• HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 4 08:22:45 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 040822
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    422 AM EDT Mon Aug 4 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 04 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE
    SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...

    Wet and unsettled conditions to persist across the Southeast as a=20
    mid-level trough axis lingers to the west allowing for moisture to
    stream northeast from the Gulf. The trough draped from the Great=20
    Lakes to the Arklatex will weaken slightly as ridging from the=20
    Atlantic expands northwestward. Heavy rain will spread across the
    region as PWs remain 1.75 to 2.25 inches, highest within a narrow=20
    channel from the FL Panhandle into coastal South Carolina,=20
    overlapping MUCAPE that is progged to rise above 1000 J/kg. The
    presence of the strong upper level jet will enhance forcing for=20
    ascent over the region while the surface front remains draped=20
    across the region, and a shortwave ejects northeast from the Gulf.
    This environment should support expanding showers and=20
    thunderstorms, with just a slight shift Northwest expected in the=20
    axis of heaviest rain due to the expansion of the mid-level ridging
    from the east.

    Antecedent moisture has lowered FFGs and increased soil sensitivity,
    especially for portions of Alabama and Georgia. The Slight Risk=20
    areas was expanded a bit further west into Alabama and=20
    northeastward across Georgia and far western South Carolina. With=20
    rainfall rates likely eclipsing 2 inches/hour at times, any of this
    heavy rainfall falling atop these vulnerable soils could quickly=20
    become runoff leading to instances of flash flooding.=20

    ...Northern Plains...

    Mid-level impulses lifting slowly northeast from the Northern
    Plains into the Upper Midwest will weaken Monday. However, forcing
    for ascent will continue, despite being in a weaker state, as PVA
    from the accompanying vorticity maxima pivots across the area and
    interacts with persistent WAA on 20-25 kts of 850mb southerly flow
    demarcating the LLJ. This will push PWs to above 1.25 inches, or
    around the 90th percentile according to NAEFS. MUCAPE will be
    somewhat limited, but the same WAA could drive CAPE to above 500
    J/kg, supporting HREF neighborhood probabilities for rainfall rates
    above 1"/hr to 10-20%.

    In general, cells should be somewhat progressive to the northeast
    on 0-6km mean winds of 10-15 kts. However, a region of enhanced
    bulk shear nearing 30 kts close to the MN/SD border will also be
    within an area of deformation which could result in regenerating
    and backbuilding convection. This will lead to slower net motion
    and repeating heavy rainfall, which is likely to be the focus of
    heaviest rainfall accumulation reflected by HREF 3"/24hr
    neighborhood probabilities of 20% (displaced south of the REFS but
    seemingly more likely in position). This could occur atop soils
    that become primed by rainfall on Sunday, but the excessive rain
    risk still appears MRGL so no upgrades appear needed at this time.


    ...Lower Ohio Valley...

    An inverted surface trough is expected to lift northeast today into
    the lower Ohio Valley. Low- level convergence along this boundary=20
    will combine with broad thickness diffluence and a shortwave=20
    pivoting northeast to drive pronounced lift into a region of high=20
    PWs (above 1.5 inches) and a collocated plume of MUCAPE above 1000=20
    J/kg. Very weak flow across this area suggests that as convection=20
    blossoms, cells will move slowly, generally from south to north,=20
    with repeating rounds of 1-2"/hour rainfall rates leading to=20
    pockets of 3+ inches of rainfall. The Marginal Risk area was=20
    maintained.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    During this period a shortwave trough will emerge from the Pacific
    Northwest and track into the Northern Rockies. Impressive ascent,=20
    primarily through height falls and increasing mid-level divergence,
    helping to spawn a wave of low pressure tracking into the High=20
    Plains by Tuesday morning. Showers and thunderstorms are expected
    to increase in coverage as a response, and with easterly low-level
    flow feeding in the higher PW values, rainfall rates of 1=20
    inch/hour or greater will be possible.=20


    Campbell/Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025
    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...

    With the ridge extending into the Atlantic across Florida and the
    trough positioned into the lower Mississippi Valley., much of the
    environment described during the Day 2 period has not changed.=20
    Between these two features, moisture will continue to surge=20
    northeast beneath shortwave impulses that are being squeezed by=20
    this synoptic pattern. The result of this will be waves of=20
    convection lifting northeast, with rainfall rates of 1-2
    inches/hour continuing to be supported despite a modest forecast=20
    reduction in PWs.

    THe latest guidance and WPC QPF indicates 2 maxima, one over the=20
    higher terrain of western Carolina/northeast Georgia and the other=20
    over central Georgia. Both locations will have areal average of=20
    roughly 2 inches. Portions of the region have had multi-day=20
    accumulations and will be vulnerable to additional rainfall. The=20
    inherited Slight Risk was adjusted on the northern bounds to the=20
    northeast, covering western parts North Carolina and South=20
    Carolina. AS such, the Marginal Risk area was expanded into=20
    southern Virginia.

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    Mid-level impulse closing off over Saskatchewan will shed vorticity
    downstream to drive height falls and PVA from Montana through North
    Dakota and into Minnesota. This mid-level ascent will help deepen a
    surface low moving across southern Canada, with triple-point development/occlusion pushing a complex frontal structure
    southeastward. Ascent across this area will impinge upon favorable thermodynamics surging northward, especially in the vicinity of the
    warm front, leading to widespread showers and thunderstorms
    pivoting northeast through the day. PW values of greater than 1.5
    inches (between the 90th and 97th percentile according to NAEFS)=20
    and MUCAPE reaching 1000-2000 J/kg, convection should support=20
    rainfall rates of 1-2 inches/hour. There continues to be a fair
    amount of spread on the QPF accumulations and overall footprint.
    Backbuilding into the higher instability will allow for some=20
    training along the frontal boundaries. Areal averages of 1 to 2
    inches possible. The inherited Marginal Risk area was expanded
    further south across eastern South Dakota and southwest Minnesota
    to encompass the southern end of the convection.

    Campbell/Weiss

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-
    ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    The features described in the Day 2 period will propagate across
    across the northern tier states shifting the areas of precipitation
    to the east. Two distinctions cluster of higher QPF is expected
    during this period. The first over southern Minnesota and the other
    across northern Minnesota/International border where areal averages
    of 1-2 inches is possible. A Marginal Risk was maintained for
    eastern portions of the Dakotas, most of western/central Minnesota.

    ...Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic...

    By this time, the surface low will be moving offshore taking the
    frontal boundary with it and the showers and thunderstorms will
    decrease from west to east, lingering over coastal areas. The best concentration of storms and QPF totals will be over coastal Georgia
    and southern/central South Carolina. A Marginal Risk spans from=20
    far northeast Florida to central Virginia.

    Campbell


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!462IDEepQoqeKtweR6vPqv5SLnM0zhoDEzb5Fj3nu2Dg= m2VcWwuJwCXXyjlN2Rv7u1DDCyXv3rQU3Q5EjMkBp6LNCgI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!462IDEepQoqeKtweR6vPqv5SLnM0zhoDEzb5Fj3nu2Dg= m2VcWwuJwCXXyjlN2Rv7u1DDCyXv3rQU3Q5EjMkBhkdy3vM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!462IDEepQoqeKtweR6vPqv5SLnM0zhoDEzb5Fj3nu2Dg= m2VcWwuJwCXXyjlN2Rv7u1DDCyXv3rQU3Q5EjMkBY8LY1y4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 4 15:59:24 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 041559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Mon Aug 4 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Aug 04 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...

    16Z UPDATE: The updated outlook is fairly consistent with the
    previous version. The main change was to extend the Slight Risk
    area a bit further to the northeast into Upstate South Carolina and
    extreme southwest North Carolina so that it largely matches the
    area outlined in the Day 2 outlook. Hi-res model signal for a
    focused area of heavy rain has improved for the overnight period,
    although there is still a lack of consistency on placement. At this
    time, the most plausible placement of the 06-12Z rainfall max would
    seem to be near the ECMWF-AIFS, although the magnitude of the QPF
    is likely too low. This is also fairly close to the 12Z HRRR, 12Z=20 HiresW-ARW, and new 12Z RRFS, and centered along a line from AHN-
    GSP. The ingredients are there for a low-topped, efficient=20
    convective rain band with low-level convergence, the right entrance
    region of an upper jet, and precipitable water values increasing=20
    to the 95th percentile or higher overnight. The main question would
    be the level of instability. Some models show zero instability,=20
    and this would favor more of a moderate rain scenario. However,=20
    even a couple hundred j/kg CAPE would likely support greater=20
    organization to the rain band and potentially very heavy localized=20
    rainfall that may extend in to the early part of the Day 2 period.=20
    The margins between a flash flood scenario and relatively benign=20
    rainfall are quite thin in this case, but certainly there is enough
    risk to warrant an upgrade to a Slight Risk.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: Wet and unsettled conditions to persist=20
    across the Southeast as a mid-level trough axis lingers to the west
    allowing for moisture to stream northeast from the Gulf. The=20
    trough draped from the Great Lakes to the Arklatex will weaken=20
    slightly as ridging from the Atlantic expands northwestward. Heavy=20
    rain will spread across the region as PWs remain 1.75 to 2.25=20
    inches, highest within a narrow channel from the FL Panhandle into=20
    coastal South Carolina, overlapping MUCAPE that is progged to rise=20
    above 1000 J/kg. The presence of the strong upper level jet will=20
    enhance forcing for ascent over the region while the surface front=20
    remains draped across the region, and a shortwave ejects northeast=20
    from the Gulf. This environment should support expanding showers=20
    and thunderstorms, with just a slight shift Northwest expected in=20
    the axis of heaviest rain due to the expansion of the mid-level=20
    ridging from the east.

    Antecedent moisture has lowered FFGs and increased soil sensitivity,
    especially for portions of Alabama and Georgia. The Slight Risk
    areas was expanded a bit further west into Alabama and
    northeastward across Georgia and far western South Carolina. With
    rainfall rates likely eclipsing 2 inches/hour at times, any of this
    heavy rainfall falling atop these vulnerable soils could quickly
    become runoff leading to instances of flash flooding.

    ...Northern Plains...

    16Z UPDATE: The Marginal Risk area was removed for western=20
    Minnesota and adjacent portions of the far eastern Dakotas.=20
    Although some models still show some very localized heavy rainfall,
    this may not meet the thresholds needed for flash flooding, and=20
    the probability at any given 25-mi neighborhood is generally lower=20
    than 5 percent, even if it's not zero. A lack of significant=20
    instability and strong focusing mechanism should be limiting=20
    factors.

    ...Lower Ohio Valley...

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: An inverted surface trough is expected to=20
    lift northeast today into the lower Ohio Valley. Low- level=20
    convergence along this boundary will combine with broad thickness=20
    diffluence and a shortwave pivoting northeast to drive pronounced=20
    lift into a region of high PWs (above 1.5 inches) and a collocated=20
    plume of MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. Very weak flow across this area=20
    suggests that as convection blossoms, cells will move slowly,=20
    generally from south to north, with repeating rounds of 1-2"/hour=20
    rainfall rates leading to pockets of 3+ inches of rainfall. The=20
    Marginal Risk area was maintained.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    16Z UPDATE: A small change was made to the Marginal Risk area to
    extend westward through central Idaho, to better match the existing
    Flood Watch area. Although probabilities for 1 inch per hour rain
    rates and FFG exceedance are generally higher in Montana, there is
    some potential for localized heavy rainfall extending into portions
    of central Idaho as well.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: During this period a shortwave trough will=20
    emerge from the Pacific Northwest and track into the Northern=20
    Rockies. Impressive ascent, primarily through height falls and=20
    increasing mid-level divergence, helping to spawn a wave of low=20
    pressure tracking into the High Plains by Tuesday morning. Showers=20
    and thunderstorms are expected to increase in coverage as a=20
    response, and with easterly low-level flow feeding in the higher PW
    values, rainfall rates of 1 inch/hour or greater will be possible.


    Lamers/Campbell


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025
    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...

    With the ridge extending into the Atlantic across Florida and the
    trough positioned into the lower Mississippi Valley., much of the
    environment described during the Day 2 period has not changed.
    Between these two features, moisture will continue to surge
    northeast beneath shortwave impulses that are being squeezed by
    this synoptic pattern. The result of this will be waves of
    convection lifting northeast, with rainfall rates of 1-2
    inches/hour continuing to be supported despite a modest forecast
    reduction in PWs.

    THe latest guidance and WPC QPF indicates 2 maxima, one over the
    higher terrain of western Carolina/northeast Georgia and the other
    over central Georgia. Both locations will have areal average of
    roughly 2 inches. Portions of the region have had multi-day
    accumulations and will be vulnerable to additional rainfall. The
    inherited Slight Risk was adjusted on the northern bounds to the
    northeast, covering western parts North Carolina and South
    Carolina. AS such, the Marginal Risk area was expanded into
    southern Virginia.

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    Mid-level impulse closing off over Saskatchewan will shed vorticity
    downstream to drive height falls and PVA from Montana through North
    Dakota and into Minnesota. This mid-level ascent will help deepen a
    surface low moving across southern Canada, with triple-point development/occlusion pushing a complex frontal structure
    southeastward. Ascent across this area will impinge upon favorable thermodynamics surging northward, especially in the vicinity of the
    warm front, leading to widespread showers and thunderstorms
    pivoting northeast through the day. PW values of greater than 1.5
    inches (between the 90th and 97th percentile according to NAEFS)
    and MUCAPE reaching 1000-2000 J/kg, convection should support
    rainfall rates of 1-2 inches/hour. There continues to be a fair
    amount of spread on the QPF accumulations and overall footprint.
    Backbuilding into the higher instability will allow for some
    training along the frontal boundaries. Areal averages of 1 to 2
    inches possible. The inherited Marginal Risk area was expanded
    further south across eastern South Dakota and southwest Minnesota
    to encompass the southern end of the convection.

    Campbell/Weiss

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-
    ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    The features described in the Day 2 period will propagate across
    across the northern tier states shifting the areas of precipitation
    to the east. Two distinctions cluster of higher QPF is expected
    during this period. The first over southern Minnesota and the other
    across northern Minnesota/International border where areal averages
    of 1-2 inches is possible. A Marginal Risk was maintained for
    eastern portions of the Dakotas, most of western/central Minnesota.

    ...Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic...

    By this time, the surface low will be moving offshore taking the
    frontal boundary with it and the showers and thunderstorms will
    decrease from west to east, lingering over coastal areas. The best concentration of storms and QPF totals will be over coastal Georgia
    and southern/central South Carolina. A Marginal Risk spans from
    far northeast Florida to central Virginia.

    Campbell


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6G5TbPgUBidgwIH9TAilDhiOW33_q73rheP_m8Dv90Uh= Fh3G3wX-dP4OrHm58HL6F--iKV2xzpOoNwa3pzfKxO9uO_Y$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6G5TbPgUBidgwIH9TAilDhiOW33_q73rheP_m8Dv90Uh= Fh3G3wX-dP4OrHm58HL6F--iKV2xzpOoNwa3pzfKWw9L9nw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6G5TbPgUBidgwIH9TAilDhiOW33_q73rheP_m8Dv90Uh= Fh3G3wX-dP4OrHm58HL6F--iKV2xzpOoNwa3pzfK7rw4dbo$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 4 20:22:57 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 042022
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    422 PM EDT Mon Aug 4 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Aug 04 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...

    16Z UPDATE: The updated outlook is fairly consistent with the
    previous version. The main change was to extend the Slight Risk
    area a bit further to the northeast into Upstate South Carolina and
    extreme southwest North Carolina so that it largely matches the
    area outlined in the Day 2 outlook. Hi-res model signal for a
    focused area of heavy rain has improved for the overnight period,
    although there is still a lack of consistency on placement. At this
    time, the most plausible placement of the 06-12Z rainfall max would
    seem to be near the ECMWF-AIFS, although the magnitude of the QPF
    is likely too low. This is also fairly close to the 12Z HRRR, 12Z
    HiresW-ARW, and new 12Z RRFS, and centered along a line from AHN-
    GSP. The ingredients are there for a low-topped, efficient
    convective rain band with low-level convergence, the right entrance
    region of an upper jet, and precipitable water values increasing
    to the 95th percentile or higher overnight. The main question would
    be the level of instability. Some models show zero instability,
    and this would favor more of a moderate rain scenario. However,
    even a couple hundred j/kg CAPE would likely support greater
    organization to the rain band and potentially very heavy localized
    rainfall that may extend in to the early part of the Day 2 period.
    The margins between a flash flood scenario and relatively benign
    rainfall are quite thin in this case, but certainly there is enough
    risk to warrant an upgrade to a Slight Risk.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: Wet and unsettled conditions to persist
    across the Southeast as a mid-level trough axis lingers to the west
    allowing for moisture to stream northeast from the Gulf. The
    trough draped from the Great Lakes to the Arklatex will weaken
    slightly as ridging from the Atlantic expands northwestward. Heavy
    rain will spread across the region as PWs remain 1.75 to 2.25
    inches, highest within a narrow channel from the FL Panhandle into
    coastal South Carolina, overlapping MUCAPE that is progged to rise
    above 1000 J/kg. The presence of the strong upper level jet will
    enhance forcing for ascent over the region while the surface front
    remains draped across the region, and a shortwave ejects northeast
    from the Gulf. This environment should support expanding showers
    and thunderstorms, with just a slight shift Northwest expected in
    the axis of heaviest rain due to the expansion of the mid-level
    ridging from the east.

    Antecedent moisture has lowered FFGs and increased soil sensitivity,
    especially for portions of Alabama and Georgia. The Slight Risk
    areas was expanded a bit further west into Alabama and
    northeastward across Georgia and far western South Carolina. With
    rainfall rates likely eclipsing 2 inches/hour at times, any of this
    heavy rainfall falling atop these vulnerable soils could quickly
    become runoff leading to instances of flash flooding.

    ...Northern Plains...

    16Z UPDATE: The Marginal Risk area was removed for western
    Minnesota and adjacent portions of the far eastern Dakotas.
    Although some models still show some very localized heavy rainfall,
    this may not meet the thresholds needed for flash flooding, and
    the probability at any given 25-mi neighborhood is generally lower
    than 5 percent, even if it's not zero. A lack of significant
    instability and strong focusing mechanism should be limiting
    factors.

    ...Lower Ohio Valley...

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: An inverted surface trough is expected to
    lift northeast today into the lower Ohio Valley. Low- level
    convergence along this boundary will combine with broad thickness
    diffluence and a shortwave pivoting northeast to drive pronounced
    lift into a region of high PWs (above 1.5 inches) and a collocated
    plume of MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. Very weak flow across this area
    suggests that as convection blossoms, cells will move slowly,
    generally from south to north, with repeating rounds of 1-2"/hour
    rainfall rates leading to pockets of 3+ inches of rainfall. The
    Marginal Risk area was maintained.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    16Z UPDATE: A small change was made to the Marginal Risk area to
    extend westward through central Idaho, to better match the existing
    Flood Watch area. Although probabilities for 1 inch per hour rain
    rates and FFG exceedance are generally higher in Montana, there is
    some potential for localized heavy rainfall extending into portions
    of central Idaho as well.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: During this period a shortwave trough will
    emerge from the Pacific Northwest and track into the Northern
    Rockies. Impressive ascent, primarily through height falls and
    increasing mid-level divergence, helping to spawn a wave of low
    pressure tracking into the High Plains by Tuesday morning. Showers
    and thunderstorms are expected to increase in coverage as a
    response, and with easterly low-level flow feeding in the higher PW
    values, rainfall rates of 1 inch/hour or greater will be possible.


    Lamers/Campbell


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...
    A heavy rainfall and flash flood event may be ongoing at the start
    of the period, somewhere from northeast Georgia, into Upstate South
    Carolina, and potentially far southwest North Carolina. The overall
    setup seems conducive, with a low-level convergence zone and the
    right entrance region of a strong upper level jet streak
    superimposed over the same area, along with anomalously high
    moisture and PWs over the 95th percentile. The main question for
    this initial round of rain is how much instability will be present.
    Some models show practically zero CAPE, while others show some
    elevated instability present. This will ultimately make the
    difference between a steady rain and heavier banding that could
    lead to flash flooding. The inherited Slight Risk area covers this
    threat, and the Day 1 outlook was adjusted to match, as the event
    may begin between 06Z and 12Z.

    Further development is then expected in a broad warm sector from
    the central Gulf Coast to south-central Georgia, and the rest of
    South Carolina, with stronger instability and PWs in excess of 2
    inches. Hi-res models indicate fairly high probabilities of 2 inch
    per hour rain rates, and a complex pattern of cell mergers and
    colliding outflow boundaries and sea breezes. This may lead to
    periods of 1-2 hours where convection is maximized in particular
    areas, and scattered instances of flash flooding. The Slight Risk
    was expanded further south through much of South Carolina to better
    account for the 12Z HREF probabilities in those portions of the
    state.

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    There continues to be a fairly strong signal for thunderstorms to
    initiate in the northern extent of an instability plume in the
    Plains, near the nose of a moisture transport maximum, in the
    afternoon on Tuesday. Consensus among the hi-res models is this
    will rapidly organize into an MCS and then likely propagate quickly
    to the southeast in the general direction suggested by the
    thickness contours. The potential for relatively fast forward
    motions may mitigate some of the flash flood risk. However,
    precipitation anomalies over the past 14 days indicate the pattern
    has been relatively wet of late in the Northern Plains, and
    precipitable water values will be anomalously high. Deep moisture=20
    combined with strong instability should support high instantaneous=20
    rain rates. Therefore, any areas where the duration of heavy rain
    could be lengthened (such as backbuilding along the periphery of a
    cold pool, cell mergers with antecedent convective development)
    may lead to flash flooding. The Marginal Risk was maintained and
    only slightly adjusted to account for the latest guidance.

    ...Ohio River Valley...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced for a potential repeat of the
    pattern from today (Monday), just displaced slightly to the east
    over S IN, C KY, SW OH. A slow moving mid-level wave would continue
    to slowly shift east, in the presence of relatively strong
    instability. Therefore, scattered afternoon thunderstorms are
    expected. Although moisture levels are not expected to be
    anomalously high, storm motions should be very slow with mean winds
    in the lowest 8km around 5 knots or so. This could lead to
    localized flash flooding by extending the duration of heavy
    rain with the most intense storms. Rain rates should reach the 1-2
    inch per hour range.

    Lamers

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-
    ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A region of anomalously high moisture, with PWs in excess of the
    90th percentile, should shift east during the Day 3 period, and
    generally continue to be superimposed with moderate to strong
    instability on the periphery of a ridge. Confidence in the
    convective details are low at this time, but the overall
    environment will remain supportive of organized convection with
    high instantaneous rain rates. The pattern may still lead to a forward-propagating MCS, which would mitigate flash flood risk
    overall, but the overall environment is favorable enough to
    maintain a Marginal Risk across the region.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    There is relatively low confidence in the placement of the=20
    heaviest rainfall on the Day 3 period, with the ECMWF-based models
    and ensembles showing higher QPF concentrated in Virginia and North
    Carolina, whereas the GFS and CMC-based models and ensembles are
    focused further south in SC, GA, AL, and FL. For now, we have opted
    not to show any particular preference, with a relatively broad
    Marginal Risk expanded down to the Gulf Coast in portions of North
    Florida. Regardless of the precise details, it does seem like a
    plume of anomalously high precipitable water values will remain
    present across the coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic region into
    the Day 3 period, and the flash flood threat areas will likely come
    down to mesoscale details that may only come into focus in
    subsequent outlook periods.

    Lamers


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_qzb-7yU2GTSEuWC3xy-jSvtUg6iVWV8e7PaUOJiYggb= b3xzFGj08hAbemz5VYqhfIec6RcgQUqnP0JLWfAd2O-wofQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_qzb-7yU2GTSEuWC3xy-jSvtUg6iVWV8e7PaUOJiYggb= b3xzFGj08hAbemz5VYqhfIec6RcgQUqnP0JLWfAda9HQk4g$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_qzb-7yU2GTSEuWC3xy-jSvtUg6iVWV8e7PaUOJiYggb= b3xzFGj08hAbemz5VYqhfIec6RcgQUqnP0JLWfAdOZWV2No$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 4 20:58:50 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 042058
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    458 PM EDT Mon Aug 4 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 2038Z Mon Aug 04 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND LOWER OHIO VALLEY...

    ...Southeast...

    16Z UPDATE: The updated outlook is fairly consistent with the
    previous version. The main change was to extend the Slight Risk
    area a bit further to the northeast into Upstate South Carolina and
    extreme southwest North Carolina so that it largely matches the
    area outlined in the Day 2 outlook. Hi-res model signal for a
    focused area of heavy rain has improved for the overnight period,
    although there is still a lack of consistency on placement. At this
    time, the most plausible placement of the 06-12Z rainfall max would
    seem to be near the ECMWF-AIFS, although the magnitude of the QPF
    is likely too low. This is also fairly close to the 12Z HRRR, 12Z
    HiresW-ARW, and new 12Z RRFS, and centered along a line from AHN-
    GSP. The ingredients are there for a low-topped, efficient
    convective rain band with low-level convergence, the right entrance
    region of an upper jet, and precipitable water values increasing
    to the 95th percentile or higher overnight. The main question would
    be the level of instability. Some models show zero instability,
    and this would favor more of a moderate rain scenario. However,
    even a couple hundred j/kg CAPE would likely support greater
    organization to the rain band and potentially very heavy localized
    rainfall that may extend in to the early part of the Day 2 period.
    The margins between a flash flood scenario and relatively benign
    rainfall are quite thin in this case, but certainly there is enough
    risk to warrant an upgrade to a Slight Risk.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: Wet and unsettled conditions to persist
    across the Southeast as a mid-level trough axis lingers to the west
    allowing for moisture to stream northeast from the Gulf. The
    trough draped from the Great Lakes to the Arklatex will weaken
    slightly as ridging from the Atlantic expands northwestward. Heavy
    rain will spread across the region as PWs remain 1.75 to 2.25
    inches, highest within a narrow channel from the FL Panhandle into
    coastal South Carolina, overlapping MUCAPE that is progged to rise
    above 1000 J/kg. The presence of the strong upper level jet will
    enhance forcing for ascent over the region while the surface front
    remains draped across the region, and a shortwave ejects northeast
    from the Gulf. This environment should support expanding showers
    and thunderstorms, with just a slight shift Northwest expected in
    the axis of heaviest rain due to the expansion of the mid-level
    ridging from the east.

    Antecedent moisture has lowered FFGs and increased soil sensitivity,
    especially for portions of Alabama and Georgia. The Slight Risk
    areas was expanded a bit further west into Alabama and
    northeastward across Georgia and far western South Carolina. With
    rainfall rates likely eclipsing 2 inches/hour at times, any of this
    heavy rainfall falling atop these vulnerable soils could quickly
    become runoff leading to instances of flash flooding.

    ...Northern Plains...

    16Z UPDATE: The Marginal Risk area was removed for western
    Minnesota and adjacent portions of the far eastern Dakotas.
    Although some models still show some very localized heavy rainfall,
    this may not meet the thresholds needed for flash flooding, and
    the probability at any given 25-mi neighborhood is generally lower
    than 5 percent, even if it's not zero. A lack of significant
    instability and strong focusing mechanism should be limiting
    factors.

    ...Lower Ohio Valley...

    20Z UPDATE: Upgraded the Day 1 ERO in this area to (1) broaden the
    Marginal Risk area a bit and (2) include a targeted Slight Risk
    across parts of southest MO, southern IL, southwest IN, and far
    westesrn KY. The Slight is essentially along the mid level
    deformation axis/comma head region, where there is a localized
    uptick in 0-6 km bulk shear (~25 kts) and were we're seeing more
    southward propagation, while the mean 850-300 mb layer flow
    (individual cells) are southerly around 5-10 kts. With TPW values
    between 1.7-1.8" within this corridor, and mixed layer CAPEs
    between 1000-2000 J/Kg (positive dCAPE/dT over the past few hours),
    expect slow-moving and training convection to produce localized
    hourly rainfall rates of 2-2.5+ inches.

    Hurley

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: An inverted surface trough is expected to
    lift northeast today into the lower Ohio Valley. Low- level
    convergence along this boundary will combine with broad thickness
    diffluence and a shortwave pivoting northeast to drive pronounced
    lift into a region of high PWs (above 1.5 inches) and a collocated
    plume of MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. Very weak flow across this area
    suggests that as convection blossoms, cells will move slowly,
    generally from south to north, with repeating rounds of 1-2"/hour
    rainfall rates leading to pockets of 3+ inches of rainfall. The
    Marginal Risk area was maintained.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    16Z UPDATE: A small change was made to the Marginal Risk area to
    extend westward through central Idaho, to better match the existing
    Flood Watch area. Although probabilities for 1 inch per hour rain
    rates and FFG exceedance are generally higher in Montana, there is
    some potential for localized heavy rainfall extending into portions
    of central Idaho as well.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: During this period a shortwave trough will
    emerge from the Pacific Northwest and track into the Northern
    Rockies. Impressive ascent, primarily through height falls and
    increasing mid-level divergence, helping to spawn a wave of low
    pressure tracking into the High Plains by Tuesday morning. Showers
    and thunderstorms are expected to increase in coverage as a
    response, and with easterly low-level flow feeding in the higher PW
    values, rainfall rates of 1 inch/hour or greater will be possible.


    Lamers/Campbell


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...
    A heavy rainfall and flash flood event may be ongoing at the start
    of the period, somewhere from northeast Georgia, into Upstate South
    Carolina, and potentially far southwest North Carolina. The overall
    setup seems conducive, with a low-level convergence zone and the
    right entrance region of a strong upper level jet streak
    superimposed over the same area, along with anomalously high
    moisture and PWs over the 95th percentile. The main question for
    this initial round of rain is how much instability will be present.
    Some models show practically zero CAPE, while others show some
    elevated instability present. This will ultimately make the
    difference between a steady rain and heavier banding that could
    lead to flash flooding. The inherited Slight Risk area covers this
    threat, and the Day 1 outlook was adjusted to match, as the event
    may begin between 06Z and 12Z.

    Further development is then expected in a broad warm sector from
    the central Gulf Coast to south-central Georgia, and the rest of
    South Carolina, with stronger instability and PWs in excess of 2
    inches. Hi-res models indicate fairly high probabilities of 2 inch
    per hour rain rates, and a complex pattern of cell mergers and
    colliding outflow boundaries and sea breezes. This may lead to
    periods of 1-2 hours where convection is maximized in particular
    areas, and scattered instances of flash flooding. The Slight Risk
    was expanded further south through much of South Carolina to better
    account for the 12Z HREF probabilities in those portions of the
    state.

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    There continues to be a fairly strong signal for thunderstorms to
    initiate in the northern extent of an instability plume in the
    Plains, near the nose of a moisture transport maximum, in the
    afternoon on Tuesday. Consensus among the hi-res models is this
    will rapidly organize into an MCS and then likely propagate quickly
    to the southeast in the general direction suggested by the
    thickness contours. The potential for relatively fast forward
    motions may mitigate some of the flash flood risk. However,
    precipitation anomalies over the past 14 days indicate the pattern
    has been relatively wet of late in the Northern Plains, and
    precipitable water values will be anomalously high. Deep moisture
    combined with strong instability should support high instantaneous
    rain rates. Therefore, any areas where the duration of heavy rain
    could be lengthened (such as backbuilding along the periphery of a
    cold pool, cell mergers with antecedent convective development)
    may lead to flash flooding. The Marginal Risk was maintained and
    only slightly adjusted to account for the latest guidance.

    ...Ohio River Valley...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced for a potential repeat of the
    pattern from today (Monday), just displaced slightly to the east
    over S IN, C KY, SW OH. A slow moving mid-level wave would continue
    to slowly shift east, in the presence of relatively strong
    instability. Therefore, scattered afternoon thunderstorms are
    expected. Although moisture levels are not expected to be
    anomalously high, storm motions should be very slow with mean winds
    in the lowest 8km around 5 knots or so. This could lead to
    localized flash flooding by extending the duration of heavy
    rain with the most intense storms. Rain rates should reach the 1-2
    inch per hour range.

    Lamers

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-
    ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A region of anomalously high moisture, with PWs in excess of the
    90th percentile, should shift east during the Day 3 period, and
    generally continue to be superimposed with moderate to strong
    instability on the periphery of a ridge. Confidence in the
    convective details are low at this time, but the overall
    environment will remain supportive of organized convection with
    high instantaneous rain rates. The pattern may still lead to a forward-propagating MCS, which would mitigate flash flood risk
    overall, but the overall environment is favorable enough to
    maintain a Marginal Risk across the region.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    There is relatively low confidence in the placement of the
    heaviest rainfall on the Day 3 period, with the ECMWF-based models
    and ensembles showing higher QPF concentrated in Virginia and North
    Carolina, whereas the GFS and CMC-based models and ensembles are
    focused further south in SC, GA, AL, and FL. For now, we have opted
    not to show any particular preference, with a relatively broad
    Marginal Risk expanded down to the Gulf Coast in portions of North
    Florida. Regardless of the precise details, it does seem like a
    plume of anomalously high precipitable water values will remain
    present across the coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic region into
    the Day 3 period, and the flash flood threat areas will likely come
    down to mesoscale details that may only come into focus in
    subsequent outlook periods.

    Lamers


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5J1eieZnupAL6SPYS3Rfxm-UYJz1dG4GGmxhK82fT5Px= MYi2qXbCB_hV0FLTRlZu1USaITLDlAuINq93WOgN3rPxkaQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5J1eieZnupAL6SPYS3Rfxm-UYJz1dG4GGmxhK82fT5Px= MYi2qXbCB_hV0FLTRlZu1USaITLDlAuINq93WOgN7zQWLyY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5J1eieZnupAL6SPYS3Rfxm-UYJz1dG4GGmxhK82fT5Px= MYi2qXbCB_hV0FLTRlZu1USaITLDlAuINq93WOgNGFyqOhw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 5 00:24:47 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 050024
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    824 PM EDT Mon Aug 4 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Aug 05 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND LOWER OHIO VALLEY...

    ...Southeast...

    16Z UPDATE: The updated outlook is fairly consistent with the
    previous version. The main change was to extend the Slight Risk
    area a bit further to the northeast into Upstate South Carolina and
    extreme southwest North Carolina so that it largely matches the
    area outlined in the Day 2 outlook. Hi-res model signal for a
    focused area of heavy rain has improved for the overnight period,
    although there is still a lack of consistency on placement. At this
    time, the most plausible placement of the 06-12Z rainfall max would
    seem to be near the ECMWF-AIFS, although the magnitude of the QPF
    is likely too low. This is also fairly close to the 12Z HRRR, 12Z
    HiresW-ARW, and new 12Z RRFS, and centered along a line from AHN-
    GSP. The ingredients are there for a low-topped, efficient
    convective rain band with low-level convergence, the right entrance
    region of an upper jet, and precipitable water values increasing
    to the 95th percentile or higher overnight. The main question would
    be the level of instability. Some models show zero instability,
    and this would favor more of a moderate rain scenario. However,
    even a couple hundred j/kg CAPE would likely support greater
    organization to the rain band and potentially very heavy localized
    rainfall that may extend in to the early part of the Day 2 period.
    The margins between a flash flood scenario and relatively benign
    rainfall are quite thin in this case, but certainly there is enough
    risk to warrant an upgrade to a Slight Risk.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: Wet and unsettled conditions to persist
    across the Southeast as a mid-level trough axis lingers to the west
    allowing for moisture to stream northeast from the Gulf. The
    trough draped from the Great Lakes to the Arklatex will weaken
    slightly as ridging from the Atlantic expands northwestward. Heavy
    rain will spread across the region as PWs remain 1.75 to 2.25
    inches, highest within a narrow channel from the FL Panhandle into
    coastal South Carolina, overlapping MUCAPE that is progged to rise
    above 1000 J/kg. The presence of the strong upper level jet will
    enhance forcing for ascent over the region while the surface front
    remains draped across the region, and a shortwave ejects northeast
    from the Gulf. This environment should support expanding showers
    and thunderstorms, with just a slight shift Northwest expected in
    the axis of heaviest rain due to the expansion of the mid-level
    ridging from the east.

    Antecedent moisture has lowered FFGs and increased soil sensitivity,
    especially for portions of Alabama and Georgia. The Slight Risk
    areas was expanded a bit further west into Alabama and
    northeastward across Georgia and far western South Carolina. With
    rainfall rates likely eclipsing 2 inches/hour at times, any of this
    heavy rainfall falling atop these vulnerable soils could quickly
    become runoff leading to instances of flash flooding.

    ...Northern Plains...

    16Z UPDATE: The Marginal Risk area was removed for western
    Minnesota and adjacent portions of the far eastern Dakotas.
    Although some models still show some very localized heavy rainfall,
    this may not meet the thresholds needed for flash flooding, and
    the probability at any given 25-mi neighborhood is generally lower
    than 5 percent, even if it's not zero. A lack of significant
    instability and strong focusing mechanism should be limiting
    factors.

    ...Lower Ohio Valley...

    20Z UPDATE: Upgraded the Day 1 ERO in this area to (1) broaden the
    Marginal Risk area a bit and (2) include a targeted Slight Risk
    across parts of southest MO, southern IL, southwest IN, and far
    westesrn KY. The Slight is essentially along the mid level
    deformation axis/comma head region, where there is a localized
    uptick in 0-6 km bulk shear (~25 kts) and were we're seeing more
    southward propagation, while the mean 850-300 mb layer flow
    (individual cells) are southerly around 5-10 kts. With TPW values
    between 1.7-1.8" within this corridor, and mixed layer CAPEs
    between 1000-2000 J/Kg (positive dCAPE/dT over the past few hours),
    expect slow-moving and training convection to produce localized
    hourly rainfall rates of 2-2.5+ inches.

    Hurley

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: An inverted surface trough is expected to
    lift northeast today into the lower Ohio Valley. Low- level
    convergence along this boundary will combine with broad thickness
    diffluence and a shortwave pivoting northeast to drive pronounced
    lift into a region of high PWs (above 1.5 inches) and a collocated
    plume of MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. Very weak flow across this area
    suggests that as convection blossoms, cells will move slowly,
    generally from south to north, with repeating rounds of 1-2"/hour
    rainfall rates leading to pockets of 3+ inches of rainfall. The
    Marginal Risk area was maintained.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    16Z UPDATE: A small change was made to the Marginal Risk area to
    extend westward through central Idaho, to better match the existing
    Flood Watch area. Although probabilities for 1 inch per hour rain
    rates and FFG exceedance are generally higher in Montana, there is
    some potential for localized heavy rainfall extending into portions
    of central Idaho as well.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: During this period a shortwave trough will
    emerge from the Pacific Northwest and track into the Northern
    Rockies. Impressive ascent, primarily through height falls and
    increasing mid-level divergence, helping to spawn a wave of low
    pressure tracking into the High Plains by Tuesday morning. Showers
    and thunderstorms are expected to increase in coverage as a
    response, and with easterly low-level flow feeding in the higher PW
    values, rainfall rates of 1 inch/hour or greater will be possible.


    Lamers/Campbell


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...Southeast...
    A heavy rainfall and flash flood event may be ongoing at the start
    of the period, somewhere from northeast Georgia, into Upstate South
    Carolina, and potentially far southwest North Carolina. The overall
    setup seems conducive, with a low-level convergence zone and the
    right entrance region of a strong upper level jet streak
    superimposed over the same area, along with anomalously high
    moisture and PWs over the 95th percentile. The main question for
    this initial round of rain is how much instability will be present.
    Some models show practically zero CAPE, while others show some
    elevated instability present. This will ultimately make the
    difference between a steady rain and heavier banding that could
    lead to flash flooding. The inherited Slight Risk area covers this
    threat, and the Day 1 outlook was adjusted to match, as the event
    may begin between 06Z and 12Z.

    Further development is then expected in a broad warm sector from
    the central Gulf Coast to south-central Georgia, and the rest of
    South Carolina, with stronger instability and PWs in excess of 2
    inches. Hi-res models indicate fairly high probabilities of 2 inch
    per hour rain rates, and a complex pattern of cell mergers and
    colliding outflow boundaries and sea breezes. This may lead to
    periods of 1-2 hours where convection is maximized in particular
    areas, and scattered instances of flash flooding. The Slight Risk
    was expanded further south through much of South Carolina to better
    account for the 12Z HREF probabilities in those portions of the
    state.

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    There continues to be a fairly strong signal for thunderstorms to
    initiate in the northern extent of an instability plume in the
    Plains, near the nose of a moisture transport maximum, in the
    afternoon on Tuesday. Consensus among the hi-res models is this
    will rapidly organize into an MCS and then likely propagate quickly
    to the southeast in the general direction suggested by the
    thickness contours. The potential for relatively fast forward
    motions may mitigate some of the flash flood risk. However,
    precipitation anomalies over the past 14 days indicate the pattern
    has been relatively wet of late in the Northern Plains, and
    precipitable water values will be anomalously high. Deep moisture
    combined with strong instability should support high instantaneous
    rain rates. Therefore, any areas where the duration of heavy rain
    could be lengthened (such as backbuilding along the periphery of a
    cold pool, cell mergers with antecedent convective development)
    may lead to flash flooding. The Marginal Risk was maintained and
    only slightly adjusted to account for the latest guidance.

    ...Ohio River Valley...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced for a potential repeat of the
    pattern from today (Monday), just displaced slightly to the east
    over S IN, C KY, SW OH. A slow moving mid-level wave would continue
    to slowly shift east, in the presence of relatively strong
    instability. Therefore, scattered afternoon thunderstorms are
    expected. Although moisture levels are not expected to be
    anomalously high, storm motions should be very slow with mean winds
    in the lowest 8km around 5 knots or so. This could lead to
    localized flash flooding by extending the duration of heavy
    rain with the most intense storms. Rain rates should reach the 1-2
    inch per hour range.

    Lamers

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE
    UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-
    ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A region of anomalously high moisture, with PWs in excess of the
    90th percentile, should shift east during the Day 3 period, and
    generally continue to be superimposed with moderate to strong
    instability on the periphery of a ridge. Confidence in the
    convective details are low at this time, but the overall
    environment will remain supportive of organized convection with
    high instantaneous rain rates. The pattern may still lead to a forward-propagating MCS, which would mitigate flash flood risk
    overall, but the overall environment is favorable enough to
    maintain a Marginal Risk across the region.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    There is relatively low confidence in the placement of the
    heaviest rainfall on the Day 3 period, with the ECMWF-based models
    and ensembles showing higher QPF concentrated in Virginia and North
    Carolina, whereas the GFS and CMC-based models and ensembles are
    focused further south in SC, GA, AL, and FL. For now, we have opted
    not to show any particular preference, with a relatively broad
    Marginal Risk expanded down to the Gulf Coast in portions of North
    Florida. Regardless of the precise details, it does seem like a
    plume of anomalously high precipitable water values will remain
    present across the coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic region into
    the Day 3 period, and the flash flood threat areas will likely come
    down to mesoscale details that may only come into focus in
    subsequent outlook periods.

    Lamers


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7QKMCrOl894r8hgA-Qh2FiO0hh8af3cl8cwO5Ca-fJZl= 4tmfAM7edWaiB12lsxxn_2d4P47bQJ8KQ6tpeRR7nv9IJKs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7QKMCrOl894r8hgA-Qh2FiO0hh8af3cl8cwO5Ca-fJZl= 4tmfAM7edWaiB12lsxxn_2d4P47bQJ8KQ6tpeRR7UzSLMm8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7QKMCrOl894r8hgA-Qh2FiO0hh8af3cl8cwO5Ca-fJZl= 4tmfAM7edWaiB12lsxxn_2d4P47bQJ8KQ6tpeRR7JLdlGT0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 5 08:33:53 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 050832
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    432 AM EDT Tue Aug 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 05 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    A heavy rainfall and flash flood event may be getting started at=20
    the beginning of the period, as convection is expected to increase
    in coverage and intensity from northeast Georgia into Upstate=20
    South Carolina (potentially extending into far southwest North=20
    Carolina) this morning. A conducive overall setup for locally heavy
    downpours exists, with a low-level front/convergence zone and the=20
    right entrance region of a strong upper-level jet streak=20
    superimposed over the same area (along with anomalously high=20
    moisture and PWs over the 90th percentile). The main limiting=20
    factor for organized heavy rainfall is certainly instability,=20
    though a modestly strengthening low-level jet (15-25 kts) will=20
    provide some isentropic upglide to kick things off this morning=20
    (with hourly totals likely limited to 1-2"). Most hi-res models=20
    depict a break in the precipitation during the day, but another=20
    round may ensue later tonight over some of the same areas, as the=20
    frontal zone and parent trough to the west move very little.=20

    Further diurnally-driven development is expected within the broader=20
    warm sector from the central Gulf Coast to south-central Georgia,=20
    and the rest of South Carolina, with stronger instability building
    today with daytime heating and PWs in excess of 2 inches. Hi-res=20
    models continue to indicate fairly high probabilities of 2"/hr=20
    rain rates, and a complex pattern of cell mergers and colliding=20
    outflow boundaries and sea breezes. This may lead to periods of 1-2
    hours where convection is maximized in particular areas, and=20
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The inherited Slight Risk
    was expanded a bit to cover coastal portions of SC/GA with the
    highest probabilities for localized 5" exceedance.=20

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    There continues to be a fairly strong signal for storms to initiate
    in the northern extent of an instability plume in the Plains, near
    the nose of a moisture transport maximum, in the afternoon today.=20
    Consensus among the hi-res models is this will rapidly organize=20
    into an MCS and then likely propagate quickly to the southeast in=20
    the general direction suggested by the thickness contours. The=20
    potential for relatively fast forward motions may mitigate some of=20
    the flash flood risk. However, precipitation anomalies over the=20
    past 14 days indicate the pattern has been relatively wet of late=20
    in the Northern Plains, and precipitable water values will be=20
    anomalously high. Deep moisture combined with strong instability=20
    should support high instantaneous rain rates. Therefore, any areas=20
    where the duration of heavy rain could be lengthened (such as=20
    backbuilding along the periphery of a cold pool, cell mergers with=20 antecedent convective development) may lead to flash flooding. The=20
    Marginal Risk was maintained and adjusted southward based on the=20
    latest guidance (factoring in upwind propagation favoring southern
    propagation late).=20

    ...Ohio River Valley...

    An inherited Marginal Risk was maintained and adjusted slightly=20
    for a potential repeat of the pattern from yesterday, just=20
    displaced slightly to the east over S IN, C KY, SW OH. A slow=20
    moving mid-level wave is expected to continue to slowly shift=20
    east, in the presence of relatively strong instability. Therefore,=20
    scattered afternoon thunderstorms are expected. Although moisture=20
    levels are not expected to be anomalously high, storm motions=20
    should be very slow with mean winds in the lowest 8-km around 5 kts=20=20
    or so. This could lead to localized flash flooding by extending the
    duration of heavy rain with the most intense storms. Rain rates=20
    should reach the 1-2"/hr range.

    Churchill/Lamers


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL=20
    SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A region of anomalously high moisture, with PWs near the 90th=20
    percentile, should shift east during the Day 2 period, and=20
    generally continue to be superimposed with moderate to strong=20
    instability on the periphery of a ridge. Confidence in the=20
    convective details remain low at this time, but the overall=20
    environment will remain supportive of organized convection with=20
    high instantaneous rain rates. The pattern may still lead to a=20 forward-propagating MCS, which would mitigate flash flood risk=20
    overall, but the overall environment is favorable enough to=20
    continue to maintain a Marginal Risk across the region.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence remains relatively low in the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall on the Day 2 period, as the ECMWF/ECENS suite continues=20
    to concentrate QPF farther north (mostly across North Carolina)=20
    whereas the bulk of the other global models and ensembles are=20
    focused south and east (mainly in SC and GA). Regardless of the=20
    precise details, a plume of anomalously high precipitable water=20
    values is likely to remain present across the coastal Southeast=20
    and Mid-Atlantic region into the Day 2 period, and the flash flood
    threat areas will likely come down to mesoscale details that will
    come much more into focus in subsequent outlook periods.=20

    Churchill/Lamers


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND NORTHERN PLAINS, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley and Northern Plains...

    An inherited Marginal Risk area was maintained and adjusted across
    North Dakota and surroundings, as models are in good agreement in
    indicating a potent upper-level shortwave digging southward into=20
    the CONUS by Day 3. The approach of the trough is likely to result=20
    in another wave of low-level return flow into the Northern High=20
    Plains, sending PWs to the 90th percentile or higher once again.=20
    Moderate to strong instability is expected to build once again with
    daytime heating on the periphery of a ridge, and organized=20
    convection is likely to ensue in the late afternoon and evening.=20

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence remains low in the placement of the heaviest rainfall
    going into the Day 3 period, with substantial differences still
    between the global model suites. As anomalously high tropospheric
    moisture is likely to remain near the coast, maintained an
    inherited Marginal Risk area across portions of the area most
    likely to realize heavy precipitation with daytime heating.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_TxLAx17v3GqvNmsBISQVKPvNlaTT444wNwholcQBIIP= rM0ou07vGd5hFFDdAbY8_L6iAVe7JDKugLNf_wkAW7v5j5c$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_TxLAx17v3GqvNmsBISQVKPvNlaTT444wNwholcQBIIP= rM0ou07vGd5hFFDdAbY8_L6iAVe7JDKugLNf_wkAQ-dKV7E$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_TxLAx17v3GqvNmsBISQVKPvNlaTT444wNwholcQBIIP= rM0ou07vGd5hFFDdAbY8_L6iAVe7JDKugLNf_wkAEOeHMjc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 5 15:48:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 051547
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1147 AM EDT Tue Aug 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Aug 05 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    16Z UPDATE: Most changes for this outlook were made to the Slight
    Risk area over the Southeast. They were not big overall, but it=20
    did recenter the risk area a bit to the northeast, expanding it=20
    about 70 miles to the northeast, and trimming about 25 miles off
    the northwest side. The ongoing round of convection in central
    South Carolina has progressed further northeast than guidance over
    the past several cycles had indicated, and 12Z hi-res models show
    an additional round of convection developing overnight from central
    North Carolina into central South Carolina. The overnight round
    would be due to a restrengthening of a LLJ and the unstable air
    mass expanding inland as a result. No other change in the reasoning
    described in the previous discussion; a complex pattern of cell
    mergers and colliding boundaries may allow storms and heavy
    rainfall to maximize in a couple localized areas, with potential=20
    for greater than 5 inches of rain in a short period of time.=20

    The 12Z HRRR shows a scenario late tonight that would be of=20
    greater concern: a training and backbuilding convective band within
    30 miles or so of the Raleigh-Durham metro area, which leads to=20
    locally extreme rainfall. Other models show hints of a similar
    scenario but do not hit similar rainfall extremes. This will need
    to be monitored in the event of greater consensus or observational
    trends, in case probabilities may need to be increased.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: A conducive overall setup for locally heavy=20
    downpours exists, with a low-level front/convergence zone and the=20
    right entrance region of a strong upper-level jet streak=20
    superimposed over the same area (along with anomalously high=20
    moisture and PWs over the 90th percentile). The main limiting=20
    factor for organized heavy rainfall is certainly instability,=20
    though a modestly strengthening low-level jet (15-25 kts) will=20
    provide some isentropic upglide to kick things off this morning=20
    (with hourly totals likely limited to 1-2"). Most hi-res models=20
    depict a break in the precipitation during the day, but another=20
    round may ensue later tonight over some of the same areas, as the=20
    frontal zone and parent trough to the west move very little.

    Further diurnally-driven development is expected within the broader
    warm sector from the central Gulf Coast to south-central Georgia,
    and the rest of South Carolina, with stronger instability building
    today with daytime heating and PWs in excess of 2 inches. Hi-res
    models continue to indicate fairly high probabilities of 2"/hr
    rain rates, and a complex pattern of cell mergers and colliding
    outflow boundaries and sea breezes. This may lead to periods of 1-2
    hours where convection is maximized in particular areas, and
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The inherited Slight Risk
    was expanded a bit to cover coastal portions of SC/GA with the
    highest probabilities for localized 5" exceedance.

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    16Z UPDATE: No major changes were made with this outlook update,
    other than to remove a small portion of the northern side of the
    risk area due to observational trends and the latest guidance.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: There continues to be a fairly strong signal=20
    for storms to initiate in the northern extent of an instability=20
    plume in the Plains, near the nose of a moisture transport maximum,
    in the afternoon today. Consensus among the hi-res models is this=20
    will rapidly organize into an MCS and then likely propagate quickly
    to the southeast in the general direction suggested by the=20
    thickness contours. The potential for relatively fast forward=20
    motions may mitigate some of the flash flood risk. However,=20
    precipitation anomalies over the past 14 days indicate the pattern=20
    has been relatively wet of late in the Northern Plains, and=20
    precipitable water values will be anomalously high. Deep moisture=20
    combined with strong instability should support high instantaneous=20
    rain rates. Therefore, any areas where the duration of heavy rain=20
    could be lengthened (such as backbuilding along the periphery of a=20
    cold pool, cell mergers with antecedent convective development) may
    lead to flash flooding. The Marginal Risk was maintained and=20
    adjusted southward based on the latest guidance (factoring in=20
    upwind propagation favoring southern propagation late).

    ...Ohio River Valley...

    16Z UPDATE: No major changes were made with this outlook update,
    other than to remove a small portion of the western side of the
    risk area.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: An inherited Marginal Risk was maintained and
    adjusted slightly for a potential repeat of the pattern from=20
    yesterday, just displaced slightly to the east over S IN, C KY, SW=20
    OH. A slow moving mid-level wave is expected to continue to slowly=20
    shift east, in the presence of relatively strong instability.=20
    Therefore, scattered afternoon thunderstorms are expected. Although
    moisture levels are not expected to be anomalously high, storm=20
    motions should be very slow with mean winds in the lowest 8-km=20
    around 5 kts or so. This could lead to localized flash flooding by=20
    extending the duration of heavy rain with the most intense storms.=20
    Rain rates should reach the 1-2"/hr range.

    Churchill/Lamers


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL
    SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A region of anomalously high moisture, with PWs near the 90th
    percentile, should shift east during the Day 2 period, and
    generally continue to be superimposed with moderate to strong
    instability on the periphery of a ridge. Confidence in the
    convective details remain low at this time, but the overall
    environment will remain supportive of organized convection with
    high instantaneous rain rates. The pattern may still lead to a forward-propagating MCS, which would mitigate flash flood risk
    overall, but the overall environment is favorable enough to
    continue to maintain a Marginal Risk across the region.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence remains relatively low in the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall on the Day 2 period, as the ECMWF/ECENS suite continues
    to concentrate QPF farther north (mostly across North Carolina)
    whereas the bulk of the other global models and ensembles are
    focused south and east (mainly in SC and GA). Regardless of the
    precise details, a plume of anomalously high precipitable water
    values is likely to remain present across the coastal Southeast
    and Mid-Atlantic region into the Day 2 period, and the flash flood
    threat areas will likely come down to mesoscale details that will
    come much more into focus in subsequent outlook periods.

    Churchill/Lamers


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND NORTHERN PLAINS, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley and Northern Plains...

    An inherited Marginal Risk area was maintained and adjusted across
    North Dakota and surroundings, as models are in good agreement in
    indicating a potent upper-level shortwave digging southward into
    the CONUS by Day 3. The approach of the trough is likely to result
    in another wave of low-level return flow into the Northern High
    Plains, sending PWs to the 90th percentile or higher once again.
    Moderate to strong instability is expected to build once again with
    daytime heating on the periphery of a ridge, and organized
    convection is likely to ensue in the late afternoon and evening.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence remains low in the placement of the heaviest rainfall
    going into the Day 3 period, with substantial differences still
    between the global model suites. As anomalously high tropospheric
    moisture is likely to remain near the coast, maintained an
    inherited Marginal Risk area across portions of the area most
    likely to realize heavy precipitation with daytime heating.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7JwIF2Fi5cJ7_6WyVBl4h6g6ujvY9dzwSICNuKaLfXYx= fgahiA7ZAPYWrxxZldhM3VGkah7s14WGbIbAH7-KORSIPAg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7JwIF2Fi5cJ7_6WyVBl4h6g6ujvY9dzwSICNuKaLfXYx= fgahiA7ZAPYWrxxZldhM3VGkah7s14WGbIbAH7-KpBQbSNg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7JwIF2Fi5cJ7_6WyVBl4h6g6ujvY9dzwSICNuKaLfXYx= fgahiA7ZAPYWrxxZldhM3VGkah7s14WGbIbAH7-KFJAXBP4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 5 19:59:18 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 051959
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    359 PM EDT Tue Aug 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Aug 05 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    16Z UPDATE: Most changes for this outlook were made to the Slight
    Risk area over the Southeast. They were not big overall, but it
    did recenter the risk area a bit to the northeast, expanding it
    about 70 miles to the northeast, and trimming about 25 miles off
    the northwest side. The ongoing round of convection in central
    South Carolina has progressed further northeast than guidance over
    the past several cycles had indicated, and 12Z hi-res models show
    an additional round of convection developing overnight from central
    North Carolina into central South Carolina. The overnight round
    would be due to a restrengthening of a LLJ and the unstable air
    mass expanding inland as a result. No other change in the reasoning
    described in the previous discussion; a complex pattern of cell
    mergers and colliding boundaries may allow storms and heavy
    rainfall to maximize in a couple localized areas, with potential
    for greater than 5 inches of rain in a short period of time.

    The 12Z HRRR shows a scenario late tonight that would be of
    greater concern: a training and backbuilding convective band within
    30 miles or so of the Raleigh-Durham metro area, which leads to
    locally extreme rainfall. Other models show hints of a similar
    scenario but do not hit similar rainfall extremes. This will need
    to be monitored in the event of greater consensus or observational
    trends, in case probabilities may need to be increased.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: A conducive overall setup for locally heavy
    downpours exists, with a low-level front/convergence zone and the
    right entrance region of a strong upper-level jet streak
    superimposed over the same area (along with anomalously high
    moisture and PWs over the 90th percentile). The main limiting
    factor for organized heavy rainfall is certainly instability,
    though a modestly strengthening low-level jet (15-25 kts) will
    provide some isentropic upglide to kick things off this morning
    (with hourly totals likely limited to 1-2"). Most hi-res models
    depict a break in the precipitation during the day, but another
    round may ensue later tonight over some of the same areas, as the
    frontal zone and parent trough to the west move very little.

    Further diurnally-driven development is expected within the broader
    warm sector from the central Gulf Coast to south-central Georgia,
    and the rest of South Carolina, with stronger instability building
    today with daytime heating and PWs in excess of 2 inches. Hi-res
    models continue to indicate fairly high probabilities of 2"/hr
    rain rates, and a complex pattern of cell mergers and colliding
    outflow boundaries and sea breezes. This may lead to periods of 1-2
    hours where convection is maximized in particular areas, and
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The inherited Slight Risk
    was expanded a bit to cover coastal portions of SC/GA with the
    highest probabilities for localized 5" exceedance.

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    16Z UPDATE: No major changes were made with this outlook update,
    other than to remove a small portion of the northern side of the
    risk area due to observational trends and the latest guidance.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: There continues to be a fairly strong signal
    for storms to initiate in the northern extent of an instability
    plume in the Plains, near the nose of a moisture transport maximum,
    in the afternoon today. Consensus among the hi-res models is this
    will rapidly organize into an MCS and then likely propagate quickly
    to the southeast in the general direction suggested by the
    thickness contours. The potential for relatively fast forward
    motions may mitigate some of the flash flood risk. However,
    precipitation anomalies over the past 14 days indicate the pattern
    has been relatively wet of late in the Northern Plains, and
    precipitable water values will be anomalously high. Deep moisture
    combined with strong instability should support high instantaneous
    rain rates. Therefore, any areas where the duration of heavy rain
    could be lengthened (such as backbuilding along the periphery of a
    cold pool, cell mergers with antecedent convective development) may
    lead to flash flooding. The Marginal Risk was maintained and
    adjusted southward based on the latest guidance (factoring in
    upwind propagation favoring southern propagation late).

    ...Ohio River Valley...

    16Z UPDATE: No major changes were made with this outlook update,
    other than to remove a small portion of the western side of the
    risk area.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: An inherited Marginal Risk was maintained and
    adjusted slightly for a potential repeat of the pattern from
    yesterday, just displaced slightly to the east over S IN, C KY, SW
    OH. A slow moving mid-level wave is expected to continue to slowly
    shift east, in the presence of relatively strong instability.
    Therefore, scattered afternoon thunderstorms are expected. Although
    moisture levels are not expected to be anomalously high, storm
    motions should be very slow with mean winds in the lowest 8-km
    around 5 kts or so. This could lead to localized flash flooding by
    extending the duration of heavy rain with the most intense storms.
    Rain rates should reach the 1-2"/hr range.

    Churchill/Lamers


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL
    SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A region of anomalously high moisture, with PWs near the 90th
    percentile, should shift east during the Day 2 period, and
    generally continue to be superimposed with moderate to strong
    instability on the periphery of a ridge. Confidence in the
    convective details remain low at this time, but the overall
    environment will remain supportive of organized convection with
    high instantaneous rain rates. The pattern may still lead to a forward-propagating MCS, which would mitigate flash flood risk
    overall, but the overall environment is favorable enough to
    continue to maintain a Marginal Risk across the region.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    2030Z Update: The 12Z guidance today came into better consensus
    that in the anomalously high moisture plume, additional convection
    is likely to develop late tonight into Wednesday across SC into
    central NC. The activity is likely to be slow moving and highly
    efficient rain producers, so some localized higher amounts are
    possible as well as some training elements. Some of this could fall
    over the more urban corridor from Charlotte to Raleigh. By the=20 afternoon/evening, the guidance is consistent that additional=20
    storms are likely closer to the coast where some intense rain rates
    are anticipated. 12Z HREF neighborhood probabilities for 3-5" for=20
    the 24-hr period exceeds 50%. With all this in mind, a Slight Risk=20
    was introduced for this part of the region.=20

    Further south into southeast Alabama into southern Georgia, the
    high moisture and proximity to the stalled frontal boundary will
    likely create scattered to widespread thunderstorms. Given the high
    PWs and general slower storm motions, some localized heavy rainfall
    totals are possible and in coordination with the local WFOs, a
    Slight Risk was extended further south into that area as well.

    ---previous discussion---

    Confidence remains relatively low in the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall on the Day 2 period, as the ECMWF/ECENS suite continues
    to concentrate QPF farther north (mostly across North Carolina)
    whereas the bulk of the other global models and ensembles are
    focused south and east (mainly in SC and GA). Regardless of the
    precise details, a plume of anomalously high precipitable water
    values is likely to remain present across the coastal Southeast
    and Mid-Atlantic region into the Day 2 period, and the flash flood
    threat areas will likely come down to mesoscale details that will
    come much more into focus in subsequent outlook periods.

    Churchill/Lamers/Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND NORTHERN PLAINS, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley and Northern Plains...

    The Marginal Risk area was maintained and adjusted across North=20
    Dakota into the Upper Midwest area, as models are in good=20
    agreement in indicating a potent upper-level shortwave digging=20
    southward into the CONUS by Day 3. The approach of the trough is=20
    likely to result in another wave of low-level return flow into the=20
    Northern High Plains, sending PWs to the 90th percentile or higher=20
    once again. Moderate to strong instability is expected to build=20
    once again with daytime heating on the periphery of a ridge, and=20
    organized convection is likely to ensue in the late afternoon and=20
    evening.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence remains low in the placement of the heaviest rainfall
    going into the Day 3 period, with substantial differences still
    between the global model suites. As anomalously high tropospheric
    moisture is likely to remain near the coast, maintained the
    existing Marginal Risk area across portions of the area most=20
    likely to realize heavy precipitation with daytime heating.

    Churchill/Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!98_jvbYYH9wibS50s2SbrABJay7izxHHShckMfWNS2HH= wz-xeB8Yms0J0pIrz5dQoqDlG1fr4n5oSlRqRdvLeaUDHHM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!98_jvbYYH9wibS50s2SbrABJay7izxHHShckMfWNS2HH= wz-xeB8Yms0J0pIrz5dQoqDlG1fr4n5oSlRqRdvLi_8QCHs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!98_jvbYYH9wibS50s2SbrABJay7izxHHShckMfWNS2HH= wz-xeB8Yms0J0pIrz5dQoqDlG1fr4n5oSlRqRdvLzuyDJFs$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 5 22:17:54 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 052217
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    617 PM EDT Tue Aug 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 221Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC AND IN THE UPPER Midwest...

    Thunderstorms were growing upscale in both areal coverage and in
    intensity across parts of southeast North Dakota and northeast
    South Dakota. This was roughly the same geographic area where the
    HREF/HRRR guidance has been signaling higher QPF in recent runs.=20
    With rainfall amounts now shown in the 2 to 3 inch range...combined
    with potentially intense rainfall rates on an area where flash=20
    flood guidance has come down due to recent rainfall...the risk of=20
    flooding has increased to the point where a Slight Risk area is=20 warranted.=20

    Bann

    ...Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    16Z UPDATE: Most changes for this outlook were made to the Slight
    Risk area over the Southeast. They were not big overall, but it
    did recenter the risk area a bit to the northeast, expanding it
    about 70 miles to the northeast, and trimming about 25 miles off
    the northwest side. The ongoing round of convection in central
    South Carolina has progressed further northeast than guidance over
    the past several cycles had indicated, and 12Z hi-res models show
    an additional round of convection developing overnight from central
    North Carolina into central South Carolina. The overnight round
    would be due to a restrengthening of a LLJ and the unstable air
    mass expanding inland as a result. No other change in the reasoning
    described in the previous discussion; a complex pattern of cell
    mergers and colliding boundaries may allow storms and heavy
    rainfall to maximize in a couple localized areas, with potential
    for greater than 5 inches of rain in a short period of time.

    The 12Z HRRR shows a scenario late tonight that would be of
    greater concern: a training and backbuilding convective band within
    30 miles or so of the Raleigh-Durham metro area, which leads to
    locally extreme rainfall. Other models show hints of a similar
    scenario but do not hit similar rainfall extremes. This will need
    to be monitored in the event of greater consensus or observational
    trends, in case probabilities may need to be increased.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: A conducive overall setup for locally heavy
    downpours exists, with a low-level front/convergence zone and the
    right entrance region of a strong upper-level jet streak
    superimposed over the same area (along with anomalously high
    moisture and PWs over the 90th percentile). The main limiting
    factor for organized heavy rainfall is certainly instability,
    though a modestly strengthening low-level jet (15-25 kts) will
    provide some isentropic upglide to kick things off this morning
    (with hourly totals likely limited to 1-2"). Most hi-res models
    depict a break in the precipitation during the day, but another
    round may ensue later tonight over some of the same areas, as the
    frontal zone and parent trough to the west move very little.

    Further diurnally-driven development is expected within the broader
    warm sector from the central Gulf Coast to south-central Georgia,
    and the rest of South Carolina, with stronger instability building
    today with daytime heating and PWs in excess of 2 inches. Hi-res
    models continue to indicate fairly high probabilities of 2"/hr
    rain rates, and a complex pattern of cell mergers and colliding
    outflow boundaries and sea breezes. This may lead to periods of 1-2
    hours where convection is maximized in particular areas, and
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The inherited Slight Risk
    was expanded a bit to cover coastal portions of SC/GA with the
    highest probabilities for localized 5" exceedance.

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    16Z UPDATE: No major changes were made with this outlook update,
    other than to remove a small portion of the northern side of the
    risk area due to observational trends and the latest guidance.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: There continues to be a fairly strong signal
    for storms to initiate in the northern extent of an instability
    plume in the Plains, near the nose of a moisture transport maximum,
    in the afternoon today. Consensus among the hi-res models is this
    will rapidly organize into an MCS and then likely propagate quickly
    to the southeast in the general direction suggested by the
    thickness contours. The potential for relatively fast forward
    motions may mitigate some of the flash flood risk. However,
    precipitation anomalies over the past 14 days indicate the pattern
    has been relatively wet of late in the Northern Plains, and
    precipitable water values will be anomalously high. Deep moisture
    combined with strong instability should support high instantaneous
    rain rates. Therefore, any areas where the duration of heavy rain
    could be lengthened (such as backbuilding along the periphery of a
    cold pool, cell mergers with antecedent convective development) may
    lead to flash flooding. The Marginal Risk was maintained and
    adjusted southward based on the latest guidance (factoring in
    upwind propagation favoring southern propagation late).

    ...Ohio River Valley...

    16Z UPDATE: No major changes were made with this outlook update,
    other than to remove a small portion of the western side of the
    risk area.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: An inherited Marginal Risk was maintained and
    adjusted slightly for a potential repeat of the pattern from
    yesterday, just displaced slightly to the east over S IN, C KY, SW
    OH. A slow moving mid-level wave is expected to continue to slowly
    shift east, in the presence of relatively strong instability.
    Therefore, scattered afternoon thunderstorms are expected. Although
    moisture levels are not expected to be anomalously high, storm
    motions should be very slow with mean winds in the lowest 8-km
    around 5 kts or so. This could lead to localized flash flooding by
    extending the duration of heavy rain with the most intense storms.
    Rain rates should reach the 1-2"/hr range.

    Churchill/Lamers


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL
    SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A region of anomalously high moisture, with PWs near the 90th
    percentile, should shift east during the Day 2 period, and
    generally continue to be superimposed with moderate to strong
    instability on the periphery of a ridge. Confidence in the
    convective details remain low at this time, but the overall
    environment will remain supportive of organized convection with
    high instantaneous rain rates. The pattern may still lead to a forward-propagating MCS, which would mitigate flash flood risk
    overall, but the overall environment is favorable enough to
    continue to maintain a Marginal Risk across the region.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    2030Z Update: The 12Z guidance today came into better consensus
    that in the anomalously high moisture plume, additional convection
    is likely to develop late tonight into Wednesday across SC into
    central NC. The activity is likely to be slow moving and highly
    efficient rain producers, so some localized higher amounts are
    possible as well as some training elements. Some of this could fall
    over the more urban corridor from Charlotte to Raleigh. By the afternoon/evening, the guidance is consistent that additional
    storms are likely closer to the coast where some intense rain rates
    are anticipated. 12Z HREF neighborhood probabilities for 3-5" for
    the 24-hr period exceeds 50%. With all this in mind, a Slight Risk
    was introduced for this part of the region.

    Further south into southeast Alabama into southern Georgia, the
    high moisture and proximity to the stalled frontal boundary will
    likely create scattered to widespread thunderstorms. Given the high
    PWs and general slower storm motions, some localized heavy rainfall
    totals are possible and in coordination with the local WFOs, a
    Slight Risk was extended further south into that area as well.

    ---previous discussion---

    Confidence remains relatively low in the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall on the Day 2 period, as the ECMWF/ECENS suite continues
    to concentrate QPF farther north (mostly across North Carolina)
    whereas the bulk of the other global models and ensembles are
    focused south and east (mainly in SC and GA). Regardless of the
    precise details, a plume of anomalously high precipitable water
    values is likely to remain present across the coastal Southeast
    and Mid-Atlantic region into the Day 2 period, and the flash flood
    threat areas will likely come down to mesoscale details that will
    come much more into focus in subsequent outlook periods.

    Churchill/Lamers/Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND NORTHERN PLAINS, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley and Northern Plains...

    The Marginal Risk area was maintained and adjusted across North
    Dakota into the Upper Midwest area, as models are in good
    agreement in indicating a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the CONUS by Day 3. The approach of the trough is
    likely to result in another wave of low-level return flow into the
    Northern High Plains, sending PWs to the 90th percentile or higher
    once again. Moderate to strong instability is expected to build
    once again with daytime heating on the periphery of a ridge, and
    organized convection is likely to ensue in the late afternoon and
    evening.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence remains low in the placement of the heaviest rainfall
    going into the Day 3 period, with substantial differences still
    between the global model suites. As anomalously high tropospheric
    moisture is likely to remain near the coast, maintained the
    existing Marginal Risk area across portions of the area most
    likely to realize heavy precipitation with daytime heating.

    Churchill/Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-1CZjQX-QAb0ubTEBCrF8F62aXQHFT5rbcHKkU50VVYN= GLu2v9p-J2qfGvWlgSco5fbW-XW_vQJlI1-U-DSZ_VOetP0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-1CZjQX-QAb0ubTEBCrF8F62aXQHFT5rbcHKkU50VVYN= GLu2v9p-J2qfGvWlgSco5fbW-XW_vQJlI1-U-DSZ9bSuVLU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-1CZjQX-QAb0ubTEBCrF8F62aXQHFT5rbcHKkU50VVYN= GLu2v9p-J2qfGvWlgSco5fbW-XW_vQJlI1-U-DSZXPl4Vp0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 6 00:58:05 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 060057
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    857 PM EDT Tue Aug 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC AND IN THE UPPER MIDWEST...

    01Z Update...Few changes made to the recently-added Slight Risk
    area in parts of the Upper Midwest/Northern Plains. 00Z sounding
    from Aberdeen showed 40 to 45 kt southerly low level winds feeding
    directly into a complex that has a history of 3 to 6 inch rainfall
    amounts. The changes which were made were based on trends in
    satellite and radar imagery.A baroclinic leaf seen in water vapor
    satellite imagery was crossing the Marginal risk area placed over
    the Ohio Valley...which was resulting in an uptick in showers and
    a few thunderstorms. Felt is was a bit too early to remove the
    Marginal risk area but the expectation is that convection should
    weaken an dissipate by late evening or the early-morning hours. Likewise...convection should gradually weaken and decrease in areal
    coverage this evening across parts of the Southeast US but enough
    upper support and low level flow of moisture precludes removal of
    the Slight risk area altogether. There was enough support to break
    the broader region into two distinct areas...one being parts of
    coastal Carolinas and the second being near the Gulf coast.=20=20

    Bann

    ...Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    16Z UPDATE: Most changes for this outlook were made to the Slight
    Risk area over the Southeast. They were not big overall, but it
    did recenter the risk area a bit to the northeast, expanding it
    about 70 miles to the northeast, and trimming about 25 miles off
    the northwest side. The ongoing round of convection in central
    South Carolina has progressed further northeast than guidance over
    the past several cycles had indicated, and 12Z hi-res models show
    an additional round of convection developing overnight from central
    North Carolina into central South Carolina. The overnight round
    would be due to a restrengthening of a LLJ and the unstable air
    mass expanding inland as a result. No other change in the reasoning
    described in the previous discussion; a complex pattern of cell
    mergers and colliding boundaries may allow storms and heavy
    rainfall to maximize in a couple localized areas, with potential
    for greater than 5 inches of rain in a short period of time.

    The 12Z HRRR shows a scenario late tonight that would be of
    greater concern: a training and backbuilding convective band within
    30 miles or so of the Raleigh-Durham metro area, which leads to
    locally extreme rainfall. Other models show hints of a similar
    scenario but do not hit similar rainfall extremes. This will need
    to be monitored in the event of greater consensus or observational
    trends, in case probabilities may need to be increased.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: A conducive overall setup for locally heavy
    downpours exists, with a low-level front/convergence zone and the
    right entrance region of a strong upper-level jet streak
    superimposed over the same area (along with anomalously high
    moisture and PWs over the 90th percentile). The main limiting
    factor for organized heavy rainfall is certainly instability,
    though a modestly strengthening low-level jet (15-25 kts) will
    provide some isentropic upglide to kick things off this morning
    (with hourly totals likely limited to 1-2"). Most hi-res models
    depict a break in the precipitation during the day, but another
    round may ensue later tonight over some of the same areas, as the
    frontal zone and parent trough to the west move very little.

    Further diurnally-driven development is expected within the broader
    warm sector from the central Gulf Coast to south-central Georgia,
    and the rest of South Carolina, with stronger instability building
    today with daytime heating and PWs in excess of 2 inches. Hi-res
    models continue to indicate fairly high probabilities of 2"/hr
    rain rates, and a complex pattern of cell mergers and colliding
    outflow boundaries and sea breezes. This may lead to periods of 1-2
    hours where convection is maximized in particular areas, and
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The inherited Slight Risk
    was expanded a bit to cover coastal portions of SC/GA with the
    highest probabilities for localized 5" exceedance.

    ...Northern Plains and Minnesota...

    16Z UPDATE: No major changes were made with this outlook update,
    other than to remove a small portion of the northern side of the
    risk area due to observational trends and the latest guidance.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: There continues to be a fairly strong signal
    for storms to initiate in the northern extent of an instability
    plume in the Plains, near the nose of a moisture transport maximum,
    in the afternoon today. Consensus among the hi-res models is this
    will rapidly organize into an MCS and then likely propagate quickly
    to the southeast in the general direction suggested by the
    thickness contours. The potential for relatively fast forward
    motions may mitigate some of the flash flood risk. However,
    precipitation anomalies over the past 14 days indicate the pattern
    has been relatively wet of late in the Northern Plains, and
    precipitable water values will be anomalously high. Deep moisture
    combined with strong instability should support high instantaneous
    rain rates. Therefore, any areas where the duration of heavy rain
    could be lengthened (such as backbuilding along the periphery of a
    cold pool, cell mergers with antecedent convective development) may
    lead to flash flooding. The Marginal Risk was maintained and
    adjusted southward based on the latest guidance (factoring in
    upwind propagation favoring southern propagation late).

    ...Ohio River Valley...

    16Z UPDATE: No major changes were made with this outlook update,
    other than to remove a small portion of the western side of the
    risk area.

    PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: An inherited Marginal Risk was maintained and
    adjusted slightly for a potential repeat of the pattern from
    yesterday, just displaced slightly to the east over S IN, C KY, SW
    OH. A slow moving mid-level wave is expected to continue to slowly
    shift east, in the presence of relatively strong instability.
    Therefore, scattered afternoon thunderstorms are expected. Although
    moisture levels are not expected to be anomalously high, storm
    motions should be very slow with mean winds in the lowest 8-km
    around 5 kts or so. This could lead to localized flash flooding by
    extending the duration of heavy rain with the most intense storms.
    Rain rates should reach the 1-2"/hr range.

    Churchill/Lamers


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND FOR THE COASTAL
    SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A region of anomalously high moisture, with PWs near the 90th
    percentile, should shift east during the Day 2 period, and
    generally continue to be superimposed with moderate to strong
    instability on the periphery of a ridge. Confidence in the
    convective details remain low at this time, but the overall
    environment will remain supportive of organized convection with
    high instantaneous rain rates. The pattern may still lead to a forward-propagating MCS, which would mitigate flash flood risk
    overall, but the overall environment is favorable enough to
    continue to maintain a Marginal Risk across the region.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    2030Z Update: The 12Z guidance today came into better consensus
    that in the anomalously high moisture plume, additional convection
    is likely to develop late tonight into Wednesday across SC into
    central NC. The activity is likely to be slow moving and highly
    efficient rain producers, so some localized higher amounts are
    possible as well as some training elements. Some of this could fall
    over the more urban corridor from Charlotte to Raleigh. By the afternoon/evening, the guidance is consistent that additional
    storms are likely closer to the coast where some intense rain rates
    are anticipated. 12Z HREF neighborhood probabilities for 3-5" for
    the 24-hr period exceeds 50%. With all this in mind, a Slight Risk
    was introduced for this part of the region.

    Further south into southeast Alabama into southern Georgia, the
    high moisture and proximity to the stalled frontal boundary will
    likely create scattered to widespread thunderstorms. Given the high
    PWs and general slower storm motions, some localized heavy rainfall
    totals are possible and in coordination with the local WFOs, a
    Slight Risk was extended further south into that area as well.

    ---previous discussion---

    Confidence remains relatively low in the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall on the Day 2 period, as the ECMWF/ECENS suite continues
    to concentrate QPF farther north (mostly across North Carolina)
    whereas the bulk of the other global models and ensembles are
    focused south and east (mainly in SC and GA). Regardless of the
    precise details, a plume of anomalously high precipitable water
    values is likely to remain present across the coastal Southeast
    and Mid-Atlantic region into the Day 2 period, and the flash flood
    threat areas will likely come down to mesoscale details that will
    come much more into focus in subsequent outlook periods.

    Churchill/Lamers/Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND NORTHERN PLAINS, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley and Northern Plains...

    The Marginal Risk area was maintained and adjusted across North
    Dakota into the Upper Midwest area, as models are in good
    agreement in indicating a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the CONUS by Day 3. The approach of the trough is
    likely to result in another wave of low-level return flow into the
    Northern High Plains, sending PWs to the 90th percentile or higher
    once again. Moderate to strong instability is expected to build
    once again with daytime heating on the periphery of a ridge, and
    organized convection is likely to ensue in the late afternoon and
    evening.

    ...Coastal Southeast and Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence remains low in the placement of the heaviest rainfall
    going into the Day 3 period, with substantial differences still
    between the global model suites. As anomalously high tropospheric
    moisture is likely to remain near the coast, maintained the
    existing Marginal Risk area across portions of the area most
    likely to realize heavy precipitation with daytime heating.

    Churchill/Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6c2j7ciPvuZt0VPtFN-LPp8CGx7e--efKTq3qp-eYeXi= wtwmS0VDZ6gn9JWBnMrbqWwzUGUqvW_9Oa8uwd53dPwOWcs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6c2j7ciPvuZt0VPtFN-LPp8CGx7e--efKTq3qp-eYeXi= wtwmS0VDZ6gn9JWBnMrbqWwzUGUqvW_9Oa8uwd53qHu0saA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6c2j7ciPvuZt0VPtFN-LPp8CGx7e--efKTq3qp-eYeXi= wtwmS0VDZ6gn9JWBnMrbqWwzUGUqvW_9Oa8uwd53WxzrXhg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 6 08:17:34 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 060817
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    417 AM EDT Wed Aug 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Relatively high coverage of convection is expected once again
    today, as a stalled frontal boundary remains draped across the
    region. While storms should generally remain relatively short-lived
    over any one location with shear being the main limiting factor,=20
    more significant convective organization is possible in the
    vicinity of the NC/SC Coastal Plain border region where deep layer
    shear is progged to be closer to 20-30 kts (versus less than 20 kts
    from surroundings). This is due to the slow eastward progress of
    the blocked upper trough to the west, and a vorticity maxima may
    also contribute to convective proliferation later today via DPVA
    and enhanced upper divergence via right-entrance region of ~80 kt
    jet streak over the Northeast. While the 00z HREF 5" exceedance
    probs are quite high (50%+ over portions of the Coastal Plain),
    uncertainty remains high with regard to the extent of resulting
    flash flooding, as the QPF spread between the HREF members remains
    quite large (with the NAM-nest and FV3 being the wetter outliers,
    while the ARW and ARW2 are the drier outliers). Maintained the
    inherited Slight Risk, and a targeted upgraded Moderate Risk could
    be possible later today should models come into better agreement.=20

    ...Central Plains into Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A mature MCS is diving southward early this morning from SD/MN into
    IA/NE (see MPD #877 for more information) along with anomalously=20
    high tropospheric moisture (PWs nearing 2.0", or around the 90th=20 percentile). Maintained a Marginal Risk for lingering convection=20
    associated with the MCS this morning, along with the potential=20
    sustained or redeveloped convection in association with the remnant
    MCV later today.=20

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS, AS WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL=20
    SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Northern Plains...

