas that will have
    seen significant rainfall the previous 24 hrs. 01z NBM
    probabilities for rainfall amounts >6" over the D1-2 period are now
    upwards of 40-60% located from Pine Bluff, AR up through western
    KY between Paducah and Bowling Green. The area with the highest
    probabilities is across western TN, just north of the Memphis
    metro, but very close by the major metro center. Considering the
    elevated theta_e alignment and +2 to +3 deviation PWATs present,
    rainfall rates within matured convective cores will likely breach
    1"/hr with 2-3"/hr within reason, especially in the early evening
    when instability is highest and the LLJ is at peak intensity. The
    deep moist convergence regime will be well-established and cell
    motions will remain generally parallel to the frontal boundary
    thanks to the stagnant synoptic scale pattern in place. This will
    lead to significant, life-threatening flash flooding to impact a
    large area where FFG's will likely lean critically low.

    Considering all the above variables, there was no reason to remove
    the High Risk. Instead, the risk area was expanded to account for
    the latest probabilities and relevant run to run continuity from
    the pertinent NWP. A Moderate Risk spans from southwestern Arkansas
    to the northeast, just outside Cincinnati on the Kentucky side of
    the Ohio River. Memphis, Little Rock, Pine Bluff, Bowling Green,
    Louisville, and Evansville are all major urban corridors within the
    Moderate Risk with areas like Paducah and Union City the larger
    towns/metros embedded within the High Risk. The travel routes most
    susceptible to flash flooding will be along the I-69 and I-55
    interstates within western KY, western TN, and northeastern AR.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A LARGE
    PORTION OF THE LOWER AND MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS...

    The final surface wave within the atmospheric parade across the
    Southern Plains to Mississippi Valley will show itself by late-
    Friday morning through the remainder of the period. This wave will
    likely be the strongest of the 3 allowing a much more amplified
    surface evolution that will shift the focus of heavier precip
    further northwest while also providing some vigor in the overall
    QPF distribution. The trend the past 24 hrs is for a zone of
    significant (3-6+") totals to be recognized across portions of the
    Southern Plains up through the Ozarks and Mid-Mississippi Valley
    of Missouri, spanning as far north as south-central Illinois. When
    assessing the theta_e environment, there is a noticeable push north
    of more modestly unstable air with the most pertinent area of
    available instability situated across southern MO down through AR,
    southeastern OK, and even northeastern TX. A sharp uptick in
    regional PWATs with deviations between +2.5-3.5 anomaly-wise are
    forecast within that zone correlating with a substantial rise in
    area convection blossoming late Friday afternoon, onward. This
    setup is fortunately further west compared to the previous periods,
    so the overlap of the heaviest rainfall is not anticipated to be
    as problematic as the previous period.

    Having said that, the pattern will yield high precip totals due to
    widespread convective schema, falling over some areas that will
    have seen appreciable rain, and over other areas that are more
    prone to flooding due to complex terrain situated over the Ozarks.
    The pattern is such that several areas from northeast of DFW up
    through IL will see rainfall amounts of 3-6" with locally higher
    beginning Friday afternoon with the heaviest rainfall likely to
    occur by the evening with the implementation of yet another LLJ
    structure thanks to the surface wave mentioned previously. Further
    to the west, another closed upper reflection across the Southwest
    U.S. will only entice greater upper forcing within a broad axis of
    difluence situated over the Plains. This setup is more privy to
    convection forming as far west as the Western Rolling Plains of TX
    to points east and northeast. Even there, modest 1-2" with locally
    higher totals are forecast in-of those zones. As a result, there
    was a general expansion of the Slight Risk further southwest into
    Central TX, an expansion of the Moderate Risk to include the
    eastern Red River Basin up through the southeast half of Missouri
    into southern Illinois, and a high-end Moderate impacting
    southeastern OK up through western AR and much of southern and
    southeast MO. The threat of widespread flash flooding is
    increasing for areas within the Moderate risk and aforementioned
    higher-end Moderate designation. Be sure to stay up to date for the
    latest changes as we move through the remainder of the week as this
    pattern remains very active and prone to significant life-
    threatening flash flood concerns.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6KMIg509C1i6BhKERdp_5VvAqlyjLyQjKndhwmgcwzxe= Th6xf3LtkyNJeAzQqhyj6lp09FmlPk7iE1c_BenIoBI4vRU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6KMIg509C1i6BhKERdp_5VvAqlyjLyQjKndhwmgcwzxe= Th6xf3LtkyNJeAzQqhyj6lp09FmlPk7iE1c_BenITRFZvG4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6KMIg509C1i6BhKERdp_5VvAqlyjLyQjKndhwmgcwzxe= Th6xf3LtkyNJeAzQqhyj6lp09FmlPk7iE1c_BenInJFyoZo$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 2 20:28:48 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 022027
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    427 PM EDT Wed Apr 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Apr 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    ARKANSAS TO CENTRAL KENTUCKY...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS..

    ...16Z Update...

    Generally minor updates were made to the ongoing ERO risk areas,
    but they were numerous. Most of the changes were based on changes
    among the latest CAMs regarding where the heaviest precipitation is
    expected through tonight. In summary though, little has changed
    with the prior forecast reasoning across the Moderate Risk area.

    A High Risk upgrade was precluded for this update for a few
    reasons: First, generally the least coverage of expected rainfall
    of 2 inches or more compared with subsequent days, second, dry
    antecedent soil conditions and relatively low river levels prior to
    the start of this event, and third, a good portion of the event
    occurs into the Day 2/Thursday period, so the time for heavy rain
    to cause flooding will be limited as the storms associated with the
    front are progressive/fast-moving for the first half of today as
    they're moving into place. There is little doubt that portions of
    the moderate risk area will see training storms resulting in flash
    flooding, but the coverage of flash flooding are not expected to rise
    to High Risk levels today and tonight.

    A squall line and attendant cold front moving across Missouri and
    northwestern Arkansas will stall along the southern portion of the
    line (where the Moderate Risk remains and been expanded), whereas
    the northern portion of the line should continue moving eastward
    with the upper level energy, which should limit the training
    potential. It's important to note that some of the guidance in
    southern Indiana suggests a second round of storms develops and
    follows closely behind the initial line. However, this second round
    of storms is also rather fast moving. Thus, think there should only
    be a few hours of heavy rain potential, which suggests the Slight
    would be the more appropriate category for that area.

    Elsewhere, the Moderate Risk was expanded east to include metro
    Nashville due to the slowing of the line and much greater potential
    for training than areas further north. For similar reasons, the
    Moderate risk was also expanded east to include much of south-
    central Kentucky.

    The CAMs guidance is in very good agreement that the line will
    stall over the northwest corner of Mississippi and is unlikely to
    progress much further south and east in northern Mississippi
    through 12Z (but likely will after 12Z and into the Day 2 period).
    Thus, the risk areas were both trimmed back about a row of counties
    and intentionally left with a really tight gradient between the
    Moderate risk to the northwest and nothing. This reflects the high
    likelihood that the forward progress of the storms stops, resulting
    in towns getting little or no rainfall close to others that get
    flooding rains only a short distance away.

    The warm front of the developing Plains low causing all of this
    rainfall appears more likely to get hung up across western New York
    tonight. This could result in multiple hours of moderate rainfall
    in the Buffalo area and along the Lake Ontario shoreline. Thus, the
    Slight Risk area was expanded east. For northern New York into
    Vermont, temperatures should remain cold enough that a significant
    portion of the precipitation falls as snow or a wintry mix, which
    should prevent flooding concerns at least until after 12Z, so the
    Marginal Risk area was trimmed.

    The broad synoptic setup described in the previous discussion below
    remains valid and has been included for reference.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The setup for the D1 period is already underway with a broad upper
    trough pattern across the Central and Western CONUS taking shape
    and interacting with a building Western Atlantic ridge that's
    already flexing its muscle in the overall longwave pattern. A
    deepening surface low over the Plains will migrate in-of the Upper
    Midwest with a cold front advancement towards the Mississippi
    Valley as we move into the first half of the period. The issue
    becomes two-fold by later this afternoon as the frontal boundary
    slows its forward momentum due to the surface reflection over the
    Midwest becoming vertically stacked and losing its vigor in
    progressing the pattern. Meanwhile, the ridge over the Atlantic
    will continue to strengthen leading to a stout western edge of the
    surface ridge pattern acting as a "wall" to prevent much more
    motion of the surface front migrating out of the Plains. By the
    evening, the front will likely be deemed quasi-stationary, meaning
    the overall advancement of the boundary will be limited and will
    only move based on subtle surface wave propagations that ride along
    the boundary, or from well-defined cold pools that originate from
    organized convective clusters that form within the vicinity. In
    this case, both of these outcomes are likely to play a significant
    role in location of the frontal positioning, as well as an
    inflection point for daily organized convection across the Lower
    Mississippi Valley up through the western half of the Ohio Valley
    for D1.

    Assessment of the 500mb vorticity field based off the past several deterministic outputs indicates the first in a set of 3 distinct
    surface waves that will originate out of the Southern Rockies and
    Plains that will eject northeastward out of the base of the mean
    trough and migrate right up the stationary boundary in place. This
    is a textbook signal for enhanced convective development with a
    sharp low to mid-level moisture advection regime along and ahead of
    the surface amplification, much of which is aided by a budding LLJ
    presence within the eastern flank of the surface wave. The latest
    CAMs and global deterministic are in agreement on a large areal
    extent of southwest to northeast oriented convection that will
    likely spawn between 18-00z this afternoon and evening, mainly once
    the primary mid-level perturbation enters the picture and provides
    sufficient ascent to trigger convection along the surface front.
    00z HREF probabilities for >2" PWATs are generally modest between
    25-50% across the Lower Mississippi Valley with the primary axis
    located across southern and eastern AR. >1.5" PWATs is very high,
    however across the same areas with a northern expansion all the
    way beyond the Ohio River near IL/IN/KY/OH by later in the evening.
    This is thanks to the strengthening nocturnal LLJ pattern that will
    transpire ~00z, maintaining a nearly steady state as we move
    through the overnight hours Wednesday into Thursday.