    Models continue to indicate a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the PacNW by Day 2, and have maintained a Marginal=20
    Risk centered on ND where convection is anticipated to initiate in
    the afternoon. The approach of the trough will result in another=20
    round of low-level return flow into the Northern High Plains,=20
    sending PWs to near (or above) the 90th percentile once again.=20
    Moderate to strong instability with daytime heating should yield
    organized convection by late afternoon/evening, and a targeted
    Slight Risk upgrade may be necessary with subsequent outlooks.=20

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence in the rainfall forecast is relatively low going into=20
    Thursday, as much depends on how convection ultimately evolves
    today. That said, the recent trends in QPF have been downward with
    most models showing anomalously high tropospheric moisture and
    low-level convergence shifting to the immediate coastline. Have
    maintained an inherited Marginal Risk for this cycle, which may be
    further reduced in coverage should these model trends continue.=20

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AS=20
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC=20
    REGION...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    Inherited Marginal Risk was expanded to include a relatively large
    portion of the north-central portion of the CONUS, a continuation
    of the threat from Day 2 from a potent upper trough/closed low.
    Convective details remain quite fuzzy at this range, but guidance
    suggests the potential for localized 3-5" totals (high spatial
    spread in these depictions) which may necessitate future targeted
    upgrades.=20

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Low confidence forecast continuing into Day 3, maintaining a
    Marginal Risk area that is largely focused on the same area. At
    this juncture most models depict heavy rainfall remaining largely
    offshore, but given recent heavy rains and the potential for
    significant amounts today have opted to keep the Marginal Risk.=20

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_LefztFLcOVDVHG75EAX7i_3buh9iaIaNy4PpYdP5PeU= nGmSKdl5CdM_Qk0DnSFR3pIEnY2_exUTryCn95fmdrSEY0w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_LefztFLcOVDVHG75EAX7i_3buh9iaIaNy4PpYdP5PeU= nGmSKdl5CdM_Qk0DnSFR3pIEnY2_exUTryCn95fmSxNSNAc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_LefztFLcOVDVHG75EAX7i_3buh9iaIaNy4PpYdP5PeU= nGmSKdl5CdM_Qk0DnSFR3pIEnY2_exUTryCn95fmz8a5GcA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 6 15:30:36 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 061530
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1130 AM EDT Wed Aug 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...1630z update...

    Minor edits were made to the day 1 ERO. Upper-level dynamics=20
    continue to support widespread convection across the=20
    Southeast/Mid- Atlantic throughout the day. HREF neighborhood=20
    probabilities of 24h qpf exceeding 5 inches remains high over=20
    parts of the Carolina coast from near Charleston up through=20
    Wilmington.

    In the Central Plains to Middle/Upper Mississippi Valley, model
    spread continues to be the main reason for no upgrades here.
    Favorable instability and moisture will support heavy
    precipitation but models struggle to converge on a solution.

    Kebede

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Relatively high coverage of convection is expected once again
    today, as a stalled frontal boundary remains draped across the
    region. While storms should generally remain relatively short-lived
    over any one location with shear being the main limiting factor,
    more significant convective organization is possible in the
    vicinity of the NC/SC Coastal Plain border region where deep layer
    shear is progged to be closer to 20-30 kts (versus less than 20 kts
    from surroundings). This is due to the slow eastward progress of
    the blocked upper trough to the west, and a vorticity maxima may
    also contribute to convective proliferation later today via DPVA
    and enhanced upper divergence via right-entrance region of ~80 kt
    jet streak over the Northeast. While the 00z HREF 5" exceedance
    probs are quite high (50%+ over portions of the Coastal Plain),
    uncertainty remains high with regard to the extent of resulting
    flash flooding, as the QPF spread between the HREF members remains
    quite large (with the NAM-nest and FV3 being the wetter outliers,
    while the ARW and ARW2 are the drier outliers). Maintained the
    inherited Slight Risk, and a targeted upgraded Moderate Risk could
    be possible later today should models come into better agreement.

    ...Central Plains into Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A mature MCS is diving southward early this morning from SD/MN into
    IA/NE (see MPD #877 for more information) along with anomalously
    high tropospheric moisture (PWs nearing 2.0", or around the 90th
    percentile). Maintained a Marginal Risk for lingering convection
    associated with the MCS this morning, along with the potential
    sustained or redeveloped convection in association with the remnant
    MCV later today.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS, AS WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL
    SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Northern Plains...

    Models continue to indicate a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the PacNW by Day 2, and have maintained a Marginal
    Risk centered on ND where convection is anticipated to initiate in
    the afternoon. The approach of the trough will result in another
    round of low-level return flow into the Northern High Plains,
    sending PWs to near (or above) the 90th percentile once again.
    Moderate to strong instability with daytime heating should yield
    organized convection by late afternoon/evening, and a targeted
    Slight Risk upgrade may be necessary with subsequent outlooks.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence in the rainfall forecast is relatively low going into
    Thursday, as much depends on how convection ultimately evolves
    today. That said, the recent trends in QPF have been downward with
    most models showing anomalously high tropospheric moisture and
    low-level convergence shifting to the immediate coastline. Have
    maintained an inherited Marginal Risk for this cycle, which may be
    further reduced in coverage should these model trends continue.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    Inherited Marginal Risk was expanded to include a relatively large
    portion of the north-central portion of the CONUS, a continuation
    of the threat from Day 2 from a potent upper trough/closed low.
    Convective details remain quite fuzzy at this range, but guidance
    suggests the potential for localized 3-5" totals (high spatial
    spread in these depictions) which may necessitate future targeted
    upgrades.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Low confidence forecast continuing into Day 3, maintaining a
    Marginal Risk area that is largely focused on the same area. At
    this juncture most models depict heavy rainfall remaining largely
    offshore, but given recent heavy rains and the potential for
    significant amounts today have opted to keep the Marginal Risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!88-iiXD-ZHSV91N3MOxFRzJMl3gtCebPzzC-zich3J5i= Gyqi7VccZljAw7JPaqmTHwzJDndjIMFXgbKsQ4ZuzPB4JX0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!88-iiXD-ZHSV91N3MOxFRzJMl3gtCebPzzC-zich3J5i= Gyqi7VccZljAw7JPaqmTHwzJDndjIMFXgbKsQ4Zul_lVJ5A$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!88-iiXD-ZHSV91N3MOxFRzJMl3gtCebPzzC-zich3J5i= Gyqi7VccZljAw7JPaqmTHwzJDndjIMFXgbKsQ4ZuCBY4er0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 6 15:32:04 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 061531
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1131 AM EDT Wed Aug 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...16z update...

    Minor edits were made to the day 1 ERO. Upper-level dynamics
    continue to support widespread convection across the
    Southeast/Mid- Atlantic throughout the day. HREF neighborhood
    probabilities of 24h qpf exceeding 5 inches remains high over
    parts of the Carolina coast from near Charleston up through
    Wilmington.

    In the Central Plains to Middle/Upper Mississippi Valley, model
    spread continues to be the main reason for no upgrades here.
    Favorable instability and moisture will support heavy
    precipitation but models struggle to converge on a solution.

    Kebede

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Relatively high coverage of convection is expected once again
    today, as a stalled frontal boundary remains draped across the
    region. While storms should generally remain relatively short-lived
    over any one location with shear being the main limiting factor,
    more significant convective organization is possible in the
    vicinity of the NC/SC Coastal Plain border region where deep layer
    shear is progged to be closer to 20-30 kts (versus less than 20 kts
    from surroundings). This is due to the slow eastward progress of
    the blocked upper trough to the west, and a vorticity maxima may
    also contribute to convective proliferation later today via DPVA
    and enhanced upper divergence via right-entrance region of ~80 kt
    jet streak over the Northeast. While the 00z HREF 5" exceedance
    probs are quite high (50%+ over portions of the Coastal Plain),
    uncertainty remains high with regard to the extent of resulting
    flash flooding, as the QPF spread between the HREF members remains
    quite large (with the NAM-nest and FV3 being the wetter outliers,
    while the ARW and ARW2 are the drier outliers). Maintained the
    inherited Slight Risk, and a targeted upgraded Moderate Risk could
    be possible later today should models come into better agreement.

    ...Central Plains into Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A mature MCS is diving southward early this morning from SD/MN into
    IA/NE (see MPD #877 for more information) along with anomalously
    high tropospheric moisture (PWs nearing 2.0", or around the 90th
    percentile). Maintained a Marginal Risk for lingering convection
    associated with the MCS this morning, along with the potential
    sustained or redeveloped convection in association with the remnant
    MCV later today.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS, AS WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL
    SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Northern Plains...

    Models continue to indicate a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the PacNW by Day 2, and have maintained a Marginal
    Risk centered on ND where convection is anticipated to initiate in
    the afternoon. The approach of the trough will result in another
    round of low-level return flow into the Northern High Plains,
    sending PWs to near (or above) the 90th percentile once again.
    Moderate to strong instability with daytime heating should yield
    organized convection by late afternoon/evening, and a targeted
    Slight Risk upgrade may be necessary with subsequent outlooks.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence in the rainfall forecast is relatively low going into
    Thursday, as much depends on how convection ultimately evolves
    today. That said, the recent trends in QPF have been downward with
    most models showing anomalously high tropospheric moisture and
    low-level convergence shifting to the immediate coastline. Have
    maintained an inherited Marginal Risk for this cycle, which may be
    further reduced in coverage should these model trends continue.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    Inherited Marginal Risk was expanded to include a relatively large
    portion of the north-central portion of the CONUS, a continuation
    of the threat from Day 2 from a potent upper trough/closed low.
    Convective details remain quite fuzzy at this range, but guidance
    suggests the potential for localized 3-5" totals (high spatial
    spread in these depictions) which may necessitate future targeted
    upgrades.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Low confidence forecast continuing into Day 3, maintaining a
    Marginal Risk area that is largely focused on the same area. At
    this juncture most models depict heavy rainfall remaining largely
    offshore, but given recent heavy rains and the potential for
    significant amounts today have opted to keep the Marginal Risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_wZx2PUGfQ8layyvKLLRqcCcEO3veZlfGbcXnkxElQbX= PF0FIjTJywcbFAu96sSKecYZXZ0AEF4JkNWC9-WfuBIhoEE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_wZx2PUGfQ8layyvKLLRqcCcEO3veZlfGbcXnkxElQbX= PF0FIjTJywcbFAu96sSKecYZXZ0AEF4JkNWC9-WfZBHk1Us$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_wZx2PUGfQ8layyvKLLRqcCcEO3veZlfGbcXnkxElQbX= PF0FIjTJywcbFAu96sSKecYZXZ0AEF4JkNWC9-WfKx2LP58$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 6 16:12:03 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 061611
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1211 PM EDT Wed Aug 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...16z update...

    Minor edits were made to the day 1 ERO. Upper-level dynamics
    continue to support widespread convection across the
    Southeast/Mid- Atlantic throughout the day. 12z HREF 40km=20
    neighborhood probabilities of 24h qpf exceeding 5 inches remains=20
    high (50-70% range) over parts of the Carolina coast from near=20
    Charleston up through Wilmington. However the EAS probabilities of=20
    exceeding 3 inches remain capped at 15%.

    In the Central Plains to Middle/Upper Mississippi Valley, model
    spread continues to be the main reason for no upgrades there.
    Favorable instability and moisture will support heavy
    precipitation, but models struggle to converge on placement of
    impactful qpf.

    Kebede

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Relatively high coverage of convection is expected once again
    today, as a stalled frontal boundary remains draped across the
    region. While storms should generally remain relatively short-lived
    over any one location with shear being the main limiting factor,
    more significant convective organization is possible in the
    vicinity of the NC/SC Coastal Plain border region where deep layer
    shear is progged to be closer to 20-30 kts (versus less than 20 kts
    from surroundings). This is due to the slow eastward progress of
    the blocked upper trough to the west, and a vorticity maxima may
    also contribute to convective proliferation later today via DPVA
    and enhanced upper divergence via right-entrance region of ~80 kt
    jet streak over the Northeast. While the 00z HREF 5" exceedance
    probs are quite high (50%+ over portions of the Coastal Plain),
    uncertainty remains high with regard to the extent of resulting
    flash flooding, as the QPF spread between the HREF members remains
    quite large (with the NAM-nest and FV3 being the wetter outliers,
    while the ARW and ARW2 are the drier outliers). Maintained the
    inherited Slight Risk, and a targeted upgraded Moderate Risk could
    be possible later today should models come into better agreement.

    ...Central Plains into Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A mature MCS is diving southward early this morning from SD/MN into
    IA/NE (see MPD #876 for more information) along with anomalously=20
    high tropospheric moisture (PWs nearing 2.0", or around the 90th=20 percentile). Maintained a Marginal Risk for lingering convection=20
    associated with the MCS this morning, along with the potential=20
    sustained or redeveloped convection in association with the remnant
    MCV later today.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS, AS WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL
    SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...Northern Plains...

    Models continue to indicate a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the PacNW by Day 2, and have maintained a Marginal
    Risk centered on ND where convection is anticipated to initiate in
    the afternoon. The approach of the trough will result in another
    round of low-level return flow into the Northern High Plains,
    sending PWs to near (or above) the 90th percentile once again.
    Moderate to strong instability with daytime heating should yield
    organized convection by late afternoon/evening, and a targeted
    Slight Risk upgrade may be necessary with subsequent outlooks.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence in the rainfall forecast is relatively low going into
    Thursday, as much depends on how convection ultimately evolves
    today. That said, the recent trends in QPF have been downward with
    most models showing anomalously high tropospheric moisture and
    low-level convergence shifting to the immediate coastline. Have
    maintained an inherited Marginal Risk for this cycle, which may be
    further reduced in coverage should these model trends continue.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    Inherited Marginal Risk was expanded to include a relatively large
    portion of the north-central portion of the CONUS, a continuation
    of the threat from Day 2 from a potent upper trough/closed low.
    Convective details remain quite fuzzy at this range, but guidance
    suggests the potential for localized 3-5" totals (high spatial
    spread in these depictions) which may necessitate future targeted
    upgrades.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Low confidence forecast continuing into Day 3, maintaining a
    Marginal Risk area that is largely focused on the same area. At
    this juncture most models depict heavy rainfall remaining largely
    offshore, but given recent heavy rains and the potential for
    significant amounts today have opted to keep the Marginal Risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8waeZGzLMsn8SHeeP0Si84aKGy7O1Ff2YxvKJ90neL_q= DpwR9YVe0iG0yETzZ2YSHzbskM6pZ-Ig2olM5WgTXLOGIZ8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8waeZGzLMsn8SHeeP0Si84aKGy7O1Ff2YxvKJ90neL_q= DpwR9YVe0iG0yETzZ2YSHzbskM6pZ-Ig2olM5WgTbJE4Ux0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8waeZGzLMsn8SHeeP0Si84aKGy7O1Ff2YxvKJ90neL_q= DpwR9YVe0iG0yETzZ2YSHzbskM6pZ-Ig2olM5WgTOV7fl04$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 6 18:59:17 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 061859
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    259 PM EDT Wed Aug 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 19Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...19z update...

    The day 1 slight risk area was expanded into southern-central areas
    of Virginia in coordination with the Wakefield field office. This
    was to account for 2-3"+ rainfall that has occurred so far today,as
    well as the potential for more convection to occur in and around=20
    this sensitive area this evening.

    ...16z update...

    Minor edits were made to the day 1 ERO. Upper-level dynamics
    continue to support widespread convection across the
    Southeast/Mid- Atlantic throughout the day. 12z HREF 40km
    neighborhood probabilities of 24h qpf exceeding 5 inches remains
    high (50-70% range) over parts of the Carolina coast from near
    Charleston up through Wilmington. However the EAS probabilities of
    exceeding 3 inches remain capped at 15%.

    In the Central Plains to Middle/Upper Mississippi Valley, model
    spread continues to be the main reason for no upgrades there.
    Favorable instability and moisture will support heavy
    precipitation, but models struggle to converge on placement of
    impactful qpf.

    Kebede

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Relatively high coverage of convection is expected once again
    today, as a stalled frontal boundary remains draped across the
    region. While storms should generally remain relatively short-lived
    over any one location with shear being the main limiting factor,
    more significant convective organization is possible in the
    vicinity of the NC/SC Coastal Plain border region where deep layer
    shear is progged to be closer to 20-30 kts (versus less than 20 kts
    from surroundings). This is due to the slow eastward progress of
    the blocked upper trough to the west, and a vorticity maxima may
    also contribute to convective proliferation later today via DPVA
    and enhanced upper divergence via right-entrance region of ~80 kt
    jet streak over the Northeast. While the 00z HREF 5" exceedance
    probs are quite high (50%+ over portions of the Coastal Plain),
    uncertainty remains high with regard to the extent of resulting
    flash flooding, as the QPF spread between the HREF members remains
    quite large (with the NAM-nest and FV3 being the wetter outliers,
    while the ARW and ARW2 are the drier outliers). Maintained the
    inherited Slight Risk, and a targeted upgraded Moderate Risk could
    be possible later today should models come into better agreement.

    ...Central Plains into Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A mature MCS is diving southward early this morning from SD/MN into
    IA/NE (see MPD #876 for more information) along with anomalously
    high tropospheric moisture (PWs nearing 2.0", or around the 90th
    percentile). Maintained a Marginal Risk for lingering convection
    associated with the MCS this morning, along with the potential
    sustained or redeveloped convection in association with the remnant
    MCV later today.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES, AS=20
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC=20
    REGION...

    ...2030z update...

    A marginal risk area was introduced for portions of southern
    Wisconsin and northern Illinois. 12z hires guidance suggests the
    development of some sort of MCS over parts of southeastern
    Minnesota/southern Wisconsin Thursday afternoon/evening. This is
    likely to occur beneath an shortwave impulse propagating through
    the Northern Plains/Upper Midwest within a broader upper-level
    ridge. 1-2=20

    ...Northern Plains...

    Models continue to indicate a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the PacNW by Day 2, and have maintained a Marginal
    Risk centered on ND where convection is anticipated to initiate in
    the afternoon. The approach of the trough will result in another
    round of low-level return flow into the Northern High Plains,
    sending PWs to near (or above) the 90th percentile once again.
    Moderate to strong instability with daytime heating should yield
    organized convection by late afternoon/evening, and a targeted
    Slight Risk upgrade may be necessary with subsequent outlooks.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence in the rainfall forecast is relatively low going into
    Thursday, as much depends on how convection ultimately evolves
    today. That said, the recent trends in QPF have been downward with
    most models showing anomalously high tropospheric moisture and
    low-level convergence shifting to the immediate coastline. Have
    maintained an inherited Marginal Risk for this cycle, which may be
    further reduced in coverage should these model trends continue.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    Inherited Marginal Risk was expanded to include a relatively large
    portion of the north-central portion of the CONUS, a continuation
    of the threat from Day 2 from a potent upper trough/closed low.
    Convective details remain quite fuzzy at this range, but guidance
    suggests the potential for localized 3-5" totals (high spatial
    spread in these depictions) which may necessitate future targeted
    upgrades.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Low confidence forecast continuing into Day 3, maintaining a
    Marginal Risk area that is largely focused on the same area. At
    this juncture most models depict heavy rainfall remaining largely
    offshore, but given recent heavy rains and the potential for
    significant amounts today have opted to keep the Marginal Risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_6qDfTn1ig-8o51Lc7OJ5dTEh_wCfciD45yoqxC3eJkV= pU5LXW4ihl6sbDc9LUIBdc1FTvS3tkTtyXTCs-_QSjQYO2I$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_6qDfTn1ig-8o51Lc7OJ5dTEh_wCfciD45yoqxC3eJkV= pU5LXW4ihl6sbDc9LUIBdc1FTvS3tkTtyXTCs-_QsI1B4X0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_6qDfTn1ig-8o51Lc7OJ5dTEh_wCfciD45yoqxC3eJkV= pU5LXW4ihl6sbDc9LUIBdc1FTvS3tkTtyXTCs-_QiyngVSM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 6 19:03:44 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 061901
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    301 PM EDT Wed Aug 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 191Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...19z update...

    The day 1 slight risk area was expanded into southern-central areas
    of Virginia in coordination with the Wakefield field office. This
    was to account for 2-3"+ rainfall that has occurred so far today,as
    well as the potential for more convection to occur in and around
    this sensitive area this evening.

    ...16z update...

    Minor edits were made to the day 1 ERO. Upper-level dynamics
    continue to support widespread convection across the
    Southeast/Mid- Atlantic throughout the day. 12z HREF 40km
    neighborhood probabilities of 24h qpf exceeding 5 inches remains
    high (50-70% range) over parts of the Carolina coast from near
    Charleston up through Wilmington. However the EAS probabilities of
    exceeding 3 inches remain capped at 15%.

    In the Central Plains to Middle/Upper Mississippi Valley, model
    spread continues to be the main reason for no upgrades there.
    Favorable instability and moisture will support heavy
    precipitation, but models struggle to converge on placement of
    impactful qpf.

    Kebede

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Relatively high coverage of convection is expected once again
    today, as a stalled frontal boundary remains draped across the
    region. While storms should generally remain relatively short-lived
    over any one location with shear being the main limiting factor,
    more significant convective organization is possible in the
    vicinity of the NC/SC Coastal Plain border region where deep layer
    shear is progged to be closer to 20-30 kts (versus less than 20 kts
    from surroundings). This is due to the slow eastward progress of
    the blocked upper trough to the west, and a vorticity maxima may
    also contribute to convective proliferation later today via DPVA
    and enhanced upper divergence via right-entrance region of ~80 kt
    jet streak over the Northeast. While the 00z HREF 5" exceedance
    probs are quite high (50%+ over portions of the Coastal Plain),
    uncertainty remains high with regard to the extent of resulting
    flash flooding, as the QPF spread between the HREF members remains
    quite large (with the NAM-nest and FV3 being the wetter outliers,
    while the ARW and ARW2 are the drier outliers). Maintained the
    inherited Slight Risk, and a targeted upgraded Moderate Risk could
    be possible later today should models come into better agreement.

    ...Central Plains into Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A mature MCS is diving southward early this morning from SD/MN into
    IA/NE (see MPD #876 for more information) along with anomalously
    high tropospheric moisture (PWs nearing 2.0", or around the 90th
    percentile). Maintained a Marginal Risk for lingering convection
    associated with the MCS this morning, along with the potential
    sustained or redeveloped convection in association with the remnant
    MCV later today.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...2030z update...

    A marginal risk area was introduced for portions of southern
    Wisconsin and northern Illinois. 12z hires guidance suggests the
    development of some sort of MCS over parts of southeastern
    Minnesota/southern Wisconsin Thursday afternoon/evening. This is
    likely to occur beneath an shortwave impulse propagating through
    the Northern Plains/Upper Midwest within a broader upper-level
    ridge. 1-2

    ...Northern Plains...

    Models continue to indicate a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the PacNW by Day 2, and have maintained a Marginal
    Risk centered on ND where convection is anticipated to initiate in
    the afternoon. The approach of the trough will result in another
    round of low-level return flow into the Northern High Plains,
    sending PWs to near (or above) the 90th percentile once again.
    Moderate to strong instability with daytime heating should yield
    organized convection by late afternoon/evening, and a targeted
    Slight Risk upgrade may be necessary with subsequent outlooks.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence in the rainfall forecast is relatively low going into
    Thursday, as much depends on how convection ultimately evolves
    today. That said, the recent trends in QPF have been downward with
    most models showing anomalously high tropospheric moisture and
    low-level convergence shifting to the immediate coastline. Have
    maintained an inherited Marginal Risk for this cycle, which may be
    further reduced in coverage should these model trends continue.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    Inherited Marginal Risk was expanded to include a relatively large
    portion of the north-central portion of the CONUS, a continuation
    of the threat from Day 2 from a potent upper trough/closed low.
    Convective details remain quite fuzzy at this range, but guidance
    suggests the potential for localized 3-5" totals (high spatial
    spread in these depictions) which may necessitate future targeted
    upgrades.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Low confidence forecast continuing into Day 3, maintaining a
    Marginal Risk area that is largely focused on the same area. At
    this juncture most models depict heavy rainfall remaining largely
    offshore, but given recent heavy rains and the potential for
    significant amounts today have opted to keep the Marginal Risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-9epHMwWG7Pj2WqO9wqIomkwxsXFmgMPArIYIcCt_fKC= eK96zPFn2S8i_G0PP29mJjHF2XWBt-42L36LkyE3QgqOSTI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-9epHMwWG7Pj2WqO9wqIomkwxsXFmgMPArIYIcCt_fKC= eK96zPFn2S8i_G0PP29mJjHF2XWBt-42L36LkyE3dcPPfT8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-9epHMwWG7Pj2WqO9wqIomkwxsXFmgMPArIYIcCt_fKC= eK96zPFn2S8i_G0PP29mJjHF2XWBt-42L36LkyE3gtkVliQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 6 19:10:23 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 061908
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    308 PM EDT Wed Aug 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1907Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...19z update...

    The day 1 slight risk area was expanded into southern-central areas
    of Virginia in coordination with the Wakefield field office. This
    was to account for 2-3"+ rainfall that has occurred so far today,as
    well as the potential for more convection to occur in and around
    this sensitive area this evening.

    ...16z update...

    Minor edits were made to the day 1 ERO. Upper-level dynamics
    continue to support widespread convection across the
    Southeast/Mid- Atlantic throughout the day. 12z HREF 40km
    neighborhood probabilities of 24h qpf exceeding 5 inches remains
    high (50-70% range) over parts of the Carolina coast from near
    Charleston up through Wilmington. However the EAS probabilities of
    exceeding 3 inches remain capped at 15%.

    In the Central Plains to Middle/Upper Mississippi Valley, model
    spread continues to be the main reason for no upgrades there.
    Favorable instability and moisture will support heavy
    precipitation, but models struggle to converge on placement of
    impactful qpf.

    Kebede

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Relatively high coverage of convection is expected once again
    today, as a stalled frontal boundary remains draped across the
    region. While storms should generally remain relatively short-lived
    over any one location with shear being the main limiting factor,
    more significant convective organization is possible in the
    vicinity of the NC/SC Coastal Plain border region where deep layer
    shear is progged to be closer to 20-30 kts (versus less than 20 kts
    from surroundings). This is due to the slow eastward progress of
    the blocked upper trough to the west, and a vorticity maxima may
    also contribute to convective proliferation later today via DPVA
    and enhanced upper divergence via right-entrance region of ~80 kt
    jet streak over the Northeast. While the 00z HREF 5" exceedance
    probs are quite high (50%+ over portions of the Coastal Plain),
    uncertainty remains high with regard to the extent of resulting
    flash flooding, as the QPF spread between the HREF members remains
    quite large (with the NAM-nest and FV3 being the wetter outliers,
    while the ARW and ARW2 are the drier outliers). Maintained the
    inherited Slight Risk, and a targeted upgraded Moderate Risk could
    be possible later today should models come into better agreement.

    ...Central Plains into Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A mature MCS is diving southward early this morning from SD/MN into
    IA/NE (see MPD #876 for more information) along with anomalously
    high tropospheric moisture (PWs nearing 2.0", or around the 90th
    percentile). Maintained a Marginal Risk for lingering convection
    associated with the MCS this morning, along with the potential
    sustained or redeveloped convection in association with the remnant
    MCV later today.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...2030z update...

    A marginal risk area was introduced for portions of southern
    Wisconsin and northern Illinois. 12z hires guidance suggests the
    development of some sort of MCS over parts of southeastern
    Minnesota/southern Wisconsin Thursday afternoon/evening. This is
    likely to occur beneath an shortwave impulse propagating through
    the Northern Plains/Upper Midwest within a broader upper-level
    ridge. 1-2

    ...Northern Plains...

    Models continue to indicate a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the PacNW by Day 2, and have maintained a Marginal
    Risk centered on ND where convection is anticipated to initiate in
    the afternoon. The approach of the trough will result in another
    round of low-level return flow into the Northern High Plains,
    sending PWs to near (or above) the 90th percentile once again.
    Moderate to strong instability with daytime heating should yield
    organized convection by late afternoon/evening, and a targeted
    Slight Risk upgrade may be necessary with subsequent outlooks.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence in the rainfall forecast is relatively low going into
    Thursday, as much depends on how convection ultimately evolves
    today. That said, the recent trends in QPF have been downward with
    most models showing anomalously high tropospheric moisture and
    low-level convergence shifting to the immediate coastline. Have
    maintained an inherited Marginal Risk for this cycle, which may be
    further reduced in coverage should these model trends continue.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    Inherited Marginal Risk was expanded to include a relatively large
    portion of the north-central portion of the CONUS, a continuation
    of the threat from Day 2 from a potent upper trough/closed low.
    Convective details remain quite fuzzy at this range, but guidance
    suggests the potential for localized 3-5" totals (high spatial
    spread in these depictions) which may necessitate future targeted
    upgrades.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Low confidence forecast continuing into Day 3, maintaining a
    Marginal Risk area that is largely focused on the same area. At
    this juncture most models depict heavy rainfall remaining largely
    offshore, but given recent heavy rains and the potential for
    significant amounts today have opted to keep the Marginal Risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7pbvWue52_LkTYk98IqFgm7fj1FyUTeLdH6NwEtTgFlw= 7xQaRO7Oy1-BvIZeNjMZc3TOnhr1GrINnVF8avqebUm_P8U$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7pbvWue52_LkTYk98IqFgm7fj1FyUTeLdH6NwEtTgFlw= 7xQaRO7Oy1-BvIZeNjMZc3TOnhr1GrINnVF8avqeU8iI-9M$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7pbvWue52_LkTYk98IqFgm7fj1FyUTeLdH6NwEtTgFlw= 7xQaRO7Oy1-BvIZeNjMZc3TOnhr1GrINnVF8avqeyO86gF4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 6 20:11:10 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 062010
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    410 PM EDT Wed Aug 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Aug 06 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    ...19z update...

    The day 1 slight risk area was expanded into southern-central areas
    of Virginia in coordination with the Wakefield field office. This
    was to account for 2-3"+ rainfall that has occurred so far today,as
    well as the potential for more convection to occur in and around
    this sensitive area this evening.

    ...16z update...

    Minor edits were made to the day 1 ERO. Upper-level dynamics
    continue to support widespread convection across the
    Southeast/Mid- Atlantic throughout the day. 12z HREF 40km
    neighborhood probabilities of 24h qpf exceeding 5 inches remains
    high (50-70% range) over parts of the Carolina coast from near
    Charleston up through Wilmington. However the EAS probabilities of
    exceeding 3 inches remain capped at 15%.

    In the Central Plains to Middle/Upper Mississippi Valley, model
    spread continues to be the main reason for no upgrades there.
    Favorable instability and moisture will support heavy
    precipitation, but models struggle to converge on placement of
    impactful qpf.

    Kebede

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Relatively high coverage of convection is expected once again
    today, as a stalled frontal boundary remains draped across the
    region. While storms should generally remain relatively short-lived
    over any one location with shear being the main limiting factor,
    more significant convective organization is possible in the
    vicinity of the NC/SC Coastal Plain border region where deep layer
    shear is progged to be closer to 20-30 kts (versus less than 20 kts
    from surroundings). This is due to the slow eastward progress of
    the blocked upper trough to the west, and a vorticity maxima may
    also contribute to convective proliferation later today via DPVA
    and enhanced upper divergence via right-entrance region of ~80 kt
    jet streak over the Northeast. While the 00z HREF 5" exceedance
    probs are quite high (50%+ over portions of the Coastal Plain),
    uncertainty remains high with regard to the extent of resulting
    flash flooding, as the QPF spread between the HREF members remains
    quite large (with the NAM-nest and FV3 being the wetter outliers,
    while the ARW and ARW2 are the drier outliers). Maintained the
    inherited Slight Risk, and a targeted upgraded Moderate Risk could
    be possible later today should models come into better agreement.

    ...Central Plains into Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A mature MCS is diving southward early this morning from SD/MN into
    IA/NE (see MPD #876 for more information) along with anomalously
    high tropospheric moisture (PWs nearing 2.0", or around the 90th
    percentile). Maintained a Marginal Risk for lingering convection
    associated with the MCS this morning, along with the potential
    sustained or redeveloped convection in association with the remnant
    MCV later today.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...2030z update...

    A marginal risk area was introduced for portions of southern
    Wisconsin and northern Illinois. 12z hires guidance suggests the
    development of some sort of MCS over parts of southeastern
    Minnesota/southern Wisconsin and moving southeastward toward
    northern Illinois Thursday afternoon/evening. This is likely to=20
    occur beneath a shortwave impulse propagating through the Northern=20 Plains/Upper Midwest within a broader upper- level ridge. Generally
    1-2 inch totals with isolated higher amounts are expected.

    Elsewhere, excessive rainfall concerns remain marginal over the
    Dakotas despite a consolidating qpf max footprint over central=20
    North Dakota. Given relatively dry soils, the potential for an=20
    upgrade remains contingent upon a continuing increased qpf trend=20
    for the next issuance.

    Kebede

    ...Northern Plains...

    Models continue to indicate a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the PacNW by Day 2, and have maintained a Marginal
    Risk centered on ND where convection is anticipated to initiate in
    the afternoon. The approach of the trough will result in another
    round of low-level return flow into the Northern High Plains,
    sending PWs to near (or above) the 90th percentile once again.
    Moderate to strong instability with daytime heating should yield
    organized convection by late afternoon/evening, and a targeted
    Slight Risk upgrade may be necessary with subsequent outlooks.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence in the rainfall forecast is relatively low going into
    Thursday, as much depends on how convection ultimately evolves
    today. That said, the recent trends in QPF have been downward with
    most models showing anomalously high tropospheric moisture and
    low-level convergence shifting to the immediate coastline. Have
    maintained an inherited Marginal Risk for this cycle, which may be
    further reduced in coverage should these model trends continue.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...2030z update...

    There were no changes to the marginal risk areas on the day 3 ERO.
    18z NBM appears to have increased qpf across the Northern Plains
    and Upper Midwest, while suppressing amounts in the Southeast.
    Localized amounts between 2-3" are possible based on a mixture of
    CAMs and global guidance.

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    Inherited Marginal Risk was expanded to include a relatively large
    portion of the north-central portion of the CONUS, a continuation
    of the threat from Day 2 from a potent upper trough/closed low.
    Convective details remain quite fuzzy at this range, but guidance
    suggests the potential for localized 3-5" totals (high spatial
    spread in these depictions) which may necessitate future targeted
    upgrades.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Low confidence forecast continuing into Day 3, maintaining a
    Marginal Risk area that is largely focused on the same area. At
    this juncture most models depict heavy rainfall remaining largely
    offshore, but given recent heavy rains and the potential for
    significant amounts today have opted to keep the Marginal Risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8lpvJJmZLMtdtbQ3CeRTwyNPazJ5KHQfYRPa-HpvWx7s= fm-ucFLm3j-6zQ1EGC__8Tfd9vMenxDFXj32pvsRf4jdqBs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8lpvJJmZLMtdtbQ3CeRTwyNPazJ5KHQfYRPa-HpvWx7s= fm-ucFLm3j-6zQ1EGC__8Tfd9vMenxDFXj32pvsRpa3pFBE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8lpvJJmZLMtdtbQ3CeRTwyNPazJ5KHQfYRPa-HpvWx7s= fm-ucFLm3j-6zQ1EGC__8Tfd9vMenxDFXj32pvsR7pKB1Iw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Aug 7 00:52:18 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 070051
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    851 PM EDT Wed Aug 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST...

    ...01Z Update...
    Maintained a Slight Risk area over portions of the Southeast U.S.
    along a quasi-stationary front where low level moisture flux
    convergence was maximized. The right entrance region of an upper
    level jet was located overhead...helping to sustain deep layer
    ascent. The combination of the two forcings should continue to
    support locally intense rainfall rates...especially given the deep
    moisture in place with precipitable water values around 2 inches
    immediately along the coastline of the Carolinas. The expectation
    is for the rates to begin weakening as the entire system moves
    slowly out to sea. The Marginal risk extends into northern Florida
    where showers and thunderstorms should linger along and ahead of
    the trailing cold front.

    Elsewhere...the Marginal risk areas were removed given model
    trends.

    Bann


    ...19z update...

    The day 1 slight risk area was expanded into southern-central areas
    of Virginia in coordination with the Wakefield field office. This
    was to account for 2-3"+ rainfall that has occurred so far today,as
    well as the potential for more convection to occur in and around
    this sensitive area this evening.

    ...16z update...

    Minor edits were made to the day 1 ERO. Upper-level dynamics
    continue to support widespread convection across the
    Southeast/Mid- Atlantic throughout the day. 12z HREF 40km
    neighborhood probabilities of 24h qpf exceeding 5 inches remains
    high (50-70% range) over parts of the Carolina coast from near
    Charleston up through Wilmington. However the EAS probabilities of
    exceeding 3 inches remain capped at 15%.

    In the Central Plains to Middle/Upper Mississippi Valley, model
    spread continues to be the main reason for no upgrades there.
    Favorable instability and moisture will support heavy
    precipitation, but models struggle to converge on placement of
    impactful qpf.

    Kebede

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Relatively high coverage of convection is expected once again
    today, as a stalled frontal boundary remains draped across the
    region. While storms should generally remain relatively short-lived
    over any one location with shear being the main limiting factor,
    more significant convective organization is possible in the
    vicinity of the NC/SC Coastal Plain border region where deep layer
    shear is progged to be closer to 20-30 kts (versus less than 20 kts
    from surroundings). This is due to the slow eastward progress of
    the blocked upper trough to the west, and a vorticity maxima may
    also contribute to convective proliferation later today via DPVA
    and enhanced upper divergence via right-entrance region of ~80 kt
    jet streak over the Northeast. While the 00z HREF 5" exceedance
    probs are quite high (50%+ over portions of the Coastal Plain),
    uncertainty remains high with regard to the extent of resulting
    flash flooding, as the QPF spread between the HREF members remains
    quite large (with the NAM-nest and FV3 being the wetter outliers,
    while the ARW and ARW2 are the drier outliers). Maintained the
    inherited Slight Risk, and a targeted upgraded Moderate Risk could
    be possible later today should models come into better agreement.

    ...Central Plains into Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    A mature MCS is diving southward early this morning from SD/MN into
    IA/NE (see MPD #876 for more information) along with anomalously
    high tropospheric moisture (PWs nearing 2.0", or around the 90th
    percentile). Maintained a Marginal Risk for lingering convection
    associated with the MCS this morning, along with the potential
    sustained or redeveloped convection in association with the remnant
    MCV later today.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...2030z update...

    A marginal risk area was introduced for portions of southern
    Wisconsin and northern Illinois. 12z hires guidance suggests the
    development of some sort of MCS over parts of southeastern
    Minnesota/southern Wisconsin and moving southeastward toward
    northern Illinois Thursday afternoon/evening. This is likely to
    occur beneath a shortwave impulse propagating through the Northern
    Plains/Upper Midwest within a broader upper- level ridge. Generally
    1-2 inch totals with isolated higher amounts are expected.

    Elsewhere, excessive rainfall concerns remain marginal over the
    Dakotas despite a consolidating qpf max footprint over central
    North Dakota. Given relatively dry soils, the potential for an
    upgrade remains contingent upon a continuing increased qpf trend
    for the next issuance.

    Kebede

    ...Northern Plains...

    Models continue to indicate a potent upper-level shortwave digging
    southward into the PacNW by Day 2, and have maintained a Marginal
    Risk centered on ND where convection is anticipated to initiate in
    the afternoon. The approach of the trough will result in another
    round of low-level return flow into the Northern High Plains,
    sending PWs to near (or above) the 90th percentile once again.
    Moderate to strong instability with daytime heating should yield
    organized convection by late afternoon/evening, and a targeted
    Slight Risk upgrade may be necessary with subsequent outlooks.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Confidence in the rainfall forecast is relatively low going into
    Thursday, as much depends on how convection ultimately evolves
    today. That said, the recent trends in QPF have been downward with
    most models showing anomalously high tropospheric moisture and
    low-level convergence shifting to the immediate coastline. Have
    maintained an inherited Marginal Risk for this cycle, which may be
    further reduced in coverage should these model trends continue.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AS
    WELL AS FOR THE COASTAL SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    REGION...

    ...2030z update...

    There were no changes to the marginal risk areas on the day 3 ERO.
    18z NBM appears to have increased qpf across the Northern Plains
    and Upper Midwest, while suppressing amounts in the Southeast.
    Localized amounts between 2-3" are possible based on a mixture of
    CAMs and global guidance.

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    Inherited Marginal Risk was expanded to include a relatively large
    portion of the north-central portion of the CONUS, a continuation
    of the threat from Day 2 from a potent upper trough/closed low.
    Convective details remain quite fuzzy at this range, but guidance
    suggests the potential for localized 3-5" totals (high spatial
    spread in these depictions) which may necessitate future targeted
    upgrades.

    ...Coastal Southeast and southern Mid-Atlantic...

    Low confidence forecast continuing into Day 3, maintaining a
    Marginal Risk area that is largely focused on the same area. At
    this juncture most models depict heavy rainfall remaining largely
    offshore, but given recent heavy rains and the potential for
    significant amounts today have opted to keep the Marginal Risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5ckyjkVvTRz5fzKcBGR7Ypla1acCCoFt20dFv-DsIWzh= z67iuKoqqhTfx4WGmdn6Zvv7vtJxiu5CFSTBZVNnEz4pKO4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5ckyjkVvTRz5fzKcBGR7Ypla1acCCoFt20dFv-DsIWzh= z67iuKoqqhTfx4WGmdn6Zvv7vtJxiu5CFSTBZVNnAi1EVf0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5ckyjkVvTRz5fzKcBGR7Ypla1acCCoFt20dFv-DsIWzh= z67iuKoqqhTfx4WGmdn6Zvv7vtJxiu5CFSTBZVNnGyB1bGI$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Aug 7 08:40:02 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 070838
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    438 AM EDT Thu Aug 7 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS...UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES...AS=20
    WELL AS THE SOUTHEASTERN COAST INTO NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    ...Northern Plains...

    The 00Z model consensus shows a potent upper-level shortwave
    tracking through the northern Rockies today/tonight with a lead
    mid-level impulse out head helping to ignite thunderstorms over
    eastern Montana with movement into North Dakota this
    afternoon/evening. 00Z GFS forecast standardized anomalies of PW
    are +2 to +3 over the northern Plains with moderate to strong
    CAPE and increasing upper level divergence/diffluence ahead of the
    approaching upper trough. 850 mb winds are forecast to increase=20
    into the 30-40 kt range across SD, ahead of a related surface low,
    helping to fuel the potential for multiple rounds of thunderstorms
    through the period and some 2 to 4 inch rainfall totals (locally
    higher possible). While movement of any organized convective
    clusters should be generally be progressive toward the=20
    east/southeast, potential for training will exist on the=20
    southwestern flank and the environment will likely support 1-2
    in/hr rainfall rates.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    Thunderstorms are likely to develop during the afternoon hours in
    the vicinity of Iowa/Wisconsin/Illinois with weak warm advection
    across a subtle theta-e gradient that strengthens with daytime
    heating. Moderate to strong instability is forecast to develop from
    southern Minnesota into Iowa and points eastward at the nose of a
    20 to 30+ kt 850 mb jet axis oriented southwest to northeast into
    the Upper Midwest and continue into the first half of the overnight.
    While uncertainty remains, indications are for a small cluster of=20 thunderstorms to form with potential for upstream development and=20
    slow net movement of heavy rain cores. 12Z and previous 00Z members
    of the HREF suite showed a relatively large spread in location and
    magnitude of heavy rainfall but decent agreement for at least 3 to
    5 inches. Low confidence in location resulted in a broadening of=20
    the previous Marginal RIsk area over Wisconsin/Illinois to include=20
    locations to the west, south and east.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid- Atlantic...

    High moisture will remain across the Coastal Plain of the Carolinas
    into the Florida Panhandle today into Friday morning, ahead of a
    mid-level trough axis in place over the Southeast and an embedded=20
    vorticity max forecast to move eastward from the southern=20
    Appalachians. Precipitable water values are expected to remain near
    2 inches along the coast and into northern Florida.=20

    Thunderstorms will increase with daytime heating and low level flow
    from the east to northeast will originate from the higher moisture
    airmass. Scattered coverage of thunderstorms is expected across
    portions of the Mid-Atlanitc and Southeast with cells exhibiting occasional slow movement and training. The high moisture and sufficient=20
    instability (at least 500 to 1500 J/kg MLCAPE) will be capable of=20
    producing 2 to 3+ in/hr rainfall rates at times, some of which
    could fall on urban centers or locations with above average=20
    rainfall over the past week.

    Otto

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTH-CENTRAL U.S. AND SOUTHEASTERN COAST INTO=20
    NORTHERN FLORIDA...


    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    There is potential for a lingering MCS to be in place over
    Minnesota at the start of the period (12Z Friday). The potent
    closed low/upper trough from Thursday night will continue to
    advance across the north-central U.S. on Friday/Friday night.
    Thunderstorms, some possibly slow moving, are expected to impact
    portions of northeastern Montana during the day on Friday while=20 thunderstorms expand in coverage during the afternoon over North
    Dakota into portions of South Dakota. By 00Z Saturday, a cold front
    is expected to become better defined over the Dakotas and move into
    a fairly unstable and moist airmass from the eastern Dakotas into
    Minnesota. Numerous thunderstorms are expected ahead of this
    boundary for Friday night, with fairly progressive movement but
    potential for training within a strengthening nocturnal low level
    jet, out ahead of the front.=20

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid-Atlantic...

    Eastward movement of the mid-level trough over the Mid-Atlantic
    states will allow the higher moisture along the coast to push
    offshore but anomalous moisture will remain over Florida (1 to 2
    standardized precipitable water anomalies). Sea breeze convergence
    along the coast in the Southeast will allow for at least some=20
    potential for flash flooding due to high rainfall rates from
    thunderstorms with 2 to 3+ in/hr rates possible. Farther south, low
    level easterly flow and a lingering surface boundary are expected=20
    to focus convection from northern Florida into the western
    Peninsula during peak heating hours. There will be spotty potential
    for 3 to 5+ inch rainfall totals across the coast of the Carolinas
    down into portions of northern Florida.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE UPPER MIDWEST AND OVER THE
    SOUTHWESTERN U.S...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    A cold front will advance eastward into the Upper Mississippi
    Valley on Saturday ahead of a strong mid-level trough moving across
    the north-central U.S. Standardized precipitable water anomalies of
    +2 to +3 are forecast by the 00Z GFS to be in place ahead of the
    front over the Upper Mississippi Valley, supporting growing
    instability with daytime heating. Unidirectional southwesterly flow
    ahead of the front will allow for periods of training with
    thunderstorms that form in the pre-frontal environment with
    potential for multiple rounds of storms.=20

    ...Central Plains...

    The cold front will move through the central Plains with low level
    upslope flow in its wake over the High Plains region. Precipitable
    water values are forecast to be near to slightly above average and
    ascent will be aided by the region's placement within the=20
    divergent and diffluent right- entrance region of the upper jet=20
    located on the eastern side of the advancing upper trough axis.
    Thunderstorms will likely shift east from eastern Colorado into
    Kansas, meeting with an increasing low level jet of 40 to 50 kt=20
    beyond 00Z Sunday. The 00Z model consensus is for an axis of=20
    locally heavy rain stretching from eastern Colorado into Kansas and
    southern Nebraska. Current thinking is for some 2 to 4 inch=20
    rainfall totals, most of which could fall over a 2-3 hour window.

    ...Southwest...

    Flow around a mid-level ridge centered over New Mexico should
    prompt increasing moisture into the Southwest with precipitable
    water values reaching near climatology for early August over
    Arizona and New Mexico. Assuming a lack of widespread cloud cover
    beneath the ridge should allow for sufficient CAPE generation by
    mid-afternoon and typical monsoonal thunderstorm coverage by
    evening. The concern for flash flooding will be enhanced by slow
    storm motions given 00Z model forecasts of 850-300 mb mean wind=20
    speeds of 10 kt or less.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9BbaGTeCKbjW_kydPZsdkEe5ptt_j7vWqffQ3qSP5qKT= CmlJKiacIPjOvoQBC2oMAIJ7YQfgwsq9W1rD1IA_EX4cLok$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9BbaGTeCKbjW_kydPZsdkEe5ptt_j7vWqffQ3qSP5qKT= CmlJKiacIPjOvoQBC2oMAIJ7YQfgwsq9W1rD1IA_q1vClyA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9BbaGTeCKbjW_kydPZsdkEe5ptt_j7vWqffQ3qSP5qKT= CmlJKiacIPjOvoQBC2oMAIJ7YQfgwsq9W1rD1IA_u4slTy4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Aug 7 11:43:04 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 071142
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    742 AM EDT Thu Aug 7 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1125Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS...UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES...AS
    WELL AS THE SOUTHEASTERN COAST INTO NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    ...Northern Plains...

    The 00Z model consensus shows a potent upper-level shortwave
    tracking through the northern Rockies today/tonight with a lead
    mid-level impulse out head helping to ignite thunderstorms over
    eastern Montana with movement into North Dakota this
    afternoon/evening. 00Z GFS forecast standardized anomalies of PW
    are +2 to +3 over the northern Plains with moderate to strong
    CAPE and increasing upper level divergence/diffluence ahead of the
    approaching upper trough. 850 mb winds are forecast to increase
    into the 30-40 kt range across SD, ahead of a related surface low,
    helping to fuel the potential for multiple rounds of thunderstorms
    through the period and some 2 to 4 inch rainfall totals (locally
    higher possible). While movement of any organized convective
    clusters should be generally be progressive toward the
    east/southeast, potential for training will exist on the
    southwestern flank and the environment will likely support 1-2
    in/hr rainfall rates.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    1124Z Update: Expanded the Marginal Risk area a bit west-southwest
    based on the latest observational trends. Veering late-stage LLJ
    (southwesterly ~25kts) orthogonal to the elevated frontal boundary
    along the northeast periphery of the upper ridge has resulted in
    some upscale growth with the backbuilding/training convection across south-central and southeast IA this morning. A bit later than
    normal given the nocturnal-diurnal cycle transition, however in
    this case the elevated convergence became maximized late given the
    orientation of the veering LLJ and the frontal zone. For further
    details, please refer to the latest Mesoscale Precipitation
    Discussion or MPD #880.

    Hurley

    Previous discussion...
    Thunderstorms are likely to develop during the afternoon hours in=20
    the vicinity of Iowa/Wisconsin/Illinois with weak warm advection=20
    across a subtle theta-e gradient that strengthens with daytime=20
    heating. Moderate to strong instability is forecast to develop from
    southern Minnesota into Iowa and points eastward at the nose of a=20
    20 to 30+ kt 850 mb jet axis oriented southwest to northeast into=20
    the Upper Midwest and continue into the first half of the=20
    overnight. While uncertainty remains, indications are for a small=20
    cluster of thunderstorms to form with potential for upstream=20
    development and slow net movement of heavy rain cores. 12Z and=20
    previous 00Z members of the HREF suite showed a relatively large=20
    spread in location and magnitude of heavy rainfall but decent=20
    agreement for at least 3 to 5 inches. Low confidence in location=20
    resulted in a broadening of the previous Marginal RIsk area over=20 Wisconsin/Illinois to include locations to the west, south and=20
    east.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid- Atlantic...

    High moisture will remain across the Coastal Plain of the Carolinas
    into the Florida Panhandle today into Friday morning, ahead of a
    mid-level trough axis in place over the Southeast and an embedded
    vorticity max forecast to move eastward from the southern
    Appalachians. Precipitable water values are expected to remain near
    2 inches along the coast and into northern Florida.

    Thunderstorms will increase with daytime heating and low level flow
    from the east to northeast will originate from the higher moisture
    airmass. Scattered coverage of thunderstorms is expected across
    portions of the Mid-Atlanitc and Southeast with cells exhibiting occasional slow movement and training. The high moisture and sufficient
    instability (at least 500 to 1500 J/kg MLCAPE) will be capable of
    producing 2 to 3+ in/hr rainfall rates at times, some of which
    could fall on urban centers or locations with above average
    rainfall over the past week.

    Otto

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTH-CENTRAL U.S. AND SOUTHEASTERN COAST INTO
    NORTHERN FLORIDA...


    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    There is potential for a lingering MCS to be in place over
    Minnesota at the start of the period (12Z Friday). The potent
    closed low/upper trough from Thursday night will continue to
    advance across the north-central U.S. on Friday/Friday night.
    Thunderstorms, some possibly slow moving, are expected to impact
    portions of northeastern Montana during the day on Friday while
    thunderstorms expand in coverage during the afternoon over North
    Dakota into portions of South Dakota. By 00Z Saturday, a cold front
    is expected to become better defined over the Dakotas and move into
    a fairly unstable and moist airmass from the eastern Dakotas into
    Minnesota. Numerous thunderstorms are expected ahead of this
    boundary for Friday night, with fairly progressive movement but
    potential for training within a strengthening nocturnal low level
    jet, out ahead of the front.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid-Atlantic...

    Eastward movement of the mid-level trough over the Mid-Atlantic
    states will allow the higher moisture along the coast to push
    offshore but anomalous moisture will remain over Florida (1 to 2
    standardized precipitable water anomalies). Sea breeze convergence
    along the coast in the Southeast will allow for at least some
    potential for flash flooding due to high rainfall rates from
    thunderstorms with 2 to 3+ in/hr rates possible. Farther south, low
    level easterly flow and a lingering surface boundary are expected
    to focus convection from northern Florida into the western
    Peninsula during peak heating hours. There will be spotty potential
    for 3 to 5+ inch rainfall totals across the coast of the Carolinas
    down into portions of northern Florida.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE UPPER MIDWEST AND OVER THE
    SOUTHWESTERN U.S...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    A cold front will advance eastward into the Upper Mississippi
    Valley on Saturday ahead of a strong mid-level trough moving across
    the north-central U.S. Standardized precipitable water anomalies of
    +2 to +3 are forecast by the 00Z GFS to be in place ahead of the
    front over the Upper Mississippi Valley, supporting growing
    instability with daytime heating. Unidirectional southwesterly flow
    ahead of the front will allow for periods of training with
    thunderstorms that form in the pre-frontal environment with
    potential for multiple rounds of storms.

    ...Central Plains...

    The cold front will move through the central Plains with low level
    upslope flow in its wake over the High Plains region. Precipitable
    water values are forecast to be near to slightly above average and
    ascent will be aided by the region's placement within the
    divergent and diffluent right- entrance region of the upper jet
    located on the eastern side of the advancing upper trough axis.
    Thunderstorms will likely shift east from eastern Colorado into
    Kansas, meeting with an increasing low level jet of 40 to 50 kt
    beyond 00Z Sunday. The 00Z model consensus is for an axis of
    locally heavy rain stretching from eastern Colorado into Kansas and
    southern Nebraska. Current thinking is for some 2 to 4 inch
    rainfall totals, most of which could fall over a 2-3 hour window.

    ...Southwest...

    Flow around a mid-level ridge centered over New Mexico should
    prompt increasing moisture into the Southwest with precipitable
    water values reaching near climatology for early August over
    Arizona and New Mexico. Assuming a lack of widespread cloud cover
    beneath the ridge should allow for sufficient CAPE generation by
    mid-afternoon and typical monsoonal thunderstorm coverage by
    evening. The concern for flash flooding will be enhanced by slow
    storm motions given 00Z model forecasts of 850-300 mb mean wind
    speeds of 10 kt or less.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ftl7JwyvYY4nGRXf105JQ5W3zdjO2xgEts6He9kKITq= mtgRzGsNG14gRHNOXN3yYKsRpwt4r5HOjU-2xvULl3nYl7k$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ftl7JwyvYY4nGRXf105JQ5W3zdjO2xgEts6He9kKITq= mtgRzGsNG14gRHNOXN3yYKsRpwt4r5HOjU-2xvULqfCzx1w$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ftl7JwyvYY4nGRXf105JQ5W3zdjO2xgEts6He9kKITq= mtgRzGsNG14gRHNOXN3yYKsRpwt4r5HOjU-2xvULMs1bGqQ$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Aug 7 16:06:59 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 071606
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1206 PM EDT Thu Aug 7 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS...UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES...AS
    WELL AS THE SOUTHEASTERN COAST INTO NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    16z Update: Only minor changes made. We are close to Slight risk
    level probabilities over ND, but will continue to hold with the=20
    Marginal for now. Forward cell speed will be a limiting factor,=20
    however some training could occur on the southern to southwest=20
    flank of convection with cell motions parallel to the moisture=20
    convergence axis. Also could see some cell mergers with initial=20
    supercells merging with the developing squall line. Given both of=20
    these possibilities, do tend to think at least localized flash=20
    flooding will be likely this afternoon into tonight. However the=20
    overall quick cell motions should limit the areal extent of flash=20
    flooding.

    The Marginal risk over the Upper Midwest was trimmed to only=20
    include areas in the vicinity and downstream of the ongoing=20
    convection across IA/MO. It looks like this activity will disrupt=20
    the environment later today into tonight, and so the models have=20
    backed off more robust development over IL/WI that they were=20
    showing earlier. Still not a zero percent chance, as the broad=20
    environment could remain favorable over these farther north areas,=20
    but the ongoing activity has seemingly lowered the risk and=20
    coverage of later convective potential enough to warrant removing=20
    the Marginal risk.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains...

    The 00Z model consensus shows a potent upper-level shortwave
    tracking through the northern Rockies today/tonight with a lead
    mid-level impulse out head helping to ignite thunderstorms over
    eastern Montana with movement into North Dakota this
    afternoon/evening. 00Z GFS forecast standardized anomalies of PW
    are +2 to +3 over the northern Plains with moderate to strong
    CAPE and increasing upper level divergence/diffluence ahead of the
    approaching upper trough. 850 mb winds are forecast to increase
    into the 30-40 kt range across SD, ahead of a related surface low,
    helping to fuel the potential for multiple rounds of thunderstorms
    through the period and some 2 to 4 inch rainfall totals (locally
    higher possible). While movement of any organized convective
    clusters should be generally be progressive toward the
    east/southeast, potential for training will exist on the
    southwestern flank and the environment will likely support 1-2
    in/hr rainfall rates.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    1124Z Update: Expanded the Marginal Risk area a bit west-southwest
    based on the latest observational trends. Veering late-stage LLJ
    (southwesterly ~25kts) orthogonal to the elevated frontal boundary
    along the northeast periphery of the upper ridge has resulted in
    some upscale growth with the backbuilding/training convection across south-central and southeast IA this morning. A bit later than
    normal given the nocturnal-diurnal cycle transition, however in
    this case the elevated convergence became maximized late given the
    orientation of the veering LLJ and the frontal zone. For further
    details, please refer to the latest Mesoscale Precipitation
    Discussion or MPD #880.

    Hurley

    Previous discussion...
    Thunderstorms are likely to develop during the afternoon hours in
    the vicinity of Iowa/Wisconsin/Illinois with weak warm advection
    across a subtle theta-e gradient that strengthens with daytime
    heating. Moderate to strong instability is forecast to develop from
    southern Minnesota into Iowa and points eastward at the nose of a
    20 to 30+ kt 850 mb jet axis oriented southwest to northeast into
    the Upper Midwest and continue into the first half of the
    overnight. While uncertainty remains, indications are for a small
    cluster of thunderstorms to form with potential for upstream
    development and slow net movement of heavy rain cores. 12Z and
    previous 00Z members of the HREF suite showed a relatively large
    spread in location and magnitude of heavy rainfall but decent
    agreement for at least 3 to 5 inches. Low confidence in location
    resulted in a broadening of the previous Marginal RIsk area over Wisconsin/Illinois to include locations to the west, south and
    east.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid- Atlantic...

    High moisture will remain across the Coastal Plain of the Carolinas
    into the Florida Panhandle today into Friday morning, ahead of a
    mid-level trough axis in place over the Southeast and an embedded
    vorticity max forecast to move eastward from the southern
    Appalachians. Precipitable water values are expected to remain near
    2 inches along the coast and into northern Florida.

    Thunderstorms will increase with daytime heating and low level flow
    from the east to northeast will originate from the higher moisture
    airmass. Scattered coverage of thunderstorms is expected across
    portions of the Mid-Atlanitc and Southeast with cells exhibiting occasional slow movement and training. The high moisture and sufficient
    instability (at least 500 to 1500 J/kg MLCAPE) will be capable of
    producing 2 to 3+ in/hr rainfall rates at times, some of which
    could fall on urban centers or locations with above average
    rainfall over the past week.

    Otto

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTH-CENTRAL U.S. AND SOUTHEASTERN COAST INTO
    NORTHERN FLORIDA...


    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    There is potential for a lingering MCS to be in place over
    Minnesota at the start of the period (12Z Friday). The potent
    closed low/upper trough from Thursday night will continue to
    advance across the north-central U.S. on Friday/Friday night.
    Thunderstorms, some possibly slow moving, are expected to impact
    portions of northeastern Montana during the day on Friday while
    thunderstorms expand in coverage during the afternoon over North
    Dakota into portions of South Dakota. By 00Z Saturday, a cold front
    is expected to become better defined over the Dakotas and move into
    a fairly unstable and moist airmass from the eastern Dakotas into
    Minnesota. Numerous thunderstorms are expected ahead of this
    boundary for Friday night, with fairly progressive movement but
    potential for training within a strengthening nocturnal low level
    jet, out ahead of the front.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid-Atlantic...

    Eastward movement of the mid-level trough over the Mid-Atlantic
    states will allow the higher moisture along the coast to push
    offshore but anomalous moisture will remain over Florida (1 to 2
    standardized precipitable water anomalies). Sea breeze convergence
    along the coast in the Southeast will allow for at least some
    potential for flash flooding due to high rainfall rates from
    thunderstorms with 2 to 3+ in/hr rates possible. Farther south, low
    level easterly flow and a lingering surface boundary are expected
    to focus convection from northern Florida into the western
    Peninsula during peak heating hours. There will be spotty potential
    for 3 to 5+ inch rainfall totals across the coast of the Carolinas
    down into portions of northern Florida.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE UPPER MIDWEST AND OVER THE
    SOUTHWESTERN U.S...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    A cold front will advance eastward into the Upper Mississippi
    Valley on Saturday ahead of a strong mid-level trough moving across
    the north-central U.S. Standardized precipitable water anomalies of
    +2 to +3 are forecast by the 00Z GFS to be in place ahead of the
    front over the Upper Mississippi Valley, supporting growing
    instability with daytime heating. Unidirectional southwesterly flow
    ahead of the front will allow for periods of training with
    thunderstorms that form in the pre-frontal environment with
    potential for multiple rounds of storms.

    ...Central Plains...

    The cold front will move through the central Plains with low level
    upslope flow in its wake over the High Plains region. Precipitable
    water values are forecast to be near to slightly above average and
    ascent will be aided by the region's placement within the
    divergent and diffluent right- entrance region of the upper jet
    located on the eastern side of the advancing upper trough axis.
    Thunderstorms will likely shift east from eastern Colorado into
    Kansas, meeting with an increasing low level jet of 40 to 50 kt
    beyond 00Z Sunday. The 00Z model consensus is for an axis of
    locally heavy rain stretching from eastern Colorado into Kansas and
    southern Nebraska. Current thinking is for some 2 to 4 inch
    rainfall totals, most of which could fall over a 2-3 hour window.

    ...Southwest...

    Flow around a mid-level ridge centered over New Mexico should
    prompt increasing moisture into the Southwest with precipitable
    water values reaching near climatology for early August over
    Arizona and New Mexico. Assuming a lack of widespread cloud cover
    beneath the ridge should allow for sufficient CAPE generation by
    mid-afternoon and typical monsoonal thunderstorm coverage by
    evening. The concern for flash flooding will be enhanced by slow
    storm motions given 00Z model forecasts of 850-300 mb mean wind
    speeds of 10 kt or less.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_9qAaXLCDJSXaInvJ6xR71nqrQ-gdvEifdlKvC9pJpD1= zEEQiYGbAuy5N4IdiKpqnwbge-H8kyjS3ID6wuhJLU247Jk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_9qAaXLCDJSXaInvJ6xR71nqrQ-gdvEifdlKvC9pJpD1= zEEQiYGbAuy5N4IdiKpqnwbge-H8kyjS3ID6wuhJ6u36a6Y$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_9qAaXLCDJSXaInvJ6xR71nqrQ-gdvEifdlKvC9pJpD1= zEEQiYGbAuy5N4IdiKpqnwbge-H8kyjS3ID6wuhJyNpQGX4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Aug 7 20:30:50 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 072030
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    430 PM EDT Thu Aug 7 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Aug 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS...UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES...AS
    WELL AS THE SOUTHEASTERN COAST INTO NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    16z Update: Only minor changes made. We are close to Slight risk
    level probabilities over ND, but will continue to hold with the
    Marginal for now. Forward cell speed will be a limiting factor,
    however some training could occur on the southern to southwest
    flank of convection with cell motions parallel to the moisture
    convergence axis. Also could see some cell mergers with initial
    supercells merging with the developing squall line. Given both of
    these possibilities, do tend to think at least localized flash
    flooding will be likely this afternoon into tonight. However the
    overall quick cell motions should limit the areal extent of flash
    flooding.

    The Marginal risk over the Upper Midwest was trimmed to only
    include areas in the vicinity and downstream of the ongoing
    convection across IA/MO. It looks like this activity will disrupt
    the environment later today into tonight, and so the models have
    backed off more robust development over IL/WI that they were
    showing earlier. Still not a zero percent chance, as the broad
    environment could remain favorable over these farther north areas,
    but the ongoing activity has seemingly lowered the risk and
    coverage of later convective potential enough to warrant removing
    the Marginal risk.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains...

    The 00Z model consensus shows a potent upper-level shortwave
    tracking through the northern Rockies today/tonight with a lead
    mid-level impulse out head helping to ignite thunderstorms over
    eastern Montana with movement into North Dakota this
    afternoon/evening. 00Z GFS forecast standardized anomalies of PW
    are +2 to +3 over the northern Plains with moderate to strong
    CAPE and increasing upper level divergence/diffluence ahead of the
    approaching upper trough. 850 mb winds are forecast to increase
    into the 30-40 kt range across SD, ahead of a related surface low,
    helping to fuel the potential for multiple rounds of thunderstorms
    through the period and some 2 to 4 inch rainfall totals (locally
    higher possible). While movement of any organized convective
    clusters should be generally be progressive toward the
    east/southeast, potential for training will exist on the
    southwestern flank and the environment will likely support 1-2
    in/hr rainfall rates.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    1124Z Update: Expanded the Marginal Risk area a bit west-southwest
    based on the latest observational trends. Veering late-stage LLJ
    (southwesterly ~25kts) orthogonal to the elevated frontal boundary
    along the northeast periphery of the upper ridge has resulted in
    some upscale growth with the backbuilding/training convection across south-central and southeast IA this morning. A bit later than
    normal given the nocturnal-diurnal cycle transition, however in
    this case the elevated convergence became maximized late given the
    orientation of the veering LLJ and the frontal zone. For further
    details, please refer to the latest Mesoscale Precipitation
    Discussion or MPD #880.

    Hurley

    Previous discussion...
    Thunderstorms are likely to develop during the afternoon hours in
    the vicinity of Iowa/Wisconsin/Illinois with weak warm advection
    across a subtle theta-e gradient that strengthens with daytime
    heating. Moderate to strong instability is forecast to develop from
    southern Minnesota into Iowa and points eastward at the nose of a
    20 to 30+ kt 850 mb jet axis oriented southwest to northeast into
    the Upper Midwest and continue into the first half of the
    overnight. While uncertainty remains, indications are for a small
    cluster of thunderstorms to form with potential for upstream
    development and slow net movement of heavy rain cores. 12Z and
    previous 00Z members of the HREF suite showed a relatively large
    spread in location and magnitude of heavy rainfall but decent
    agreement for at least 3 to 5 inches. Low confidence in location
    resulted in a broadening of the previous Marginal RIsk area over Wisconsin/Illinois to include locations to the west, south and
    east.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid- Atlantic...

    High moisture will remain across the Coastal Plain of the Carolinas
    into the Florida Panhandle today into Friday morning, ahead of a
    mid-level trough axis in place over the Southeast and an embedded
    vorticity max forecast to move eastward from the southern
    Appalachians. Precipitable water values are expected to remain near
    2 inches along the coast and into northern Florida.

    Thunderstorms will increase with daytime heating and low level flow
    from the east to northeast will originate from the higher moisture
    airmass. Scattered coverage of thunderstorms is expected across
    portions of the Mid-Atlanitc and Southeast with cells exhibiting occasional slow movement and training. The high moisture and sufficient
    instability (at least 500 to 1500 J/kg MLCAPE) will be capable of
    producing 2 to 3+ in/hr rainfall rates at times, some of which
    could fall on urban centers or locations with above average
    rainfall over the past week.

    Otto

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTH-CENTRAL U.S. AND SOUTHEASTERN COAST INTO
    NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    20z Update:
    Not much change needed to the inherited risk areas. Still looks
    like some convection will be ongoing at 12z Friday across portions
    of eastern ND into northern MN, but guidance generally shows
    progressive and weakening cells during the morning hours. The=20
    better chance of localized flash flooding across eastern ND into=20
    central and northern MN is late Friday afternoon into the overnight
    hours. Strong mid to upper level forcing combining with intense=20
    lower level moisture transport and extreme instability will likely=20
    drive an organized convective threat. Still looks like fast moving=20
    storms will limit the magnitude and coverage of flash flooding,=20
    although the strong moisture transport/instability combo can always
    result in at least an isolated flash flood risk.

    Chenard


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    There is potential for a lingering MCS to be in place over
    Minnesota at the start of the period (12Z Friday). The potent
    closed low/upper trough from Thursday night will continue to
    advance across the north-central U.S. on Friday/Friday night.
    Thunderstorms, some possibly slow moving, are expected to impact
    portions of northeastern Montana during the day on Friday while
    thunderstorms expand in coverage during the afternoon over North
    Dakota into portions of South Dakota. By 00Z Saturday, a cold front
    is expected to become better defined over the Dakotas and move into
    a fairly unstable and moist airmass from the eastern Dakotas into
    Minnesota. Numerous thunderstorms are expected ahead of this
    boundary for Friday night, with fairly progressive movement but
    potential for training within a strengthening nocturnal low level
    jet, out ahead of the front.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid-Atlantic...

    Eastward movement of the mid-level trough over the Mid-Atlantic
    states will allow the higher moisture along the coast to push
    offshore but anomalous moisture will remain over Florida (1 to 2
    standardized precipitable water anomalies). Sea breeze convergence
    along the coast in the Southeast will allow for at least some
    potential for flash flooding due to high rainfall rates from
    thunderstorms with 2 to 3+ in/hr rates possible. Farther south, low
    level easterly flow and a lingering surface boundary are expected
    to focus convection from northern Florida into the western
    Peninsula during peak heating hours. There will be spotty potential
    for 3 to 5+ inch rainfall totals across the coast of the Carolinas
    down into portions of northern Florida.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE UPPER MIDWEST, AND OVER=20
    THE SOUTHWESTERN AND SOUTHEASTERN U.S...

    20z Update:
    The synoptic setup for flash flooding looks better on Saturday into
    Saturday night as the front begins to slow/stall from eastern CO
    into WI. Persistent moisture transport into this boundary could
    support an increased flash flood risk by Saturday night. Considered
    a Slight risk upgrade across portions of southern/central IA into
    southern WI, but opted to hold off for now. The ingredients for
    backbuilding convection appear to be there along this corridor, but
    enough uncertainty on the details to hold off for now. The northern
    extent of this convection could end up more progressive, with the
    backbuilding more focused on the southern to southwestern extent,
    possibly even stretching back into northeast KS. Thus not=20
    confident enough on the location to upgrade at this point, but will
    continue to monitor. Organized convection could also drive an=20
    upgrade over eastern CO into western KS, but model solutions differ
    more widely on the organization of this activity lowering the=20
    confidence.

    A Marginal risk was added to portions of the central/northern FL
    into southern GA. Moisture and convective coverage looks greater
    than on Friday (when we did have a Marginal risk), so opted to=20
    introduce one on this day as well. Issues will likely stay=20
    localized given the high FFG, but the model QPF signal is on an=20
    uptick by this time and there should be enough instability and=20
    moisture around for locally higher totals.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    A cold front will advance eastward into the Upper Mississippi
    Valley on Saturday ahead of a strong mid-level trough moving across
    the north-central U.S. Standardized precipitable water anomalies of
    +2 to +3 are forecast by the 00Z GFS to be in place ahead of the
    front over the Upper Mississippi Valley, supporting growing
    instability with daytime heating. Unidirectional southwesterly flow
    ahead of the front will allow for periods of training with
    thunderstorms that form in the pre-frontal environment with
    potential for multiple rounds of storms.

    ...Central Plains...

    The cold front will move through the central Plains with low level
    upslope flow in its wake over the High Plains region. Precipitable
    water values are forecast to be near to slightly above average and
    ascent will be aided by the region's placement within the
    divergent and diffluent right- entrance region of the upper jet
    located on the eastern side of the advancing upper trough axis.
    Thunderstorms will likely shift east from eastern Colorado into
    Kansas, meeting with an increasing low level jet of 40 to 50 kt
    beyond 00Z Sunday. The 00Z model consensus is for an axis of
    locally heavy rain stretching from eastern Colorado into Kansas and
    southern Nebraska. Current thinking is for some 2 to 4 inch
    rainfall totals, most of which could fall over a 2-3 hour window.

    ...Southwest...

    Flow around a mid-level ridge centered over New Mexico should
    prompt increasing moisture into the Southwest with precipitable
    water values reaching near climatology for early August over
    Arizona and New Mexico. Assuming a lack of widespread cloud cover
    beneath the ridge should allow for sufficient CAPE generation by
    mid-afternoon and typical monsoonal thunderstorm coverage by
    evening. The concern for flash flooding will be enhanced by slow
    storm motions given 00Z model forecasts of 850-300 mb mean wind
    speeds of 10 kt or less.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4_xmHu-0wgkTlojuSNA9fFLrfAJju4XZggWfqJ0-mpe3= BvPGkNB87DrHfb4GWVlxZxOm_q4uIJ5pwBdAGFa4EchtWzE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4_xmHu-0wgkTlojuSNA9fFLrfAJju4XZggWfqJ0-mpe3= BvPGkNB87DrHfb4GWVlxZxOm_q4uIJ5pwBdAGFa4XHSBBbE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4_xmHu-0wgkTlojuSNA9fFLrfAJju4XZggWfqJ0-mpe3= BvPGkNB87DrHfb4GWVlxZxOm_q4uIJ5pwBdAGFa4YxGM8Lc$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Aug 8 01:03:54 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 080102
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    902 PM EDT Thu Aug 7 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025


    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF=20
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS OVERNIGHT...

    01Z...Upgraded to a Slight Risk of excessive rainfall from eastern
    Montana across much of North Dakota as convection is expected to
    develop in/near a strong gradient of instability and moisture=20
    pooling ahead of convection. Concerns about the forward speed=20
    limiting the excessive rainfall remain...but the signals from the=20
    18Z HREF for 1- and 3-hour Flash Flood Guidance Exceedance values=20
    have increased and the Warn on Forecast added to the confidence of=20 convection later tonight. Thinking is that the better chance for=20
    rainfall will develop later tonight over the eastern part of North=20
    Dakota where higher surface dewpoints are located. To the=20
    south...realigned the Marginal Risk area a bit over the Mississippi
    Valley are based on latest radar trends and the 18Z HREF which=20
    maintained sporadic low-end probabilities of rainfall that would=20
    exceed the 1- and 3-hour flash flood guidance.

    Bann


    16z Update: Only minor changes made. We are close to Slight risk
    level probabilities over ND, but will continue to hold with the
    Marginal for now. Forward cell speed will be a limiting factor,
    however some training could occur on the southern to southwest
    flank of convection with cell motions parallel to the moisture
    convergence axis. Also could see some cell mergers with initial
    supercells merging with the developing squall line. Given both of
    these possibilities, do tend to think at least localized flash
    flooding will be likely this afternoon into tonight. However the
    overall quick cell motions should limit the areal extent of flash
    flooding.

    The Marginal risk over the Upper Midwest was trimmed to only
    include areas in the vicinity and downstream of the ongoing
    convection across IA/MO. It looks like this activity will disrupt
    the environment later today into tonight, and so the models have
    backed off more robust development over IL/WI that they were
    showing earlier. Still not a zero percent chance, as the broad
    environment could remain favorable over these farther north areas,
    but the ongoing activity has seemingly lowered the risk and
    coverage of later convective potential enough to warrant removing
    the Marginal risk.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains...

    The 00Z model consensus shows a potent upper-level shortwave
    tracking through the northern Rockies today/tonight with a lead
    mid-level impulse out head helping to ignite thunderstorms over
    eastern Montana with movement into North Dakota this
    afternoon/evening. 00Z GFS forecast standardized anomalies of PW
    are +2 to +3 over the northern Plains with moderate to strong
    CAPE and increasing upper level divergence/diffluence ahead of the
    approaching upper trough. 850 mb winds are forecast to increase
    into the 30-40 kt range across SD, ahead of a related surface low,
    helping to fuel the potential for multiple rounds of thunderstorms
    through the period and some 2 to 4 inch rainfall totals (locally
    higher possible). While movement of any organized convective
    clusters should be generally be progressive toward the
    east/southeast, potential for training will exist on the
    southwestern flank and the environment will likely support 1-2
    in/hr rainfall rates.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    1124Z Update: Expanded the Marginal Risk area a bit west-southwest
    based on the latest observational trends. Veering late-stage LLJ
    (southwesterly ~25kts) orthogonal to the elevated frontal boundary
    along the northeast periphery of the upper ridge has resulted in
    some upscale growth with the backbuilding/training convection across south-central and southeast IA this morning. A bit later than
    normal given the nocturnal-diurnal cycle transition, however in
    this case the elevated convergence became maximized late given the
    orientation of the veering LLJ and the frontal zone. For further
    details, please refer to the latest Mesoscale Precipitation
    Discussion or MPD #880.

    Hurley

    Previous discussion...
    Thunderstorms are likely to develop during the afternoon hours in
    the vicinity of Iowa/Wisconsin/Illinois with weak warm advection
    across a subtle theta-e gradient that strengthens with daytime
    heating. Moderate to strong instability is forecast to develop from
    southern Minnesota into Iowa and points eastward at the nose of a
    20 to 30+ kt 850 mb jet axis oriented southwest to northeast into
    the Upper Midwest and continue into the first half of the
    overnight. While uncertainty remains, indications are for a small
    cluster of thunderstorms to form with potential for upstream
    development and slow net movement of heavy rain cores. 12Z and
    previous 00Z members of the HREF suite showed a relatively large
    spread in location and magnitude of heavy rainfall but decent
    agreement for at least 3 to 5 inches. Low confidence in location
    resulted in a broadening of the previous Marginal RIsk area over Wisconsin/Illinois to include locations to the west, south and
    east.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid- Atlantic...

    High moisture will remain across the Coastal Plain of the Carolinas
    into the Florida Panhandle today into Friday morning, ahead of a
    mid-level trough axis in place over the Southeast and an embedded
    vorticity max forecast to move eastward from the southern
    Appalachians. Precipitable water values are expected to remain near
    2 inches along the coast and into northern Florida.

    Thunderstorms will increase with daytime heating and low level flow
    from the east to northeast will originate from the higher moisture
    airmass. Scattered coverage of thunderstorms is expected across
    portions of the Mid-Atlanitc and Southeast with cells exhibiting occasional slow movement and training. The high moisture and sufficient
    instability (at least 500 to 1500 J/kg MLCAPE) will be capable of
    producing 2 to 3+ in/hr rainfall rates at times, some of which
    could fall on urban centers or locations with above average
    rainfall over the past week.

    Otto

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTH-CENTRAL U.S. AND SOUTHEASTERN COAST INTO
    NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    20z Update:
    Not much change needed to the inherited risk areas. Still looks
    like some convection will be ongoing at 12z Friday across portions
    of eastern ND into northern MN, but guidance generally shows
    progressive and weakening cells during the morning hours. The
    better chance of localized flash flooding across eastern ND into
    central and northern MN is late Friday afternoon into the overnight
    hours. Strong mid to upper level forcing combining with intense
    lower level moisture transport and extreme instability will likely
    drive an organized convective threat. Still looks like fast moving
    storms will limit the magnitude and coverage of flash flooding,
    although the strong moisture transport/instability combo can always
    result in at least an isolated flash flood risk.

    Chenard


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley...

    There is potential for a lingering MCS to be in place over
    Minnesota at the start of the period (12Z Friday). The potent
    closed low/upper trough from Thursday night will continue to
    advance across the north-central U.S. on Friday/Friday night.
    Thunderstorms, some possibly slow moving, are expected to impact
    portions of northeastern Montana during the day on Friday while
    thunderstorms expand in coverage during the afternoon over North
    Dakota into portions of South Dakota. By 00Z Saturday, a cold front
    is expected to become better defined over the Dakotas and move into
    a fairly unstable and moist airmass from the eastern Dakotas into
    Minnesota. Numerous thunderstorms are expected ahead of this
    boundary for Friday night, with fairly progressive movement but
    potential for training within a strengthening nocturnal low level
    jet, out ahead of the front.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast to Coastal Mid-Atlantic...

    Eastward movement of the mid-level trough over the Mid-Atlantic
    states will allow the higher moisture along the coast to push
    offshore but anomalous moisture will remain over Florida (1 to 2
    standardized precipitable water anomalies). Sea breeze convergence
    along the coast in the Southeast will allow for at least some
    potential for flash flooding due to high rainfall rates from
    thunderstorms with 2 to 3+ in/hr rates possible. Farther south, low
    level easterly flow and a lingering surface boundary are expected
    to focus convection from northern Florida into the western
    Peninsula during peak heating hours. There will be spotty potential
    for 3 to 5+ inch rainfall totals across the coast of the Carolinas
    down into portions of northern Florida.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK AREAS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE UPPER MIDWEST, AND OVER
    THE SOUTHWESTERN AND SOUTHEASTERN U.S...

    20z Update:
    The synoptic setup for flash flooding looks better on Saturday into
    Saturday night as the front begins to slow/stall from eastern CO
    into WI. Persistent moisture transport into this boundary could
    support an increased flash flood risk by Saturday night. Considered
    a Slight risk upgrade across portions of southern/central IA into
    southern WI, but opted to hold off for now. The ingredients for
    backbuilding convection appear to be there along this corridor, but
    enough uncertainty on the details to hold off for now. The northern
    extent of this convection could end up more progressive, with the
    backbuilding more focused on the southern to southwestern extent,
    possibly even stretching back into northeast KS. Thus not
    confident enough on the location to upgrade at this point, but will
    continue to monitor. Organized convection could also drive an
    upgrade over eastern CO into western KS, but model solutions differ
    more widely on the organization of this activity lowering the
    confidence.

    A Marginal risk was added to portions of the central/northern FL
    into southern GA. Moisture and convective coverage looks greater
    than on Friday (when we did have a Marginal risk), so opted to
    introduce one on this day as well. Issues will likely stay
    localized given the high FFG, but the model QPF signal is on an
    uptick by this time and there should be enough instability and
    moisture around for locally higher totals.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    A cold front will advance eastward into the Upper Mississippi
    Valley on Saturday ahead of a strong mid-level trough moving across
    the north-central U.S. Standardized precipitable water anomalies of
    +2 to +3 are forecast by the 00Z GFS to be in place ahead of the
    front over the Upper Mississippi Valley, supporting growing
    instability with daytime heating. Unidirectional southwesterly flow
    ahead of the front will allow for periods of training with
    thunderstorms that form in the pre-frontal environment with
    potential for multiple rounds of storms.

    ...Central Plains...

    The cold front will move through the central Plains with low level
    upslope flow in its wake over the High Plains region. Precipitable
    water values are forecast to be near to slightly above average and
    ascent will be aided by the region's placement within the
    divergent and diffluent right- entrance region of the upper jet
    located on the eastern side of the advancing upper trough axis.
    Thunderstorms will likely shift east from eastern Colorado into
    Kansas, meeting with an increasing low level jet of 40 to 50 kt
    beyond 00Z Sunday. The 00Z model consensus is for an axis of
    locally heavy rain stretching from eastern Colorado into Kansas and
    southern Nebraska. Current thinking is for some 2 to 4 inch
    rainfall totals, most of which could fall over a 2-3 hour window.

    ...Southwest...