    Considering the variables above, a significant precip core is
    anticipated extending from the ArklaTex, north into the north-
    central Ohio Valley with a sharp eastern edge defined by the
    greater subsidence provided by the western fringes of the low to
    mid-level ridge anchored over and off the Southeast U.S. coast.
    This sharp delineation is typically an artifact of strong surface
    based convergence present just upstream, especially within a primed
    upper pattern fighting against the ridge itself. Across AR up
    through western TN and KY, a well-defined axis of heavy precip is
    progged across all major NWP, a testament to the agreement on the
    placement of the primary convective cell motions, but also where
    there is an expectation for the future cell mergers and forward
    propagation to occur leading to repeated rainfall threats during
    the course of Wednesday evening to Thursday morning. HREF
    neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall indicate a large
    corridor of 70-90+% probs located across south-central and eastern
    AR, extending northeast up through western TN and the far
    southwestern KY area to the south of PAH. The >5" probs are also
    elevated within that same zone running 25-50% across that corridor
    leading to general continuity in what has been forecast the past
    several cycles. EAS probabilities are also very impressive for >2"
    over much of the above area with 60-80% located over almost all of
    western TN, including the Memphis metro. These types of outputs
    from the prob fields are historically aligned with higher-end risk
    days, especially over regions that have already primed soils or
    exhibit large scale urban footprints privy to runoff potential.
    This setup is shifting towards the significant category in terms of
    expectation for the first day of a long-lasting period of enhanced
    rainfall concerns thanks to the pattern hitting a "longwave
    roadblock".

    Totals for the D1 period are likely to reach 2-4" across a large
    domain with localized totals of 5-8" plausible in areas that see
    greater training and focused cell mergers once the storm mode
    shifts from supercellular to more of a multi-cell cluster after
    cold pool mergers late in the evening. The previous Moderate Risk
    was relatively maintained, but did extend the risk a bit further
    east due to CAMs output signaling a greater risk of outflow
    dominant regimes pushing the eastern extent of the heavier precip
    further into northern MS and western TN. A high-end Moderate is
    most likely from the Pine Bluff, AR up through the southwestern KY,
    northwest TN border south of Paducah. The Memphis, TN metro and
    the eastern side of Little Rock, AR is the most likely large metro
    corridors under the greatest threat for significant flash flood
    prospects when assessing the latest probabilities and general QPF
    output. Further north into KY and IN, a Moderate Risk still exists
    for most of western KY up into southern IN as guidance indicates a
    secondary maxima of QPF due to cell initiation late Wednesday into
    early Thursday along the leading edge of the surface wave as it
    migrates northeast. Some guidance is very aggressive with precip
    outputs >2" over a short time scale, enough to cause flash flood
    concerns within any urban corridors and valleys located within the
    river flood plane. Considering the signals for >1" at the very
    least, the Moderate Risk was drawn north to account for the
    potential with a general expectation this setup will evolve into
    that area as we work into the D2.

    This is an increasingly significant setup approaching with
    potential for high impacts and life-threatening flash flooding
    spanning the course of several days. Be sure to prepare if you live
    in a flood zone anywhere from Arkansas, northeast through the
    Ohio/Tennessee Valley's. Anyone surrounding will want to monitor
    this setup closely as small changes could have heightened impacts
    given the forecasted setup.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR EXTREME SOUTHEAST
    MISSOURI TO WESTERN KENTUCKY WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S...

    20Z Update: The updated ERO does not require many changes with the
    arrival of the 12Z models and CAM guidance. There was a very slight
    southward adjustment of about 10-20 miles with the inherited High
    Risk area to include the greater Memphis area. There is strong
    model agreement for additional 3-5 inch rainfall totals on top of
    extremely heavy rainfall expected Wednesday night across much of
    this same area. This will result in severely reduced flash flood
    guidance values that will easily be exceeded with this next round
    of intense rainfall. There may be a lull in the activity during
    portions of the day Thursday, but the rainfall intensity should
    rapidly increase once again Thursday night as more MCSs train over
    the same areas. The one model that differs from the overall model
    consensus is the NAM conest which depicts considerably lighter QPF
    on the order of 1-2 inches over this region, but this is considered
    a lower probability solution at this time.

    Elsewhere across the nation, a Marginal Risk area has been added
    across portions of far eastern Colorado, northwestern Kansas, and
    southwestern Nebraska as a shortwave moves through the region with
    moderate to locally heavy rainfall developing ahead of a surface
    low forming in the lee of the central Rockies. Although no
    widespread flooding is expected, some of the storms may briefly
    train and possibly result in some nuisance level flooding on a
    localized basis. The previous forecast discussion is appended below
    for reference. /Hamrick

    ------------------

    The D2 period will be an ongoing atmospheric evolution with the
    first half of the time frame being a continuation of the
    significant rainfall from the D1 as the succession of cold pool
    mergers and convective clusters propagate across the Ohio and
    Tennessee Valleys before finally fading as they lose steam moving
    into the wall of subsidence to the east. Scattered showers and
    storms will still be ongoing within the confines of the quasi-
    stationary front just due to continued low-level convergence and
    smaller mid-level perturbations ripping through the "atmospheric
    speedway" setup from southwest to northeast across the Southern
    Plains up through the Ohio Valley. Despite the expectation for
    lower rates during the early to mid-afternoon period on Thursday,
    any additional rainfall will act as a priming mechanism for what
    will transpire later in the evening as the second of 3 major
    surface waves takes shape across the Lower Mississippi to Ohio
    Valleys.

    The introduction of yet another stout LLJ pattern and attendant
    low-level moisture flux will yield another round of widespread
    convection within proxy to the surface front that will modestly
    undulate north to south within the confines of the aforementioned
    areas. The positioning of the front will make all the difference in
    the inevitable convective cell motions and subsequent QPF
    distribution, something that will be important when assessing where
    the worst flooding will occur as the grounds around much of the Low
    to Mid-Mississippi Valley and western Ohio Valley will be flood
    prone from the previous convective impacts. As of this time, there
    is ample agreement from global deterministic, as well as the
    relevant ensemble packages for an axis of heavy precipitation to
    impact a zone spanning central and northeastern Arkansas up through
    western Tennessee and Kentucky with the northern edge of the
    heavier precip aligned with the KY/OH schemaborder near the Ohio=20
    River basin. Additional amounts of 2-4" with locally up to 7" will=20
    impact those above zones, overlapping several areas that will have=20
    seen significant rainfall the previous 24 hrs. 01z NBM=20
    probabilities for rainfall amounts >6" over the D1-2 period are now
    upwards of 40-60% located from Pine Bluff, AR up through western=20
    KY between Paducah and Bowling Green. The area with the highest=20 probabilities is across western TN, just north of the Memphis=20
    metro, but very close by the major metro center. Considering the=20
    elevated theta_e alignment and +2 to +3 deviation PWATs present,=20
    rainfall rates within matured convective cores will likely breach=20
    1"/hr with 2-3"/hr within reason, especially in the early evening=20
    when instability is highest and the LLJ is at peak intensity. The=20
    deep moist convergence regime will be well-established and cell=20
    motions will remain generally parallel to the frontal boundary=20
    thanks to the stagnant synoptic scale pattern in place. This will=20
    lead to significant, life-threatening flash flooding to impact a=20
    large area where FFG's will likely lean critically low.

    Considering all the above variables, there was no reason to remove
    the High Risk. Instead, the risk area was expanded to account for
    the latest probabilities and relevant run to run continuity from
    the pertinent NWP. A Moderate Risk spans from southwestern Arkansas
    to the northeast, just outside Cincinnati on the Kentucky side of
    the Ohio River. Memphis, Little Rock, Pine Bluff, Bowling Green,
    Louisville, and Evansville are all major urban corridors within the
    Moderate Risk with areas like Paducah and Union City the larger
    towns/metros embedded within the High Risk. The travel routes most
    susceptible to flash flooding will be along the I-69 and I-55
    interstates within western KY, western TN, and northeastern AR.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A LARGE
    PORTION OF THE LOWER AND MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS...

    20Z Update: The existing Moderate Risk area did not require many
    adjustments for this time period. Given the axis of heaviest
    rainfall is expected to be displaced about 100 miles northwest of
    the Day 2 event, this currently avoids the need for any High Risk
    areas at this time. However, if models trend farther southeast with
    the main QPF axis in future runs, it is possible a High Risk could
    eventually be needed for eastern portions of the current Moderate
    Risk area. Rainfall totals on the order of 3-6 inches, locally
    higher, are expected throughout most of the Moderate Risk area. The
    outer Marginal Risk area was extended to include northeast Ohio=20
    and also to near the Rio Grande in southwestern Texas. The previous
    forecast discussion is appended below for reference. /Hamrick ---------------------


    The final surface wave within the atmospheric parade across the
    Southern Plains to Mississippi Valley will show itself by late-
    Friday morning through the remainder of the period. This wave will
    likely be the strongest of the 3 allowing a much more amplified
    surface evolution that will shift the focus of heavier precip
    further northwest while also providing some vigor in the overall
    QPF distribution. The trend the past 24 hrs is for a zone of
    significant (3-6+") totals to be recognized across portions of the
    Southern Plains up through the Ozarks and Mid-Mississippi Valley
    of Missouri, spanning as far north as south-central Illinois. When
    assessing the theta_e environment, there is a noticeable push north
    of more modestly unstable air with the most pertinent area of
    available instability situated across southern MO down through AR,
    southeastern OK, and even northeastern TX. A sharp uptick in
    regional PWATs with deviations between +2.5-3.5 anomaly-wise are
    forecast within that zone correlating with a substantial rise in
    area convection blossoming late Friday afternoon, onward. This
    setup is fortunately further west compared to the previous periods,
    so the overlap of the heaviest rainfall is not anticipated to be
    as problematic as the previous period.

    Having said that, the pattern will yield high precip totals due to
    widespread convective activity, falling over some areas that will=20
    have seen appreciable rain, and over other areas that are more=20
    prone to flooding due to complex terrain situated over the Ozarks.=20
    The pattern is such that several areas from northeast of DFW up=20
    through IL will see rainfall amounts of 3-6" with locally higher=20
    beginning Friday afternoon with the heaviest rainfall likely to=20
    occur by the evening with the implementation of yet another LLJ=20
    structure thanks to the surface wave mentioned previously. Further=20
    to the west, another closed upper reflection across the Southwest=20
    U.S. will only entice greater upper forcing within a broad axis of=20
    difluence situated over the Plains. This setup is more privy to=20
    convection forming as far west as the Western Rolling Plains of TX=20
    to points east and northeast. Even there, modest 1-2" with locally=20
    higher totals are forecast in-of those zones. As a result, there=20
    was a general expansion of the Slight Risk further southwest into=20
    Central TX, an expansion of the Moderate Risk to include the=20
    eastern Red River Basin up through the southeast half of Missouri=20
    into southern Illinois, and a high-end Moderate impacting=20
    southeastern OK up through western AR and much of southern and=20
    southeast MO. The threat of widespread flash flooding is increasing
    for areas within the Moderate risk and aforementioned higher-end=20
    Moderate designation. Be sure to stay up to date for the latest=20
    changes as we move through the remainder of the week as this=20
    pattern remains very active and prone to significant life-=20
    threatening flash flood concerns.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ezeFBjhrbGvkIRmQZMJutdqQ-5H7UnFaRrDnSmeEUTW= L-7KIr_67fPX7V1O3sPzkat0FwxD7ryfVXxMOhkoyUCZ9mk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ezeFBjhrbGvkIRmQZMJutdqQ-5H7UnFaRrDnSmeEUTW= L-7KIr_67fPX7V1O3sPzkat0FwxD7ryfVXxMOhkonT5VH-A$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ezeFBjhrbGvkIRmQZMJutdqQ-5H7UnFaRrDnSmeEUTW= L-7KIr_67fPX7V1O3sPzkat0FwxD7ryfVXxMOhkoqNEUdDY$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 3 00:59:04 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 030057
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    857 PM EDT Wed Apr 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    ARKANSAS TO CENTRAL KENTUCKY...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS..

    ...01Z Update...

    Updates to the Day 1 ERO were mainly focused on peeling away the
    back (western) side of the Slight and Marginal Risk areas across
    parts of the Midwest, based on the latest observational trends and
    more recent high-res guidance (current HRRR trends and 18Z HREF
    deterministic and probabilistic data). Notable changes to the
    remainder of the ERO include confining the northeastern portion of
    the Slight (eastern edge now across eastern OH instead of western
    NY-northwest PA), while pulling the eastern edges of the Slight=20
    and Moderate Risk areas ever so slightly E-SE, again based on the
    latest guidance trends.

    Hurley


    ...16Z Update...

    Generally minor updates were made to the ongoing ERO risk areas,=20
    but they were numerous. Most of the changes were based on changes=20
    among the latest CAMs regarding where the heaviest precipitation is
    expected through tonight. In summary though, little has changed=20
    with the prior forecast reasoning across the Moderate Risk area.

    A High Risk upgrade was precluded for this update for a few
    reasons: First, generally the least coverage of expected rainfall
    of 2 inches or more compared with subsequent days, second, dry
    antecedent soil conditions and relatively low river levels prior to
    the start of this event, and third, a good portion of the event
    occurs into the Day 2/Thursday period, so the time for heavy rain
    to cause flooding will be limited as the storms associated with the
    front are progressive/fast-moving for the first half of today as
    they're moving into place. There is little doubt that portions of
    the moderate risk area will see training storms resulting in flash
    flooding, but the coverage of flash flooding are not expected to rise
    to High Risk levels today and tonight.

    A squall line and attendant cold front moving across Missouri and
    northwestern Arkansas will stall along the southern portion of the
    line (where the Moderate Risk remains and been expanded), whereas
    the northern portion of the line should continue moving eastward
    with the upper level energy, which should limit the training
    potential. It's important to note that some of the guidance in
    southern Indiana suggests a second round of storms develops and
    follows closely behind the initial line. However, this second round
    of storms is also rather fast moving. Thus, think there should only
    be a few hours of heavy rain potential, which suggests the Slight
    would be the more appropriate category for that area.

    Elsewhere, the Moderate Risk was expanded east to include metro
    Nashville due to the slowing of the line and much greater potential
    for training than areas further north. For similar reasons, the
    Moderate risk was also expanded east to include much of south-
    central Kentucky.

    The CAMs guidance is in very good agreement that the line will
    stall over the northwest corner of Mississippi and is unlikely to
    progress much further south and east in northern Mississippi
    through 12Z (but likely will after 12Z and into the Day 2 period).
    Thus, the risk areas were both trimmed back about a row of counties
    and intentionally left with a really tight gradient between the
    Moderate risk to the northwest and nothing. This reflects the high
    likelihood that the forward progress of the storms stops, resulting
    in towns getting little or no rainfall close to others that get
    flooding rains only a short distance away.

    The warm front of the developing Plains low causing all of this
    rainfall appears more likely to get hung up across western New York
    tonight. This could result in multiple hours of moderate rainfall
    in the Buffalo area and along the Lake Ontario shoreline. Thus, the
    Slight Risk area was expanded east. For northern New York into
    Vermont, temperatures should remain cold enough that a significant
    portion of the precipitation falls as snow or a wintry mix, which
    should prevent flooding concerns at least until after 12Z, so the
    Marginal Risk area was trimmed.

    The broad synoptic setup described in the previous discussion below
    remains valid and has been included for reference.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR EXTREME SOUTHEAST
    MISSOURI TO WESTERN KENTUCKY WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL BEGIN TODAY
    WITH SEVERAL DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S...

    20Z Update: The updated ERO does not require many changes with the
    arrival of the 12Z models and CAM guidance. There was a very slight
    southward adjustment of about 10-20 miles with the inherited High
    Risk area to include the greater Memphis area. There is strong
    model agreement for additional 3-5 inch rainfall totals on top of
    extremely heavy rainfall expected Wednesday night across much of
    this same area. This will result in severely reduced flash flood
    guidance values that will easily be exceeded with this next round
    of intense rainfall. There may be a lull in the activity during
    portions of the day Thursday, but the rainfall intensity should
    rapidly increase once again Thursday night as more MCSs train over
    the same areas. The one model that differs from the overall model
    consensus is the NAM conest which depicts considerably lighter QPF
    on the order of 1-2 inches over this region, but this is considered
    a lower probability solution at this time.

    Elsewhere across the nation, a Marginal Risk area has been added
    across portions of far eastern Colorado, northwestern Kansas, and
    southwestern Nebraska as a shortwave moves through the region with
    moderate to locally heavy rainfall developing ahead of a surface
    low forming in the lee of the central Rockies. Although no
    widespread flooding is expected, some of the storms may briefly
    train and possibly result in some nuisance level flooding on a
    localized basis. The previous forecast discussion is appended below
    for reference. /Hamrick

    ------------------

    The D2 period will be an ongoing atmospheric evolution with the
    first half of the time frame being a continuation of the
    significant rainfall from the D1 as the succession of cold pool
    mergers and convective clusters propagate across the Ohio and
    Tennessee Valleys before finally fading as they lose steam moving
    into the wall of subsidence to the east. Scattered showers and
    storms will still be ongoing within the confines of the quasi-
    stationary front just due to continued low-level convergence and
    smaller mid-level perturbations ripping through the "atmospheric
    speedway" setup from southwest to northeast across the Southern
    Plains up through the Ohio Valley. Despite the expectation for
    lower rates during the early to mid-afternoon period on Thursday,
    any additional rainfall will act as a priming mechanism for what
    will transpire later in the evening as the second of 3 major
    surface waves takes shape across the Lower Mississippi to Ohio
    Valleys.

    The introduction of yet another stout LLJ pattern and attendant
    low-level moisture flux will yield another round of widespread
    convection within proxy to the surface front that will modestly
    undulate north to south within the confines of the aforementioned
    areas. The positioning of the front will make all the difference in
    the inevitable convective cell motions and subsequent QPF
    distribution, something that will be important when assessing where
    the worst flooding will occur as the grounds around much of the Low
    to Mid-Mississippi Valley and western Ohio Valley will be flood
    prone from the previous convective impacts. As of this time, there
    is ample agreement from global deterministic, as well as the
    relevant ensemble packages for an axis of heavy precipitation to
    impact a zone spanning central and northeastern Arkansas up through
    western Tennessee and Kentucky with the northern edge of the
    heavier precip aligned with the KY/OH schemaborder near the Ohio
    River basin. Additional amounts of 2-4" with locally up to 7" will
    impact those above zones, overlapping several areas that will have
    seen significant rainfall the previous 24 hrs. 01z NBM
    probabilities for rainfall amounts >6" over the D1-2 period are now
    upwards of 40-60% located from Pine Bluff, AR up through western
    KY between Paducah and Bowling Green. The area with the highest
    probabilities is across western TN, just north of the Memphis
    metro, but very close by the major metro center. Considering the
    elevated theta_e alignment and +2 to +3 deviation PWATs present,
    rainfall rates within matured convective cores will likely breach
    1"/hr with 2-3"/hr within reason, especially in the early evening
    when instability is highest and the LLJ is at peak intensity. The
    deep moist convergence regime will be well-established and cell
    motions will remain generally parallel to the frontal boundary
    thanks to the stagnant synoptic scale pattern in place. This will
    lead to significant, life-threatening flash flooding to impact a
    large area where FFG's will likely lean critically low.

    Considering all the above variables, there was no reason to remove
    the High Risk. Instead, the risk area was expanded to account for
    the latest probabilities and relevant run to run continuity from
    the pertinent NWP. A Moderate Risk spans from southwestern Arkansas
    to the northeast, just outside Cincinnati on the Kentucky side of
    the Ohio River. Memphis, Little Rock, Pine Bluff, Bowling Green,
    Louisville, and Evansville are all major urban corridors within the
    Moderate Risk with areas like Paducah and Union City the larger
    towns/metros embedded within the High Risk. The travel routes most
    susceptible to flash flooding will be along the I-69 and I-55
    interstates within western KY, western TN, and northeastern AR.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A LARGE
    PORTION OF THE LOWER AND MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS...

    20Z Update: The existing Moderate Risk area did not require many
    adjustments for this time period. Given the axis of heaviest
    rainfall is expected to be displaced about 100 miles northwest of
    the Day 2 event, this currently avoids the need for any High Risk
    areas at this time. However, if models trend farther southeast with
    the main QPF axis in future runs, it is possible a High Risk could
    eventually be needed for eastern portions of the current Moderate
    Risk area. Rainfall totals on the order of 3-6 inches, locally
    higher, are expected throughout most of the Moderate Risk area. The
    outer Marginal Risk area was extended to include northeast Ohio
    and also to near the Rio Grande in southwestern Texas. The previous
    forecast discussion is appended below for reference. /Hamrick ---------------------


    The final surface wave within the atmospheric parade across the
    Southern Plains to Mississippi Valley will show itself by late-
    Friday morning through the remainder of the period. This wave will
    likely be the strongest of the 3 allowing a much more amplified
    surface evolution that will shift the focus of heavier precip
    further northwest while also providing some vigor in the overall
    QPF distribution. The trend the past 24 hrs is for a zone of
    significant (3-6+") totals to be recognized across portions of the
    Southern Plains up through the Ozarks and Mid-Mississippi Valley
    of Missouri, spanning as far north as south-central Illinois. When
    assessing the theta_e environment, there is a noticeable push north
    of more modestly unstable air with the most pertinent area of
    available instability situated across southern MO down through AR,
    southeastern OK, and even northeastern TX. A sharp uptick in
    regional PWATs with deviations between +2.5-3.5 anomaly-wise are
    forecast within that zone correlating with a substantial rise in
    area convection blossoming late Friday afternoon, onward. This
    setup is fortunately further west compared to the previous periods,
    so the overlap of the heaviest rainfall is not anticipated to be
    as problematic as the previous period.