    Flow around a mid-level ridge centered over New Mexico should
    prompt increasing moisture into the Southwest with precipitable
    water values reaching near climatology for early August over
    Arizona and New Mexico. Assuming a lack of widespread cloud cover
    beneath the ridge should allow for sufficient CAPE generation by
    mid-afternoon and typical monsoonal thunderstorm coverage by
    evening. The concern for flash flooding will be enhanced by slow
    storm motions given 00Z model forecasts of 850-300 mb mean wind
    speeds of 10 kt or less.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-btnbyUXol3sB_7ehlTXfQWthbl8hCxgMHFhwfbHkAx5= 5GjAP0JspkPviGAcDRFZEkzofVD1GE7r1YDExtbsXNgWp10$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-btnbyUXol3sB_7ehlTXfQWthbl8hCxgMHFhwfbHkAx5= 5GjAP0JspkPviGAcDRFZEkzofVD1GE7r1YDExtbsF3jQapU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-btnbyUXol3sB_7ehlTXfQWthbl8hCxgMHFhwfbHkAx5= 5GjAP0JspkPviGAcDRFZEkzofVD1GE7r1YDExtbsxHSvT0w$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Aug 8 09:10:21 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 080908
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    508 AM EDT Fri Aug 8 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER CENTRAL AND
    NORTHERN MINNESOTA INTO FAR NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...Northern Plains through Upper Mississippi Valley...

    An anomalous 500 mb low will track eastward from the=20
    Montana/Canada border today with strong height falls moving into=20
    the Dakotas later today and tonight. At the surface, low pressure=20
    over South Dakota will track eastward toward Minnesota today before
    advancing into southern Canada overnight as a cold front becomes=20
    more defined to its south. Strong to extreme instability is
    forecast again with this system today, ahead of the low/front over central/southern Minnesota along with highly anomalous moisture=20
    over central and northern Minnesota (+2 to +4 standardized=20
    anomalies via 00Z GFS). The front will steadily track eastward=20
    between 00-12Z Saturday but potential will exist for high rainfall=20
    rates given the environment.=20

    An MCS from early Friday morning is expected to continue eastward
    into the northern half of Minnesota early in the period but with a
    weakening trend as the low level jet weakens and veers. While this
    first round of rainfall is not expected to pose much in the way of
    a flash flood threat prior to 18Z, high short term rates and
    perhaps an inch or so of rain may prime soils for a second round
    Friday night. A second round of thunderstorms is expected to form
    over eastern North Dakota by late evening with convection=20
    orienting from NNE to SSW with the advancing cold front. Numerous=20 thunderstorms are expected ahead of this boundary for Friday night=20
    as low level forcing combines with increasing diffluence/divergence
    aloft ahead of a jet max east of the upper low. Should line=20
    orientation briefly match the mean steering flow, allowing for=20
    training, high rain rates of perhaps 2+ in/hr can be realized as=20
    the convective axis shifts eastward into northwestern Wisconsin by=20
    Saturday morning. A Slight Risk was introduced for the potential=20
    for flash flooding and potential for 2-4 inches in central to=20
    northern Minnesota. The Marginal Risk surrounds this region for=20
    lower confidence in excessive rainfall potential.

    ...Southeastern Coast into Northern and Central Florida...

    High moisture with precipitable water values near 2 inches (a bit
    higher over central/northern Florida) will be in place again today
    in the vicinity of a lingering stationary front that extended from
    offshore of the Carolinas into northern Florida. Daytime heating
    should allow MLCAPE values to rise into roughly the 1000-2000 J/kg
    range. Weak mid-level ridging over Florida will be accompanied by
    weak deeper layer mean flow, supportive of slow storm motions. 00Z
    models support the potential for some slightly stronger low level=20
    flow over the western Peninsula, northeast of an inverted trough
    axis in the eastern Gulf, which could increase potential for slow
    cell movement/backbuilding. The environment could support rain
    rates of 2 to 4 in/hr, but the threat appears rather isolated to
    widely scattered, only supporting a Marginal Risk.

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER IOWA INTO
    SOUTHERN WISCONSIN AND NORTHWESTERN ILLINOIS...

    ...Midwest...

    A cold front will enter the upper Great Lakes to central Plains and
    stall on Saturday as the core of an anomalous 500 mb low tracks
    northeastward from south-central Canada. Precipitable water values
    of 1.5 to 2.0 inches are forecast by the model consensus to pool
    along the front and moderate to strong instability values are=20
    likely to develop with daytime heating. While there may be some
    lingering convective activity along the front Saturday morning
    across the Upper Midwest, the main flash flood concern is expected
    to develop later in the day on Saturday. Backing low level flow is
    forecast to setup east of a surface low in Kansas with 30-40 kt at
    850 mb forecast by the 00Z model consensus (some guidance is near
    50 kt Saturday night). Flow aloft will be divergent and diffluent
    to the south of an upper jet max over the upper Mississippi Valley,
    enhanced by an upstream shortwave trough forecast to advance
    through the central Rockies Saturday night. Increased forcing for
    ascent along the front with mean steering flow parallel to the
    synoptic front should favor areas of training with heavy rain
    likely. While the details are a bit uncertain, the most likely
    areas to see heavy rain potential (3 to 5 inches) will be near the
    front from Iowa into southern Wisconsin and far northwestern
    Illinois where a Slight Risk was introduced with this update.

    ...Central Plains...

    In the wake of a cold front moving into the southern High Plains,
    low level upslope into western Nebraska/Kansas and eastern Colorado
    will favor increased moisture into the region and sustaining of
    thunderstorms forecast to move off of the higher terrain by
    Saturday afternoon. MLCAPE is forecast to be at least 1000-1500=20
    J/kg over the High Plains and when combined with sufficient shear=20
    aloft, some organized storms will be possible. There will be=20
    potential for isolated flash flooding late Saturday evening into=20
    the overnight as a low level jet develops, aiding convergence in=20
    the vicinity of the frontal boundary, forecast to return north as a
    warm front.

    ...Southeastern Coast into Northern and Central Florida...

    A similar setup across the Southeast will set up for Saturday as=20
    was in place for Friday with high precipitable water values over 2=20
    inches in place from the eastern Gulf coast into coastal South
    Carolina near a lingering front. Portions of the outlooked area=20
    will have weak steering flow in place yet again and low to mid-
    level winds from the east to southeast will favor scattered=20
    thunderstorms during peak heating with potential for brief training/backbuilding and high rates of 2-4 in/hr. At this time,
    coverage of flash flood potential looks to be low enough to
    warrant only a Marginal Risk.

    ...Southwest...

    The mid to upper-level ridge that will be in place from Friday into
    Saturday will begin to break down as upper level troughing
    amplifies into the region from the north. Moisture values are
    expected to return to near seasonal levels for early August across
    Arizona while remaining slightly below average in New Mexico.=20
    Thunderstorms are expected to form with solar insolation along the=20
    higher terrain by 18Z, ramping up in intensity and coverage through
    21Z. Given the increase in moisture compared to prior days, storms
    should have a better shot of producing 1 to 2 in/hr rates,=20
    especially across the southern half of Arizona and New Mexico where
    weaker steering flow will be present as 00Z model forecasts show=20
    850-300 mb mean wind speeds of 10 kt or less.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER FROM EASTERN NEBRASKA/KANSAS INTO SOUTHERN WISCONSIN/NORTHERN ILLINOIS...

    ...Central Plains into Upper Midwest...

    A quasi-stationary front will be in place from Sunday into Monday,
    extending from the Great Lakes into the southern High Plains. The
    base of an upper trough axis will be moving overhead through Monday
    morning with southwesterly flow downstream along/over the front. An
    enhanced low level flow regime will be in place much of the day
    across the southern High Plains into the Midwest with potential=20
    for mid-level impulses within the southwesterly flow aiding with=20
    lift across the Plains to Midwest. The parallel nature of the
    steering flow and frontal boundary will again favor the potential
    for repeating and training of thunderstorms. Multiple rounds of
    thunderstorms will be possible with peak flash flood potential
    occurring late Sunday evening and overnight as convection moving
    off of the higher terrain meets with strengthening low level flow
    ahead of the upper trough. Precipitable water anomalies will
    generally be +1 to +2 over the Plains with higher values toward the
    Great Lakes. Questionable instability values over the Great Lakes
    region will limit flash flood potential as the better consensus for
    instability will be over southern locations. Model QPF values
    seemed to agree with at least 3 to 5 inch potential from the global
    guidance and locally higher from the 00Z RRFS and regional CMC.

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic Coast to Northeastern Gulf Coast...

    A lingering frontal boundary over northern Florida and high=20
    pressure anchored over the northern Mid-Atlantic will maintain
    low level southeasterly winds into the southeastern U.S. on Sunday. Precipitable water values of 2.0 to 2.3 inches over the Southeast=20
    and Florida will again support intense tropical downpours as
    thunderstorms increase with daytime heating. Low level=20
    southeasterly winds and confluent axes will combine with sea breeze
    convergence and other mesoscale boundaries to support scattered=20 thunderstorms with isolated flash flood potential from 2-4 in/hr
    rainfall rates.

    ...Southwest...

    Continued advancing of the base of an upper trough from the central
    Rockies into the central Plains and an elongated ridge over
    California will favor northwesterly mid-level flow into the
    Southwest. While this may reduce moisture availability across the
    Four Corners region, low level southerly flow is expected to be in
    place over the northern Gulf of California into Arizona, with=20
    westerly flow advecting low to mid-level moisture downstream toward
    New Mexico. Meanwhile, the front over the High Plains from=20
    Saturday night is forecast to again sink down to the south with an=20
    upslope flow regime setting up over northeastern New Mexico,=20
    helping to increase low level moisture into the region. Moisture=20
    values for much of central/southern Arizona and New Mexico are=20
    expected to be near average and monsoon thunderstorms are expected=20
    during the late afternoon and evening hours with perhaps greater=20
    coverage than previous days. Typical potential for high short term=20
    rain rates (1-2 inches in an hour or less) will set up with=20
    isolated to widely scattered flash flood potential.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4QjE4Nf70aK14w6pUirwRBcUrWZ0I5iMLz9mM7mG2Nrt= JdMDKGzX8yBRxHoKyXwmtyKriCEly5BY-uVeKY0Wz9z6HTI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4QjE4Nf70aK14w6pUirwRBcUrWZ0I5iMLz9mM7mG2Nrt= JdMDKGzX8yBRxHoKyXwmtyKriCEly5BY-uVeKY0WMKQlTVY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4QjE4Nf70aK14w6pUirwRBcUrWZ0I5iMLz9mM7mG2Nrt= JdMDKGzX8yBRxHoKyXwmtyKriCEly5BY-uVeKY0Wb4-PHGk$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Aug 8 15:55:10 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 081554
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1154 AM EDT Fri Aug 8 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF=20
    NORTHERN MINNESOTA INTO FAR NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...16Z Update...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    In coordination with FGF/Fargo, ND, MPX/Minneapolis, MN and
    DLH/Duluth, MN forecast offices, the Slight Risk was trimmed with=20
    this update to portions of northern Minnesota and far northwestern=20 Wisconsin. A progressive and weakening MCS currently moving into=20
    the Arrowhead and the western Lake Superior areas will continue=20
    weakening and dissipate over the next few hours. Another MCS is=20
    expected to develop this evening near or just east of the ND/MN=20
    border, and rapidly progress east, in very similar fashion to the=20
    behavior of the current MCS earlier this morning. The MCS is likely
    to take the form of a squall line, and therefore be a minimal=20
    flooding threat, despite the storms having ample (up to 3 sigma=20
    above normal) moisture to work with. PWATs will approach 2 inches=20
    in a few locations as the storms move through. The primary flooding
    concern is where any storms get hung up on the southern end of the
    line, resulting in localized training. If this does occur, then=20
    the southern portion of the Slight along the MN/WI border would=20
    have the highest flash flooding risk.=20

    Elsewhere, the surrounding Marginal largely covers the potential
    for isolated training or if a particularly strong storm moves over
    a particularly vulnerable area.

    ...Southeast...

    The Marginal Risk in the Southeast remains unchanged with this
    update. Rounds of storms associated with a tropical wave moving
    over Florida will take advantage of a very moisture-rich air mass,
    resulting in scattered showers and thunderstorms. The area of
    greatest concern will be around the Tampa-St. Pete metro, where
    slow-moving storms associated with a convergence boundary appear
    likely to impact the metro later this afternoon. This is
    highlighted in much of the 12Z CAMs guidance. Very high FFGs (over
    3 inches in 1 hour) should mitigate the coverage and severity of
    any flash flooding with any storms. While the storms should be
    slow-moving, the cores and their mergers and interactions should
    hold the flooding threat even along the west coast to a Marginal,
    albeit a higher-end Marginal.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains through Upper Mississippi Valley...

    An anomalous 500 mb low will track eastward from the
    Montana/Canada border today with strong height falls moving into
    the Dakotas later today and tonight. At the surface, low pressure
    over South Dakota will track eastward toward Minnesota today before
    advancing into southern Canada overnight as a cold front becomes
    more defined to its south. Strong to extreme instability is
    forecast again with this system today, ahead of the low/front over central/southern Minnesota along with highly anomalous moisture
    over central and northern Minnesota (+2 to +4 standardized
    anomalies via 00Z GFS). The front will steadily track eastward
    between 00-12Z Saturday but potential will exist for high rainfall
    rates given the environment.

    An MCS from early Friday morning is expected to continue eastward
    into the northern half of Minnesota early in the period but with a
    weakening trend as the low level jet weakens and veers. While this
    first round of rainfall is not expected to pose much in the way of
    a flash flood threat prior to 18Z, high short term rates and
    perhaps an inch or so of rain may prime soils for a second round
    Friday night. A second round of thunderstorms is expected to form
    over eastern North Dakota by late evening with convection
    orienting from NNE to SSW with the advancing cold front. Numerous
    thunderstorms are expected ahead of this boundary for Friday night
    as low level forcing combines with increasing diffluence/divergence
    aloft ahead of a jet max east of the upper low. Should line
    orientation briefly match the mean steering flow, allowing for
    training, high rain rates of perhaps 2+ in/hr can be realized as
    the convective axis shifts eastward into northwestern Wisconsin by
    Saturday morning. A Slight Risk was introduced for the potential
    for flash flooding and potential for 2-4 inches in central to
    northern Minnesota. The Marginal Risk surrounds this region for
    lower confidence in excessive rainfall potential.

    ...Southeastern Coast into Northern and Central Florida...

    High moisture with precipitable water values near 2 inches (a bit
    higher over central/northern Florida) will be in place again today
    in the vicinity of a lingering stationary front that extended from
    offshore of the Carolinas into northern Florida. Daytime heating
    should allow MLCAPE values to rise into roughly the 1000-2000 J/kg
    range. Weak mid-level ridging over Florida will be accompanied by
    weak deeper layer mean flow, supportive of slow storm motions. 00Z
    models support the potential for some slightly stronger low level
    flow over the western Peninsula, northeast of an inverted trough
    axis in the eastern Gulf, which could increase potential for slow
    cell movement/backbuilding. The environment could support rain
    rates of 2 to 4 in/hr, but the threat appears rather isolated to
    widely scattered, only supporting a Marginal Risk.

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER IOWA INTO
    SOUTHERN WISCONSIN AND NORTHWESTERN ILLINOIS...

    ...Midwest...

    A cold front will enter the upper Great Lakes to central Plains and
    stall on Saturday as the core of an anomalous 500 mb low tracks
    northeastward from south-central Canada. Precipitable water values
    of 1.5 to 2.0 inches are forecast by the model consensus to pool
    along the front and moderate to strong instability values are
    likely to develop with daytime heating. While there may be some
    lingering convective activity along the front Saturday morning
    across the Upper Midwest, the main flash flood concern is expected
    to develop later in the day on Saturday. Backing low level flow is
    forecast to setup east of a surface low in Kansas with 30-40 kt at
    850 mb forecast by the 00Z model consensus (some guidance is near
    50 kt Saturday night). Flow aloft will be divergent and diffluent
    to the south of an upper jet max over the upper Mississippi Valley,
    enhanced by an upstream shortwave trough forecast to advance
    through the central Rockies Saturday night. Increased forcing for
    ascent along the front with mean steering flow parallel to the
    synoptic front should favor areas of training with heavy rain
    likely. While the details are a bit uncertain, the most likely
    areas to see heavy rain potential (3 to 5 inches) will be near the
    front from Iowa into southern Wisconsin and far northwestern
    Illinois where a Slight Risk was introduced with this update.

    ...Central Plains...

    In the wake of a cold front moving into the southern High Plains,
    low level upslope into western Nebraska/Kansas and eastern Colorado
    will favor increased moisture into the region and sustaining of
    thunderstorms forecast to move off of the higher terrain by
    Saturday afternoon. MLCAPE is forecast to be at least 1000-1500
    J/kg over the High Plains and when combined with sufficient shear
    aloft, some organized storms will be possible. There will be
    potential for isolated flash flooding late Saturday evening into
    the overnight as a low level jet develops, aiding convergence in
    the vicinity of the frontal boundary, forecast to return north as a
    warm front.

    ...Southeastern Coast into Northern and Central Florida...

    A similar setup across the Southeast will set up for Saturday as
    was in place for Friday with high precipitable water values over 2
    inches in place from the eastern Gulf coast into coastal South
    Carolina near a lingering front. Portions of the outlooked area
    will have weak steering flow in place yet again and low to mid-
    level winds from the east to southeast will favor scattered
    thunderstorms during peak heating with potential for brief training/backbuilding and high rates of 2-4 in/hr. At this time,
    coverage of flash flood potential looks to be low enough to
    warrant only a Marginal Risk.

    ...Southwest...

    The mid to upper-level ridge that will be in place from Friday into
    Saturday will begin to break down as upper level troughing
    amplifies into the region from the north. Moisture values are
    expected to return to near seasonal levels for early August across
    Arizona while remaining slightly below average in New Mexico.
    Thunderstorms are expected to form with solar insolation along the
    higher terrain by 18Z, ramping up in intensity and coverage through
    21Z. Given the increase in moisture compared to prior days, storms
    should have a better shot of producing 1 to 2 in/hr rates,
    especially across the southern half of Arizona and New Mexico where
    weaker steering flow will be present as 00Z model forecasts show
    850-300 mb mean wind speeds of 10 kt or less.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER FROM EASTERN NEBRASKA/KANSAS INTO SOUTHERN WISCONSIN/NORTHERN ILLINOIS...

    ...Central Plains into Upper Midwest...

    A quasi-stationary front will be in place from Sunday into Monday,
    extending from the Great Lakes into the southern High Plains. The
    base of an upper trough axis will be moving overhead through Monday
    morning with southwesterly flow downstream along/over the front. An
    enhanced low level flow regime will be in place much of the day
    across the southern High Plains into the Midwest with potential
    for mid-level impulses within the southwesterly flow aiding with
    lift across the Plains to Midwest. The parallel nature of the
    steering flow and frontal boundary will again favor the potential
    for repeating and training of thunderstorms. Multiple rounds of
    thunderstorms will be possible with peak flash flood potential
    occurring late Sunday evening and overnight as convection moving
    off of the higher terrain meets with strengthening low level flow
    ahead of the upper trough. Precipitable water anomalies will
    generally be +1 to +2 over the Plains with higher values toward the
    Great Lakes. Questionable instability values over the Great Lakes
    region will limit flash flood potential as the better consensus for
    instability will be over southern locations. Model QPF values
    seemed to agree with at least 3 to 5 inch potential from the global
    guidance and locally higher from the 00Z RRFS and regional CMC.

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic Coast to Northeastern Gulf Coast...

    A lingering frontal boundary over northern Florida and high
    pressure anchored over the northern Mid-Atlantic will maintain
    low level southeasterly winds into the southeastern U.S. on Sunday. Precipitable water values of 2.0 to 2.3 inches over the Southeast
    and Florida will again support intense tropical downpours as
    thunderstorms increase with daytime heating. Low level
    southeasterly winds and confluent axes will combine with sea breeze
    convergence and other mesoscale boundaries to support scattered
    thunderstorms with isolated flash flood potential from 2-4 in/hr
    rainfall rates.

    ...Southwest...

    Continued advancing of the base of an upper trough from the central
    Rockies into the central Plains and an elongated ridge over
    California will favor northwesterly mid-level flow into the
    Southwest. While this may reduce moisture availability across the
    Four Corners region, low level southerly flow is expected to be in
    place over the northern Gulf of California into Arizona, with
    westerly flow advecting low to mid-level moisture downstream toward
    New Mexico. Meanwhile, the front over the High Plains from
    Saturday night is forecast to again sink down to the south with an
    upslope flow regime setting up over northeastern New Mexico,
    helping to increase low level moisture into the region. Moisture
    values for much of central/southern Arizona and New Mexico are
    expected to be near average and monsoon thunderstorms are expected
    during the late afternoon and evening hours with perhaps greater
    coverage than previous days. Typical potential for high short term
    rain rates (1-2 inches in an hour or less) will set up with
    isolated to widely scattered flash flood potential.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4Ucr862yrZURflwEC4U8Ufm01xgtOx4yw6gdXL6112G4= po9_8YKNHh_XLa_-p6epzH5owokvsvRlqtEzgxwSjVGNC1Y$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4Ucr862yrZURflwEC4U8Ufm01xgtOx4yw6gdXL6112G4= po9_8YKNHh_XLa_-p6epzH5owokvsvRlqtEzgxwSjwpOlzM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4Ucr862yrZURflwEC4U8Ufm01xgtOx4yw6gdXL6112G4= po9_8YKNHh_XLa_-p6epzH5owokvsvRlqtEzgxwSs63GzCI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Aug 8 20:03:10 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 082002
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    402 PM EDT Fri Aug 8 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Aug 08 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN MINNESOTA INTO FAR NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...16Z Update...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    In coordination with FGF/Fargo, ND, MPX/Minneapolis, MN and
    DLH/Duluth, MN forecast offices, the Slight Risk was trimmed with
    this update to portions of northern Minnesota and far northwestern
    Wisconsin. A progressive and weakening MCS currently moving into
    the Arrowhead and the western Lake Superior areas will continue
    weakening and dissipate over the next few hours. Another MCS is
    expected to develop this evening near or just east of the ND/MN
    border, and rapidly progress east, in very similar fashion to the
    behavior of the current MCS earlier this morning. The MCS is likely
    to take the form of a squall line, and therefore be a minimal
    flooding threat, despite the storms having ample (up to 3 sigma
    above normal) moisture to work with. PWATs will approach 2 inches
    in a few locations as the storms move through. The primary flooding
    concern is where any storms get hung up on the southern end of the
    line, resulting in localized training. If this does occur, then
    the southern portion of the Slight along the MN/WI border would
    have the highest flash flooding risk.

    Elsewhere, the surrounding Marginal largely covers the potential
    for isolated training or if a particularly strong storm moves over
    a particularly vulnerable area.

    ...Southeast...

    The Marginal Risk in the Southeast remains unchanged with this
    update. Rounds of storms associated with a tropical wave moving
    over Florida will take advantage of a very moisture-rich air mass,
    resulting in scattered showers and thunderstorms. The area of
    greatest concern will be around the Tampa-St. Pete metro, where
    slow-moving storms associated with a convergence boundary appear
    likely to impact the metro later this afternoon. This is
    highlighted in much of the 12Z CAMs guidance. Very high FFGs (over
    3 inches in 1 hour) should mitigate the coverage and severity of
    any flash flooding with any storms. While the storms should be
    slow-moving, the cores and their mergers and interactions should
    hold the flooding threat even along the west coast to a Marginal,
    albeit a higher-end Marginal.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains through Upper Mississippi Valley...

    An anomalous 500 mb low will track eastward from the
    Montana/Canada border today with strong height falls moving into
    the Dakotas later today and tonight. At the surface, low pressure
    over South Dakota will track eastward toward Minnesota today before
    advancing into southern Canada overnight as a cold front becomes
    more defined to its south. Strong to extreme instability is
    forecast again with this system today, ahead of the low/front over central/southern Minnesota along with highly anomalous moisture
    over central and northern Minnesota (+2 to +4 standardized
    anomalies via 00Z GFS). The front will steadily track eastward
    between 00-12Z Saturday but potential will exist for high rainfall
    rates given the environment.

    An MCS from early Friday morning is expected to continue eastward
    into the northern half of Minnesota early in the period but with a
    weakening trend as the low level jet weakens and veers. While this
    first round of rainfall is not expected to pose much in the way of
    a flash flood threat prior to 18Z, high short term rates and
    perhaps an inch or so of rain may prime soils for a second round
    Friday night. A second round of thunderstorms is expected to form
    over eastern North Dakota by late evening with convection
    orienting from NNE to SSW with the advancing cold front. Numerous
    thunderstorms are expected ahead of this boundary for Friday night
    as low level forcing combines with increasing diffluence/divergence
    aloft ahead of a jet max east of the upper low. Should line
    orientation briefly match the mean steering flow, allowing for
    training, high rain rates of perhaps 2+ in/hr can be realized as
    the convective axis shifts eastward into northwestern Wisconsin by
    Saturday morning. A Slight Risk was introduced for the potential
    for flash flooding and potential for 2-4 inches in central to
    northern Minnesota. The Marginal Risk surrounds this region for
    lower confidence in excessive rainfall potential.

    ...Southeastern Coast into Northern and Central Florida...

    High moisture with precipitable water values near 2 inches (a bit
    higher over central/northern Florida) will be in place again today
    in the vicinity of a lingering stationary front that extended from
    offshore of the Carolinas into northern Florida. Daytime heating
    should allow MLCAPE values to rise into roughly the 1000-2000 J/kg
    range. Weak mid-level ridging over Florida will be accompanied by
    weak deeper layer mean flow, supportive of slow storm motions. 00Z
    models support the potential for some slightly stronger low level
    flow over the western Peninsula, northeast of an inverted trough
    axis in the eastern Gulf, which could increase potential for slow
    cell movement/backbuilding. The environment could support rain
    rates of 2 to 4 in/hr, but the threat appears rather isolated to
    widely scattered, only supporting a Marginal Risk.

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR EASTERN IOWA,
    SOUTHERN WISCONSIN, AND FAR NORTHWESTERN ILLINOIS...

    ...20Z Update...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    In coordination with DVN/Quad Cities, IA; MKX/Milwaukee, WI;
    ARX/LaCrosse, WI; and DMX/Des Moines, IA forecast offices, a
    Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this update for much of
    eastern Iowa, southern Wisconsin, and far northwestern Illinois. A
    cold front will move eastward into the upper Midwest from the
    northern Plains tonight. This front will stall out as both its
    parent surface low tracks northeast, and the upper level low
    supporting the cold air pushing the front east also retreats
    towards the north. This will leave the front stalled out over
    central Iowa northeast into far western Wisconsin. Meanwhile,
    abundant Gulf moisture is already in place across the upper
    Midwest, and will further increase overnight as the cold front both
    pushes it eastward, and allows the moisture to pool along the front
    in the form of showers and thunderstorms. The initial time the
    front stalls will be when it is strongest, and able to support the
    greatest coverage of storms. Instability will be incredibly high
    south and east of the front in the warm and very humid air mass,
    with the high resolution guidance on average showing MUCAPE values
    north of 4,000 J/kg. This will support explosive development of the
    storms as they form, with the cold pools of those storms supporting
    additional storm development.

    Guidance is in decent agreement that the storms will initiate to
    the north in Wisconsin, then like a chain reaction, pop down the
    front towards the southwest. The predominant flow will be
    southwesterly, parallel to the front, with Corfidi vectors
    perpendicular to the flow, out of the northwest. Thus, expect some
    training of storms towards the northeast as any lines of storms
    track towards the southeast. Since the forcing front will be
    stalling out, the steady advection of additional Gulf moisture and
    instability on a 25 kt southwesterly LLJ at 850 mb will support
    additional convective development towards the south and west, with
    those storms then tracking southeast. This will result in areas
    where there are multiple hours of heavy rain over individual areas.
    While the exact location of those areas is very difficult to
    pinpoint much before the event begins, the Moderate Risk area
    highlights where the greatest density of locations subject to
    multiple hours of heavy rain will be. Previous heavy rainfall over
    Iowa have led to rivers in the area already higher than normal, so
    this significant addition of rain will greatly increase stream,
    creek, and river levels all across the area. Considerable flash and
    urban flooding is likely, resulting from 1-3 inch per hour rainfall
    rates with the stronger storms, widespread rainfall totals of 4-6
    inches, and isolated higher rainfall amounts possible. As is
    typical of these events, the greatest coverage and intensity storms
    are likely to occur overnight Saturday night into Sunday, as the
    heaviest rains have pushed into eastern Iowa. For the storms in
    Wisconsin, the storms will be through the day, but with a similar
    setup for movement, coverage, and intensity of storms.=20

    Expect 2-3 rounds of storms over the heaviest impacted spots, which
    appears likeliest to occur over eastern and southeastern Iowa. ARIs
    are near 25 year recurrence intervals along the Mississippi River,
    and up to a 70% chance of exceeding flash flood guidance over much
    of eastern Iowa. The flash flood guidance numbers are likely to
    decrease as a result of the heavy rain on D2/Saturday.

    For the surrounding Slight Risk area, much of it factors in
    uncertainty with how far away from the main front the heaviest rain
    can get, and stays largely equidistant from the Moderate Risk area.
    That said, lesser amounts of training and storms are still
    expected, and could cause widely scattered instances of flash
    flooding.

    ...Southwest...

    The Marginal Risk across the Southwest was greatly trimmed in
    coordination with ABQ/Albuquerque, NM and EPZ/El Paso, TX forecast
    offices. The monsoon will be waning through the period, which
    should keep any wet thunderstorms confined to mostly southeastern
    Arizona on Saturday, elsewhere, abundant dry air should keep most
    convection as dry thunderstorms. Guidance has greatly increased the precipitation footprint across that area, which too contributed to
    the downgrade.

    ...Southeast...

    No changes were made to the Marginal Risk from southern South
    Carolina through much of the Florida Peninsula. Scattered to
    numerous storms are likely to combat very high FFGs in the area,
    resulting in isolated instances of flash flooding. The storms could
    organize into local clusters, but heavy rain is unlikely to remain
    over any one area for an extended period of time, despite the
    abundance of moisture (PWATs well over 2 inches), so for now the
    Marginal Risk remains in place with little agreement on where any
    embedded higher risk areas will be.

    ...High Plains of Colorado and Western Kansas...

    Widely scattered convection across eastern Colorado could pose an
    isolated flash flooding risk over the area on Saturday. While a few
    storms may initiate over the area during the afternoon, the greater
    coverage of storms will occur overnight Saturday night. Storm=20
    motions should be fast enough to the southeast to only pose an=20
    isolated flash flooding risk.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM FAR NORTHERN
    MISSOURI THROUGH MUCH OF EASTERN IOWA AND INTO SOUTHWESTERN
    WISCONSIN...

    ...20Z Update...

    In coordination with DVN/Quad Cities, IA; MKX/Milwaukee, WI;
    ARX/LaCrosse, WI; and DMX/Des Moines, IA; and EAX/Pleasant Hill, MO=20
    forecast offices, a Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this=20
    update for far northern Missouri, much of eastern Iowa, southern=20
    Wisconsin, and far northwestern Illinois. This area is very similar
    to the Moderate Risk area from D2/Saturday, as the front forcing
    all of the storms that will cause the flash flooding will be
    ongoing across much of eastern Iowa Sunday morning, weaken during
    the day, with more storms moving in from the west on Sunday night.
    The storms are likely to develop along the same stalled out front
    again Sunday night, but will extend well southwest of the
    D2/Saturday period across much of northern Missouri and likely
    eastern Kansas as well. The Moderate Risk was kept to mostly Iowa
    for now since it will be a continuation of very heavy rainfall from
    the D2/Saturday period. However, expect multiple inches of rain to
    impact much of northern Missouri, including the Kansas City and St.
    Joseph metros. Since relatively little rain is expected in those
    metros on Saturday, the areas may take a round of storms before
    soils are moistened up, but even there, training and multiple
    rounds of storms are likely. Thus, while Kansas City and St. Joseph
    are currently in a higher-end Slight, it's very possible the area
    may need to be upgraded to a Moderate as well with future updates.
    Regardless, the continuation of very heavy rain in already hard hit
    areas will likely result in more impactful and widespread flooding
    impacts across Iowa, far western Illinois, and far southwestern
    Wisconsin on Sunday as compared with Saturday.

    More widespread convection is also likely across much of Kansas and
    into far eastern Colorado on Sunday. The storms are unlikely to
    result in more flooding on Sunday since the storms on Saturday
    should be relatively few and far between, but the area will be
    monitored for potential need to upgrade to a Slight Risk, extending
    from the current Slight across eastern Kansas.

    The Marginals in the Southeast and Southwest were largely
    unchanged. See the previous discussion below for more details on
    those areas.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic Coast to Northeastern Gulf Coast...

    A lingering frontal boundary over northern Florida and high
    pressure anchored over the northern Mid-Atlantic will maintain
    low level southeasterly winds into the southeastern U.S. on Sunday. Precipitable water values of 2.0 to 2.3 inches over the Southeast
    and Florida will again support intense tropical downpours as
    thunderstorms increase with daytime heating. Low level
    southeasterly winds and confluent axes will combine with sea breeze
    convergence and other mesoscale boundaries to support scattered
    thunderstorms with isolated flash flood potential from 2-4 in/hr
    rainfall rates.

    ...Southwest...

    Continued advancing of the base of an upper trough from the central
    Rockies into the central Plains and an elongated ridge over
    California will favor northwesterly mid-level flow into the
    Southwest. While this may reduce moisture availability across the
    Four Corners region, low level southerly flow is expected to be in
    place over the northern Gulf of California into Arizona, with
    westerly flow advecting low to mid-level moisture downstream toward
    New Mexico. Meanwhile, the front over the High Plains from
    Saturday night is forecast to again sink down to the south with an
    upslope flow regime setting up over northeastern New Mexico,
    helping to increase low level moisture into the region. Moisture
    values for much of central/southern Arizona and New Mexico are
    expected to be near average and monsoon thunderstorms are expected
    during the late afternoon and evening hours with perhaps greater
    coverage than previous days. Typical potential for high short term
    rain rates (1-2 inches in an hour or less) will set up with
    isolated to widely scattered flash flood potential.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_03anSBAtKxDGA7e6hGcoFk6rs3YesCrFhJt7NNX5vbo= pjH2Nmw03iBzSzVm-Kpg-NGyICVigYrTU-CaNZ_pq7xhsbA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_03anSBAtKxDGA7e6hGcoFk6rs3YesCrFhJt7NNX5vbo= pjH2Nmw03iBzSzVm-Kpg-NGyICVigYrTU-CaNZ_pMpGxv44$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_03anSBAtKxDGA7e6hGcoFk6rs3YesCrFhJt7NNX5vbo= pjH2Nmw03iBzSzVm-Kpg-NGyICVigYrTU-CaNZ_p3Dh5wN4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Aug 9 00:58:14 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 090058
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    858 PM EDT Fri Aug 8 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN MINNESOTA INTO FAR NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN...

    01Z Update...
    Awaiting the initiation of the next MCS across portions of the
    Upper Midwest near or just east of the ND/MN border, and rapidly=20
    progress east in very similar fashion to the behavior of the=20
    MCS earlier this morning. The MCS is likely to take the form of a=20
    squall line, and therefore be a minimal flooding threat, despite=20
    the storms having ample deep-layered moisture (up to 3 sigma above
    normal) climatology to work with and precipitable water values
    approaching 2 inches. The primary flooding concern remains where=20
    any storms get hung up on the southern end of the line, resulting=20
    in localized training. If this does occur, then the southern=20
    portion of the Slight along the MN/WI border would have the highest
    flash flooding risk. The 18Z HREF largely supported placement of
    the previously-issued Slight Risk area and the surrounding=20
    Marginal Risk area. The past couple=20

    Farther south, the Marginal risk area was pulled south to cover
    much of Iowa and a portion of eastern Nebraska where the latest
    runs of the HRRR have been supporting the 18Z NAM nest idea of
    convection with potential for some intense rain rates building
    farther south and east than suggested by the HREF...although the
    NAM nest maximum may be too high.

    ...Southeast...
    Maintained the Marginal risk area over coastal portions of South
    Carolina and Georgia into the northeast corner of Florida given
    persistence of on-shore flow and the lingering cyclonic energy in
    the low levels just off shore. A downward trend should continue
    along the west coast of the Florida peninsula so that portion of
    the state was removed from the Marginal risk area.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR EASTERN IOWA,
    SOUTHERN WISCONSIN, AND FAR NORTHWESTERN ILLINOIS...

    ...20Z Update...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    In coordination with DVN/Quad Cities, IA; MKX/Milwaukee, WI;
    ARX/LaCrosse, WI; and DMX/Des Moines, IA forecast offices, a
    Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this update for much of
    eastern Iowa, southern Wisconsin, and far northwestern Illinois. A
    cold front will move eastward into the upper Midwest from the
    northern Plains tonight. This front will stall out as both its
    parent surface low tracks northeast, and the upper level low
    supporting the cold air pushing the front east also retreats
    towards the north. This will leave the front stalled out over
    central Iowa northeast into far western Wisconsin. Meanwhile,
    abundant Gulf moisture is already in place across the upper
    Midwest, and will further increase overnight as the cold front both
    pushes it eastward, and allows the moisture to pool along the front
    in the form of showers and thunderstorms. The initial time the
    front stalls will be when it is strongest, and able to support the
    greatest coverage of storms. Instability will be incredibly high
    south and east of the front in the warm and very humid air mass,
    with the high resolution guidance on average showing MUCAPE values
    north of 4,000 J/kg. This will support explosive development of the
    storms as they form, with the cold pools of those storms supporting
    additional storm development.

    Guidance is in decent agreement that the storms will initiate to
    the north in Wisconsin, then like a chain reaction, pop down the
    front towards the southwest. The predominant flow will be
    southwesterly, parallel to the front, with Corfidi vectors
    perpendicular to the flow, out of the northwest. Thus, expect some
    training of storms towards the northeast as any lines of storms
    track towards the southeast. Since the forcing front will be
    stalling out, the steady advection of additional Gulf moisture and
    instability on a 25 kt southwesterly LLJ at 850 mb will support
    additional convective development towards the south and west, with
    those storms then tracking southeast. This will result in areas
    where there are multiple hours of heavy rain over individual areas.
    While the exact location of those areas is very difficult to
    pinpoint much before the event begins, the Moderate Risk area
    highlights where the greatest density of locations subject to
    multiple hours of heavy rain will be. Previous heavy rainfall over
    Iowa have led to rivers in the area already higher than normal, so
    this significant addition of rain will greatly increase stream,
    creek, and river levels all across the area. Considerable flash and
    urban flooding is likely, resulting from 1-3 inch per hour rainfall
    rates with the stronger storms, widespread rainfall totals of 4-6
    inches, and isolated higher rainfall amounts possible. As is
    typical of these events, the greatest coverage and intensity storms
    are likely to occur overnight Saturday night into Sunday, as the
    heaviest rains have pushed into eastern Iowa. For the storms in
    Wisconsin, the storms will be through the day, but with a similar
    setup for movement, coverage, and intensity of storms.

    Expect 2-3 rounds of storms over the heaviest impacted spots, which
    appears likeliest to occur over eastern and southeastern Iowa. ARIs
    are near 25 year recurrence intervals along the Mississippi River,
    and up to a 70% chance of exceeding flash flood guidance over much
    of eastern Iowa. The flash flood guidance numbers are likely to
    decrease as a result of the heavy rain on D2/Saturday.

    For the surrounding Slight Risk area, much of it factors in
    uncertainty with how far away from the main front the heaviest rain
    can get, and stays largely equidistant from the Moderate Risk area.
    That said, lesser amounts of training and storms are still
    expected, and could cause widely scattered instances of flash
    flooding.

    ...Southwest...

    The Marginal Risk across the Southwest was greatly trimmed in
    coordination with ABQ/Albuquerque, NM and EPZ/El Paso, TX forecast
    offices. The monsoon will be waning through the period, which
    should keep any wet thunderstorms confined to mostly southeastern
    Arizona on Saturday, elsewhere, abundant dry air should keep most
    convection as dry thunderstorms. Guidance has greatly increased the precipitation footprint across that area, which too contributed to
    the downgrade.

    ...Southeast...

    No changes were made to the Marginal Risk from southern South
    Carolina through much of the Florida Peninsula. Scattered to
    numerous storms are likely to combat very high FFGs in the area,
    resulting in isolated instances of flash flooding. The storms could
    organize into local clusters, but heavy rain is unlikely to remain
    over any one area for an extended period of time, despite the
    abundance of moisture (PWATs well over 2 inches), so for now the
    Marginal Risk remains in place with little agreement on where any
    embedded higher risk areas will be.

    ...High Plains of Colorado and Western Kansas...

    Widely scattered convection across eastern Colorado could pose an
    isolated flash flooding risk over the area on Saturday. While a few
    storms may initiate over the area during the afternoon, the greater
    coverage of storms will occur overnight Saturday night. Storm
    motions should be fast enough to the southeast to only pose an
    isolated flash flooding risk.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM FAR NORTHERN
    MISSOURI THROUGH MUCH OF EASTERN IOWA AND INTO SOUTHWESTERN
    WISCONSIN...

    ...20Z Update...

    In coordination with DVN/Quad Cities, IA; MKX/Milwaukee, WI;
    ARX/LaCrosse, WI; and DMX/Des Moines, IA; and EAX/Pleasant Hill, MO
    forecast offices, a Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this
    update for far northern Missouri, much of eastern Iowa, southern
    Wisconsin, and far northwestern Illinois. This area is very similar
    to the Moderate Risk area from D2/Saturday, as the front forcing
    all of the storms that will cause the flash flooding will be
    ongoing across much of eastern Iowa Sunday morning, weaken during
    the day, with more storms moving in from the west on Sunday night.
    The storms are likely to develop along the same stalled out front
    again Sunday night, but will extend well southwest of the
    D2/Saturday period across much of northern Missouri and likely
    eastern Kansas as well. The Moderate Risk was kept to mostly Iowa
    for now since it will be a continuation of very heavy rainfall from
    the D2/Saturday period. However, expect multiple inches of rain to
    impact much of northern Missouri, including the Kansas City and St.
    Joseph metros. Since relatively little rain is expected in those
    metros on Saturday, the areas may take a round of storms before
    soils are moistened up, but even there, training and multiple
    rounds of storms are likely. Thus, while Kansas City and St. Joseph
    are currently in a higher-end Slight, it's very possible the area
    may need to be upgraded to a Moderate as well with future updates.
    Regardless, the continuation of very heavy rain in already hard hit
    areas will likely result in more impactful and widespread flooding
    impacts across Iowa, far western Illinois, and far southwestern
    Wisconsin on Sunday as compared with Saturday.

    More widespread convection is also likely across much of Kansas and
    into far eastern Colorado on Sunday. The storms are unlikely to
    result in more flooding on Sunday since the storms on Saturday
    should be relatively few and far between, but the area will be
    monitored for potential need to upgrade to a Slight Risk, extending
    from the current Slight across eastern Kansas.

    The Marginals in the Southeast and Southwest were largely
    unchanged. See the previous discussion below for more details on
    those areas.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic Coast to Northeastern Gulf Coast...

    A lingering frontal boundary over northern Florida and high
    pressure anchored over the northern Mid-Atlantic will maintain
    low level southeasterly winds into the southeastern U.S. on Sunday. Precipitable water values of 2.0 to 2.3 inches over the Southeast
    and Florida will again support intense tropical downpours as
    thunderstorms increase with daytime heating. Low level
    southeasterly winds and confluent axes will combine with sea breeze
    convergence and other mesoscale boundaries to support scattered
    thunderstorms with isolated flash flood potential from 2-4 in/hr
    rainfall rates.

    ...Southwest...

    Continued advancing of the base of an upper trough from the central
    Rockies into the central Plains and an elongated ridge over
    California will favor northwesterly mid-level flow into the
    Southwest. While this may reduce moisture availability across the
    Four Corners region, low level southerly flow is expected to be in
    place over the northern Gulf of California into Arizona, with
    westerly flow advecting low to mid-level moisture downstream toward
    New Mexico. Meanwhile, the front over the High Plains from
    Saturday night is forecast to again sink down to the south with an
    upslope flow regime setting up over northeastern New Mexico,
    helping to increase low level moisture into the region. Moisture
    values for much of central/southern Arizona and New Mexico are
    expected to be near average and monsoon thunderstorms are expected
    during the late afternoon and evening hours with perhaps greater
    coverage than previous days. Typical potential for high short term
    rain rates (1-2 inches in an hour or less) will set up with
    isolated to widely scattered flash flood potential.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8PFwGrYiQyl_W4cy860btcGlpSUYoFsk9i9Q6RGkQh5u= WpNbvylw6Zzv25LGghK0xq1ElAJcqcLaZSgMk-lqfxfWtSs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8PFwGrYiQyl_W4cy860btcGlpSUYoFsk9i9Q6RGkQh5u= WpNbvylw6Zzv25LGghK0xq1ElAJcqcLaZSgMk-lqpGOaWmw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8PFwGrYiQyl_W4cy860btcGlpSUYoFsk9i9Q6RGkQh5u= WpNbvylw6Zzv25LGghK0xq1ElAJcqcLaZSgMk-lqYCu_Zb0$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Aug 9 07:55:51 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 090755
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    355 AM EDT Sat Aug 9 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM FAR NORTHERN
    MISSOURI THROUGH MUCH OF EASTERN IOWA AND INTO SOUTHWESTERN
    WISCONSIN...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    The synoptic setup for heavy rainfall is becoming increasingly=20
    favorable as a near-textbook Maddox Frontal Pattern develops across
    the Upper Midwest. This will likely result in numerous instances=20
    of flash flooding from northern Missouri through southern Wisconsin.

    The period begins with a closed 500mb low moving across southern=20 Manitoba/Saskatchewan, which will drive an elongated trough=20
    southeast into the Central Plains and Upper Midwest with=20
    accompanying height falls. Embedded shortwaves shedding around the=20
    primary closed low will help keep the trough axis aligned SW to NE=20
    from the Four Corners into the Upper Midwest, and this is a=20
    critical piece to the evolving setup. As the trough lingers back to
    the west, the parent upper jet streak rotating into central Canada
    will maintain a tail back into the Central Plains, leaving=20
    favorable RRQ diffluence atop the region, and aligned with the=20
    greatest height falls. Since the trough will move little during=20
    this time, this pronounced synoptic support will be quasi-=20
    stationary, resulting in prolonged lift across the region.

    At the surface, a cold front will try to push east, but become=20
    generally stationary from MN to KS as the upper trough lingers to=20
    the west. This will enable a plume of elevated moisture to=20
    continually surge northeast ahead of the front, as PWs of 2 to 2.2=20
    inches (above the 97th percentile according to NAEFS) get drawn=20
    northward on 850mb inflow of 20-30 kts, pushing an impressive theta-
    e ridge axis northward into IA. This anomalous moisture will=20
    combine with MUCAPE of 2000 J/kg or more to supply extreme=20
    thermodynamics into the region, supporting heavy rainfall rates for
    which both the HREF and REFS indicates has a 30-40% chance of=20
    exceeding 2"/hr, and the HRRR (as far out as it goes) suggesting as
    much as 1"/15min (4"/hr rates) at times.=20

    The concern for Saturday, especially within the inherited MDT risk=20
    area, then, is that multiple rounds of convection are likely as weak=20 impulses track aloft and 850-300mb winds remain parallel to the=20
    front. At the same time, Corfidi vectors become increasingly aligned=20 anti-parallel to this mean wind, indicating a high potential for=20 backbuilding and training, which will support total rainfall above=20
    5" (40-60% chance), with locally as much as 8" possible (10-15%=20
    chance). However, there is still considerable uncertainty into the=20
    exact placement as rounds of convection, especially through any=20 clusters/MCS, drive the effective boundary (merged outflow with=20
    front) north and south at times. This could result in a slow=20
    southern push of the heaviest rainfall through the day, although=20
    the northward advance of the theta-e ridge at times should again=20
    push heavy rain northward as well. With a lot of spread in place,=20
    the HREF EAS probabilities (which are extremely significant for=20
    2"/24hrs at above 35%) were used to help tailor the MDT risk area,=20
    which aligns quite well with the latest ECMWF EFI above 0.7.

    Despite the uncertainty in exact placement, the MDT risk remains=20
    needed for the likelihood of training/repeating intense rainfall=20
    rates of 1-3+"/hr leading to FFG exceedance probabilities that=20
    peak above 40%. The MDT risk was expanded slightly to the SW to=20
    account for the latest high res CAMs as well, and numerous=20
    instances of flash flooding are likely.


    ...Southeast...=20
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms is expected across
    Florida and the coastal Southeast. The driving factor for this=20
    widespread convection will be a trough of low pressure centered=20
    over the eastern Gulf, with a secondary surface stationary front=20
    draped along the Panhandle of FL to off the SC/GA coast. This
    results in generally weak flow within a col in the vicinity of a=20
    mid-level ridge, with modest onshore flow from the Atlantic=20
    becoming subtly accelerated by the trough over the Gulf.=20
    Additionally, weak impulses rotating around the Gulf trough will=20
    push W/NW through the period, providing locally enhanced ascent=20
    across the area.

    Although ascent will be generally modest outside of any impulses or=20
    sea breeze/frontal convergence boundaries, the environment will be=20
    favorable for periods of heavy rainfall. PWs above 2.25 inches, or=20
    above the 90th percentile according to NAEFS, will encompass the=20
    region, and overlap with MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg to support robust=20 thermodynamics for heavy rainfall. Any ascent working into this=20
    environment will support convection with rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr.
    Cells that develop will likely move very slowly W/NW on 0-6km mean
    winds of just 5-10 kts, and as propagation vectors become=20
    increasingly aligned back into the higher moisture and anti-
    parallel to the mean wind, backbuilding and repeating cells will=20
    become likely. This could be enhanced by regeneration along sea=20
    breeze boundaries or storm mergers, lengthening the duration of=20
    these heavy rain rates.=20

    Although identifying where the heaviest rainfall will occur today is=20 challenging due to the weakly forced environment and slow-moving=20
    storms, the HREF neighborhood probabilities support generally two=20
    areas of heavier rainfall. The first is along the Gulf Coast of the=20
    FL Peninsula where the W/NW inflow may allow for a more focused=20
    region of heavy rainfall as the sea breeze becomes pinned and cells=20
    moving westward merge with it. The other region is along the SC/GA=20
    coasts where a weak impulse moving onshore within modest WAA will=20
    help deepen warm cloud depths and focus heavier rainfall along the=20 frictional land/sea convergence boundary. In both of these areas,=20
    HREF probabilities for 5"/24hrs peak above 50%, and this could occur=20
    atop primed soils from heavy rainfall on Friday. After coordination
    with ILM/CHS/JAX, a targeted SLGT risk has been added for the=20
    coastal plain of GA/SC where the HREF signal is most impressive and
    rounds of storms effectively converging along the coast could=20
    produce repeating rounds of heavy rainfall.


    ...Southwest...=20
    A mid-level ridge centered across southern NM will gradually=20
    weaken today in response to an impressive trough amplifying across=20
    the Northern Rockies and a weak mid-level impulse rotating westward
    from Texas beneath it. This feature is progged to track along the=20 international border before gradually rotating northwest late in=20
    the period, and locally enhanced ascent in the vicinity of this=20
    impulse will drive renewed and focused convection. As this=20
    shortwave tracks W/NW, it will impinge into a narrow corridor of=20
    elevated PWs above 1.25 inches aligned with a similar narrow=20
    channel of MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. Together, this will provide an=20 environment that will support thunderstorms with heavy rainfall as=20
    reflected by simulated reflectivity from the available CAMs=20
    including the HRRR-forced and GFS-forced UA WRF.=20

    Storm motions beneath this weakening ridge will be quite weak and=20
    variable, as expected, with 0-6km mean wind vectors showing a=20
    variety of directions and speeds of just 5-10 kts. With bulk shear=20
    remaining minimal, this indicates that pulse-type storms with=20
    generally limited lifespans will be the primary storm mode, and in=20
    the weakly forced environment this will allow for outflows and storm=20
    mergers to result in additional, and at times more intense,=20
    redevelopment. Rainfall rates could exceed 1"/hr at times (20-40%=20
    chance) which through mergers and slow motions could produce 1-2" of=20
    rain with locally higher amounts. Briefly considered a small SLGT=20
    risk over the area of greatest instability near Tucson, but wide=20
    variation in coverage among the various CAMs combined with recent=20
    dryness across the area precluded the confidence for an upgrade at=20
    this time.


    ...Central High Plains...=20
    The tail end of a front stretching from the Upper Midwest will=20
    linger across the Central High Plains today. As a trough upstream=20
    deepens over the Northern Rockies and sheds spokes of vorticity=20
    eastward, these will interact with the lingering front to produce=20
    scattered showers and thunderstorms late this afternoon through=20
    tonight. Impressive bulk shear of 35-50 kts combining with moist=20
    E/NE 850mb flow will result in slow moving thunderstorms organizing
    into clusters, with repeated development likely upstream. Coverage
    of storms may be isolated to scattered according to high-res CAMs,
    but the slow motion of any cell that develops combined with=20
    anticipated rain rates above 1"/hr may produce isolated flash=20
    flooding.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    KANSAS NORTHEAST THROUGH SOUTHERN WISCONSIN...

    ...Central Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    An extremely active pattern continues across the Plains and Upper
    Midwest as the synoptic regime from D1 persists through the
    weekend.=20

    An amplifying mid-level trough centered from ND through NM will
    deepen to produce 500mb heights that may locally fall below the
    10th percentile according to NAEFS. ALthough the primary vorticity
    maxima in the core of the trough spins northeast into Ontario,
    lingering impulses shedding back into the Four Corners maintain the
    trough axis back to the west. This will persist mid-level SW flow
    angling across the Central Plains and into the Upper Midwest, with
    weak impulses rotating through the flow and persistent upper
    diffluence within the RRQ of a poleward arcing jet streak
    downstream of the primary trough axis providing deep layer ascent.
    This pattern matches the conceptual model for a Maddox Frontal
    rainfall event, and another day of heavy rainfall is likely Sunday
    in portions of the region.

    As the synoptic pattern stalls, a surface stationary front will
    oscillate from WI through OK, providing a focus for convective
    generation along the low-level convergent boundary. Additionally,
    any weak impulse transiting the front could result in weak low-
    pressure development along the boundary. This makes for a
    challenging QPF and ERO forecast since the environment will be
    extremely favorable for training heavy rainfall, but the exact
    placement remains very much uncertain.

    As far as the environment, thermodynamics are expected to be=20
    exceptional for the area supporting intense rainfall rates. PWs
    above 2", or well above the 90th percentile, are progged to surge
    northward on return flow ahead of the front, combining with MUCAPE
    of 2000 J/kg to fuel widespread convective development as the=20
    850mb inflow/LLJ propagates northeast. Mean 0-6km winds will again=20
    be parallel to the boundary, although with wind speeds are expected
    to be generally more progressive than on Saturday, reaching 15-20=20
    kts. However, bulk shear progged to reach 40 kts will support=20
    organized cells, and Corfidi vectors collapsed to just 5 kts and=20
    aligned against the mean wind indicate a high threat for=20
    backbuilding cells leading to longer duration of heavy rainfall and
    slow net cell motions. With rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr expected,=20
    this could result in axes of 3-5 inches of rain with locally higher
    amounts. This will likely result in scattered to numerous flash=20
    flood instances, with locally significant impacts possible should=20
    heavy rain train across urban areas.

    There remains uncertainty into the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall, and the inherited MDT risk was adjusted cosmetically for
    the recent guidance to align both with the highest REFS/SREF
    exceedance probabilities while also accounting for the expected
    heavy rainfall footprint from D1. Additionally, some adjustments
    were made to better reflect the CSU first guess field which pulled
    the higher risk areas a bit SW from previous runs.


    ...Southwest...
    A MRGL risk remains for portions of the Southwest on Sunday as
    monsoonal moisture begins to return to the area leading to a more
    active convective pattern. A mid-level trough extending down from
    the Northern High Plains will continue to amplify Sunday, producing
    lowered heights across the Four Corners and Desert Southwest,
    through which weak spokes of vorticity will rotate. These lowered=20
    heights and locally enhanced ascent will impinge into an=20
    increasingly favorable thermodynamic environment to support=20
    convection with heavy rainfall. Low-to-mid level flow will=20
    gradually back more to the SW, allowing for a better draw northward
    of PWs exceeding 1", which may spread as far north as the Mogollon
    Rim and combine with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg across the southern=20
    half of AZ and NM. This will support scattered to widespread=20
    showers and thunderstorms which will move slowly eastward through=20
    the day. With rainfall rates as much as 1"/hr at times, this could=20
    result in at least isolated instances of flash flooding, especially
    across more vulnerable soils or terrain, and the MRGL risk was=20
    maintained and adjusted for new guidance.


    ...Southeast...
    Another very active day across portions of the Southeast is
    expected as tropical moisture (PWs above 2.25 inches) persists in
    response to a wave of low pressure drifting across the eastern
    Gulf. The mid-level pattern remains quite diffuse into Sunday, with
    a col sitting over much of the Southeast in response to broad
    ridging along the Atlantic Seaboard. This suggests that features
    will move little during the period, and guidance indicates a weak
    shortwave drifting along the GA/SC coast once again on Sunday.

    850mb inflow from the southeast will maintain impressive moist
    advection onshore, and this wind, while modest at 15-20 kts, will
    generally exceed the mean 0-6km winds which will be just 5-10 kts.
    This will provide a two-pronged effect on the heavy rainfall threat
    in that the 850mb wind exceeding the mean wind will drive large
    scale enhanced ascent, while the weak mean winds will additionally
    support slow movement of convection that develops. With rainfall
    rates likely peaking at 2-3"/hr (30% chance for 2"/hr from the
    HREF), maximum rainfall of 3-5" with locally higher amounts is=20
    again possible on Sunday as reflected by SREF/GEFS/HREF/REFS
    probabilities. Some of this may fall atop soils that are sensitive
    from prior heavy rainfall on Friday and Saturday, leading to a
    locally higher flash flood risk. The latest UFVS CSU First guess
    field has a SLGT risk over coastal SC, which overlaps almost
    identically with the SLGT risk on D1 and the highest REFS/HREF/GEFS probabilities into D2 (when available). For this reason a targeted
    SLGT risk was again added, primarily for the SC coastal plain.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM NORTHERN
    MISSOURI THROUGH NORTHERN ILLINOIS AND SOUTHERN WISCONSIN...


    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    The amplifying trough across the High Plains and the accompanying
    cold front producing the heavy rainfall across the Plains/Upper
    Midwest Saturday and Sunday will gradually pivot eastward on D3
    /Monday/. Despite this eastward translation, pinched 850-500mb flow
    between this trough and a ridge to the east will maintain efficient
    moist advection out of the Gulf, albeit with PW anomalies lower
    than forecast for the weekend. This suggests that another day of
    training convection is likely along the front from Oklahoma=20
    through Michigan, but with somewhat reduced intensity. Rainfall=20
    rates will likely still peak above 1"/hr at times, which through=20
    training could produce 1-3 of rainfall (ECENS/GEFS probabilities=20
    for 3+ inches below 10%), and where this rain overlaps with heavy=20
    rain from the weekend (most likely on the western edge of the SLGT=20
    risk area), scattered instances of flash flooding are possible.=20
    Otherwise, any cells training along the front could produce=20
    isolated responses and a broad MRGL risk draped along the length of
    the front into the southern High Plains continues.


    ...Southeast...
    Rinse and repeat for the Southeast, especially in the vicinity of
    South Carolina, Georgia, and the Florida Panhandle, as onshore=20
    return flow around an elongated high over the Atlantic spreads=20
    tropical moisture onshore. PWs are again progged to be 2-2.25
    inches with overlapping MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Within these
    impressive thermodynamics, forcing for ascent will be provided both
    by land/sea convergence axes but also downstream of two=20
    shortwaves: one moving near the SC coast and a second rotating=20
    northward from the Gulf into the FL Panhandle. Both of these mid-
    level features may reflect to the surface as inverted troughs,=20
    providing additional convergence for slow moving thunderstorms=20
    containing rainfall rates of 1-3"/hr. There is quite a bit of=20
    spread among the global ensembles by D3 as to how far inland=20
    convection will track, and as to whether there will be any focused=20
    areas of heavier rainfall. For these reasons a broad MRGL risk=20
    remains across the area for at least isolated flash flood=20
    potential, especially since soils will be primed from heavy=20
    rainfall anticipated on D1 and D2.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5sXTOmCMFKwfCj-OXSIAOq3z_V3-Ipxk4x-qzGNrqUTK= rhoyE7ohHE_noUyvOKkSq72sTD2oM6-Lm5rvximRgWg4lqE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5sXTOmCMFKwfCj-OXSIAOq3z_V3-Ipxk4x-qzGNrqUTK= rhoyE7ohHE_noUyvOKkSq72sTD2oM6-Lm5rvximR6cuG1YU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5sXTOmCMFKwfCj-OXSIAOq3z_V3-Ipxk4x-qzGNrqUTK= rhoyE7ohHE_noUyvOKkSq72sTD2oM6-Lm5rvximRSM2Pt2Y$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Aug 9 16:18:53 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 091618
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1218 PM EDT Sat Aug 9 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM FAR NORTHERN
    MISSOURI THROUGH MUCH OF EASTERN IOWA AND INTO SOUTHWESTERN
    WISCONSIN...

    ...16z update...

    The synoptic and mesoscale environments across the CONUS appear to
    be consistent with what was described in the previous discussion.=20
    However, a number of 12z models have developed an axis of high qpf=20
    around the Mississippi from portions of southwest Iowa into=20
    southeast Nebraska and northwest Missouri.=20

    Elsewhere, increased HREF probabilities in the 40km and EAS=20
    neighborhood products suggest a more efficient rainfall event along
    the favorable thermodynamic and synoptic coastal environment. The=20
    slight risk should be sufficient for now.=20

    A high EFI signal of 1 over eastern Colorado prompted a closer=20
    look at that marginal risk area with this afternoon update. HREF=20
    1hr precip signaling a couple of rounds of .25-.5"/hr rates this=20
    evening within a relatively moist 1-1.5" PWAT environment, beneath
    a weak shortwave impulse aloft and 500-1000J/Kg cape at the=20
    surface could produce efficient rainfall. However, as mentioned in
    the previous discussion, slow cell motion and scattered coverage=20
    of storms based on the 12z CAMs mitigate upgrade concerns at this=20
    time. Scattered to isolated flash flooding remains a concern here.

    Kebede


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    The synoptic setup for heavy rainfall is becoming increasingly
    favorable as a near-textbook Maddox Frontal Pattern develops across
    the Upper Midwest. This will likely result in numerous instances
    of flash flooding from northern Missouri through southern Wisconsin.

    The period begins with a closed 500mb low moving across southern Manitoba/Saskatchewan, which will drive an elongated trough
    southeast into the Central Plains and Upper Midwest with
    accompanying height falls. Embedded shortwaves shedding around the
    primary closed low will help keep the trough axis aligned SW to NE
    from the Four Corners into the Upper Midwest, and this is a
    critical piece to the evolving setup. As the trough lingers back to
    the west, the parent upper jet streak rotating into central Canada
    will maintain a tail back into the Central Plains, leaving
    favorable RRQ diffluence atop the region, and aligned with the
    greatest height falls. Since the trough will move little during
    this time, this pronounced synoptic support will be quasi-
    stationary, resulting in prolonged lift across the region.

    At the surface, a cold front will try to push east, but become
    generally stationary from MN to KS as the upper trough lingers to
    the west. This will enable a plume of elevated moisture to
    continually surge northeast ahead of the front, as PWs of 2 to 2.2
    inches (above the 97th percentile according to NAEFS) get drawn
    northward on 850mb inflow of 20-30 kts, pushing an impressive theta-
    e ridge axis northward into IA. This anomalous moisture will
    combine with MUCAPE of 2000 J/kg or more to supply extreme
    thermodynamics into the region, supporting heavy rainfall rates for
    which both the HREF and REFS indicates has a 30-40% chance of
    exceeding 2"/hr, and the HRRR (as far out as it goes) suggesting as
    much as 1"/15min (4"/hr rates) at times.

    The concern for Saturday, especially within the inherited MDT risk
    area, then, is that multiple rounds of convection are likely as weak
    impulses track aloft and 850-300mb winds remain parallel to the
    front. At the same time, Corfidi vectors become increasingly aligned anti-parallel to this mean wind, indicating a high potential for
    backbuilding and training, which will support total rainfall above
    5" (40-60% chance), with locally as much as 8" possible (10-15%
    chance). However, there is still considerable uncertainty into the
    exact placement as rounds of convection, especially through any
    clusters/MCS, drive the effective boundary (merged outflow with
    front) north and south at times. This could result in a slow
    southern push of the heaviest rainfall through the day, although
    the northward advance of the theta-e ridge at times should again
    push heavy rain northward as well. With a lot of spread in place,
    the HREF EAS probabilities (which are extremely significant for
    2"/24hrs at above 35%) were used to help tailor the MDT risk area,
    which aligns quite well with the latest ECMWF EFI above 0.7.

    Despite the uncertainty in exact placement, the MDT risk remains
    needed for the likelihood of training/repeating intense rainfall
    rates of 1-3+"/hr leading to FFG exceedance probabilities that
    peak above 40%. The MDT risk was expanded slightly to the SW to
    account for the latest high res CAMs as well, and numerous
    instances of flash flooding are likely.


    ...Southeast...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms is expected across
    Florida and the coastal Southeast. The driving factor for this
    widespread convection will be a trough of low pressure centered
    over the eastern Gulf, with a secondary surface stationary front
    draped along the Panhandle of FL to off the SC/GA coast. This
    results in generally weak flow within a col in the vicinity of a
    mid-level ridge, with modest onshore flow from the Atlantic
    becoming subtly accelerated by the trough over the Gulf.
    Additionally, weak impulses rotating around the Gulf trough will
    push W/NW through the period, providing locally enhanced ascent
    across the area.

    Although ascent will be generally modest outside of any impulses or
    sea breeze/frontal convergence boundaries, the environment will be
    favorable for periods of heavy rainfall. PWs above 2.25 inches, or
    above the 90th percentile according to NAEFS, will encompass the
    region, and overlap with MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg to support robust thermodynamics for heavy rainfall. Any ascent working into this
    environment will support convection with rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr.
    Cells that develop will likely move very slowly W/NW on 0-6km mean
    winds of just 5-10 kts, and as propagation vectors become
    increasingly aligned back into the higher moisture and anti-
    parallel to the mean wind, backbuilding and repeating cells will
    become likely. This could be enhanced by regeneration along sea
    breeze boundaries or storm mergers, lengthening the duration of
    these heavy rain rates.

    Although identifying where the heaviest rainfall will occur today is challenging due to the weakly forced environment and slow-moving
    storms, the HREF neighborhood probabilities support generally two
    areas of heavier rainfall. The first is along the Gulf Coast of the
    FL Peninsula where the W/NW inflow may allow for a more focused
    region of heavy rainfall as the sea breeze becomes pinned and cells
    moving westward merge with it. The other region is along the SC/GA
    coasts where a weak impulse moving onshore within modest WAA will
    help deepen warm cloud depths and focus heavier rainfall along the
    frictional land/sea convergence boundary. In both of these areas,
    HREF probabilities for 5"/24hrs peak above 50%, and this could occur
    atop primed soils from heavy rainfall on Friday. After coordination
    with ILM/CHS/JAX, a targeted SLGT risk has been added for the
    coastal plain of GA/SC where the HREF signal is most impressive and
    rounds of storms effectively converging along the coast could
    produce repeating rounds of heavy rainfall.


    ...Southwest...
    A mid-level ridge centered across southern NM will gradually
    weaken today in response to an impressive trough amplifying across
    the Northern Rockies and a weak mid-level impulse rotating westward
    from Texas beneath it. This feature is progged to track along the
    international border before gradually rotating northwest late in
    the period, and locally enhanced ascent in the vicinity of this
    impulse will drive renewed and focused convection. As this
    shortwave tracks W/NW, it will impinge into a narrow corridor of
    elevated PWs above 1.25 inches aligned with a similar narrow
    channel of MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. Together, this will provide an
    environment that will support thunderstorms with heavy rainfall as
    reflected by simulated reflectivity from the available CAMs
    including the HRRR-forced and GFS-forced UA WRF.

    Storm motions beneath this weakening ridge will be quite weak and
    variable, as expected, with 0-6km mean wind vectors showing a
    variety of directions and speeds of just 5-10 kts. With bulk shear
    remaining minimal, this indicates that pulse-type storms with
    generally limited lifespans will be the primary storm mode, and in
    the weakly forced environment this will allow for outflows and storm
    mergers to result in additional, and at times more intense,
    redevelopment. Rainfall rates could exceed 1"/hr at times (20-40%
    chance) which through mergers and slow motions could produce 1-2" of
    rain with locally higher amounts. Briefly considered a small SLGT
    risk over the area of greatest instability near Tucson, but wide
    variation in coverage among the various CAMs combined with recent
    dryness across the area precluded the confidence for an upgrade at
    this time.


    ...Central High Plains...
    The tail end of a front stretching from the Upper Midwest will
    linger across the Central High Plains today. As a trough upstream
    deepens over the Northern Rockies and sheds spokes of vorticity
    eastward, these will interact with the lingering front to produce
    scattered showers and thunderstorms late this afternoon through
    tonight. Impressive bulk shear of 35-50 kts combining with moist
    E/NE 850mb flow will result in slow moving thunderstorms organizing
    into clusters, with repeated development likely upstream. Coverage
    of storms may be isolated to scattered according to high-res CAMs,
    but the slow motion of any cell that develops combined with
    anticipated rain rates above 1"/hr may produce isolated flash
    flooding.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    KANSAS NORTHEAST THROUGH SOUTHERN WISCONSIN...

    ...Central Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    An extremely active pattern continues across the Plains and Upper
    Midwest as the synoptic regime from D1 persists through the
    weekend.

    An amplifying mid-level trough centered from ND through NM will
    deepen to produce 500mb heights that may locally fall below the
    10th percentile according to NAEFS. ALthough the primary vorticity
    maxima in the core of the trough spins northeast into Ontario,
    lingering impulses shedding back into the Four Corners maintain the
    trough axis back to the west. This will persist mid-level SW flow
    angling across the Central Plains and into the Upper Midwest, with
    weak impulses rotating through the flow and persistent upper
    diffluence within the RRQ of a poleward arcing jet streak
    downstream of the primary trough axis providing deep layer ascent.
    This pattern matches the conceptual model for a Maddox Frontal
    rainfall event, and another day of heavy rainfall is likely Sunday
    in portions of the region.

    As the synoptic pattern stalls, a surface stationary front will
    oscillate from WI through OK, providing a focus for convective
    generation along the low-level convergent boundary. Additionally,
    any weak impulse transiting the front could result in weak low-
    pressure development along the boundary. This makes for a
    challenging QPF and ERO forecast since the environment will be
    extremely favorable for training heavy rainfall, but the exact
    placement remains very much uncertain.

    As far as the environment, thermodynamics are expected to be
    exceptional for the area supporting intense rainfall rates. PWs
    above 2", or well above the 90th percentile, are progged to surge
    northward on return flow ahead of the front, combining with MUCAPE
    of 2000 J/kg to fuel widespread convective development as the
    850mb inflow/LLJ propagates northeast. Mean 0-6km winds will again
    be parallel to the boundary, although with wind speeds are expected
    to be generally more progressive than on Saturday, reaching 15-20
    kts. However, bulk shear progged to reach 40 kts will support
    organized cells, and Corfidi vectors collapsed to just 5 kts and
    aligned against the mean wind indicate a high threat for
    backbuilding cells leading to longer duration of heavy rainfall and
    slow net cell motions. With rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr expected,
    this could result in axes of 3-5 inches of rain with locally higher
    amounts. This will likely result in scattered to numerous flash
    flood instances, with locally significant impacts possible should
    heavy rain train across urban areas.

    There remains uncertainty into the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall, and the inherited MDT risk was adjusted cosmetically for
    the recent guidance to align both with the highest REFS/SREF
    exceedance probabilities while also accounting for the expected
    heavy rainfall footprint from D1. Additionally, some adjustments
    were made to better reflect the CSU first guess field which pulled
    the higher risk areas a bit SW from previous runs.


    ...Southwest...
    A MRGL risk remains for portions of the Southwest on Sunday as
    monsoonal moisture begins to return to the area leading to a more
    active convective pattern. A mid-level trough extending down from
    the Northern High Plains will continue to amplify Sunday, producing
    lowered heights across the Four Corners and Desert Southwest,
    through which weak spokes of vorticity will rotate. These lowered
    heights and locally enhanced ascent will impinge into an
    increasingly favorable thermodynamic environment to support
    convection with heavy rainfall. Low-to-mid level flow will
    gradually back more to the SW, allowing for a better draw northward
    of PWs exceeding 1", which may spread as far north as the Mogollon
    Rim and combine with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg across the southern
    half of AZ and NM. This will support scattered to widespread
    showers and thunderstorms which will move slowly eastward through
    the day. With rainfall rates as much as 1"/hr at times, this could
    result in at least isolated instances of flash flooding, especially
    across more vulnerable soils or terrain, and the MRGL risk was
    maintained and adjusted for new guidance.


    ...Southeast...
    Another very active day across portions of the Southeast is
    expected as tropical moisture (PWs above 2.25 inches) persists in
    response to a wave of low pressure drifting across the eastern
    Gulf. The mid-level pattern remains quite diffuse into Sunday, with
    a col sitting over much of the Southeast in response to broad
    ridging along the Atlantic Seaboard. This suggests that features
    will move little during the period, and guidance indicates a weak
    shortwave drifting along the GA/SC coast once again on Sunday.

    850mb inflow from the southeast will maintain impressive moist
    advection onshore, and this wind, while modest at 15-20 kts, will
    generally exceed the mean 0-6km winds which will be just 5-10 kts.
    This will provide a two-pronged effect on the heavy rainfall threat
    in that the 850mb wind exceeding the mean wind will drive large
    scale enhanced ascent, while the weak mean winds will additionally
    support slow movement of convection that develops. With rainfall
    rates likely peaking at 2-3"/hr (30% chance for 2"/hr from the
    HREF), maximum rainfall of 3-5" with locally higher amounts is
    again possible on Sunday as reflected by SREF/GEFS/HREF/REFS
    probabilities. Some of this may fall atop soils that are sensitive
    from prior heavy rainfall on Friday and Saturday, leading to a
    locally higher flash flood risk. The latest UFVS CSU First guess
    field has a SLGT risk over coastal SC, which overlaps almost
    identically with the SLGT risk on D1 and the highest REFS/HREF/GEFS probabilities into D2 (when available). For this reason a targeted
    SLGT risk was again added, primarily for the SC coastal plain.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM NORTHERN
    MISSOURI THROUGH NORTHERN ILLINOIS AND SOUTHERN WISCONSIN...


    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    The amplifying trough across the High Plains and the accompanying
    cold front producing the heavy rainfall across the Plains/Upper
    Midwest Saturday and Sunday will gradually pivot eastward on D3
    /Monday/. Despite this eastward translation, pinched 850-500mb flow
    between this trough and a ridge to the east will maintain efficient
    moist advection out of the Gulf, albeit with PW anomalies lower
    than forecast for the weekend. This suggests that another day of
    training convection is likely along the front from Oklahoma
    through Michigan, but with somewhat reduced intensity. Rainfall
    rates will likely still peak above 1"/hr at times, which through
    training could produce 1-3 of rainfall (ECENS/GEFS probabilities
    for 3+ inches below 10%), and where this rain overlaps with heavy
    rain from the weekend (most likely on the western edge of the SLGT
    risk area), scattered instances of flash flooding are possible.
    Otherwise, any cells training along the front could produce
    isolated responses and a broad MRGL risk draped along the length of
    the front into the southern High Plains continues.


    ...Southeast...
    Rinse and repeat for the Southeast, especially in the vicinity of
    South Carolina, Georgia, and the Florida Panhandle, as onshore
    return flow around an elongated high over the Atlantic spreads
    tropical moisture onshore. PWs are again progged to be 2-2.25
    inches with overlapping MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Within these
    impressive thermodynamics, forcing for ascent will be provided both
    by land/sea convergence axes but also downstream of two
    shortwaves: one moving near the SC coast and a second rotating
    northward from the Gulf into the FL Panhandle. Both of these mid-
    level features may reflect to the surface as inverted troughs,
    providing additional convergence for slow moving thunderstorms
    containing rainfall rates of 1-3"/hr. There is quite a bit of
    spread among the global ensembles by D3 as to how far inland
    convection will track, and as to whether there will be any focused
    areas of heavier rainfall. For these reasons a broad MRGL risk
    remains across the area for at least isolated flash flood
    potential, especially since soils will be primed from heavy
    rainfall anticipated on D1 and D2.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5XZEyBslqm-Qnn1KUXPjMo91vpMsR9Pm2fCJRdQy72TL= kQT6nEbPxGe6ethuorgsNT971j1j_UyuVgGs_6yyBQQ5LL4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5XZEyBslqm-Qnn1KUXPjMo91vpMsR9Pm2fCJRdQy72TL= kQT6nEbPxGe6ethuorgsNT971j1j_UyuVgGs_6yyTfhA_SU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5XZEyBslqm-Qnn1KUXPjMo91vpMsR9Pm2fCJRdQy72TL= kQT6nEbPxGe6ethuorgsNT971j1j_UyuVgGs_6yyGMkfwG8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Aug 9 20:24:07 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 092023
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    423 PM EDT Sat Aug 9 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Aug 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM FAR NORTHERN
    MISSOURI THROUGH MUCH OF EASTERN IOWA AND INTO SOUTHWESTERN
    WISCONSIN...

    ...16z update...

    The synoptic and mesoscale environments across the CONUS appear to
    be consistent with what was described in the previous discussion.
    However, a number of 12z models have developed an axis of high qpf
    around the Mississippi from portions of southwest Iowa into
    southeast Nebraska and northwest Missouri.

    Elsewhere, increased HREF probabilities in the 40km and EAS
    neighborhood products suggest a more efficient rainfall event along
    the favorable thermodynamic and synoptic coastal environment. The
    slight risk should be sufficient for now.

    A high EFI signal of 1 over eastern Colorado prompted a closer
    look at that marginal risk area with this afternoon update. HREF
    1hr precip signaling a couple of rounds of .25-.5"/hr rates this
    evening within a relatively moist 1-1.5" PWAT environment, beneath
    a weak shortwave impulse aloft and 500-1000J/Kg cape at the
    surface could produce efficient rainfall. However, as mentioned in
    the previous discussion, slow cell motion and scattered coverage
    of storms based on the 12z CAMs mitigate upgrade concerns at this
    time. Scattered to isolated flash flooding remains a concern here.

    Kebede


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    The synoptic setup for heavy rainfall is becoming increasingly
    favorable as a near-textbook Maddox Frontal Pattern develops across
    the Upper Midwest. This will likely result in numerous instances
    of flash flooding from northern Missouri through southern Wisconsin.

    The period begins with a closed 500mb low moving across southern Manitoba/Saskatchewan, which will drive an elongated trough
    southeast into the Central Plains and Upper Midwest with
    accompanying height falls. Embedded shortwaves shedding around the
    primary closed low will help keep the trough axis aligned SW to NE
    from the Four Corners into the Upper Midwest, and this is a
    critical piece to the evolving setup. As the trough lingers back to
    the west, the parent upper jet streak rotating into central Canada
    will maintain a tail back into the Central Plains, leaving
    favorable RRQ diffluence atop the region, and aligned with the
    greatest height falls. Since the trough will move little during
    this time, this pronounced synoptic support will be quasi-
    stationary, resulting in prolonged lift across the region.

    At the surface, a cold front will try to push east, but become
    generally stationary from MN to KS as the upper trough lingers to
    the west. This will enable a plume of elevated moisture to
    continually surge northeast ahead of the front, as PWs of 2 to 2.2
    inches (above the 97th percentile according to NAEFS) get drawn
    northward on 850mb inflow of 20-30 kts, pushing an impressive theta-
    e ridge axis northward into IA. This anomalous moisture will
    combine with MUCAPE of 2000 J/kg or more to supply extreme
    thermodynamics into the region, supporting heavy rainfall rates for
    which both the HREF and REFS indicates has a 30-40% chance of
    exceeding 2"/hr, and the HRRR (as far out as it goes) suggesting as
    much as 1"/15min (4"/hr rates) at times.

    The concern for Saturday, especially within the inherited MDT risk
    area, then, is that multiple rounds of convection are likely as weak
    impulses track aloft and 850-300mb winds remain parallel to the
    front. At the same time, Corfidi vectors become increasingly aligned anti-parallel to this mean wind, indicating a high potential for
    backbuilding and training, which will support total rainfall above
    5" (40-60% chance), with locally as much as 8" possible (10-15%
    chance). However, there is still considerable uncertainty into the
    exact placement as rounds of convection, especially through any
    clusters/MCS, drive the effective boundary (merged outflow with
    front) north and south at times. This could result in a slow
    southern push of the heaviest rainfall through the day, although
    the northward advance of the theta-e ridge at times should again
    push heavy rain northward as well. With a lot of spread in place,
    the HREF EAS probabilities (which are extremely significant for
    2"/24hrs at above 35%) were used to help tailor the MDT risk area,
    which aligns quite well with the latest ECMWF EFI above 0.7.

    Despite the uncertainty in exact placement, the MDT risk remains
    needed for the likelihood of training/repeating intense rainfall
    rates of 1-3+"/hr leading to FFG exceedance probabilities that
    peak above 40%. The MDT risk was expanded slightly to the SW to
    account for the latest high res CAMs as well, and numerous
    instances of flash flooding are likely.


    ...Southeast...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms is expected across
    Florida and the coastal Southeast. The driving factor for this
    widespread convection will be a trough of low pressure centered
    over the eastern Gulf, with a secondary surface stationary front
    draped along the Panhandle of FL to off the SC/GA coast. This
    results in generally weak flow within a col in the vicinity of a
    mid-level ridge, with modest onshore flow from the Atlantic
    becoming subtly accelerated by the trough over the Gulf.
    Additionally, weak impulses rotating around the Gulf trough will
    push W/NW through the period, providing locally enhanced ascent
    across the area.

    Although ascent will be generally modest outside of any impulses or
    sea breeze/frontal convergence boundaries, the environment will be
    favorable for periods of heavy rainfall. PWs above 2.25 inches, or
    above the 90th percentile according to NAEFS, will encompass the
    region, and overlap with MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg to support robust thermodynamics for heavy rainfall. Any ascent working into this
    environment will support convection with rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr.
    Cells that develop will likely move very slowly W/NW on 0-6km mean
    winds of just 5-10 kts, and as propagation vectors become
    increasingly aligned back into the higher moisture and anti-
    parallel to the mean wind, backbuilding and repeating cells will
    become likely. This could be enhanced by regeneration along sea
    breeze boundaries or storm mergers, lengthening the duration of
    these heavy rain rates.

    Although identifying where the heaviest rainfall will occur today is challenging due to the weakly forced environment and slow-moving
    storms, the HREF neighborhood probabilities support generally two
    areas of heavier rainfall. The first is along the Gulf Coast of the
    FL Peninsula where the W/NW inflow may allow for a more focused
    region of heavy rainfall as the sea breeze becomes pinned and cells
    moving westward merge with it. The other region is along the SC/GA
    coasts where a weak impulse moving onshore within modest WAA will
    help deepen warm cloud depths and focus heavier rainfall along the
    frictional land/sea convergence boundary. In both of these areas,
    HREF probabilities for 5"/24hrs peak above 50%, and this could occur
    atop primed soils from heavy rainfall on Friday. After coordination
    with ILM/CHS/JAX, a targeted SLGT risk has been added for the
    coastal plain of GA/SC where the HREF signal is most impressive and
    rounds of storms effectively converging along the coast could
    produce repeating rounds of heavy rainfall.


    ...Southwest...
    A mid-level ridge centered across southern NM will gradually
    weaken today in response to an impressive trough amplifying across
    the Northern Rockies and a weak mid-level impulse rotating westward
    from Texas beneath it. This feature is progged to track along the
    international border before gradually rotating northwest late in
    the period, and locally enhanced ascent in the vicinity of this
    impulse will drive renewed and focused convection. As this
    shortwave tracks W/NW, it will impinge into a narrow corridor of
    elevated PWs above 1.25 inches aligned with a similar narrow
    channel of MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. Together, this will provide an
    environment that will support thunderstorms with heavy rainfall as
    reflected by simulated reflectivity from the available CAMs
    including the HRRR-forced and GFS-forced UA WRF.

    Storm motions beneath this weakening ridge will be quite weak and
    variable, as expected, with 0-6km mean wind vectors showing a
    variety of directions and speeds of just 5-10 kts. With bulk shear
    remaining minimal, this indicates that pulse-type storms with
    generally limited lifespans will be the primary storm mode, and in
    the weakly forced environment this will allow for outflows and storm
    mergers to result in additional, and at times more intense,
    redevelopment. Rainfall rates could exceed 1"/hr at times (20-40%
    chance) which through mergers and slow motions could produce 1-2" of
    rain with locally higher amounts. Briefly considered a small SLGT
    risk over the area of greatest instability near Tucson, but wide
    variation in coverage among the various CAMs combined with recent
    dryness across the area precluded the confidence for an upgrade at
    this time.


    ...Central High Plains...
    The tail end of a front stretching from the Upper Midwest will
    linger across the Central High Plains today. As a trough upstream
    deepens over the Northern Rockies and sheds spokes of vorticity
    eastward, these will interact with the lingering front to produce
    scattered showers and thunderstorms late this afternoon through
    tonight. Impressive bulk shear of 35-50 kts combining with moist
    E/NE 850mb flow will result in slow moving thunderstorms organizing
    into clusters, with repeated development likely upstream. Coverage
    of storms may be isolated to scattered according to high-res CAMs,
    but the slow motion of any cell that develops combined with
    anticipated rain rates above 1"/hr may produce isolated flash
    flooding.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    KANSAS NORTHEAST THROUGH SOUTHERN WISCONSIN...

    ...2030z update...

    The moderate and slight risk areas over the Upper Midwest/Middle=20
    Mississippi Valley were expanded to the southeast and trimmed over
    southern Wisconsin with this afternoon's update. 12z HREF=20
    signaled a southern and eastern shift in QPF max for the 24hr=20
    period ending at 12z on Monday. Deterministic and ensemble 12z=20
    guidance were closer to what was issued overnight, which allowed=20
    for a less drastic change to the outlook areas with this=20
    afternoon's update.

    In the Central High Plains, a slight risk was introduced to account
    for antecedent rainfall from this evening's storms. A deepening=20
    trough axis and a over the Rockies should support scattered to=20
    isolated storms. Modest instability and notable moisture flux could
    produce efficient rainfall rates, but weak low level jet and bulk
    shear won't support long lived storms.

    Wetter QPF trends over the Georgia/Carolina coast prompted a small
    expansion of the slight risk over those areas. Coastal areas
    between Georgetown and Wilmington could receive 3-5 inches with
    isolated higher amounts possible. If trends continue then an
    upgrade is likely along the coast in particular.

    Kebede


    ...Previous Discussion...


    ...Central Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    An extremely active pattern continues across the Plains and Upper
    Midwest as the synoptic regime from D1 persists through the
    weekend.

    An amplifying mid-level trough centered from ND through NM will
    deepen to produce 500mb heights that may locally fall below the
    10th percentile according to NAEFS. ALthough the primary vorticity
    maxima in the core of the trough spins northeast into Ontario,
    lingering impulses shedding back into the Four Corners maintain the
    trough axis back to the west. This will persist mid-level SW flow
    angling across the Central Plains and into the Upper Midwest, with
    weak impulses rotating through the flow and persistent upper
    diffluence within the RRQ of a poleward arcing jet streak
    downstream of the primary trough axis providing deep layer ascent.
    This pattern matches the conceptual model for a Maddox Frontal
    rainfall event, and another day of heavy rainfall is likely Sunday
    in portions of the region.

    As the synoptic pattern stalls, a surface stationary front will
    oscillate from WI through OK, providing a focus for convective
    generation along the low-level convergent boundary. Additionally,
    any weak impulse transiting the front could result in weak low-
    pressure development along the boundary. This makes for a
    challenging QPF and ERO forecast since the environment will be
    extremely favorable for training heavy rainfall, but the exact
    placement remains very much uncertain.

    As far as the environment, thermodynamics are expected to be
    exceptional for the area supporting intense rainfall rates. PWs
    above 2", or well above the 90th percentile, are progged to surge
    northward on return flow ahead of the front, combining with MUCAPE
    of 2000 J/kg to fuel widespread convective development as the
    850mb inflow/LLJ propagates northeast. Mean 0-6km winds will again
    be parallel to the boundary, although with wind speeds are expected
    to be generally more progressive than on Saturday, reaching 15-20
    kts. However, bulk shear progged to reach 40 kts will support
    organized cells, and Corfidi vectors collapsed to just 5 kts and
    aligned against the mean wind indicate a high threat for
    backbuilding cells leading to longer duration of heavy rainfall and
    slow net cell motions. With rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr expected,
    this could result in axes of 3-5 inches of rain with locally higher
    amounts. This will likely result in scattered to numerous flash
    flood instances, with locally significant impacts possible should
    heavy rain train across urban areas.

    There remains uncertainty into the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall, and the inherited MDT risk was adjusted cosmetically for
    the recent guidance to align both with the highest REFS/SREF
    exceedance probabilities while also accounting for the expected
    heavy rainfall footprint from D1. Additionally, some adjustments
    were made to better reflect the CSU first guess field which pulled
    the higher risk areas a bit SW from previous runs.


    ...Southwest...
    A MRGL risk remains for portions of the Southwest on Sunday as
    monsoonal moisture begins to return to the area leading to a more
    active convective pattern. A mid-level trough extending down from
    the Northern High Plains will continue to amplify Sunday, producing
    lowered heights across the Four Corners and Desert Southwest,
    through which weak spokes of vorticity will rotate. These lowered
    heights and locally enhanced ascent will impinge into an
    increasingly favorable thermodynamic environment to support
    convection with heavy rainfall. Low-to-mid level flow will
    gradually back more to the SW, allowing for a better draw northward
    of PWs exceeding 1", which may spread as far north as the Mogollon
    Rim and combine with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg across the southern
    half of AZ and NM. This will support scattered to widespread
    showers and thunderstorms which will move slowly eastward through
    the day. With rainfall rates as much as 1"/hr at times, this could
    result in at least isolated instances of flash flooding, especially
    across more vulnerable soils or terrain, and the MRGL risk was
    maintained and adjusted for new guidance.


    ...Southeast...
    Another very active day across portions of the Southeast is
    expected as tropical moisture (PWs above 2.25 inches) persists in
    response to a wave of low pressure drifting across the eastern
    Gulf. The mid-level pattern remains quite diffuse into Sunday, with
    a col sitting over much of the Southeast in response to broad
    ridging along the Atlantic Seaboard. This suggests that features
    will move little during the period, and guidance indicates a weak
    shortwave drifting along the GA/SC coast once again on Sunday.

    850mb inflow from the southeast will maintain impressive moist
    advection onshore, and this wind, while modest at 15-20 kts, will
    generally exceed the mean 0-6km winds which will be just 5-10 kts.
    This will provide a two-pronged effect on the heavy rainfall threat
    in that the 850mb wind exceeding the mean wind will drive large
    scale enhanced ascent, while the weak mean winds will additionally
    support slow movement of convection that develops. With rainfall
    rates likely peaking at 2-3"/hr (30% chance for 2"/hr from the
    HREF), maximum rainfall of 3-5" with locally higher amounts is
    again possible on Sunday as reflected by SREF/GEFS/HREF/REFS
    probabilities. Some of this may fall atop soils that are sensitive
    from prior heavy rainfall on Friday and Saturday, leading to a
    locally higher flash flood risk. The latest UFVS CSU First guess
    field has a SLGT risk over coastal SC, which overlaps almost
    identically with the SLGT risk on D1 and the highest REFS/HREF/GEFS probabilities into D2 (when available). For this reason a targeted
    SLGT risk was again added, primarily for the SC coastal plain.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM NORTHERN
    MISSOURI THROUGH NORTHERN ILLINOIS AND SOUTHERN WISCONSIN...

    ...2030z update...

    The Central Plains to Upper Midwest slight risk area remains mostly
    unchanged with this afternoon update. 12z guidance keeps axis of
    highest qpf mainly within the inherited outlook areas so not much
    of an update necessary here. In the Southeast, a new slight risk=20
    was added from near Georgetown to around Wilmington due to the=20
    persistence of rainfall over the next few days with over 5 inches=20
    possible through Tuesday morning.

    Kebede

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    The amplifying trough across the High Plains and the accompanying
    cold front producing the heavy rainfall across the Plains/Upper
    Midwest Saturday and Sunday will gradually pivot eastward on D3
    /Monday/. Despite this eastward translation, pinched 850-500mb flow
    between this trough and a ridge to the east will maintain efficient
    moist advection out of the Gulf, albeit with PW anomalies lower
    than forecast for the weekend. This suggests that another day of
    training convection is likely along the front from Oklahoma
    through Michigan, but with somewhat reduced intensity. Rainfall
    rates will likely still peak above 1"/hr at times, which through
    training could produce 1-3 of rainfall (ECENS/GEFS probabilities
    for 3+ inches below 10%), and where this rain overlaps with heavy
    rain from the weekend (most likely on the western edge of the SLGT
    risk area), scattered instances of flash flooding are possible.
    Otherwise, any cells training along the front could produce
    isolated responses and a broad MRGL risk draped along the length of
    the front into the southern High Plains continues.


    ...Southeast...
    Rinse and repeat for the Southeast, especially in the vicinity of
    South Carolina, Georgia, and the Florida Panhandle, as onshore
    return flow around an elongated high over the Atlantic spreads
    tropical moisture onshore. PWs are again progged to be 2-2.25
    inches with overlapping MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Within these
    impressive thermodynamics, forcing for ascent will be provided both
    by land/sea convergence axes but also downstream of two
    shortwaves: one moving near the SC coast and a second rotating
    northward from the Gulf into the FL Panhandle. Both of these mid-
    level features may reflect to the surface as inverted troughs,
    providing additional convergence for slow moving thunderstorms
    containing rainfall rates of 1-3"/hr. There is quite a bit of
    spread among the global ensembles by D3 as to how far inland
    convection will track, and as to whether there will be any focused
    areas of heavier rainfall. For these reasons a broad MRGL risk
    remains across the area for at least isolated flash flood
    potential, especially since soils will be primed from heavy
    rainfall anticipated on D1 and D2.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9uTkCmtQnjBmlfsXsZ4Qs1HMvHzEKMXXbEGGu0CramN-= aImBZl2K0NXgAvfHACfzNaj2r2f1uhbt_z3theKLZApoVrY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9uTkCmtQnjBmlfsXsZ4Qs1HMvHzEKMXXbEGGu0CramN-= aImBZl2K0NXgAvfHACfzNaj2r2f1uhbt_z3theKLMtSmxbA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9uTkCmtQnjBmlfsXsZ4Qs1HMvHzEKMXXbEGGu0CramN-= aImBZl2K0NXgAvfHACfzNaj2r2f1uhbt_z3theKLDcfUkcE$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Aug 10 00:57:55 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 100056
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    856 PM EDT Sat Aug 9 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS SOUTHEAST
    NEBRASKA THROUGH PORTIONS OF IOWA...

    01Z Update: Current trends have allowed for a shift in the previous
    MDT risk with a greater emphasis encompassing the NE/KS line up
    through IA with the highest threat likely extending from southeast
    NE extending northeast through southwest and east-central IA.
    Stationary boundary remains situated across KS with a surface
    reflection settled over northeast KS providing a consistent theta_E
    flux in-of southeast NE and neighboring areas as noted via the
    latest 00z surface analysis. MUCAPE between 3000-5000 J/kg will be
    situated within a warm sector environment situated to the eastern
    flank of the surface low, continuing until encroached upon by an
    upscale convective complex currently maturing over the CO Front
    Range up into southwest NE. Latest hi-res guidance indicates a
    favorable upscale growth regime along the KS/NE line with discrete
    cell development downstream of the main cluster as LLJ genesis
    provides a favorable low-level shear mechanism for cells to develop
    within proxy of the warm front located over southeast NE down into
    northeast KS. Cell mergers eventually will occur with the
    advancement of the complex overnight leading to a congealing heavy
    convective core focused over that area of southeast NE and the KS
    border. Latest iterations of the HRRR have been consistent in a
    maxima of 2-4", locally upwards of 5" located across the area of
    southeast NE into far southwest IA with 1-3" plausible over
    southern NE up into the Missouri river area of far eastern
    NE/western IA. A MDT risk not extends back over those
    aforementioned areas where 2-4" is increasingly favorable with an
    expansion to the northeast across IA where frontal positioning will
    enact as a focal point for convective redevelopment overnight as
    the LLJ cranks and noses northeastward out of the Missouri Valley.
    Models have been wavering on specifics of where the heaviest will
    occur in IA, but considering some of the antecedent wet soils in
    place and the threat for heavy rainfall remaining elevated, the MDT
    was sufficient given the above and incredibly favorable environment
    in place.=20

    Another area of interest will reside over southern WI as LLJ
    initiation will likely interact with a residual outflow boundary
    currently bisecting the southern portion of the state. Hi-res
    guidance, including the the latest WoFS have been insistent on a
    period of convective development along the confines of the
    boundary as it remains parked over the same areas. The combination
    of convergent low-level flow and mean flow relatively parallel to
    the boundary in question, this would entice a period of slow-
    moving, repeating cells over the area in an area from Milwaukee
    over towards Madison down towards the IL border. This is where the
    signal is greatest in the CAMs and was the greatest shift in probs
    for >2" in the 18z HREF suite. The MDT was maintained across
    southwest WI for the potential with the SLGT expanded eastward into
    the Milwaukee metro, including the lake shores along I-94.

    Minimal changes to the MRGL risk area over the Southwest U.S. and
    the SLGT/MRGL across the Southeast as the pattern remains favorable
    for isolated to scattered instances of flash flooding given the
    persistent signal. MRGL over the Southwest U.S. was scaled back in
    size to reflect the latest trends with a majority of the heavy rain
    likely over southeast AZ terrain.=20

    Kleebauer=20


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN
    KANSAS NORTHEAST THROUGH SOUTHERN WISCONSIN...

    ...2030z update...

    The moderate and slight risk areas over the Upper Midwest/Middle
    Mississippi Valley were expanded to the southeast and trimmed over
    southern Wisconsin with this afternoon's update. 12z HREF
    signaled a southern and eastern shift in QPF max for the 24hr
    period ending at 12z on Monday. Deterministic and ensemble 12z
    guidance were closer to what was issued overnight, which allowed
    for a less drastic change to the outlook areas with this
    afternoon's update.

    In the Central High Plains, a slight risk was introduced to account
    for antecedent rainfall from this evening's storms. A deepening
    trough axis and a over the Rockies should support scattered to
    isolated storms. Modest instability and notable moisture flux could
    produce efficient rainfall rates, but weak low level jet and bulk
    shear won't support long lived storms.

    Wetter QPF trends over the Georgia/Carolina coast prompted a small
    expansion of the slight risk over those areas. Coastal areas
    between Georgetown and Wilmington could receive 3-5 inches with
    isolated higher amounts possible. If trends continue then an
    upgrade is likely along the coast in particular.

    Kebede


    ...Previous Discussion...


    ...Central Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    An extremely active pattern continues across the Plains and Upper
    Midwest as the synoptic regime from D1 persists through the
    weekend.

    An amplifying mid-level trough centered from ND through NM will
    deepen to produce 500mb heights that may locally fall below the
    10th percentile according to NAEFS. ALthough the primary vorticity
    maxima in the core of the trough spins northeast into Ontario,
    lingering impulses shedding back into the Four Corners maintain the
    trough axis back to the west. This will persist mid-level SW flow
    angling across the Central Plains and into the Upper Midwest, with
    weak impulses rotating through the flow and persistent upper
    diffluence within the RRQ of a poleward arcing jet streak
    downstream of the primary trough axis providing deep layer ascent.
    This pattern matches the conceptual model for a Maddox Frontal
    rainfall event, and another day of heavy rainfall is likely Sunday
    in portions of the region.

    As the synoptic pattern stalls, a surface stationary front will
    oscillate from WI through OK, providing a focus for convective
    generation along the low-level convergent boundary. Additionally,
    any weak impulse transiting the front could result in weak low-
    pressure development along the boundary. This makes for a
    challenging QPF and ERO forecast since the environment will be
    extremely favorable for training heavy rainfall, but the exact
    placement remains very much uncertain.

    As far as the environment, thermodynamics are expected to be
    exceptional for the area supporting intense rainfall rates. PWs
    above 2", or well above the 90th percentile, are progged to surge
    northward on return flow ahead of the front, combining with MUCAPE
    of 2000 J/kg to fuel widespread convective development as the
    850mb inflow/LLJ propagates northeast. Mean 0-6km winds will again
    be parallel to the boundary, although with wind speeds are expected
    to be generally more progressive than on Saturday, reaching 15-20
    kts. However, bulk shear progged to reach 40 kts will support
    organized cells, and Corfidi vectors collapsed to just 5 kts and
    aligned against the mean wind indicate a high threat for
    backbuilding cells leading to longer duration of heavy rainfall and
    slow net cell motions. With rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr expected,
    this could result in axes of 3-5 inches of rain with locally higher
    amounts. This will likely result in scattered to numerous flash
    flood instances, with locally significant impacts possible should
    heavy rain train across urban areas.

    There remains uncertainty into the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall, and the inherited MDT risk was adjusted cosmetically for
    the recent guidance to align both with the highest REFS/SREF
    exceedance probabilities while also accounting for the expected
    heavy rainfall footprint from D1. Additionally, some adjustments
    were made to better reflect the CSU first guess field which pulled
    the higher risk areas a bit SW from previous runs.


    ...Southwest...
    A MRGL risk remains for portions of the Southwest on Sunday as
    monsoonal moisture begins to return to the area leading to a more
    active convective pattern. A mid-level trough extending down from
    the Northern High Plains will continue to amplify Sunday, producing
    lowered heights across the Four Corners and Desert Southwest,
    through which weak spokes of vorticity will rotate. These lowered
    heights and locally enhanced ascent will impinge into an
    increasingly favorable thermodynamic environment to support
    convection with heavy rainfall. Low-to-mid level flow will
    gradually back more to the SW, allowing for a better draw northward
    of PWs exceeding 1", which may spread as far north as the Mogollon
    Rim and combine with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg across the southern
    half of AZ and NM. This will support scattered to widespread
    showers and thunderstorms which will move slowly eastward through
    the day. With rainfall rates as much as 1"/hr at times, this could
    result in at least isolated instances of flash flooding, especially
    across more vulnerable soils or terrain, and the MRGL risk was
    maintained and adjusted for new guidance.


    ...Southeast...
    Another very active day across portions of the Southeast is
    expected as tropical moisture (PWs above 2.25 inches) persists in
    response to a wave of low pressure drifting across the eastern
    Gulf. The mid-level pattern remains quite diffuse into Sunday, with
    a col sitting over much of the Southeast in response to broad
    ridging along the Atlantic Seaboard. This suggests that features
    will move little during the period, and guidance indicates a weak
    shortwave drifting along the GA/SC coast once again on Sunday.

    850mb inflow from the southeast will maintain impressive moist
    advection onshore, and this wind, while modest at 15-20 kts, will
    generally exceed the mean 0-6km winds which will be just 5-10 kts.
    This will provide a two-pronged effect on the heavy rainfall threat
    in that the 850mb wind exceeding the mean wind will drive large
    scale enhanced ascent, while the weak mean winds will additionally
    support slow movement of convection that develops. With rainfall
    rates likely peaking at 2-3"/hr (30% chance for 2"/hr from the
    HREF), maximum rainfall of 3-5" with locally higher amounts is
    again possible on Sunday as reflected by SREF/GEFS/HREF/REFS
    probabilities. Some of this may fall atop soils that are sensitive
    from prior heavy rainfall on Friday and Saturday, leading to a
    locally higher flash flood risk. The latest UFVS CSU First guess
    field has a SLGT risk over coastal SC, which overlaps almost
    identically with the SLGT risk on D1 and the highest REFS/HREF/GEFS probabilities into D2 (when available). For this reason a targeted
    SLGT risk was again added, primarily for the SC coastal plain.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM NORTHERN
    MISSOURI THROUGH NORTHERN ILLINOIS AND SOUTHERN WISCONSIN...

    ...2030z update...

    The Central Plains to Upper Midwest slight risk area remains mostly
    unchanged with this afternoon update. 12z guidance keeps axis of
    highest qpf mainly within the inherited outlook areas so not much
    of an update necessary here. In the Southeast, a new slight risk
    was added from near Georgetown to around Wilmington due to the
    persistence of rainfall over the next few days with over 5 inches
    possible through Tuesday morning.

    Kebede

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    The amplifying trough across the High Plains and the accompanying
    cold front producing the heavy rainfall across the Plains/Upper
    Midwest Saturday and Sunday will gradually pivot eastward on D3
    /Monday/. Despite this eastward translation, pinched 850-500mb flow
    between this trough and a ridge to the east will maintain efficient
    moist advection out of the Gulf, albeit with PW anomalies lower
    than forecast for the weekend. This suggests that another day of
    training convection is likely along the front from Oklahoma
    through Michigan, but with somewhat reduced intensity. Rainfall
    rates will likely still peak above 1"/hr at times, which through
    training could produce 1-3 of rainfall (ECENS/GEFS probabilities
    for 3+ inches below 10%), and where this rain overlaps with heavy
    rain from the weekend (most likely on the western edge of the SLGT
    risk area), scattered instances of flash flooding are possible.
    Otherwise, any cells training along the front could produce
    isolated responses and a broad MRGL risk draped along the length of
    the front into the southern High Plains continues.


    ...Southeast...
    Rinse and repeat for the Southeast, especially in the vicinity of
    South Carolina, Georgia, and the Florida Panhandle, as onshore
    return flow around an elongated high over the Atlantic spreads
    tropical moisture onshore. PWs are again progged to be 2-2.25
    inches with overlapping MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Within these
    impressive thermodynamics, forcing for ascent will be provided both
    by land/sea convergence axes but also downstream of two
    shortwaves: one moving near the SC coast and a second rotating
    northward from the Gulf into the FL Panhandle. Both of these mid-
    level features may reflect to the surface as inverted troughs,
    providing additional convergence for slow moving thunderstorms
    containing rainfall rates of 1-3"/hr. There is quite a bit of
    spread among the global ensembles by D3 as to how far inland
    convection will track, and as to whether there will be any focused
    areas of heavier rainfall. For these reasons a broad MRGL risk
    remains across the area for at least isolated flash flood
    potential, especially since soils will be primed from heavy
    rainfall anticipated on D1 and D2.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82sZGwvAxnpJOtWmoJ0-gu33EcdHCmjB1zZwWPgpL1wW= ljzuldjvLzo43HSFcnYqtkfbi38JA43QY9n_soFNOTt-jwc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82sZGwvAxnpJOtWmoJ0-gu33EcdHCmjB1zZwWPgpL1wW= ljzuldjvLzo43HSFcnYqtkfbi38JA43QY9n_soFNXlr3-Js$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!82sZGwvAxnpJOtWmoJ0-gu33EcdHCmjB1zZwWPgpL1wW= ljzuldjvLzo43HSFcnYqtkfbi38JA43QY9n_soFNFpoyaOM$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Aug 10 08:35:51 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 100835
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    435 AM EDT Sun Aug 10 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    KANSAS AND MISSOURI...

    ...Central Plains through the Upper Midwest...=20
    The synoptic pattern today continues to be indicative of a Maddox=20
    Frontal rainfall event, although confidence in the exact evolution=20
    has decreased and significant changes are needed to the inherited=20
    ERO. Some of these changes are due to exceptional model uncertainty
    at this time range, but also accounting for what occurred Saturday
    when the event did not really pan out as expected.

    Synoptically, the setup still remains extremely favorable for an=20
    axis of very heavy rainfall. An anomalous mid-level trough (500mb=20
    and 200mb heights locally below the 10th percentile according to=20
    NAEFS) will remain aligned from ND/MN southwest through the Four=20
    Corners. Although the leading impulse embedded in the core of this=20
    trough will advect east across southern Canada, spokes of vorticity=20
    and associated shortwaves rotating through the flow to the south=20
    will force the trough axis to remain to the west. Downstream of this=20
    trough axis, a persistent upper jet streak will arc poleward into=20
    Ontario, placing at least modest but persistent upper level=20
    diffluence within its RRQ. Beneath this evolving setup, a surface=20
    front will oscillate at least subtly NW to SE as a stationary front,=20 providing additional focus for ascent beneath the weak height falls=20
    and periods of PVA. Additionally, any stronger impulse interacting=20
    with the surface front could result in waves of low pressure=20
    rippling along to the northeast.

    East of this front, low-level return flow will continue to advect=20
    from an open Gulf, drawing elevated thermodynamics and theta-e=20
    northward. PWs are progged to climb to above 2 inches as the 850mb=20
    LLJ surges to 20-30 kts, overlapping intense MUCAPE of more than=20
    3000 J/kg to provide an extremely favorable environment for heavy=20
    rain, which is additionally supported by specific humidity values=20
    between 925-850mb above the 97th percentile (NAEFS). At the same=20
    time, the theta-e ridge will blossom and align into the front, with=20
    an intense gradient suggesting heavy rainfall on its NW axis as is=20
    typical with the Maddox Frontal conceptual model. In this setup,=20
    with persistent ascent acting upon impressive thermodynamics, and=20
    mean 0-6km winds aligned to the front, it is likely streaks of heavy=20 rainfall will occur, and most deterministic models showing 1-4=20
    inches of rainfall through 12Z Monday, with high-res CAMs indicating=20
    locally 5-7 inches, so heavy rainfall is almost a certainty.

    However, uncertainty is exceptional (especially for a 24-hr=20
    forecast) with the placement of this heavy rain, and the spread in=20
    placement ranges from southwest WI to southern KS, and almost=20
    anywhere in between, leading to a challenging ERO forecast.

    While the front will be the primary focus for convection, along with=20
    a wave of low pressure expected to develop along it, and the LLJ is=20
    likely to be parallel to it, there is increasing concern that=20
    convective clusters (both overnight Saturday night into Sunday, and=20 additionally on Sunday) will leave outflow boundaries aligned more=20 west-to-east outrunning the front. This could drastically change the=20 position of the heaviest rain axes, and would support heavy rainfall=20
    south of the global members in a typical bias. If these clusters do=20
    not develop, convection and heavy rainfall would likely remain more=20
    aligned SW to NE, but have noted a trend in the Corfidi vectors to=20
    be more pointed S/SE after SW early, which would additionally=20
    support more W-E heavy rainfall. With all the uncertainty in=20
    placement, the ERO was modified heavily and tailored primarily to=20
    HREF/REFS neighborhood probabilities, but with additional changes=20
    influenced by the EAS probabilities, the CSU first guess fields,
    and coordination with the impacted WFOs.


    ...Southeast...=20
    Another active day of convection is likely from the coastal=20
    Carolinas through Florida.=20

    Broad ridging extending from a Bermuda-type but elongated high=20
    pressure over the Atlantic will be modified by an inverted trough=20
    aligned from the eastern Gulf to the NC coast. Onshore and confluent=20
    flow into this inverted trough will maintain impressive moist=20
    advection into the area, manifesting as PWs above 2.25 inches, well=20
    above the 90th percentile according to the SPC sounding climatology.=20
    This will overlap with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg, modest overall=20
    instability indicative of a tropical airmass, to produce impressive=20 thermodynamics to support heavy rainfall. Additionally, this robust=20 thermodynamic advection onshore will result from 850mb winds as high=20
    as 15 kts, which, while modest, will exceed the mean 0-6km winds=20
    which are progged to be just around 5 kts. This suggests widespread=20 convergent ascent across the Southeast, with the accompanying WAA=20
    surging warm cloud depths to around 15,000 ft, supporting efficient=20
    warm rain processes within a deeply saturated column noted in=20
    regional forecast soundings.

    The CAMs are in generally good agreement in widespread convection=20
    today. Scattered slow-moving thunderstorms with rainfall rates of 1-
    3"/hr are expected across much of FL and into GA/AL. However, the=20
    focus for the heaviest rainfall is likely along the coastal plain of=20
    GA through southeast NC. Here, propagation vectors are aligned=20
    against the weak mean wind, and with subtle mid-level impulses=20
    lifting northwest within the weakly forced environment, waves of=20
    repeating rounds of convection with heavy rainfall are likely. In=20
    this region, the HREF indicates a 20-30% chance of 2"/hr rain rates,=20
    with locally more than 3"/hr possible at times, at least briefly.=20
    With backbuilding offshore leading to regenerating and training=20
    rounds of heavy rain, total rainfall could exceed 5" (30-50% chance=20
    from the REFS/HREF), with the greatest potential along the SC coast.=20
    The inherited SLGT risk was cosmetically adjusted, but scattered=20
    instances of flash flooding appear likely today, even across these
    areas that are generally more difficult to flood.


    ...Southwest...=20
    A MRGL risk of excessive rainfall continues for portions of the=20
    Southwest today as monsoonal moisture returns to the area leading=20
    to a more active convective pattern. A mid-level trough extending=20
    down from the Northern High Plains will deepen today, producing=20
    lowered heights across the Four Corners and Desert Southwest,=20
    through which weak spokes of vorticity will rotate. These lowered=20
    heights and locally enhanced ascent will impinge into an=20
    increasingly favorable thermodynamic environment to support=20
    convection with heavy rainfall as low-to-mid level flow backs=20
    gradually to the SW, allowing for a better draw northward of PWs=20
    exceeding 1", which may spread as far north as the Mogollon Rim and
    combine with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg across the southern half of=20
    AZ and NM. This will support scattered to widespread showers and=20 thunderstorms which will move slowly eastward through the day. With
    rainfall rates as much as 0.75"/hr to 1"/hr at times as shown by=20
    the UA WRF and HREF neighborhood probabilities , this could result=20
    in at least isolated instances of flash flooding, especially across
    more vulnerable soils or terrain. The MRGL risk was curtailed a=20
    bit on the eastern side across NM where CAPE is progged to be much=20
    weaker, but in general changes to the inherited risk were minor.


    ...Central High Plains...=20
    The inherited SLGT risk was maintained across eastern CO,=20
    primarily for renewed thunderstorm activity on Sunday evening=20
    falling atop soils that will be primed from ongoing (Saturday=20
    night) convection. The elongated stationary front across the=20
    Central Plains early today will drop steadily southward, leaving NE
    upslope flow in its wake. This will be most pronounced into=20
    eastern and southeastern CO, where PWs will likely surge to above 1
    inch. As convection develops across the higher terrain of CO=20
    during the aftn, it should steadily progress east and then grow=20
    upscale as it moves off the terrain in response to bulk shear of 40
    kts. While these clusters should move steadily eastward on mean=20
    0-6km winds of 15-20 kts, rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr are likely=20
    which could be sufficient to overwhelm soils that will be saturated
    from antecedent rainfall. Additionally, some local backbuilding is
    possible as reflected by CAMs across southeast CO, lengthening the
    potential duration of heavy rainfall in a few areas.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS THROUGH THE UPPER MIDWEST, AND THE COASTS OF THE
    CAROLINAS...

    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    The anomalous trough drifting slowly eastward from the High Plains
    will weaken slightly as heights rise across the Central Plains
    Monday. This will have limited overall affect on the downstream
    rainfall, however, as spokes of vorticity embedded within the flow
    and the accompanying surface front remain in place to drive ascent,
    with only slow eastward advance expected through D2.

    Despite this eastward translation, pinched 850-500mb flow between=20
    this trough and a ridge to the east will maintain efficient moist=20
    advection out of the Gulf, albeit with PW anomalies lower than=20
    forecast for the weekend (PWs around 1.75 inches or 0.5 to 1.0
    standard deviations above the climo mean). This suggests that=20
    another day of training convection is likely along the front from=20
    Oklahoma through Michigan, but with somewhat reduced intensity from
    prior days. Another challenges for D2 is the uncertainty in frontal
    position and convective timing, as lingering boundaries from
    Sunday's convection (with additional uncertainty in placement) will
    play an important role into the training potential and heavy rain
    axes on Monday. This suggests that despite a still favorable
    synoptic pattern and elevated thermodynamics, the SLGT risk remains
    the highest needed category for the D2 ERO.

    On Monday, rainfall rates will likely still peak above 1"/hr at=20
    times, which through training could produce 1-3 of rainfall=20
    (ECENS/GEFS probabilities for 3+ inches below 10%), and where this=20
    rain overlaps with heavy rain from the weekend (most likely on the=20
    W/SW edge of the SLGT risk area), scattered instances of flash=20
    flooding are possible. Otherwise, any cells training along the=20
    front could produce isolated responses and a broad MRGL risk draped
    along the length of the front into the southern High Plains=20
    continues.


    ...Southeast...
    Yet another active day across the Southeast is expected Monday as
    an inverted low-to-mid level trough drifts northeast along the
    coast of the Carolinas. This trough will move within a favorable
    thermodynamic environment characterized by still highly anomalous
    PWs of 2 to 2.25 inches, although the slow retreat of the mid-level
    ridge to the east should help ease some of this moisture the latter
    half of D2. Still, the overlap of these elevated PWs with MUCAPE of
    1000-2000 J/kg will support convection with heavy rainfall.

    In general, convection across the Southeast on Monday should be
    scattered in coverage, but some organization, or at least better
    clustering, is likely in the vicinity of any shortwaves and the
    inverted trough, primarily from the Grand Strand of SC to the
    Crystal Coast of NC. Here, repeating rounds of convection with
    efficient rain rates exceeding 2"/hr are likely, driven by
    impressive low-level confluence. Elsewhere across the Southeast,
    heavy rainfall rates are also likely, but with less organization,
    but still slow storm motions. The rainfall probabilities for more
    than 3" peak along the SC/NC coasts and the SLGT risk was adjusted
    cosmetically for the new guidance. Otherwise, a broad MRGL risk
    continues for slow moving thunderstorms across areas that have had
    recent heavy rainfall, and an expansion was made into the Upstate
    of SC where some of the high res CAMs suggest enough upslope to
    enhance rainfall locally in that area.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES, THE SOUTHWEST, AND GULF
    COAST/SOUTHEAST...


    ...Upper Midwest...
    The anomalous mid-level trough that will produce the heavy rainfall
    D1 and D2 across the Upper Midwest/Central Plains will weaken
    Tuesday as shortwaves embedded within the trough become more
    rapidly absorbed into westerlies across the northern tier of the
    CONUS. A lingering shortwave trough, likely convectively enhanced,
    pivoting across KS/MO will drive sufficient ascent for additional
    rainfall along the weakening front, but with lesser moisture and
    instability than was available earlier in the week. Still, at least
    short term training of intense rainfall rates is likely as mean
    layer winds align to the weakening front, which could result in
    isolated instances of flash flooding.=20


    ...Southeast...
    Elongated mid-level ridge extending westward from the Atlantic to
    along much of the Gulf Coast will subtly retreat Tuesday as a
    shortwave emerging from the Gulf lifts northward. The modest height
    falls and PVA accompanying this feature will drive ascent into an
    otherwise weakly forced environment, producing a favorable setup
    for scattered to numerous thunderstorms from the central Gulf Coast
    northeast along the periphery of the ridge into Georgia.
    Thunderstorms that develop will contain heavy rainfall rates of
    1-2"/hr in response to favorable thermodynamics characterized by
    PWs of 2-2.25 inches overlapping MUCAPE as high as 2000 J/kg. The
    general SW return flow will push storms along steadily to the N/NE,
    but with repeating rounds possible and some organization beneath
    the shortwave, a few instances of flash flooding could result as
    rainfall reaches 2-3" in some areas.


    ...Southwest...
    Mid-level ridging will expand but shift subtly westward on Tuesday
    while weak impulses rotate around its periphery. This will help to
    intensify instability across the region, and progs indicate a
    larger plume of 1000 J/kg MUCAPE spreading across the southern
    portions of AZ and NM, especially during peak aftn heating. This
    will combine with PWs that will be above 1" in many areas south of
    the Mogollon Rim, leading to a favorable environment for
    convection. Where any of these impulses rotate aloft, enhanced
    ascent will yield scattered to widespread thunderstorms with rain
    rates approaching 1"/hr at times, and these storms will move
    slowly/chaotically beneath the ridge. This could result in
    isolated instances of flash flooding, most likely where any storms
    track across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_6pP1vTJAx0TwhXKvp1R5xP6A6lyjuQ1uZsJy_Gw5UU7= iaPhMwKBiy66SPPel7MmAqvE98-VFp1H4_I8dZ6eFenX_Vg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_6pP1vTJAx0TwhXKvp1R5xP6A6lyjuQ1uZsJy_Gw5UU7= iaPhMwKBiy66SPPel7MmAqvE98-VFp1H4_I8dZ6eDgWCCmw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_6pP1vTJAx0TwhXKvp1R5xP6A6lyjuQ1uZsJy_Gw5UU7= iaPhMwKBiy66SPPel7MmAqvE98-VFp1H4_I8dZ6eIlNGkgc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Aug 10 15:58:05 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 101556
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1156 AM EDT Sun Aug 10 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    KANSAS, MISSOURI, AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    16Z Update...

    The meteorological synopsis provided by the overnight shift remains
    in sound shape with updates this cycle based off changes in the=20
    12Z guidance suite. Most guidance has shown the heaviest rainfall=20
    axis is shifting farther south and west with HREF/REFS neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall around 40% in southwest KS and=20
    far northern OK. The expectation remains for a blossoming area of=20 thunderstorms activity over the central Plains as the LLJ=20
    strengthens tonight and favorably orients itself along a frontal=20
    boundary draped over the region. 12Z HREF and 00Z REFS guidance=20
    continue to highlight southeast KS as featuring the highest odds=20
    for rainfall totals >5" (30-45% 40km neighborhood probabilities on=20
    new 12Z HREF) through tonight. Farther west, the Slight Risk was=20
    expanded as far west as the Palmer Divide with new 12Z HREF PMM=20
    guidance showing some isolated max amounts approaching 2" in some=20
    cases. Only minor tweaks to the risk areas were made in the=20
    Southeast and Southwest based on a blend of new incoming 12Z=20
    guidance, which largely shows the risk areas remain on track.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Central Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    The synoptic pattern today continues to be indicative of a Maddox
    Frontal rainfall event, although confidence in the exact evolution
    has decreased and significant changes are needed to the inherited
    ERO. Some of these changes are due to exceptional model uncertainty
    at this time range, but also accounting for what occurred Saturday
    when the event did not really pan out as expected.

    Synoptically, the setup still remains extremely favorable for an
    axis of very heavy rainfall. An anomalous mid-level trough (500mb
    and 200mb heights locally below the 10th percentile according to
    NAEFS) will remain aligned from ND/MN southwest through the Four
    Corners. Although the leading impulse embedded in the core of this
    trough will advect east across southern Canada, spokes of vorticity
    and associated shortwaves rotating through the flow to the south
    will force the trough axis to remain to the west. Downstream of this
    trough axis, a persistent upper jet streak will arc poleward into
    Ontario, placing at least modest but persistent upper level
    diffluence within its RRQ. Beneath this evolving setup, a surface
    front will oscillate at least subtly NW to SE as a stationary front,
    providing additional focus for ascent beneath the weak height falls
    and periods of PVA. Additionally, any stronger impulse interacting
    with the surface front could result in waves of low pressure
    rippling along to the northeast.

    East of this front, low-level return flow will continue to advect
    from an open Gulf, drawing elevated thermodynamics and theta-e
    northward. PWs are progged to climb to above 2 inches as the 850mb
    LLJ surges to 20-30 kts, overlapping intense MUCAPE of more than
    3000 J/kg to provide an extremely favorable environment for heavy
    rain, which is additionally supported by specific humidity values
    between 925-850mb above the 97th percentile (NAEFS). At the same
    time, the theta-e ridge will blossom and align into the front, with
    an intense gradient suggesting heavy rainfall on its NW axis as is
    typical with the Maddox Frontal conceptual model. In this setup,
    with persistent ascent acting upon impressive thermodynamics, and
    mean 0-6km winds aligned to the front, it is likely streaks of heavy
    rainfall will occur, and most deterministic models showing 1-4
    inches of rainfall through 12Z Monday, with high-res CAMs indicating
    locally 5-7 inches, so heavy rainfall is almost a certainty.

    However, uncertainty is exceptional (especially for a 24-hr
    forecast) with the placement of this heavy rain, and the spread in
    placement ranges from southwest WI to southern KS, and almost
    anywhere in between, leading to a challenging ERO forecast.

    While the front will be the primary focus for convection, along with
    a wave of low pressure expected to develop along it, and the LLJ is
    likely to be parallel to it, there is increasing concern that
    convective clusters (both overnight Saturday night into Sunday, and additionally on Sunday) will leave outflow boundaries aligned more
    west-to-east outrunning the front. This could drastically change the
    position of the heaviest rain axes, and would support heavy rainfall
    south of the global members in a typical bias. If these clusters do
    not develop, convection and heavy rainfall would likely remain more
    aligned SW to NE, but have noted a trend in the Corfidi vectors to
    be more pointed S/SE after SW early, which would additionally
    support more W-E heavy rainfall. With all the uncertainty in
    placement, the ERO was modified heavily and tailored primarily to
    HREF/REFS neighborhood probabilities, but with additional changes
    influenced by the EAS probabilities, the CSU first guess fields,
    and coordination with the impacted WFOs.


    ...Southeast...
    Another active day of convection is likely from the coastal
    Carolinas through Florida.

    Broad ridging extending from a Bermuda-type but elongated high
    pressure over the Atlantic will be modified by an inverted trough
    aligned from the eastern Gulf to the NC coast. Onshore and confluent
    flow into this inverted trough will maintain impressive moist
    advection into the area, manifesting as PWs above 2.25 inches, well
    above the 90th percentile according to the SPC sounding climatology.
    This will overlap with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg, modest overall
    instability indicative of a tropical airmass, to produce impressive thermodynamics to support heavy rainfall. Additionally, this robust thermodynamic advection onshore will result from 850mb winds as high
    as 15 kts, which, while modest, will exceed the mean 0-6km winds
    which are progged to be just around 5 kts. This suggests widespread
    convergent ascent across the Southeast, with the accompanying WAA
    surging warm cloud depths to around 15,000 ft, supporting efficient
    warm rain processes within a deeply saturated column noted in
    regional forecast soundings.

    The CAMs are in generally good agreement in widespread convection
    today. Scattered slow-moving thunderstorms with rainfall rates of 1-
    3"/hr are expected across much of FL and into GA/AL. However, the
    focus for the heaviest rainfall is likely along the coastal plain of
    GA through southeast NC. Here, propagation vectors are aligned
    against the weak mean wind, and with subtle mid-level impulses
    lifting northwest within the weakly forced environment, waves of
    repeating rounds of convection with heavy rainfall are likely. In
    this region, the HREF indicates a 20-30% chance of 2"/hr rain rates,
    with locally more than 3"/hr possible at times, at least briefly.
    With backbuilding offshore leading to regenerating and training
    rounds of heavy rain, total rainfall could exceed 5" (30-50% chance
    from the REFS/HREF), with the greatest potential along the SC coast.
    The inherited SLGT risk was cosmetically adjusted, but scattered
    instances of flash flooding appear likely today, even across these
    areas that are generally more difficult to flood.


    ...Southwest...
    A MRGL risk of excessive rainfall continues for portions of the
    Southwest today as monsoonal moisture returns to the area leading
    to a more active convective pattern. A mid-level trough extending
    down from the Northern High Plains will deepen today, producing
    lowered heights across the Four Corners and Desert Southwest,
    through which weak spokes of vorticity will rotate. These lowered
    heights and locally enhanced ascent will impinge into an
    increasingly favorable thermodynamic environment to support
    convection with heavy rainfall as low-to-mid level flow backs
    gradually to the SW, allowing for a better draw northward of PWs
    exceeding 1", which may spread as far north as the Mogollon Rim and
    combine with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg across the southern half of
    AZ and NM. This will support scattered to widespread showers and
    thunderstorms which will move slowly eastward through the day. With
    rainfall rates as much as 0.75"/hr to 1"/hr at times as shown by
    the UA WRF and HREF neighborhood probabilities , this could result
    in at least isolated instances of flash flooding, especially across
    more vulnerable soils or terrain. The MRGL risk was curtailed a
    bit on the eastern side across NM where CAPE is progged to be much
    weaker, but in general changes to the inherited risk were minor.


    ...Central High Plains...
    The inherited SLGT risk was maintained across eastern CO,
    primarily for renewed thunderstorm activity on Sunday evening
    falling atop soils that will be primed from ongoing (Saturday
    night) convection. The elongated stationary front across the
    Central Plains early today will drop steadily southward, leaving NE
    upslope flow in its wake. This will be most pronounced into
    eastern and southeastern CO, where PWs will likely surge to above 1
    inch. As convection develops across the higher terrain of CO
    during the aftn, it should steadily progress east and then grow
    upscale as it moves off the terrain in response to bulk shear of 40
    kts. While these clusters should move steadily eastward on mean
    0-6km winds of 15-20 kts, rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr are likely
    which could be sufficient to overwhelm soils that will be saturated
    from antecedent rainfall. Additionally, some local backbuilding is
    possible as reflected by CAMs across southeast CO, lengthening the
    potential duration of heavy rainfall in a few areas.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS THROUGH THE UPPER MIDWEST, AND THE COASTS OF THE
    CAROLINAS...

    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    The anomalous trough drifting slowly eastward from the High Plains
    will weaken slightly as heights rise across the Central Plains
    Monday. This will have limited overall affect on the downstream
    rainfall, however, as spokes of vorticity embedded within the flow
    and the accompanying surface front remain in place to drive ascent,
    with only slow eastward advance expected through D2.

    Despite this eastward translation, pinched 850-500mb flow between
    this trough and a ridge to the east will maintain efficient moist
    advection out of the Gulf, albeit with PW anomalies lower than
    forecast for the weekend (PWs around 1.75 inches or 0.5 to 1.0
    standard deviations above the climo mean). This suggests that
    another day of training convection is likely along the front from
    Oklahoma through Michigan, but with somewhat reduced intensity from
    prior days. Another challenges for D2 is the uncertainty in frontal
    position and convective timing, as lingering boundaries from
    Sunday's convection (with additional uncertainty in placement) will
    play an important role into the training potential and heavy rain
    axes on Monday. This suggests that despite a still favorable
    synoptic pattern and elevated thermodynamics, the SLGT risk remains
    the highest needed category for the D2 ERO.

    On Monday, rainfall rates will likely still peak above 1"/hr at
    times, which through training could produce 1-3 of rainfall
    (ECENS/GEFS probabilities for 3+ inches below 10%), and where this
    rain overlaps with heavy rain from the weekend (most likely on the
    W/SW edge of the SLGT risk area), scattered instances of flash
    flooding are possible. Otherwise, any cells training along the
    front could produce isolated responses and a broad MRGL risk draped
    along the length of the front into the southern High Plains
    continues.


    ...Southeast...
    Yet another active day across the Southeast is expected Monday as
    an inverted low-to-mid level trough drifts northeast along the
    coast of the Carolinas. This trough will move within a favorable
    thermodynamic environment characterized by still highly anomalous
    PWs of 2 to 2.25 inches, although the slow retreat of the mid-level
    ridge to the east should help ease some of this moisture the latter
    half of D2. Still, the overlap of these elevated PWs with MUCAPE of
    1000-2000 J/kg will support convection with heavy rainfall.

    In general, convection across the Southeast on Monday should be
    scattered in coverage, but some organization, or at least better
    clustering, is likely in the vicinity of any shortwaves and the
    inverted trough, primarily from the Grand Strand of SC to the
    Crystal Coast of NC. Here, repeating rounds of convection with
    efficient rain rates exceeding 2"/hr are likely, driven by
    impressive low-level confluence. Elsewhere across the Southeast,
    heavy rainfall rates are also likely, but with less organization,
    but still slow storm motions. The rainfall probabilities for more
    than 3" peak along the SC/NC coasts and the SLGT risk was adjusted
    cosmetically for the new guidance. Otherwise, a broad MRGL risk
    continues for slow moving thunderstorms across areas that have had
    recent heavy rainfall, and an expansion was made into the Upstate
    of SC where some of the high res CAMs suggest enough upslope to
    enhance rainfall locally in that area.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES, THE SOUTHWEST, AND GULF
    COAST/SOUTHEAST...


    ...Upper Midwest...
    The anomalous mid-level trough that will produce the heavy rainfall
    D1 and D2 across the Upper Midwest/Central Plains will weaken
    Tuesday as shortwaves embedded within the trough become more
    rapidly absorbed into westerlies across the northern tier of the
    CONUS. A lingering shortwave trough, likely convectively enhanced,
    pivoting across KS/MO will drive sufficient ascent for additional
    rainfall along the weakening front, but with lesser moisture and
    instability than was available earlier in the week. Still, at least
    short term training of intense rainfall rates is likely as mean
    layer winds align to the weakening front, which could result in
    isolated instances of flash flooding.


    ...Southeast...
    Elongated mid-level ridge extending westward from the Atlantic to
    along much of the Gulf Coast will subtly retreat Tuesday as a
    shortwave emerging from the Gulf lifts northward. The modest height
    falls and PVA accompanying this feature will drive ascent into an
    otherwise weakly forced environment, producing a favorable setup
    for scattered to numerous thunderstorms from the central Gulf Coast
    northeast along the periphery of the ridge into Georgia.
    Thunderstorms that develop will contain heavy rainfall rates of
    1-2"/hr in response to favorable thermodynamics characterized by
    PWs of 2-2.25 inches overlapping MUCAPE as high as 2000 J/kg. The
    general SW return flow will push storms along steadily to the N/NE,
    but with repeating rounds possible and some organization beneath
    the shortwave, a few instances of flash flooding could result as
    rainfall reaches 2-3" in some areas.


    ...Southwest...
    Mid-level ridging will expand but shift subtly westward on Tuesday
    while weak impulses rotate around its periphery. This will help to
    intensify instability across the region, and progs indicate a
    larger plume of 1000 J/kg MUCAPE spreading across the southern
    portions of AZ and NM, especially during peak aftn heating. This
    will combine with PWs that will be above 1" in many areas south of
    the Mogollon Rim, leading to a favorable environment for
    convection. Where any of these impulses rotate aloft, enhanced
    ascent will yield scattered to widespread thunderstorms with rain
    rates approaching 1"/hr at times, and these storms will move
    slowly/chaotically beneath the ridge. This could result in
    isolated instances of flash flooding, most likely where any storms
    track across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-weCbcBmBgL67IrkiaNNHE_tR0YypZxKFGUwxzGMKJla= m0CVZ6VRQ-j75n-ZisLQen_36wir6FZNlUAclV_SZjf0HSY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-weCbcBmBgL67IrkiaNNHE_tR0YypZxKFGUwxzGMKJla= m0CVZ6VRQ-j75n-ZisLQen_36wir6FZNlUAclV_SmUp3EJo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-weCbcBmBgL67IrkiaNNHE_tR0YypZxKFGUwxzGMKJla= m0CVZ6VRQ-j75n-ZisLQen_36wir6FZNlUAclV_Ssn05Tug$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Aug 10 20:16:23 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 102016
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    416 PM EDT Sun Aug 10 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Aug 10 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    KANSAS, MISSOURI, AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    16Z Update...

    The meteorological synopsis provided by the overnight shift remains
    in sound shape with updates this cycle based off changes in the
    12Z guidance suite. Most guidance has shown the heaviest rainfall
    axis is shifting farther south and west with HREF/REFS neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall around 40% in southwest KS and
    far northern OK. The expectation remains for a blossoming area of
    thunderstorms activity over the central Plains as the LLJ
    strengthens tonight and favorably orients itself along a frontal
    boundary draped over the region. 12Z HREF and 00Z REFS guidance
    continue to highlight southeast KS as featuring the highest odds
    for rainfall totals >5" (30-45% 40km neighborhood probabilities on
    new 12Z HREF) through tonight. Farther west, the Slight Risk was
    expanded as far west as the Palmer Divide with new 12Z HREF PMM
    guidance showing some isolated max amounts approaching 2" in some
    cases. Only minor tweaks to the risk areas were made in the
    Southeast and Southwest based on a blend of new incoming 12Z
    guidance, which largely shows the risk areas remain on track.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Central Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    The synoptic pattern today continues to be indicative of a Maddox
    Frontal rainfall event, although confidence in the exact evolution
    has decreased and significant changes are needed to the inherited
    ERO. Some of these changes are due to exceptional model uncertainty
    at this time range, but also accounting for what occurred Saturday
    when the event did not really pan out as expected.

    Synoptically, the setup still remains extremely favorable for an
    axis of very heavy rainfall. An anomalous mid-level trough (500mb
    and 200mb heights locally below the 10th percentile according to
    NAEFS) will remain aligned from ND/MN southwest through the Four
    Corners. Although the leading impulse embedded in the core of this
    trough will advect east across southern Canada, spokes of vorticity
    and associated shortwaves rotating through the flow to the south
    will force the trough axis to remain to the west. Downstream of this
    trough axis, a persistent upper jet streak will arc poleward into
    Ontario, placing at least modest but persistent upper level
    diffluence within its RRQ. Beneath this evolving setup, a surface
    front will oscillate at least subtly NW to SE as a stationary front,
    providing additional focus for ascent beneath the weak height falls
    and periods of PVA. Additionally, any stronger impulse interacting
    with the surface front could result in waves of low pressure
    rippling along to the northeast.

    East of this front, low-level return flow will continue to advect
    from an open Gulf, drawing elevated thermodynamics and theta-e
    northward. PWs are progged to climb to above 2 inches as the 850mb
    LLJ surges to 20-30 kts, overlapping intense MUCAPE of more than
    3000 J/kg to provide an extremely favorable environment for heavy
    rain, which is additionally supported by specific humidity values
    between 925-850mb above the 97th percentile (NAEFS). At the same
    time, the theta-e ridge will blossom and align into the front, with
    an intense gradient suggesting heavy rainfall on its NW axis as is
    typical with the Maddox Frontal conceptual model. In this setup,
    with persistent ascent acting upon impressive thermodynamics, and
    mean 0-6km winds aligned to the front, it is likely streaks of heavy
    rainfall will occur, and most deterministic models showing 1-4
    inches of rainfall through 12Z Monday, with high-res CAMs indicating
    locally 5-7 inches, so heavy rainfall is almost a certainty.

    However, uncertainty is exceptional (especially for a 24-hr
    forecast) with the placement of this heavy rain, and the spread in
    placement ranges from southwest WI to southern KS, and almost
    anywhere in between, leading to a challenging ERO forecast.

    While the front will be the primary focus for convection, along with
    a wave of low pressure expected to develop along it, and the LLJ is
    likely to be parallel to it, there is increasing concern that
    convective clusters (both overnight Saturday night into Sunday, and additionally on Sunday) will leave outflow boundaries aligned more
    west-to-east outrunning the front. This could drastically change the
    position of the heaviest rain axes, and would support heavy rainfall
    south of the global members in a typical bias. If these clusters do
    not develop, convection and heavy rainfall would likely remain more
    aligned SW to NE, but have noted a trend in the Corfidi vectors to
    be more pointed S/SE after SW early, which would additionally
    support more W-E heavy rainfall. With all the uncertainty in
    placement, the ERO was modified heavily and tailored primarily to
    HREF/REFS neighborhood probabilities, but with additional changes
    influenced by the EAS probabilities, the CSU first guess fields,
    and coordination with the impacted WFOs.


    ...Southeast...
    Another active day of convection is likely from the coastal
    Carolinas through Florida.

    Broad ridging extending from a Bermuda-type but elongated high
    pressure over the Atlantic will be modified by an inverted trough
    aligned from the eastern Gulf to the NC coast. Onshore and confluent
    flow into this inverted trough will maintain impressive moist
    advection into the area, manifesting as PWs above 2.25 inches, well
    above the 90th percentile according to the SPC sounding climatology.
    This will overlap with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg, modest overall
    instability indicative of a tropical airmass, to produce impressive thermodynamics to support heavy rainfall. Additionally, this robust thermodynamic advection onshore will result from 850mb winds as high
    as 15 kts, which, while modest, will exceed the mean 0-6km winds
    which are progged to be just around 5 kts. This suggests widespread
    convergent ascent across the Southeast, with the accompanying WAA
    surging warm cloud depths to around 15,000 ft, supporting efficient
    warm rain processes within a deeply saturated column noted in
    regional forecast soundings.

    The CAMs are in generally good agreement in widespread convection
    today. Scattered slow-moving thunderstorms with rainfall rates of 1-
    3"/hr are expected across much of FL and into GA/AL. However, the
    focus for the heaviest rainfall is likely along the coastal plain of
    GA through southeast NC. Here, propagation vectors are aligned
    against the weak mean wind, and with subtle mid-level impulses
    lifting northwest within the weakly forced environment, waves of
    repeating rounds of convection with heavy rainfall are likely. In
    this region, the HREF indicates a 20-30% chance of 2"/hr rain rates,
    with locally more than 3"/hr possible at times, at least briefly.
    With backbuilding offshore leading to regenerating and training
    rounds of heavy rain, total rainfall could exceed 5" (30-50% chance
    from the REFS/HREF), with the greatest potential along the SC coast.
    The inherited SLGT risk was cosmetically adjusted, but scattered
    instances of flash flooding appear likely today, even across these
    areas that are generally more difficult to flood.


    ...Southwest...
    A MRGL risk of excessive rainfall continues for portions of the
    Southwest today as monsoonal moisture returns to the area leading
    to a more active convective pattern. A mid-level trough extending
    down from the Northern High Plains will deepen today, producing
    lowered heights across the Four Corners and Desert Southwest,
    through which weak spokes of vorticity will rotate. These lowered
    heights and locally enhanced ascent will impinge into an
    increasingly favorable thermodynamic environment to support
    convection with heavy rainfall as low-to-mid level flow backs
    gradually to the SW, allowing for a better draw northward of PWs
    exceeding 1", which may spread as far north as the Mogollon Rim and
    combine with MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg across the southern half of
    AZ and NM. This will support scattered to widespread showers and
    thunderstorms which will move slowly eastward through the day. With
    rainfall rates as much as 0.75"/hr to 1"/hr at times as shown by
    the UA WRF and HREF neighborhood probabilities , this could result
    in at least isolated instances of flash flooding, especially across
    more vulnerable soils or terrain. The MRGL risk was curtailed a
    bit on the eastern side across NM where CAPE is progged to be much
    weaker, but in general changes to the inherited risk were minor.


    ...Central High Plains...
    The inherited SLGT risk was maintained across eastern CO,
    primarily for renewed thunderstorm activity on Sunday evening
    falling atop soils that will be primed from ongoing (Saturday
    night) convection. The elongated stationary front across the
    Central Plains early today will drop steadily southward, leaving NE
    upslope flow in its wake. This will be most pronounced into
    eastern and southeastern CO, where PWs will likely surge to above 1
    inch. As convection develops across the higher terrain of CO
    during the aftn, it should steadily progress east and then grow
    upscale as it moves off the terrain in response to bulk shear of 40
    kts. While these clusters should move steadily eastward on mean
    0-6km winds of 15-20 kts, rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr are likely
    which could be sufficient to overwhelm soils that will be saturated
    from antecedent rainfall. Additionally, some local backbuilding is
    possible as reflected by CAMs across southeast CO, lengthening the
    potential duration of heavy rainfall in a few areas.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS THROUGH THE UPPER MIDWEST, THE COASTS OF THE=20
    CAROLINAS, & THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE...

    ...Southern Plains & MO-KS-AR-OK...

    The South Central U.S. will be sandwiched between two upper level
    disturbances; one upper trough approaching from the Southern
    Rockies, and mid-upper level trough axis over southern Texas. Atop
    the atmosphere, modest diffluent 250mb flow will support divergence
    aloft while a nearby surface frontal boundary acts as a trigger=20
    for thunderstorms. Any residual outflow boundaries from Sunday
    night's convection or from Monday afternoon's convection will also
    likely play a role in firing off thunderstorms to the south and
    east of the surface front. PWATs will generally be >1.8" along the
    Red River and points north and east, while areas as far west as=20
    the TX Panhandle and cap rock are between 1.4-1.6". In terms of=20
    instability, lesser values (MLCAPE 500-1,000 J/kg) will be=20
    available in the TX Panhandle, with greater over the MO-KS-AR-OK=20
    region through Monday night. The 12Z HREF does show spotty areas of moderate-chance probabilities (40-60%) within the Slight Risk area
    for >3" of rainfall, as well as low-chance probabilities (10-30%)=20
    for >5" in central OK. Given these factors, the Slight Risk was=20
    focused more here compared to the previous forecast cycle.

    ...Middle MS Valley...

    The Slight Risk was scaled back here given the reduction in
    available instability, latest QPF reduction, and lesser footprint
    of >3" rainfall probabilities in the 12Z HREF. With soils growing
    more saturated and the lingering presence of near 2" PWATs, there
    is still a localized flash flood threat, hence the presence of a
    rather large Marginal Risk area that stretches from the I-70
    corridor from KS/MO on north through the Great Lakes.=20

    ...Florida Panhandle & Big Bend...

    In coordination with TAE, introduced a Slight Risk for areas along
    and south of I-10 in the FL Panhandle and Big Bend. As a mid-to-
    upper level inverted trough axis approaches, it will be accompanied
    by a wealth of anomalous PWATs that will approach 2.5" in some
    areas. Modeled soundings show warm cloud layers just shy of
    16,000ft deep in some cases with little-to-no capping inversions
    Monday afternoon. On the eastern flank of the inverted trough,
    925-850mb winds will be uniformly out of the SE. ECMWF soundings
    over the Big Bend show Corfidi Upshear vectors that are <10 knots=20
    Monday afternoon, suggesting the potential for back-building and=20
    training thunderstorms. Given the abundance of tropical moisture=20
    and MLCAPE up to 1,000 J/kg, it is quite possible to have=20
    thunderstorms generate 2" of rainfall in as little as 30 minutes.=20
    The scale of these storms are making QPF forecasts across CAMs=20
    guidance widely varying on location, but the atmospheric parameters
    support an increasingly concerning setup for flash flooding for=20
    Monday.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Southeast...
    Yet another active day across the Southeast is expected Monday as
    an inverted low-to-mid level trough drifts northeast along the
    coast of the Carolinas. This trough will move within a favorable
    thermodynamic environment characterized by still highly anomalous
    PWs of 2 to 2.25 inches, although the slow retreat of the mid-level
    ridge to the east should help ease some of this moisture the latter
    half of D2. Still, the overlap of these elevated PWs with MUCAPE of
    1000-2000 J/kg will support convection with heavy rainfall.

    In general, convection across the Southeast on Monday should be
    scattered in coverage, but some organization, or at least better
    clustering, is likely in the vicinity of any shortwaves and the
    inverted trough, primarily from the Grand Strand of SC to the
    Crystal Coast of NC. Here, repeating rounds of convection with
    efficient rain rates exceeding 2"/hr are likely, driven by
    impressive low-level confluence. Elsewhere across the Southeast,
    heavy rainfall rates are also likely, but with less organization,
    but still slow storm motions. The rainfall probabilities for more
    than 3" peak along the SC/NC coasts and the SLGT risk was adjusted
    cosmetically for the new guidance. Otherwise, a broad MRGL risk
    continues for slow moving thunderstorms across areas that have had
    recent heavy rainfall, and an expansion was made into the Upstate
    of SC where some of the high res CAMs suggest enough upslope to
    enhance rainfall locally in that area.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES, THE SOUTHWEST, AND GULF
    COAST/SOUTHEAST...

    2030Z Update...

    There were some minor adjustments made this forecast cycle to the
    Marginal Risk areas based on latest 12Z guidance and WPC QPF. The
    Southeast will be closely monitored given the same feature
    supporting a Slight Risk on Day 2 in the FL Panhandle and Big Bend
    areas will move farther inland on Tuesday. However, there remains a
    fair amount of spread regarding how much rainfall occurs and which
    areas are favored. Given the lingering uncertainty, opted to
    hold on to a Marginal Risk area with no upgrade this forecast
    cycle.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Upper Midwest...
    The anomalous mid-level trough that will produce the heavy rainfall
    D1 and D2 across the Upper Midwest/Central Plains will weaken
    Tuesday as shortwaves embedded within the trough become more
    rapidly absorbed into westerlies across the northern tier of the
    CONUS. A lingering shortwave trough, likely convectively enhanced,
    pivoting across KS/MO will drive sufficient ascent for additional
    rainfall along the weakening front, but with lesser moisture and
    instability than was available earlier in the week. Still, at least
    short term training of intense rainfall rates is likely as mean
    layer winds align to the weakening front, which could result in
    isolated instances of flash flooding.


    ...Southeast...
    Elongated mid-level ridge extending westward from the Atlantic to
    along much of the Gulf Coast will subtly retreat Tuesday as a
    shortwave emerging from the Gulf lifts northward. The modest height
    falls and PVA accompanying this feature will drive ascent into an
    otherwise weakly forced environment, producing a favorable setup
    for scattered to numerous thunderstorms from the central Gulf Coast
    northeast along the periphery of the ridge into Georgia.
    Thunderstorms that develop will contain heavy rainfall rates of
    1-2"/hr in response to favorable thermodynamics characterized by
    PWs of 2-2.25 inches overlapping MUCAPE as high as 2000 J/kg. The
    general SW return flow will push storms along steadily to the N/NE,
    but with repeating rounds possible and some organization beneath
    the shortwave, a few instances of flash flooding could result as
    rainfall reaches 2-3" in some areas.


    ...Southwest...
    Mid-level ridging will expand but shift subtly westward on Tuesday
    while weak impulses rotate around its periphery. This will help to
    intensify instability across the region, and progs indicate a
    larger plume of 1000 J/kg MUCAPE spreading across the southern
    portions of AZ and NM, especially during peak aftn heating. This
    will combine with PWs that will be above 1" in many areas south of
    the Mogollon Rim, leading to a favorable environment for
    convection. Where any of these impulses rotate aloft, enhanced
    ascent will yield scattered to widespread thunderstorms with rain
    rates approaching 1"/hr at times, and these storms will move
    slowly/chaotically beneath the ridge. This could result in
    isolated instances of flash flooding, most likely where any storms
    track across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6SEaZuyrmJqTVnBbPGy8ZTlf5gn3tbkz1_pA61F_TF0m= FuMgIZCf3yPyN49zvkwspwDLxcuveXEqGb5vVUMc6QEe8hg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6SEaZuyrmJqTVnBbPGy8ZTlf5gn3tbkz1_pA61F_TF0m= FuMgIZCf3yPyN49zvkwspwDLxcuveXEqGb5vVUMcjTTMIzg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6SEaZuyrmJqTVnBbPGy8ZTlf5gn3tbkz1_pA61F_TF0m= FuMgIZCf3yPyN49zvkwspwDLxcuveXEqGb5vVUMceVwvHOE$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 11 00:47:28 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 110047
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    847 PM EDT Sun Aug 10 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    KANSAS, MISSOURI, AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    01z Update: Current radar and satellite composite indicate our
    setup across the Central Plains is continuing to evolve with the
    focus driven along a cold front analyzed over the southern tier of
    KS into southwest MO. Looking at mesoanalysis, there's a pretty
    strong corridor of sfc-850mb FGEN situated over southeastern KS
    into neighboring MO with blossoming convection over the above areas
    with radar estimates of 2-3"/hr in the strongest cores. Elevated
    PWATs and considerable theta_E presence along and south of the
    front lend credence to a fairly robust convective environment
    capable of dropping significant rainfall in a span of a few hrs.
    The signal for heavy rain back over southwest KS remains with
    upscale growth anticipated out of the southeast CO Front Range,
    migrating eastward along the confines of the boundary. This
    eventual complex will merge downstream with the convective pattern
    ongoing across the other side of KS, congealing into quite a large
    convective cluster as we move beyond 06z. Cold pool generation will
    span eastward with some inference of a MCV potentially
    materializing out of the leftover convective pattern, but that
    jury is still out. Regardless of the eventual evolution, there's a
    consensus on a large area of 2-4" with locally upwards of 6-7"
    across the south-central and southeast KS into the far southwestern
    portion of MO by the end of the forecast cycle.=20

    Pending outflow progression to the north, new cells could=20
    materialize within the upstream cold pool progression, likely=20
    accenting the frontal boundary to waver further north towards the=20
    I-70 corridor. This could be in part to the mesoscale low generated
    off the convective cluster anticipated later which could enhance a
    secondary convective cluster on the arcing frontal positioning as=20
    the boundary gets lifted north-northwest. This puts places like=20
    Kansas City to Topeka in play for heavy thunderstorm potential=20
    later this evening, in agreement with the latest AIFS ML output=20
    signaling a better 6hr QPF output across northeast KS for the=20
    period between 06-12z and beyond. Considering the overall evolution
    anticipated and observational trends, there was not a need to
    deviate much from the previous MDT risk forecast with only some
    minor adjustments on the edges to account for the latest trends.=20
    SLGT risk is very much in place for much of KS into portions of OK=20
    into MO for the rest of the overnight with a high-end SLGT risk=20
    (25-40% threshold) for flash flood potential as far north as I-70=20
    over central and northeast KS into MO.=20

    SLGT risk remains in effect across the Midwest as thunderstorm
    activity continues to plague areas of IA into WI and IL. This is
    trending to be the last round before conditions settle, but with
    the antecedent moist soils remaining from the previous 36-48 hrs of
    rainfall, there was little reason to remove the previous SLGT risk
    in place until the setup finally vacates. Thus, maintained general
    continuity and scaled back over areas where convective impacts are
    less likely.=20

    SLGT across the Southeast CONUS remains with the greatest threat
    remaining along the immediate coastal plain from Wilmington, NC
    down through Brunswick, GA. Some of the hi-res guidance continue=20
    to promote these smaller heavy cores to brush into the coast during
    the overnight hrs. which could very well amount to significant=20
    rainfall in a short time considering the environment maintaining
    PWATs running >2.25" as noted via the 00z soundings from KJAX and
    KCHS. It's a case where onshore flow will have the ultimate say in
    what occurs in this setup as thunderstorms could stay offshore all
    night, but the proximity of the heavy convection and potential are
    too close to deviate away from what was inherited. Continuity was
    maintained as a result with agreement from the local WFO's.

    MRGL risk remains across the Southwest CONUS into the Caprock of
    NM/TX where isolated heavy cores could offer some low-end
    opportunity for flash flooding. This setup will dwindle after 06z
    with the loss of diurnal instability and surface inversion
    development.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS THROUGH THE UPPER MIDWEST, THE COASTS OF THE
    CAROLINAS, & THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE...

    ...Southern Plains & MO-KS-AR-OK...

    The South Central U.S. will be sandwiched between two upper level
    disturbances; one upper trough approaching from the Southern
    Rockies, and mid-upper level trough axis over southern Texas. Atop
    the atmosphere, modest diffluent 250mb flow will support divergence
    aloft while a nearby surface frontal boundary acts as a trigger
    for thunderstorms. Any residual outflow boundaries from Sunday
    night's convection or from Monday afternoon's convection will also
    likely play a role in firing off thunderstorms to the south and
    east of the surface front. PWATs will generally be >1.8" along the
    Red River and points north and east, while areas as far west as
    the TX Panhandle and cap rock are between 1.4-1.6". In terms of
    instability, lesser values (MLCAPE 500-1,000 J/kg) will be
    available in the TX Panhandle, with greater over the MO-KS-AR-OK
    region through Monday night. The 12Z HREF does show spotty areas of moderate-chance probabilities (40-60%) within the Slight Risk area
    for >3" of rainfall, as well as low-chance probabilities (10-30%)
    for >5" in central OK. Given these factors, the Slight Risk was
    focused more here compared to the previous forecast cycle.

    ...Middle MS Valley...

    The Slight Risk was scaled back here given the reduction in
    available instability, latest QPF reduction, and lesser footprint
    of >3" rainfall probabilities in the 12Z HREF. With soils growing
    more saturated and the lingering presence of near 2" PWATs, there
    is still a localized flash flood threat, hence the presence of a
    rather large Marginal Risk area that stretches from the I-70
    corridor from KS/MO on north through the Great Lakes.

    ...Florida Panhandle & Big Bend...

    In coordination with TAE, introduced a Slight Risk for areas along
    and south of I-10 in the FL Panhandle and Big Bend. As a mid-to-
    upper level inverted trough axis approaches, it will be accompanied
    by a wealth of anomalous PWATs that will approach 2.5" in some
    areas. Modeled soundings show warm cloud layers just shy of
    16,000ft deep in some cases with little-to-no capping inversions
    Monday afternoon. On the eastern flank of the inverted trough,
    925-850mb winds will be uniformly out of the SE. ECMWF soundings
    over the Big Bend show Corfidi Upshear vectors that are <10 knots
    Monday afternoon, suggesting the potential for back-building and
    training thunderstorms. Given the abundance of tropical moisture
    and MLCAPE up to 1,000 J/kg, it is quite possible to have
    thunderstorms generate 2" of rainfall in as little as 30 minutes.
    The scale of these storms are making QPF forecasts across CAMs
    guidance widely varying on location, but the atmospheric parameters
    support an increasingly concerning setup for flash flooding for
    Monday.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Southeast...
    Yet another active day across the Southeast is expected Monday as
    an inverted low-to-mid level trough drifts northeast along the
    coast of the Carolinas. This trough will move within a favorable
    thermodynamic environment characterized by still highly anomalous
    PWs of 2 to 2.25 inches, although the slow retreat of the mid-level
    ridge to the east should help ease some of this moisture the latter
    half of D2. Still, the overlap of these elevated PWs with MUCAPE of
    1000-2000 J/kg will support convection with heavy rainfall.

    In general, convection across the Southeast on Monday should be
    scattered in coverage, but some organization, or at least better
    clustering, is likely in the vicinity of any shortwaves and the
    inverted trough, primarily from the Grand Strand of SC to the
    Crystal Coast of NC. Here, repeating rounds of convection with
    efficient rain rates exceeding 2"/hr are likely, driven by
    impressive low-level confluence. Elsewhere across the Southeast,
    heavy rainfall rates are also likely, but with less organization,
    but still slow storm motions. The rainfall probabilities for more
    than 3" peak along the SC/NC coasts and the SLGT risk was adjusted
    cosmetically for the new guidance. Otherwise, a broad MRGL risk
    continues for slow moving thunderstorms across areas that have had
    recent heavy rainfall, and an expansion was made into the Upstate
    of SC where some of the high res CAMs suggest enough upslope to
    enhance rainfall locally in that area.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES, THE SOUTHWEST, AND GULF
    COAST/SOUTHEAST...

    2030Z Update...

    There were some minor adjustments made this forecast cycle to the
    Marginal Risk areas based on latest 12Z guidance and WPC QPF. The
    Southeast will be closely monitored given the same feature
    supporting a Slight Risk on Day 2 in the FL Panhandle and Big Bend
    areas will move farther inland on Tuesday. However, there remains a
    fair amount of spread regarding how much rainfall occurs and which
    areas are favored. Given the lingering uncertainty, opted to
    hold on to a Marginal Risk area with no upgrade this forecast
    cycle.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Upper Midwest...
    The anomalous mid-level trough that will produce the heavy rainfall
    D1 and D2 across the Upper Midwest/Central Plains will weaken
    Tuesday as shortwaves embedded within the trough become more
    rapidly absorbed into westerlies across the northern tier of the
    CONUS. A lingering shortwave trough, likely convectively enhanced,
    pivoting across KS/MO will drive sufficient ascent for additional
    rainfall along the weakening front, but with lesser moisture and
    instability than was available earlier in the week. Still, at least
    short term training of intense rainfall rates is likely as mean
    layer winds align to the weakening front, which could result in
    isolated instances of flash flooding.


    ...Southeast...
    Elongated mid-level ridge extending westward from the Atlantic to
    along much of the Gulf Coast will subtly retreat Tuesday as a
    shortwave emerging from the Gulf lifts northward. The modest height
    falls and PVA accompanying this feature will drive ascent into an
    otherwise weakly forced environment, producing a favorable setup
    for scattered to numerous thunderstorms from the central Gulf Coast
    northeast along the periphery of the ridge into Georgia.
    Thunderstorms that develop will contain heavy rainfall rates of
    1-2"/hr in response to favorable thermodynamics characterized by
    PWs of 2-2.25 inches overlapping MUCAPE as high as 2000 J/kg. The
    general SW return flow will push storms along steadily to the N/NE,
    but with repeating rounds possible and some organization beneath
    the shortwave, a few instances of flash flooding could result as
    rainfall reaches 2-3" in some areas.


    ...Southwest...
    Mid-level ridging will expand but shift subtly westward on Tuesday
    while weak impulses rotate around its periphery. This will help to
    intensify instability across the region, and progs indicate a
    larger plume of 1000 J/kg MUCAPE spreading across the southern
    portions of AZ and NM, especially during peak aftn heating. This
    will combine with PWs that will be above 1" in many areas south of
    the Mogollon Rim, leading to a favorable environment for
    convection. Where any of these impulses rotate aloft, enhanced
    ascent will yield scattered to widespread thunderstorms with rain
    rates approaching 1"/hr at times, and these storms will move
    slowly/chaotically beneath the ridge. This could result in
    isolated instances of flash flooding, most likely where any storms
    track across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!50RC5MywqURfpOOL3cZQ-ASMtdIqGbPFlyHbXUAa38Fu= Jz9PNkHCncayFOtPRF-QjKmJiYqZwWFQEy1E1zFSkAV1AJc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!50RC5MywqURfpOOL3cZQ-ASMtdIqGbPFlyHbXUAa38Fu= Jz9PNkHCncayFOtPRF-QjKmJiYqZwWFQEy1E1zFSFoctSXk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!50RC5MywqURfpOOL3cZQ-ASMtdIqGbPFlyHbXUAa38Fu= Jz9PNkHCncayFOtPRF-QjKmJiYqZwWFQEy1E1zFS4pWYRxg$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 11 08:23:41 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 110823
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    423 AM EDT Mon Aug 11 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS, COASTAL NORTH AND SOUTH CAROLINA AND ACROSS THE=20
    FLORIDA...

    ...Southern Plains...
    The active early morning convection currently across portions of=20
    the Southern and Central Plains will likely weaken prior to or=20
    shortly after 1200 UTC Monday. The latest hi res model consensus is
    for the next round of convection to then form farther south along=20
    the surface frontal boundary stretching from the Southern High=20
    Plains, northeastward into the Lower MO Valley. No major changes=20
    made to the previous slight risk area, with the current version=20
    fitting well where both the HREF mean and RRFS mean neighborhood=20 probabilities for 1 and 2"+ amounts are high. PW values will remain
    high, 1.5 to 2"+ in the slight risk area. This combined with=20
    favorable upper difluence on the southeast side of the slow moving=20
    mid to upper level trof moving across the Southern Plains, will=20
    support potential for additional heavy precipitation totals. A=20
    period of slow moving/training cells parallel to the frontal=20
    boundary, primarily in the 0000 to 1200 UTC Tuesday period will=20
    support localized hourly rainfall rates of 1"+.=20

    No changes made to the marginal risk area extending farther to the
    northeast into the Mid Mississippi Valley and Lower Lakes region.
    The HREF and RRFS mean neighborhood probabilities are not as high
    for 1 and 2"+ amounts as over the Southern Plains. Localized heavy
    rainfall amounts along this portion of the front, are expected to=20
    be to the south of where the heaviest rainfall fell over the past=20
    24 hours from northeast IA, far northwest IL and southern WI. For
    these reasons, the threat level was maintained as marginal.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast...
    An axis of tropical PW values, 2 to 2.25"+, will push=20
    northwestward in association with mid level shortwave energy moving
    across the northeastern Gulf. Active showers likely in this high=20
    PW axis along the immediate central to northeastern Gulf coastal=20
    regions. HREF and RRFS mean neighborhood probabilities are high for
    for 1, 2 and 3"+ totals from the Florida Panhandle, west across=20
    far southern AL, far southern MS, southern LA into coastal=20
    northeast TX. A slight risk was maintained across the FL Panhandle=20
    region. The marginal risk was extended westward to cover the high=20
    HREF and RRFS mean neighborhood probabilities across far southern=20
    AL, far southern MS, far southern LA into coastal northeast TX.=20
    There is consensus for potentially two periods of potentially=20
    .50-1"+ hourly rainfall amounts during the day 1 period. The first=20
    early this morning, extending into the post 12Z Monday period,=20
    followed by another uptick in coastal precip intensities in the=20
    early hours of Tuesday, 0600-1200 UTC.

    ...Coastal South and North Carolina...
    The anomalous PW axis moving northwest into the immediate Gulf
    Coast day 1 will also remain in place farther to the northeast
    from GA into SC and NC. Only some small changes made to the
    previous slight risk areas along the SC and NC coasts, extending
    the slight risk approximately 50 miles farther northeast along the
    NC coast to cover the latest model qpf and higher HREF/RRFS
    probabilities. Active showers likely in this anomalous PW axis as
    onshore south southeasterly flow persists day 1. There will be the
    likelihood of training of precip areas in the south southeasterly
    flow, supporting localized hourly rainfall totals of 1-2"+. The
    marginal risk area over west central NC was extended approximately
    50-100 miles to the north to cover the latest model qpf.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER=20
    LAKES, SOUTHWESTWARD INTO THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND INTO=20
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS, FROM THE CENTRAL GULF COAST INTO THE=20
    CAROLINAS AND ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHWEST...

    ...Lower Lakes into the Mid MS Valley and Southern Plains...
    An axis of high PW values, 1.5-1.75"+ will continue along and ahead
    of the elongated frontal zone stretching from the Lower Lakes,
    southwestward into the Mid MS Valley and into the Southern Plains.
    Scattered convection likely in this high PW axis, supporting
    locally heavy precip totals. The previous marginal risk area was
    extended farther southwestward from southern MO, across northwest=20
    AR, much of OK and into northern TX to cover model qpf spread. Also
    expanded the previous marginal risk area farther northwestward=20
    into eastern WI and the northern portion of the L.P. of MI to cover
    the model qpf spread for potentially locally heavy rainfall totals
    along the northern portion of the frontal zone across these areas.


    ...Central Gulf Coast into the Carolinas...=20
    The axis of high PW values stretching from the Central Gulf Coast=20
    into the Carolinas on day 1 will persist across these regions day=20
    2. Shortwave energy embedded in this high PW axis will continue to=20
    support potential for additional heavy rains day 2. The previous=20
    marginal risk area was extended east northeastward from northern=20
    GA/Upstate of SC/far western NC to cover much of the remainder of=20
    NC and SC where several models show heavy rain potential.=20

    ...Southwest...
    No changes made to the previous marginal risk area from southeast=20
    AZ into much of NM. Weak shortwaves progged to rotate around the=20
    mid to upper level ridge building eastward into the Great Basin day
    2, enhancing large scale uvvs in an axis of seasonable PW values.=20
    Scattered convection across this area will support potential for=20
    localized heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues,=20
    especially across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.=20

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE TENNESSEE AND OHIO VALLEY AND EASTERN
    LAKES, ACROSS COASTAL SOUTH CAROLINA AND COASTAL NORTH CAROLINA,
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND OVER THE SOUTHWEST...


    Similar to the day 2 period, an axis of high PW values will
    continue to stretch from the Central Gulf coast, east northeastward
    into the Southeast and Southern Mid Atlantic. Widespread scattered
    convection likely in this anomalous PW axis, values 1.5-2 standard
    deviations above the mean. Mid to upper level dynamics will have
    weakened by day 3, with less defined areas of upper diffluence to
    accentuate lift in this high PW axis. Still, model consensus is for
    continued potential for continued locally heavy rains across these
    areas. A marginal risk was added for the upper coast of SC and the
    lower coast of NC where models do show potential for additional
    locally heavy rains day 3.