    Having said that, the pattern will yield high precip totals due to
    widespread convective activity, falling over some areas that will
    have seen appreciable rain, and over other areas that are more
    prone to flooding due to complex terrain situated over the Ozarks.
    The pattern is such that several areas from northeast of DFW up
    through IL will see rainfall amounts of 3-6" with locally higher
    beginning Friday afternoon with the heaviest rainfall likely to
    occur by the evening with the implementation of yet another LLJ
    structure thanks to the surface wave mentioned previously. Further
    to the west, another closed upper reflection across the Southwest
    U.S. will only entice greater upper forcing within a broad axis of
    difluence situated over the Plains. This setup is more privy to
    convection forming as far west as the Western Rolling Plains of TX
    to points east and northeast. Even there, modest 1-2" with locally
    higher totals are forecast in-of those zones. As a result, there
    was a general expansion of the Slight Risk further southwest into
    Central TX, an expansion of the Moderate Risk to include the
    eastern Red River Basin up through the southeast half of Missouri
    into southern Illinois, and a high-end Moderate impacting
    southeastern OK up through western AR and much of southern and
    southeast MO. The threat of widespread flash flooding is increasing
    for areas within the Moderate risk and aforementioned higher-end
    Moderate designation. Be sure to stay up to date for the latest
    changes as we move through the remainder of the week as this
    pattern remains very active and prone to significant life-
    threatening flash flood concerns.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!79OyDL98L6zh9khsXMtLm6gaezfcMQPzpS_MuVpdl656= W39VrsvOZlJj_D5_DwxV8dzZhTIjy3fDAKm5jWhXZi7P-fI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!79OyDL98L6zh9khsXMtLm6gaezfcMQPzpS_MuVpdl656= W39VrsvOZlJj_D5_DwxV8dzZhTIjy3fDAKm5jWhXYLg3u-U$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!79OyDL98L6zh9khsXMtLm6gaezfcMQPzpS_MuVpdl656= W39VrsvOZlJj_D5_DwxV8dzZhTIjy3fDAKm5jWhX3n0jN2I$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 3 08:11:35 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 030811
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    411 AM EDT Thu Apr 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER TO MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL CONTINUE=20
    TODAY WITH HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF THE LOWER=20
    MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S ONCE AGAIN...

    Significant rainfall over the past 12-24 hrs will only add to the
    favor of widespread flash flooding later this afternoon and evening
    as the next round of heavy rainfall occurs as the next surface wave
    rides up the quasi-stationary boundary in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Widespread 2-4" of rain with
    maxima between 5-6" has fallen this evening across a zone spanning
    from southern Arkansas up through western Tennessee and Kentucky
    leading to several flash flood warnings as the first surface wave
    lifts north. Some overturning of the atmosphere is anticipated by
    morning with areal theta_e's decreasing across areas north of the
    Ohio River and a tightening instability gradient positioned along
    and south of the quasi-stationary front nestled from southwest to
    northeast over the Mississippi Valley. Despite some limiting
    factors early on, small mid-level perturbations embedded within the
    mean flow will still cause some scattered light to moderate
    convective development through the morning and afternoon leading to
    a continuation of priming from the prior evening.=20

    The nocturnal period will once again become the main period of
    interest as the nocturnal LLJ kicks back in across the Deep South
    and banks into the stationary front bisecting the Mississippi and
    southern Ohio Valley. The same areas that saw the significant rain
    and flash flooding this evening will be hit once again with another
    wave of convection that will initiate across the ArklaTex and
    southern Arkansas and eventually move northeast as the flow aligns
    parallel to the stationary front. Additional precip totals of 2-4"
    with local to 6" will once again be in the cards for much of
    Arkansas, western Tennessee, and southwestern Kentucky which will
    ultimately put 48-hr totals between 4-8" with locally up to 10"
    during the time frame. Local FFG's are already very low after
    today's precip with much of the corridor spanning eastern AR up
    through north-central KY exhibiting 1 and 3-hr FFG intervals
    running below 1/1.5" respectively. 00z HREF is very much indicating
    that rainfall rates during the peak of diurnal convection will
    reside within that 1-2"/hr marker with FFG exceedance probabilities
    above 50% for the 1/3/6-hr intervals in place. Neighborhood
    probabilities for >3" total are between 40-60% across eastern AR
    with as high as 60-80% over northwest TN and southwestern KY. >5"
    neighborhood probs are running between 25-40% within the same
    corridor, backed up by EAS probs >2" sufficiently above 50% along
    the Mississippi north of Memphis to points northeast.=20

    Despite the overall output being slightly lower than what occurred
    this evening, the prescience has been set for significant flood=20
    potential given the already saturated soils, expected rates, and=20
    regional rivers running high from the previous period of rainfall.=20
    The previous High Risk inherited was generally maintained with=20
    small adjustments accounting for recent rainfall trends, updated=20
    FFG's, and encompassing elevated probabilities from both the hi-res
    and national ensemble blends. A Moderate Risk still in effect for=20
    a large area surrounding the High Risk in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley with a span that covers areas of southwest=20
    Arkansas up to as far northeast as Cincinnati.=20

    This is quickly becoming a high-end flash flood scenario with
    another day or two of rainfall expected on top of what has occurred
    and what will occur. If you lie within a flood plane or any area
    that is prone to flash flooding across Arkansas, western Tennessee,
    and western Kentucky, you will want to pay close attention and=20
    have a plan to seek higher ground, if possible.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A LARGE
    PORTION OF THE LOWER AND MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS...

    The previous synoptic scale forecast was relatively unchanged
    within the run to run assessment over the course of Friday into
    Saturday morning. The final surface wave within the atmospheric=20
    parade across the Southern Plains to Mississippi Valley will show=20
    itself by late- Friday morning through the remainder of the period.
    This wave will likely be the strongest of the 3 allowing a much=20
    more amplified surface evolution that will shift the focus of=20
    heavier precip further northwest while also providing some vigor in
    the overall QPF distribution. The trend the past 48 hrs is for a=20
    zone of significant (3-6+") totals to be recognized across portions
    of the Southern Plains up through the Ozarks and Mid-Mississippi=20
    Valley of Missouri, spanning as far north as south- central=20
    Illinois. When assessing the theta_e environment, there is a=20
    noticeable push north of more modestly unstable air with the most=20
    pertinent area of available instability situated across southern MO
    down through AR, southeastern OK, and even northeastern TX. A=20
    sharp uptick in regional PWATs with deviations between +3 to +4 anomaly-
    wise are forecast within that zone correlating with a substantial=20
    rise in area convection blossoming late Friday afternoon, onward.=20
    This setup is fortunately further west compared to the previous=20
    periods, so the overlap of the heaviest rainfall is not anticipated
    to be as problematic as the previous period.

    Having said that, the pattern will yield high precip totals due to
    widespread convective activity, falling over some areas that will
    have seen appreciable rain, and over other areas that are more
    prone to flooding due to complex terrain situated over the Ozarks.
    The pattern is such that several areas from east of DFW up through
    IL will see rainfall amounts of 3-6" with locally higher beginning
    Friday afternoon with the heaviest rainfall likely to occur by the
    evening with the implementation of yet another LLJ structure=20
    thanks to the surface wave mentioned previously. Further to the=20
    west, another closed upper reflection across the Southwest U.S.=20
    will only entice greater upper forcing within a broad axis of=20
    difluence situated over the Plains. This setup is more privy to=20
    convection forming as far west as the Western Rolling Plains of TX=20
    to points east and northeast. Even there, modest 1-2" with locally=20
    higher totals are forecast in-of those zones. The heaviest
    precipitation axis based off the latest NBM probabilities still has
    a significant footprint of at least 3" located near the Dallas=20
    metro and points just east (40-60%) to as high as 60-80% in a large
    area spanning the Red River of northeast TX up through much of
    western and northern AR, through the Ozarks of MO, finally reaching
    the Mississippi River south of St.Louis. Ensemble mean QPF output
    signals a massive area of at least 2" with urban centers like
    Dallas, Little Rock, St. Louis, and Springfield, MO all within a
    core of the heavy precip footprint.=20

    Considering the probabilistic output of the NBM, the consistency
    within guidance for a significant corridor of very heavy rainfall,
    and a well-defined axis of training precip potential, a broad
    Moderate Risk was maintained and even expanded to account for the
    expanse of likely flash flooding. A high-end Moderate is a likely
    tag for places within southeast OK up through western and northern
    AR through the Ozarks of Missouri as these areas will have the
    greatest threat of enhanced rates over top of either complex=20
    terrain or primed soils. An upgrade is plausible in future updates=20
    pending additional convective probability details.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025 - 12Z Sun Apr 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER TO MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOODING IS EXPECTED ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON
    THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING..

    The combination of intense right-entrance region jet dynamics,
    highly anomalous atmospheric moisture, and very saturated=20
    antecedent soil moisture will lead to another high impact flash=20
    flood forecast for Saturday afternoon through Sunday morning across
    the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley. This threat will extend=20
    further east as a cold front helps finally sweep the stagnant
    pattern out of the region, but not before another round of heavy
    rainfall inundates areas that will be sensitive to any appreciable
    rainfall.=20

    A stout 190-200kt upper jet located over the Great Lakes will lend
    to a pronounced upper ascent pattern situated over the Mississippi
    Valley during the period. At the surface, our quasi-stationary
    front that will linger through the course of several days will
    still be confined to similar areas that have been impacted by its
    presence in the days prior. Upper low located over the Southwest
    U.S. will begin to open up and eject eastward, becoming sheared on
    the northern edge due to an amplifying trough digging out of
    Canada. To the east, our Western Atlantic ridge that has provided a
    stalemate to any frontal progression moving east of the Mississippi
    will provide one last period of favorable low to mid-level
    convergence as the pattern evolves with the large trough to the
    west countering the ridge across the Southeast. In the middle of
    the atmospheric squeeze-play, elevated moisture presence and
    favorable instability will remain present to be activated with the
    addition of diurnal destabilization and increasingly favorable
    ascent to match. The combination will allow for a rapid development
    of widespread convection across the Missouri Valley with slow
    advancement eastward towards the Low to Mid-Mississippi Valley
    convergence point.=20

    This setup has trended prolific in the QPF realm of the forecast
    with very little deviation in all major deterministic at this
    juncture. An expanse of 3-6" with locally up to 8" of rainfall is
    forecast across a large portion of Arkansas extending east-
    northeast through far southeastern Missouri, all of western and
    central Tennessee and Kentucky, to as far north as the
    Ohio/Kentucky border along the Ohio River. Northwest Mississippi
    will also lie within the axis of heaviest precipitation leading to
    quite a large area of not only heavy precip, but significant
    overlap of areas that will have super saturated grounds that will
    struggle to maintain the ability to absorb more rainfall. This
    setup will yield a very dangerous scenario where widespread flash
    flooding with considerable and potentially catastrophic impacts
    would be favored. The agreement among all major NWP for substantial
    rainfall totals and projected hourly rates >1-2"/hr is a testament
    to the overall gravity of what is to come.=20

    In coordination with the local WFO's across Arkansas, Tennessee,
    and Kentucky...a High Risk area for excessive rainfall has been
    added over central and eastern AR, all of western TN and KY, far
    southeastern MO, and the southern edge of IN. Additional storm
    totals will bring multi-day amounts between 8-12" with some areas
    potentially reaching as high as 14" over the span of 5 days. A
    broad Moderate Risk spans the outer perimeter of the High Risk
    leading to several more areas prone to significant flash flood
    concerns due to the setup. This is becoming an increasingly
    life-threatening situation for areas of the Lower and Mid-
    Mississippi Valley region.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9jR6Da1huZkBCSM2nD1wk4av5dJyrftJ2Dz1DOuZs6zk= bH_Z-qOYBU6qswhxyFyTehTA85VavmRm5Y9NMTiSWks0jno$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9jR6Da1huZkBCSM2nD1wk4av5dJyrftJ2Dz1DOuZs6zk= bH_Z-qOYBU6qswhxyFyTehTA85VavmRm5Y9NMTiSB99LbJI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9jR6Da1huZkBCSM2nD1wk4av5dJyrftJ2Dz1DOuZs6zk= bH_Z-qOYBU6qswhxyFyTehTA85VavmRm5Y9NMTiSLgXpyjE$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 3 15:59:23 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 031559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Thu Apr 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER TO MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL CONTINUE=20
    TODAY WITH HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF THE LOWER=20
    MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S ONCE AGAIN...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The overall forecast philosophy is on track and only minor spatial
    adjustments have been made to categorical areas. The High Risk
    areas remains in place across portions of Arkansas, Tennessee, and
    Kentucky, where a nearly stationary frontal boundary should linger
    throughout the day and foster multile rounds of deep convection.
    12Z model QPFs suggest another 2-4 inches of rainfall generally
    from Little Rock northeastward through south-central Kentucky, with
    much of that rain falling on sensitive ground conditions (low to
    near-zero FFGs) from prior rainfall and flood impacts last night
    and this morning. Significant impacts remain possible, with the
    only lingering uncertainty for convective coverage tied to
    gradually rising geopotential heights from this afternoon onward.
    Little Rock metro was added to the High Risk area after
    consultation with WFO LZK, with ongoing high-water impacts
    continuing as of this discussion issuance.

    The Slight Risk area was expanded eastward into more of West
    Virginia, southeastern Kentucky, and Middle Tennessee for this
    outlook. Portions of West Virginia have experienced impacts from
    heavy rainfall already this morning, and an extensive fetch of
    moderate to heavy rainfall is expected to persist much of the day
    given renewed convective development across the Mid-South per
    latest radar mosaic imagery.

    Lastly, Marginal risk areas were maintained across 1) west Texas
    for overnight redevelopment of convection in areas that experienced
    heavy rainfall this morning and 2) expanded into the
    Philadelphia/New York City and adjacent areas for banded/training
    convective potential in the 08-12Z timeframe. A quick 0.5-1.25 inch
    of rainfall is possible across urban areas of the I-95 corridor,
    which could pose a few runoff issues.

    See the previous discussion below for more information.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Significant rainfall over the past 12-24 hrs will only add to the
    favor of widespread flash flooding later this afternoon and evening
    as the next round of heavy rainfall occurs as the next surface wave
    rides up the quasi-stationary boundary in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Widespread 2-4" of rain with
    maxima between 5-6" has fallen this evening across a zone spanning
    from southern Arkansas up through western Tennessee and Kentucky
    leading to several flash flood warnings as the first surface wave
    lifts north. Some overturning of the atmosphere is anticipated by
    morning with areal theta_e's decreasing across areas north of the
    Ohio River and a tightening instability gradient positioned along
    and south of the quasi-stationary front nestled from southwest to
    northeast over the Mississippi Valley. Despite some limiting
    factors early on, small mid-level perturbations embedded within the
    mean flow will still cause some scattered light to moderate
    convective development through the morning and afternoon leading to
    a continuation of priming from the prior evening.=20

    The nocturnal period will once again become the main period of
    interest as the nocturnal LLJ kicks back in across the Deep South
    and banks into the stationary front bisecting the Mississippi and
    southern Ohio Valley. The same areas that saw the significant rain
    and flash flooding this evening will be hit once again with another
    wave of convection that will initiate across the ArklaTex and
    southern Arkansas and eventually move northeast as the flow aligns
    parallel to the stationary front. Additional precip totals of 2-4"
    with local to 6" will once again be in the cards for much of
    Arkansas, western Tennessee, and southwestern Kentucky which will
    ultimately put 48-hr totals between 4-8" with locally up to 10"
    during the time frame. Local FFG's are already very low after
    today's precip with much of the corridor spanning eastern AR up
    through north-central KY exhibiting 1 and 3-hr FFG intervals
    running below 1/1.5" respectively. 00z HREF is very much indicating
    that rainfall rates during the peak of diurnal convection will
    reside within that 1-2"/hr marker with FFG exceedance probabilities
    above 50% for the 1/3/6-hr intervals in place. Neighborhood
    probabilities for >3" total are between 40-60% across eastern AR
    with as high as 60-80% over northwest TN and southwestern KY. >5"
    neighborhood probs are running between 25-40% within the same
    corridor, backed up by EAS probs >2" sufficiently above 50% along
    the Mississippi north of Memphis to points northeast.=20

    Despite the overall output being slightly lower than what occurred
    this evening, the prescience has been set for significant flood=20
    potential given the already saturated soils, expected rates, and=20
    regional rivers running high from the previous period of rainfall.=20
    The previous High Risk inherited was generally maintained with=20
    small adjustments accounting for recent rainfall trends, updated=20
    FFG's, and encompassing elevated probabilities from both the hi-res
    and national ensemble blends. A Moderate Risk still in effect for=20
    a large area surrounding the High Risk in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley with a span that covers areas of southwest=20
    Arkansas up to as far northeast as Cincinnati.=20

    This is quickly becoming a high-end flash flood scenario with
    another day or two of rainfall expected on top of what has occurred
    and what will occur. If you lie within a flood plane or any area
    that is prone to flash flooding across Arkansas, western Tennessee,
    and western Kentucky, you will want to pay close attention and=20
    have a plan to seek higher ground, if possible.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A LARGE
    PORTION OF THE LOWER AND MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS...

    The previous synoptic scale forecast was relatively unchanged
    within the run to run assessment over the course of Friday into
    Saturday morning. The final surface wave within the atmospheric=20
    parade across the Southern Plains to Mississippi Valley will show=20
    itself by late- Friday morning through the remainder of the period.
    This wave will likely be the strongest of the 3 allowing a much=20
    more amplified surface evolution that will shift the focus of=20
    heavier precip further northwest while also providing some vigor in
    the overall QPF distribution. The trend the past 48 hrs is for a=20
    zone of significant (3-6+") totals to be recognized across portions
    of the Southern Plains up through the Ozarks and Mid-Mississippi=20
    Valley of Missouri, spanning as far north as south- central=20
    Illinois. When assessing the theta_e environment, there is a=20
    noticeable push north of more modestly unstable air with the most=20
    pertinent area of available instability situated across southern MO
    down through AR, southeastern OK, and even northeastern TX. A=20
    sharp uptick in regional PWATs with deviations between +3 to +4 anomaly-
    wise are forecast within that zone correlating with a substantial=20
    rise in area convection blossoming late Friday afternoon, onward.=20
    This setup is fortunately further west compared to the previous=20
    periods, so the overlap of the heaviest rainfall is not anticipated
    to be as problematic as the previous period.

    Having said that, the pattern will yield high precip totals due to
    widespread convective activity, falling over some areas that will
    have seen appreciable rain, and over other areas that are more
    prone to flooding due to complex terrain situated over the Ozarks.
    The pattern is such that several areas from east of DFW up through
    IL will see rainfall amounts of 3-6" with locally higher beginning
    Friday afternoon with the heaviest rainfall likely to occur by the
    evening with the implementation of yet another LLJ structure=20
    thanks to the surface wave mentioned previously. Further to the=20
    west, another closed upper reflection across the Southwest U.S.=20
    will only entice greater upper forcing within a broad axis of=20
    difluence situated over the Plains. This setup is more privy to=20
    convection forming as far west as the Western Rolling Plains of TX=20
    to points east and northeast. Even there, modest 1-2" with locally=20
    higher totals are forecast in-of those zones. The heaviest
    precipitation axis based off the latest NBM probabilities still has
    a significant footprint of at least 3" located near the Dallas=20
    metro and points just east (40-60%) to as high as 60-80% in a large
    area spanning the Red River of northeast TX up through much of
    western and northern AR, through the Ozarks of MO, finally reaching
    the Mississippi River south of St.Louis. Ensemble mean QPF output
    signals a massive area of at least 2" with urban centers like
    Dallas, Little Rock, St. Louis, and Springfield, MO all within a
    core of the heavy precip footprint.=20

    Considering the probabilistic output of the NBM, the consistency
    within guidance for a significant corridor of very heavy rainfall,
    and a well-defined axis of training precip potential, a broad
    Moderate Risk was maintained and even expanded to account for the
    expanse of likely flash flooding. A high-end Moderate is a likely
    tag for places within southeast OK up through western and northern
    AR through the Ozarks of Missouri as these areas will have the
    greatest threat of enhanced rates over top of either complex=20
    terrain or primed soils. An upgrade is plausible in future updates=20
    pending additional convective probability details.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025 - 12Z Sun Apr 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER TO MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOODING IS EXPECTED ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON
    THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING..