    ...Lower Lakes/Northeast into the OH/TN Valley, Central to=20
    Southern Appalachians...=20
    An axis of high PW values, 1.5-1.75"+ also likely to continue=20
    along the elongated frontal zone pushing eastward through the Lower
    Lakes into NY State and northern New England and stretching=20
    southwestward into the OH/TN Valley regions and Central to Southern Appalachians. Widespread scattered convection likely along this=20
    front in this high PW axis, supporting locally heavy rains and=20
    isolated runoff issues. No changes made to the previous marginal=20
    risk area along and ahead of this front.

    ...Southwest...
    No significant changes to the overall flow pattern for the
    Southwest day 3. Additional weak vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high will support another round of
    scattered convection. Low confidence on any qpf details, but
    potential will continue for localized heavy rains and isolated
    runoff issues, especially across more vulnerable terrain features or burn s= cars.=20

    ...Northern Plains...
    The low level southerly flow expected to strengthen after 0000 UTC
    Thursday across the Northern Plains ahead of a surface front
    emerging into the Northern Plains. An area of organized convection
    possible ahead of this front, with locally heavy precip totals
    possible. There is a lot of model spread with qpf details at the
    moment, leading to low confidence. The previous marginal risk area
    was decreased in size to better fit the overlap of potentially
    heavy rains with the lower FFG values.

    Oravec



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_H_x0DkkK7jZbsQA4-1bDU_nhhVnfK4G0XmZhuBSCOkD= DarH0jaxNESJOc9mBUtxGqVVNaDfg-I3IXF9c27QgvR-JU8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_H_x0DkkK7jZbsQA4-1bDU_nhhVnfK4G0XmZhuBSCOkD= DarH0jaxNESJOc9mBUtxGqVVNaDfg-I3IXF9c27QkcKWDFo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_H_x0DkkK7jZbsQA4-1bDU_nhhVnfK4G0XmZhuBSCOkD= DarH0jaxNESJOc9mBUtxGqVVNaDfg-I3IXF9c27QByuW_Aw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 11 15:46:22 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 111545
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1145 AM EDT Mon Aug 11 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS, COASTAL CAROLINAS INTO GEORGIA AND ACROSS THE=20
    FLORIDA PANHANDLE...

    ...16z Update...

    Previous forecast remains largely on track based on observational
    trends and the latest 12z hi-res suite across the relevant regions.
    Some modest expansion of the SLGTs (westward into more of the TX=20
    Panhandle, as well as southward from coastal SC into coastal GA)=20
    occurred (12z HREF neighborhood probs for 5" exceedance of 10%+),=20
    as well as a more substantial expansion of surrounding MRGL areas=20
    (to include more of the southern and central Appalachians with much
    higher PWATs and instability compared to 24-hr ago, as well as=20
    into portions of eastern KS and southwest NE in association with=20
    convective redevelopment in the vicinity of an MCV from overnight).

    Churchill


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southern Plains...
    The active early morning convection currently across portions of
    the Southern and Central Plains will likely weaken prior to or
    shortly after 1200 UTC Monday. The latest hi res model consensus is
    for the next round of convection to then form farther south along
    the surface frontal boundary stretching from the Southern High
    Plains, northeastward into the Lower MO Valley. No major changes
    made to the previous slight risk area, with the current version
    fitting well where both the HREF mean and RRFS mean neighborhood
    probabilities for 1 and 2"+ amounts are high. PW values will remain
    high, 1.5 to 2"+ in the slight risk area. This combined with
    favorable upper difluence on the southeast side of the slow moving
    mid to upper level trof moving across the Southern Plains, will
    support potential for additional heavy precipitation totals. A
    period of slow moving/training cells parallel to the frontal
    boundary, primarily in the 0000 to 1200 UTC Tuesday period will
    support localized hourly rainfall rates of 1"+.

    No changes made to the marginal risk area extending farther to the
    northeast into the Mid Mississippi Valley and Lower Lakes region.
    The HREF and RRFS mean neighborhood probabilities are not as high
    for 1 and 2"+ amounts as over the Southern Plains. Localized heavy
    rainfall amounts along this portion of the front, are expected to
    be to the south of where the heaviest rainfall fell over the past
    24 hours from northeast IA, far northwest IL and southern WI. For
    these reasons, the threat level was maintained as marginal.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast...
    An axis of tropical PW values, 2 to 2.25"+, will push
    northwestward in association with mid level shortwave energy moving
    across the northeastern Gulf. Active showers likely in this high
    PW axis along the immediate central to northeastern Gulf coastal
    regions. HREF and RRFS mean neighborhood probabilities are high for
    for 1, 2 and 3"+ totals from the Florida Panhandle, west across
    far southern AL, far southern MS, southern LA into coastal
    northeast TX. A slight risk was maintained across the FL Panhandle
    region. The marginal risk was extended westward to cover the high
    HREF and RRFS mean neighborhood probabilities across far southern
    AL, far southern MS, far southern LA into coastal northeast TX.
    There is consensus for potentially two periods of potentially
    .50-1"+ hourly rainfall amounts during the day 1 period. The first
    early this morning, extending into the post 12Z Monday period,
    followed by another uptick in coastal precip intensities in the
    early hours of Tuesday, 0600-1200 UTC.

    ...Coastal South and North Carolina...
    The anomalous PW axis moving northwest into the immediate Gulf
    Coast day 1 will also remain in place farther to the northeast
    from GA into SC and NC. Only some small changes made to the
    previous slight risk areas along the SC and NC coasts, extending
    the slight risk approximately 50 miles farther northeast along the
    NC coast to cover the latest model qpf and higher HREF/RRFS
    probabilities. Active showers likely in this anomalous PW axis as
    onshore south southeasterly flow persists day 1. There will be the
    likelihood of training of precip areas in the south southeasterly
    flow, supporting localized hourly rainfall totals of 1-2"+. The
    marginal risk area over west central NC was extended approximately
    50-100 miles to the north to cover the latest model qpf.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    LAKES, SOUTHWESTWARD INTO THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND INTO
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS, FROM THE CENTRAL GULF COAST INTO THE
    CAROLINAS AND ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHWEST...

    ...Lower Lakes into the Mid MS Valley and Southern Plains...
    An axis of high PW values, 1.5-1.75"+ will continue along and ahead
    of the elongated frontal zone stretching from the Lower Lakes,
    southwestward into the Mid MS Valley and into the Southern Plains.
    Scattered convection likely in this high PW axis, supporting
    locally heavy precip totals. The previous marginal risk area was
    extended farther southwestward from southern MO, across northwest
    AR, much of OK and into northern TX to cover model qpf spread. Also
    expanded the previous marginal risk area farther northwestward
    into eastern WI and the northern portion of the L.P. of MI to cover
    the model qpf spread for potentially locally heavy rainfall totals
    along the northern portion of the frontal zone across these areas.


    ...Central Gulf Coast into the Carolinas...
    The axis of high PW values stretching from the Central Gulf Coast
    into the Carolinas on day 1 will persist across these regions day
    2. Shortwave energy embedded in this high PW axis will continue to
    support potential for additional heavy rains day 2. The previous
    marginal risk area was extended east northeastward from northern
    GA/Upstate of SC/far western NC to cover much of the remainder of
    NC and SC where several models show heavy rain potential.

    ...Southwest...
    No changes made to the previous marginal risk area from southeast
    AZ into much of NM. Weak shortwaves progged to rotate around the
    mid to upper level ridge building eastward into the Great Basin day
    2, enhancing large scale uvvs in an axis of seasonable PW values.
    Scattered convection across this area will support potential for
    localized heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues,
    especially across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE TENNESSEE AND OHIO VALLEY AND EASTERN
    LAKES, ACROSS COASTAL SOUTH CAROLINA AND COASTAL NORTH CAROLINA,
    PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND OVER THE SOUTHWEST...


    Similar to the day 2 period, an axis of high PW values will
    continue to stretch from the Central Gulf coast, east northeastward
    into the Southeast and Southern Mid Atlantic. Widespread scattered
    convection likely in this anomalous PW axis, values 1.5-2 standard
    deviations above the mean. Mid to upper level dynamics will have
    weakened by day 3, with less defined areas of upper diffluence to
    accentuate lift in this high PW axis. Still, model consensus is for
    continued potential for continued locally heavy rains across these
    areas. A marginal risk was added for the upper coast of SC and the
    lower coast of NC where models do show potential for additional
    locally heavy rains day 3.

    ...Lower Lakes/Northeast into the OH/TN Valley, Central to
    Southern Appalachians...
    An axis of high PW values, 1.5-1.75"+ also likely to continue
    along the elongated frontal zone pushing eastward through the Lower
    Lakes into NY State and northern New England and stretching
    southwestward into the OH/TN Valley regions and Central to Southern Appalachians. Widespread scattered convection likely along this
    front in this high PW axis, supporting locally heavy rains and
    isolated runoff issues. No changes made to the previous marginal
    risk area along and ahead of this front.

    ...Southwest...
    No significant changes to the overall flow pattern for the
    Southwest day 3. Additional weak vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high will support another round of
    scattered convection. Low confidence on any qpf details, but
    potential will continue for localized heavy rains and isolated
    runoff issues, especially across more vulnerable terrain features or burn s= cars.

    ...Northern Plains...
    The low level southerly flow expected to strengthen after 0000 UTC
    Thursday across the Northern Plains ahead of a surface front
    emerging into the Northern Plains. An area of organized convection
    possible ahead of this front, with locally heavy precip totals
    possible. There is a lot of model spread with qpf details at the
    moment, leading to low confidence. The previous marginal risk area
    was decreased in size to better fit the overlap of potentially
    heavy rains with the lower FFG values.

    Oravec



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5yaq15lqx6DPiZpDCmwcUcIE9mfC7Y4exv_1iDUyikH2= o668RhTB2BoYkcDfC40lWax3fw-GjLwXchHId7LdHUt-Am0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5yaq15lqx6DPiZpDCmwcUcIE9mfC7Y4exv_1iDUyikH2= o668RhTB2BoYkcDfC40lWax3fw-GjLwXchHId7LdLxACWpI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5yaq15lqx6DPiZpDCmwcUcIE9mfC7Y4exv_1iDUyikH2= o668RhTB2BoYkcDfC40lWax3fw-GjLwXchHId7LdUg_eWq8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 11 20:18:34 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 112018
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    418 PM EDT Mon Aug 11 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Aug 11 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS, COASTAL CAROLINAS INTO GEORGIA, AND ACROSS THE=20
    FLORIDA PANHANDLE...

    ...16z Update...

    Previous forecast remains largely on track based on observational
    trends and the latest 12z hi-res suite across the relevant regions.
    Some modest expansion of the SLGTs (westward into more of the TX
    Panhandle, as well as southward from coastal SC into coastal GA)
    occurred (12z HREF neighborhood probs for 5" exceedance of 10%+),
    as well as a more substantial expansion of surrounding MRGL areas
    (to include more of the southern and central Appalachians with much
    higher PWATs and instability compared to 24-hr ago, as well as
    into portions of eastern KS and southwest NE in association with
    convective redevelopment in the vicinity of an MCV from overnight).

    Churchill


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southern Plains...
    The active early morning convection currently across portions of
    the Southern and Central Plains will likely weaken prior to or
    shortly after 1200 UTC Monday. The latest hi res model consensus is
    for the next round of convection to then form farther south along
    the surface frontal boundary stretching from the Southern High
    Plains, northeastward into the Lower MO Valley. No major changes
    made to the previous slight risk area, with the current version
    fitting well where both the HREF mean and RRFS mean neighborhood
    probabilities for 1 and 2"+ amounts are high. PW values will remain
    high, 1.5 to 2"+ in the slight risk area. This combined with
    favorable upper difluence on the southeast side of the slow moving
    mid to upper level trof moving across the Southern Plains, will
    support potential for additional heavy precipitation totals. A
    period of slow moving/training cells parallel to the frontal
    boundary, primarily in the 0000 to 1200 UTC Tuesday period will
    support localized hourly rainfall rates of 1"+.

    No changes made to the marginal risk area extending farther to the
    northeast into the Mid Mississippi Valley and Lower Lakes region.
    The HREF and RRFS mean neighborhood probabilities are not as high
    for 1 and 2"+ amounts as over the Southern Plains. Localized heavy
    rainfall amounts along this portion of the front, are expected to
    be to the south of where the heaviest rainfall fell over the past
    24 hours from northeast IA, far northwest IL and southern WI. For
    these reasons, the threat level was maintained as marginal.

    ...Northeastern Gulf Coast...
    An axis of tropical PW values, 2 to 2.25"+, will push
    northwestward in association with mid level shortwave energy moving
    across the northeastern Gulf. Active showers likely in this high
    PW axis along the immediate central to northeastern Gulf coastal
    regions. HREF and RRFS mean neighborhood probabilities are high for
    for 1, 2 and 3"+ totals from the Florida Panhandle, west across
    far southern AL, far southern MS, southern LA into coastal
    northeast TX. A slight risk was maintained across the FL Panhandle
    region. The marginal risk was extended westward to cover the high
    HREF and RRFS mean neighborhood probabilities across far southern
    AL, far southern MS, far southern LA into coastal northeast TX.
    There is consensus for potentially two periods of potentially
    .50-1"+ hourly rainfall amounts during the day 1 period. The first
    early this morning, extending into the post 12Z Monday period,
    followed by another uptick in coastal precip intensities in the
    early hours of Tuesday, 0600-1200 UTC.

    ...Coastal South and North Carolina...
    The anomalous PW axis moving northwest into the immediate Gulf
    Coast day 1 will also remain in place farther to the northeast
    from GA into SC and NC. Only some small changes made to the
    previous slight risk areas along the SC and NC coasts, extending
    the slight risk approximately 50 miles farther northeast along the
    NC coast to cover the latest model qpf and higher HREF/RRFS
    probabilities. Active showers likely in this anomalous PW axis as
    onshore south southeasterly flow persists day 1. There will be the
    likelihood of training of precip areas in the south southeasterly
    flow, supporting localized hourly rainfall totals of 1-2"+. The
    marginal risk area over west central NC was extended approximately
    50-100 miles to the north to cover the latest model qpf.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS INTO LOWER ELEVATIONS OF NORTH-CENTRAL
    GEORGIA AND WESTERN SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...20z Update...

    A SLGT has been introduced for much of Southern Appalachia, as the
    12z guidance suite has come into remarkably good agreement with a
    strong signal for localized 3"+ totals (per 12z HREF and 06z REFS=20 neighborhood exceedance probabilities of 40-60%, co-located with
    rather good agreement in the QPF maxima between the global models).
    Highly anomalous tropospheric moisture (2.0"+ PW, near max moving
    average) is already in place across the region with persistent=20
    low-level moisture transport over the past 24-hr (with PWs=20
    increasing by as much as 0.4-0.5" since 18z yesterday across the=20
    region). While the current environment is weakly forced with little
    shear, this may change rather dramatically tomorrow as two distinct
    synoptic features interact later in the day tomorrow. The first is
    a tropical upper-tropospheric trough (TUTT) cell (mid-upper low=20
    situated in the sub-tropical easterlies) centered near the FL/GA=20
    border, and the second is a shortwave trough (increasingly
    positively tilted over time due to cyclonic wave breaking with the
    parent upper-trough lifting northeast near the Great Lakes)
    advancing from the west. While the interaction of these features is
    complex, the occurrence near the terrain of the southern slopes of
    the Appalachians looks to focus convection into this sensitive
    region (with continued southerly advection and forced ascent via=20
    terrain of very moist air from the south). Trends in the guidance
    will need to be monitored closely for future upgrades, as there is
    potential for sustained locally heavy rainfall for the entire day
    (and particularly so after 00z with the diurnal peak in the low-
    level jet oriented directly into the terrain).=20

    Elsewhere, forecast remains largely on track. Went ahead and
    combined the MRGLs (over both West TX and the OH/TN Valley) with a
    strong enough signal from the new hi-res guidance to support at
    least low-end probs for excessive rainfall.=20

    Churchill


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Lower Lakes into the Mid MS Valley and Southern Plains...
    An axis of high PW values, 1.5-1.75"+ will continue along and ahead
    of the elongated frontal zone stretching from the Lower Lakes,
    southwestward into the Mid MS Valley and into the Southern Plains.
    Scattered convection likely in this high PW axis, supporting
    locally heavy precip totals. The previous marginal risk area was
    extended farther southwestward from southern MO, across northwest
    AR, much of OK and into northern TX to cover model qpf spread. Also
    expanded the previous marginal risk area farther northwestward
    into eastern WI and the northern portion of the L.P. of MI to cover
    the model qpf spread for potentially locally heavy rainfall totals
    along the northern portion of the frontal zone across these areas.


    ...Central Gulf Coast into the Carolinas...
    The axis of high PW values stretching from the Central Gulf Coast
    into the Carolinas on day 1 will persist across these regions day
    2. Shortwave energy embedded in this high PW axis will continue to
    support potential for additional heavy rains day 2. The previous
    marginal risk area was extended east northeastward from northern
    GA/Upstate of SC/far western NC to cover much of the remainder of
    NC and SC where several models show heavy rain potential.

    ...Southwest...
    No changes made to the previous marginal risk area from southeast
    AZ into much of NM. Weak shortwaves progged to rotate around the
    mid to upper level ridge building eastward into the Great Basin day
    2, enhancing large scale uvvs in an axis of seasonable PW values.
    Scattered convection across this area will support potential for
    localized heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues,
    especially across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF
    THE EASTERN AND SOUTHERN UNITED STATES, AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND SOUTHWEST...

    ...20z Update...

    Little change in the overall forecast and below reasoning. Either
    maintained or expanded the MRGL risks based on the new guidance
    (with the most significant expansion across the Southern and
    Eastern CONUS). Uncertainty in the forecast is higher than usual,
    as global models are not giving any particularly strong signals at
    this range (despite what will likely eventually need some targeted
    upgrades from mesoscale details, given the prevalence of anomalous moisture).=20


    Churchill


    ...Previous Discussion...

    Similar to the day 2 period, an axis of high PW values will
    continue to stretch from the Central Gulf coast, east northeastward
    into the Southeast and Southern Mid Atlantic. Widespread scattered
    convection likely in this anomalous PW axis, values 1.5-2 standard
    deviations above the mean. Mid to upper level dynamics will have
    weakened by day 3, with less defined areas of upper diffluence to
    accentuate lift in this high PW axis. Still, model consensus is for
    continued potential for continued locally heavy rains across these
    areas. A marginal risk was added for the upper coast of SC and the
    lower coast of NC where models do show potential for additional
    locally heavy rains day 3.

    ...Lower Lakes/Northeast into the OH/TN Valley, Central to
    Southern Appalachians...
    An axis of high PW values, 1.5-1.75"+ also likely to continue
    along the elongated frontal zone pushing eastward through the Lower
    Lakes into NY State and northern New England and stretching
    southwestward into the OH/TN Valley regions and Central to Southern Appalachians. Widespread scattered convection likely along this
    front in this high PW axis, supporting locally heavy rains and
    isolated runoff issues. No changes made to the previous marginal
    risk area along and ahead of this front.

    ...Southwest...
    No significant changes to the overall flow pattern for the
    Southwest day 3. Additional weak vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high will support another round of
    scattered convection. Low confidence on any qpf details, but
    potential will continue for localized heavy rains and isolated
    runoff issues, especially across more vulnerable terrain features
    or burn scars.=20

    ...Northern Plains...
    The low level southerly flow expected to strengthen after 0000 UTC
    Thursday across the Northern Plains ahead of a surface front
    emerging into the Northern Plains. An area of organized convection
    possible ahead of this front, with locally heavy precip totals
    possible. There is a lot of model spread with qpf details at the
    moment, leading to low confidence. The previous marginal risk area
    was decreased in size to better fit the overlap of potentially
    heavy rains with the lower FFG values.

    Oravec



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9JCUqmmdAjz4NxdVqnsXFrWXMQ3UC-yd2xCEZ1NVVhOD= UucSyix26sR5thYTIr5oHh1m2HNihzQbtxUptszx0xj71l8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9JCUqmmdAjz4NxdVqnsXFrWXMQ3UC-yd2xCEZ1NVVhOD= UucSyix26sR5thYTIr5oHh1m2HNihzQbtxUptszxiPZw2FQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9JCUqmmdAjz4NxdVqnsXFrWXMQ3UC-yd2xCEZ1NVVhOD= UucSyix26sR5thYTIr5oHh1m2HNihzQbtxUptszxOi2ajCA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 12 00:45:35 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 120044
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    844 PM EDT Mon Aug 11 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS AND CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    01Z Update: The main changes this forecast were the removal of the
    SLGT risk over the Carolina's, expansion of the SLGT on the western
    and southern edge for the threat in the Southern Plains, and
    maintaining the western periphery of the SLGT risk over the central
    Gulf coast around the FL Panhandle into southern AL.=20

    SLGT risk across the Southern Plains was maintained but expanded on
    the southern and western periphery of the inherited risk. Highest
    confidence across central and southwest OK down through North TX,
    mainly north of I-20. Theta_E analysis is pretty robust within that
    zone and will likely have the benefit of best nocturnal instability
    along with proxy to the front. Hi-res suggesting 2-4" with locally
    upwards of 5" possible in that corridor with extension on guidance
    a little further south in the potential as of the latest runs.
    Northern edge of the SLGT was trimmed back, but still lies along
    and south of I-44 from OKC to Tulsa. Complex of thunderstorms
    across central and northeast OK will slowly decay, but outflow
    progression to the east-southeast will likely cause supplemental
    development downstream over eastern OK over the next several hrs.
    Environment is suitable for those 2-4" maxima in that particular
    zone, enough for the risk to expand a touch eastward, but less of a
    change compared to the aforementioned areas to the west.=20

    SLGT was maintained for a small area along the central Gulf coast
    for prevailing southerlies to keep onshore flow prevalent through
    the overnight with most guidance indicating a weak impulse
    propagating inland after 06z leading to an uptick in convection
    near the coast. Environment is ripe for locally heavy rainfall
    capable of 2-4"/hr at peak intensity, enough to favor some flash
    flood concerns in those urbanized zones along and south of I-10.
    Wanted to cover bases and maintain general continuity with the
    western extent of the previous SLGT risk issuance.

    The previous SLGT over the Carolina's was removed as general
    sat/radar trends favor cold pool dominance leading to decaying
    convective outputs and warming cloud tops on IR. There's still some
    guidance indicating perhaps a few zones could see redevelopment of
    heavy rain this evening with the immediate SC coast near Myrtle
    Beach up through Hatteras potentially seeing enough onshore
    component to bring in another round of heavy convective cores off
    the Atlantic. This signal is scattered amongst the CAMs members=20
    with the HRRR/RRFS combo indicating maybe a cell or two getting=20
    very close to the shore, but not a probable scenario. Unlike the=20
    last few nights, the setup is degrading for the prospect which was=20
    enough to remove the SLGT and just settle with a MRGL risk. The=20
    interior Carolina's will be interesting to watch as a weak mid-=20
    level perturbation currently analyzed over GA swings north and=20
    enters the Piedmont area late overnight. Some guidance wants to=20
    fire more convection in-of Upstate SC into portions of southwest NC
    during the time frame of 06-12z. The consensus isn't all there=20
    with 18z HREF probabilities for >2" lacking much favor for any=20
    higher risk to be implemented. This will likely be more of an=20
    isolated scenario, but hourly trends will be monitored for a short=20
    term upgrade if they materialize more aggressively than currently=20
    shown.=20

    Kept a MRGL for the Midwest with another round of convection moving
    through the area, but forward propagation speeds look solid enough
    to favor a lower profile flash flood concern. Most concerning areas
    were the Quad Cities up into Southern and Southeast WI, but didn't
    see enough of a broad threat to warrant any upgrades. Look for
    locally 1-2" of rainfall in a quick progression with a local max
    ~3" possible, but less likely when assessing neighborhood
    probabilities <10% for the 3" threshold.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS INTO LOWER ELEVATIONS OF NORTH-CENTRAL
    GEORGIA AND WESTERN SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...20z Update...

    A SLGT has been introduced for much of Southern Appalachia, as the
    12z guidance suite has come into remarkably good agreement with a
    strong signal for localized 3"+ totals (per 12z HREF and 06z REFS
    neighborhood exceedance probabilities of 40-60%, co-located with
    rather good agreement in the QPF maxima between the global models).
    Highly anomalous tropospheric moisture (2.0"+ PW, near max moving
    average) is already in place across the region with persistent
    low-level moisture transport over the past 24-hr (with PWs
    increasing by as much as 0.4-0.5" since 18z yesterday across the
    region). While the current environment is weakly forced with little
    shear, this may change rather dramatically tomorrow as two distinct
    synoptic features interact later in the day tomorrow. The first is
    a tropical upper-tropospheric trough (TUTT) cell (mid-upper low
    situated in the sub-tropical easterlies) centered near the FL/GA
    border, and the second is a shortwave trough (increasingly
    positively tilted over time due to cyclonic wave breaking with the
    parent upper-trough lifting northeast near the Great Lakes)
    advancing from the west. While the interaction of these features is
    complex, the occurrence near the terrain of the southern slopes of
    the Appalachians looks to focus convection into this sensitive
    region (with continued southerly advection and forced ascent via
    terrain of very moist air from the south). Trends in the guidance
    will need to be monitored closely for future upgrades, as there is
    potential for sustained locally heavy rainfall for the entire day
    (and particularly so after 00z with the diurnal peak in the low-
    level jet oriented directly into the terrain).

    Elsewhere, forecast remains largely on track. Went ahead and
    combined the MRGLs (over both West TX and the OH/TN Valley) with a
    strong enough signal from the new hi-res guidance to support at
    least low-end probs for excessive rainfall.

    Churchill


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Lower Lakes into the Mid MS Valley and Southern Plains...
    An axis of high PW values, 1.5-1.75"+ will continue along and ahead
    of the elongated frontal zone stretching from the Lower Lakes,
    southwestward into the Mid MS Valley and into the Southern Plains.
    Scattered convection likely in this high PW axis, supporting
    locally heavy precip totals. The previous marginal risk area was
    extended farther southwestward from southern MO, across northwest
    AR, much of OK and into northern TX to cover model qpf spread. Also
    expanded the previous marginal risk area farther northwestward
    into eastern WI and the northern portion of the L.P. of MI to cover
    the model qpf spread for potentially locally heavy rainfall totals
    along the northern portion of the frontal zone across these areas.


    ...Central Gulf Coast into the Carolinas...
    The axis of high PW values stretching from the Central Gulf Coast
    into the Carolinas on day 1 will persist across these regions day
    2. Shortwave energy embedded in this high PW axis will continue to
    support potential for additional heavy rains day 2. The previous
    marginal risk area was extended east northeastward from northern
    GA/Upstate of SC/far western NC to cover much of the remainder of
    NC and SC where several models show heavy rain potential.

    ...Southwest...
    No changes made to the previous marginal risk area from southeast
    AZ into much of NM. Weak shortwaves progged to rotate around the
    mid to upper level ridge building eastward into the Great Basin day
    2, enhancing large scale uvvs in an axis of seasonable PW values.
    Scattered convection across this area will support potential for
    localized heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues,
    especially across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF
    THE EASTERN AND SOUTHERN UNITED STATES, AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND SOUTHWEST...

    ...20z Update...

    Little change in the overall forecast and below reasoning. Either
    maintained or expanded the MRGL risks based on the new guidance
    (with the most significant expansion across the Southern and
    Eastern CONUS). Uncertainty in the forecast is higher than usual,
    as global models are not giving any particularly strong signals at
    this range (despite what will likely eventually need some targeted
    upgrades from mesoscale details, given the prevalence of anomalous
    moisture).


    Churchill


    ...Previous Discussion...

    Similar to the day 2 period, an axis of high PW values will
    continue to stretch from the Central Gulf coast, east northeastward
    into the Southeast and Southern Mid Atlantic. Widespread scattered
    convection likely in this anomalous PW axis, values 1.5-2 standard
    deviations above the mean. Mid to upper level dynamics will have
    weakened by day 3, with less defined areas of upper diffluence to
    accentuate lift in this high PW axis. Still, model consensus is for
    continued potential for continued locally heavy rains across these
    areas. A marginal risk was added for the upper coast of SC and the
    lower coast of NC where models do show potential for additional
    locally heavy rains day 3.

    ...Lower Lakes/Northeast into the OH/TN Valley, Central to
    Southern Appalachians...
    An axis of high PW values, 1.5-1.75"+ also likely to continue
    along the elongated frontal zone pushing eastward through the Lower
    Lakes into NY State and northern New England and stretching
    southwestward into the OH/TN Valley regions and Central to Southern Appalachians. Widespread scattered convection likely along this
    front in this high PW axis, supporting locally heavy rains and
    isolated runoff issues. No changes made to the previous marginal
    risk area along and ahead of this front.

    ...Southwest...
    No significant changes to the overall flow pattern for the
    Southwest day 3. Additional weak vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high will support another round of
    scattered convection. Low confidence on any qpf details, but
    potential will continue for localized heavy rains and isolated
    runoff issues, especially across more vulnerable terrain features
    or burn scars.

    ...Northern Plains...
    The low level southerly flow expected to strengthen after 0000 UTC
    Thursday across the Northern Plains ahead of a surface front
    emerging into the Northern Plains. An area of organized convection
    possible ahead of this front, with locally heavy precip totals
    possible. There is a lot of model spread with qpf details at the
    moment, leading to low confidence. The previous marginal risk area
    was decreased in size to better fit the overlap of potentially
    heavy rains with the lower FFG values.

    Oravec



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!57BRGmO_1o6pfR4UC9rnFS0EZ3KQAYC0dPTS1r2PVftP= tIa1uM2ja59-JY15FmOKqIocWsg6tfDj-xnBxS506Bvw_Ls$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!57BRGmO_1o6pfR4UC9rnFS0EZ3KQAYC0dPTS1r2PVftP= tIa1uM2ja59-JY15FmOKqIocWsg6tfDj-xnBxS50oTDu9UY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!57BRGmO_1o6pfR4UC9rnFS0EZ3KQAYC0dPTS1r2PVftP= tIa1uM2ja59-JY15FmOKqIocWsg6tfDj-xnBxS50hQZAWGI$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 12 08:29:19 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 120828
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    428 AM EDT Tue Aug 12 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...
    There continues to be a strong model signal for heavy rains in the
    vicinity of the Southern Appalachians day 1. PW values remain well
    above average from the Central Gulf coast, northeastward into the=20
    Southern Appalachians and then eastward through the Carolinas and=20
    Southern Mid-Atlantic. Convection will be enhanced through this=20
    anomalous PW axis by a stream of mid to upper level vorts forecasts
    to rotate across this region, around the peripheries of a weak mid
    to upper level ridge centered just off the northeast Florida=20
    coast. While locally heavy rains are possible anywhere in this high
    PW axis, one strong model signal is across the Southern=20
    Appalachians where moist upslope flow and enhanced uvvs from the
    embedded vorts will support heavy precip. The slight risk area was
    not changed much from the previous issuance and fits well with the
    latest axis of high neighborhood probabilities from the HREF and=20
    RRFS mean for 2"+ amounts. The RRFS mean has a more defined 3"+=20
    high probabilities than the HREF, but both mean still emphasize the
    area in the vicinity of the Southern Appalachians for heavy rains
    day 1.


    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    A slight risk was continued along portions of the Central Gulf
    Coast from in the vicinity of Pensacola, west to New Orleans.
    Consensus from the latest hi res guidance is for the potential for
    two periods of heavy rains affecting the immediate coastal region
    in association with the mid level vorts rotating north
    northeastward off the Gulf. HREF probabilities for .50 to 1"+=20
    amounts begin to increase prior to 1200 UTC Tuesday and continue to
    be high until 1500 UTC across the Central Gulf coast. A second=20
    period of high hourly HREF probabilities for .50-1"+ then occurs=20
    again in the early hours of Wednesday, beginning around 0600 UTC
    and continuing to just after 1200 UTC. Isolated runoff issues
    possible from each heavy precip max period, especially in more
    urbanized regions.

    ...Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, Mid Mississippi Valley into the
    Southern Plains...
    A broad marginal risk area was maintained across a large region
    from the Great Lakes, south and southwestward into the OH Valley,
    Mid MS Valley and Southern Plains. PW values will remain high
    across these regions, 1.5 to 2"+, with the latest suite of models
    showing at least localized heavy rain potential in this high PW
    axis. While HREF and RRFS neighborhood probabilities for 1"+ totals
    are high across these areas, the probabilities do drop=20
    significantly for higher totals. The HREF EAS probabilities for 1"+
    are low across much of this region, depicting poor overlap with=20
    the hi res heavy rain areas. One exception is over northeast IL
    into far northern IN and southwest L.P. of MI where EAS 1"+
    probabilities are as high as 25-30%, showing better hi res heavy
    rain overlap. The higher EAS probabilities are to the southeast of
    where the heaviest rains have occurred recently. This and the
    expected progressive nature of the convection, supports keeping=20
    the risk level as marginal.=20

    ...Southwest...
    No changes made to the previous marginal risk area from southeast
    AZ into much of NM. Weak shortwaves progged to rotate around the
    mid to upper level ridge building eastward into the Great Basin day
    1, enhancing large scale uvvs in an axis of seasonable PW values.=20
    Scattered convection across this area will support potential for=20
    localized heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues,=20
    especially across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF
    THE EASTERN AND SOUTHERN UNITED STATES, AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND SOUTHWEST...

    No changes of note made to the very broad marginal risk area day 2
    stretching northeastward from the Central Gulf coast, into the
    TN/OH Valleys, Southern to Central Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic into
    NY State and northern New England. A broad axis of above average PW
    values, 1.5 to 2+ standard deviations above the mean will stretch
    along and ahead of the primary surface front moving west to east
    across the northern tier from the Lower Lakes/OH Valley region,
    east into the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast. The above average PW values
    across the Gulf coast into the Southeast/Southern Mid-Atlantic
    during day 1, will also continue into day 2. There is general
    agreement in the models for the potential for widespread scattered
    convection in this high PW axis, with areal average moderate totals
    depicted and likelihood of locally heavy totals. Confidence is low
    with respect to where the heavier, more concentrated convection may
    be. Subsequently, we have not changed the risk level from previous
    issuances, maintaining it at marginal for the time being.

    A few areas of concern for potential higher threat level day 2 in
    subsequent issuances.

    Southern Appalachians: Early morning heavy rains late day 1 across
    the Southern Appalachians may linger into the post 1200 UTC
    Wednesday period across eastern TN/western NC. The HREF 12 hour=20
    neighborhood probabilities ending 0000 UTC Thu Aug 14 are high for=20
    1 and 2"+ amounts.

    Mid-Atlantic: Convection likely to begin to become more organized
    ahead of the above mentioned frontal boundary pushing eastward.
    HREF 12 hour neighborhood probabilities ending 0000 UTC Thu Aug 14
    are high for 1 and 2"+ amounts from northern VA, northward across
    much of PA into the Southern Tier of NY State.=20

    Central Gulf Coast: HREF hourly precip probabilities for .50-1"+
    amounts remain high early day 2 from the expected second round of
    heavy rains to affect the Central Gulf coastal region during the
    day 1 period, that may extend into the day 2 period.

    ...Northern Plains...
    There continues to be a lot of model spread day 2 with potential
    convective development ahead of the next front pushing into the
    Northern High Plains 0000-1200 UTC Thursday. The low level=20
    southerly flow expected to strengthen after 0000 UTC Thursday=20
    across the Northern Plains ahead this front, supporting increasing
    convective potential. Several of the global models do show
    potential for heavy amounts late day 2, but continue to show large
    amounts of spread with respect to placement, leading to continued
    low confidence. Given this, the risk level was maintained at
    marginal.

    ...Southwest...
    No significant changes to the overall flow pattern for the
    Southwest day 2. Additional weak vorts rotating around the Great=20 Basin/Southwest mid to upper high will support another round of=20
    scattered convection. Low confidence on any qpf details, but=20
    potential will continue for localized heavy rains and isolated=20
    runoff issues, especially across more vulnerable terrain features=20
    or burn scars.



    Day 3=20
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, TENNESSEE VALLEY, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS INTO=20
    THE SOUTHEAST AND ACROSS THE SOUTHWEST AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    ...Southeastern portion of the CONUS...
    The cold front moving across the northeast tier of the CONUS day 2
    will keep the axis of above average PW values, 1.5 to 2+ standard
    deviations above the mean, concentrated across the southeast
    quarter of the CONUS from the Lower MS Valley, east across the TN
    Valley, Southern Appalachians and into the Southeast. There is
    general model consensus for widespread scattered convection across
    these areas day 3, with locally heavy rains likely where convection
    becomes more organized. Large scale uvvs will continue to be
    enhanced by shortwaves rotating around the mid to upper level ridge
    that is expected to build westward day 3 across North Florida into
    the northeast Gulf. Models are showing a lot of spread with qpf
    details day 3, keeping the risk level, at the moment to marginal
    across these areas.

    =20
    ...Southwest...
    Similar to the day 2 period, no significant changes to the overall
    flow pattern for the Southwest expected on day 3. Additional weak=20
    vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high=20
    will support another round of scattered convection. Low confidence=20
    on any qpf details, but potential will continue for localized heavy
    rains and isolated runoff issues, especially across more=20
    vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    The frontal boundary moving into the Northern Plains day 2 will
    continue to push eastward into the Upper MS Valley day 3. There may
    be two rounds of precip affecting this area day 3. An initial=20
    surge of warm advection rains early day 3, followed by potential=20
    frontal convection late day 3. Continued low confidence in any qpf=20
    details at this range, warranting only a marginal risk.=20


    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-J5ObTB3WtTZzjhB_AjrjLtEXqWftLt25pst0hswMMzS= dNjwRYwO9vP1x9ut5lJJKi_qGOLgbajn42CvvxL2calhA9k$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-J5ObTB3WtTZzjhB_AjrjLtEXqWftLt25pst0hswMMzS= dNjwRYwO9vP1x9ut5lJJKi_qGOLgbajn42CvvxL21Z1v9lc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-J5ObTB3WtTZzjhB_AjrjLtEXqWftLt25pst0hswMMzS= dNjwRYwO9vP1x9ut5lJJKi_qGOLgbajn42CvvxL2VKu85Qw$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 12 15:58:01 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 121557
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1157 AM EDT Tue Aug 12 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    16Z Update...
    Few changes needed to on-going Excessive Rainfall Outlook. Trends
    seen in satellite and radar imagery still fit the global and
    ensemble guidance in most places. Did make a minor expansion to the
    Slight Risk area in the western Carolinas and tweaked the position
    of the Marginal Risk area in the Great Lakes to account for the
    latest ensembles/CAMs.

    Bann

    ...Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...
    There continues to be a strong model signal for heavy rains in the
    vicinity of the Southern Appalachians day 1. PW values remain well
    above average from the Central Gulf coast, northeastward into the
    Southern Appalachians and then eastward through the Carolinas and
    Southern Mid-Atlantic. Convection will be enhanced through this
    anomalous PW axis by a stream of mid to upper level vorts forecasts
    to rotate across this region, around the peripheries of a weak mid
    to upper level ridge centered just off the northeast Florida
    coast. While locally heavy rains are possible anywhere in this high
    PW axis, one strong model signal is across the Southern
    Appalachians where moist upslope flow and enhanced uvvs from the
    embedded vorts will support heavy precip. The slight risk area was
    not changed much from the previous issuance and fits well with the
    latest axis of high neighborhood probabilities from the HREF and
    RRFS mean for 2"+ amounts. The RRFS mean has a more defined 3"+
    high probabilities than the HREF, but both mean still emphasize the
    area in the vicinity of the Southern Appalachians for heavy rains
    day 1.


    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    A slight risk was continued along portions of the Central Gulf
    Coast from in the vicinity of Pensacola, west to New Orleans.
    Consensus from the latest hi res guidance is for the potential for
    two periods of heavy rains affecting the immediate coastal region
    in association with the mid level vorts rotating north
    northeastward off the Gulf. HREF probabilities for .50 to 1"+
    amounts begin to increase prior to 1200 UTC Tuesday and continue to
    be high until 1500 UTC across the Central Gulf coast. A second
    period of high hourly HREF probabilities for .50-1"+ then occurs
    again in the early hours of Wednesday, beginning around 0600 UTC
    and continuing to just after 1200 UTC. Isolated runoff issues
    possible from each heavy precip max period, especially in more
    urbanized regions.

    ...Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, Mid Mississippi Valley into the
    Southern Plains...
    A broad marginal risk area was maintained across a large region
    from the Great Lakes, south and southwestward into the OH Valley,
    Mid MS Valley and Southern Plains. PW values will remain high
    across these regions, 1.5 to 2"+, with the latest suite of models
    showing at least localized heavy rain potential in this high PW
    axis. While HREF and RRFS neighborhood probabilities for 1"+ totals
    are high across these areas, the probabilities do drop
    significantly for higher totals. The HREF EAS probabilities for 1"+
    are low across much of this region, depicting poor overlap with
    the hi res heavy rain areas. One exception is over northeast IL
    into far northern IN and southwest L.P. of MI where EAS 1"+
    probabilities are as high as 25-30%, showing better hi res heavy
    rain overlap. The higher EAS probabilities are to the southeast of
    where the heaviest rains have occurred recently. This and the
    expected progressive nature of the convection, supports keeping
    the risk level as marginal.

    ...Southwest...
    No changes made to the previous marginal risk area from southeast
    AZ into much of NM. Weak shortwaves progged to rotate around the
    mid to upper level ridge building eastward into the Great Basin day
    1, enhancing large scale uvvs in an axis of seasonable PW values.
    Scattered convection across this area will support potential for
    localized heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues,
    especially across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF
    THE EASTERN AND SOUTHERN UNITED STATES, AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND SOUTHWEST...

    No changes of note made to the very broad marginal risk area day 2
    stretching northeastward from the Central Gulf coast, into the
    TN/OH Valleys, Southern to Central Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic into
    NY State and northern New England. A broad axis of above average PW
    values, 1.5 to 2+ standard deviations above the mean will stretch
    along and ahead of the primary surface front moving west to east
    across the northern tier from the Lower Lakes/OH Valley region,
    east into the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast. The above average PW values
    across the Gulf coast into the Southeast/Southern Mid-Atlantic
    during day 1, will also continue into day 2. There is general
    agreement in the models for the potential for widespread scattered
    convection in this high PW axis, with areal average moderate totals
    depicted and likelihood of locally heavy totals. Confidence is low
    with respect to where the heavier, more concentrated convection may
    be. Subsequently, we have not changed the risk level from previous
    issuances, maintaining it at marginal for the time being.

    A few areas of concern for potential higher threat level day 2 in
    subsequent issuances.

    Southern Appalachians: Early morning heavy rains late day 1 across
    the Southern Appalachians may linger into the post 1200 UTC
    Wednesday period across eastern TN/western NC. The HREF 12 hour
    neighborhood probabilities ending 0000 UTC Thu Aug 14 are high for
    1 and 2"+ amounts.

    Mid-Atlantic: Convection likely to begin to become more organized
    ahead of the above mentioned frontal boundary pushing eastward.
    HREF 12 hour neighborhood probabilities ending 0000 UTC Thu Aug 14
    are high for 1 and 2"+ amounts from northern VA, northward across
    much of PA into the Southern Tier of NY State.

    Central Gulf Coast: HREF hourly precip probabilities for .50-1"+
    amounts remain high early day 2 from the expected second round of
    heavy rains to affect the Central Gulf coastal region during the
    day 1 period, that may extend into the day 2 period.

    ...Northern Plains...
    There continues to be a lot of model spread day 2 with potential
    convective development ahead of the next front pushing into the
    Northern High Plains 0000-1200 UTC Thursday. The low level
    southerly flow expected to strengthen after 0000 UTC Thursday
    across the Northern Plains ahead this front, supporting increasing
    convective potential. Several of the global models do show
    potential for heavy amounts late day 2, but continue to show large
    amounts of spread with respect to placement, leading to continued
    low confidence. Given this, the risk level was maintained at
    marginal.

    ...Southwest...
    No significant changes to the overall flow pattern for the
    Southwest day 2. Additional weak vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high will support another round of
    scattered convection. Low confidence on any qpf details, but
    potential will continue for localized heavy rains and isolated
    runoff issues, especially across more vulnerable terrain features
    or burn scars.



    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, TENNESSEE VALLEY, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS INTO
    THE SOUTHEAST AND ACROSS THE SOUTHWEST AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    ...Southeastern portion of the CONUS...
    The cold front moving across the northeast tier of the CONUS day 2
    will keep the axis of above average PW values, 1.5 to 2+ standard
    deviations above the mean, concentrated across the southeast
    quarter of the CONUS from the Lower MS Valley, east across the TN
    Valley, Southern Appalachians and into the Southeast. There is
    general model consensus for widespread scattered convection across
    these areas day 3, with locally heavy rains likely where convection
    becomes more organized. Large scale uvvs will continue to be
    enhanced by shortwaves rotating around the mid to upper level ridge
    that is expected to build westward day 3 across North Florida into
    the northeast Gulf. Models are showing a lot of spread with qpf
    details day 3, keeping the risk level, at the moment to marginal
    across these areas.


    ...Southwest...
    Similar to the day 2 period, no significant changes to the overall
    flow pattern for the Southwest expected on day 3. Additional weak
    vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high
    will support another round of scattered convection. Low confidence
    on any qpf details, but potential will continue for localized heavy
    rains and isolated runoff issues, especially across more
    vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    The frontal boundary moving into the Northern Plains day 2 will
    continue to push eastward into the Upper MS Valley day 3. There may
    be two rounds of precip affecting this area day 3. An initial
    surge of warm advection rains early day 3, followed by potential
    frontal convection late day 3. Continued low confidence in any qpf
    details at this range, warranting only a marginal risk.


    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ebEaQnWEwRj2MWgJpFhlfeodWTx_7WCvfDKYXtqOGOc= nmseywEFjCpEVCvelDZ9TDG-qUF7bYvrTfz5TSFj7qohQs8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ebEaQnWEwRj2MWgJpFhlfeodWTx_7WCvfDKYXtqOGOc= nmseywEFjCpEVCvelDZ9TDG-qUF7bYvrTfz5TSFjrV-m5Gk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ebEaQnWEwRj2MWgJpFhlfeodWTx_7WCvfDKYXtqOGOc= nmseywEFjCpEVCvelDZ9TDG-qUF7bYvrTfz5TSFjRGZe6T8$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 12 20:25:11 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 122024
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    424 PM EDT Tue Aug 12 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Aug 12 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    16Z Update...
    Few changes needed to on-going Excessive Rainfall Outlook. Trends
    seen in satellite and radar imagery still fit the global and
    ensemble guidance in most places. Did make a minor expansion to the
    Slight Risk area in the western Carolinas and tweaked the position
    of the Marginal Risk area in the Great Lakes to account for the
    latest ensembles/CAMs.

    Bann

    ...Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...
    There continues to be a strong model signal for heavy rains in the
    vicinity of the Southern Appalachians day 1. PW values remain well
    above average from the Central Gulf coast, northeastward into the
    Southern Appalachians and then eastward through the Carolinas and
    Southern Mid-Atlantic. Convection will be enhanced through this
    anomalous PW axis by a stream of mid to upper level vorts forecasts
    to rotate across this region, around the peripheries of a weak mid
    to upper level ridge centered just off the northeast Florida
    coast. While locally heavy rains are possible anywhere in this high
    PW axis, one strong model signal is across the Southern
    Appalachians where moist upslope flow and enhanced uvvs from the
    embedded vorts will support heavy precip. The slight risk area was
    not changed much from the previous issuance and fits well with the
    latest axis of high neighborhood probabilities from the HREF and
    RRFS mean for 2"+ amounts. The RRFS mean has a more defined 3"+
    high probabilities than the HREF, but both mean still emphasize the
    area in the vicinity of the Southern Appalachians for heavy rains
    day 1.


    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    A slight risk was continued along portions of the Central Gulf
    Coast from in the vicinity of Pensacola, west to New Orleans.
    Consensus from the latest hi res guidance is for the potential for
    two periods of heavy rains affecting the immediate coastal region
    in association with the mid level vorts rotating north
    northeastward off the Gulf. HREF probabilities for .50 to 1"+
    amounts begin to increase prior to 1200 UTC Tuesday and continue to
    be high until 1500 UTC across the Central Gulf coast. A second
    period of high hourly HREF probabilities for .50-1"+ then occurs
    again in the early hours of Wednesday, beginning around 0600 UTC
    and continuing to just after 1200 UTC. Isolated runoff issues
    possible from each heavy precip max period, especially in more
    urbanized regions.

    ...Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, Mid Mississippi Valley into the
    Southern Plains...
    A broad marginal risk area was maintained across a large region
    from the Great Lakes, south and southwestward into the OH Valley,
    Mid MS Valley and Southern Plains. PW values will remain high
    across these regions, 1.5 to 2"+, with the latest suite of models
    showing at least localized heavy rain potential in this high PW
    axis. While HREF and RRFS neighborhood probabilities for 1"+ totals
    are high across these areas, the probabilities do drop
    significantly for higher totals. The HREF EAS probabilities for 1"+
    are low across much of this region, depicting poor overlap with
    the hi res heavy rain areas. One exception is over northeast IL
    into far northern IN and southwest L.P. of MI where EAS 1"+
    probabilities are as high as 25-30%, showing better hi res heavy
    rain overlap. The higher EAS probabilities are to the southeast of
    where the heaviest rains have occurred recently. This and the
    expected progressive nature of the convection, supports keeping
    the risk level as marginal.

    ...Southwest...
    No changes made to the previous marginal risk area from southeast
    AZ into much of NM. Weak shortwaves progged to rotate around the
    mid to upper level ridge building eastward into the Great Basin day
    1, enhancing large scale uvvs in an axis of seasonable PW values.
    Scattered convection across this area will support potential for
    localized heavy rainfall amounts and isolated runoff issues,
    especially across more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF
    THE EASTERN AND SOUTHERN UNITED STATES, AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND SOUTHWEST...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Introduced a Slight Risk across portions of the Appalachians where
    the latest HREF guidance depicted an increasing chance of 1- and
    2-hour inch per hour rainfall accumulation probabilities as well as
    a signal for the probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood=20
    guidance. Model deterministic guidance was generally light with
    little run-to-run agreement and a fairly large spread in the
    placement of the QPF. Given the anomalous amount of moisture in
    place and the best forcing remaining west of the mountains through
    most of the day...hoisted a Slight Risk area that is largely an
    extension of the Day 1 Slight Risk area. No change of the outlook
    or the forecast reasoning in the Upper Midwest or Southwest US.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    No changes of note made to the very broad marginal risk area day 2
    stretching northeastward from the Central Gulf coast, into the
    TN/OH Valleys, Southern to Central Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic into
    NY State and northern New England. A broad axis of above average PW
    values, 1.5 to 2+ standard deviations above the mean will stretch
    along and ahead of the primary surface front moving west to east
    across the northern tier from the Lower Lakes/OH Valley region,
    east into the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast. The above average PW values
    across the Gulf coast into the Southeast/Southern Mid-Atlantic
    during day 1, will also continue into day 2. There is general
    agreement in the models for the potential for widespread scattered
    convection in this high PW axis, with areal average moderate totals
    depicted and likelihood of locally heavy totals. Confidence is low
    with respect to where the heavier, more concentrated convection may
    be. Subsequently, we have not changed the risk level from previous
    issuances, maintaining it at marginal for the time being.

    A few areas of concern for potential higher threat level day 2 in
    subsequent issuances.

    Southern Appalachians: Early morning heavy rains late day 1 across
    the Southern Appalachians may linger into the post 1200 UTC
    Wednesday period across eastern TN/western NC. The HREF 12 hour
    neighborhood probabilities ending 0000 UTC Thu Aug 14 are high for
    1 and 2"+ amounts.

    Mid-Atlantic: Convection likely to begin to become more organized
    ahead of the above mentioned frontal boundary pushing eastward.
    HREF 12 hour neighborhood probabilities ending 0000 UTC Thu Aug 14
    are high for 1 and 2"+ amounts from northern VA, northward across
    much of PA into the Southern Tier of NY State.

    Central Gulf Coast: HREF hourly precip probabilities for .50-1"+
    amounts remain high early day 2 from the expected second round of
    heavy rains to affect the Central Gulf coastal region during the
    day 1 period, that may extend into the day 2 period.

    ...Northern Plains...
    There continues to be a lot of model spread day 2 with potential
    convective development ahead of the next front pushing into the
    Northern High Plains 0000-1200 UTC Thursday. The low level
    southerly flow expected to strengthen after 0000 UTC Thursday
    across the Northern Plains ahead this front, supporting increasing
    convective potential. Several of the global models do show
    potential for heavy amounts late day 2, but continue to show large
    amounts of spread with respect to placement, leading to continued
    low confidence. Given this, the risk level was maintained at
    marginal.

    ...Southwest...
    No significant changes to the overall flow pattern for the
    Southwest day 2. Additional weak vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high will support another round of
    scattered convection. Low confidence on any qpf details, but
    potential will continue for localized heavy rains and isolated
    runoff issues, especially across more vulnerable terrain features
    or burn scars.



    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, TENNESSEE VALLEY, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS INTO
    THE SOUTHEAST AND ACROSS THE SOUTHWEST AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    The on-going outlook remained in good shape...resulting in only a
    few subtle modifications. The forecast reasoning changed little.


    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...Southeastern portion of the CONUS...
    The cold front moving across the northeast tier of the CONUS day 2
    will keep the axis of above average PW values, 1.5 to 2+ standard
    deviations above the mean, concentrated across the southeast
    quarter of the CONUS from the Lower MS Valley, east across the TN
    Valley, Southern Appalachians and into the Southeast. There is
    general model consensus for widespread scattered convection across
    these areas day 3, with locally heavy rains likely where convection
    becomes more organized. Large scale uvvs will continue to be
    enhanced by shortwaves rotating around the mid to upper level ridge
    that is expected to build westward day 3 across North Florida into
    the northeast Gulf. Models are showing a lot of spread with qpf
    details day 3, keeping the risk level, at the moment to marginal
    across these areas.


    ...Southwest...
    Similar to the day 2 period, no significant changes to the overall
    flow pattern for the Southwest expected on day 3. Additional weak
    vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high
    will support another round of scattered convection. Low confidence
    on any qpf details, but potential will continue for localized heavy
    rains and isolated runoff issues, especially across more
    vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    The frontal boundary moving into the Northern Plains day 2 will
    continue to push eastward into the Upper MS Valley day 3. There may
    be two rounds of precip affecting this area day 3. An initial
    surge of warm advection rains early day 3, followed by potential
    frontal convection late day 3. Continued low confidence in any qpf
    details at this range, warranting only a marginal risk.


    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6fHMe0ZdwYuYW5UVeCcTlZi7KcskJ7ddn5pCY8gimEr4= aVsLoHzSo7kXB-g10epDBjtp0p0ii0U6OwNCcCZ_D6AMhHQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6fHMe0ZdwYuYW5UVeCcTlZi7KcskJ7ddn5pCY8gimEr4= aVsLoHzSo7kXB-g10epDBjtp0p0ii0U6OwNCcCZ_IMeAUDQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6fHMe0ZdwYuYW5UVeCcTlZi7KcskJ7ddn5pCY8gimEr4= aVsLoHzSo7kXB-g10epDBjtp0p0ii0U6OwNCcCZ_sNdVWfQ$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 13 00:40:06 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 130039
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    839 PM EDT Tue Aug 12 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...


    ...SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...
    Ongoing heavy rainfall in the Southern Appalachians is expected to
    shift northward with time through the Cumberland Plateau. PW=20
    values remain sufficient for heavy rain concerns. Convection will=20
    be enhanced through this anomalous PW axis by a stream of mid to=20
    upper level vorts forecasts to rotate across this region, around=20
    the peripheries of a weak mid to upper level ridge centered just=20
    off the northeast Florida coast. Unlike early this morning, the
    18z HREF is more aggressive on the risk in the Southern
    Appalachians than the 12z REFS guidance. Hourly amounts to 2.5"
    remain possible overnight within the Slight Risk.


    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    A slight risk was continued along portions of the Central Gulf
    Coast from from southernmost AL through southernmost MS and
    southeast LA. Consensus from the latest hi res guidance is for the
    potential for an overnight period of heavy rain affecting the=20
    immediate coastal region in association with with disturbed weather
    in the northern Gulf, mainly after 0600 UTC and continuing to just
    after 1200 UTC. Isolated runoff issues possible, especially in=20
    more urbanized regions.


    ...Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, Mid Mississippi Valley into the
    Southern Plains...
    A broad marginal risk area was maintained across a large region
    from the Great Lakes, south and southwestward into the OH Valley,
    Mid MS Valley and Southern Plains. PW values will remain high
    across these regions, 1.5 to 2"+, with the latest suite of models
    showing at least localized heavy rain potential in this high PW
    axis into the overnight hours. Any lingering issues would be
    isolated, hence the maintenance of a Marginal Risk.


    ...Southwest...=20
    Widely scattered to scattered convection across this area will=20
    support potential for localized heavy rainfall amounts with=20
    isolated runoff issues which should minimize towards midnight local
    time, especially across more vulnerable terrain features, dry=20 washes/arroyos, or burn scars.

    Roth


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF
    THE EASTERN AND SOUTHERN UNITED STATES, AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND SOUTHWEST...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Introduced a Slight Risk across portions of the Appalachians where
    the latest HREF guidance depicted an increasing chance of 1- and
    2-hour inch per hour rainfall accumulation probabilities as well as
    a signal for the probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood
    guidance. Model deterministic guidance was generally light with
    little run-to-run agreement and a fairly large spread in the
    placement of the QPF. Given the anomalous amount of moisture in
    place and the best forcing remaining west of the mountains through
    most of the day...hoisted a Slight Risk area that is largely an
    extension of the Day 1 Slight Risk area. No change of the outlook
    or the forecast reasoning in the Upper Midwest or Southwest US.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    No changes of note made to the very broad marginal risk area day 2
    stretching northeastward from the Central Gulf coast, into the
    TN/OH Valleys, Southern to Central Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic into
    NY State and northern New England. A broad axis of above average PW
    values, 1.5 to 2+ standard deviations above the mean will stretch
    along and ahead of the primary surface front moving west to east
    across the northern tier from the Lower Lakes/OH Valley region,
    east into the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast. The above average PW values
    across the Gulf coast into the Southeast/Southern Mid-Atlantic
    during day 1, will also continue into day 2. There is general
    agreement in the models for the potential for widespread scattered
    convection in this high PW axis, with areal average moderate totals
    depicted and likelihood of locally heavy totals. Confidence is low
    with respect to where the heavier, more concentrated convection may
    be. Subsequently, we have not changed the risk level from previous
    issuances, maintaining it at marginal for the time being.

    A few areas of concern for potential higher threat level day 2 in
    subsequent issuances.

    Southern Appalachians: Early morning heavy rains late day 1 across
    the Southern Appalachians may linger into the post 1200 UTC
    Wednesday period across eastern TN/western NC. The HREF 12 hour
    neighborhood probabilities ending 0000 UTC Thu Aug 14 are high for
    1 and 2"+ amounts.

    Mid-Atlantic: Convection likely to begin to become more organized
    ahead of the above mentioned frontal boundary pushing eastward.
    HREF 12 hour neighborhood probabilities ending 0000 UTC Thu Aug 14
    are high for 1 and 2"+ amounts from northern VA, northward across
    much of PA into the Southern Tier of NY State.

    Central Gulf Coast: HREF hourly precip probabilities for .50-1"+
    amounts remain high early day 2 from the expected second round of
    heavy rains to affect the Central Gulf coastal region during the
    day 1 period, that may extend into the day 2 period.

    ...Northern Plains...
    There continues to be a lot of model spread day 2 with potential
    convective development ahead of the next front pushing into the
    Northern High Plains 0000-1200 UTC Thursday. The low level
    southerly flow expected to strengthen after 0000 UTC Thursday
    across the Northern Plains ahead this front, supporting increasing
    convective potential. Several of the global models do show
    potential for heavy amounts late day 2, but continue to show large
    amounts of spread with respect to placement, leading to continued
    low confidence. Given this, the risk level was maintained at
    marginal.

    ...Southwest...
    No significant changes to the overall flow pattern for the
    Southwest day 2. Additional weak vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high will support another round of
    scattered convection. Low confidence on any qpf details, but
    potential will continue for localized heavy rains and isolated
    runoff issues, especially across more vulnerable terrain features
    or burn scars.



    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, TENNESSEE VALLEY, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS INTO
    THE SOUTHEAST AND ACROSS THE SOUTHWEST AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    The on-going outlook remained in good shape...resulting in only a
    few subtle modifications. The forecast reasoning changed little.


    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...Southeastern portion of the CONUS...
    The cold front moving across the northeast tier of the CONUS day 2
    will keep the axis of above average PW values, 1.5 to 2+ standard
    deviations above the mean, concentrated across the southeast
    quarter of the CONUS from the Lower MS Valley, east across the TN
    Valley, Southern Appalachians and into the Southeast. There is
    general model consensus for widespread scattered convection across
    these areas day 3, with locally heavy rains likely where convection
    becomes more organized. Large scale uvvs will continue to be
    enhanced by shortwaves rotating around the mid to upper level ridge
    that is expected to build westward day 3 across North Florida into
    the northeast Gulf. Models are showing a lot of spread with qpf
    details day 3, keeping the risk level, at the moment to marginal
    across these areas.


    ...Southwest...
    Similar to the day 2 period, no significant changes to the overall
    flow pattern for the Southwest expected on day 3. Additional weak
    vorts rotating around the Great Basin/Southwest mid to upper high
    will support another round of scattered convection. Low confidence
    on any qpf details, but potential will continue for localized heavy
    rains and isolated runoff issues, especially across more
    vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    The frontal boundary moving into the Northern Plains day 2 will
    continue to push eastward into the Upper MS Valley day 3. There may
    be two rounds of precip affecting this area day 3. An initial
    surge of warm advection rains early day 3, followed by potential
    frontal convection late day 3. Continued low confidence in any qpf
    details at this range, warranting only a marginal risk.


    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_-9XVTBLCLDxOL42-KrGh2jA-8_sTD4cNJk1570XqNRn= ywfCDAXT1Rw6nmRS2HUlp-EYq8xc1IouSwN5G7AMsaL66wE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_-9XVTBLCLDxOL42-KrGh2jA-8_sTD4cNJk1570XqNRn= ywfCDAXT1Rw6nmRS2HUlp-EYq8xc1IouSwN5G7AMhSYXySc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_-9XVTBLCLDxOL42-KrGh2jA-8_sTD4cNJk1570XqNRn= ywfCDAXT1Rw6nmRS2HUlp-EYq8xc1IouSwN5G7AMZ1kLWZ4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 13 08:28:59 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 130828
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    428 AM EDT Wed Aug 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

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


    ...Southern Appalachians...

    A cold front over the Great Lakes to mid-Mississippi Valley early
    Wednesday morning is forecast to advance southeastward into New=20
    York, the central Appalachians and western Kentucky/Tennessee by
    Thursday morning. High moisture with precipitable water (PW)
    anomalies of 1 to 2+ are forecast to extend ahead of the cold front
    from central Texas to western New England and much of the East=20
    Coast. Across the southern Appalachians, there may be an early=20
    round of locally heavy rainfall early Wednesday, related to
    lingering nocturnal convection. The greater concern will be later
    today with peak afternoon heating and scattered coverage of
    thunderstorms, ahead of a synoptic scale mid-level trough axis
    approaching from the northwest and a low to mid- level impulse=20
    tracking around a ridge offshore of the Southeast, with some
    locally enhanced southerly flow into the Appalachians. 00Z HREF and
    18Z REFS neighborhood probabilities of exceeding flash flood
    guidance (FFG) were a bit higher here than other areas of the U.S.
    with potential for some 2-4 inch totals (locally higher) through=20
    Thursday morning.=20

    ...Remainder of Eastern U.S. into Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Confluent and locally stronger 925-850 mb winds of 20-30 kt are=20
    expected across Virginia/North Carolina as the region sits between=20
    ridging to the south and troughing to the north today. There will=20
    be some enhanced potential for training and backbuilding cells in=20
    the west to east flow, coupled with PWs over 2 inches, supporting=20
    potential for a few 3 to 5 inch totals.

    Back toward Texas and much of the Lower Mississippi Valley, high=20
    PWs and slow storm motions could support some widely scattered=20
    instances of flash flooding during peak heating, with dissipation
    into the overnight.

    ...Northern Plains...
    A few thunderstorms will be possible over South Dakota in the=20
    first 6 to 9 hours of the period, ahead of an advancing mid-level=20
    impulse tracking eastward from southeastern Montana. Nocturnal
    strengthening of the low level jet is expected overnight, ahead of
    a shortwave approaching from the west, with southerly winds of 35=20
    to 45 kt at 850 mb forecast by the 00Z GFS through the central
    Plains into the Dakotas. A small MCS is possible near a warm front
    across the region overnight but details on exact location and
    rainfall totals remain a bit uncertain. The Marginal Risk covers
    the probabilities for 2+ inches highlighted in the 00Z HREF and 18Z
    REFS.

    ...Southwest...
    A ridge aloft over the Four Corners region is forecast to slowly
    shift east into eastern New Mexico by Thursday morning, ahead of an
    approaching upper trough into California. Some increase in PWs are
    expected into Arizona and southwestern New Mexico during the period
    but values will climb to near average by 00Z Thursday. An=20
    expectation of decent solar insolation with limited cloud cover=20
    should support seasonable instability values into the region for=20
    this afternoon/evening and Localized flash flooding will be=20
    possible with diurnally driven thunderstorms, especially across=20
    more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER=20
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE MID-ATLANITC COAST AND NORTHEAST...AS=20
    WELL AS THE SOUTHWEST AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...East Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...
    The cold front from Wednesday will continue to advance toward the
    southeast with lingering high moisture ahead of the boundary from
    New England into the Mid-Atlantic Coast. Potential for localized
    excessive rainfall within the anomalous PW axis and with forcing
    ahead of the front, but cloud cover may limit the potential for
    higher instability values. There should be at least an isolated
    flash flood threat with thunderstorms ahead of the front from
    southern New England to the Mid-Atlantic coast.=20

    Farther south, from the Southeast to the Lower Mississippi Valley,
    there does not appear to be a substantial focus area for excessive
    rainfall potential, hence the broad Marginal Risk, but high
    moisture and daytime heating will result in scattered thunderstorms
    with peak rainfall rates in the 1 to 3 in/hr range. Similar to=20
    Wednesday, parts of the Lower Mississippi Valley will have high PWs
    and slow cell motions given placement between a mid- level ridge=20
    center over KS and another over the northeastern Gulf.

    ...Southwest...
    The upper trough over California on Wednesday will continue to move
    east on Thursday with increased moisture advection into Arizona and
    parts of Utah into the Four Corners region. PW values are forecast
    to increase to near +1 standardized anomaly for Arizona into
    southern Utah. While cloud cover is a bit uncertain for Thursday
    into Friday, ahead of the western trough and from any lingering
    disturbances from the previous day, A similar sized, perhaps
    slightly larger, Marginal Risk is drawn for Thursday into Friday
    following the model QPF consensus and Arizona Regional WRF
    simulated reflectivity, which showed the potential for more
    widespread coverage of thunderstorms on Thursday compared to
    Wednesday.

    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will move into the north-central U.S. on Thursday with
    a steady enhancement to southerly/southwesterly 850 mb winds ahead
    of the boundary. Even after diurnal weakening of the nocturnal low
    level jet, 00Z GFS forecasts show 20-40 kt continuing from the
    central Plains into the eastern Dakotas and Minnesota through
    Thursday evening. Locally heavy rain may be ongoing Thursday
    morning with decent potential for another round Thursday night with
    favorable jet diffluence/divergence aloft, possible moderate
    instability and standardized PW anomalies of +1 to +2. Confidence
    on the exact location remains uncertain however, with hopefully
    increasing confidence occurring as we move into the hires range.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER=20
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHEAST COAST...AS WELL AS THE=20
    SOUTHWEST/FOUR CORNERS REGION AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Southeast Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    Lingering high moisture will be in place on Friday, south of a
    southward sagging frontal boundary with standardized PW anomalies=20
    of +1 to +2 from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Southeast
    Coast. With an upper ridge centered over the northeastern Gulf,
    there will be potential for mesoscale impulses to ridge around the
    ridge and help focus diurnally driven thunderstorms during peak=20
    heating. Similar to previous days, locally high rain rates with 1=20
    to 3 in/hr may occur with localized training.

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will continue to advance downstream through the Upper
    Mississippi Valley but slow/stall back toward the west. PWs will
    remain above average in the vicinity of the front and organized
    thunderstorm potential will exist within the mean westerly flow
    aloft. Similar to previous days, nocturnal strengthening of the low
    level jet at night will have the potential to generate an MCS or loosely-organized convective cluster with localized training
    potential. Confidence is rather low at 3 days out, but the Marginal
    Risk was drawn to cover the various model solutions and conceptual
    thinking for greatest rainfall potential near the front and low
    level jet axis intersection.

    ...Southwest...
    Active southwesterly flow across much of the western U.S. will
    encourage the further expansion of above average moisture into the
    Four Corners region and northern Great Basin. While standardized PW
    anomalies will generally peak in the +1 to +2 range, not everyone
    within these anomalies will see the same flash flood potential. The
    focus appears to be best tied to the Mogollon Rim into the Wasatch
    and central to southern Rockies, ahead of a number of shortwave
    impulses moving in from southern California. Tied to the relatively
    stronger belt of westerlies could be jet-induced divergence maxima
    aloft to help in the production of locally heavy rainfall.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8yombZEIMaL9Y52DpfSCSuo4ji-MjGtRGb_4Ckcj2ORk= cswOUHtFGyI9zyUXEJ1yFRPsnsQvDAldXI3STHDcweENzCQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8yombZEIMaL9Y52DpfSCSuo4ji-MjGtRGb_4Ckcj2ORk= cswOUHtFGyI9zyUXEJ1yFRPsnsQvDAldXI3STHDcItC8Xqw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8yombZEIMaL9Y52DpfSCSuo4ji-MjGtRGb_4Ckcj2ORk= cswOUHtFGyI9zyUXEJ1yFRPsnsQvDAldXI3STHDcKTDD4C4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 13 12:52:18 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 131251
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    851 AM EDT Wed Aug 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1244Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE SOUTHERN
    AND CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...NORTH TEXAS AND THE IMMEDIATE CENTRAL
    GULF COAST...

    1245Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...
    Issued a special Excessive Rainfall Outlook to hoist Slight Risks
    in the northern portion of Texas where convection has been growing
    upscale in intensity and areal coverage. Latest short-range
    CAM guidance showed some 3 to 5 inch rainfall potential here which
    seems consistent given the potential for some back-building
    convection. Refer to WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 924.
    Also introduced a Slight Risk area along the Gulf coast...mainly
    over the Florida peninsula...where an area of showers and
    thunderstorms has been dropping locally intense downpours.
    Additional details in the WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion
    923. Only other change was to extend the pre-existing Slight Risk
    in the Central and Southern Appalachians southwestward into parts
    of southern Tennessee and northern Alabama based on latest trends=20
    in radar imagery.

    Bann


    ...Southern Appalachians...

    A cold front over the Great Lakes to mid-Mississippi Valley early
    Wednesday morning is forecast to advance southeastward into New
    York, the central Appalachians and western Kentucky/Tennessee by
    Thursday morning. High moisture with precipitable water (PW)
    anomalies of 1 to 2+ are forecast to extend ahead of the cold front
    from central Texas to western New England and much of the East
    Coast. Across the southern Appalachians, there may be an early
    round of locally heavy rainfall early Wednesday, related to
    lingering nocturnal convection. The greater concern will be later
    today with peak afternoon heating and scattered coverage of
    thunderstorms, ahead of a synoptic scale mid-level trough axis
    approaching from the northwest and a low to mid- level impulse
    tracking around a ridge offshore of the Southeast, with some
    locally enhanced southerly flow into the Appalachians. 00Z HREF and
    18Z REFS neighborhood probabilities of exceeding flash flood
    guidance (FFG) were a bit higher here than other areas of the U.S.
    with potential for some 2-4 inch totals (locally higher) through
    Thursday morning.

    ...Remainder of Eastern U.S. into Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Confluent and locally stronger 925-850 mb winds of 20-30 kt are
    expected across Virginia/North Carolina as the region sits between
    ridging to the south and troughing to the north today. There will
    be some enhanced potential for training and backbuilding cells in
    the west to east flow, coupled with PWs over 2 inches, supporting
    potential for a few 3 to 5 inch totals.

    Back toward Texas and much of the Lower Mississippi Valley, high
    PWs and slow storm motions could support some widely scattered
    instances of flash flooding during peak heating, with dissipation
    into the overnight.

    ...Northern Plains...
    A few thunderstorms will be possible over South Dakota in the
    first 6 to 9 hours of the period, ahead of an advancing mid-level
    impulse tracking eastward from southeastern Montana. Nocturnal
    strengthening of the low level jet is expected overnight, ahead of
    a shortwave approaching from the west, with southerly winds of 35
    to 45 kt at 850 mb forecast by the 00Z GFS through the central
    Plains into the Dakotas. A small MCS is possible near a warm front
    across the region overnight but details on exact location and
    rainfall totals remain a bit uncertain. The Marginal Risk covers
    the probabilities for 2+ inches highlighted in the 00Z HREF and 18Z
    REFS.

    ...Southwest...
    A ridge aloft over the Four Corners region is forecast to slowly
    shift east into eastern New Mexico by Thursday morning, ahead of an
    approaching upper trough into California. Some increase in PWs are
    expected into Arizona and southwestern New Mexico during the period
    but values will climb to near average by 00Z Thursday. An
    expectation of decent solar insolation with limited cloud cover
    should support seasonable instability values into the region for
    this afternoon/evening and Localized flash flooding will be
    possible with diurnally driven thunderstorms, especially across
    more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE MID-ATLANITC COAST AND NORTHEAST...AS
    WELL AS THE SOUTHWEST AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...East Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...
    The cold front from Wednesday will continue to advance toward the
    southeast with lingering high moisture ahead of the boundary from
    New England into the Mid-Atlantic Coast. Potential for localized
    excessive rainfall within the anomalous PW axis and with forcing
    ahead of the front, but cloud cover may limit the potential for
    higher instability values. There should be at least an isolated
    flash flood threat with thunderstorms ahead of the front from
    southern New England to the Mid-Atlantic coast.

    Farther south, from the Southeast to the Lower Mississippi Valley,
    there does not appear to be a substantial focus area for excessive
    rainfall potential, hence the broad Marginal Risk, but high
    moisture and daytime heating will result in scattered thunderstorms
    with peak rainfall rates in the 1 to 3 in/hr range. Similar to
    Wednesday, parts of the Lower Mississippi Valley will have high PWs
    and slow cell motions given placement between a mid- level ridge
    center over KS and another over the northeastern Gulf.

    ...Southwest...
    The upper trough over California on Wednesday will continue to move
    east on Thursday with increased moisture advection into Arizona and
    parts of Utah into the Four Corners region. PW values are forecast
    to increase to near +1 standardized anomaly for Arizona into
    southern Utah. While cloud cover is a bit uncertain for Thursday
    into Friday, ahead of the western trough and from any lingering
    disturbances from the previous day, A similar sized, perhaps
    slightly larger, Marginal Risk is drawn for Thursday into Friday
    following the model QPF consensus and Arizona Regional WRF
    simulated reflectivity, which showed the potential for more
    widespread coverage of thunderstorms on Thursday compared to
    Wednesday.

    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will move into the north-central U.S. on Thursday with
    a steady enhancement to southerly/southwesterly 850 mb winds ahead
    of the boundary. Even after diurnal weakening of the nocturnal low
    level jet, 00Z GFS forecasts show 20-40 kt continuing from the
    central Plains into the eastern Dakotas and Minnesota through
    Thursday evening. Locally heavy rain may be ongoing Thursday
    morning with decent potential for another round Thursday night with
    favorable jet diffluence/divergence aloft, possible moderate
    instability and standardized PW anomalies of +1 to +2. Confidence
    on the exact location remains uncertain however, with hopefully
    increasing confidence occurring as we move into the hires range.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHEAST COAST...AS WELL AS THE
    SOUTHWEST/FOUR CORNERS REGION AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Southeast Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    Lingering high moisture will be in place on Friday, south of a
    southward sagging frontal boundary with standardized PW anomalies
    of +1 to +2 from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Southeast
    Coast. With an upper ridge centered over the northeastern Gulf,
    there will be potential for mesoscale impulses to ridge around the
    ridge and help focus diurnally driven thunderstorms during peak
    heating. Similar to previous days, locally high rain rates with 1
    to 3 in/hr may occur with localized training.

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will continue to advance downstream through the Upper
    Mississippi Valley but slow/stall back toward the west. PWs will
    remain above average in the vicinity of the front and organized
    thunderstorm potential will exist within the mean westerly flow
    aloft. Similar to previous days, nocturnal strengthening of the low
    level jet at night will have the potential to generate an MCS or loosely-organized convective cluster with localized training
    potential. Confidence is rather low at 3 days out, but the Marginal
    Risk was drawn to cover the various model solutions and conceptual
    thinking for greatest rainfall potential near the front and low
    level jet axis intersection.

    ...Southwest...
    Active southwesterly flow across much of the western U.S. will
    encourage the further expansion of above average moisture into the
    Four Corners region and northern Great Basin. While standardized PW
    anomalies will generally peak in the +1 to +2 range, not everyone
    within these anomalies will see the same flash flood potential. The
    focus appears to be best tied to the Mogollon Rim into the Wasatch
    and central to southern Rockies, ahead of a number of shortwave
    impulses moving in from southern California. Tied to the relatively
    stronger belt of westerlies could be jet-induced divergence maxima
    aloft to help in the production of locally heavy rainfall.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_box0Chi9o6We87Df5y92OB4-EmcU29cgQzFUBJADmAH= iTFvVz5Sk4vR1zHARJKUu4eAIB0DMG87G7VbEF0ljlpLJLk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_box0Chi9o6We87Df5y92OB4-EmcU29cgQzFUBJADmAH= iTFvVz5Sk4vR1zHARJKUu4eAIB0DMG87G7VbEF0lt0SG_CE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_box0Chi9o6We87Df5y92OB4-EmcU29cgQzFUBJADmAH= iTFvVz5Sk4vR1zHARJKUu4eAIB0DMG87G7VbEF0lJW6GjmU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 13 16:15:39 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 131614
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1214 PM EDT Wed Aug 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE TENNESSEE
    VALLEY NORTHEASTWARD INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Given the 12Z soundings from the Mid-Atlantic region which had a
    nearly saturated profile through a deep layer resulting in a tall
    and skinny CAPE...expanded the on-going Slight Risk in the Mid-
    Atlantic northward and eastward along the I-95 corridor. In
    particular, the concern revolves around very intense rainfall rates
    falling in an urban environment. The HREF does show a gap in the
    probabilities for rainfall rates and flash flood exceedance
    probabilities between the forcing to the north that prompts the=20
    concern along the I-95 corridor and forcing of a mid-level wave=20
    approaching the central portion of the Appalachians. Confidence is
    lowest in this corridor...but individual waves have supported
    storms which have been very efficient rainfall this morning. With
    the potential for the storms to occur at/near the peak of maximum
    heating and synoptic scale forcing still in the area...went against
    the HREF guidance. No changes in the Marginal risk areas or
    forecast reasoning in the Upper Midwest or Southwest US.

    Bann


    1245Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...
    Issued a special Excessive Rainfall Outlook to hoist Slight Risks
    in the northern portion of Texas where convection has been growing
    upscale in intensity and areal coverage. Latest short-range
    CAM guidance showed some 3 to 5 inch rainfall potential here which
    seems consistent given the potential for some back-building
    convection. Refer to WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 924.
    Also introduced a Slight Risk area along the Gulf coast...mainly
    over the Florida peninsula...where an area of showers and
    thunderstorms has been dropping locally intense downpours.
    Additional details in the WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion
    923. Only other change was to extend the pre-existing Slight Risk
    in the Central and Southern Appalachians southwestward into parts
    of southern Tennessee and northern Alabama based on latest trends
    in radar imagery.

    Bann


    ...Southern Appalachians...

    A cold front over the Great Lakes to mid-Mississippi Valley early
    Wednesday morning is forecast to advance southeastward into New
    York, the central Appalachians and western Kentucky/Tennessee by
    Thursday morning. High moisture with precipitable water (PW)
    anomalies of 1 to 2+ are forecast to extend ahead of the cold front
    from central Texas to western New England and much of the East
    Coast. Across the southern Appalachians, there may be an early
    round of locally heavy rainfall early Wednesday, related to
    lingering nocturnal convection. The greater concern will be later
    today with peak afternoon heating and scattered coverage of
    thunderstorms, ahead of a synoptic scale mid-level trough axis
    approaching from the northwest and a low to mid- level impulse
    tracking around a ridge offshore of the Southeast, with some
    locally enhanced southerly flow into the Appalachians. 00Z HREF and
    18Z REFS neighborhood probabilities of exceeding flash flood
    guidance (FFG) were a bit higher here than other areas of the U.S.
    with potential for some 2-4 inch totals (locally higher) through
    Thursday morning.

    ...Remainder of Eastern U.S. into Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Confluent and locally stronger 925-850 mb winds of 20-30 kt are
    expected across Virginia/North Carolina as the region sits between
    ridging to the south and troughing to the north today. There will
    be some enhanced potential for training and backbuilding cells in
    the west to east flow, coupled with PWs over 2 inches, supporting
    potential for a few 3 to 5 inch totals.

    Back toward Texas and much of the Lower Mississippi Valley, high
    PWs and slow storm motions could support some widely scattered
    instances of flash flooding during peak heating, with dissipation
    into the overnight.

    ...Northern Plains...
    A few thunderstorms will be possible over South Dakota in the
    first 6 to 9 hours of the period, ahead of an advancing mid-level
    impulse tracking eastward from southeastern Montana. Nocturnal
    strengthening of the low level jet is expected overnight, ahead of
    a shortwave approaching from the west, with southerly winds of 35
    to 45 kt at 850 mb forecast by the 00Z GFS through the central
    Plains into the Dakotas. A small MCS is possible near a warm front
    across the region overnight but details on exact location and
    rainfall totals remain a bit uncertain. The Marginal Risk covers
    the probabilities for 2+ inches highlighted in the 00Z HREF and 18Z
    REFS.

    ...Southwest...
    A ridge aloft over the Four Corners region is forecast to slowly
    shift east into eastern New Mexico by Thursday morning, ahead of an
    approaching upper trough into California. Some increase in PWs are
    expected into Arizona and southwestern New Mexico during the period
    but values will climb to near average by 00Z Thursday. An
    expectation of decent solar insolation with limited cloud cover
    should support seasonable instability values into the region for
    this afternoon/evening and Localized flash flooding will be
    possible with diurnally driven thunderstorms, especially across
    more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE MID-ATLANITC COAST AND NORTHEAST...AS
    WELL AS THE SOUTHWEST AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...East Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...
    The cold front from Wednesday will continue to advance toward the
    southeast with lingering high moisture ahead of the boundary from
    New England into the Mid-Atlantic Coast. Potential for localized
    excessive rainfall within the anomalous PW axis and with forcing
    ahead of the front, but cloud cover may limit the potential for
    higher instability values. There should be at least an isolated
    flash flood threat with thunderstorms ahead of the front from
    southern New England to the Mid-Atlantic coast.

    Farther south, from the Southeast to the Lower Mississippi Valley,
    there does not appear to be a substantial focus area for excessive
    rainfall potential, hence the broad Marginal Risk, but high
    moisture and daytime heating will result in scattered thunderstorms
    with peak rainfall rates in the 1 to 3 in/hr range. Similar to
    Wednesday, parts of the Lower Mississippi Valley will have high PWs
    and slow cell motions given placement between a mid- level ridge
    center over KS and another over the northeastern Gulf.