    The combination of intense right-entrance region jet dynamics,
    highly anomalous atmospheric moisture, and very saturated=20
    antecedent soil moisture will lead to another high impact flash=20
    flood forecast for Saturday afternoon through Sunday morning across
    the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley. This threat will extend=20
    further east as a cold front helps finally sweep the stagnant
    pattern out of the region, but not before another round of heavy
    rainfall inundates areas that will be sensitive to any appreciable
    rainfall.=20

    A stout 190-200kt upper jet located over the Great Lakes will lend
    to a pronounced upper ascent pattern situated over the Mississippi
    Valley during the period. At the surface, our quasi-stationary
    front that will linger through the course of several days will
    still be confined to similar areas that have been impacted by its
    presence in the days prior. Upper low located over the Southwest
    U.S. will begin to open up and eject eastward, becoming sheared on
    the northern edge due to an amplifying trough digging out of
    Canada. To the east, our Western Atlantic ridge that has provided a
    stalemate to any frontal progression moving east of the Mississippi
    will provide one last period of favorable low to mid-level
    convergence as the pattern evolves with the large trough to the
    west countering the ridge across the Southeast. In the middle of
    the atmospheric squeeze-play, elevated moisture presence and
    favorable instability will remain present to be activated with the
    addition of diurnal destabilization and increasingly favorable
    ascent to match. The combination will allow for a rapid development
    of widespread convection across the Missouri Valley with slow
    advancement eastward towards the Low to Mid-Mississippi Valley
    convergence point.=20

    This setup has trended prolific in the QPF realm of the forecast
    with very little deviation in all major deterministic at this
    juncture. An expanse of 3-6" with locally up to 8" of rainfall is
    forecast across a large portion of Arkansas extending east-
    northeast through far southeastern Missouri, all of western and
    central Tennessee and Kentucky, to as far north as the
    Ohio/Kentucky border along the Ohio River. Northwest Mississippi
    will also lie within the axis of heaviest precipitation leading to
    quite a large area of not only heavy precip, but significant
    overlap of areas that will have super saturated grounds that will
    struggle to maintain the ability to absorb more rainfall. This
    setup will yield a very dangerous scenario where widespread flash
    flooding with considerable and potentially catastrophic impacts
    would be favored. The agreement among all major NWP for substantial
    rainfall totals and projected hourly rates >1-2"/hr is a testament
    to the overall gravity of what is to come.=20

    In coordination with the local WFO's across Arkansas, Tennessee,
    and Kentucky...a High Risk area for excessive rainfall has been
    added over central and eastern AR, all of western TN and KY, far
    southeastern MO, and the southern edge of IN. Additional storm
    totals will bring multi-day amounts between 8-12" with some areas
    potentially reaching as high as 14" over the span of 5 days. A
    broad Moderate Risk spans the outer perimeter of the High Risk
    leading to several more areas prone to significant flash flood
    concerns due to the setup. This is becoming an increasingly
    life-threatening situation for areas of the Lower and Mid-
    Mississippi Valley region.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ava2AG2ozS1lto_2mjdmR-xJmpcd-O2IHdbYfSRVMPg= wOuOhKi6npRA5bhSD3XCsUcV298yZOC5ETMmyGiSw32pFP4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ava2AG2ozS1lto_2mjdmR-xJmpcd-O2IHdbYfSRVMPg= wOuOhKi6npRA5bhSD3XCsUcV298yZOC5ETMmyGiSex_vf1s$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ava2AG2ozS1lto_2mjdmR-xJmpcd-O2IHdbYfSRVMPg= wOuOhKi6npRA5bhSD3XCsUcV298yZOC5ETMmyGiScNyH5Uw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 3 19:10:46 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 031909
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    309 PM EDT Thu Apr 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER TO MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL CONTINUE=20
    TODAY WITH HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF THE LOWER=20
    MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S ONCE AGAIN...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The overall forecast philosophy is on track and only minor spatial
    adjustments have been made to categorical areas. The High Risk
    areas remains in place across portions of Arkansas, Tennessee, and
    Kentucky, where a nearly stationary frontal boundary should linger
    throughout the day and foster multile rounds of deep convection.
    12Z model QPFs suggest another 2-4 inches of rainfall generally
    from Little Rock northeastward through south-central Kentucky, with
    much of that rain falling on sensitive ground conditions (low to
    near-zero FFGs) from prior rainfall and flood impacts last night
    and this morning. Significant impacts remain possible, with the
    only lingering uncertainty for convective coverage tied to
    gradually rising geopotential heights from this afternoon onward.
    Little Rock metro was added to the High Risk area after
    consultation with WFO LZK, with ongoing high-water impacts
    continuing as of this discussion issuance.

    The Slight Risk area was expanded eastward into more of West
    Virginia, southeastern Kentucky, and Middle Tennessee for this
    outlook. Portions of West Virginia have experienced impacts from
    heavy rainfall already this morning, and an extensive fetch of
    moderate to heavy rainfall is expected to persist much of the day
    given renewed convective development across the Mid-South per
    latest radar mosaic imagery.

    Lastly, Marginal risk areas were maintained across 1) west Texas
    for overnight redevelopment of convection in areas that experienced
    heavy rainfall this morning and 2) expanded into the
    Philadelphia/New York City and adjacent areas for banded/training
    convective potential in the 08-12Z timeframe. A quick 0.5-1.25 inch
    of rainfall is possible across urban areas of the I-95 corridor,
    which could pose a few runoff issues.

    See the previous discussion below for more information.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Significant rainfall over the past 12-24 hrs will only add to the
    favor of widespread flash flooding later this afternoon and evening
    as the next round of heavy rainfall occurs as the next surface wave
    rides up the quasi-stationary boundary in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Widespread 2-4" of rain with
    maxima between 5-6" has fallen this evening across a zone spanning
    from southern Arkansas up through western Tennessee and Kentucky
    leading to several flash flood warnings as the first surface wave
    lifts north. Some overturning of the atmosphere is anticipated by
    morning with areal theta_e's decreasing across areas north of the
    Ohio River and a tightening instability gradient positioned along
    and south of the quasi-stationary front nestled from southwest to
    northeast over the Mississippi Valley. Despite some limiting
    factors early on, small mid-level perturbations embedded within the
    mean flow will still cause some scattered light to moderate
    convective development through the morning and afternoon leading to
    a continuation of priming from the prior evening.=20

    The nocturnal period will once again become the main period of
    interest as the nocturnal LLJ kicks back in across the Deep South
    and banks into the stationary front bisecting the Mississippi and
    southern Ohio Valley. The same areas that saw the significant rain
    and flash flooding this evening will be hit once again with another
    wave of convection that will initiate across the ArklaTex and
    southern Arkansas and eventually move northeast as the flow aligns
    parallel to the stationary front. Additional precip totals of 2-4"
    with local to 6" will once again be in the cards for much of
    Arkansas, western Tennessee, and southwestern Kentucky which will
    ultimately put 48-hr totals between 4-8" with locally up to 10"
    during the time frame. Local FFG's are already very low after
    today's precip with much of the corridor spanning eastern AR up
    through north-central KY exhibiting 1 and 3-hr FFG intervals
    running below 1/1.5" respectively. 00z HREF is very much indicating
    that rainfall rates during the peak of diurnal convection will
    reside within that 1-2"/hr marker with FFG exceedance probabilities
    above 50% for the 1/3/6-hr intervals in place. Neighborhood
    probabilities for >3" total are between 40-60% across eastern AR
    with as high as 60-80% over northwest TN and southwestern KY. >5"
    neighborhood probs are running between 25-40% within the same
    corridor, backed up by EAS probs >2" sufficiently above 50% along
    the Mississippi north of Memphis to points northeast.=20

    Despite the overall output being slightly lower than what occurred
    this evening, the prescience has been set for significant flood=20
    potential given the already saturated soils, expected rates, and=20
    regional rivers running high from the previous period of rainfall.=20
    The previous High Risk inherited was generally maintained with=20
    small adjustments accounting for recent rainfall trends, updated=20
    FFG's, and encompassing elevated probabilities from both the hi-res
    and national ensemble blends. A Moderate Risk still in effect for=20
    a large area surrounding the High Risk in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley with a span that covers areas of southwest=20
    Arkansas up to as far northeast as Cincinnati.=20

    This is quickly becoming a high-end flash flood scenario with
    another day or two of rainfall expected on top of what has occurred
    and what will occur. If you lie within a flood plane or any area
    that is prone to flash flooding across Arkansas, western Tennessee,
    and western Kentucky, you will want to pay close attention and=20
    have a plan to seek higher ground, if possible.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE OZARKS AND MID-SOUTH...

    ...LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOODING EXPECTED FRIDAY AFTERNOON
    THROUGH EARLY SATURDAY...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    Both global models and CAMs have come into agreement with
    development of at least one north-northeast to south-southwest
    oriented band of convection located generally from the ArkLaTex
    into southeastern Missouri. Convection should be oriented generally
    parallel to fast, meridionally oriented flow aloft, with abundant=20
    moisture, low- level shear, and instability profiles all favoring=20
    abundant rainfall (potentially exceeding 10 inches on a localized=20
    basis). These totals will fall on areas that will have experienced=20
    2-6 inches of rainfall leading up to the forecast period, with wet=20 soils/terrain variations all suggestive of a potentially widespread
    and significant flash flood event.=20

    Expansion of Moderate Risk (and attendant probabilities) was
    considered across more of Illinois and central Indiana, but pre-
    existing dry conditions and uncertainty about duration of
    precipitation were mitigating factors for a higher flash flood
    threat. This region will be evaluated for a possible upgrade in
    later outlooks.

    Outside of these changes, the overall outlook was on track with an
    eventual broad axis of heavy precipitation expected from
    north/central Texas northeastward to Ohio/Pennsylvania.

    See the previous forecast discussion below for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The previous synoptic scale forecast was relatively unchanged
    within the run to run assessment over the course of Friday into
    Saturday morning. The final surface wave within the atmospheric=20
    parade across the Southern Plains to Mississippi Valley will show=20
    itself by late- Friday morning through the remainder of the period.
    This wave will likely be the strongest of the 3 allowing a much=20
    more amplified surface evolution that will shift the focus of=20
    heavier precip further northwest while also providing some vigor in
    the overall QPF distribution. The trend the past 48 hrs is for a=20
    zone of significant (3-6+") totals to be recognized across portions
    of the Southern Plains up through the Ozarks and Mid-Mississippi=20
    Valley of Missouri, spanning as far north as south- central=20
    Illinois. When assessing the theta_e environment, there is a=20
    noticeable push north of more modestly unstable air with the most=20
    pertinent area of available instability situated across southern MO
    down through AR, southeastern OK, and even northeastern TX. A=20
    sharp uptick in regional PWATs with deviations between +3 to +4 anomaly-
    wise are forecast within that zone correlating with a substantial=20
    rise in area convection blossoming late Friday afternoon, onward.=20
    This setup is fortunately further west compared to the previous=20
    periods, so the overlap of the heaviest rainfall is not anticipated
    to be as problematic as the previous period.