    ...Southwest...
    The upper trough over California on Wednesday will continue to move
    east on Thursday with increased moisture advection into Arizona and
    parts of Utah into the Four Corners region. PW values are forecast
    to increase to near +1 standardized anomaly for Arizona into
    southern Utah. While cloud cover is a bit uncertain for Thursday
    into Friday, ahead of the western trough and from any lingering
    disturbances from the previous day, A similar sized, perhaps
    slightly larger, Marginal Risk is drawn for Thursday into Friday
    following the model QPF consensus and Arizona Regional WRF
    simulated reflectivity, which showed the potential for more
    widespread coverage of thunderstorms on Thursday compared to
    Wednesday.

    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will move into the north-central U.S. on Thursday with
    a steady enhancement to southerly/southwesterly 850 mb winds ahead
    of the boundary. Even after diurnal weakening of the nocturnal low
    level jet, 00Z GFS forecasts show 20-40 kt continuing from the
    central Plains into the eastern Dakotas and Minnesota through
    Thursday evening. Locally heavy rain may be ongoing Thursday
    morning with decent potential for another round Thursday night with
    favorable jet diffluence/divergence aloft, possible moderate
    instability and standardized PW anomalies of +1 to +2. Confidence
    on the exact location remains uncertain however, with hopefully
    increasing confidence occurring as we move into the hires range.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHEAST COAST...AS WELL AS THE
    SOUTHWEST/FOUR CORNERS REGION AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Southeast Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    Lingering high moisture will be in place on Friday, south of a
    southward sagging frontal boundary with standardized PW anomalies
    of +1 to +2 from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Southeast
    Coast. With an upper ridge centered over the northeastern Gulf,
    there will be potential for mesoscale impulses to ridge around the
    ridge and help focus diurnally driven thunderstorms during peak
    heating. Similar to previous days, locally high rain rates with 1
    to 3 in/hr may occur with localized training.

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will continue to advance downstream through the Upper
    Mississippi Valley but slow/stall back toward the west. PWs will
    remain above average in the vicinity of the front and organized
    thunderstorm potential will exist within the mean westerly flow
    aloft. Similar to previous days, nocturnal strengthening of the low
    level jet at night will have the potential to generate an MCS or loosely-organized convective cluster with localized training
    potential. Confidence is rather low at 3 days out, but the Marginal
    Risk was drawn to cover the various model solutions and conceptual
    thinking for greatest rainfall potential near the front and low
    level jet axis intersection.

    ...Southwest...
    Active southwesterly flow across much of the western U.S. will
    encourage the further expansion of above average moisture into the
    Four Corners region and northern Great Basin. While standardized PW
    anomalies will generally peak in the +1 to +2 range, not everyone
    within these anomalies will see the same flash flood potential. The
    focus appears to be best tied to the Mogollon Rim into the Wasatch
    and central to southern Rockies, ahead of a number of shortwave
    impulses moving in from southern California. Tied to the relatively
    stronger belt of westerlies could be jet-induced divergence maxima
    aloft to help in the production of locally heavy rainfall.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-L5rBdK1x5c-FxPTGLBFNZdlpdYbNbI8x8br-pTcFxuD= ED0dvNr4_f4Iv3Ep1xfbrzH7fyCE3-psi37vuUFOAatHQzc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-L5rBdK1x5c-FxPTGLBFNZdlpdYbNbI8x8br-pTcFxuD= ED0dvNr4_f4Iv3Ep1xfbrzH7fyCE3-psi37vuUFOXWzh1LU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-L5rBdK1x5c-FxPTGLBFNZdlpdYbNbI8x8br-pTcFxuD= ED0dvNr4_f4Iv3Ep1xfbrzH7fyCE3-psi37vuUFOZM8Jx6Q$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 13 20:25:35 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 132025
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    425 PM EDT Wed Aug 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Aug 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE TENNESSEE
    VALLEY NORTHEASTWARD INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC REGION...

    16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Given the 12Z soundings from the Mid-Atlantic region which had a
    nearly saturated profile through a deep layer resulting in a tall
    and skinny CAPE...expanded the on-going Slight Risk in the Mid-
    Atlantic northward and eastward along the I-95 corridor. In
    particular, the concern revolves around very intense rainfall rates
    falling in an urban environment. The HREF does show a gap in the
    probabilities for rainfall rates and flash flood exceedance
    probabilities between the forcing to the north that prompts the
    concern along the I-95 corridor and forcing of a mid-level wave
    approaching the central portion of the Appalachians. Confidence is
    lowest in this corridor...but individual waves have supported
    storms which have been very efficient rainfall this morning. With
    the potential for the storms to occur at/near the peak of maximum
    heating and synoptic scale forcing still in the area...went against
    the HREF guidance. No changes in the Marginal risk areas or
    forecast reasoning in the Upper Midwest or Southwest US.

    Bann


    1245Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...
    Issued a special Excessive Rainfall Outlook to hoist Slight Risks
    in the northern portion of Texas where convection has been growing
    upscale in intensity and areal coverage. Latest short-range
    CAM guidance showed some 3 to 5 inch rainfall potential here which
    seems consistent given the potential for some back-building
    convection. Refer to WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 924.
    Also introduced a Slight Risk area along the Gulf coast...mainly
    over the Florida peninsula...where an area of showers and
    thunderstorms has been dropping locally intense downpours.
    Additional details in the WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion
    923. Only other change was to extend the pre-existing Slight Risk
    in the Central and Southern Appalachians southwestward into parts
    of southern Tennessee and northern Alabama based on latest trends
    in radar imagery.

    Bann


    ...Southern Appalachians...

    A cold front over the Great Lakes to mid-Mississippi Valley early
    Wednesday morning is forecast to advance southeastward into New
    York, the central Appalachians and western Kentucky/Tennessee by
    Thursday morning. High moisture with precipitable water (PW)
    anomalies of 1 to 2+ are forecast to extend ahead of the cold front
    from central Texas to western New England and much of the East
    Coast. Across the southern Appalachians, there may be an early
    round of locally heavy rainfall early Wednesday, related to
    lingering nocturnal convection. The greater concern will be later
    today with peak afternoon heating and scattered coverage of
    thunderstorms, ahead of a synoptic scale mid-level trough axis
    approaching from the northwest and a low to mid- level impulse
    tracking around a ridge offshore of the Southeast, with some
    locally enhanced southerly flow into the Appalachians. 00Z HREF and
    18Z REFS neighborhood probabilities of exceeding flash flood
    guidance (FFG) were a bit higher here than other areas of the U.S.
    with potential for some 2-4 inch totals (locally higher) through
    Thursday morning.

    ...Remainder of Eastern U.S. into Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Confluent and locally stronger 925-850 mb winds of 20-30 kt are
    expected across Virginia/North Carolina as the region sits between
    ridging to the south and troughing to the north today. There will
    be some enhanced potential for training and backbuilding cells in
    the west to east flow, coupled with PWs over 2 inches, supporting
    potential for a few 3 to 5 inch totals.

    Back toward Texas and much of the Lower Mississippi Valley, high
    PWs and slow storm motions could support some widely scattered
    instances of flash flooding during peak heating, with dissipation
    into the overnight.

    ...Northern Plains...
    A few thunderstorms will be possible over South Dakota in the
    first 6 to 9 hours of the period, ahead of an advancing mid-level
    impulse tracking eastward from southeastern Montana. Nocturnal
    strengthening of the low level jet is expected overnight, ahead of
    a shortwave approaching from the west, with southerly winds of 35
    to 45 kt at 850 mb forecast by the 00Z GFS through the central
    Plains into the Dakotas. A small MCS is possible near a warm front
    across the region overnight but details on exact location and
    rainfall totals remain a bit uncertain. The Marginal Risk covers
    the probabilities for 2+ inches highlighted in the 00Z HREF and 18Z
    REFS.

    ...Southwest...
    A ridge aloft over the Four Corners region is forecast to slowly
    shift east into eastern New Mexico by Thursday morning, ahead of an
    approaching upper trough into California. Some increase in PWs are
    expected into Arizona and southwestern New Mexico during the period
    but values will climb to near average by 00Z Thursday. An
    expectation of decent solar insolation with limited cloud cover
    should support seasonable instability values into the region for
    this afternoon/evening and Localized flash flooding will be
    possible with diurnally driven thunderstorms, especially across
    more vulnerable terrain features or burn scars.

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PARTS OF
    COASTAL MID ATLANTIC REGION...

    The 12Z HREF showed an uptick in convection capable of potentially
    producing excessive rainfall over southeast Virginia and adjacent
    portions of northeast North Carolina. Being located in a moisture-
    rich region between a surface trough of low pressure along/near=20
    the coast...storms that form and an approaching cold front to the
    west should help foster an environment in which storms can produce
    downpours which lead to scattered instances of flooding. The 12Z
    HREF neighborhood probabilities peak in the 25 to 40 percent range
    for 2 inches of rainfall in an hour and 15 to 20 percent for 3
    inches of rainfall in an hour. A targeted Slight Risk was issued to
    cover the risk. Elsewhere...was able to largely maintain continuity
    in the Upper Midwest and Southwest. Trimmed a portion of the
    Marginal risk area in parts of Utah where forecast soundings showed a considerable amount of dry air in the sub-cloud region,

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion

    ...East Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...
    The cold front from Wednesday will continue to advance toward the
    southeast with lingering high moisture ahead of the boundary from
    New England into the Mid-Atlantic Coast. Potential for localized
    excessive rainfall within the anomalous PW axis and with forcing
    ahead of the front, but cloud cover may limit the potential for
    higher instability values. There should be at least an isolated
    flash flood threat with thunderstorms ahead of the front from
    southern New England to the Mid-Atlantic coast.

    Farther south, from the Southeast to the Lower Mississippi Valley,
    there does not appear to be a substantial focus area for excessive
    rainfall potential, hence the broad Marginal Risk, but high
    moisture and daytime heating will result in scattered thunderstorms
    with peak rainfall rates in the 1 to 3 in/hr range. Similar to
    Wednesday, parts of the Lower Mississippi Valley will have high PWs
    and slow cell motions given placement between a mid- level ridge
    center over KS and another over the northeastern Gulf.

    ...Southwest...
    The upper trough over California on Wednesday will continue to move
    east on Thursday with increased moisture advection into Arizona and
    parts of Utah into the Four Corners region. PW values are forecast
    to increase to near +1 standardized anomaly for Arizona into
    southern Utah. While cloud cover is a bit uncertain for Thursday
    into Friday, ahead of the western trough and from any lingering
    disturbances from the previous day, A similar sized, perhaps
    slightly larger, Marginal Risk is drawn for Thursday into Friday
    following the model QPF consensus and Arizona Regional WRF
    simulated reflectivity, which showed the potential for more
    widespread coverage of thunderstorms on Thursday compared to
    Wednesday.

    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will move into the north-central U.S. on Thursday with
    a steady enhancement to southerly/southwesterly 850 mb winds ahead
    of the boundary. Even after diurnal weakening of the nocturnal low
    level jet, 00Z GFS forecasts show 20-40 kt continuing from the
    central Plains into the eastern Dakotas and Minnesota through
    Thursday evening. Locally heavy rain may be ongoing Thursday
    morning with decent potential for another round Thursday night with
    favorable jet diffluence/divergence aloft, possible moderate
    instability and standardized PW anomalies of +1 to +2. Confidence
    on the exact location remains uncertain however, with hopefully
    increasing confidence occurring as we move into the hires range.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHEAST COAST...AS WELL AS THE
    SOUTHWEST/FOUR CORNERS REGION AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...

    Only a few changes made to the on-going Day 3 Excessive Rainfall=20
    Outlook. One of the changes was to align the Marginal Risk area in=20
    the Southwest with the leading edge of the mid-level height falls.=20
    Otherwise the outlook areas still have the support of the overall=20
    synoptics in the South/Southeast and the Upper Midwest.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...Southeast Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    Lingering high moisture will be in place on Friday, south of a
    southward sagging frontal boundary with standardized PW anomalies
    of +1 to +2 from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Southeast
    Coast. With an upper ridge centered over the northeastern Gulf,
    there will be potential for mesoscale impulses to ridge around the
    ridge and help focus diurnally driven thunderstorms during peak
    heating. Similar to previous days, locally high rain rates with 1
    to 3 in/hr may occur with localized training.

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will continue to advance downstream through the Upper
    Mississippi Valley but slow/stall back toward the west. PWs will
    remain above average in the vicinity of the front and organized
    thunderstorm potential will exist within the mean westerly flow
    aloft. Similar to previous days, nocturnal strengthening of the low
    level jet at night will have the potential to generate an MCS or loosely-organized convective cluster with localized training
    potential. Confidence is rather low at 3 days out, but the Marginal
    Risk was drawn to cover the various model solutions and conceptual
    thinking for greatest rainfall potential near the front and low
    level jet axis intersection.

    ...Southwest...
    Active southwesterly flow across much of the western U.S. will
    encourage the further expansion of above average moisture into the
    Four Corners region and northern Great Basin. While standardized PW
    anomalies will generally peak in the +1 to +2 range, not everyone
    within these anomalies will see the same flash flood potential. The
    focus appears to be best tied to the Mogollon Rim into the Wasatch
    and central to southern Rockies, ahead of a number of shortwave
    impulses moving in from southern California. Tied to the relatively
    stronger belt of westerlies could be jet-induced divergence maxima
    aloft to help in the production of locally heavy rainfall.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7tX43v9ldgmPuQAqxX0llcD5Xro6TeSH2Q9Vojg6pe5p= L-vhekw5PpdVHjm4-elh5VrxuVA8eB_QZumh-Ogrp7ZzMMw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7tX43v9ldgmPuQAqxX0llcD5Xro6TeSH2Q9Vojg6pe5p= L-vhekw5PpdVHjm4-elh5VrxuVA8eB_QZumh-OgrTgqAYfw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7tX43v9ldgmPuQAqxX0llcD5Xro6TeSH2Q9Vojg6pe5p= L-vhekw5PpdVHjm4-elh5VrxuVA8eB_QZumh-OgrpLXg9lU$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Aug 14 00:59:31 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 140059
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    859 PM EDT Wed Aug 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS TO THE NORTHEAST, PARTS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS, AND
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    01Z Update...
    Ample moisture ahead of an upper trough axis extending from the=20
    Great Lakes back into the southern Plains continues to fuel=20
    isolated to scattered showers and storms from New England back into
    southern Texas. While pockets of heavier rainfall rates persist,=20
    much of the organized, heavier rainfall from earlier in the day has
    diminished, with the loss of daytime heating contributing to the=20
    waning threat for widespread heavy rains. While isolated to=20
    scattered showers and storms are expected to continue through the=20
    evening into the overnight, the consensus of the hi-res guidance=20
    does not indicate additional development of heavy rains that would=20
    produce more than isolated flash flooding concerns. Therefore the=20
    Slight Risk areas were removed from the southern Plains, Southeast,
    and Mid Atlantic. Recognizing the potential for isolated concerns=20
    to continue, a Marginal Risk was maintained from southern Texas to=20
    New England.

    In the Southwest and the northern Plains, the footprints were
    reduced, but a Marginal Risk was maintained for portions of both
    areas.

    Pereira

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PARTS OF
    COASTAL MID ATLANTIC REGION...

    The 12Z HREF showed an uptick in convection capable of potentially
    producing excessive rainfall over southeast Virginia and adjacent
    portions of northeast North Carolina. Being located in a moisture-
    rich region between a surface trough of low pressure along/near
    the coast...storms that form and an approaching cold front to the
    west should help foster an environment in which storms can produce
    downpours which lead to scattered instances of flooding. The 12Z
    HREF neighborhood probabilities peak in the 25 to 40 percent range
    for 2 inches of rainfall in an hour and 15 to 20 percent for 3
    inches of rainfall in an hour. A targeted Slight Risk was issued to
    cover the risk. Elsewhere...was able to largely maintain continuity
    in the Upper Midwest and Southwest. Trimmed a portion of the
    Marginal risk area in parts of Utah where forecast soundings showed a considerable amount of dry air in the sub-cloud region,

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion

    ...East Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...
    The cold front from Wednesday will continue to advance toward the
    southeast with lingering high moisture ahead of the boundary from
    New England into the Mid-Atlantic Coast. Potential for localized
    excessive rainfall within the anomalous PW axis and with forcing
    ahead of the front, but cloud cover may limit the potential for
    higher instability values. There should be at least an isolated
    flash flood threat with thunderstorms ahead of the front from
    southern New England to the Mid-Atlantic coast.

    Farther south, from the Southeast to the Lower Mississippi Valley,
    there does not appear to be a substantial focus area for excessive
    rainfall potential, hence the broad Marginal Risk, but high
    moisture and daytime heating will result in scattered thunderstorms
    with peak rainfall rates in the 1 to 3 in/hr range. Similar to
    Wednesday, parts of the Lower Mississippi Valley will have high PWs
    and slow cell motions given placement between a mid- level ridge
    center over KS and another over the northeastern Gulf.

    ...Southwest...
    The upper trough over California on Wednesday will continue to move
    east on Thursday with increased moisture advection into Arizona and
    parts of Utah into the Four Corners region. PW values are forecast
    to increase to near +1 standardized anomaly for Arizona into
    southern Utah. While cloud cover is a bit uncertain for Thursday
    into Friday, ahead of the western trough and from any lingering
    disturbances from the previous day, A similar sized, perhaps
    slightly larger, Marginal Risk is drawn for Thursday into Friday
    following the model QPF consensus and Arizona Regional WRF
    simulated reflectivity, which showed the potential for more
    widespread coverage of thunderstorms on Thursday compared to
    Wednesday.

    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will move into the north-central U.S. on Thursday with
    a steady enhancement to southerly/southwesterly 850 mb winds ahead
    of the boundary. Even after diurnal weakening of the nocturnal low
    level jet, 00Z GFS forecasts show 20-40 kt continuing from the
    central Plains into the eastern Dakotas and Minnesota through
    Thursday evening. Locally heavy rain may be ongoing Thursday
    morning with decent potential for another round Thursday night with
    favorable jet diffluence/divergence aloft, possible moderate
    instability and standardized PW anomalies of +1 to +2. Confidence
    on the exact location remains uncertain however, with hopefully
    increasing confidence occurring as we move into the hires range.

    Otto


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHEAST COAST...AS WELL AS THE
    SOUTHWEST/FOUR CORNERS REGION AND THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...

    Only a few changes made to the on-going Day 3 Excessive Rainfall
    Outlook. One of the changes was to align the Marginal Risk area in
    the Southwest with the leading edge of the mid-level height falls.
    Otherwise the outlook areas still have the support of the overall
    synoptics in the South/Southeast and the Upper Midwest.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...Southeast Coast to Lower Mississippi Valley...

    Lingering high moisture will be in place on Friday, south of a
    southward sagging frontal boundary with standardized PW anomalies
    of +1 to +2 from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Southeast
    Coast. With an upper ridge centered over the northeastern Gulf,
    there will be potential for mesoscale impulses to ridge around the
    ridge and help focus diurnally driven thunderstorms during peak
    heating. Similar to previous days, locally high rain rates with 1
    to 3 in/hr may occur with localized training.

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will continue to advance downstream through the Upper
    Mississippi Valley but slow/stall back toward the west. PWs will
    remain above average in the vicinity of the front and organized
    thunderstorm potential will exist within the mean westerly flow
    aloft. Similar to previous days, nocturnal strengthening of the low
    level jet at night will have the potential to generate an MCS or loosely-organized convective cluster with localized training
    potential. Confidence is rather low at 3 days out, but the Marginal
    Risk was drawn to cover the various model solutions and conceptual
    thinking for greatest rainfall potential near the front and low
    level jet axis intersection.

    ...Southwest...
    Active southwesterly flow across much of the western U.S. will
    encourage the further expansion of above average moisture into the
    Four Corners region and northern Great Basin. While standardized PW
    anomalies will generally peak in the +1 to +2 range, not everyone
    within these anomalies will see the same flash flood potential. The
    focus appears to be best tied to the Mogollon Rim into the Wasatch
    and central to southern Rockies, ahead of a number of shortwave
    impulses moving in from southern California. Tied to the relatively
    stronger belt of westerlies could be jet-induced divergence maxima
    aloft to help in the production of locally heavy rainfall.

    Otto


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7XzOoicx8ad2kYJq4-KHryaNayHgYzhO2YG2GXH8MWnW= McF1CGbDuz-MHVs95AfFitEPklkVWcXd6LjauyCNlPwk2TI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7XzOoicx8ad2kYJq4-KHryaNayHgYzhO2YG2GXH8MWnW= McF1CGbDuz-MHVs95AfFitEPklkVWcXd6LjauyCNckw4tkk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7XzOoicx8ad2kYJq4-KHryaNayHgYzhO2YG2GXH8MWnW= McF1CGbDuz-MHVs95AfFitEPklkVWcXd6LjauyCNhqdCgPY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Aug 14 07:55:10 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 140754
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    354 AM EDT Thu Aug 14 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    ...Southern New England through the Lower Mississippi Valley...=20
    Surface cold front draped from New England through the Ozarks will=20
    drift gradually southeast but generally stall across the region=20
    Thursday as the parent trough begins to fill, leaving gradually=20
    more zonal flow over the eastern CONUS. Although heights will=20
    gradually rise, weak shortwave impulses embedded within the flow=20
    will maintain periodic ascent atop the front to create waves of low
    pressure rippling northeast to produce locally enhanced lift, and=20
    scattered to numerous thunderstorms are again expected across the=20
    east on Thursday, primarily from southern New England through the=20
    Gulf Coast.

    Thunderstorms that develop will all have the potential to produce=20
    pockets of heavy rainfall as thermodynamics remain impressive. PWs=20
    of more than 2 inches will remain in a plume arcing within return=20
    flow around offshore high pressure from the Florida Panhandle=20
    through the northern Mid-Atlantic states. This PW will overlap with=20
    elevated MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg to create the favorable=20
    thermodynamics for heavy rainfall, and the HREF indicates scattered=20 neighborhood probabilities for 2"/hr rain rates across much of the=20
    area supporting the broad inherited MRGL risk.

    However, there appears to be at least a signal for some more=20
    organized convection with a greater threat for excessive rainfall=20
    across the eastern Carolinas and into Southeast Virginia. This=20
    region will benefit from additionally focused ascent through the=20
    presence of the cold front and a surface trough, upon which a more=20 pronounced shortwave is progged by the consensus of the models to=20
    lift northeast during peak heating. This will promote at least=20
    modest bulk shear to support multi-cell clusters across this area,=20
    while most of the rest of the east should generally feature pulse=20
    type thunderstorms. Additionally, mean 0-6km winds and propagation=20
    vectors are aligned and parallel to the boundaries, suggesting an=20
    enhanced training risk as well, which additionally supports the=20
    elevated HREF and REFS probabilities for 3"/24hrs (and lower but=20
    still notable 5"/24 hrs). For this reason the inherited SLGT risk=20
    was adjusted to spread farther south into the eastern Carolinas.


    ...Southwest...=20
    Mid-level ridge centered over NM to start Thursday morning will=20
    weaken in response to height falls approaching from CA as a trough=20
    digs down the Pacific coast. This will have the two- pronged affect
    of lowering heights across the Desert Southwest/Four Corners=20
    region, while also leading to increased cyclonic flow emerging=20
    from near Baja to push a potent shortwave northward across AZ and=20
    into UT. Additionally, this increasingly south flow, especially=20
    between 850-700mb, will transport elevated PWs northward, and a=20
    plume above 1" is progged to surge almost to UT by the end of the=20
    forecast period. Where this combines with MUCAPE above 500 J/kg,=20
    slow moving storms (0-6km mean winds of just around 5 kts to the=20
    north) could become more organized leading to a longer duration of=20
    heavy rainfall rates of 0.5-1"/hr. The total coverage is still=20
    somewhat uncertain so the inherited MRGL risk still appears=20
    appropriate, but this was expanded north to match recent guidance,=20
    and convection is likely to be more widespread Thursday than it was
    on Wednesday.


    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...=20
    A warm front will lift northeast towards Minnesota today,=20
    accompanied by a surge of 850mb winds to 20-30 kts advecting=20
    anomalous PWs of 1.5 to 1.75 inches northeastward (+1 to +1.5=20
    standard deviations above the climo mean). This front will be=20
    driven eastward by a potent but flat and fast- moving shortwave=20
    embedded within the nearly zonal flow aloft, leading to a period=20
    of enhanced ascent aided by the warm front and accompanying=20
    isentropic lift of the 850mb wind. This will result in scattered=20 thunderstorms across the area, with bulk shear of 25-35 kts=20
    potentially supporting some organization into clusters. The=20
    guidance is highly variable in both the placement and intensity of=20 convection today, and the QPF footprint and ensemble probabilities=20
    suffer as a result. Still, with the impressive thermodynamics in=20
    place, thunderstorms that develop could support rainfall rates of=20
    1-2"/hr with at least short-term training possible, and the=20
    inherited MRGL risk was curtailed for latest guidance but=20
    continued.


    ...Pacific Northwest...=20
    A rare August atmospheric river (AR) is progged to make landfall=20
    this evening north of 45N into WA state with IVT above 500 kg/m/s=20
    as reflected by both GEFS and ECENS probabilities above 90%. A weak
    shortwave embedded within otherwise zonal flow aloft will help=20
    produce ascent into this plume of IVT, but instability will be=20
    negligible and jet level ascent appears to be displaced north of=20
    the core of the AR. While deterministic model QPF output and=20
    accompanying ensembles support a threat for heavy rainfall,=20
    especially in the Olympics, this will be occurring atop extremely=20
    dry soils and should generally be beneficial rainfall.=20
    Additionally, in the AR/ERO verification data set since 2019, there
    has never been an impactful (MRGL risk or higher) AR in the month=20
    of August. For this reason, despite some heavy rain spreading=20
    onshore this evening, no excessive rainfall impacts are expected.

    Weiss

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    MINNESOTA AND WISCONSIN...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will progress slowly eastward Friday across Minnesota,
    elongated from Wisconsin to South Dakota by the end of D2. This
    front will elongate and pivot more to a W/E direction as the
    driving mid-level flow gets squeezed between a trough over northern
    Canada and a bulging ridge across the Lower/Mid Mississippi Valley.
    As the flow becomes more zonal to align elongate the front, waves
    of vorticity will surge eastward within the pinching flow to track
    west to east along this front from the Dakotas into Wisconsin. This
    will produce enhanced lift into an environment that will steadily
    become more favorable for convection, and may feature extreme
    thermodynamics of PWs above 1.75 inches overlapping MUCAPE of
    3000-4000 J/kg later D2.

    This suggests that thunderstorms will become scattered to
    widespread, peaking later in the day as the LLJ ramps up to 25-35
    kts from the SW. This will occur concurrently with a surge of bulk
    shear to above 35 kts, and as warm cloud depths climb during this
    period as well, convection will grow upscale, potentially into one
    or more MCS, with rainfall rates of 1-3"/hr. Mean 0-6km winds of
    15-25 kts suggest cells will move quickly eastward, but
    redevelopment along the front and any upwind growth on MCS
    boundaries could prolong this rainfall through
    backbuilding/training. The inherited MRGL risk was modified
    cosmetically and a targeted SLGT risk was added to match the=20
    highest ensemble probabilities of 3 inches which also overlap some=20
    lower FFG.


    ...Mid-Atlantic through portions of the Southeast...=20
    The cold front from Thursday will dissipate into a trough Friday=20
    while pushing south towards AL/GA/SC. Despite the weakening of this
    boundary and increasing heights aloft in the vicinity of an=20
    expanding mid-level ridge, showers and thunderstorms are again=20
    expected, although in a more scattered fashion than on Thursday.=20
    PWs will remain elevated as tropical moisture continues across the=20
    region, exceeding 2 inches in a ribbon from eastern NC through the=20
    Gulf Coast of MS/LA. This will overlap with impressive MUCAPE above
    2000 J/kg during peak heating to drive aftn convection, generally=20
    of a pulse nature, across much of the region. Weak impulses are=20
    modeled within the flow, but with minimal accompanying height falls
    or PVA, so any organization will be tied to outflow boundaries or=20
    storm mergers within the otherwise pulse environment. Despite=20
    rainfall rates that will likely peak at 2-3"/hr thanks to the=20
    robust thermodynamics, short lifespans and a lack of organization=20
    suggests only a MRGL risk of excessive rainfall is needed.


    ...Southwest...
    The flow across the Southwest on Friday becomes increasingly
    pinched between an amplifying trough digging over California and a
    bulging ridge centered near the Central Plains. Shortwave energy
    and accompanying spokes of vorticity will periodically shed from
    this upstream trough and track SW to NE from southern AZ through
    the Four Corners, likely resulting in widespread convective
    development, especially as a MUCAPE plume surges above 1000 J/kg.=20

    It is possible that development will be slow to initiate on Friday
    due to remnant overnight convection Thursday night leaving cloud
    cover early, but most available models including the GFS-forced UA
    WRF indicate widespread thunderstorms from southern AZ through=20
    UT/CO and even into WY during the evening. Rainfall rates in
    convection will likely peak above 1"/hr across AZ where
    instability/PWs are higher, but should reach 0.5"-1"/hr elsewhere.
    While 0-6km mean winds will be progressive enough to limit
    individual cells from producing too much rain, sufficient bulk
    shear of 20-30 kts, especially beneath any shortwave impulses, will
    help organize convection into clusters to either lengthen rainfall
    duration or result in repeating rounds of storms. Where this
    occurs, rainfall probabilities above 1" reach as high as 30-40%,
    and the MRGL risk was expanded northward from inherited.


    ...Western Gulf Coast...=20
    Invest 98L and its accompanying potent mid- level circulation will
    lift northwest into northern Mexico or southern Texas Friday=20
    afternoon. To the east of this feature, accelerating low-to-mid=20
    level winds will advect a plume of tropical moisture northward onto
    the Texas coast, with PWs potentially exceeding 2.25 inches along=20
    much of the Texas coast. While this is only around the 90th=20
    percentile from the CFSR climatology, it will be accompanied by=20
    MUCAPE exceeding 3000 J/kg drawn inland by 850mb winds of 20-30 kts
    (equal to or greater than the mean 0-6km wind). Although the=20
    deterministic models feature a wide variation in QPF output Friday,
    and the resulting ensemble probabilities are suppressed in=20
    response, it appears the setup is favorable for at least modest=20
    inland penetration of training heavy rainfall within thunderstorms,
    so a MRGL risk was added for portions of the region.


    ...Pacific Northwest...
    The core of a rare August atmospheric river (AR) will move onshore
    WA state on Friday, leading to prolonged heavy rainfall, continuing
    from the landfall on Thursday and discussed in the D1 ERD. While
    QPF will likely be greater on Friday (potentially 2-4" and even
    locally greater in the higher terrain of the Olympics and northern
    Cascades), the threat for excessive rainfall remains somewhat
    uncertain. Impressive PWs of 1.25 to 1.5 inches (locally the
    highest ever recorded in the 5-week CFSR climatology from NAEFS)
    and formidable 850mb winds will help drive strong upslope ascent
    supporting this intense rainfall into upwind terrain features.
    While it is nearly certain rainfall will be heavy, there is less
    certainty into whether rain rates can be sufficient to cause rapid
    runoff atop very dry soils since MUCAPE is forecast to be
    negligible which should keep rain rates to around 0.5"/hr. If this
    rain were to fall atop recent and sensitive burn scars, instances
    of flash flooding could result, but at this time the threat appears
    to be below 5% when considering the climatology of the event as
    well. After coordination with WFO SEW and OTX, other than some
    concern about a few sensitive burn scars, agreement was made on
    keeping a MRGL risk out of the forecast at this time.

    Weiss

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST INTO THE GREAT LAKES...

    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    Pinched mid-level flow will become increasingly squeezed between a
    trough over Ontario and a ridge expanding from the Gulf Coast.
    Between these two features, nearly zonal flow will force a cold
    front to generally align west to east and stall, providing a
    convergent impetus for convection. Along this front, spokes of
    vorticity will track west to east leading to locally enhanced
    ascent to support waves of low pressure, while 850mb inflow returns
    around the high pressure ridge and reaches 25-35 kts to draw
    elevated thermodynamics characterized by PWs above 1.75 inches and
    MUCAPE of 4000 J/kg into the boundary. This will support multiple
    rounds of thunderstorms through the day, peaking during the
    evening/Saturday night, with rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr or more at
    times, leading to scattered instances of flash flooding. A SLGT
    risk has been added for portions of this area where probabilities
    from the SREF/GEFS/ECENS align for more than 3" of rain.


    ...Southwest...
    Continued S/SW mid-level flow around the periphery of a ridge
    positioned over the Mississippi River Valley will maintain elevated
    moisture into the Southwest on Saturday. Guidance continues to
    suggest that weak shortwaves/vorticity maxima will lift northeast
    embedded within the flow, although the intensity of these features
    is generally modest, and weaker than on Friday. Additionally,
    although 850mb flow will remain southerly over NM, it is progged to
    shift a bit more to the west over AZ, lowering the overall PW
    anomalies and indicating the greater risk for any isolated flash
    flooding will shift east from prior days. MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg
    will support rainfall rates that may approach 1"/hr at times, and
    if these fall across more sensitive features like burn scars or
    urban areas, isolated instances of flash flooding could result.


    ...Southeast...
    A wave of low pressure along a weakening cold front will drift
    southeast away from the NC coast on Saturday. At the same time, a
    building ridge over the Mississippi River Valley will lead to
    anti-cyclonic mid-level flow out of the NW into the Southeast,
    setting up a situation with moist confluent flow intensifying over
    the region. PWs will likely remain elevated above 2" along the Gulf
    Coast, but be lower elsewhere as drier air tries to advect from the
    NE around the offshore low, and this will result in less widespread
    coverage of thunderstorms than prior days. While coverage of
    convection is expected to generally be scattered, some locally
    enhanced rainfall along any convergence axes is possible due to
    rainfall rates that will still reach 1-2"/hr at times. Where these
    fall across vulnerable soils from widespread convection on prior
    days, impacts could result, and a MRGL risk continues for portions
    of the area.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9qASvq5A0noKH0lf3L_TZ0PYprh5VAf0jO4KCC3q4lCx= ZlfG6zvQ_eIOLJ56n3W5Vzlhd_ba4CAKKrb9Sh-1RfSSkrk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9qASvq5A0noKH0lf3L_TZ0PYprh5VAf0jO4KCC3q4lCx= ZlfG6zvQ_eIOLJ56n3W5Vzlhd_ba4CAKKrb9Sh-1-2iSGQ8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9qASvq5A0noKH0lf3L_TZ0PYprh5VAf0jO4KCC3q4lCx= ZlfG6zvQ_eIOLJ56n3W5Vzlhd_ba4CAKKrb9Sh-1WgNqeJU$=20

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

    --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105)
  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Aug 14 15:55:27 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 141555
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1155 AM EDT Thu Aug 14 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    ...16Z Update...

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    Based on some of the latest CAMs guidance, featuring notable
    agreement with the development of training thunderstorms across
    portions of southern and eastern North Carolina, a higher end
    Slight is in effect from the Hampton Roads area southwest through
    far northeastern South Carolina. Confidence has therefore=20
    increased on the potential for flooding, especially considering=20
    recent heavy rainfall has saturated the soils in the area. Abundant
    moisture with PWATs near 2.25 inches will support highly efficient
    warm rain processes which will allow any storms, and especially
    training storms to produce multiple inch per hour rainfall rates
    with the heaviest cores. One caveat will be somewhat reduced
    visibility from cloud cover from the ongoing MCS, which may help
    portions of SC avoid the greatest impacts from flooding in favor of
    areas further northeast into NC.=20

    Confidence decreases just a bit across far northeastern North
    Carolina and southeast Virginia, where much of the convective
    activity expected will develop along the James River and the storms
    may then progress a bit south of due east. There remains some
    potential that those storms' cold pools help fuel additional
    convective development over the more sensitive urban Hampton Roads
    area.

    ...Northeast...

    The Marginal Risk area was split around the NYC metro and Long
    Island, noting a stationary boundary persisting across eastern MA
    and RI, and more moisture from central NJ southward, resulting in a
    relative minimum of rainfall over the NYC metro.

    ...MS/AL...

    A Slight Risk upgrade was considered for this area for this
    afternoon's expected convection across central MS and extending
    into central AL. Plentiful atmospheric moisture and instability=20
    will be available, however the lack of a strong enough forcing
    mechanism should limit any flash flooding impacts to isolated
    areas. Any slow moving convection along the immediate Gulf Coast
    could result in isolated flash flooding in any urban areas, so the
    Marginal Risk was expanded to include the Gulf Coast.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    The Marginal Risk remains in place across much of Minnesota and
    adjacent counties with this update. Expect some limited convection
    to develop across the state within the broader low level jet this
    afternoon, but any storms that develop should be fast moving.
    Additional storms develop across northern Minnesota into tonight,
    but these too should also be fast moving. Regardless, expected
    coverage over the coming days will be increasing, along with the
    flash flooding threat.

    ...Southwest...

    No major changes were made, but there is some potential for
    convective development over the Phoenix metro, or from outflows
    from likely more numerous showers and storms along the Mogollon Rim
    as those outflows move southwestward into the Valley. The Marginal
    Risk was expanded to include these lower elevation areas with this
    update.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southern New England through the Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Surface cold front draped from New England through the Ozarks will
    drift gradually southeast but generally stall across the region
    Thursday as the parent trough begins to fill, leaving gradually
    more zonal flow over the eastern CONUS. Although heights will
    gradually rise, weak shortwave impulses embedded within the flow
    will maintain periodic ascent atop the front to create waves of low
    pressure rippling northeast to produce locally enhanced lift, and
    scattered to numerous thunderstorms are again expected across the
    east on Thursday, primarily from southern New England through the
    Gulf Coast.

    Thunderstorms that develop will all have the potential to produce
    pockets of heavy rainfall as thermodynamics remain impressive. PWs
    of more than 2 inches will remain in a plume arcing within return
    flow around offshore high pressure from the Florida Panhandle
    through the northern Mid-Atlantic states. This PW will overlap with
    elevated MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg to create the favorable
    thermodynamics for heavy rainfall, and the HREF indicates scattered neighborhood probabilities for 2"/hr rain rates across much of the
    area supporting the broad inherited MRGL risk.

    However, there appears to be at least a signal for some more
    organized convection with a greater threat for excessive rainfall
    across the eastern Carolinas and into Southeast Virginia. This
    region will benefit from additionally focused ascent through the
    presence of the cold front and a surface trough, upon which a more
    pronounced shortwave is progged by the consensus of the models to
    lift northeast during peak heating. This will promote at least
    modest bulk shear to support multi-cell clusters across this area,
    while most of the rest of the east should generally feature pulse
    type thunderstorms. Additionally, mean 0-6km winds and propagation
    vectors are aligned and parallel to the boundaries, suggesting an
    enhanced training risk as well, which additionally supports the
    elevated HREF and REFS probabilities for 3"/24hrs (and lower but
    still notable 5"/24 hrs). For this reason the inherited SLGT risk
    was adjusted to spread farther south into the eastern Carolinas.


    ...Southwest...
    Mid-level ridge centered over NM to start Thursday morning will
    weaken in response to height falls approaching from CA as a trough
    digs down the Pacific coast. This will have the two- pronged affect
    of lowering heights across the Desert Southwest/Four Corners
    region, while also leading to increased cyclonic flow emerging
    from near Baja to push a potent shortwave northward across AZ and
    into UT. Additionally, this increasingly south flow, especially
    between 850-700mb, will transport elevated PWs northward, and a
    plume above 1" is progged to surge almost to UT by the end of the
    forecast period. Where this combines with MUCAPE above 500 J/kg,
    slow moving storms (0-6km mean winds of just around 5 kts to the
    north) could become more organized leading to a longer duration of
    heavy rainfall rates of 0.5-1"/hr. The total coverage is still
    somewhat uncertain so the inherited MRGL risk still appears
    appropriate, but this was expanded north to match recent guidance,
    and convection is likely to be more widespread Thursday than it was
    on Wednesday.


    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A warm front will lift northeast towards Minnesota today,
    accompanied by a surge of 850mb winds to 20-30 kts advecting
    anomalous PWs of 1.5 to 1.75 inches northeastward (+1 to +1.5
    standard deviations above the climo mean). This front will be
    driven eastward by a potent but flat and fast- moving shortwave
    embedded within the nearly zonal flow aloft, leading to a period
    of enhanced ascent aided by the warm front and accompanying
    isentropic lift of the 850mb wind. This will result in scattered
    thunderstorms across the area, with bulk shear of 25-35 kts
    potentially supporting some organization into clusters. The
    guidance is highly variable in both the placement and intensity of
    convection today, and the QPF footprint and ensemble probabilities
    suffer as a result. Still, with the impressive thermodynamics in
    place, thunderstorms that develop could support rainfall rates of
    1-2"/hr with at least short-term training possible, and the
    inherited MRGL risk was curtailed for latest guidance but
    continued.


    ...Pacific Northwest...
    A rare August atmospheric river (AR) is progged to make landfall
    this evening north of 45N into WA state with IVT above 500 kg/m/s
    as reflected by both GEFS and ECENS probabilities above 90%. A weak
    shortwave embedded within otherwise zonal flow aloft will help
    produce ascent into this plume of IVT, but instability will be
    negligible and jet level ascent appears to be displaced north of
    the core of the AR. While deterministic model QPF output and
    accompanying ensembles support a threat for heavy rainfall,
    especially in the Olympics, this will be occurring atop extremely
    dry soils and should generally be beneficial rainfall.
    Additionally, in the AR/ERO verification data set since 2019, there
    has never been an impactful (MRGL risk or higher) AR in the month
    of August. For this reason, despite some heavy rain spreading
    onshore this evening, no excessive rainfall impacts are expected.

    Weiss

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    MINNESOTA AND WISCONSIN...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A cold front will progress slowly eastward Friday across Minnesota,
    elongated from Wisconsin to South Dakota by the end of D2. This
    front will elongate and pivot more to a W/E direction as the
    driving mid-level flow gets squeezed between a trough over northern
    Canada and a bulging ridge across the Lower/Mid Mississippi Valley.
    As the flow becomes more zonal to align elongate the front, waves
    of vorticity will surge eastward within the pinching flow to track
    west to east along this front from the Dakotas into Wisconsin. This
    will produce enhanced lift into an environment that will steadily
    become more favorable for convection, and may feature extreme
    thermodynamics of PWs above 1.75 inches overlapping MUCAPE of
    3000-4000 J/kg later D2.

    This suggests that thunderstorms will become scattered to
    widespread, peaking later in the day as the LLJ ramps up to 25-35
    kts from the SW. This will occur concurrently with a surge of bulk
    shear to above 35 kts, and as warm cloud depths climb during this
    period as well, convection will grow upscale, potentially into one
    or more MCS, with rainfall rates of 1-3"/hr. Mean 0-6km winds of
    15-25 kts suggest cells will move quickly eastward, but
    redevelopment along the front and any upwind growth on MCS
    boundaries could prolong this rainfall through
    backbuilding/training. The inherited MRGL risk was modified
    cosmetically and a targeted SLGT risk was added to match the
    highest ensemble probabilities of 3 inches which also overlap some
    lower FFG.


    ...Mid-Atlantic through portions of the Southeast...
    The cold front from Thursday will dissipate into a trough Friday
    while pushing south towards AL/GA/SC. Despite the weakening of this
    boundary and increasing heights aloft in the vicinity of an
    expanding mid-level ridge, showers and thunderstorms are again
    expected, although in a more scattered fashion than on Thursday.
    PWs will remain elevated as tropical moisture continues across the
    region, exceeding 2 inches in a ribbon from eastern NC through the
    Gulf Coast of MS/LA. This will overlap with impressive MUCAPE above
    2000 J/kg during peak heating to drive aftn convection, generally
    of a pulse nature, across much of the region. Weak impulses are
    modeled within the flow, but with minimal accompanying height falls
    or PVA, so any organization will be tied to outflow boundaries or
    storm mergers within the otherwise pulse environment. Despite
    rainfall rates that will likely peak at 2-3"/hr thanks to the
    robust thermodynamics, short lifespans and a lack of organization
    suggests only a MRGL risk of excessive rainfall is needed.


    ...Southwest...
    The flow across the Southwest on Friday becomes increasingly
    pinched between an amplifying trough digging over California and a
    bulging ridge centered near the Central Plains. Shortwave energy
    and accompanying spokes of vorticity will periodically shed from
    this upstream trough and track SW to NE from southern AZ through
    the Four Corners, likely resulting in widespread convective
    development, especially as a MUCAPE plume surges above 1000 J/kg.

    It is possible that development will be slow to initiate on Friday
    due to remnant overnight convection Thursday night leaving cloud
    cover early, but most available models including the GFS-forced UA
    WRF indicate widespread thunderstorms from southern AZ through
    UT/CO and even into WY during the evening. Rainfall rates in
    convection will likely peak above 1"/hr across AZ where
    instability/PWs are higher, but should reach 0.5"-1"/hr elsewhere.
    While 0-6km mean winds will be progressive enough to limit
    individual cells from producing too much rain, sufficient bulk
    shear of 20-30 kts, especially beneath any shortwave impulses, will
    help organize convection into clusters to either lengthen rainfall
    duration or result in repeating rounds of storms. Where this
    occurs, rainfall probabilities above 1" reach as high as 30-40%,
    and the MRGL risk was expanded northward from inherited.


    ...Western Gulf Coast...
    Invest 98L and its accompanying potent mid- level circulation will
    lift northwest into northern Mexico or southern Texas Friday
    afternoon. To the east of this feature, accelerating low-to-mid
    level winds will advect a plume of tropical moisture northward onto
    the Texas coast, with PWs potentially exceeding 2.25 inches along
    much of the Texas coast. While this is only around the 90th
    percentile from the CFSR climatology, it will be accompanied by
    MUCAPE exceeding 3000 J/kg drawn inland by 850mb winds of 20-30 kts
    (equal to or greater than the mean 0-6km wind). Although the
    deterministic models feature a wide variation in QPF output Friday,
    and the resulting ensemble probabilities are suppressed in
    response, it appears the setup is favorable for at least modest
    inland penetration of training heavy rainfall within thunderstorms,
    so a MRGL risk was added for portions of the region.


    ...Pacific Northwest...
    The core of a rare August atmospheric river (AR) will move onshore
    WA state on Friday, leading to prolonged heavy rainfall, continuing
    from the landfall on Thursday and discussed in the D1 ERD. While
    QPF will likely be greater on Friday (potentially 2-4" and even
    locally greater in the higher terrain of the Olympics and northern
    Cascades), the threat for excessive rainfall remains somewhat
    uncertain. Impressive PWs of 1.25 to 1.5 inches (locally the
    highest ever recorded in the 5-week CFSR climatology from NAEFS)
    and formidable 850mb winds will help drive strong upslope ascent
    supporting this intense rainfall into upwind terrain features.
    While it is nearly certain rainfall will be heavy, there is less
    certainty into whether rain rates can be sufficient to cause rapid
    runoff atop very dry soils since MUCAPE is forecast to be
    negligible which should keep rain rates to around 0.5"/hr. If this
    rain were to fall atop recent and sensitive burn scars, instances
    of flash flooding could result, but at this time the threat appears
    to be below 5% when considering the climatology of the event as
    well. After coordination with WFO SEW and OTX, other than some
    concern about a few sensitive burn scars, agreement was made on
    keeping a MRGL risk out of the forecast at this time.

    Weiss

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST INTO THE GREAT LAKES...

    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    Pinched mid-level flow will become increasingly squeezed between a
    trough over Ontario and a ridge expanding from the Gulf Coast.
    Between these two features, nearly zonal flow will force a cold
    front to generally align west to east and stall, providing a
    convergent impetus for convection. Along this front, spokes of
    vorticity will track west to east leading to locally enhanced
    ascent to support waves of low pressure, while 850mb inflow returns
    around the high pressure ridge and reaches 25-35 kts to draw
    elevated thermodynamics characterized by PWs above 1.75 inches and
    MUCAPE of 4000 J/kg into the boundary. This will support multiple
    rounds of thunderstorms through the day, peaking during the
    evening/Saturday night, with rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr or more at
    times, leading to scattered instances of flash flooding. A SLGT
    risk has been added for portions of this area where probabilities
    from the SREF/GEFS/ECENS align for more than 3" of rain.


    ...Southwest...
    Continued S/SW mid-level flow around the periphery of a ridge
    positioned over the Mississippi River Valley will maintain elevated
    moisture into the Southwest on Saturday. Guidance continues to
    suggest that weak shortwaves/vorticity maxima will lift northeast
    embedded within the flow, although the intensity of these features
    is generally modest, and weaker than on Friday. Additionally,
    although 850mb flow will remain southerly over NM, it is progged to
    shift a bit more to the west over AZ, lowering the overall PW
    anomalies and indicating the greater risk for any isolated flash
    flooding will shift east from prior days. MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg
    will support rainfall rates that may approach 1"/hr at times, and
    if these fall across more sensitive features like burn scars or
    urban areas, isolated instances of flash flooding could result.


    ...Southeast...
    A wave of low pressure along a weakening cold front will drift
    southeast away from the NC coast on Saturday. At the same time, a
    building ridge over the Mississippi River Valley will lead to
    anti-cyclonic mid-level flow out of the NW into the Southeast,
    setting up a situation with moist confluent flow intensifying over
    the region. PWs will likely remain elevated above 2" along the Gulf
    Coast, but be lower elsewhere as drier air tries to advect from the
    NE around the offshore low, and this will result in less widespread
    coverage of thunderstorms than prior days. While coverage of
    convection is expected to generally be scattered, some locally
    enhanced rainfall along any convergence axes is possible due to
    rainfall rates that will still reach 1-2"/hr at times. Where these
    fall across vulnerable soils from widespread convection on prior
    days, impacts could result, and a MRGL risk continues for portions
    of the area.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7ccEY7Y9vN5NNLx_y2iIoep5_MWNnK1n7qkXhLEWGxkR= 9XglO8yc4urUWKd3nKmNESGpFLGmLzG3YYcGvSq9GTzJQFU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7ccEY7Y9vN5NNLx_y2iIoep5_MWNnK1n7qkXhLEWGxkR= 9XglO8yc4urUWKd3nKmNESGpFLGmLzG3YYcGvSq9cYEsgRA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7ccEY7Y9vN5NNLx_y2iIoep5_MWNnK1n7qkXhLEWGxkR= 9XglO8yc4urUWKd3nKmNESGpFLGmLzG3YYcGvSq9trHy9ZI$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Aug 14 20:04:40 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 142004
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    404 PM EDT Thu Aug 14 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Aug 14 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    ...16Z Update...

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    Based on some of the latest CAMs guidance, featuring notable
    agreement with the development of training thunderstorms across
    portions of southern and eastern North Carolina, a higher end
    Slight is in effect from the Hampton Roads area southwest through
    far northeastern South Carolina. Confidence has therefore
    increased on the potential for flooding, especially considering
    recent heavy rainfall has saturated the soils in the area. Abundant
    moisture with PWATs near 2.25 inches will support highly efficient
    warm rain processes which will allow any storms, and especially
    training storms to produce multiple inch per hour rainfall rates
    with the heaviest cores. One caveat will be somewhat reduced
    visibility from cloud cover from the ongoing MCS, which may help
    portions of SC avoid the greatest impacts from flooding in favor of
    areas further northeast into NC.

    Confidence decreases just a bit across far northeastern North
    Carolina and southeast Virginia, where much of the convective
    activity expected will develop along the James River and the storms
    may then progress a bit south of due east. There remains some
    potential that those storms' cold pools help fuel additional
    convective development over the more sensitive urban Hampton Roads
    area.

    ...Northeast...

    The Marginal Risk area was split around the NYC metro and Long
    Island, noting a stationary boundary persisting across eastern MA
    and RI, and more moisture from central NJ southward, resulting in a
    relative minimum of rainfall over the NYC metro.

    ...MS/AL...

    A Slight Risk upgrade was considered for this area for this
    afternoon's expected convection across central MS and extending
    into central AL. Plentiful atmospheric moisture and instability
    will be available, however the lack of a strong enough forcing
    mechanism should limit any flash flooding impacts to isolated
    areas. Any slow moving convection along the immediate Gulf Coast
    could result in isolated flash flooding in any urban areas, so the
    Marginal Risk was expanded to include the Gulf Coast.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    The Marginal Risk remains in place across much of Minnesota and
    adjacent counties with this update. Expect some limited convection
    to develop across the state within the broader low level jet this
    afternoon, but any storms that develop should be fast moving.
    Additional storms develop across northern Minnesota into tonight,
    but these too should also be fast moving. Regardless, expected
    coverage over the coming days will be increasing, along with the
    flash flooding threat.

    ...Southwest...

    No major changes were made, but there is some potential for
    convective development over the Phoenix metro, or from outflows
    from likely more numerous showers and storms along the Mogollon Rim
    as those outflows move southwestward into the Valley. The Marginal
    Risk was expanded to include these lower elevation areas with this
    update.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southern New England through the Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Surface cold front draped from New England through the Ozarks will
    drift gradually southeast but generally stall across the region
    Thursday as the parent trough begins to fill, leaving gradually
    more zonal flow over the eastern CONUS. Although heights will
    gradually rise, weak shortwave impulses embedded within the flow
    will maintain periodic ascent atop the front to create waves of low
    pressure rippling northeast to produce locally enhanced lift, and
    scattered to numerous thunderstorms are again expected across the
    east on Thursday, primarily from southern New England through the
    Gulf Coast.

    Thunderstorms that develop will all have the potential to produce
    pockets of heavy rainfall as thermodynamics remain impressive. PWs
    of more than 2 inches will remain in a plume arcing within return
    flow around offshore high pressure from the Florida Panhandle
    through the northern Mid-Atlantic states. This PW will overlap with
    elevated MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg to create the favorable
    thermodynamics for heavy rainfall, and the HREF indicates scattered neighborhood probabilities for 2"/hr rain rates across much of the
    area supporting the broad inherited MRGL risk.

    However, there appears to be at least a signal for some more
    organized convection with a greater threat for excessive rainfall
    across the eastern Carolinas and into Southeast Virginia. This
    region will benefit from additionally focused ascent through the
    presence of the cold front and a surface trough, upon which a more
    pronounced shortwave is progged by the consensus of the models to
    lift northeast during peak heating. This will promote at least
    modest bulk shear to support multi-cell clusters across this area,
    while most of the rest of the east should generally feature pulse
    type thunderstorms. Additionally, mean 0-6km winds and propagation
    vectors are aligned and parallel to the boundaries, suggesting an
    enhanced training risk as well, which additionally supports the
    elevated HREF and REFS probabilities for 3"/24hrs (and lower but
    still notable 5"/24 hrs). For this reason the inherited SLGT risk
    was adjusted to spread farther south into the eastern Carolinas.


    ...Southwest...
    Mid-level ridge centered over NM to start Thursday morning will
    weaken in response to height falls approaching from CA as a trough
    digs down the Pacific coast. This will have the two- pronged affect
    of lowering heights across the Desert Southwest/Four Corners
    region, while also leading to increased cyclonic flow emerging
    from near Baja to push a potent shortwave northward across AZ and
    into UT. Additionally, this increasingly south flow, especially
    between 850-700mb, will transport elevated PWs northward, and a
    plume above 1" is progged to surge almost to UT by the end of the
    forecast period. Where this combines with MUCAPE above 500 J/kg,
    slow moving storms (0-6km mean winds of just around 5 kts to the
    north) could become more organized leading to a longer duration of
    heavy rainfall rates of 0.5-1"/hr. The total coverage is still
    somewhat uncertain so the inherited MRGL risk still appears
    appropriate, but this was expanded north to match recent guidance,
    and convection is likely to be more widespread Thursday than it was
    on Wednesday.


    ..Upper Mississippi Valley...
    A warm front will lift northeast towards Minnesota today,
    accompanied by a surge of 850mb winds to 20-30 kts advecting
    anomalous PWs of 1.5 to 1.75 inches northeastward (+1 to +1.5
    standard deviations above the climo mean). This front will be
    driven eastward by a potent but flat and fast- moving shortwave
    embedded within the nearly zonal flow aloft, leading to a period
    of enhanced ascent aided by the warm front and accompanying
    isentropic lift of the 850mb wind. This will result in scattered
    thunderstorms across the area, with bulk shear of 25-35 kts
    potentially supporting some organization into clusters. The
    guidance is highly variable in both the placement and intensity of
    convection today, and the QPF footprint and ensemble probabilities
    suffer as a result. Still, with the impressive thermodynamics in
    place, thunderstorms that develop could support rainfall rates of
    1-2"/hr with at least short-term training possible, and the
    inherited MRGL risk was curtailed for latest guidance but
    continued.


    ...Pacific Northwest...
    A rare August atmospheric river (AR) is progged to make landfall
    this evening north of 45N into WA state with IVT above 500 kg/m/s
    as reflected by both GEFS and ECENS probabilities above 90%. A weak
    shortwave embedded within otherwise zonal flow aloft will help
    produce ascent into this plume of IVT, but instability will be
    negligible and jet level ascent appears to be displaced north of
    the core of the AR. While deterministic model QPF output and
    accompanying ensembles support a threat for heavy rainfall,
    especially in the Olympics, this will be occurring atop extremely
    dry soils and should generally be beneficial rainfall.
    Additionally, in the AR/ERO verification data set since 2019, there
    has never been an impactful (MRGL risk or higher) AR in the month
    of August. For this reason, despite some heavy rain spreading
    onshore this evening, no excessive rainfall impacts are expected.

    Weiss

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, DEEP SOUTH=20
    TEXAS, AND FAR SOUTHERN ARIZONA...

    ...20Z Update...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    Guidance has shifted a bit south and east with the band of heaviest
    rainfall expected across portions of Minnesota and Wisconsin on
    Friday. There is reasonable agreement that an MCS will form across
    Minnesota and Wisconsin, then push south, following the
    instability, towards Iowa and Illinois. It is really in the
    formation stage of the MCS during the evening hours when the
    flooding threat will be maximized, while after that, the MCS should
    be a fast mover towards the south overnight. There has been some=20
    time for the soils to dry in this area, though some rain expected
    today, D1, could saturate soils in some areas ahead of this new
    breakout of convection. Overall this area is on the lower end side
    of the Slight Risk category, but any storms that get hung up on
    either side of the MCS could make for locally higher impacts,
    albeit isolated.

    ...Southern Appalachians...

    In coordination with GSP/Greer, SC forecast office, a Slight Risk
    area was added to portions of the Western Carolinas with this
    update. HREF probabilities for FFG exceedance have increased to 30%
    across this region, and guidance is in better agreement that
    clusters of storms will form in this area, and the storms will
    likely move slowly, chaotically, and be highly influenced by each
    others cold pools, resulting in cell mergers. On the whole, the
    storms will generally move south and east with time, so portions of
    upstate South Carolina may get into the flooding threat later than
    western North Carolina on Friday. A significant portion of the
    certainty with the Slight Risk for this area consists of the soils
    being saturated from recent, and in some cases, ongoing heavy
    rainfall, which will have local streams, creeks, and rivers already
    above normal, such that additional rainfall will result in widely
    scattered instances of flash flooding. PWATs ahead of a southward
    moving cold front will be between 1.5 and 1.8 inches, allowing for
    sufficient moisture to be present to support storms capable of
    locally heavy rainfall, especially when adding any upslope
    component and forcing tied to the mountains.

    ...Deep South Texas...

    In coordination with BRO/Brownsville, TX forecast office, a Slight
    Risk area was introduced with this update. A healthy looking Invest
    98L in the western Gulf is being very poorly handled in the
    guidance thus far. However, there is good agreement that it will
    remain on a northwestward trajectory, making landfall somewhere
    near Brownsville on Friday. Any further intensification of this
    system will increase the rainfall threat across Deep South Texas.
    The greatest vulnerability for heavy rainfall will be in the urban
    areas such as Brownsville and McAllen.

    There remains much higher than normal uncertainty with the expected
    rainfall footprint of Invest 98L. Since the guidance has poor
    handling on this system, most of the guidance is dissipating the
    rainfall very soon upon landfall, which pattern recognition would
    suggest does not often happens with a tropical system on the move.
    Thus, in contrast to much of the guidance, the Slight Risk was
    hoisted acknowledging the potential for organized convection to
    impact somewhere along the Texas Gulf Coast, most likely on Friday
    morning and in Deep South Texas. Outflow and sea breezes may make
    for slightly elevated chances of heavy rain and resultant flash
    flooding along all of the Texas Gulf Coast and into Louisiana,
    where the Marginal was expanded, but remains in place. Due to this
    high uncertainty, large changes to the ERO risk areas are likely
    with subsequent updates as the guidance gets a better handle on
    Invest 98L. Should 98L intensify, additional upgrades may be
    needed. Please see the National Hurricane Center website at
    hurricanes.gov for more details about Invest 98L.

    ...Southern Arizona...

    Monsoonal moisture in place across Arizona will combine with an
    upper level vort max to result in greater than normal organization
    of expected convection across far southern Arizona on Friday
    afternoon. Given the higher than normal PWATs and potential for
    organization; in coordination with TWC/Tucson, AZ forecast office,
    a Slight Risk area was introduced with this update, mainly along=20
    the International Border. Convection is likely to break out well=20
    into Arizona, mostly along the Mogollon Rim, but guidance has been=20
    less than reliable about the coverage of storms, particularly in=20
    southern Arizona. Thus, despite some of the guidance being much=20
    better, and suggesting a higher end threat, the Slight really=20
    focuses where the vort max will be the primary forcing mechanism=20
    for convection.

    ...Pacific Northwest...

    After extensive coordination with SEW/Seattle, WA forecast office,
    a Marginal Risk was introduced for all of western Washington with
    this update. An extremely anomalous moisture plume associated with
    a robust atmospheric river is forecast to move into western
    Washington on Friday. PWATs will be as high as 6 sigma above
    climatological normals for this time of year, which if verified,
    will set both monthly records for August and threaten all time
    records, as they near 1.75 inches. This incredible abundance of
    moisture will translate to a 24-36 hour period of highly efficient
    rainfall, streaming primarily into the west facing slopes of the
    Olympics and Cascades Mountains. By far the heaviest rainfall
    totals will be seen in those areas. For the more populated interior
    valleys, including the Seattle Metro, the usual downslope shadowing
    will occur. However, the combination of urbanization and the
    unusually high amount of moisture is likely to overcome the
    downsloping, resulting in far lower, but still significant amounts
    of rainfall into those areas.=20

    Contrasting the anomalous atmospheric moisture and rainfall, nearly
    all of western Washington is in some amount of drought, ranging
    from Minor to Extreme, as the area is in the midst of its dry
    season. That dry season will abruptly end tonight through into
    Saturday morning, as rivers approach record territory with all the
    rainfall. The drought conditions should certainly dampen any
    flooding impacts quite a bit, pun intended. Normally with this
    unusual an amount of atmospheric moisture, the ERO would start at
    Slight or Moderate and only go up from there, but given a good
    amount of this rainfall will be beneficial and welcome for filling
    local reservoirs, the Marginal was the decided happy medium to
    account for localized impacts from flooding small streams and
    creeks, as well as urban impacts, but flooding impacts should
    remain relatively isolated since the atmospheric river has such a
    large volume to fill before the rainfall becomes impactful.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST INTO THE GREAT LAKES...

    ...20Z Update...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    Relatively few changes were made to the risk areas on Day
    3/Saturday. A higher end Slight is in effect for portions of
    central Wisconsin. Additional heavy rainfall from MCS development
    again on Saturday is likely to overlap with areas hit from heavy
    rains on D2/Friday. This overlap, in addition to prior heavy rains
    in the area, will keep soils saturated, and the rivers and streams
    full. Thus, the additional rainfall expected Saturday will fall on
    top of these saturated soils and full streams. Magnitude-wise, the
    rainfall on Saturday will also be heavier across Wisconsin than
    previous days, only increasing the potential impact. For these
    reasons, the higher end Slight is in effect, and considerations may
    need to be given, depending on how much rain falls in the interim,
    as to whether a Moderate Risk may be needed in this area.=20

    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...

    The inherited Marginal Risk was greatly expanded across portions of
    central Texas with this update. This is all due to uncertainty with
    the track and eventual impacts associated with the moisture plume
    with Invest 98L over the western Gulf. All indications are that the
    associated moisture will push northward from Deep South Texas on
    D2/Friday into central Texas on Saturday, but how organized the
    storms become, their coverage, and heavy rainfall potential remain
    highly uncertain. Thus, there is higher than normal probability
    that future upgrades will be needed, there is just no certainty as
    to where. The guidance is in decent agreement that any upper level
    disturbance that 98L is able to form prior to its landfall and
    subsequent dissipation over Deep South Texas will continue up the
    Rio Grande towards the Big Bend Area. This has the potential to
    bring heavy rainfall to areas that got the devastating flooding way
    back on July 4. However, it's very important to note that the
    guidance is far from agreed on this scenario.=20

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture will begin to push east on Saturday, expanding
    the potential for isolated flash flooding across much of southern
    New Mexico. However, there remains little to help focus that
    moisture and those storms into any kind of organization, so while
    the slopes of the mountains could act as a localized focus, and
    where the flash flooding threat is highest, this too remains
    uncertain. Most likely the storms will behave as they've done in
    past events, remaining widely scattered, reliant on cold pools and
    cell mergers, and not persist for very long. The inherited Marginal
    was left unchanged with this update, as any heavy rainfall
    footprint also remains unchanged.

    ...Pacific Northwest...

    The Atmospheric River (A.R.) aimed at Washington State on=20
    D2/Friday will begin to shift southward across Oregon on=20
    D3/Saturday. Unlike Washington however, the A.R. will be on the=20
    move towards the south, greatly limiting the time any one area is
    under the plume of moisture tracking northeastward into the
    northern Rockies. Since much of western Oregon is also in a
    drought, the much lesser amounts of rainfall expected into the
    Oregon Cascades and coastal ranges compared to areas further north
    into Washington State should limit any flash flooding to sub-
    Marginal levels. Considerations for a future Marginal Risk will be
    needed should more rain impact northern Oregon on D2/Friday than
    currently forecast.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    Pinched mid-level flow will become increasingly squeezed between a
    trough over Ontario and a ridge expanding from the Gulf Coast.
    Between these two features, nearly zonal flow will force a cold
    front to generally align west to east and stall, providing a
    convergent impetus for convection. Along this front, spokes of
    vorticity will track west to east leading to locally enhanced
    ascent to support waves of low pressure, while 850mb inflow returns
    around the high pressure ridge and reaches 25-35 kts to draw
    elevated thermodynamics characterized by PWs above 1.75 inches and
    MUCAPE of 4000 J/kg into the boundary. This will support multiple
    rounds of thunderstorms through the day, peaking during the
    evening/Saturday night, with rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr or more at
    times, leading to scattered instances of flash flooding. A SLGT
    risk has been added for portions of this area where probabilities
    from the SREF/GEFS/ECENS align for more than 3" of rain.


    ...Southwest...
    Continued S/SW mid-level flow around the periphery of a ridge
    positioned over the Mississippi River Valley will maintain elevated
    moisture into the Southwest on Saturday. Guidance continues to
    suggest that weak shortwaves/vorticity maxima will lift northeast
    embedded within the flow, although the intensity of these features
    is generally modest, and weaker than on Friday. Additionally,
    although 850mb flow will remain southerly over NM, it is progged to
    shift a bit more to the west over AZ, lowering the overall PW
    anomalies and indicating the greater risk for any isolated flash
    flooding will shift east from prior days. MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg
    will support rainfall rates that may approach 1"/hr at times, and
    if these fall across more sensitive features like burn scars or
    urban areas, isolated instances of flash flooding could result.


    ...Southeast...
    A wave of low pressure along a weakening cold front will drift
    southeast away from the NC coast on Saturday. At the same time, a
    building ridge over the Mississippi River Valley will lead to
    anti-cyclonic mid-level flow out of the NW into the Southeast,
    setting up a situation with moist confluent flow intensifying over
    the region. PWs will likely remain elevated above 2" along the Gulf
    Coast, but be lower elsewhere as drier air tries to advect from the
    NE around the offshore low, and this will result in less widespread
    coverage of thunderstorms than prior days. While coverage of
    convection is expected to generally be scattered, some locally
    enhanced rainfall along any convergence axes is possible due to
    rainfall rates that will still reach 1-2"/hr at times. Where these
    fall across vulnerable soils from widespread convection on prior
    days, impacts could result, and a MRGL risk continues for portions
    of the area.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-J6ER26Z-mZMnPJ0Tip67XoXGVeXej1Pu-Cs-bqO9qER= aYVlNrJ_J0KtNaG67iREI0GvIxH-yxhDp-Oxw49PjFv4fd8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-J6ER26Z-mZMnPJ0Tip67XoXGVeXej1Pu-Cs-bqO9qER= aYVlNrJ_J0KtNaG67iREI0GvIxH-yxhDp-Oxw49PPdpVC-I$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-J6ER26Z-mZMnPJ0Tip67XoXGVeXej1Pu-Cs-bqO9qER= aYVlNrJ_J0KtNaG67iREI0GvIxH-yxhDp-Oxw49PBnCJj6o$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Aug 15 00:53:53 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 150053
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    853 PM EDT Thu Aug 14 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEASTERN VA AND EASTERN NC...

    01Z Update...
    Reduced the footprint of the previous Slight Risk to portions of
    southeastern VA and eastern NC. In the near-term, convection=20
    firing along a slow-moving surface boundary is expected to produce
    an isolated to scattered threat for heavy rain and flash flooding=20
    along the southeastern VA/northeastern NC border before waning=20
    later this evening. See WPC MPD #935 for additional information=20
    regarding the near-term heavy rainfall and flash flooding threat=20
    across this area.

    Farther to the south, consensus of the hi-res guidance shows a
    low developing along the southeastern NC coast and becoming the=20
    focus for heavy rain as it moves northeast along the Outer Banks=20
    overnight. The 18Z HREF shows high neighborhood probabilities (up=20
    to 70 percent) for amounts greater than 3 inches over parts of the=20
    Outer Banks tonight.

    Elsewhere, made smaller adjustments to the Marginal Risk areas over
    the Southwest and the eastern Dakotas/Minnesota.

    And with the one remaining cluster of storms now moving
    progressively south over southeastern MA, the Marginal Risk was
    removed from southeastern New England.

    Pereira

    Day 2 Valid 12Z=20
    Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, DEEP SOUTH
    TEXAS, AND FAR SOUTHERN ARIZONA...

    ...20Z Update...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    Guidance has shifted a bit south and east with the band of heaviest
    rainfall expected across portions of Minnesota and Wisconsin on
    Friday. There is reasonable agreement that an MCS will form across
    Minnesota and Wisconsin, then push south, following the
    instability, towards Iowa and Illinois. It is really in the
    formation stage of the MCS during the evening hours when the
    flooding threat will be maximized, while after that, the MCS should
    be a fast mover towards the south overnight. There has been some
    time for the soils to dry in this area, though some rain expected
    today, D1, could saturate soils in some areas ahead of this new
    breakout of convection. Overall this area is on the lower end side
    of the Slight Risk category, but any storms that get hung up on
    either side of the MCS could make for locally higher impacts,
    albeit isolated.

    ...Southern Appalachians...

    In coordination with GSP/Greer, SC forecast office, a Slight Risk
    area was added to portions of the Western Carolinas with this
    update. HREF probabilities for FFG exceedance have increased to 30%
    across this region, and guidance is in better agreement that
    clusters of storms will form in this area, and the storms will
    likely move slowly, chaotically, and be highly influenced by each
    others cold pools, resulting in cell mergers. On the whole, the
    storms will generally move south and east with time, so portions of
    upstate South Carolina may get into the flooding threat later than
    western North Carolina on Friday. A significant portion of the
    certainty with the Slight Risk for this area consists of the soils
    being saturated from recent, and in some cases, ongoing heavy
    rainfall, which will have local streams, creeks, and rivers already
    above normal, such that additional rainfall will result in widely
    scattered instances of flash flooding. PWATs ahead of a southward
    moving cold front will be between 1.5 and 1.8 inches, allowing for
    sufficient moisture to be present to support storms capable of
    locally heavy rainfall, especially when adding any upslope
    component and forcing tied to the mountains.

    ...Deep South Texas...

    In coordination with BRO/Brownsville, TX forecast office, a Slight
    Risk area was introduced with this update. A healthy looking Invest
    98L in the western Gulf is being very poorly handled in the
    guidance thus far. However, there is good agreement that it will
    remain on a northwestward trajectory, making landfall somewhere
    near Brownsville on Friday. Any further intensification of this
    system will increase the rainfall threat across Deep South Texas.
    The greatest vulnerability for heavy rainfall will be in the urban
    areas such as Brownsville and McAllen.

    There remains much higher than normal uncertainty with the expected
    rainfall footprint of Invest 98L. Since the guidance has poor
    handling on this system, most of the guidance is dissipating the
    rainfall very soon upon landfall, which pattern recognition would
    suggest does not often happens with a tropical system on the move.
    Thus, in contrast to much of the guidance, the Slight Risk was
    hoisted acknowledging the potential for organized convection to
    impact somewhere along the Texas Gulf Coast, most likely on Friday
    morning and in Deep South Texas. Outflow and sea breezes may make
    for slightly elevated chances of heavy rain and resultant flash
    flooding along all of the Texas Gulf Coast and into Louisiana,
    where the Marginal was expanded, but remains in place. Due to this
    high uncertainty, large changes to the ERO risk areas are likely
    with subsequent updates as the guidance gets a better handle on
    Invest 98L. Should 98L intensify, additional upgrades may be
    needed. Please see the National Hurricane Center website at
    hurricanes.gov for more details about Invest 98L.

    ...Southern Arizona...

    Monsoonal moisture in place across Arizona will combine with an
    upper level vort max to result in greater than normal organization
    of expected convection across far southern Arizona on Friday
    afternoon. Given the higher than normal PWATs and potential for
    organization; in coordination with TWC/Tucson, AZ forecast office,
    a Slight Risk area was introduced with this update, mainly along
    the International Border. Convection is likely to break out well
    into Arizona, mostly along the Mogollon Rim, but guidance has been
    less than reliable about the coverage of storms, particularly in
    southern Arizona. Thus, despite some of the guidance being much
    better, and suggesting a higher end threat, the Slight really
    focuses where the vort max will be the primary forcing mechanism
    for convection.

    ...Pacific Northwest...

    After extensive coordination with SEW/Seattle, WA forecast office,
    a Marginal Risk was introduced for all of western Washington with
    this update. An extremely anomalous moisture plume associated with
    a robust atmospheric river is forecast to move into western
    Washington on Friday. PWATs will be as high as 6 sigma above
    climatological normals for this time of year, which if verified,
    will set both monthly records for August and threaten all time
    records, as they near 1.75 inches. This incredible abundance of
    moisture will translate to a 24-36 hour period of highly efficient
    rainfall, streaming primarily into the west facing slopes of the
    Olympics and Cascades Mountains. By far the heaviest rainfall
    totals will be seen in those areas. For the more populated interior
    valleys, including the Seattle Metro, the usual downslope shadowing
    will occur. However, the combination of urbanization and the
    unusually high amount of moisture is likely to overcome the
    downsloping, resulting in far lower, but still significant amounts
    of rainfall into those areas.

    Contrasting the anomalous atmospheric moisture and rainfall, nearly
    all of western Washington is in some amount of drought, ranging
    from Minor to Extreme, as the area is in the midst of its dry
    season. That dry season will abruptly end tonight through into
    Saturday morning, as rivers approach record territory with all the
    rainfall. The drought conditions should certainly dampen any
    flooding impacts quite a bit, pun intended. Normally with this
    unusual an amount of atmospheric moisture, the ERO would start at
    Slight or Moderate and only go up from there, but given a good
    amount of this rainfall will be beneficial and welcome for filling
    local reservoirs, the Marginal was the decided happy medium to
    account for localized impacts from flooding small streams and
    creeks, as well as urban impacts, but flooding impacts should
    remain relatively isolated since the atmospheric river has such a
    large volume to fill before the rainfall becomes impactful.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST INTO THE GREAT LAKES...

    ...20Z Update...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    Relatively few changes were made to the risk areas on Day
    3/Saturday. A higher end Slight is in effect for portions of
    central Wisconsin. Additional heavy rainfall from MCS development
    again on Saturday is likely to overlap with areas hit from heavy
    rains on D2/Friday. This overlap, in addition to prior heavy rains
    in the area, will keep soils saturated, and the rivers and streams
    full. Thus, the additional rainfall expected Saturday will fall on
    top of these saturated soils and full streams. Magnitude-wise, the
    rainfall on Saturday will also be heavier across Wisconsin than
    previous days, only increasing the potential impact. For these
    reasons, the higher end Slight is in effect, and considerations may
    need to be given, depending on how much rain falls in the interim,
    as to whether a Moderate Risk may be needed in this area.

    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...

    The inherited Marginal Risk was greatly expanded across portions of
    central Texas with this update. This is all due to uncertainty with
    the track and eventual impacts associated with the moisture plume
    with Invest 98L over the western Gulf. All indications are that the
    associated moisture will push northward from Deep South Texas on
    D2/Friday into central Texas on Saturday, but how organized the
    storms become, their coverage, and heavy rainfall potential remain
    highly uncertain. Thus, there is higher than normal probability
    that future upgrades will be needed, there is just no certainty as
    to where. The guidance is in decent agreement that any upper level
    disturbance that 98L is able to form prior to its landfall and
    subsequent dissipation over Deep South Texas will continue up the
    Rio Grande towards the Big Bend Area. This has the potential to
    bring heavy rainfall to areas that got the devastating flooding way
    back on July 4. However, it's very important to note that the
    guidance is far from agreed on this scenario.

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture will begin to push east on Saturday, expanding
    the potential for isolated flash flooding across much of southern
    New Mexico. However, there remains little to help focus that
    moisture and those storms into any kind of organization, so while
    the slopes of the mountains could act as a localized focus, and
    where the flash flooding threat is highest, this too remains
    uncertain. Most likely the storms will behave as they've done in
    past events, remaining widely scattered, reliant on cold pools and
    cell mergers, and not persist for very long. The inherited Marginal
    was left unchanged with this update, as any heavy rainfall
    footprint also remains unchanged.

    ...Pacific Northwest...

    The Atmospheric River (A.R.) aimed at Washington State on
    D2/Friday will begin to shift southward across Oregon on
    D3/Saturday. Unlike Washington however, the A.R. will be on the
    move towards the south, greatly limiting the time any one area is
    under the plume of moisture tracking northeastward into the
    northern Rockies. Since much of western Oregon is also in a
    drought, the much lesser amounts of rainfall expected into the
    Oregon Cascades and coastal ranges compared to areas further north
    into Washington State should limit any flash flooding to sub-
    Marginal levels. Considerations for a future Marginal Risk will be
    needed should more rain impact northern Oregon on D2/Friday than
    currently forecast.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Central Plains through the Great Lakes...
    Pinched mid-level flow will become increasingly squeezed between a
    trough over Ontario and a ridge expanding from the Gulf Coast.
    Between these two features, nearly zonal flow will force a cold
    front to generally align west to east and stall, providing a
    convergent impetus for convection. Along this front, spokes of
    vorticity will track west to east leading to locally enhanced
    ascent to support waves of low pressure, while 850mb inflow returns
    around the high pressure ridge and reaches 25-35 kts to draw
    elevated thermodynamics characterized by PWs above 1.75 inches and
    MUCAPE of 4000 J/kg into the boundary. This will support multiple
    rounds of thunderstorms through the day, peaking during the
    evening/Saturday night, with rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr or more at
    times, leading to scattered instances of flash flooding. A SLGT
    risk has been added for portions of this area where probabilities
    from the SREF/GEFS/ECENS align for more than 3" of rain.


    ...Southwest...
    Continued S/SW mid-level flow around the periphery of a ridge
    positioned over the Mississippi River Valley will maintain elevated
    moisture into the Southwest on Saturday. Guidance continues to
    suggest that weak shortwaves/vorticity maxima will lift northeast
    embedded within the flow, although the intensity of these features
    is generally modest, and weaker than on Friday. Additionally,
    although 850mb flow will remain southerly over NM, it is progged to
    shift a bit more to the west over AZ, lowering the overall PW
    anomalies and indicating the greater risk for any isolated flash
    flooding will shift east from prior days. MUCAPE of 500-1000 J/kg
    will support rainfall rates that may approach 1"/hr at times, and
    if these fall across more sensitive features like burn scars or
    urban areas, isolated instances of flash flooding could result.


    ...Southeast...
    A wave of low pressure along a weakening cold front will drift
    southeast away from the NC coast on Saturday. At the same time, a
    building ridge over the Mississippi River Valley will lead to
    anti-cyclonic mid-level flow out of the NW into the Southeast,
    setting up a situation with moist confluent flow intensifying over
    the region. PWs will likely remain elevated above 2" along the Gulf
    Coast, but be lower elsewhere as drier air tries to advect from the
    NE around the offshore low, and this will result in less widespread
    coverage of thunderstorms than prior days. While coverage of
    convection is expected to generally be scattered, some locally
    enhanced rainfall along any convergence axes is possible due to
    rainfall rates that will still reach 1-2"/hr at times. Where these
    fall across vulnerable soils from widespread convection on prior
    days, impacts could result, and a MRGL risk continues for portions
    of the area.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8HHCH3abn4tIBvcorwgDx4YB6gP2E3FZE_Uh_9A51u_X= aNaQEEa3VlFbCl6a3EQzKUw0BJJTUNs02cP04ySthVNemD8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8HHCH3abn4tIBvcorwgDx4YB6gP2E3FZE_Uh_9A51u_X= aNaQEEa3VlFbCl6a3EQzKUw0BJJTUNs02cP04ySt8wB5hiE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8HHCH3abn4tIBvcorwgDx4YB6gP2E3FZE_Uh_9A51u_X= aNaQEEa3VlFbCl6a3EQzKUw0BJJTUNs02cP04yStwTvsoG0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Aug 15 08:28:56 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 150827
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    427 AM EDT Fri Aug 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST, THE LOWER RIO GRANDE VALLEY, AND FAR SOUTHERN=20
    ARIZONA...

    ...Northern Plains through Upper Midwest...
    Organized convective activity of a complex nature is expected today
    and tonight with the frontal zones over South Dakota and southern
    Minnesota. Ongoing activity over SD should help determine what
    happens today with additional activity overnight. Considerable
    spread in capturing this MCS activity is seen among 00Z HREF
    guidance with a bit of a south shift from previous runs. This
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from southern MN over northern IA
    with western WI left in given the potential for overnight movement
    there. Much of this area (MN/WI) will continue to be a focus for=20
    heavy rainfall into Monday.


    ...Lower Rio Grande Valley through the Central Gulf Coast...=20
    AL98 redeveloped in the western Gulf overnight which is still=20
    poorly handled by CAM guidance (though the 00Z ARW and RRFS have=20
    some semblance of it). The northwestward trajectory still puts it=20
    on a path to near Brownsville today (03Z RAP suggests by 18Z) which
    poses a flash flood threat for the Lower Rio Grande Valley. The=20
    Slight Risk is maintained for the LRGV where there may be a low=20
    center to analyze by landfall. The Marginal risk extends up the=20
    Texas Coast and now through much of Louisiana for the tropical=20
    moisture plume shifting north with the surface trough. Please see=20
    the National Hurricane Center website at hurricanes.gov for any=20
    more details about Invest 98L.


    ...Southwest...=20
    Monsoonal moisture is in place across Arizona with ongoing
    nocturnal convection from central to southeastern portions of the
    state. It appears some stratus will persist into the morning and
    could setup differential heating boundaries, so adjustments to the
    flash flood threat areas are likely. An upper level vort max from
    northern Mexico will aid diurnal redevelopment. Given the push of
    above normal PW (rising to 1.5 sigma above normal) the Slight Risk
    area was maintained and expanded a bit based on the 00Z HREF. The
    eastern extent of the moisture does look to expand east of the
    southern Rockies, so the Marginal Risk which covers much of the
    rest of AZ through the Slot Canyon region of southern UT was
    expanded a bit to include more of central NM and far western TX.=20


    ...Mid-Atlantic through Southeast Coast and southern=20
    Appalachians...
    Continued broad area of elevated moisture from southeast PA to
    northern FL (where a Marginal Risk is in place) which is north of=20
    an upper ridge extending zonally from the FL Peninsula out into the
    Atlantic. Airmass storms with light steering flow make for slow-=20
    moving heavy development. 00Z HREF had a noted decrease in high=20
    rainfall probs over the southern Appalachians, so in coordination=20
    with WFO GSP, the Slight Risk was downgraded to a Marginal.


    ...Pacific Northwest...
    An extremely anomalous moisture plume associated with an=20
    atmospheric river continues to through western Washington into
    northwest OR through today. PW of 1.75" is 5 sigma above=20
    climatological normals, which if verified, would set both monthly=20
    records for August and threaten all time records. This incredible=20
    abundance of moisture will continue to create highly efficient=20
    rainfall through tonight, streaming primarily into the west facing
    slopes of the Olympics and Cascades Mountains. General shadowing is
    expected for the Seattle Metro, but still significant amounts of=20
    rainfall are possible in valley locations.

    Nearly all of western Washington is in some amount of drought,=20
    ranging from Minor to Extreme here at the end of the dry
    season which should limit flooding impacts. The Marginal Risk
    remains in effect.

    Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025
    Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST AND THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS OF NEW MEXICO...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Continued organized heavy rainfall from MCS development on=20
    Saturday which may overlap with heavy rain areas from today over MN
    and possibly WI. 00Z guidance is a bit south of prior runs which
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from central MN through much of=20
    WI and west of Lake Michigan. Considering this being the second day
    of heavy rain, this is considered a higher end Slight Risk. Depending
    on how much rain falls today and the updated forecasts with more
    CAMs available a Moderate Risk are may become warranted.


    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...
    Trimmed the Marginal Risk from south-central TX through the
    Carolinas a bit south based on 00Z consensus. Uncertainty remains=20=20
    with the track and impacts of the moisture plume from AL98 currently
    over the western Gulf. The associated moisture will push northward
    into central Texas on Saturday, but uncertainty remains with storm
    organization and intensity. The moisture plume does extend as far=20
    west as the Texas Hill Country and along the Gulf Coast.


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture will begin to push east on Saturday, expanding=20
    the potential for isolated flash flooding across much of southern=20
    New Mexico. Given the persistence of 1.5 sigma above normal PW, the
    Marginal Risk is expanded into northern NM and the Sacramento
    Mountains are placed in a targeted Slight Risk with 00Z CAM support
    for focused heavy rain there where highly sensitive burn scars
    remain.=20

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    Continued frontal boundaries along northern extent of upper ridge
    focused over the central CONUS allows third consecutive day for
    organized convective activity over southern MN with additional
    heavy rain threats for western WI. The Slight Risk was expanded a
    bit south given input from the Canadian Regional which remains
    north and RRFS which focuses heavy rain more toward the MN/IA=20
    border. Moisture from the atmospheric river pushing into western WA
    today extends over the northern Plains. Given broad area of
    instability, frontal forcing, and PW of 1 to 2.5 sigma above
    normal, a Marginal Risk remains for much of MT and along the Dakota
    border.=20


    ...New Mexico...
    Continued monsoonal moisture between flow from a trough off the
    West Coast and a ridge over the central US. Will need to monitor
    areas for upgrades, but for now a Marginal Risk remains in effect
    for much of NM and far west TX.


    ...Florida to the Central Gulf Coast...=20
    Focus of elevated PW (2 to 2.25" which is 2 sigma above normal)=20
    across northern FL through the central Gulf Coast from ridge=20
    centered over the central states. The Marginal Risk for the=20
    northern half of the FL Peninsula into southern GA was expanded=20
    west through Mobile, AL given this high moisture with further=20
    expansion possible, particularly if remnants of AL98 will aid=20
    organization of activity.

    Jackson



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4OPGKo_m4IQc9MNl7VTXFUXKyz_8X049T2kjHl5vrPhS= 39aGeDp9JTSKoMMpRa3ZnNHp43ePMiyqP_MkoY0W0JYiCfg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4OPGKo_m4IQc9MNl7VTXFUXKyz_8X049T2kjHl5vrPhS= 39aGeDp9JTSKoMMpRa3ZnNHp43ePMiyqP_MkoY0WVJNt5q0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4OPGKo_m4IQc9MNl7VTXFUXKyz_8X049T2kjHl5vrPhS= 39aGeDp9JTSKoMMpRa3ZnNHp43ePMiyqP_MkoY0WXMlgMGI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Aug 15 11:09:19 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 151107
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    707 AM EDT Fri Aug 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST, THE LOWER RIO GRANDE VALLEY, AND FAR SOUTHERN
    ARIZONA...

    ...Northern Plains through Upper Midwest...
    Organized convective activity of a complex nature is expected today
    and tonight with the frontal zones over South Dakota and southern
    Minnesota. Ongoing activity over SD should help determine what
    happens today with additional activity overnight. Considerable
    spread in capturing this MCS activity is seen among 00Z HREF
    guidance with a bit of a south shift from previous runs. This
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from southern MN over northern IA
    with western WI left in given the potential for overnight movement
    there. Much of this area (MN/WI) will continue to be a focus for
    heavy rainfall into Monday.


    ...Lower Rio Grande Valley through the Central Gulf Coast...
    AL98 redeveloped in the western Gulf overnight which is still
    poorly handled by CAM guidance (though the 00Z ARW and RRFS have
    some semblance of it). The northwestward trajectory still puts it
    on a path to near Brownsville today (03Z RAP suggests by 18Z) which
    poses a flash flood threat for the Lower Rio Grande Valley. The
    Slight Risk is maintained for the LRGV where there may be a low
    center to analyze by landfall. The Marginal risk extends up the
    Texas Coast and now through much of Louisiana for the tropical
    moisture plume shifting north with the surface trough. Please see
    the National Hurricane Center website at hurricanes.gov for any
    more details about Invest 98L.


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture is in place across Arizona with ongoing
    nocturnal convection from central to southeastern portions of the
    state. It appears some stratus will persist into the morning and
    could setup differential heating boundaries, so adjustments to the
    flash flood threat areas are likely. An upper level vort max from
    northern Mexico will aid diurnal redevelopment. Given the push of
    above normal PW (rising to 1.5 sigma above normal) the Slight Risk
    area was maintained and expanded a bit based on the 00Z HREF. The
    eastern extent of the moisture does look to expand east of the
    southern Rockies, so the Marginal Risk which covers much of the
    rest of AZ through the Slot Canyon region of southern UT was
    expanded a bit to include more of central NM and far western TX.


    ...Mid-Atlantic through Southeast Coast and southern
    Appalachians...
    Continued broad area of elevated moisture from southeast PA to
    northern FL (where a Marginal Risk is in place) which is north of
    an upper ridge extending zonally from the FL Peninsula out into the
    Atlantic. Airmass storms with light steering flow make for slow-
    moving heavy development. 00Z HREF had a noted decrease in high
    rainfall probs over the southern Appalachians, so in coordination
    with WFO GSP, the Slight Risk was downgraded to a Marginal.


    ...Pacific Northwest...
    An extremely anomalous moisture plume associated with an
    atmospheric river continues to through western Washington into
    northwest OR through today. PW of 1.75" is 5 sigma above
    climatological normals, which if verified, would set both monthly
    records for August and threaten all time records. This incredible
    abundance of moisture will continue to create highly efficient
    rainfall through tonight, streaming primarily into the west facing
    slopes of the Olympics and Cascades Mountains. General shadowing is
    expected for the Seattle Metro, but still significant amounts of
    rainfall are possible in valley locations.

    Nearly all of western Washington is in some amount of drought,
    ranging from Minor to Extreme here at the end of the dry
    season which should limit flooding impacts. The Marginal Risk
    remains in effect.

    Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025
    Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST AND THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS OF NEW MEXICO...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Continued organized heavy rainfall from MCS development on
    Saturday which may overlap with heavy rain areas from today over MN
    and possibly WI. 00Z guidance is a bit south of prior runs which
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from central MN through much of
    WI and west of Lake Michigan. Considering this being the second day
    of heavy rain, this is considered a higher end Slight Risk. Depending
    on how much rain falls today and the updated forecasts with more
    CAMs available a Moderate Risk are may become warranted.


    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...
    Trimmed the Marginal Risk from south-central TX through the
    Carolinas a bit south based on 00Z consensus. Uncertainty remains
    with the track and impacts of the moisture plume from AL98 currently
    over the western Gulf. The associated moisture will push northward
    into central Texas on Saturday, but uncertainty remains with storm
    organization and intensity. The moisture plume does extend as far
    west as the Texas Hill Country and along the Gulf Coast.


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture will begin to push east on Saturday, expanding
    the potential for isolated flash flooding across much of southern
    New Mexico. Given the persistence of 1.5 sigma above normal PW, the
    Marginal Risk is expanded into northern NM and the Sacramento
    Mountains are placed in a targeted Slight Risk with 00Z CAM support
    for focused heavy rain there where highly sensitive burn scars
    remain.

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    Continued frontal boundaries along northern extent of upper ridge
    focused over the central CONUS allows third consecutive day for
    organized convective activity over southern MN with additional
    heavy rain threats for western WI. The Slight Risk was expanded a
    bit south given input from the Canadian Regional which remains
    north and RRFS which focuses heavy rain more toward the MN/IA
    border. Moisture from the atmospheric river pushing into western WA
    today extends over the northern Plains. Given broad area of
    instability, frontal forcing, and PW of 1 to 2.5 sigma above
    normal, a Marginal Risk remains for much of MT and along the Dakota
    border.


    ...New Mexico...
    Continued monsoonal moisture between flow from a trough off the
    West Coast and a ridge over the central US. Will need to monitor
    areas for upgrades, but for now a Marginal Risk remains in effect
    for much of NM and far west TX.


    ...Florida to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Focus of elevated PW (2 to 2.25" which is 2 sigma above normal)
    across northern FL through the central Gulf Coast from ridge
    centered over the central states. The Marginal Risk for the
    northern half of the FL Peninsula into southern GA was expanded
    west through Mobile, AL given this high moisture with further
    expansion possible, particularly if remnants of AL98 will aid
    organization of activity.

    Jackson



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6_MkOu_UwUQwilVLnNueZYvHJ2dxfNVL7ktQfnpUSD6w= G0SPiszu5-o-E9sfiUA49yvBEV7UFmiwL202qRXLREbkxlg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6_MkOu_UwUQwilVLnNueZYvHJ2dxfNVL7ktQfnpUSD6w= G0SPiszu5-o-E9sfiUA49yvBEV7UFmiwL202qRXLnkcdQdY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6_MkOu_UwUQwilVLnNueZYvHJ2dxfNVL7ktQfnpUSD6w= G0SPiszu5-o-E9sfiUA49yvBEV7UFmiwL202qRXLMdVgb7s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Aug 15 15:59:32 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 151559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Fri Aug 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST, THE LOWER RIO GRANDE VALLEY, AND FAR SOUTHERN
    ARIZONA...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The ongoing forecast philosophy is on track, with a few changes
    made to risk areas across the southern U.S. The Slight Risk area
    across Deep South Texas was confined to coastal areas near
    Brownsville and along the Rio Grande. The convective pattern near a
    tropical disturbance just southeast of Brownsville was exhibiting
    signs of relatively dry air over land inhibiting heavy rainfall
    potential over land areas so far this morning. Models are still=20
    insistent on an inland push of higher PW air (exceeding 2.3 inch=20
    PW) in tandem with the northwestward movement of the disturbance.=20
    This moistening, pockets of surface heating, and remnant MCV(s) in=20
    the region suggests potential for a focused band (or two) of heavy
    rainfall materializing across inland areas near the coast that=20
    could result in flash flooding. The Slight Risk area represents=20
    locations with the greatest potential for this scenario to play=20
    out, though additional, propagating bands of convection area also=20
    expected to propagate northward across a larger part of southeast=20
    Texas through the afternoon and evening hours.

    The second area of larger-scale ERO changes extend from central
    Mississippi through Alabama and southwestern Georgia. 12Z HREF
    guidance suggests the potential for scattered thunderstorms to
    drift/move erratically through the afternoon and early evening amid
    a very moist and destabilizing airmass (2+ inch PW values). Locally
    heavy rainfall and spots of 2 inch/hr rain rates are expected,
    which may impact low-lying and/or urbanized/flashy areas across the
    Southeast.

    Heavy rain/flash flood threats remain across the Mid-Atlantic,
    Desert Southwest, and upper Midwest through 12Z Saturday.
    Additional information is located in the previous discussion text
    below.

    Cook

    ...Previous Forecast Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains through Upper Midwest...
    Organized convective activity of a complex nature is expected today
    and tonight with the frontal zones over South Dakota and southern
    Minnesota. Ongoing activity over SD should help determine what
    happens today with additional activity overnight. Considerable
    spread in capturing this MCS activity is seen among 00Z HREF
    guidance with a bit of a south shift from previous runs. This
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from southern MN over northern IA
    with western WI left in given the potential for overnight movement
    there. Much of this area (MN/WI) will continue to be a focus for
    heavy rainfall into Monday.


    ...Lower Rio Grande Valley through the Central Gulf Coast...
    AL98 redeveloped in the western Gulf overnight which is still
    poorly handled by CAM guidance (though the 00Z ARW and RRFS have
    some semblance of it). The northwestward trajectory still puts it
    on a path to near Brownsville today (03Z RAP suggests by 18Z) which
    poses a flash flood threat for the Lower Rio Grande Valley. The
    Slight Risk is maintained for the LRGV where there may be a low
    center to analyze by landfall. The Marginal risk extends up the
    Texas Coast and now through much of Louisiana for the tropical
    moisture plume shifting north with the surface trough. Please see
    the National Hurricane Center website at hurricanes.gov for any
    more details about Invest 98L.


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture is in place across Arizona with ongoing
    nocturnal convection from central to southeastern portions of the
    state. It appears some stratus will persist into the morning and
    could setup differential heating boundaries, so adjustments to the
    flash flood threat areas are likely. An upper level vort max from
    northern Mexico will aid diurnal redevelopment. Given the push of
    above normal PW (rising to 1.5 sigma above normal) the Slight Risk
    area was maintained and expanded a bit based on the 00Z HREF. The
    eastern extent of the moisture does look to expand east of the
    southern Rockies, so the Marginal Risk which covers much of the
    rest of AZ through the Slot Canyon region of southern UT was
    expanded a bit to include more of central NM and far western TX.


    ...Mid-Atlantic through Southeast Coast and southern
    Appalachians...
    Continued broad area of elevated moisture from southeast PA to
    northern FL (where a Marginal Risk is in place) which is north of
    an upper ridge extending zonally from the FL Peninsula out into the
    Atlantic. Airmass storms with light steering flow make for slow-
    moving heavy development. 00Z HREF had a noted decrease in high
    rainfall probs over the southern Appalachians, so in coordination
    with WFO GSP, the Slight Risk was downgraded to a Marginal.


    ...Pacific Northwest...
    An extremely anomalous moisture plume associated with an
    atmospheric river continues to through western Washington into
    northwest OR through today. PW of 1.75" is 5 sigma above
    climatological normals, which if verified, would set both monthly
    records for August and threaten all time records. This incredible
    abundance of moisture will continue to create highly efficient
    rainfall through tonight, streaming primarily into the west facing
    slopes of the Olympics and Cascades Mountains. General shadowing is
    expected for the Seattle Metro, but still significant amounts of
    rainfall are possible in valley locations.

    Nearly all of western Washington is in some amount of drought,
    ranging from Minor to Extreme here at the end of the dry
    season which should limit flooding impacts. The Marginal Risk
    remains in effect.

    Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025
    Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST AND THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS OF NEW MEXICO...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Continued organized heavy rainfall from MCS development on
    Saturday which may overlap with heavy rain areas from today over MN
    and possibly WI. 00Z guidance is a bit south of prior runs which
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from central MN through much of
    WI and west of Lake Michigan. Considering this being the second day
    of heavy rain, this is considered a higher end Slight Risk. Depending
    on how much rain falls today and the updated forecasts with more
    CAMs available a Moderate Risk are may become warranted.


    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...
    Trimmed the Marginal Risk from south-central TX through the
    Carolinas a bit south based on 00Z consensus. Uncertainty remains
    with the track and impacts of the moisture plume from AL98 currently
    over the western Gulf. The associated moisture will push northward
    into central Texas on Saturday, but uncertainty remains with storm
    organization and intensity. The moisture plume does extend as far
    west as the Texas Hill Country and along the Gulf Coast.


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture will begin to push east on Saturday, expanding
    the potential for isolated flash flooding across much of southern
    New Mexico. Given the persistence of 1.5 sigma above normal PW, the
    Marginal Risk is expanded into northern NM and the Sacramento
    Mountains are placed in a targeted Slight Risk with 00Z CAM support
    for focused heavy rain there where highly sensitive burn scars
    remain.

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    Continued frontal boundaries along northern extent of upper ridge
    focused over the central CONUS allows third consecutive day for
    organized convective activity over southern MN with additional
    heavy rain threats for western WI. The Slight Risk was expanded a
    bit south given input from the Canadian Regional which remains
    north and RRFS which focuses heavy rain more toward the MN/IA
    border. Moisture from the atmospheric river pushing into western WA
    today extends over the northern Plains. Given broad area of
    instability, frontal forcing, and PW of 1 to 2.5 sigma above
    normal, a Marginal Risk remains for much of MT and along the Dakota
    border.


    ...New Mexico...
    Continued monsoonal moisture between flow from a trough off the
    West Coast and a ridge over the central US. Will need to monitor
    areas for upgrades, but for now a Marginal Risk remains in effect
    for much of NM and far west TX.


    ...Florida to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Focus of elevated PW (2 to 2.25" which is 2 sigma above normal)
    across northern FL through the central Gulf Coast from ridge
    centered over the central states. The Marginal Risk for the
    northern half of the FL Peninsula into southern GA was expanded
    west through Mobile, AL given this high moisture with further
    expansion possible, particularly if remnants of AL98 will aid
    organization of activity.

    Jackson



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!529B8xAR2Qj-VRvM7qay6laXrSwofFUv1vPLOvxFOEZK= VgN0t0MzKf9GWIcQj8H2s2yAgJRgsWavQVA8Cwdw2IwxS6k$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!529B8xAR2Qj-VRvM7qay6laXrSwofFUv1vPLOvxFOEZK= VgN0t0MzKf9GWIcQj8H2s2yAgJRgsWavQVA8CwdwmZkZiLM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!529B8xAR2Qj-VRvM7qay6laXrSwofFUv1vPLOvxFOEZK= VgN0t0MzKf9GWIcQj8H2s2yAgJRgsWavQVA8CwdwyG6Gj4E$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Aug 15 19:43:49 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 151943
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    343 PM EDT Fri Aug 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST, THE LOWER RIO GRANDE VALLEY, AND FAR SOUTHERN
    ARIZONA...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The ongoing forecast philosophy is on track, with a few changes
    made to risk areas across the southern U.S. The Slight Risk area
    across Deep South Texas was confined to coastal areas near
    Brownsville and along the Rio Grande. The convective pattern near a
    tropical disturbance just southeast of Brownsville was exhibiting
    signs of relatively dry air over land inhibiting heavy rainfall
    potential over land areas so far this morning. Models are still
    insistent on an inland push of higher PW air (exceeding 2.3 inch
    PW) in tandem with the northwestward movement of the disturbance.
    This moistening, pockets of surface heating, and remnant MCV(s) in
    the region suggests potential for a focused band (or two) of heavy
    rainfall materializing across inland areas near the coast that
    could result in flash flooding. The Slight Risk area represents
    locations with the greatest potential for this scenario to play
    out, though additional, propagating bands of convection area also
    expected to propagate northward across a larger part of southeast
    Texas through the afternoon and evening hours.

    The second area of larger-scale ERO changes extend from central
    Mississippi through Alabama and southwestern Georgia. 12Z HREF
    guidance suggests the potential for scattered thunderstorms to
    drift/move erratically through the afternoon and early evening amid
    a very moist and destabilizing airmass (2+ inch PW values). Locally
    heavy rainfall and spots of 2 inch/hr rain rates are expected,
    which may impact low-lying and/or urbanized/flashy areas across the
    Southeast.

    Heavy rain/flash flood threats remain across the Mid-Atlantic,
    Desert Southwest, and upper Midwest through 12Z Saturday.
    Additional information is located in the previous discussion text
    below.

    Cook

    ...Previous Forecast Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains through Upper Midwest...
    Organized convective activity of a complex nature is expected today
    and tonight with the frontal zones over South Dakota and southern
    Minnesota. Ongoing activity over SD should help determine what
    happens today with additional activity overnight. Considerable
    spread in capturing this MCS activity is seen among 00Z HREF
    guidance with a bit of a south shift from previous runs. This
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from southern MN over northern IA
    with western WI left in given the potential for overnight movement
    there. Much of this area (MN/WI) will continue to be a focus for
    heavy rainfall into Monday.


    ...Lower Rio Grande Valley through the Central Gulf Coast...
    AL98 redeveloped in the western Gulf overnight which is still
    poorly handled by CAM guidance (though the 00Z ARW and RRFS have
    some semblance of it). The northwestward trajectory still puts it
    on a path to near Brownsville today (03Z RAP suggests by 18Z) which
    poses a flash flood threat for the Lower Rio Grande Valley. The
    Slight Risk is maintained for the LRGV where there may be a low
    center to analyze by landfall. The Marginal risk extends up the
    Texas Coast and now through much of Louisiana for the tropical
    moisture plume shifting north with the surface trough. Please see
    the National Hurricane Center website at hurricanes.gov for any
    more details about Invest 98L.


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture is in place across Arizona with ongoing
    nocturnal convection from central to southeastern portions of the
    state. It appears some stratus will persist into the morning and
    could setup differential heating boundaries, so adjustments to the
    flash flood threat areas are likely. An upper level vort max from
    northern Mexico will aid diurnal redevelopment. Given the push of
    above normal PW (rising to 1.5 sigma above normal) the Slight Risk
    area was maintained and expanded a bit based on the 00Z HREF. The
    eastern extent of the moisture does look to expand east of the
    southern Rockies, so the Marginal Risk which covers much of the
    rest of AZ through the Slot Canyon region of southern UT was
    expanded a bit to include more of central NM and far western TX.


    ...Mid-Atlantic through Southeast Coast and southern
    Appalachians...
    Continued broad area of elevated moisture from southeast PA to
    northern FL (where a Marginal Risk is in place) which is north of
    an upper ridge extending zonally from the FL Peninsula out into the
    Atlantic. Airmass storms with light steering flow make for slow-
    moving heavy development. 00Z HREF had a noted decrease in high
    rainfall probs over the southern Appalachians, so in coordination
    with WFO GSP, the Slight Risk was downgraded to a Marginal.


    ...Pacific Northwest...
    An extremely anomalous moisture plume associated with an
    atmospheric river continues to through western Washington into
    northwest OR through today. PW of 1.75" is 5 sigma above
    climatological normals, which if verified, would set both monthly
    records for August and threaten all time records. This incredible
    abundance of moisture will continue to create highly efficient
    rainfall through tonight, streaming primarily into the west facing
    slopes of the Olympics and Cascades Mountains. General shadowing is
    expected for the Seattle Metro, but still significant amounts of
    rainfall are possible in valley locations.

    Nearly all of western Washington is in some amount of drought,
    ranging from Minor to Extreme here at the end of the dry
    season which should limit flooding impacts. The Marginal Risk
    remains in effect.

    Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025
    Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST AND SOUTHERN THROUGH SOUTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...21Z Outlook Update... The ongoing forecast is generally on track,=20
    and a few changes to the outlook have been made:

    1) Slight Risk has been expanded to cover more area across=20 southern/southwestern New Mexico. Areas of 0.5-1.5 inch rainfall=20
    totals are expected across this region, and some of this rainfall is=20 expected to occur across burn scars that have promoted extreme=20
    runoff at times especially near the Sacramento Mountains and across=20
    the Black Range. Locally significant impacts are possible in this=20
    regime.

    2) Marginal risk has been expanded northward and westward across=20
    portions of western and central Texas. Most models/QPFs depict=20
    relatively modest rainfall amounts across the region during the=20
    forecast period. However, heavier rainfall has materialized near the=20
    center of a tropical disturbance near Brownsville, and there is some=20
    concern that the mid-level organization of this disturbance may hold=20 together and spawn thunderstorms over sensitive areas of the Hill=20
    Country and vicinity, which remains sensitive from prior rainfall=20
    over the past couple months. The flash flood threat appears to be=20
    relatively conditional at this time, but will continue to be=20
    closely monitored.

    3) Marginal risk has been added across northern California, much of central/eastern Oregon, and a small part of western Idaho. Point=20
    forecast soundings depict heavy rain potential amid 1-1.3 inch PW=20
    values and mid-level instability. A few thunderstorms are expected
    as a mid/upper wave approaches the region. Some of the heavy=20
    rainfall could occur atop burn scars, locally enhancing runoff=20
    potential.

    4) Marginal risk has been expanded across southeastern Montana and
    western South Dakota. Models depict scattered convection to develop
    during the afternoon and evening across these areas, although
    relatively high cloud bases and the progressive nature of=20
    convection may limit the overall flash flood threat to isolated=20
    spots where training and/or cell mergers can occur.

    Outside of these areas, Marginal and Slight Risks remain in place
    across the Upper Midwest. Another round of heavy rainfall is
    expected especially in the Slight Risk area from a convective
    complex. Ground conditions should be wet from prior rainfall, and
    increased sensitivity to heavy rainfall should result in an
    appreciable flash flood threat especially after 00Z. Some
    uncertainty regarding specific axes of heavy rainfall preclude any
    Moderate risk upgrade at this time, although model and
    observational trends will continue to be monitored.

    See the previous discussion below for more information.

    Cook

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Continued organized heavy rainfall from MCS development on
    Saturday which may overlap with heavy rain areas from today over MN
    and possibly WI. 00Z guidance is a bit south of prior runs which
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from central MN through much of
    WI and west of Lake Michigan. Considering this being the second day
    of heavy rain, this is considered a higher end Slight Risk. Depending
    on how much rain falls today and the updated forecasts with more
    CAMs available a Moderate Risk are may become warranted.


    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...
    Trimmed the Marginal Risk from south-central TX through the
    Carolinas a bit south based on 00Z consensus. Uncertainty remains
    with the track and impacts of the moisture plume from AL98 currently
    over the western Gulf. The associated moisture will push northward
    into central Texas on Saturday, but uncertainty remains with storm
    organization and intensity. The moisture plume does extend as far
    west as the Texas Hill Country and along the Gulf Coast.


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture will begin to push east on Saturday, expanding
    the potential for isolated flash flooding across much of southern
    New Mexico. Given the persistence of 1.5 sigma above normal PW, the
    Marginal Risk is expanded into northern NM and the Sacramento
    Mountains are placed in a targeted Slight Risk with 00Z CAM support
    for focused heavy rain there where highly sensitive burn scars
    remain.

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    Minimal changes have been made to the ongoing outlook for this
    update. Portions of the Upper Midwest continue to remain favorable
    for both 1) multiple rounds of heavy rainfall in the Days 1-2
    forecast periods and 2) substantial redevelopment of heavy rainfall
    during the Day 3 forecast period. The prior rainfall should create
    critically sensitive ground conditions that readily promote
    excessive runoff, and a Moderate Risk may eventually be meeded
    across portions of Minnesota and vicinity. Too much uncertainty=20
    remains regarding specific convective evolution for any upgrades in
    this forecast cycle, and convective development may be heavily
    modulated by convection over the prior 24 hours and any remnant
    outflows that might shift subsequent convective redevelopment.=20=20

    Scattered thunderstorms remain likely across New Mexico and
    vicinity, although coverage may be a bit lower than in prior days -
    suggesting a Marginal flash flood risk. Additional heavy downpours
    may cause isolated flooding concerns in north/central Florida and
    southern Georgia as well.

    See the prior discussion for additional information.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    Continued frontal boundaries along northern extent of upper ridge
    focused over the central CONUS allows third consecutive day for
    organized convective activity over southern MN with additional
    heavy rain threats for western WI. The Slight Risk was expanded a
    bit south given input from the Canadian Regional which remains
    north and RRFS which focuses heavy rain more toward the MN/IA
    border. Moisture from the atmospheric river pushing into western WA
    today extends over the northern Plains. Given broad area of
    instability, frontal forcing, and PW of 1 to 2.5 sigma above
    normal, a Marginal Risk remains for much of MT and along the Dakota
    border.


    ...New Mexico...
    Continued monsoonal moisture between flow from a trough off the
    West Coast and a ridge over the central US. Will need to monitor
    areas for upgrades, but for now a Marginal Risk remains in effect
    for much of NM and far west TX.


    ...Florida to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Focus of elevated PW (2 to 2.25" which is 2 sigma above normal)
    across northern FL through the central Gulf Coast from ridge
    centered over the central states. The Marginal Risk for the
    northern half of the FL Peninsula into southern GA was expanded
    west through Mobile, AL given this high moisture with further
    expansion possible, particularly if remnants of AL98 will aid
    organization of activity.

    Jackson



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6SkU31CAp1okpCgAb18SlyWLM8Z0An4aZSZ25O6KNMgl= yYbvgv5BJO-KyWvTUegFe-ws5ew6draD7_5fFYPxj4i5Sj0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6SkU31CAp1okpCgAb18SlyWLM8Z0An4aZSZ25O6KNMgl= yYbvgv5BJO-KyWvTUegFe-ws5ew6draD7_5fFYPx8WGQweo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6SkU31CAp1okpCgAb18SlyWLM8Z0An4aZSZ25O6KNMgl= yYbvgv5BJO-KyWvTUegFe-ws5ew6draD7_5fFYPx0cCZHg0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Aug 16 00:58:17 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 160056
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    856 PM EDT Fri Aug 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST AND FAR SOUTHERN ARIZONA...

    ...01Z Forecast Update...

    Significant adjustments to the Marginal Risk area across the South
    and Mid-Atlantic were made given the gradual decrease in
    thunderstorm activity. Some storms are still ongoing across the
    Deep South, but with the loss of daytime heating, storms will
    continue to dissipate one by one until it is generally a more
    tranquil Saturday morning.=20

    One exception is South Texas where the low-mid level inverted=20
    trough axis is ushering in a plume of tropical moisture into the=20
    region. SErly 850mb winds will surge to as strong as 30-35kts and=20
    align itself into the more elevated Hill Country. There are some=20
    CAMs members (HRRR/ARW most notably)that show potential pockets of=20
    1-1.5" of rainfall with locally higher totals possible with the=20
    heaviest rainfall potential occurring late tonight into early=20
    Saturday morning. Latest RAP soundings also depict highly saturated
    profiles with over 1,000 J/kg of MUCAPE and near 2.3" PWATs. Given
    these factors, the Marginal Risk was adjusted to be located in=20
    south-central Texas, which includes the San Antonio metro area.
    Storms tapping into the abundance of moisture and modest=20
    instability aloft could produce torrential downpours that could=20
    result in 3"/hr rainfall rates.

    The Slight Risk in the Midwest was adjusted to where the threat
    area's northeast flank in central Wisconsin was scaled back.
    However, the Slight Risk remains in place over southern MN and on
    east to the MS River bordering IA/WI given the continued presence
    of modest instability and the approach off a narrow 500mb vort max
    tracking across SD. The 18Z HREF new 12-hour probabilities show
    low-to-moderate chances (30-50%) for additional rainfall totals >3"
    in southern MN with some solutions showing some potential
    backbuilding as far west as eastern SD.=20

    Lastly, the Desert Southwest threat areas had minor tweaks to
    account for current Doppler Radar and some inclusion of latest
    CAMs. No tweaks to the Pacific Northwest Marginal Risk were made
    this forecast cycle.=20

    Mullinax

    --Previous Discussion--

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The ongoing forecast philosophy is on track, with a few changes
    made to risk areas across the southern U.S. The Slight Risk area
    across Deep South Texas was confined to coastal areas near
    Brownsville and along the Rio Grande. The convective pattern near a
    tropical disturbance just southeast of Brownsville was exhibiting
    signs of relatively dry air over land inhibiting heavy rainfall
    potential over land areas so far this morning. Models are still
    insistent on an inland push of higher PW air (exceeding 2.3 inch
    PW) in tandem with the northwestward movement of the disturbance.
    This moistening, pockets of surface heating, and remnant MCV(s) in
    the region suggests potential for a focused band (or two) of heavy
    rainfall materializing across inland areas near the coast that
    could result in flash flooding. The Slight Risk area represents
    locations with the greatest potential for this scenario to play
    out, though additional, propagating bands of convection area also
    expected to propagate northward across a larger part of southeast
    Texas through the afternoon and evening hours.

    The second area of larger-scale ERO changes extend from central
    Mississippi through Alabama and southwestern Georgia. 12Z HREF
    guidance suggests the potential for scattered thunderstorms to
    drift/move erratically through the afternoon and early evening amid
    a very moist and destabilizing airmass (2+ inch PW values). Locally
    heavy rainfall and spots of 2 inch/hr rain rates are expected,
    which may impact low-lying and/or urbanized/flashy areas across the
    Southeast.

    Heavy rain/flash flood threats remain across the Mid-Atlantic,
    Desert Southwest, and upper Midwest through 12Z Saturday.
    Additional information is located in the previous discussion text
    below.

    Cook

    ...Previous Forecast Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains through Upper Midwest...
    Organized convective activity of a complex nature is expected today
    and tonight with the frontal zones over South Dakota and southern
    Minnesota. Ongoing activity over SD should help determine what
    happens today with additional activity overnight. Considerable
    spread in capturing this MCS activity is seen among 00Z HREF
    guidance with a bit of a south shift from previous runs. This
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from southern MN over northern IA
    with western WI left in given the potential for overnight movement
    there. Much of this area (MN/WI) will continue to be a focus for
    heavy rainfall into Monday.


    ...Lower Rio Grande Valley through the Central Gulf Coast...
    AL98 redeveloped in the western Gulf overnight which is still
    poorly handled by CAM guidance (though the 00Z ARW and RRFS have
    some semblance of it). The northwestward trajectory still puts it
    on a path to near Brownsville today (03Z RAP suggests by 18Z) which
    poses a flash flood threat for the Lower Rio Grande Valley. The
    Slight Risk is maintained for the LRGV where there may be a low
    center to analyze by landfall. The Marginal risk extends up the
    Texas Coast and now through much of Louisiana for the tropical
    moisture plume shifting north with the surface trough. Please see
    the National Hurricane Center website at hurricanes.gov for any
    more details about Invest 98L.


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture is in place across Arizona with ongoing
    nocturnal convection from central to southeastern portions of the
    state. It appears some stratus will persist into the morning and
    could setup differential heating boundaries, so adjustments to the
    flash flood threat areas are likely. An upper level vort max from
    northern Mexico will aid diurnal redevelopment. Given the push of
    above normal PW (rising to 1.5 sigma above normal) the Slight Risk
    area was maintained and expanded a bit based on the 00Z HREF. The
    eastern extent of the moisture does look to expand east of the
    southern Rockies, so the Marginal Risk which covers much of the
    rest of AZ through the Slot Canyon region of southern UT was
    expanded a bit to include more of central NM and far western TX.


    ...Mid-Atlantic through Southeast Coast and southern
    Appalachians...
    Continued broad area of elevated moisture from southeast PA to
    northern FL (where a Marginal Risk is in place) which is north of
    an upper ridge extending zonally from the FL Peninsula out into the
    Atlantic. Airmass storms with light steering flow make for slow-
    moving heavy development. 00Z HREF had a noted decrease in high
    rainfall probs over the southern Appalachians, so in coordination
    with WFO GSP, the Slight Risk was downgraded to a Marginal.


    ...Pacific Northwest...
    An extremely anomalous moisture plume associated with an
    atmospheric river continues to through western Washington into
    northwest OR through today. PW of 1.75" is 5 sigma above
    climatological normals, which if verified, would set both monthly
    records for August and threaten all time records. This incredible
    abundance of moisture will continue to create highly efficient
    rainfall through tonight, streaming primarily into the west facing
    slopes of the Olympics and Cascades Mountains. General shadowing is
    expected for the Seattle Metro, but still significant amounts of
    rainfall are possible in valley locations.

    Nearly all of western Washington is in some amount of drought,
    ranging from Minor to Extreme here at the end of the dry
    season which should limit flooding impacts. The Marginal Risk
    remains in effect.

    Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025
    Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST AND SOUTHERN THROUGH SOUTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...21Z Outlook Update... The ongoing forecast is generally on track,
    and a few changes to the outlook have been made:

    1) Slight Risk has been expanded to cover more area across southern/southwestern New Mexico. Areas of 0.5-1.5 inch rainfall
    totals are expected across this region, and some of this rainfall is
    expected to occur across burn scars that have promoted extreme
    runoff at times especially near the Sacramento Mountains and across
    the Black Range. Locally significant impacts are possible in this
    regime.

    2) Marginal risk has been expanded northward and westward across
    portions of western and central Texas. Most models/QPFs depict
    relatively modest rainfall amounts across the region during the
    forecast period. However, heavier rainfall has materialized near the
    center of a tropical disturbance near Brownsville, and there is some
    concern that the mid-level organization of this disturbance may hold
    together and spawn thunderstorms over sensitive areas of the Hill
    Country and vicinity, which remains sensitive from prior rainfall
    over the past couple months. The flash flood threat appears to be
    relatively conditional at this time, but will continue to be
    closely monitored.

    3) Marginal risk has been added across northern California, much of central/eastern Oregon, and a small part of western Idaho. Point
    forecast soundings depict heavy rain potential amid 1-1.3 inch PW
    values and mid-level instability. A few thunderstorms are expected
    as a mid/upper wave approaches the region. Some of the heavy
    rainfall could occur atop burn scars, locally enhancing runoff
    potential.

    4) Marginal risk has been expanded across southeastern Montana and
    western South Dakota. Models depict scattered convection to develop
    during the afternoon and evening across these areas, although
    relatively high cloud bases and the progressive nature of
    convection may limit the overall flash flood threat to isolated
    spots where training and/or cell mergers can occur.

    Outside of these areas, Marginal and Slight Risks remain in place
    across the Upper Midwest. Another round of heavy rainfall is
    expected especially in the Slight Risk area from a convective
    complex. Ground conditions should be wet from prior rainfall, and
    increased sensitivity to heavy rainfall should result in an
    appreciable flash flood threat especially after 00Z. Some
    uncertainty regarding specific axes of heavy rainfall preclude any
    Moderate risk upgrade at this time, although model and
    observational trends will continue to be monitored.

    See the previous discussion below for more information.

    Cook

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Continued organized heavy rainfall from MCS development on
    Saturday which may overlap with heavy rain areas from today over MN
    and possibly WI. 00Z guidance is a bit south of prior runs which
    warrants focusing the Slight Risk from central MN through much of
    WI and west of Lake Michigan. Considering this being the second day
    of heavy rain, this is considered a higher end Slight Risk. Depending
    on how much rain falls today and the updated forecasts with more
    CAMs available a Moderate Risk are may become warranted.


    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...
    Trimmed the Marginal Risk from south-central TX through the
    Carolinas a bit south based on 00Z consensus. Uncertainty remains
    with the track and impacts of the moisture plume from AL98 currently
    over the western Gulf. The associated moisture will push northward
    into central Texas on Saturday, but uncertainty remains with storm
    organization and intensity. The moisture plume does extend as far
    west as the Texas Hill Country and along the Gulf Coast.


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture will begin to push east on Saturday, expanding
    the potential for isolated flash flooding across much of southern
    New Mexico. Given the persistence of 1.5 sigma above normal PW, the
    Marginal Risk is expanded into northern NM and the Sacramento
    Mountains are placed in a targeted Slight Risk with 00Z CAM support
    for focused heavy rain there where highly sensitive burn scars
    remain.

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    Minimal changes have been made to the ongoing outlook for this
    update. Portions of the Upper Midwest continue to remain favorable
    for both 1) multiple rounds of heavy rainfall in the Days 1-2
    forecast periods and 2) substantial redevelopment of heavy rainfall
    during the Day 3 forecast period. The prior rainfall should create
    critically sensitive ground conditions that readily promote
    excessive runoff, and a Moderate Risk may eventually be meeded
    across portions of Minnesota and vicinity. Too much uncertainty
    remains regarding specific convective evolution for any upgrades in
    this forecast cycle, and convective development may be heavily
    modulated by convection over the prior 24 hours and any remnant
    outflows that might shift subsequent convective redevelopment.

    Scattered thunderstorms remain likely across New Mexico and
    vicinity, although coverage may be a bit lower than in prior days -
    suggesting a Marginal flash flood risk. Additional heavy downpours
    may cause isolated flooding concerns in north/central Florida and
    southern Georgia as well.

    See the prior discussion for additional information.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    Continued frontal boundaries along northern extent of upper ridge
    focused over the central CONUS allows third consecutive day for
    organized convective activity over southern MN with additional
    heavy rain threats for western WI. The Slight Risk was expanded a
    bit south given input from the Canadian Regional which remains
    north and RRFS which focuses heavy rain more toward the MN/IA
    border. Moisture from the atmospheric river pushing into western WA
    today extends over the northern Plains. Given broad area of
    instability, frontal forcing, and PW of 1 to 2.5 sigma above
    normal, a Marginal Risk remains for much of MT and along the Dakota
    border.


    ...New Mexico...
    Continued monsoonal moisture between flow from a trough off the
    West Coast and a ridge over the central US. Will need to monitor
    areas for upgrades, but for now a Marginal Risk remains in effect
    for much of NM and far west TX.


    ...Florida to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Focus of elevated PW (2 to 2.25" which is 2 sigma above normal)
    across northern FL through the central Gulf Coast from ridge
    centered over the central states. The Marginal Risk for the
    northern half of the FL Peninsula into southern GA was expanded
    west through Mobile, AL given this high moisture with further
    expansion possible, particularly if remnants of AL98 will aid
    organization of activity.

    Jackson



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Su3woLDuhNpLbFbG3fYo5oHcndGoCm-KV51InoYDkWM= hDr2hgkRxGBuAtIEVBF-UHT1HO-xmMXMikpWoX4IzVO602A$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Su3woLDuhNpLbFbG3fYo5oHcndGoCm-KV51InoYDkWM= hDr2hgkRxGBuAtIEVBF-UHT1HO-xmMXMikpWoX4Il1nqa54$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Su3woLDuhNpLbFbG3fYo5oHcndGoCm-KV51InoYDkWM= hDr2hgkRxGBuAtIEVBF-UHT1HO-xmMXMikpWoX4IIjB0o44$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Aug 16 08:53:23 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 160852
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    452 AM EDT Sat Aug 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO, AND SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...Upper Midwest and Northern Plains...
    Well organized MCS over eastern SD early this morning will continue
    to track east over southern MN rest of this morning and likely into
    WI around midday. Cells developing ahead of the severe line as well
    as MCV/bookend development will make for a repeating heavy
    rain/flash flood threat along the the path. The boundary from this
    system will play a role in nocturnal convection tonight which=20
    could also be quite heavy and over similar areas of MN/IA/WI and
    may warrant a Moderate Risk upgrade. Otherwise, until then the
    Slight Risk is expanded west across southern MN and includes more
    of northern IA with the Driftless area of WI up through the Twin
    Cities considered a higher end Slight area.=20
    The lingering frontal boundary over SD and into far eastern MT
    warrants maintenance of the Marginal Risk over that portion of the
    Northern Plains for redeveloping storms tonight.


    ...South-Central Texas, Along Gulf Coast and Southeast...
    Tropical disturbance remnants (had been AL98) are south of Laredo
    with southerly flow bringing associated tropical moisture north
    toward the Texas Hill Country. Convection has developed southwest
    of San Antonio and will continue to grow as it lifts north to the
    Hill Country. The 00Z HREF had good consistency with this and with
    input from WFO EWX, there is now a Slight Risk for this morning
    threat with potential for 2-4" and locally higher through 18Z.
    Please monitor WPC MPDs and local WFO products for updates on this
    heavy rainfall threat area.
    To the east of the Texas Hill Country and along the Gulf Coast up
    to the southern Appalachians and northern FL Peninsula is elevated
    moisture, generally 1.5 sigma above normal. Isolated excessive
    rain/flash flood potential is present today through this broad
    region much like recent days (though focused farther south as the
    upper ridge continues to shift the forcing south).


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture plume should focus farther east today,=20
    shifting the potential for isolated flash flooding across
    southeastern Arizona, and much of central/southern New Mexico.=20
    CAMs continue to support Sacramento Mountains (and just east)
    focused activity as well as directly west, where the Slight Risk
    remains.


    ...Northwest and Northern Rockies...
    Marginal risk remains across far north-central California and much
    of central/eastern Oregon with an expansion across northern ID and
    western MT. Elevated moisture from the record high moisture
    atmospheric river (Salem OR had its highest PW on record at 00Z)
    develops into a ribbon across these areas during peak heating today
    which should produce isolated flash flood threats. Some of the=20
    heavy rainfall could occur atop burn scars, locally enhancing=20
    runoff potential.

    Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025
    Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    Continued activity from late tonight into or through Sunday morning
    is expected along residual/frontal boundaries over portions of the
    Midwest, likely including potential repeat areas in southern MN=20
    and western WI. This activity is developing in an elevated moisture
    atmosphere along northern extent of upper ridge focused over the=20
    central CONUS. Guidance is quite varied across the Upper Midwest
    with the Canadian Regional keeping the heaviest focus over northern
    MN/eastern ND, the 00Z FV3LAM a bit farther south from eastern ND=20
    to northwestern WI, the 00Z RRFS over southern MN. The 06Z NAMnest
    and HRRR also have a southern MN focus which is where the Slight
    Risk remains, though the Marginal Risk was expanded north to
    accommodate more of the northern solutions. Given all the boundary
    and mesoscale interactions that will take place today and tonight,
    there is remaining uncertainty which will hopefully come into
    better focus with guidance later today.=20
    Moisture from the atmospheric river pushing over the Northwest and
    northern Rockies through tonight extends over the northern Plains
    on Sunday. Given broad area of instability, frontal forcing, and=20
    PW of 1 to 2.5 sigma above normal, a Marginal Risk remains for much
    of MT and the Dakotas.


    ...New Mexico...
    Continued monsoonal moisture over New Mexico on Sunday between=20
    flow from a trough off the West Coast and a ridge over the central=20
    US. Will need to monitor areas for upgrades, but for now a Marginal
    Risk remains in effect for much of NM and far west TX.


    ...Florida to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Focus of elevated PW (2 to 2.25" which is 2 sigma above normal)
    across northern FL through the central Gulf Coast from ridge
    centered over the central states. The Marginal Risk remains for=20
    the northern half of the FL Peninsula into southern GA and west
    through Mobile, AL remains in effect.=20

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR NEW MEXICO
    AND THE GREAT LAKES...

    ...Great Lakes...
    The persistent frontal pattern over the Upper Midwest begins to
    move east Monday night. Until then, continued organized activity=20
    can be expected to redevelop over similar areas from recent days in Iowa/Wisconsin before shifting across Michigan. Elevated moisture
    rounding upper high pressure centered over the central states will
    continue to fuel heavy rain potential with impulses/the frontal
    pattern to aid lift. There is notable uncertainty with most global
    guidance and the Canadian Regional focusing heavy rain closer to
    Lake Michigan while the 00Z RRFS and the 03Z SREF is focused more
    in Iowa/southern Minnesota. The broad Marginal is maintained for
    now with notes that a more focused area of heavy rain is likely
    (shrink the outlook area) and if that were to be particularly=20
    heavy and/or over areas impacted from heavy rain between now and=20
    then, an upgrade would be necessary.


    ...New Mexico and Far West Texas...
    Continued monsoonal moisture advection continues to result in
    terrain based initiation with an isolated flash flood threat. The
    Marginal Risk was expanded to include most of New Mexico and a=20
    little more of Far West Texas and southeast Arizona.



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9aBnZpDq0P6DCgf2YWC9unVBprvrRzKLvG0XwueW3qf-= ByK7r-qAHvmNcWVmcifgLs30b87EfqaU1GRgWuZyTwBGxOk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9aBnZpDq0P6DCgf2YWC9unVBprvrRzKLvG0XwueW3qf-= ByK7r-qAHvmNcWVmcifgLs30b87EfqaU1GRgWuZyMRIXS5E$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9aBnZpDq0P6DCgf2YWC9unVBprvrRzKLvG0XwueW3qf-= ByK7r-qAHvmNcWVmcifgLs30b87EfqaU1GRgWuZycNH_S1A$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Aug 16 15:57:01 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 161556
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1156 AM EDT Sat Aug 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST AND A SMALL PORTION OF SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...Upper Midwest and Northern Plains...
    Small changes were made to the outlook to adjust for observational
    trends; the most consequential was a slight southward shift in the
    Slight Risk area in the Upper Midwest. The latest radar trends
    suggest a compact MCS in C WI will continue to progress east-
    southeast or southeast late this morning and early this afternoon,
    with potential for some training of higher rain rates on the
    upshear flank of the cold pool. However, greater concern for
    backbuilding and training convection would be for convective
    development expected to occur later -- generally near the
    instability gradient. However, hi-res model guidance (even runs
    initialized at 12Z) does not seem to have the best handle on the
    ongoing situation across N/C WI, and this poses some challenges
    with placing the most likely area for heavier rainfall. If the
    ongoing MCS continues to expand southwest with additional
    development on the upshear flank, and remain forward-propagating,
    the outflow boundary could push further south than anticipated and
    set up from N IL back toward NE IA. However, if the MCS remains
    close to its current dimensions and upstream convection struggles
    to become established in the next few hours, the outflow and
    effective front would be more likely to be situated further north,
    from S WI into SE MN. These differences are crucial.=20

    The overall pattern does support training and backbuilding with any
    later rounds of convection developing along the instability
    gradient. The nose of the LLJ will be focused back to the west,
    with a large reservoir of strong instability, and a corridor of
    deep, anomalously high moisture in place. Although hi-res models
    are struggling to place things consistently at the moment, they all
    generally show an overnight round of convection that backbuilds in
    a nearly-stationary fashion, and this is consistent with the
    conceptual model for this type of pattern. That scenario can
    produce more significant impacts if realized, and so a Moderate
    Risk upgrade was considered. However, given the lack of consistency
    in guidance and uncertainties around ongoing convection, the Slight
    Risk was maintained for now. We will be monitoring convectiveand just east)=
    focused activity as well as directly=20
    west, where the Slight Risk remains.trends over the next few=20
    hours for a possible unscheduled outlook update this afternoon and=20
    a targeted upgrade to Moderate Risk.


    ...South-Central Texas, Along Gulf Coast and Southeast...
    Very few changes were made to the outlook along the Gulf Coast
    region, other than to remove the Slight Risk in C TX, which was
    also coordinated with WFO EWX. The ongoing convection this morning
    is very isolated and models have backed off on the heavy rainfall
    signal in Texas in general. Nevertheless, the Marginal Risk was
    maintained in these areas. A Slight Risk was also considered from
    southeast Georgia into northeast Florida where 12Z HREF
    probabilities of 2-4 inches of rain area most elevated and
    concentrated. However, simulated reflectivity from the 12Z hi-res
    members suggests that localized rainfall maxima would be most
    likely through cell mergers and boundary collisions that would
    briefly maximize rainfall in a certain area, rather than anything
    lingering for several hours. Given the transient nature of the
    heavy rainfall, we opted to maintain the Marginal Risk for now.

    A Marginal Risk was also briefly considered for portions of the
    Mid-Atlantic from far N VA into W MD, C/NE PA, and S NY. Isolated
    convection has already developed and is not moving very quickly.
    However, 12Z soundings show a significant amount of dry air aloft
    and precipitable water values, although somewhat elevated, are not
    highly anomalous. Therefore, any heavy rainfall and resulting flash
    flooding would be expected to be fairly isolated. In other words,
    the probability is non-zero, but less than 5% (Marginal Risk).


    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture plume should focus farther east today,
    shifting the potential for isolated flash flooding across
    southeastern Arizona, and portions of southern New Mexico. CAMs=20
    continue to support more concentrated activity in the Sacramento=20
    Mountains, but have backed off on instability and rainfall
    potential in southwest New Mexico. Therefore, the Slight Risk was
    trimmed to be concentrated near the Sacramento Mountains
    specifically. Another area of focus would be the Trans-Pecos and
    Big Bend region of Texas, where 12Z HREF probabilities of 2 inch
    rainfall are higher. There is a weakness in the mid-upper level
    flow over this area, so developing thunderstorms have the potential
    to be nearly stationary. It will be monitored for a potential
    Slight Risk upgrade.


    ...Northwest and Northern Rockies...
    Marginal risk remains across far north-central California and much
    of central/eastern Oregon with an expansion across northern ID and
    western MT. Elevated moisture from the record high moisture
    atmospheric river (Salem OR had its highest PW on record at 00Z)
    develops into a ribbon across these areas during peak heating today
    which should produce isolated flash flood threats. Some of the
    heavy rainfall could occur atop burn scars, locally enhancing
    runoff potential.

    Lamers/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025
    Fri Aug 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 16 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains through the Upper Midwest...
    Continued activity from late tonight into or through Sunday morning
    is expected along residual/frontal boundaries over portions of the
    Midwest, likely including potential repeat areas in southern MN
    and western WI. This activity is developing in an elevated moisture
    atmosphere along northern extent of upper ridge focused over the
    central CONUS. Guidance is quite varied across the Upper Midwest
    with the Canadian Regional keeping the heaviest focus over northern
    MN/eastern ND, the 00Z FV3LAM a bit farther south from eastern ND
    to northwestern WI, the 00Z RRFS over southern MN. The 06Z NAMnest
    and HRRR also have a southern MN focus which is where the Slight
    Risk remains, though the Marginal Risk was expanded north to
    accommodate more of the northern solutions. Given all the boundary
    and mesoscale interactions that will take place today and tonight,
    there is remaining uncertainty which will hopefully come into
    better focus with guidance later today.
    Moisture from the atmospheric river pushing over the Northwest and
    northern Rockies through tonight extends over the northern Plains
    on Sunday. Given broad area of instability, frontal forcing, and
    PW of 1 to 2.5 sigma above normal, a Marginal Risk remains for much
    of MT and the Dakotas.


    ...New Mexico...
    Continued monsoonal moisture over New Mexico on Sunday between
    flow from a trough off the West Coast and a ridge over the central
    US. Will need to monitor areas for upgrades, but for now a Marginal
    Risk remains in effect for much of NM and far west TX.


    ...Florida to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Focus of elevated PW (2 to 2.25" which is 2 sigma above normal)
    across northern FL through the central Gulf Coast from ridge
    centered over the central states. The Marginal Risk remains for
    the northern half of the FL Peninsula into southern GA and west
    through Mobile, AL remains in effect.

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR NEW MEXICO
    AND THE GREAT LAKES...

    ...Great Lakes...
    The persistent frontal pattern over the Upper Midwest begins to
    move east Monday night. Until then, continued organized activity
    can be expected to redevelop over similar areas from recent days in Iowa/Wisconsin before shifting across Michigan. Elevated moisture
    rounding upper high pressure centered over the central states will
    continue to fuel heavy rain potential with impulses/the frontal
    pattern to aid lift. There is notable uncertainty with most global
    guidance and the Canadian Regional focusing heavy rain closer to
    Lake Michigan while the 00Z RRFS and the 03Z SREF is focused more
    in Iowa/southern Minnesota. The broad Marginal is maintained for
    now with notes that a more focused area of heavy rain is likely
    (shrink the outlook area) and if that were to be particularly
    heavy and/or over areas impacted from heavy rain between now and
    then, an upgrade would be necessary.


    ...New Mexico and Far West Texas...
    Continued monsoonal moisture advection continues to result in
    terrain based initiation with an isolated flash flood threat. The
    Marginal Risk was expanded to include most of New Mexico and a
    little more of Far West Texas and southeast Arizona.



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4LAIMLvbEmUrSkwTbODtoSfH7FPmS4BQGSmmYG7hIxKj= pyKlD4fUvsXkY_R-cTO7Bazv6wIcHVvVlAzNrogNweN-AhE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4LAIMLvbEmUrSkwTbODtoSfH7FPmS4BQGSmmYG7hIxKj= pyKlD4fUvsXkY_R-cTO7Bazv6wIcHVvVlAzNrogNURS1iRQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4LAIMLvbEmUrSkwTbODtoSfH7FPmS4BQGSmmYG7hIxKj= pyKlD4fUvsXkY_R-cTO7Bazv6wIcHVvVlAzNrogNTl6ZlTg$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Aug 16 20:05:34 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 162005
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    405 PM EDT Sat Aug 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Aug 16 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST AND A SMALL PORTION OF SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...Upper Midwest and Northern Plains...

    Small changes were made to the outlook to adjust for observational
    trends; the most consequential was a slight southward shift in the
    Slight Risk area in the Upper Midwest. The latest radar trends
    suggest a compact MCS in C WI will continue to progress east-
    southeast or southeast late this morning and early this afternoon,
    with potential for some training of higher rain rates on the
    upshear flank of the cold pool. However, greater concern for
    backbuilding and training convection would be for convective
    development expected to occur later -- generally near the
    instability gradient. However, hi-res model guidance (even runs
    initialized at 12Z) does not seem to have the best handle on the
    ongoing situation across N/C WI, and this poses some challenges
    with placing the most likely area for heavier rainfall. If the
    ongoing MCS continues to expand southwest with additional
    development on the upshear flank, and remain forward-propagating,
    the outflow boundary could push further south than anticipated and
    set up from N IL back toward NE IA. However, if the MCS remains
    close to its current dimensions and upstream convection struggles
    to become established in the next few hours, the outflow and
    effective front would be more likely to be situated further north,
    from S WI into SE MN. These differences are crucial.

    The overall pattern does support training and backbuilding with any
    later rounds of convection developing along the instability
    gradient. The nose of the LLJ will be focused back to the west,
    with a large reservoir of strong instability, and a corridor of
    deep, anomalously high moisture in place. Although hi-res models
    are struggling to place things consistently at the moment, they all
    generally show an overnight round of convection that backbuilds in
    a nearly-stationary fashion, and this is consistent with the
    conceptual model for this type of pattern. That scenario can
    produce more significant impacts if realized, and so a Moderate
    Risk upgrade was considered. However, given the lack of consistency
    in guidance and uncertainties around ongoing convection, the Slight
    Risk was maintained for now. We will be monitoring convective trends
    over the next few hours for a possible unscheduled outlook update=20
    this afternoon and a targeted upgrade to Moderate Risk.

    ...South-Central Texas, Along Gulf Coast and Southeast...

    Very few changes were made to the outlook along the Gulf Coast
    region, other than to remove the Slight Risk in C TX, which was
    also coordinated with WFO EWX. The ongoing convection this morning
    is very isolated and models have backed off on the heavy rainfall
    signal in Texas in general. Nevertheless, the Marginal Risk was
    maintained in these areas. A Slight Risk was also considered from
    southeast Georgia into northeast Florida where 12Z HREF
    probabilities of 2-4 inches of rain area most elevated and
    concentrated. However, simulated reflectivity from the 12Z hi-res
    members suggests that localized rainfall maxima would be most
    likely through cell mergers and boundary collisions that would
    briefly maximize rainfall in a certain area, rather than anything
    lingering for several hours. Given the transient nature of the
    heavy rainfall, we opted to maintain the Marginal Risk for now.

    A Marginal Risk was also briefly considered for portions of the
    Mid-Atlantic from far N VA into W MD, C/NE PA, and S NY. Isolated
    convection has already developed and is not moving very quickly.
    However, 12Z soundings show a significant amount of dry air aloft
    and precipitable water values, although somewhat elevated, are not
    highly anomalous. Therefore, any heavy rainfall and resulting flash
    flooding would be expected to be fairly isolated. In other words,
    the probability is non-zero, but less than 5% (Marginal Risk).

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture plume should focus farther east today,
    shifting the potential for isolated flash flooding across
    southeastern Arizona, and portions of southern New Mexico. CAMs
    continue to support more concentrated activity in the Sacramento
    Mountains, but have backed off on instability and rainfall
    potential in southwest New Mexico. Therefore, the Slight Risk was
    trimmed to be concentrated near the Sacramento Mountains
    specifically. Another area of focus would be the Trans-Pecos and
    Big Bend region of Texas, where 12Z HREF probabilities of 2 inch
    rainfall are higher. There is a weakness in the mid-upper level
    flow over this area, so developing thunderstorms have the potential
    to be nearly stationary. It will be monitored for a potential
    Slight Risk upgrade.

    ...Northwest and Northern Rockies...

    Marginal risk remains across far north-central California and much
    of central/eastern Oregon with an expansion across northern ID and
    western MT. Elevated moisture from the record high moisture
    atmospheric river (Salem OR had its highest PW on record at 00Z)
    develops into a ribbon across these areas during peak heating today
    which should produce isolated flash flood threats. Some of the
    heavy rainfall could occur atop burn scars, locally enhancing
    runoff potential.

    Lamers/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Upper Midwest...=20

    A backbuilding band of thunderstorms may be ongoing at the
    beginning of the period (12Z Sunday), however there is considerable uncertainty. The latest hi-res model guidance suggests this would
    be most likely from S MN into SW WI, but there is placement
    uncertainty related to the mesoscale evolution and outflow
    boundaries over the next 12-18 hours, and uncertainty around how
    well convection will be able to sustain itself. Models fairly=20
    consistently show warming mid-level temperatures Saturday Night in=20
    the same area. This generally reduces the size of the CAPE profile=20
    during a critical time of convective initiation, and could increase
    the strength of a cap.

    However, if thunderstorm activity becomes more organized, the
    overall pattern is favorable for training and backbuilding, with
    the nose of a LLJ pointed into S MN, and an instability maximum
    centered just to the southwest (upstream) of the most likely area
    for convective initiation. Organized clusters of storms training in
    a region of strong instability and anomalously high PWs could lead
    to rapid accumulation of rain in a narrow corridor. Rain rates may
    reach 2 inches per hour in that scenario, and thus there is a
    conditional threat for some significant flash flooding. Given the
    uncertainties expressed above, the overall categorical risk is
    being held at Slight for now.

    Additional thunderstorm development is expected late in the
    afternoon or early in the evening on Sunday in eastern South Dakota
    (or adjacent areas), and a continuation of strong instability and
    anomalously high PWs would support high rain rates and a continued
    flash flood threat overnight in the Slight Risk area.

    ...Elsewhere in the Country...

    Multiple other Marginal Risk areas have been maintained -- from
    Montana into the Dakotas, in portions of New Mexico and West Texas,
    and in portions of Florida and southeast Georgia. A Marginal Risk
    area was also added in the Mid Atlantic for Pennsylvania and
    adjacent portions of neighboring states.

    The common factor for all these areas is that, although there is
    some risk of flash flooding, any higher rainfall rates and
    thunderstorm activity should be relatively brief, and therefore=20
    impacts should be relatively isolated.=20

    Lamers


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN NEW
    MEXICO AND FAR WEST TEXAS, AND THE GREAT LAKES...

    Confidence is lower in concentrated areas of excessive rainfall=20
    and flash flooding for the Day 3 period, and thus the previous
    Marginal Risk areas have largely been maintained. The Western Great
    Lakes and the New Mexico and West Texas regions both are projected
    to have precipitable water values near or above the 90th
    percentile, and abundant instability. Therefore, even though the
    details are unclear, the environment in each area is broadly
    supportive of organized convection with high rain rates above 1
    inch per hour at times. A future Slight Risk upgrade seems most
    likely in the Great Lakes region due to much stronger low-mid level
    inflow, supported by anomalously high integrated vapor transport
    (above the 90th percentile based on the ECMWF ensemble mean).

    Lamers


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7EpgOjSwZr7vKWZE2Yam_asPJo25JVuD7q0dJDKM3z_r= sCaFChdzoASzYkqGuvjo4uSJ2D7rNKXyeQ47YC1w_Q2BC6E$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7EpgOjSwZr7vKWZE2Yam_asPJo25JVuD7q0dJDKM3z_r= sCaFChdzoASzYkqGuvjo4uSJ2D7rNKXyeQ47YC1wMWl_2qs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7EpgOjSwZr7vKWZE2Yam_asPJo25JVuD7q0dJDKM3z_r= sCaFChdzoASzYkqGuvjo4uSJ2D7rNKXyeQ47YC1wMaHMXD0$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Aug 17 00:54:26 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 170054
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    854 PM EDT Sat Aug 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST AND THE DAKOTAS...

    01Z Update...

    The Marginal Risk in the South has been scaled back with most storms dissipating after sunset. The Northwest will also see a decreasing
    threat for flash flooding for most of the region, so the Marginal
    Risk was scaled back there too. The biggest adjustments were in=20
    the Northern Plains and Midwest. The Slight Risk was oriented a=20
    little farther south and west from southern MN and northeast IA=20
    into southern WI and northern IL. Doppler Radar is already showing=20
    a cluster of stationary and back- building cells in an environment=20
    with ample instability and anomalous moisture located along a=20
    stalled outflow boundary. Veering low-level winds are also=20
    supporting organized cells with mean-steering winds oriented=20
    parallel to the boundary. There is increasing concern for flash=20
    flooding in these areas given their soil sensitivities and the=20
    potential for 2-3"/hr rainfall rates tonight.

    The other change was to introduce a Slight Risk in parts of the
    western Dakotas. A potent 500-700mb trough ejecting out of the
    Central Rockies will provide supportive upper-level ascent over the
    region with 1.6-1.8" PWATs (approaching 99th climatological
    percentile levels) and MUCAPE in excess of 2,000 J/kg. The 18Z=20
    HREF showed 30-45% probabilities for >3" of rainfall between 00-12Z
    Sunday. Hourly rainfall rates >2"/hr are possible tonight and 1-hr
    FFGs are as low as 1-1.5"/hr in some cases. In collaboration with=20
    BIS, UNR, and ABR, a Slight Risk was introduced for tonight and=20
    into early Sunday morning.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Upper Midwest and Northern Plains...

    Small changes were made to the outlook to adjust for observational
    trends; the most consequential was a slight southward shift in the
    Slight Risk area in the Upper Midwest. The latest radar trends
    suggest a compact MCS in C WI will continue to progress east-
    southeast or southeast late this morning and early this afternoon,
    with potential for some training of higher rain rates on the
    upshear flank of the cold pool. However, greater concern for
    backbuilding and training convection would be for convective
    development expected to occur later -- generally near the
    instability gradient. However, hi-res model guidance (even runs
    initialized at 12Z) does not seem to have the best handle on the
    ongoing situation across N/C WI, and this poses some challenges
    with placing the most likely area for heavier rainfall. If the
    ongoing MCS continues to expand southwest with additional
    development on the upshear flank, and remain forward-propagating,
    the outflow boundary could push further south than anticipated and
    set up from N IL back toward NE IA. However, if the MCS remains
    close to its current dimensions and upstream convection struggles
    to become established in the next few hours, the outflow and
    effective front would be more likely to be situated further north,
    from S WI into SE MN. These differences are crucial.

    The overall pattern does support training and backbuilding with any
    later rounds of convection developing along the instability
    gradient. The nose of the LLJ will be focused back to the west,
    with a large reservoir of strong instability, and a corridor of
    deep, anomalously high moisture in place. Although hi-res models
    are struggling to place things consistently at the moment, they all
    generally show an overnight round of convection that backbuilds in
    a nearly-stationary fashion, and this is consistent with the
    conceptual model for this type of pattern. That scenario can
    produce more significant impacts if realized, and so a Moderate
    Risk upgrade was considered. However, given the lack of consistency
    in guidance and uncertainties around ongoing convection, the Slight
    Risk was maintained for now. We will be monitoring convective trends
    over the next few hours for a possible unscheduled outlook update
    this afternoon and a targeted upgrade to Moderate Risk.

    ...South-Central Texas, Along Gulf Coast and Southeast...

    Very few changes were made to the outlook along the Gulf Coast
    region, other than to remove the Slight Risk in C TX, which was
    also coordinated with WFO EWX. The ongoing convection this morning
    is very isolated and models have backed off on the heavy rainfall
    signal in Texas in general. Nevertheless, the Marginal Risk was
    maintained in these areas. A Slight Risk was also considered from
    southeast Georgia into northeast Florida where 12Z HREF
    probabilities of 2-4 inches of rain area most elevated and
    concentrated. However, simulated reflectivity from the 12Z hi-res
    members suggests that localized rainfall maxima would be most
    likely through cell mergers and boundary collisions that would
    briefly maximize rainfall in a certain area, rather than anything
    lingering for several hours. Given the transient nature of the
    heavy rainfall, we opted to maintain the Marginal Risk for now.

    A Marginal Risk was also briefly considered for portions of the
    Mid-Atlantic from far N VA into W MD, C/NE PA, and S NY. Isolated
    convection has already developed and is not moving very quickly.
    However, 12Z soundings show a significant amount of dry air aloft
    and precipitable water values, although somewhat elevated, are not
    highly anomalous. Therefore, any heavy rainfall and resulting flash
    flooding would be expected to be fairly isolated. In other words,
    the probability is non-zero, but less than 5% (Marginal Risk).

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture plume should focus farther east today,
    shifting the potential for isolated flash flooding across
    southeastern Arizona, and portions of southern New Mexico. CAMs
    continue to support more concentrated activity in the Sacramento
    Mountains, but have backed off on instability and rainfall
    potential in southwest New Mexico. Therefore, the Slight Risk was
    trimmed to be concentrated near the Sacramento Mountains
    specifically. Another area of focus would be the Trans-Pecos and
    Big Bend region of Texas, where 12Z HREF probabilities of 2 inch
    rainfall are higher. There is a weakness in the mid-upper level
    flow over this area, so developing thunderstorms have the potential
    to be nearly stationary. It will be monitored for a potential
    Slight Risk upgrade.

    ...Northwest and Northern Rockies...

    Marginal risk remains across far north-central California and much
    of central/eastern Oregon with an expansion across northern ID and
    western MT. Elevated moisture from the record high moisture
    atmospheric river (Salem OR had its highest PW on record at 00Z)
    develops into a ribbon across these areas during peak heating today
    which should produce isolated flash flood threats. Some of the
    heavy rainfall could occur atop burn scars, locally enhancing
    runoff potential.

    Lamers/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    A backbuilding band of thunderstorms may be ongoing at the
    beginning of the period (12Z Sunday), however there is considerable uncertainty. The latest hi-res model guidance suggests this would
    be most likely from S MN into SW WI, but there is placement
    uncertainty related to the mesoscale evolution and outflow
    boundaries over the next 12-18 hours, and uncertainty around how
    well convection will be able to sustain itself. Models fairly
    consistently show warming mid-level temperatures Saturday Night in
    the same area. This generally reduces the size of the CAPE profile
    during a critical time of convective initiation, and could increase
    the strength of a cap.

    However, if thunderstorm activity becomes more organized, the
    overall pattern is favorable for training and backbuilding, with
    the nose of a LLJ pointed into S MN, and an instability maximum
    centered just to the southwest (upstream) of the most likely area
    for convective initiation. Organized clusters of storms training in
    a region of strong instability and anomalously high PWs could lead
    to rapid accumulation of rain in a narrow corridor. Rain rates may
    reach 2 inches per hour in that scenario, and thus there is a
    conditional threat for some significant flash flooding. Given the
    uncertainties expressed above, the overall categorical risk is
    being held at Slight for now.

    Additional thunderstorm development is expected late in the
    afternoon or early in the evening on Sunday in eastern South Dakota
    (or adjacent areas), and a continuation of strong instability and
    anomalously high PWs would support high rain rates and a continued
    flash flood threat overnight in the Slight Risk area.

    ...Elsewhere in the Country...

    Multiple other Marginal Risk areas have been maintained -- from
    Montana into the Dakotas, in portions of New Mexico and West Texas,
    and in portions of Florida and southeast Georgia. A Marginal Risk
    area was also added in the Mid Atlantic for Pennsylvania and
    adjacent portions of neighboring states.

    The common factor for all these areas is that, although there is
    some risk of flash flooding, any higher rainfall rates and
    thunderstorm activity should be relatively brief, and therefore
    impacts should be relatively isolated.

    Lamers


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN NEW
    MEXICO AND FAR WEST TEXAS, AND THE GREAT LAKES...

    Confidence is lower in concentrated areas of excessive rainfall
    and flash flooding for the Day 3 period, and thus the previous
    Marginal Risk areas have largely been maintained. The Western Great
    Lakes and the New Mexico and West Texas regions both are projected
    to have precipitable water values near or above the 90th
    percentile, and abundant instability. Therefore, even though the
    details are unclear, the environment in each area is broadly
    supportive of organized convection with high rain rates above 1
    inch per hour at times. A future Slight Risk upgrade seems most
    likely in the Great Lakes region due to much stronger low-mid level
    inflow, supported by anomalously high integrated vapor transport
    (above the 90th percentile based on the ECMWF ensemble mean).

    Lamers


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!79wLXMCEkWjT2fZBUe4DRvEmQ-Ku-N13V5HbErpq51iH= bcVwYeRg1dwBk4PbzvcTWua6VThjMbSRi66-UVVH7PcGOE8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!79wLXMCEkWjT2fZBUe4DRvEmQ-Ku-N13V5HbErpq51iH= bcVwYeRg1dwBk4PbzvcTWua6VThjMbSRi66-UVVHwTlld6o$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!79wLXMCEkWjT2fZBUe4DRvEmQ-Ku-N13V5HbErpq51iH= bcVwYeRg1dwBk4PbzvcTWua6VThjMbSRi66-UVVHnS-etC4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Aug 17 08:49:27 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 170849
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    449 AM EDT Sun Aug 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains, Upper Midwest and Ohio Valley through Northern Mid-Atlantic...=20
    Ongoing swath of repeating heavy rain from southern Minnesota=20
    through Chicago and northern Indiana should diminish a fair amount=20
    by 12Z. However, the remnant boundary should be a focus for=20
    convection to fire upon later today over similar areas and=20
    downstream over the Ohio Valley. This warrants a corridor of=20
    Marginal Risk that connects the previous one over NY State.

    Yet another MCS is tracking east through South Dakota tonight with
    this one taking a bit of a northern track compared to the one last
    night. This organized activity can be expected to be moving east=20
    from the central Dakota border by 12Z with further afternoon=20
    development over much of eastern Minnesota into Wisconsin with the
    aid of the boundary lifting/pivoting from southern MN. Then, this
    evening another round of organized heavy rain works its way across
    much of MN reaching northern IA and southwest WI overnight. This=20
    warrants northward expansion of the Slight Risk up to Duluth and=20
    over more of western Wisconsin.

    Farther east, scattered heavy thunderstorms over southern Ontario
    are continuing to push east overnight with a cold front. Strong=20
    moisture advection overnight ahead of the front is allowing for
    much above normal moisture to spread over the eastern Great Lakes
    with potential for 2" PW in the 12Z BUF raob. Morning heavy rain
    works its way over western NY and much of PA where a Marginal Risk
    remains. Stronger NWly flow around the central CONUS upper ridge
    should keep activity fairly progressive, but the NWly flow did
    warrant some expansion to the Marginal for the western slopes of
    the central Appalachians.

    Remnant moisture over Montana from the atmospheric river that
    pushed into the Northwest a couple days ago could cause repeating
    heavy enough rain to be excessive, so the Marginal Risk is
    maintained there.


    ...New Mexico and Western Texas...
    Continued east shift in the monsoonal moisture plume places an
    isolated flash flood risk over eastern NM and far western TX into
    the TX Panhandle today where the PW anomaly remains 1.5 sigma above
    normal.


    ...Florida...
    Persistent boundary over the northern FL Peninsula maintains high
    moisture with 2.25" PW (2 sigma above normal). Mainly diurnally
    driven convective activity may produce locally excessive rainfall
    even with the high FFG (around 4"/3hr).

    Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    WISCONSIN INTO NORTHERN ILLINOIS...

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes...
    Ongoing Monday morning convection is progged by the 06Z HRRR to be
    over northeastern IA and southern WI to the IL border before
    diminishing by midday. The remnant boundary then allows further
    activity to fire over similar areas later that afternoon. Moisture
    is quite elevated with PW peaking around 2" in the afternoon. The=20
    overlap of these repeating rounds of heavy storms over already=20
    saturated ground warrants an upgrade to a Slight Risk for much of=20
    southern WI into northern IL per coordination with WFOs MKX and=20
    ARX. Given the mesoscale processes over the persistent frontal
    pattern generous coverage of the Marginal Risk is used to cover
    much of the Midwest.


    ...Southwest...
    The upper ridge axis shifts west to NM on Monday suppressing the
    monsoonal flow and warranting a Marginal Risk over southern NM and
    far western Texas.


    ...Southeast...
    Added Marginal Risks over the southern Appalachians/Piedmont and
    northern FL Peninsula for pooled moisture anomalies and perhaps
    some remnant frontal boundary in FL. These areas would see
    mainly diurnally driven convection.

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE SOUTH
    CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS THROUGH EASTERN MIDWEST AND IN THE SOUTHWEST...

    ...Central Plains to the Midwest...
    Westward motion to the upper ridge axis allows the frontal wave
    pattern over the Upper Midwest to finally eject southeast Monday
    night. Positive moisture anomaly with PW 1.5 to 2 sigma above
    normal extend from MI through MO by Tuesday afternoon. Frontal
    forcing should allow for progressive motion, but activity could be
    heavy enough to warrant an isolated flash flood risk and a Marginal
    Risk. The 00Z global model consensus is for rainfall focus farther
    west than previous runs, particularly for the EC. Therefore, in
    coordination with WFOs BTV ALY BUF and BGM, the Marginal Risk was
    trimmed out of the Northeast.


    ...Southwest...
    Remnant moisture with PW anomalies around 1 sigma above normal are
    over eastern AZ/much of NM on Tuesday. An isolated terrain driven
    flash flood risk is possible in the diurnal convection, so the
    Marginal Risk is maintained.=20

    Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8SYzg_5JqLs5EsNyjgiMbt5iRfqY5MLcFRDkNgApBg89= _HE1U52oZTmZ6euqZUKwVJaq0YlMTH7EgNx1TVzgRnFV62c$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8SYzg_5JqLs5EsNyjgiMbt5iRfqY5MLcFRDkNgApBg89= _HE1U52oZTmZ6euqZUKwVJaq0YlMTH7EgNx1TVzgIMcgg68$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8SYzg_5JqLs5EsNyjgiMbt5iRfqY5MLcFRDkNgApBg89= _HE1U52oZTmZ6euqZUKwVJaq0YlMTH7EgNx1TVzghflLrZE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Aug 17 15:52:32 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 171551
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1151 AM EDT Sun Aug 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains, Upper Midwest, Ohio Valley, Northern Mid-=20
    Atlantic and southeast New England...=20
    Showers and thunderstorms linger across portions of eastern SD and
    southwest MN near a front and associated outflow boundaries. Other
    dying activity is moving into the Northern Mid-Atlantic States and
    towards the Lower Ohio Valley.

    Across the Upper Midwest, there should be some boundary return
    before evening/overnight convective development occurs near
    southwest MN due to strong southwest flow importing decent
    instability into the region. The thunderstorms then move into=20
    portions of northern IA and southwest WI. With the signal waning in
    the mesoscale guidance towards the International Border with=20
    Canada, trimmed the northern portion of the Slight Risk area. Due=20
    to heavy rains overnight and early this morning, shifted the=20
    southern extent more southward to account for at least partially=20 saturated/compromised soils near the IA/MN border and in case the=20
    mesoscale guidance is still too poleward with its heavy rain=20
    footprint.

    Farther east, renewed scattered thunderstorm activity is expected
    across the Northeast ahead of a dying precipitation area across PA,
    which appears to have an MCV in tow. The Appalachians and possible
    lee trough/sea breeze front closer to the New England coast should
    also act as foci near and ahead of the incoming front. Stronger=20
    NWly flow around the central CONUS upper ridge should keep activity
    fairly progressive, so the risk level was left as Marginal.

    Remnant moisture over Montana and near the Black Hills from the=20
    atmospheric river that pushed into the Northwest a couple days ago=20
    could cause repeating convection to cause heavy rain to be=20
    excessive, so reworked the Marginal Risk there.


    ...New Mexico and Western Texas...
    Continued east shift in the monsoonal moisture plume places an
    isolated flash flood risk over eastern NM and far western TX into
    the TX Panhandle today where the PW anomaly remains 1.5 sigma above
    normal. Few changes were made to continuity in this region.


    ...Florida...
    Persistent boundary over the northern FL Peninsula maintains high
    moisture with 2.25" PW (2 sigma above normal). Mainly diurnally-
    driven convective activity may produce locally excessive rainfall
    even with the high FFG (around 4"/3hr).

    Roth/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    WISCONSIN INTO NORTHERN ILLINOIS...

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes...
    Ongoing Monday morning convection is progged by the 06Z HRRR to be
    over northeastern IA and southern WI to the IL border before
    diminishing by midday. The remnant boundary then allows further
    activity to fire over similar areas later that afternoon. Moisture
    is quite elevated with PW peaking around 2" in the afternoon. The
    overlap of these repeating rounds of heavy storms over already
    saturated ground warrants an upgrade to a Slight Risk for much of
    southern WI into northern IL per coordination with WFOs MKX and
    ARX. Given the mesoscale processes over the persistent frontal
    pattern generous coverage of the Marginal Risk is used to cover
    much of the Midwest.


    ...Southwest...
    The upper ridge axis shifts west to NM on Monday suppressing the
    monsoonal flow and warranting a Marginal Risk over southern NM and
    far western Texas.


    ...Southeast...
    Added Marginal Risks over the southern Appalachians/Piedmont and
    northern FL Peninsula for pooled moisture anomalies and perhaps
    some remnant frontal boundary in FL. These areas would see
    mainly diurnally driven convection.

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE SOUTH
    CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS THROUGH EASTERN MIDWEST AND IN THE SOUTHWEST...

    ...Central Plains to the Midwest...
    Westward motion to the upper ridge axis allows the frontal wave
    pattern over the Upper Midwest to finally eject southeast Monday
    night. Positive moisture anomaly with PW 1.5 to 2 sigma above
    normal extend from MI through MO by Tuesday afternoon. Frontal
    forcing should allow for progressive motion, but activity could be
    heavy enough to warrant an isolated flash flood risk and a Marginal
    Risk. The 00Z global model consensus is for rainfall focus farther
    west than previous runs, particularly for the EC. Therefore, in
    coordination with WFOs BTV ALY BUF and BGM, the Marginal Risk was
    trimmed out of the Northeast.


    ...Southwest...
    Remnant moisture with PW anomalies around 1 sigma above normal are
    over eastern AZ/much of NM on Tuesday. An isolated terrain driven
    flash flood risk is possible in the diurnal convection, so the
    Marginal Risk is maintained.

    Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ReuQKPhFQPoFssqTVe3vjJx6IBxxskwTgbNjUM4BYod= NIqOwQ2WzVW43aqYQdiCPy2RmyfEOn7mJx1yygPguz2auHI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ReuQKPhFQPoFssqTVe3vjJx6IBxxskwTgbNjUM4BYod= NIqOwQ2WzVW43aqYQdiCPy2RmyfEOn7mJx1yygPgh2LQlfY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ReuQKPhFQPoFssqTVe3vjJx6IBxxskwTgbNjUM4BYod= NIqOwQ2WzVW43aqYQdiCPy2RmyfEOn7mJx1yygPgxQocBvg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Aug 17 19:13:46 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 171913
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    313 PM EDT Sun Aug 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Aug 17 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains, Upper Midwest, Ohio Valley, Northern Mid-
    Atlantic and southeast New England...
    Showers and thunderstorms linger across portions of eastern SD and
    southwest MN near a front and associated outflow boundaries. Other
    dying activity is moving into the Northern Mid-Atlantic States and
    towards the Lower Ohio Valley.