    Having said that, the pattern will yield high precip totals due to
    widespread convective activity, falling over some areas that will
    have seen appreciable rain, and over other areas that are more
    prone to flooding due to complex terrain situated over the Ozarks.
    The pattern is such that several areas from east of DFW up through
    IL will see rainfall amounts of 3-6" with locally higher beginning
    Friday afternoon with the heaviest rainfall likely to occur by the
    evening with the implementation of yet another LLJ structure=20
    thanks to the surface wave mentioned previously. Further to the=20
    west, another closed upper reflection across the Southwest U.S.=20
    will only entice greater upper forcing within a broad axis of=20
    difluence situated over the Plains. This setup is more privy to=20
    convection forming as far west as the Western Rolling Plains of TX=20
    to points east and northeast. Even there, modest 1-2" with locally=20
    higher totals are forecast in-of those zones. The heaviest
    precipitation axis based off the latest NBM probabilities still has
    a significant footprint of at least 3" located near the Dallas=20
    metro and points just east (40-60%) to as high as 60-80% in a large
    area spanning the Red River of northeast TX up through much of
    western and northern AR, through the Ozarks of MO, finally reaching
    the Mississippi River south of St.Louis. Ensemble mean QPF output
    signals a massive area of at least 2" with urban centers like
    Dallas, Little Rock, St. Louis, and Springfield, MO all within a
    core of the heavy precip footprint.=20

    Considering the probabilistic output of the NBM, the consistency
    within guidance for a significant corridor of very heavy rainfall,
    and a well-defined axis of training precip potential, a broad
    Moderate Risk was maintained and even expanded to account for the
    expanse of likely flash flooding. A high-end Moderate is a likely
    tag for places within southeast OK up through western and northern
    AR through the Ozarks of Missouri as these areas will have the
    greatest threat of enhanced rates over top of either complex=20
    terrain or primed soils. An upgrade is plausible in future updates=20
    pending additional convective probability details.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025 - 12Z Sun Apr 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    OZARKS AND LOWER TO MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS WITH MAJOR FLOODING=20
    EXPECTED...

    ..LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOODING IS EXPECTED ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON
    THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING..

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    Substantial changes were made to the ongoing outlook with the
    expectation that deep, slow-moving and intense convection would
    still be ongoing across Arkansas at 12Z Saturday. The High Risk
    expansion in Arkansas is essentially a continuation of the=20
    significant flash flood threat from the D2/Fri forecast period. South-soutwesterly flow aloft at the start of the period is
    expected to continue fostering a very slow eastward progression of
    convection, while 1.75+ PW values,, 1500+ J/kg MLCAPE, and
    convective training/mergers should continue to foster high to
    locally extreme rain rates and FFG exceedence on a widespread
    basis. At least 3-5 inch rainfall totals are expected, with locally
    higher amounts possible.

    Eventually, veering flow aloft will result in a faster forward
    speed of any convective complex(es) toward the Ohio and Tennessee
    River Valleys during the latter half of the forecast period. As=20
    this occurs, low FFGs are expected to remain from abundant=20
    antecedent rainfall, and it is very likely that ground conditions
    will not have completely recovered from abundant antecedent
    rainfall. In this scenario, widespread significant impacts are=20
    expected with both ongoing and newer instances of flash flooding.

    Additional details are available in the previous discussion below.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The combination of intense right-entrance region jet dynamics,
    highly anomalous atmospheric moisture, and very saturated=20
    antecedent soil moisture will lead to another high impact flash=20
    flood forecast for Saturday afternoon through Sunday morning across
    the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley. This threat will extend=20
    further east as a cold front helps finally sweep the stagnant
    pattern out of the region, but not before another round of heavy
    rainfall inundates areas that will be sensitive to any appreciable
    rainfall.=20

    A stout 190-200kt upper jet located over the Great Lakes will lend
    to a pronounced upper ascent pattern situated over the Mississippi
    Valley during the period. At the surface, our quasi-stationary
    front that will linger through the course of several days will
    still be confined to similar areas that have been impacted by its
    presence in the days prior. Upper low located over the Southwest
    U.S. will begin to open up and eject eastward, becoming sheared on
    the northern edge due to an amplifying trough digging out of
    Canada. To the east, our Western Atlantic ridge that has provided a
    stalemate to any frontal progression moving east of the Mississippi
    will provide one last period of favorable low to mid-level
    convergence as the pattern evolves with the large trough to the
    west countering the ridge across the Southeast. In the middle of
    the atmospheric squeeze-play, elevated moisture presence and
    favorable instability will remain present to be activated with the
    addition of diurnal destabilization and increasingly favorable
    ascent to match. The combination will allow for a rapid development
    of widespread convection across the Missouri Valley with slow
    advancement eastward towards the Low to Mid-Mississippi Valley
    convergence point.=20

    This setup has trended prolific in the QPF realm of the forecast
    with very little deviation in all major deterministic at this
    juncture. An expanse of 3-6" with locally up to 8" of rainfall is
    forecast across a large portion of Arkansas extending east-
    northeast through far southeastern Missouri, all of western and
    central Tennessee and Kentucky, to as far north as the
    Ohio/Kentucky border along the Ohio River. Northwest Mississippi
    will also lie within the axis of heaviest precipitation leading to
    quite a large area of not only heavy precip, but significant
    overlap of areas that will have super saturated grounds that will
    struggle to maintain the ability to absorb more rainfall. This
    setup will yield a very dangerous scenario where widespread flash
    flooding with considerable and potentially catastrophic impacts
    would be favored. The agreement among all major NWP for substantial
    rainfall totals and projected hourly rates >1-2"/hr is a testament
    to the overall gravity of what is to come.=20

    In coordination with the local WFO's across Arkansas, Tennessee,
    and Kentucky...a High Risk area for excessive rainfall has been
    added over central and eastern AR, all of western TN and KY, far
    southeastern MO, and the southern edge of IN. Additional storm
    totals will bring multi-day amounts between 8-12" with some areas
    potentially reaching as high as 14" over the span of 5 days. A
    broad Moderate Risk spans the outer perimeter of the High Risk
    leading to several more areas prone to significant flash flood
    concerns due to the setup. This is becoming an increasingly
    life-threatening situation for areas of the Lower and Mid-
    Mississippi Valley region.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!51lNKwxuTZ6SFJiX-f8x8TOr8GgWSFBPvWSg0BKeZ486= _PawYOGrjweINSKglRznS8Q5z3l5KnWeEbh6b3dUpd-3SD0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!51lNKwxuTZ6SFJiX-f8x8TOr8GgWSFBPvWSg0BKeZ486= _PawYOGrjweINSKglRznS8Q5z3l5KnWeEbh6b3dUJMxnoHc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!51lNKwxuTZ6SFJiX-f8x8TOr8GgWSFBPvWSg0BKeZ486= _PawYOGrjweINSKglRznS8Q5z3l5KnWeEbh6b3dU1yJSncc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 4 00:19:22 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 040019
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    819 PM EDT Thu Apr 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER TO MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL CONTINUE
    TODAY WITH HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S ONCE AGAIN...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The overall forecast philosophy is on track and only minor spatial
    adjustments have been made to categorical areas. The High Risk
    areas remains in place across portions of Arkansas, Tennessee, and
    Kentucky, where a nearly stationary frontal boundary should linger
    throughout the day and foster multile rounds of deep convection.
    12Z model QPFs suggest another 2-4 inches of rainfall generally
    from Little Rock northeastward through south-central Kentucky, with
    much of that rain falling on sensitive ground conditions (low to
    near-zero FFGs) from prior rainfall and flood impacts last night
    and this morning. Significant impacts remain possible, with the
    only lingering uncertainty for convective coverage tied to
    gradually rising geopotential heights from this afternoon onward.
    Little Rock metro was added to the High Risk area after
    consultation with WFO LZK, with ongoing high-water impacts
    continuing as of this discussion issuance.

    The Slight Risk area was expanded eastward into more of West
    Virginia, southeastern Kentucky, and Middle Tennessee for this
    outlook. Portions of West Virginia have experienced impacts from
    heavy rainfall already this morning, and an extensive fetch of
    moderate to heavy rainfall is expected to persist much of the day
    given renewed convective development across the Mid-South per
    latest radar mosaic imagery.

    Lastly, Marginal risk areas were maintained across 1) west Texas
    for overnight redevelopment of convection in areas that experienced
    heavy rainfall this morning and 2) expanded into the
    Philadelphia/New York City and adjacent areas for banded/training
    convective potential in the 08-12Z timeframe. A quick 0.5-1.25 inch
    of rainfall is possible across urban areas of the I-95 corridor,
    which could pose a few runoff issues.

    See the previous discussion below for more information.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Significant rainfall over the past 12-24 hrs will only add to the
    favor of widespread flash flooding later this afternoon and evening
    as the next round of heavy rainfall occurs as the next surface wave
    rides up the quasi-stationary boundary in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Widespread 2-4" of rain with
    maxima between 5-6" has fallen this evening across a zone spanning
    from southern Arkansas up through western Tennessee and Kentucky
    leading to several flash flood warnings as the first surface wave
    lifts north. Some overturning of the atmosphere is anticipated by
    morning with areal theta_e's decreasing across areas north of the
    Ohio River and a tightening instability gradient positioned along
    and south of the quasi-stationary front nestled from southwest to
    northeast over the Mississippi Valley. Despite some limiting
    factors early on, small mid-level perturbations embedded within the
    mean flow will still cause some scattered light to moderate
    convective development through the morning and afternoon leading to
    a continuation of priming from the prior evening.

    The nocturnal period will once again become the main period of
    interest as the nocturnal LLJ kicks back in across the Deep South
    and banks into the stationary front bisecting the Mississippi and
    southern Ohio Valley. The same areas that saw the significant rain
    and flash flooding this evening will be hit once again with another
    wave of convection that will initiate across the ArklaTex and
    southern Arkansas and eventually move northeast as the flow aligns
    parallel to the stationary front. Additional precip totals of 2-4"
    with local to 6" will once again be in the cards for much of
    Arkansas, western Tennessee, and southwestern Kentucky which will
    ultimately put 48-hr totals between 4-8" with locally up to 10"
    during the time frame. Local FFG's are already very low after
    today's precip with much of the corridor spanning eastern AR up
    through north-central KY exhibiting 1 and 3-hr FFG intervals
    running below 1/1.5" respectively. 00z HREF is very much indicating
    that rainfall rates during the peak of diurnal convection will
    reside within that 1-2"/hr marker with FFG exceedance probabilities
    above 50% for the 1/3/6-hr intervals in place. Neighborhood
    probabilities for >3" total are between 40-60% across eastern AR
    with as high as 60-80% over northwest TN and southwestern KY. >5"
    neighborhood probs are running between 25-40% within the same
    corridor, backed up by EAS probs >2" sufficiently above 50% along
    the Mississippi north of Memphis to points northeast.

    Despite the overall output being slightly lower than what occurred
    this evening, the prescience has been set for significant flood
    potential given the already saturated soils, expected rates, and
    regional rivers running high from the previous period of rainfall.
    The previous High Risk inherited was generally maintained with
    small adjustments accounting for recent rainfall trends, updated
    FFG's, and encompassing elevated probabilities from both the hi-res
    and national ensemble blends. A Moderate Risk still in effect for
    a large area surrounding the High Risk in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley with a span that covers areas of southwest
    Arkansas up to as far northeast as Cincinnati.

    This is quickly becoming a high-end flash flood scenario with
    another day or two of rainfall expected on top of what has occurred
    and what will occur. If you lie within a flood plane or any area
    that is prone to flash flooding across Arkansas, western Tennessee,
    and western Kentucky, you will want to pay close attention and
    have a plan to seek higher ground, if possible.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025 - 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE OZARKS AND MID-SOUTH...

    ...LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOODING EXPECTED FRIDAY AFTERNOON
    THROUGH EARLY SATURDAY...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    Both global models and CAMs have come into agreement with
    development of at least one north-northeast to south-southwest
    oriented band of convection located generally from the ArkLaTex
    into southeastern Missouri. Convection should be oriented generally
    parallel to fast, meridionally oriented flow aloft, with abundant
    moisture, low- level shear, and instability profiles all favoring
    abundant rainfall (potentially exceeding 10 inches on a localized
    basis). These totals will fall on areas that will have experienced
    2-6 inches of rainfall leading up to the forecast period, with wet soils/terrain variations all suggestive of a potentially widespread
    and significant flash flood event.

    Expansion of Moderate Risk (and attendant probabilities) was
    considered across more of Illinois and central Indiana, but pre-
    existing dry conditions and uncertainty about duration of
    precipitation were mitigating factors for a higher flash flood
    threat. This region will be evaluated for a possible upgrade in
    later outlooks.

    Outside of these changes, the overall outlook was on track with an
    eventual broad axis of heavy precipitation expected from
    north/central Texas northeastward to Ohio/Pennsylvania.

    See the previous forecast discussion below for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The previous synoptic scale forecast was relatively unchanged
    within the run to run assessment over the course of Friday into
    Saturday morning. The final surface wave within the atmospheric
    parade across the Southern Plains to Mississippi Valley will show
    itself by late- Friday morning through the remainder of the period.
    This wave will likely be the strongest of the 3 allowing a much
    more amplified surface evolution that will shift the focus of
    heavier precip further northwest while also providing some vigor in
    the overall QPF distribution. The trend the past 48 hrs is for a
    zone of significant (3-6+") totals to be recognized across portions
    of the Southern Plains up through the Ozarks and Mid-Mississippi
    Valley of Missouri, spanning as far north as south- central
    Illinois. When assessing the theta_e environment, there is a
    noticeable push north of more modestly unstable air with the most
    pertinent area of available instability situated across southern MO
    down through AR, southeastern OK, and even northeastern TX. A
    sharp uptick in regional PWATs with deviations between +3 to +4 anomaly-
    wise are forecast within that zone correlating with a substantial
    rise in area convection blossoming late Friday afternoon, onward.
    This setup is fortunately further west compared to the previous
    periods, so the overlap of the heaviest rainfall is not anticipated
    to be as problematic as the previous period.

    Having said that, the pattern will yield high precip totals due to
    widespread convective activity, falling over some areas that will
    have seen appreciable rain, and over other areas that are more
    prone to flooding due to complex terrain situated over the Ozarks.
    The pattern is such that several areas from east of DFW up through
    IL will see rainfall amounts of 3-6" with locally higher beginning
    Friday afternoon with the heaviest rainfall likely to occur by the
    evening with the implementation of yet another LLJ structure
    thanks to the surface wave mentioned previously. Further to the
    west, another closed upper reflection across the Southwest U.S.
    will only entice greater upper forcing within a broad axis of
    difluence situated over the Plains. This setup is more privy to
    convection forming as far west as the Western Rolling Plains of TX
    to points east and northeast. Even there, modest 1-2" with locally
    higher totals are forecast in-of those zones. The heaviest
    precipitation axis based off the latest NBM probabilities still has
    a significant footprint of at least 3" located near the Dallas
    metro and points just east (40-60%) to as high as 60-80% in a large
    area spanning the Red River of northeast TX up through much of
    western and northern AR, through the Ozarks of MO, finally reaching
    the Mississippi River south of St.Louis. Ensemble mean QPF output
    signals a massive area of at least 2" with urban centers like
    Dallas, Little Rock, St. Louis, and Springfield, MO all within a
    core of the heavy precip footprint.

    Considering the probabilistic output of the NBM, the consistency
    within guidance for a significant corridor of very heavy rainfall,
    and a well-defined axis of training precip potential, a broad
    Moderate Risk was maintained and even expanded to account for the
    expanse of likely flash flooding. A high-end Moderate is a likely
    tag for places within southeast OK up through western and northern
    AR through the Ozarks of Missouri as these areas will have the
    greatest threat of enhanced rates over top of either complex
    terrain or primed soils. An upgrade is plausible in future updates
    pending additional convective probability details.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Apr 05 2025 - 12Z Sun Apr 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    OZARKS AND LOWER TO MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS WITH MAJOR FLOODING
    EXPECTED...

    ..LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOODING IS EXPECTED ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON
    THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING..

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    Substantial changes were made to the ongoing outlook with the
    expectation that deep, slow-moving and intense convection would
    still be ongoing across Arkansas at 12Z Saturday. The High Risk
    expansion in Arkansas is essentially a continuation of the
    significant flash flood threat from the D2/Fri forecast period. South-soutwesterly flow aloft at the start of the period is
    expected to continue fostering a very slow eastward progression of
    convection, while 1.75+ PW values,, 1500+ J/kg MLCAPE, and
    convective training/mergers should continue to foster high to
    locally extreme rain rates and FFG exceedence on a widespread
    basis. At least 3-5 inch rainfall totals are expected, with locally
    higher amounts possible.

    Eventually, veering flow aloft will result in a faster forward
    speed of any convective complex(es) toward the Ohio and Tennessee
    River Valleys during the latter half of the forecast period. As
    this occurs, low FFGs are expected to remain from abundant
    antecedent rainfall, and it is very likely that ground conditions
    will not have completely recovered from abundant antecedent
    rainfall. In this scenario, widespread significant impacts are
    expected with both ongoing and newer instances of flash flooding.

    Additional details are available in the previous discussion below.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The combination of intense right-entrance region jet dynamics,
    highly anomalous atmospheric moisture, and very saturated
    antecedent soil moisture will lead to another high impact flash
    flood forecast for Saturday afternoon through Sunday morning across
    the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley. This threat will extend
    further east as a cold front helps finally sweep the stagnant
    pattern out of the region, but not before another round of heavy
    rainfall inundates areas that will be sensitive to any appreciable
    rainfall.

    A stout 190-200kt upper jet located over the Great Lakes will lend
    to a pronounced upper ascent pattern situated over the Mississippi
    Valley during the period. At the surface, our quasi-stationary
    front that will linger through the course of several days will
    still be confined to similar areas that have been impacted by its
    presence in the days prior. Upper low located over the Southwest
    U.S. will begin to open up and eject eastward, becoming sheared on
    the northern edge due to an amplifying trough digging out of
    Canada. To the east, our Western Atlantic ridge that has provided a
    stalemate to any frontal progression moving east of the Mississippi
    will provide one last period of favorable low to mid-level
    convergence as the pattern evolves with the large trough to the
    west countering the ridge across the Southeast. In the middle of
    the atmospheric squeeze-play, elevated moisture presence and
    favorable instability will remain present to be activated with the
    addition of diurnal destabilization and increasingly favorable
    ascent to match. The combination will allow for a rapid development
    of widespread convection across the Missouri Valley with slow
    advancement eastward towards the Low to Mid-Mississippi Valley
    convergence point.

    This setup has trended prolific in the QPF realm of the forecast
    with very little deviation in all major deterministic at this
    juncture. An expanse of 3-6" with locally up to 8" of rainfall is
    forecast across a large portion of Arkansas extending east-
    northeast through far southeastern Missouri, all of western and
    central Tennessee and Kentucky, to as far north as the
    Ohio/Kentucky border along the Ohio River. Northwest Mississippi
    will also lie within the axis of heaviest precipitation leading to
    quite a large area of not only heavy precip, but significant
    overlap of areas that will have super saturated grounds that will
    struggle to maintain the ability to absorb more rainfall. This
    setup will yield a very dangerous scenario where widespread flash
    flooding with considerable and potentially catastrophic impacts
    would be favored. The agreement among all major NWP for substantial
    rainfall totals and projected hourly rates >1-2"/hr is a testament
    to the overall gravity of what is to come.

    In coordination with the local WFO's across Arkansas, Tennessee,
    and Kentucky...a High Risk area for excessive rainfall has been
    added over central and eastern AR, all of western TN and KY, far
    southeastern MO, and the southern edge of IN. Additional storm
    totals will bring multi-day amounts between 8-12" with some areas
    potentially reaching as high as 14" over the span of 5 days. A
    broad Moderate Risk spans the outer perimeter of the High Risk
    leading to several more areas prone to significant flash flood
    concerns due to the setup. This is becoming an increasingly
    life-threatening situation for areas of the Lower and Mid-
    Mississippi Valley region.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7hHbayBwPUzCffzs9Dv5s9Uft_t_pLKeF_yanyhoVGWB= 0KDR_gvuT5HuwFAaS-znigCr25lInKjmxCHdsry6AlmaQ7o$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7hHbayBwPUzCffzs9Dv5s9Uft_t_pLKeF_yanyhoVGWB= 0KDR_gvuT5HuwFAaS-znigCr25lInKjmxCHdsry6gxcn1Yo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7hHbayBwPUzCffzs9Dv5s9Uft_t_pLKeF_yanyhoVGWB= 0KDR_gvuT5HuwFAaS-znigCr25lInKjmxCHdsry6lj5Vi38$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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