    Across the Upper Midwest, there should be some boundary return
    before evening/overnight convective development occurs near
    southwest MN due to strong southwest flow importing decent
    instability into the region. The thunderstorms then move into
    portions of northern IA and southwest WI. With the signal waning in
    the mesoscale guidance towards the International Border with
    Canada, trimmed the northern portion of the Slight Risk area. Due
    to heavy rains overnight and early this morning, shifted the
    southern extent more southward to account for at least partially saturated/compromised soils near the IA/MN border and in case the
    mesoscale guidance is still too poleward with its heavy rain
    footprint.

    Farther east, renewed scattered thunderstorm activity is expected
    across the Northeast ahead of a dying precipitation area across PA,
    which appears to have an MCV in tow. The Appalachians and possible
    lee trough/sea breeze front closer to the New England coast should
    also act as foci near and ahead of the incoming front. Stronger
    NWly flow around the central CONUS upper ridge should keep activity
    fairly progressive, so the risk level was left as Marginal.

    Remnant moisture over Montana and near the Black Hills from the
    atmospheric river that pushed into the Northwest a couple days ago
    could cause repeating convection to cause heavy rain to be
    excessive, so reworked the Marginal Risk there.


    ...New Mexico and Western Texas...
    Continued east shift in the monsoonal moisture plume places an
    isolated flash flood risk over eastern NM and far western TX into
    the TX Panhandle today where the PW anomaly remains 1.5 sigma above
    normal. Few changes were made to continuity in this region.


    ...Florida...
    Persistent boundary over the northern FL Peninsula maintains high
    moisture with 2.25" PW (2 sigma above normal). Mainly diurnally-
    driven convective activity may produce locally excessive rainfall
    even with the high FFG (around 4"/3hr).

    Roth/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    WISCONSIN INTO NORTHERN ILLINOIS...

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes...
    Ongoing Monday morning convection is progged to be moving into
    portions of WI and northern IL before diminishing by midday. The=20
    remnant boundary then allows further activity to fire over similar=20
    areas later that afternoon. Moisture is quite elevated with PW=20
    peaking at or just over 2" in the afternoon. Hourly rain amounts to
    3" with local totals to 5" are possible. The overlap of these=20
    repeating rounds of heavy storms over already saturated ground and=20
    urban areas warranted a Slight Risk which was expanded to include=20 Chicagoland on this afternoon update. Given the mesoscale processes
    over the persistent frontal pattern generous coverage of the=20
    Marginal Risk is used to cover much of the Midwest.


    ...CO/KS/NE...
    A convective complex is expected to form in the Front Range and
    propagate eastward, which the guidance weakens as it crosses the
    100th meridian. As the guidance can sometimes undersell Front Range
    convection, added a Marginal Risk to account for the heavy rainfall
    it could produce. Hourly amounts up to 2" are possible where cells
    merge or manage to train.


    ...Southwest...
    The upper ridge axis shifts west to NM on Monday suppressing the
    monsoonal flow and warranting a Marginal Risk over southern NM and
    far western Texas under its base where moisture is more than=20
    sufficient for isolated flash flood issues. Hourly amounts to 2.5"
    are possible where cells are stationary, backbuild, merge, or=20
    train.


    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    An easterly wave is expected to traverse areas of southernmost MS
    and southern LA, leading to heavy rainfall. Precipitable water
    values are forecast to rise to 2"+, and ML CAPE up to 3000 J/kg is
    expected. Daytime heating should play a role in the heavy rain
    production. Hourly amounts to 3" with local amounts to 5" are
    possible where cells merge or manage to train. Effective bulk=20
    shear is forecast by the GFS to be capped around 20 kts, so pulse=20
    convection is expected.


    ...Southeast...
    A Marginal Risk remains over the southern Appalachians/Piedmont=20
    and northern FL Peninsula for pooled moisture anomalies and perhaps
    some remnant frontal boundary in FL. These areas would see mainly=20
    diurnally driven convection.

    Roth/Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE SOUTH
    CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS THROUGH EASTERN MIDWEST AND IN THE SOUTHWEST...

    ...Central Plains to the Midwest...
    Westward motion to the upper ridge axis allows the frontal wave
    pattern over the Upper Midwest to finally eject southeast Monday
    night. Positive moisture anomaly with PW 1.5 to 2 sigma above
    normal extend from MI through MO by Tuesday afternoon, with the
    wave itself spending time across southeast MO. Frontal forcing=20
    should allow for progressive motion. Effective bulk shear appears
    low enough for an expectation for pulse convection, but hourly
    amounts to 3" on a local basis is sufficient for an isolated to
    widely scattered flash flood/Marginal Risk. The main change was to
    split the risk area in two, one covering the Midwest/Plains and=20
    the other focused in the Southern Appalachians.


    ...Southern Appalachians...
    A wave of moisture/spoke of energy moves by the region as an
    anticyclonic wave breaking event occurs, with an upper level packet
    of energy moving dropping in from the north. Effective bulk shear
    is scarce, so pulse convection is expected in this region. Hourly
    amounts to 3" are possible locally which could lead to flash
    flooding on an isolated basis.


    ...Southwest...
    Remnant moisture with PW anomalies around 1 sigma above normal are
    over eastern AZ/much of NM on Tuesday. Given the precipitable water
    values available, hourly amounts to 2" are possible where cells
    stall, backbuild, merge, or manage to train. An isolated terrain=20
    driven flash flood risk is possible in the diurnal convection, so=20
    the Marginal Risk is maintained.

    Roth/Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-0Hjq0NwegboslWpHX_pPwIb9CpLktXnfgvEjiAoM9_S= R8xIQ8InCb4aTn5B0PP_SDBk4pFy_p3_R8Oahy-LO5RNYsM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-0Hjq0NwegboslWpHX_pPwIb9CpLktXnfgvEjiAoM9_S= R8xIQ8InCb4aTn5B0PP_SDBk4pFy_p3_R8Oahy-L0V6XbyY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-0Hjq0NwegboslWpHX_pPwIb9CpLktXnfgvEjiAoM9_S= R8xIQ8InCb4aTn5B0PP_SDBk4pFy_p3_R8Oahy-LrBSjbUY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 18 00:54:47 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 180054
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    854 PM EDT Sun Aug 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    01Z Update...

    The Slight Risk in the Midwest remains on track tonight. RAP
    mesoanalysis shows both WAA within the 850-925mb layer and a steady
    influx of moisture within the same layer. This is all occurring
    directly into a W-E oriented frontal boundary that, at 21Z, was
    located from central SD on east through northern IA and into
    northern IL. A potent shortwave trough traversing the Dakotas this
    evening will provide healthy upper-level ascent aloft and modest
    effective bulk shear that approaches 30-40 kts will help to=20
    organize developing convection. PWATs of 1.8-2.0" are anticipated,=20
    which is above the 99th climatological percentile, and will work=20
    in tandem with MLCAPE between 1,000-2,000 J/kg to generate 2-3"/hr=20
    maximum rainfall rates in the most intense cells tonight. The 00Z=20
    WoFS 90th percentile rainfall totals depicts as much as 3-6" of=20
    rainfall within the worst storms within the Slight Risk, which=20
    given the rainfall totals last night occurred in a similar=20
    environment, does have the potential to occur again tonight. 1-hr=20
    FFGs are generally <2" and even 3-hr FFGs are <2" is some parts of=20
    eastern SD, southern MN, and as far east as the MS River Valley.=20
    The new 18Z HREF is keying in on south-central MN and the Twin=20
    Cities metro for probabilities in the moderate-to-high range=20
    (40-70%) for rainfall totals >3" between 00-12Z Monday. With that=20
    all said, there could be locally significant flash flooding in=20
    areas where storms train repeatedly over a given location, or over=20
    areas with highly sensitive soils from recent rainfall.=20

    Elsewhere, the Marginal Risks in the Southeast, Northeast,=20
    Northwest, and Southwest were scaled backed given the loss of=20
    daytime heating and many storms beginning to dissipate. They are=20
    still in place for portions of these regions given the small chance
    for additional localized flash flooding, especially prior to 06Z=20
    tonight.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Northern Plains, Upper Midwest, Ohio Valley, Northern Mid-
    Atlantic and southeast New England...
    Showers and thunderstorms linger across portions of eastern SD and
    southwest MN near a front and associated outflow boundaries. Other
    dying activity is moving into the Northern Mid-Atlantic States and
    towards the Lower Ohio Valley.

    Across the Upper Midwest, there should be some boundary return
    before evening/overnight convective development occurs near
    southwest MN due to strong southwest flow importing decent
    instability into the region. The thunderstorms then move into
    portions of northern IA and southwest WI. With the signal waning in
    the mesoscale guidance towards the International Border with
    Canada, trimmed the northern portion of the Slight Risk area. Due
    to heavy rains overnight and early this morning, shifted the
    southern extent more southward to account for at least partially saturated/compromised soils near the IA/MN border and in case the
    mesoscale guidance is still too poleward with its heavy rain
    footprint.

    Farther east, renewed scattered thunderstorm activity is expected
    across the Northeast ahead of a dying precipitation area across PA,
    which appears to have an MCV in tow. The Appalachians and possible
    lee trough/sea breeze front closer to the New England coast should
    also act as foci near and ahead of the incoming front. Stronger
    NWly flow around the central CONUS upper ridge should keep activity
    fairly progressive, so the risk level was left as Marginal.

    Remnant moisture over Montana and near the Black Hills from the
    atmospheric river that pushed into the Northwest a couple days ago
    could cause repeating convection to cause heavy rain to be
    excessive, so reworked the Marginal Risk there.


    ...New Mexico and Western Texas...
    Continued east shift in the monsoonal moisture plume places an
    isolated flash flood risk over eastern NM and far western TX into
    the TX Panhandle today where the PW anomaly remains 1.5 sigma above
    normal. Few changes were made to continuity in this region.


    ...Florida...
    Persistent boundary over the northern FL Peninsula maintains high
    moisture with 2.25" PW (2 sigma above normal). Mainly diurnally-
    driven convective activity may produce locally excessive rainfall
    even with the high FFG (around 4"/3hr).

    Roth/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    WISCONSIN INTO NORTHERN ILLINOIS...

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes...
    Ongoing Monday morning convection is progged to be moving into
    portions of WI and northern IL before diminishing by midday. The
    remnant boundary then allows further activity to fire over similar
    areas later that afternoon. Moisture is quite elevated with PW
    peaking at or just over 2" in the afternoon. Hourly rain amounts to
    3" with local totals to 5" are possible. The overlap of these
    repeating rounds of heavy storms over already saturated ground and
    urban areas warranted a Slight Risk which was expanded to include
    Chicagoland on this afternoon update. Given the mesoscale processes
    over the persistent frontal pattern generous coverage of the
    Marginal Risk is used to cover much of the Midwest.


    ...CO/KS/NE...
    A convective complex is expected to form in the Front Range and
    propagate eastward, which the guidance weakens as it crosses the
    100th meridian. As the guidance can sometimes undersell Front Range
    convection, added a Marginal Risk to account for the heavy rainfall
    it could produce. Hourly amounts up to 2" are possible where cells
    merge or manage to train.


    ...Southwest...
    The upper ridge axis shifts west to NM on Monday suppressing the
    monsoonal flow and warranting a Marginal Risk over southern NM and
    far western Texas under its base where moisture is more than
    sufficient for isolated flash flood issues. Hourly amounts to 2.5"
    are possible where cells are stationary, backbuild, merge, or
    train.


    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    An easterly wave is expected to traverse areas of southernmost MS
    and southern LA, leading to heavy rainfall. Precipitable water
    values are forecast to rise to 2"+, and ML CAPE up to 3000 J/kg is
    expected. Daytime heating should play a role in the heavy rain
    production. Hourly amounts to 3" with local amounts to 5" are
    possible where cells merge or manage to train. Effective bulk
    shear is forecast by the GFS to be capped around 20 kts, so pulse
    convection is expected.


    ...Southeast...
    A Marginal Risk remains over the southern Appalachians/Piedmont
    and northern FL Peninsula for pooled moisture anomalies and perhaps
    some remnant frontal boundary in FL. These areas would see mainly
    diurnally driven convection.

    Roth/Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE SOUTH
    CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS THROUGH EASTERN MIDWEST AND IN THE SOUTHWEST...

    ...Central Plains to the Midwest...
    Westward motion to the upper ridge axis allows the frontal wave
    pattern over the Upper Midwest to finally eject southeast Monday
    night. Positive moisture anomaly with PW 1.5 to 2 sigma above
    normal extend from MI through MO by Tuesday afternoon, with the
    wave itself spending time across southeast MO. Frontal forcing
    should allow for progressive motion. Effective bulk shear appears
    low enough for an expectation for pulse convection, but hourly
    amounts to 3" on a local basis is sufficient for an isolated to
    widely scattered flash flood/Marginal Risk. The main change was to
    split the risk area in two, one covering the Midwest/Plains and
    the other focused in the Southern Appalachians.


    ...Southern Appalachians...
    A wave of moisture/spoke of energy moves by the region as an
    anticyclonic wave breaking event occurs, with an upper level packet
    of energy moving dropping in from the north. Effective bulk shear
    is scarce, so pulse convection is expected in this region. Hourly
    amounts to 3" are possible locally which could lead to flash
    flooding on an isolated basis.


    ...Southwest...
    Remnant moisture with PW anomalies around 1 sigma above normal are
    over eastern AZ/much of NM on Tuesday. Given the precipitable water
    values available, hourly amounts to 2" are possible where cells
    stall, backbuild, merge, or manage to train. An isolated terrain
    driven flash flood risk is possible in the diurnal convection, so
    the Marginal Risk is maintained.

    Roth/Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7GDlMk1boqTMHNubU9BafjL_rFNG6XNlTG8T3QTlDGuS= 0vxThJ7UwoipUgrRCB8nNEOWJVBP02XlxFzStLDiQ6E-__c$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7GDlMk1boqTMHNubU9BafjL_rFNG6XNlTG8T3QTlDGuS= 0vxThJ7UwoipUgrRCB8nNEOWJVBP02XlxFzStLDi2GlI-RU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7GDlMk1boqTMHNubU9BafjL_rFNG6XNlTG8T3QTlDGuS= 0vxThJ7UwoipUgrRCB8nNEOWJVBP02XlxFzStLDi0StTs_o$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 18 07:24:08 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 180723
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    323 AM EDT Mon Aug 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST AND WESTERN GREAT LAKES...

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes...

    Radar/sat composite indicates a large expanse of convection
    migrating to the east-northeast stemming from broad regional
    forcing aided by a stout shortwave exiting out of the Northern
    Plains. Current setup is progged to maneuver downstream into=20
    WI/Northern IL with a elevated risk of heavy rainfall bisecting=20
    area along and east of the I90/39 corridor. 00z HREF blended mean=20
    QPF distribution focuses the heaviest rain across the=20
    Milwaukee/Chicago metros with an expansion west back towards that=20
    I90/39 interchange. This is consistent with the sharp theta_E=20
    gradient oriented along the approaching warm front from the=20
    southwest as we move through the morning hrs today. The boundary=20
    referenced will be the suitable focal point for redevelopment as we
    move beyond 16-18z as environmental conditions remain ripe for=20
    enhanced convective initiation as conditions destabilize within the
    broad warm sector along and south of the warm front. HREF probs=20
    for >3" locally are running highest between Madison to Milwaukee=20
    down into the northern periphery of IL, including the northern=20
    suburbs of Chicago. This area is most prone to flash flood risks=20
    due to the urbanization factors, as well primed soils from several=20
    periods of heavy rainfall prior to what will transpire today. The=20 combination of the above factors lent credence to continuing the=20
    SLGT risk inherited with some modest expansion on the northern and=20
    southern periphery to account for trends in heavier QPF placement=20
    down through IL and up into central WI.=20

    ...Front Range through Central Plains...

    Series of convective complexes will migrate across the region
    extending from the CO Front Range across the KS/NE line until it
    reaches towards the Missouri River valley near northwestern MO.
    Models are a bit all over the place on exactly how the setup
    evolves downstream, but the consensus on initiation across the
    Front Range and along the KS/NE border was enough to warrant
    coverage with a MRGL risk as cells could produce rates >2"/hr when
    assessing hourly prob fields from the HREF and individual CAM
    outputs. Highest probs for >2" of rainfall are across northeast CO,
    northwest KS, and the MO/KS/NE border with some of the CAMs
    indicating upwards of 4" in either location. If consensus grows in
    either location for >3", there's a chance for a targeted upgrade in
    future updates. For now, the MRGL risk was sufficient.=20

    ...Southwest into Southern Plains...=20

    Monsoonal moisture trapped under the ridge across NM/Southern
    Plains will continue the persistent threat of scattered to
    widespread convective development from southeast AZ up through
    much of NM, west TX, and western OK. The scattered nature of the
    convection and no real organized zone of precip will limit the
    higher end potential for any risk, however the threat is certainly
    within the bounds of a MRGL risk considering the threat for 2-3"
    locally in any one location is forecast. The greatest threat will
    likely situate over the Sacramento's thanks to the remnant burn
    scar presence that enhances flash flood and debris flow concerns
    locally in southern NM.=20

    ...Central Gulf Coast...

    Very little change in the forecast for Monday. An easterly wave is
    expected to traverse areas of central Gulf coast, leading to heavy
    rainfall later this afternoon. PWATs generally >2" coupled with
    sufficient buoyancy/instability running between 2500-4000 J/kg
    MUCAPE will be plentiful for heavy convective cores capable of
    rates between 2-4"/hr in the strongest cells. HREF neighborhood
    probs for >3" are running between 30-45% near and south of I-10
    with the best threats likely in the urban corridors from New
    Orleans across into Lafayette to Lake Charles. The progressive
    nature of the precip should alleviate the worst flash flood
    concerns, but still remains within the lower end of the MRGL
    threshold for the threat. Maintained general continuity from
    previous forecast with some minor trimming of the eastern extent of
    the risk area to remove southern MS.=20=20

    ...Mid Atlantic and Carolina's...=20

    Prevailing east to northeast flow from the Lower Delmarva down
    through the Carolina's will aid in enhancing regional convergence
    along a southward advancing front stemming from low-level wedge
    pattern as high pressure drills southward to the east of the Blue
    Ridge. Theta_E maxima is generally confined to the VA Tidewater
    down through eastern NC with a slope back west as you get into SC.
    Models are relatively solid agreement on the placement of the
    heaviest precip in these zones mainly due to the instability
    presence promoting general convective schemes compared to more
    low-topped showers and stratiform in the stable layer behind the
    cold front. MRGL risk was last forecast was maintained with some
    adjustments based on the latest QPF trends in the hi-res suite and
    ensemble bias corrected output.=20

    ...Florida...

    Seasonal PWATs and convergence of the sea breeze anticipated across
    central FL will lead to a period of heavy rainfall along the I-75
    corridor, including threats to the Orlando metro area. CAMs are
    consistent on a zone of 3-6" locally the evolution across the above
    area. This is a generally localized concern as is customary with
    these setups, so the previous MRGL risk was kept with removal of
    the eastern side of the state as the convergence zone will likely
    occur too far west to generate much of a significant rainfall risk
    in the I-95 corridor.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS TO GREAT LAKES, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, AND SOUTHWESTERN U.S...

    ...Southern Plains to Great Lakes...

    Mid and upper level progression will undergo a wave break pattern=20
    with the eastern flank of the ridge being compressed with an=20
    overall shift westward in the ridge axis leading to energy dropping
    southeast out of the Great Lakes area. Widespread +1 to +2=20
    deviation PWATs will exist in proximity of the Missouri Valley up=20
    into the Great Lakes with a cold frontal progression moving=20
    southeast out of the Northern Plains into the Central U.S. by=20
    Tuesday afternoon. Coupled low and mid-level ascent provided by=20
    migrating shortwaves and the aforementioned front will interact=20
    with the above normal moisture environment in place allowing for
    widespread convective development across a large chunk of the
    Plains up through the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes creating a broad
    threat for localized flash flooding. Greatest potential will likely
    exist over the Mid-Mississippi Valley into the western Ohio Valley
    given the strongest low-level convergence signature and mid-level
    shortwave focus in tandem for Tuesday afternoon and evening. Areal
    average QPF output still isn't as robust as one would look for to
    entice an upgraded risk, however there are some early indications
    from the end of the CAMs window where perhaps a targeted upgrade
    could occur if the trends remain favorable for the outlined area.
    Locally as much as 3" are indicated in that zone with some 2-3"
    totals littered across the Central U.S in proxy to the advancing
    cold front. First Guess Fields remain consistent on just a broad
    MRGL risk area which was general continuity from previous forecast.
    As a result, maintained that posture, but will monitor for the
    upgrade potential in the succession of updates.=20

    ...Southern Appalachians...

    Elevated moisture and narrow tongue of instability in the confines
    of the Southern Appalachians will allow for a threat of focused
    heavy rainfall across the western Carolinas down into GA. A quick
    moving mid-level perturbation dropping south out of the Ohio Valley
    will enhance the potential providing just enough forcing and weak
    shear to warrant some heavier convective outputs capable of
    dropping 2-3" in a short time that would generate some flash flood
    prospects in the vicinity of the complex terrain. Previous forecast
    was still on target with the latest model trends leading to
    relative continuity in the MRGL in place.

    ...Southwest...

    Little to no change in the expected pattern evolution across
    portions of the Southwest U.S. with regards to convective
    opportunity. Remnant moisture with PWAT anomalies around 1 standard
    deviation above normal will be situated over eastern AZ/much of NM
    on Tuesday. Considering the moist environment in place, hourly=20
    amounts between 1-2" are plausible where cells stall, backbuild,=20
    merge, or train. An isolated terrain driven flash flood risk is=20
    possible in the diurnal convection, especially over the Sangre de
    Cristos, Sacramento's, and eastern Mogollon Rim. Considering run to
    run variance being limited over the past 24 hrs., there was no
    reason to deviate much from the inherited forecast. The MRGL risk
    was generally maintained with some minor adjustments on the
    northern periphery to account for QPF enhancement in-of the Sangre
    de Cristos.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FROM
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS TO CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, AND
    SOUTHWEST U.S...

    ...Southern Plains to Appalachians...

    Slow migrating cold front will become the focal point for
    convective development over the course of Wednesday into early
    Thursday leading to widely scattered thunderstorms capable of
    localized flash flooding. Signal is really diffuse overall, but
    environmental conditions are still relevant for pockets of heavy
    rain that could cause some flash flood concerns in more urbanized
    corridors of the Southern Plains to the southern half of the
    Appalachian front. The best potential likely exists in the
    mountains where complex terrain and convergent flow will aid in
    upslope forcing capable of slow-moving cell motions and heavy
    rainfall over smaller foci (mountain ridge tops). A low-end MRGL
    exists over a broad area with potential for a more concrete area of
    interest pending how the broad synoptic pattern evolves and any
    focal points within the mesoscale (remnant outflows).=20

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture presence and general diurnal instability will
    aid in traditional afternoon and evening convective output across
    east and southeast AZ into west-central NM on Wednesday. Signals
    for heavy precip are very isolated leading to the threat lying just
    inside the MRGL risk threshold. There is a chance the areal
    coverage shrinks or the threat goes away altogether, but model
    output maintains the prospects at this juncture, so maintained
    continuity from previous forecast.

    ...Northern Mid Atlantic...

    As of this update, there is no risk area in place across Central PA
    into New York State, however will be monitoring the pattern
    progression of a shortwave ejecting out of Ontario by the end of D2
    into D3 that could entice a targeted risk in these two specific
    zones. Models are truly split on the threat, and with antecedent
    conditions running very dry over the areas in question, it will
    take guidance amping up the precip output to consider any upgrades.
    This has some definition within the ML guidance and EC ENS, so
    wanted to provide some insight on the threat despite a lack of a
    risk area.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7J9hX3qh_CSUeZH5JSNiwfUkRUz7aCINZsDqw34lPkqx= 4klPe7jak6boNkpumtTTV9BANVvzR3TeiPnhVu2pZl5FpLQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7J9hX3qh_CSUeZH5JSNiwfUkRUz7aCINZsDqw34lPkqx= 4klPe7jak6boNkpumtTTV9BANVvzR3TeiPnhVu2phXYvFtw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7J9hX3qh_CSUeZH5JSNiwfUkRUz7aCINZsDqw34lPkqx= 4klPe7jak6boNkpumtTTV9BANVvzR3TeiPnhVu2pdRI3n0Q$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 18 15:55:43 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 181555
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1155 AM EDT Mon Aug 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes...

    A frontal system marching east through the Upper Mississippi Valley
    is supporting a large cluster of thunderstorms across eastern IA and
    southern WI that will soon head for northern IL later today. As=20
    the warm front inches closer to Chicagoland, SWrly low-level flow=20
    will intersect the front and continue to develop additional storms=20
    this afternoon. The environment will grow increasingly unstable,=20
    with the 12Z DVN sounding showing an impressive >4,000 J/kg MUCAPE=20
    profile that will be advected east into northern IL and southern=20
    WI. Area-averaged HRRR soundings across northern IL/southern WI=20
    this afternoon show as much as 2.0" PWATs and marginal low-level=20 helicity/shear to help organize developing convection.=20

    12Z HREF probabilities show moderate probabilities (40-60%) for=20
    rainfall totals >3" from water-logged southeast MN and northeast IA
    on south and east to northern IL and northwest IN. The inherited=20
    Slight Risk was adjusted to the HREF's probabilities. Should=20
    guidance trend wetter tonight, there could be locally significant=20
    flash flooding within the Slight Risk, which does include the=20
    Chicago metro area. The Chicago metro area is particularly=20
    vulnerable given the high concentration of hydrophobic surfaces and
    0-40cm soil saturation around the Chicagoland area are topping the
    90th percentile according to NASA SPoRT-LIS. In summary, flash=20
    flooding is a concern once again in parts of the Midwest with=20
    locally significant flash flooding possible once again this=20
    afternoon and evening.

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic & Appalachians...

    In collaboration with AKQ and MHX, decided to introduce a Slight
    Risk for parts of eastern NC and southeast VA. Latest 12Z HREF
    probabilistic guidance shows moderate-to-high chances (50-70%) for
    rainfall totals >3" within the Slight Risk area, with some
    individual CAM members showing >3" totals as far north as the more
    populated areas of the southeast VA Tidewater. Some CAMs also show
    isolated amounts topping 5" in eastern NC with 12Z HREF
    probabilities showing 20-30% chances for >5". The atmosphere is
    primed with tropical PWATs topping 2.2" in some areas, MUCAPE
    around 1,000 J/kg, and warm cloud layers at least 15,000ft deep.
    This could support rainfall rates up to 3"/hr and 30-minute rates=20
    over 1"/hr. Given these factors, the Slight Risk was introduced=20
    this forecast cycle.

    In addition, there is some concern for flash flooding in the NC=20
    Appalachians where latest 12Z HREF guidance shows moderate-to-high=20
    chance probabilities (50-70%) for rainfall totals >3" through 12Z=20
    Tues. Soils are also sensitive with some of the Blue Ridge and=20
    Smokeys sporting near 90th percentile saturation per 0-40cm soil=20
    moisture on NASA SPoRT-LIS. There is the potential for flash=20
    flooding along complex terrain and along streams that historically=20
    tend to rise quickly in short-duration downpours.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Front Range through Central Plains...

    Series of convective complexes will migrate across the region
    extending from the CO Front Range across the KS/NE line until it
    reaches towards the Missouri River valley near northwestern MO.
    Models are a bit all over the place on exactly how the setup
    evolves downstream, but the consensus on initiation across the
    Front Range and along the KS/NE border was enough to warrant
    coverage with a MRGL risk as cells could produce rates >2"/hr when
    assessing hourly prob fields from the HREF and individual CAM
    outputs. Highest probs for >2" of rainfall are across northeast CO,
    northwest KS, and the MO/KS/NE border with some of the CAMs
    indicating upwards of 4" in either location. If consensus grows in
    either location for >3", there's a chance for a targeted upgrade in
    future updates. For now, the MRGL risk was sufficient.

    ...Southwest into Southern Plains...

    Monsoonal moisture trapped under the ridge across NM/Southern
    Plains will continue the persistent threat of scattered to
    widespread convective development from southeast AZ up through
    much of NM, west TX, and western OK. The scattered nature of the
    convection and no real organized zone of precip will limit the
    higher end potential for any risk, however the threat is certainly
    within the bounds of a MRGL risk considering the threat for 2-3"
    locally in any one location is forecast. The greatest threat will
    likely situate over the Sacramento's thanks to the remnant burn
    scar presence that enhances flash flood and debris flow concerns
    locally in southern NM.

    ...Central Gulf Coast...

    Very little change in the forecast for Monday. An easterly wave is
    expected to traverse areas of central Gulf coast, leading to heavy
    rainfall later this afternoon. PWATs generally >2" coupled with
    sufficient buoyancy/instability running between 2500-4000 J/kg
    MUCAPE will be plentiful for heavy convective cores capable of
    rates between 2-4"/hr in the strongest cells. HREF neighborhood
    probs for >3" are running between 30-45% near and south of I-10
    with the best threats likely in the urban corridors from New
    Orleans across into Lafayette to Lake Charles. The progressive
    nature of the precip should alleviate the worst flash flood
    concerns, but still remains within the lower end of the MRGL
    threshold for the threat. Maintained general continuity from
    previous forecast with some minor trimming of the eastern extent of
    the risk area to remove southern MS.

    ...Florida...

    Seasonal PWATs and convergence of the sea breeze anticipated across
    central FL will lead to a period of heavy rainfall along the I-75
    corridor, including threats to the Orlando metro area. CAMs are
    consistent on a zone of 3-6" locally the evolution across the above
    area. This is a generally localized concern as is customary with
    these setups, so the previous MRGL risk was kept with removal of
    the eastern side of the state as the convergence zone will likely
    occur too far west to generate much of a significant rainfall risk
    in the I-95 corridor.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS TO GREAT LAKES, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, AND SOUTHWESTERN U.S...

    ...Southern Plains to Great Lakes...

    Mid and upper level progression will undergo a wave break pattern
    with the eastern flank of the ridge being compressed with an
    overall shift westward in the ridge axis leading to energy dropping
    southeast out of the Great Lakes area. Widespread +1 to +2
    deviation PWATs will exist in proximity of the Missouri Valley up
    into the Great Lakes with a cold frontal progression moving
    southeast out of the Northern Plains into the Central U.S. by
    Tuesday afternoon. Coupled low and mid-level ascent provided by
    migrating shortwaves and the aforementioned front will interact
    with the above normal moisture environment in place allowing for
    widespread convective development across a large chunk of the
    Plains up through the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes creating a broad
    threat for localized flash flooding. Greatest potential will likely
    exist over the Mid-Mississippi Valley into the western Ohio Valley
    given the strongest low-level convergence signature and mid-level
    shortwave focus in tandem for Tuesday afternoon and evening. Areal
    average QPF output still isn't as robust as one would look for to
    entice an upgraded risk, however there are some early indications
    from the end of the CAMs window where perhaps a targeted upgrade
    could occur if the trends remain favorable for the outlined area.
    Locally as much as 3" are indicated in that zone with some 2-3"
    totals littered across the Central U.S in proxy to the advancing
    cold front. First Guess Fields remain consistent on just a broad
    MRGL risk area which was general continuity from previous forecast.
    As a result, maintained that posture, but will monitor for the
    upgrade potential in the succession of updates.

    ...Southern Appalachians...

    Elevated moisture and narrow tongue of instability in the confines
    of the Southern Appalachians will allow for a threat of focused
    heavy rainfall across the western Carolinas down into GA. A quick
    moving mid-level perturbation dropping south out of the Ohio Valley
    will enhance the potential providing just enough forcing and weak
    shear to warrant some heavier convective outputs capable of
    dropping 2-3" in a short time that would generate some flash flood
    prospects in the vicinity of the complex terrain. Previous forecast
    was still on target with the latest model trends leading to
    relative continuity in the MRGL in place.

    ...Southwest...

    Little to no change in the expected pattern evolution across
    portions of the Southwest U.S. with regards to convective
    opportunity. Remnant moisture with PWAT anomalies around 1 standard
    deviation above normal will be situated over eastern AZ/much of NM
    on Tuesday. Considering the moist environment in place, hourly
    amounts between 1-2" are plausible where cells stall, backbuild,
    merge, or train. An isolated terrain driven flash flood risk is
    possible in the diurnal convection, especially over the Sangre de
    Cristos, Sacramento's, and eastern Mogollon Rim. Considering run to
    run variance being limited over the past 24 hrs., there was no
    reason to deviate much from the inherited forecast. The MRGL risk
    was generally maintained with some minor adjustments on the
    northern periphery to account for QPF enhancement in-of the Sangre
    de Cristos.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FROM
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS TO CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, AND
    SOUTHWEST U.S...

    ...Southern Plains to Appalachians...

    Slow migrating cold front will become the focal point for
    convective development over the course of Wednesday into early
    Thursday leading to widely scattered thunderstorms capable of
    localized flash flooding. Signal is really diffuse overall, but
    environmental conditions are still relevant for pockets of heavy
    rain that could cause some flash flood concerns in more urbanized
    corridors of the Southern Plains to the southern half of the
    Appalachian front. The best potential likely exists in the
    mountains where complex terrain and convergent flow will aid in
    upslope forcing capable of slow-moving cell motions and heavy
    rainfall over smaller foci (mountain ridge tops). A low-end MRGL
    exists over a broad area with potential for a more concrete area of
    interest pending how the broad synoptic pattern evolves and any
    focal points within the mesoscale (remnant outflows).

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture presence and general diurnal instability will
    aid in traditional afternoon and evening convective output across
    east and southeast AZ into west-central NM on Wednesday. Signals
    for heavy precip are very isolated leading to the threat lying just
    inside the MRGL risk threshold. There is a chance the areal
    coverage shrinks or the threat goes away altogether, but model
    output maintains the prospects at this juncture, so maintained
    continuity from previous forecast.

    ...Northern Mid Atlantic...

    As of this update, there is no risk area in place across Central PA
    into New York State, however will be monitoring the pattern
    progression of a shortwave ejecting out of Ontario by the end of D2
    into D3 that could entice a targeted risk in these two specific
    zones. Models are truly split on the threat, and with antecedent
    conditions running very dry over the areas in question, it will
    take guidance amping up the precip output to consider any upgrades.
    This has some definition within the ML guidance and EC ENS, so
    wanted to provide some insight on the threat despite a lack of a
    risk area.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Awe039JFj5cF_dZaZYJmtIcsXrVnwQKkzpb9S1JPWEj= hd_G7dJnmtvqmkFDMGhx6Vi-UdFpyjtpPiaiWNGxjtd2-Zw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Awe039JFj5cF_dZaZYJmtIcsXrVnwQKkzpb9S1JPWEj= hd_G7dJnmtvqmkFDMGhx6Vi-UdFpyjtpPiaiWNGxjWW6O54$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Awe039JFj5cF_dZaZYJmtIcsXrVnwQKkzpb9S1JPWEj= hd_G7dJnmtvqmkFDMGhx6Vi-UdFpyjtpPiaiWNGxef2vxbA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Aug 18 19:58:02 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 181954
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    354 PM EDT Mon Aug 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Aug 18 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes...

    A frontal system marching east through the Upper Mississippi Valley
    is supporting a large cluster of thunderstorms across eastern IA and
    southern WI that will soon head for northern IL later today. As
    the warm front inches closer to Chicagoland, SWrly low-level flow
    will intersect the front and continue to develop additional storms
    this afternoon. The environment will grow increasingly unstable,
    with the 12Z DVN sounding showing an impressive >4,000 J/kg MUCAPE
    profile that will be advected east into northern IL and southern
    WI. Area-averaged HRRR soundings across northern IL/southern WI
    this afternoon show as much as 2.0" PWATs and marginal low-level
    helicity/shear to help organize developing convection.

    12Z HREF probabilities show moderate probabilities (40-60%) for
    rainfall totals >3" from water-logged southeast MN and northeast IA
    on south and east to northern IL and northwest IN. The inherited
    Slight Risk was adjusted to the HREF's probabilities. Should
    guidance trend wetter tonight, there could be locally significant
    flash flooding within the Slight Risk, which does include the
    Chicago metro area. The Chicago metro area is particularly
    vulnerable given the high concentration of hydrophobic surfaces and
    0-40cm soil saturation around the Chicagoland area are topping the
    90th percentile according to NASA SPoRT-LIS. In summary, flash
    flooding is a concern once again in parts of the Midwest with
    locally significant flash flooding possible once again this
    afternoon and evening.

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic & Appalachians...

    In collaboration with AKQ and MHX, decided to introduce a Slight
    Risk for parts of eastern NC and southeast VA. Latest 12Z HREF
    probabilistic guidance shows moderate-to-high chances (50-70%) for
    rainfall totals >3" within the Slight Risk area, with some
    individual CAM members showing >3" totals as far north as the more
    populated areas of the southeast VA Tidewater. Some CAMs also show
    isolated amounts topping 5" in eastern NC with 12Z HREF
    probabilities showing 20-30% chances for >5". The atmosphere is
    primed with tropical PWATs topping 2.2" in some areas, MUCAPE
    around 1,000 J/kg, and warm cloud layers at least 15,000ft deep.
    This could support rainfall rates up to 3"/hr and 30-minute rates
    over 1"/hr. Given these factors, the Slight Risk was introduced
    this forecast cycle.

    In addition, there is some concern for flash flooding in the NC
    Appalachians where latest 12Z HREF guidance shows moderate-to-high
    chance probabilities (50-70%) for rainfall totals >3" through 12Z
    Tues. Soils are also sensitive with some of the Blue Ridge and
    Smokeys sporting near 90th percentile saturation per 0-40cm soil
    moisture on NASA SPoRT-LIS. There is the potential for flash
    flooding along complex terrain and along streams that historically
    tend to rise quickly in short-duration downpours.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Front Range through Central Plains...

    Series of convective complexes will migrate across the region
    extending from the CO Front Range across the KS/NE line until it
    reaches towards the Missouri River valley near northwestern MO.
    Models are a bit all over the place on exactly how the setup
    evolves downstream, but the consensus on initiation across the
    Front Range and along the KS/NE border was enough to warrant
    coverage with a MRGL risk as cells could produce rates >2"/hr when
    assessing hourly prob fields from the HREF and individual CAM
    outputs. Highest probs for >2" of rainfall are across northeast CO,
    northwest KS, and the MO/KS/NE border with some of the CAMs
    indicating upwards of 4" in either location. If consensus grows in
    either location for >3", there's a chance for a targeted upgrade in
    future updates. For now, the MRGL risk was sufficient.

    ...Southwest into Southern Plains...

    Monsoonal moisture trapped under the ridge across NM/Southern
    Plains will continue the persistent threat of scattered to
    widespread convective development from southeast AZ up through
    much of NM, west TX, and western OK. The scattered nature of the
    convection and no real organized zone of precip will limit the
    higher end potential for any risk, however the threat is certainly
    within the bounds of a MRGL risk considering the threat for 2-3"
    locally in any one location is forecast. The greatest threat will
    likely situate over the Sacramento's thanks to the remnant burn
    scar presence that enhances flash flood and debris flow concerns
    locally in southern NM.

    ...Central Gulf Coast...

    Very little change in the forecast for Monday. An easterly wave is
    expected to traverse areas of central Gulf coast, leading to heavy
    rainfall later this afternoon. PWATs generally >2" coupled with
    sufficient buoyancy/instability running between 2500-4000 J/kg
    MUCAPE will be plentiful for heavy convective cores capable of
    rates between 2-4"/hr in the strongest cells. HREF neighborhood
    probs for >3" are running between 30-45% near and south of I-10
    with the best threats likely in the urban corridors from New
    Orleans across into Lafayette to Lake Charles. The progressive
    nature of the precip should alleviate the worst flash flood
    concerns, but still remains within the lower end of the MRGL
    threshold for the threat. Maintained general continuity from
    previous forecast with some minor trimming of the eastern extent of
    the risk area to remove southern MS.

    ...Florida...

    Seasonal PWATs and convergence of the sea breeze anticipated across
    central FL will lead to a period of heavy rainfall along the I-75
    corridor, including threats to the Orlando metro area. CAMs are
    consistent on a zone of 3-6" locally the evolution across the above
    area. This is a generally localized concern as is customary with
    these setups, so the previous MRGL risk was kept with removal of
    the eastern side of the state as the convergence zone will likely
    occur too far west to generate much of a significant rainfall risk
    in the I-95 corridor.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS TO GREAT LAKES, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, AND SOUTHWESTERN U.S...

    2000Z Update...

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced for the Mid-Atlantic coastal areas
    that stretch from the I-95 corridor in central VA on east to the
    Atlantic coast of the DelMarVa. PWATs are likely to still hover
    around 2" around the Chesapeake Bay and placed close by to the
    nearby stationary front. MUCAPE will be limited (generally <500
    J/kg) but relatively deep warm cloud layers up to 14,000ft could
    still support localized rainfall rates up to 3"/hr in the most
    intense cells. Localized flash flooding would have better chances
    of unfolding should these more potent cells occur over more
    urbanized environments or in poor drainage areas.

    Otherwise, minor adjustments to the inherited Marginal Risks were
    made based on latest QPF trends. The southern Appalachians bear
    watching as they could be more sensitive to potential flash
    flooding should the area be hit by heavy rainfall on Monday.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Southern Plains to Great Lakes...

    Mid and upper level progression will undergo a wave break pattern
    with the eastern flank of the ridge being compressed with an
    overall shift westward in the ridge axis leading to energy dropping
    southeast out of the Great Lakes area. Widespread +1 to +2
    deviation PWATs will exist in proximity of the Missouri Valley up
    into the Great Lakes with a cold frontal progression moving
    southeast out of the Northern Plains into the Central U.S. by
    Tuesday afternoon. Coupled low and mid-level ascent provided by
    migrating shortwaves and the aforementioned front will interact
    with the above normal moisture environment in place allowing for
    widespread convective development across a large chunk of the
    Plains up through the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes creating a broad
    threat for localized flash flooding. Greatest potential will likely
    exist over the Mid-Mississippi Valley into the western Ohio Valley
    given the strongest low-level convergence signature and mid-level
    shortwave focus in tandem for Tuesday afternoon and evening. Areal
    average QPF output still isn't as robust as one would look for to
    entice an upgraded risk, however there are some early indications
    from the end of the CAMs window where perhaps a targeted upgrade
    could occur if the trends remain favorable for the outlined area.
    Locally as much as 3" are indicated in that zone with some 2-3"
    totals littered across the Central U.S in proxy to the advancing
    cold front. First Guess Fields remain consistent on just a broad
    MRGL risk area which was general continuity from previous forecast.
    As a result, maintained that posture, but will monitor for the
    upgrade potential in the succession of updates.

    ...Southern Appalachians...

    Elevated moisture and narrow tongue of instability in the confines
    of the Southern Appalachians will allow for a threat of focused
    heavy rainfall across the western Carolinas down into GA. A quick
    moving mid-level perturbation dropping south out of the Ohio Valley
    will enhance the potential providing just enough forcing and weak
    shear to warrant some heavier convective outputs capable of
    dropping 2-3" in a short time that would generate some flash flood
    prospects in the vicinity of the complex terrain. Previous forecast
    was still on target with the latest model trends leading to
    relative continuity in the MRGL in place.

    ...Southwest...

    Little to no change in the expected pattern evolution across
    portions of the Southwest U.S. with regards to convective
    opportunity. Remnant moisture with PWAT anomalies around 1 standard
    deviation above normal will be situated over eastern AZ/much of NM
    on Tuesday. Considering the moist environment in place, hourly
    amounts between 1-2" are plausible where cells stall, backbuild,
    merge, or train. An isolated terrain driven flash flood risk is
    possible in the diurnal convection, especially over the Sangre de
    Cristos, Sacramento's, and eastern Mogollon Rim. Considering run to
    run variance being limited over the past 24 hrs., there was no
    reason to deviate much from the inherited forecast. The MRGL risk
    was generally maintained with some minor adjustments on the
    northern periphery to account for QPF enhancement in-of the Sangre
    de Cristos.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FOR THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS, MID-SOUTH, CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, THE
    NORTHEAST, AND SOUTHWEST U.S...

    2000Z Update...

    ...Northeast...

    Latest trends over the past 12 hours in the ECMWF, EC-AIFS, UKMET,
    and NAM have come in wetter over portions of the more populated=20
    corridor of the Northeast. There is discussion as to whether or not
    this ultimately becomes a predecessor rain event (PRE). This is=20
    largely due to Erin's proximity to the region, the placement of a=20
    250mb jet streak over the Gulf of Maine placing its diffluent=20
    right-entrance region over the Northeast, and a nearby coastal=20
    front acting as a trigger for storms that tap into PWATs that are=20
    hovering around 2". However, the bulk of the PWAT, 700-300mb=20
    moisture field, and theta-e ridge associated with Erin reside=20
    farther south and over the Atlantic.=20

    Whether it decides to PRE or not to PRE, the facts are that=20
    anomalous PWATs and modest lift aloft will foster efficient warm-=20
    rain processes over a highly populated section of the country that=20
    contains plenty of hydrophobic surfaces. There is also an=20
    increasing signal in AI guidance and ensembles as well. At the=20
    moment, the lack of instability and PWATs mainly associated with=20
    the D1 Midwest system are making this flash flood setup more=20
    localized in nature. However, these trends have only just started=20
    in some members of guidance. This setup will continue to be closely
    monitored over the next 24-48 hours.=20

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Southern Plains to Appalachians...

    Slow migrating cold front will become the focal point for
    convective development over the course of Wednesday into early
    Thursday leading to widely scattered thunderstorms capable of
    localized flash flooding. Signal is really diffuse overall, but
    environmental conditions are still relevant for pockets of heavy
    rain that could cause some flash flood concerns in more urbanized
    corridors of the Southern Plains to the southern half of the
    Appalachian front. The best potential likely exists in the
    mountains where complex terrain and convergent flow will aid in
    upslope forcing capable of slow-moving cell motions and heavy
    rainfall over smaller foci (mountain ridge tops). A low-end MRGL
    exists over a broad area with potential for a more concrete area of
    interest pending how the broad synoptic pattern evolves and any
    focal points within the mesoscale (remnant outflows).

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture presence and general diurnal instability will
    aid in traditional afternoon and evening convective output across
    east and southeast AZ into west-central NM on Wednesday. Signals
    for heavy precip are very isolated leading to the threat lying just
    inside the MRGL risk threshold. There is a chance the areal
    coverage shrinks or the threat goes away altogether, but model
    output maintains the prospects at this juncture, so maintained
    continuity from previous forecast.

    ...Northern Mid Atlantic...

    As of this update, there is no risk area in place across Central PA
    into New York State, however will be monitoring the pattern
    progression of a shortwave ejecting out of Ontario by the end of D2
    into D3 that could entice a targeted risk in these two specific
    zones. Models are truly split on the threat, and with antecedent
    conditions running very dry over the areas in question, it will
    take guidance amping up the precip output to consider any upgrades.
    This has some definition within the ML guidance and EC ENS, so
    wanted to provide some insight on the threat despite a lack of a
    risk area.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5BDH60j1UE8SAQXB83kA255SFkr1rhEjyKXSrAkAUNkr= 1uW1--Dv_dZl-GKgp7W0tJdHCY3slDErB7BRlHTHKrAiUHE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5BDH60j1UE8SAQXB83kA255SFkr1rhEjyKXSrAkAUNkr= 1uW1--Dv_dZl-GKgp7W0tJdHCY3slDErB7BRlHTH3EC6YdY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5BDH60j1UE8SAQXB83kA255SFkr1rhEjyKXSrAkAUNkr= 1uW1--Dv_dZl-GKgp7W0tJdHCY3slDErB7BRlHTHQkd7wkg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 19 00:48:51 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 190048
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    848 PM EDT Mon Aug 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST AND SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes...
    Thunderstorms across northern IL and southern WI and being
    supported by a circulation apparent on radar imagery entering
    southeast WI. They've led to numerous flash flood warnings as
    hourly rain amounts have reached 3" at time, which is too much for
    saturated soils and urban areas alike. Adjustments for the new=20
    update were to remove portions of the MRGL north and west of this=20 circulation per radar reflectivity trends. Locally significant=20
    flash flooding remains possible within the Slight Risk, which=20
    includes Chicagoland, overnight.=20


    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic & Appalachians...
    The Slight Risk remains for parts of eastern NC and southeast VA
    due to active convection in that area which has led to a couple of=20
    flash flood warnings. Hourly rain amounts have approached 3" at
    times. The Marginal Risk was shifted from the Eastern Shore into=20
    Tidewater VA per the latest HREF guidance.

    Concern remains for flash flooding in the NC Appalachians through
    tonight. Soils are also sensitive with some of the Blue Ridge and=20
    Smokeys sporting near 90th percentile saturation per 0-40cm soil=20
    moisture on NASA SPoRT- LIS. There is the potential for flash=20
    flooding along complex terrain and along streams that historically=20
    tend to rise quickly in short- duration downpours.


    ...Front Range through Central Plains...
    Series of convective complexes are about to cross the border from
    CO into KS, while an east-west band of convection lies ahead across
    KS. Hourly rain amounts as of late have reached 2.5" in spots.=20=20
    Only the 18z hi- res NAM seems to be capturing this KS band=20
    reasonably well. This activity should cross the Sunflower State=20
    overnight within the existing Marginal Risk area. Adjustments were=20
    made per the most recent HREF guidance and radar reflectivity=20
    trends.


    ...Southwest into Southern Plains...
    Monsoonal moisture trapped under the ridge across NM/Southern=20
    Plains has led to scattered convective development from southeast=20
    AZ up through much of NM, west TX, and western OK -- where a few
    active flash flood warnings are in effect -- which will be slow to collapse/thin out in coverage overnight. Hourly rain amounts have=20
    reached 2" at times. The threat remains for 2-3" locally in any one
    location remains.


    Roth


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS TO GREAT LAKES, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, AND SOUTHWESTERN U.S...

    2000Z Update...

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    A Marginal Risk was introduced for the Mid-Atlantic coastal areas
    that stretch from the I-95 corridor in central VA on east to the
    Atlantic coast of the DelMarVa. PWATs are likely to still hover
    around 2" around the Chesapeake Bay and placed close by to the
    nearby stationary front. MUCAPE will be limited (generally <500
    J/kg) but relatively deep warm cloud layers up to 14,000ft could
    still support localized rainfall rates up to 3"/hr in the most
    intense cells. Localized flash flooding would have better chances
    of unfolding should these more potent cells occur over more
    urbanized environments or in poor drainage areas.

    Otherwise, minor adjustments to the inherited Marginal Risks were
    made based on latest QPF trends. The southern Appalachians bear
    watching as they could be more sensitive to potential flash
    flooding should the area be hit by heavy rainfall on Monday.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Southern Plains to Great Lakes...

    Mid and upper level progression will undergo a wave break pattern
    with the eastern flank of the ridge being compressed with an
    overall shift westward in the ridge axis leading to energy dropping
    southeast out of the Great Lakes area. Widespread +1 to +2
    deviation PWATs will exist in proximity of the Missouri Valley up
    into the Great Lakes with a cold frontal progression moving
    southeast out of the Northern Plains into the Central U.S. by
    Tuesday afternoon. Coupled low and mid-level ascent provided by
    migrating shortwaves and the aforementioned front will interact
    with the above normal moisture environment in place allowing for
    widespread convective development across a large chunk of the
    Plains up through the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes creating a broad
    threat for localized flash flooding. Greatest potential will likely
    exist over the Mid-Mississippi Valley into the western Ohio Valley
    given the strongest low-level convergence signature and mid-level
    shortwave focus in tandem for Tuesday afternoon and evening. Areal
    average QPF output still isn't as robust as one would look for to
    entice an upgraded risk, however there are some early indications
    from the end of the CAMs window where perhaps a targeted upgrade
    could occur if the trends remain favorable for the outlined area.
    Locally as much as 3" are indicated in that zone with some 2-3"
    totals littered across the Central U.S in proxy to the advancing
    cold front. First Guess Fields remain consistent on just a broad
    MRGL risk area which was general continuity from previous forecast.
    As a result, maintained that posture, but will monitor for the
    upgrade potential in the succession of updates.

    ...Southern Appalachians...

    Elevated moisture and narrow tongue of instability in the confines
    of the Southern Appalachians will allow for a threat of focused
    heavy rainfall across the western Carolinas down into GA. A quick
    moving mid-level perturbation dropping south out of the Ohio Valley
    will enhance the potential providing just enough forcing and weak
    shear to warrant some heavier convective outputs capable of
    dropping 2-3" in a short time that would generate some flash flood
    prospects in the vicinity of the complex terrain. Previous forecast
    was still on target with the latest model trends leading to
    relative continuity in the MRGL in place.

    ...Southwest...

    Little to no change in the expected pattern evolution across
    portions of the Southwest U.S. with regards to convective
    opportunity. Remnant moisture with PWAT anomalies around 1 standard
    deviation above normal will be situated over eastern AZ/much of NM
    on Tuesday. Considering the moist environment in place, hourly
    amounts between 1-2" are plausible where cells stall, backbuild,
    merge, or train. An isolated terrain driven flash flood risk is
    possible in the diurnal convection, especially over the Sangre de
    Cristos, Sacramento's, and eastern Mogollon Rim. Considering run to
    run variance being limited over the past 24 hrs., there was no
    reason to deviate much from the inherited forecast. The MRGL risk
    was generally maintained with some minor adjustments on the
    northern periphery to account for QPF enhancement in-of the Sangre
    de Cristos.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FOR THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS, MID-SOUTH, CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, THE
    NORTHEAST, AND SOUTHWEST U.S...

    2000Z Update...

    ...Northeast...

    Latest trends over the past 12 hours in the ECMWF, EC-AIFS, UKMET,
    and NAM have come in wetter over portions of the more populated
    corridor of the Northeast. There is discussion as to whether or not
    this ultimately becomes a predecessor rain event (PRE). This is
    largely due to Erin's proximity to the region, the placement of a
    250mb jet streak over the Gulf of Maine placing its diffluent
    right-entrance region over the Northeast, and a nearby coastal
    front acting as a trigger for storms that tap into PWATs that are
    hovering around 2". However, the bulk of the PWAT, 700-300mb
    moisture field, and theta-e ridge associated with Erin reside
    farther south and over the Atlantic.

    Whether it decides to PRE or not to PRE, the facts are that
    anomalous PWATs and modest lift aloft will foster efficient warm-
    rain processes over a highly populated section of the country that
    contains plenty of hydrophobic surfaces. There is also an
    increasing signal in AI guidance and ensembles as well. At the
    moment, the lack of instability and PWATs mainly associated with
    the D1 Midwest system are making this flash flood setup more
    localized in nature. However, these trends have only just started
    in some members of guidance. This setup will continue to be closely
    monitored over the next 24-48 hours.

    Mullinax

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...Southern Plains to Appalachians...

    Slow migrating cold front will become the focal point for
    convective development over the course of Wednesday into early
    Thursday leading to widely scattered thunderstorms capable of
    localized flash flooding. Signal is really diffuse overall, but
    environmental conditions are still relevant for pockets of heavy
    rain that could cause some flash flood concerns in more urbanized
    corridors of the Southern Plains to the southern half of the
    Appalachian front. The best potential likely exists in the
    mountains where complex terrain and convergent flow will aid in
    upslope forcing capable of slow-moving cell motions and heavy
    rainfall over smaller foci (mountain ridge tops). A low-end MRGL
    exists over a broad area with potential for a more concrete area of
    interest pending how the broad synoptic pattern evolves and any
    focal points within the mesoscale (remnant outflows).

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture presence and general diurnal instability will
    aid in traditional afternoon and evening convective output across
    east and southeast AZ into west-central NM on Wednesday. Signals
    for heavy precip are very isolated leading to the threat lying just
    inside the MRGL risk threshold. There is a chance the areal
    coverage shrinks or the threat goes away altogether, but model
    output maintains the prospects at this juncture, so maintained
    continuity from previous forecast.

    ...Northern Mid Atlantic...

    As of this update, there is no risk area in place across Central PA
    into New York State, however will be monitoring the pattern
    progression of a shortwave ejecting out of Ontario by the end of D2
    into D3 that could entice a targeted risk in these two specific
    zones. Models are truly split on the threat, and with antecedent
    conditions running very dry over the areas in question, it will
    take guidance amping up the precip output to consider any upgrades.
    This has some definition within the ML guidance and EC ENS, so
    wanted to provide some insight on the threat despite a lack of a
    risk area.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Da3svooXOlAXd3ttpotjKcB3fldCmn-9asr-vYkPE52= AQdZ0dmvgbkaJWO_5tdCdE8pyCFVpm3drlpTn3R9GlJs-M0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Da3svooXOlAXd3ttpotjKcB3fldCmn-9asr-vYkPE52= AQdZ0dmvgbkaJWO_5tdCdE8pyCFVpm3drlpTn3R9IdomrMc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Da3svooXOlAXd3ttpotjKcB3fldCmn-9asr-vYkPE52= AQdZ0dmvgbkaJWO_5tdCdE8pyCFVpm3drlpTn3R9CFbAp-s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 19 08:17:51 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 190817
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    417 AM EDT Tue Aug 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

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

    ...Southern Appalachians...=20
    Old frontal boundary strengthened by 'cold' air damming,=20
    northeasterly flow has pooled enhanced low to mid-level moisture=20
    through the eastern slopes of the Southern Appalachian mountains.=20
    Another day of slow southward sag of the boundary, clearing skies=20
    for ample insolation across the terrain and strong upslope should=20
    trigger solid convective response through early afternoon. A narrow
    mid-level ridge to the northwest will keep weak mid to upper level
    steering in place to allow for slow cell motions with potential of
    continued upslope convergence resulting in scattered clustering=20
    and potential cell mergers. Hi-Res CAMs continue to paint the=20
    eastern slopes of the NC and NE GA Appalachians with 2-4" totals=20
    resulting in HREF neighborhood probability of 3" at 40-50% and=20
    indications of 5"+ at 20%. Total moisture is not overly anomalous,
    but is still above average, though persistent upslope flux in=20
    complex terrain suggests a small Slight Risk of Excessive Rainfall=20
    appears prudent at this time.=20

    ...Coastal Plains of Southern Maryland to Georgia...=20
    Reinforcing cold front has stalled across the southern Mid-=20
    Atlantic Monday that has pooled enhanced moisture near the mouth of
    the Chesapeake Bay through the Coastal Plains of the Carolinas,=20
    connecting back to an older cold front and pool across east-central
    GA. Total Pwats of 2" are pooled along the boundary. As such, this
    will tighten moisture/theta-E gradients and with ample early=20
    morning insolation should make for an unstable convective=20
    environment by afternoon. Additionally, slow approach and influence
    of Hurricane Erin, will maintain/tighten moisture/instability=20
    gradient and strengthen sea-breeze development. Given strong low=20
    level convergence; weak,parallel to coast mid to upper level=20
    steering; especially near intersection with front extending out=20
    from SE VA, localized rates of 2-2.5"/hr are probable and with deep
    layer steering generally parallel to the Coastal Carolinas, some=20
    short- term repeating is possible before propagating inland=20
    resulting in some localized totals of 2-4" with highest=20
    probabilities further north in SE VA/NE NC.=20

    ...Great Lakes to eastern Central Plains...=20
    Mid to upper level progression depicts ridge building across the=20
    Northern Plains as broader shortwave feature rolls into a weakness=20
    across the Great Lakes later today (Tuesday); with the amplifying=20
    ridge, further elongation of a positive trough weakness expands=20
    southward toward the Ozark Plateau and eastern Central Plains. The=20 associated surface low and cold front will progress through the=20
    central Great Lakes into the Northeast toward end of day supporting
    relatively stronger moisture flux along it and through the eastern Midwest/Northern Ohio Valley with slightly above average PWat=20
    values of 1.5-1.75"; locally higher to provide ample moisture for=20
    efficient rainfall and localized scattered to widely scattered=20
    flash flood risk. Deeper layer moisture is slightly reduced further
    southward along the sagging frontal zone into the Mid-MS River=20
    Valley and Ozarks, but to counter-act the reduction in=20
    coverage/rainfall efficiency; cell motions will be slower and more
    chaotic in nature to allow for increased duration/random mergers=20
    to occur than farther north across W NY/MI/OH and IND. Hi-Res CAM=20
    signals remain on course for random/scattered incidents of 2-3"=20
    totals consistent with a broad Marginal Risk area across the Great=20 Lakes/Ohio Valley into the Central Plains. This remains on track to
    prior forecasts, with only small adjustment to connect risk areas=20
    to the Marginal Risk across the Southern High Plains and western=20
    Central Plains (see below).

    ...Southwest to Southern High Plains...
    As noted in section above, broad 1.5 to 2 standard anomaly ridge=20
    continues to dominate the central Rockies, spreading into the=20
    northern High Plains. This shift allows for shortwave 'ridge-=20
    rider' energy to further erode and retrograde along its southeast=20
    quadrant. As such, another day of active thunderstorms within an=20
    above average low-level moisture plume will unfold centered over=20
    NM. Hi-Res CAMs and HREF show highest signal along the early=20
    afternoon upslope/convergence along the Sangre de Cristo,=20
    Sacramento, Mogollon and Black Ranges. Eventually spreading out=20
    with scattered to widely scattered slow moving pulse cells across=20
    the southern Central Plains and southern High Plains into the=20
    evening hours. High rainfall production and slow/stationary cell=20
    motions will result in scattered instances of 2"+ resulting in=20
    widely scattered possible flash flooding consistent with a Marginal
    Risk of Excessive Rainfall.=20

    Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FROM
    SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND DOWN THE APPALACHIANS, THE MID-SOUTH AND TEXAS,
    AS WELL AS EASTERN ARIZONA...

    ...Northeast...
    Stationary front lingering over the northern Mid-Atlantic looks to
    form a convergent focus to moisture streaming north ahead of
    Hurricane Erin, particularly Wednesday night. This front and
    enhanced moisture (The 00Z ECMWF retains PW around 2"), along with
    the area from Long Island/NYC to southern New England in=20
    a right entrance region of a Wly jet that extends over the Gulf of=20
    Maine continue to point to a possible predecessor rain event (PRE).
    For now the Marginal is expanded per 00Z guidance consensus
    (connecting to the previous Marginal on the Appalachians) with a=20
    note that there very well may be upgrades needed once the target is
    more clear.

    ...Southern Plains through the Appalachians...=20
    Slow migrating cold front is the continued focal point for=20
    convective development Wednesday leading to widely scattered=20
    thunderstorms capable of localized flash flooding. Environmental=20
    conditions are conducive for pockets of heavy rain that would=20
    cause some flash flood concerns in urban centers of the Southern=20
    Plains through the Appalachians. Enhanced rainfall is expected in=20
    the mountains where complex terrain and convergent flow will aid in
    upslope forcing capable of slow- moving cell motions and heavy=20
    rainfall. A broad low-end Marginal persists over a broad area with
    potential for enhanced areas pending how the broad synoptic and=20
    localized mesoscale (boundaries) pattern evolves.=20
    The Marginal risk was expanded west through the Sacramento
    Mountains where CAMs are once again focusing enhanced diurnal=20
    convection.

    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture presence (1.5 sigma above normal) and general=20
    diurnal instability will aid in traditional afternoon and evening=20
    convective output across east and southeast AZ into west-central NM
    on Wednesday. The Marginal Risk is retained.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...
    Moisture plume from Erin with 2" PW converges on surface trough
    over far eastern NC providing a corridor of enhanced rainfall.
    Also, uncertainty in the track of Erin may bring the outer bands
    close enough to warrant an excessive rainfall risk. This rainfall
    looks to be on the order of a couple inches, but also comes during
    an approaching new moon with swell that may locally worsen
    drainage. A Marginal Risk is introduced for the Outer Banks.

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE=20
    SOUTHWEST, SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS THROUGH THE SOUTHEAST, AND THE=20
    NORTHERN PLAINS INTO MINNESOTA...

    ...Southwest...
    Lingering monsoonal moisture (PW one sigma above normal) and=20
    diurnal instability will trigger afternoon and evening showers and=20
    storms across most of central and eastern Arizona, southern Utah,=20
    and northwestern New Mexico. Heavy precipitation should be=20
    localized, but could cause flash flooding concerns for sensitive=20
    areas (steep terrain, burn scars, urban areas). The Marginal Risk=20
    is retained with some overall expansion for the above mentioned=20
    areas for this isolated flash flood threat.

    ...South-Central Texas through the Southeast and Southern
    Appalachians...=20
    A slow-moving frontal boundary will sag farther into the southern=20
    states on Thursday and continue to serve as a focus for scattered=20
    showers and storms from south-central TX to western NC. Diurnal=20 heating/instability and a broad swath of anomalous moisture will=20
    support locally heavy rain that could lead to isolated instances of
    flash flooding, especially in urban, poor drainage, and/or low-=20
    lying areas. Overall, convective organization looks like it will be
    lacking, but heavy rain may be more concentrated over the southern
    Appalachians with upslope enhancement. Furthermore, the greatest
    moisture anomaly is over Louisiana, so that area may be a target
    for an upgrade should it become apparent in CAM solutions. A broad
    Marginal Risk is in place to cover this activity from the southern
    Plains to the southern Appalachians with some expansion east to the
    central Carolinas.

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...
    An energetic upper-level shortwave is forecast to move east across
    the northern Plains and Upper Midwest Thursday afternoon and night.
    This will be accompanied by a strong surface cold front that moves
    through moisture and instability to support at least locally heavy
    rain rates with showers and storms. The front should be fairly=20
    progressive, limiting heavy rain potential, but convective mode=20
    will play a role in determining heavy rain/flash flood threats in=20
    this area. For now, there Marginal Risk over the eastern Dakotas
    and much of MN is expanded south to include more of SD per the 00Z
    RRFS and Canadian Regional output.=20

    ...Eastern North Carolina...
    Moisture convergence from Erin and possibly outer bands continue
    over the Outer Banks into Thursday warranting a continuation of the
    Marginal Risk from Wednesday.

    Dolan/Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8Zm0-xj0dZgNnaNfc17s7SttYqrFHfTMEo2hOj6tdrsq= SFXYERuKSO9d9_FnjKt5oC0W9GXcZ3AQtdnxjahJ-qmVDg8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8Zm0-xj0dZgNnaNfc17s7SttYqrFHfTMEo2hOj6tdrsq= SFXYERuKSO9d9_FnjKt5oC0W9GXcZ3AQtdnxjahJcNqKXj8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8Zm0-xj0dZgNnaNfc17s7SttYqrFHfTMEo2hOj6tdrsq= SFXYERuKSO9d9_FnjKt5oC0W9GXcZ3AQtdnxjahJrpOhEnw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 19 15:40:24 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 191540
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1140 AM EDT Tue Aug 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

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

    16Z Update:
    Overall the Day 1 ERO is in good shape with only minor adjustments
    needed for most areas. A very localized heavy rainfall band across
    southern end of the DelMarVa Peninsula has produced locally in
    excess of 6" this morning. This activity should begin to push fully
    offshore over the next few hours with the intensity dropping off as
    well this afternoon. This is well handled by the MPD #958 that was
    issued around 920 AM EDT.=20

    No significant changes were made to the Slight Risk area in the
    southern Appalachians where pockets of 2-4" totals remain on track
    given the relatively moist environment and upslope flow across the
    complex terrain.

    Otherwise, a Marginal Risk was introduced for portions of eastern
    Texas where lingering MCV activity is beginning to blossom again
    late this morning. Overall, there is a noted uptick in the 12Z
    guidance for convection to increase further into this afternoon as
    the MCV drifts south/west. Expect pockets of locally heavy rainfall
    with 1-2"/hr rain rates. Some localized 2-3" totals will be
    possible in a short duration. Given the moist environment and
    plentiful instability expected to develop this afternoon, a
    Marginal Risk should cover the isolated flood risk into this
    afternoon.=20

    Taylor

    ...Southern Appalachians...
    Old frontal boundary strengthened by 'cold' air damming,
    northeasterly flow has pooled enhanced low to mid-level moisture
    through the eastern slopes of the Southern Appalachian mountains.
    Another day of slow southward sag of the boundary, clearing skies
    for ample insolation across the terrain and strong upslope should
    trigger solid convective response through early afternoon. A narrow
    mid-level ridge to the northwest will keep weak mid to upper level
    steering in place to allow for slow cell motions with potential of
    continued upslope convergence resulting in scattered clustering
    and potential cell mergers. Hi-Res CAMs continue to paint the
    eastern slopes of the NC and NE GA Appalachians with 2-4" totals
    resulting in HREF neighborhood probability of 3" at 40-50% and
    indications of 5"+ at 20%. Total moisture is not overly anomalous,
    but is still above average, though persistent upslope flux in
    complex terrain suggests a small Slight Risk of Excessive Rainfall
    appears prudent at this time.

    ...Coastal Plains of Southern Maryland to Georgia...
    Reinforcing cold front has stalled across the southern Mid-
    Atlantic Monday that has pooled enhanced moisture near the mouth of
    the Chesapeake Bay through the Coastal Plains of the Carolinas,
    connecting back to an older cold front and pool across east-central
    GA. Total Pwats of 2" are pooled along the boundary. As such, this
    will tighten moisture/theta-E gradients and with ample early
    morning insolation should make for an unstable convective
    environment by afternoon. Additionally, slow approach and influence
    of Hurricane Erin, will maintain/tighten moisture/instability
    gradient and strengthen sea-breeze development. Given strong low
    level convergence; weak,parallel to coast mid to upper level
    steering; especially near intersection with front extending out
    from SE VA, localized rates of 2-2.5"/hr are probable and with deep
    layer steering generally parallel to the Coastal Carolinas, some
    short- term repeating is possible before propagating inland
    resulting in some localized totals of 2-4" with highest
    probabilities further north in SE VA/NE NC.

    ...Great Lakes to eastern Central Plains...
    Mid to upper level progression depicts ridge building across the
    Northern Plains as broader shortwave feature rolls into a weakness
    across the Great Lakes later today (Tuesday); with the amplifying
    ridge, further elongation of a positive trough weakness expands
    southward toward the Ozark Plateau and eastern Central Plains. The
    associated surface low and cold front will progress through the
    central Great Lakes into the Northeast toward end of day supporting
    relatively stronger moisture flux along it and through the eastern Midwest/Northern Ohio Valley with slightly above average PWat
    values of 1.5-1.75"; locally higher to provide ample moisture for
    efficient rainfall and localized scattered to widely scattered
    flash flood risk. Deeper layer moisture is slightly reduced further
    southward along the sagging frontal zone into the Mid-MS River
    Valley and Ozarks, but to counter-act the reduction in
    coverage/rainfall efficiency; cell motions will be slower and more
    chaotic in nature to allow for increased duration/random mergers
    to occur than farther north across W NY/MI/OH and IND. Hi-Res CAM
    signals remain on course for random/scattered incidents of 2-3"
    totals consistent with a broad Marginal Risk area across the Great
    Lakes/Ohio Valley into the Central Plains. This remains on track to
    prior forecasts, with only small adjustment to connect risk areas
    to the Marginal Risk across the Southern High Plains and western
    Central Plains (see below).

    ...Southwest to Southern High Plains...
    As noted in section above, broad 1.5 to 2 standard anomaly ridge
    continues to dominate the central Rockies, spreading into the
    northern High Plains. This shift allows for shortwave 'ridge-
    rider' energy to further erode and retrograde along its southeast
    quadrant. As such, another day of active thunderstorms within an
    above average low-level moisture plume will unfold centered over
    NM. Hi-Res CAMs and HREF show highest signal along the early
    afternoon upslope/convergence along the Sangre de Cristo,
    Sacramento, Mogollon and Black Ranges. Eventually spreading out
    with scattered to widely scattered slow moving pulse cells across
    the southern Central Plains and southern High Plains into the
    evening hours. High rainfall production and slow/stationary cell
    motions will result in scattered instances of 2"+ resulting in
    widely scattered possible flash flooding consistent with a Marginal
    Risk of Excessive Rainfall.

    Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FROM
    SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND DOWN THE APPALACHIANS, THE MID-SOUTH AND TEXAS,
    AS WELL AS EASTERN ARIZONA...

    ...Northeast...
    Stationary front lingering over the northern Mid-Atlantic looks to
    form a convergent focus to moisture streaming north ahead of
    Hurricane Erin, particularly Wednesday night. This front and
    enhanced moisture (The 00Z ECMWF retains PW around 2"), along with
    the area from Long Island/NYC to southern New England in
    a right entrance region of a Wly jet that extends over the Gulf of
    Maine continue to point to a possible predecessor rain event (PRE).
    For now the Marginal is expanded per 00Z guidance consensus
    (connecting to the previous Marginal on the Appalachians) with a
    note that there very well may be upgrades needed once the target is
    more clear.

    ...Southern Plains through the Appalachians...
    Slow migrating cold front is the continued focal point for
    convective development Wednesday leading to widely scattered
    thunderstorms capable of localized flash flooding. Environmental
    conditions are conducive for pockets of heavy rain that would
    cause some flash flood concerns in urban centers of the Southern
    Plains through the Appalachians. Enhanced rainfall is expected in
    the mountains where complex terrain and convergent flow will aid in
    upslope forcing capable of slow- moving cell motions and heavy
    rainfall. A broad low-end Marginal persists over a broad area with
    potential for enhanced areas pending how the broad synoptic and
    localized mesoscale (boundaries) pattern evolves.
    The Marginal risk was expanded west through the Sacramento
    Mountains where CAMs are once again focusing enhanced diurnal
    convection.

    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture presence (1.5 sigma above normal) and general
    diurnal instability will aid in traditional afternoon and evening
    convective output across east and southeast AZ into west-central NM
    on Wednesday. The Marginal Risk is retained.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...
    Moisture plume from Erin with 2" PW converges on surface trough
    over far eastern NC providing a corridor of enhanced rainfall.
    Also, uncertainty in the track of Erin may bring the outer bands
    close enough to warrant an excessive rainfall risk. This rainfall
    looks to be on the order of a couple inches, but also comes during
    an approaching new moon with swell that may locally worsen
    drainage. A Marginal Risk is introduced for the Outer Banks.

    Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE
    SOUTHWEST, SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS THROUGH THE SOUTHEAST, AND THE
    NORTHERN PLAINS INTO MINNESOTA...

    ...Southwest...
    Lingering monsoonal moisture (PW one sigma above normal) and
    diurnal instability will trigger afternoon and evening showers and
    storms across most of central and eastern Arizona, southern Utah,
    and northwestern New Mexico. Heavy precipitation should be
    localized, but could cause flash flooding concerns for sensitive
    areas (steep terrain, burn scars, urban areas). The Marginal Risk
    is retained with some overall expansion for the above mentioned
    areas for this isolated flash flood threat.

    ...South-Central Texas through the Southeast and Southern
    Appalachians...
    A slow-moving frontal boundary will sag farther into the southern
    states on Thursday and continue to serve as a focus for scattered
    showers and storms from south-central TX to western NC. Diurnal heating/instability and a broad swath of anomalous moisture will
    support locally heavy rain that could lead to isolated instances of
    flash flooding, especially in urban, poor drainage, and/or low-
    lying areas. Overall, convective organization looks like it will be
    lacking, but heavy rain may be more concentrated over the southern
    Appalachians with upslope enhancement. Furthermore, the greatest
    moisture anomaly is over Louisiana, so that area may be a target
    for an upgrade should it become apparent in CAM solutions. A broad
    Marginal Risk is in place to cover this activity from the southern
    Plains to the southern Appalachians with some expansion east to the
    central Carolinas.

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...
    An energetic upper-level shortwave is forecast to move east across
    the northern Plains and Upper Midwest Thursday afternoon and night.
    This will be accompanied by a strong surface cold front that moves
    through moisture and instability to support at least locally heavy
    rain rates with showers and storms. The front should be fairly
    progressive, limiting heavy rain potential, but convective mode
    will play a role in determining heavy rain/flash flood threats in
    this area. For now, there Marginal Risk over the eastern Dakotas
    and much of MN is expanded south to include more of SD per the 00Z
    RRFS and Canadian Regional output.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...
    Moisture convergence from Erin and possibly outer bands continue
    over the Outer Banks into Thursday warranting a continuation of the
    Marginal Risk from Wednesday.

    Dolan/Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_iV_Ca6MY4UwExqmXtQ0d5EWlwEnzvHR3SPLcCz91Pvf= 3vTfsKOX5Z2SsoSVUHlAMqNCTP4Utqg45_Uq-3cloVrT4cI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_iV_Ca6MY4UwExqmXtQ0d5EWlwEnzvHR3SPLcCz91Pvf= 3vTfsKOX5Z2SsoSVUHlAMqNCTP4Utqg45_Uq-3cl5ESxYZQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_iV_Ca6MY4UwExqmXtQ0d5EWlwEnzvHR3SPLcCz91Pvf= 3vTfsKOX5Z2SsoSVUHlAMqNCTP4Utqg45_Uq-3cl5YKzZq8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Aug 19 19:41:04 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 191940
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    340 PM EDT Tue Aug 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Aug 19 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

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

    16Z Update:
    Overall the Day 1 ERO is in good shape with only minor adjustments
    needed for most areas. A very localized heavy rainfall band across
    southern end of the DelMarVa Peninsula has produced locally in
    excess of 6" this morning. This activity should begin to push fully
    offshore over the next few hours with the intensity dropping off as
    well this afternoon. This is well handled by the MPD #958 that was
    issued around 920 AM EDT.

    No significant changes were made to the Slight Risk area in the
    southern Appalachians where pockets of 2-4" totals remain on track
    given the relatively moist environment and upslope flow across the
    complex terrain.

    Otherwise, a Marginal Risk was introduced for portions of eastern
    Texas where lingering MCV activity is beginning to blossom again
    late this morning. Overall, there is a noted uptick in the 12Z
    guidance for convection to increase further into this afternoon as
    the MCV drifts south/west. Expect pockets of locally heavy rainfall
    with 1-2"/hr rain rates. Some localized 2-3" totals will be
    possible in a short duration. Given the moist environment and
    plentiful instability expected to develop this afternoon, a
    Marginal Risk should cover the isolated flood risk into this
    afternoon.

    Taylor

    ...Southern Appalachians...
    Old frontal boundary strengthened by 'cold' air damming,
    northeasterly flow has pooled enhanced low to mid-level moisture
    through the eastern slopes of the Southern Appalachian mountains.
    Another day of slow southward sag of the boundary, clearing skies
    for ample insolation across the terrain and strong upslope should
    trigger solid convective response through early afternoon. A narrow
    mid-level ridge to the northwest will keep weak mid to upper level
    steering in place to allow for slow cell motions with potential of
    continued upslope convergence resulting in scattered clustering
    and potential cell mergers. Hi-Res CAMs continue to paint the
    eastern slopes of the NC and NE GA Appalachians with 2-4" totals
    resulting in HREF neighborhood probability of 3" at 40-50% and
    indications of 5"+ at 20%. Total moisture is not overly anomalous,
    but is still above average, though persistent upslope flux in
    complex terrain suggests a small Slight Risk of Excessive Rainfall
    appears prudent at this time.

    ...Coastal Plains of Southern Maryland to Georgia...
    Reinforcing cold front has stalled across the southern Mid-
    Atlantic Monday that has pooled enhanced moisture near the mouth of
    the Chesapeake Bay through the Coastal Plains of the Carolinas,
    connecting back to an older cold front and pool across east-central
    GA. Total Pwats of 2" are pooled along the boundary. As such, this
    will tighten moisture/theta-E gradients and with ample early
    morning insolation should make for an unstable convective
    environment by afternoon. Additionally, slow approach and influence
    of Hurricane Erin, will maintain/tighten moisture/instability
    gradient and strengthen sea-breeze development. Given strong low
    level convergence; weak,parallel to coast mid to upper level
    steering; especially near intersection with front extending out
    from SE VA, localized rates of 2-2.5"/hr are probable and with deep
    layer steering generally parallel to the Coastal Carolinas, some
    short- term repeating is possible before propagating inland
    resulting in some localized totals of 2-4" with highest
    probabilities further north in SE VA/NE NC.

    ...Great Lakes to eastern Central Plains...
    Mid to upper level progression depicts ridge building across the
    Northern Plains as broader shortwave feature rolls into a weakness
    across the Great Lakes later today (Tuesday); with the amplifying
    ridge, further elongation of a positive trough weakness expands
    southward toward the Ozark Plateau and eastern Central Plains. The
    associated surface low and cold front will progress through the
    central Great Lakes into the Northeast toward end of day supporting
    relatively stronger moisture flux along it and through the eastern Midwest/Northern Ohio Valley with slightly above average PWat
    values of 1.5-1.75"; locally higher to provide ample moisture for
    efficient rainfall and localized scattered to widely scattered
    flash flood risk. Deeper layer moisture is slightly reduced further
    southward along the sagging frontal zone into the Mid-MS River
    Valley and Ozarks, but to counter-act the reduction in
    coverage/rainfall efficiency; cell motions will be slower and more
    chaotic in nature to allow for increased duration/random mergers
    to occur than farther north across W NY/MI/OH and IND. Hi-Res CAM
    signals remain on course for random/scattered incidents of 2-3"
    totals consistent with a broad Marginal Risk area across the Great
    Lakes/Ohio Valley into the Central Plains. This remains on track to
    prior forecasts, with only small adjustment to connect risk areas
    to the Marginal Risk across the Southern High Plains and western
    Central Plains (see below).

    ...Southwest to Southern High Plains...
    As noted in section above, broad 1.5 to 2 standard anomaly ridge
    continues to dominate the central Rockies, spreading into the
    northern High Plains. This shift allows for shortwave 'ridge-
    rider' energy to further erode and retrograde along its southeast
    quadrant. As such, another day of active thunderstorms within an
    above average low-level moisture plume will unfold centered over
    NM. Hi-Res CAMs and HREF show highest signal along the early
    afternoon upslope/convergence along the Sangre de Cristo,
    Sacramento, Mogollon and Black Ranges. Eventually spreading out
    with scattered to widely scattered slow moving pulse cells across
    the southern Central Plains and southern High Plains into the
    evening hours. High rainfall production and slow/stationary cell
    motions will result in scattered instances of 2"+ resulting in
    widely scattered possible flash flooding consistent with a Marginal
    Risk of Excessive Rainfall.

    Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FROM
    SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND DOWN THE APPALACHIANS, THE MID-SOUTH AND TEXAS,
    AS WELL AS EASTERN ARIZONA...

    ...Northeast...
    Stationary front lingering over the northern Mid-Atlantic looks to
    form a convergent focus to moisture streaming north ahead of
    Hurricane Erin, particularly Wednesday night. This front and
    enhanced moisture (The 00Z ECMWF retains PW around 2"), along with
    the area from Long Island/NYC to southern New England in
    a right entrance region of a Wly jet that extends over the Gulf of
    Maine continue to point to a possible predecessor rain event (PRE).

    With the 12Z guidance, there remains some signal for a PRE over
    portions of the Northeast into southern New England, with some of
    the hi-res guidance indicating pockets of locally heavy rainfall.
    However, there remains considerable uncertainty on the placement
    and development of this, so there wasn't enough confidence to
    introduce any higher risk areas to the ERO for now, but something
    that bears watching in the next update.=20

    ...Southern Plains through the Appalachians...
    Slow migrating cold front is the continued focal point for
    convective development Wednesday leading to widely scattered
    thunderstorms capable of localized flash flooding. Environmental
    conditions are conducive for pockets of heavy rain that would
    cause some flash flood concerns in urban centers of the Southern
    Plains through the Appalachians. Enhanced rainfall is expected in
    the mountains where complex terrain and convergent flow will aid in
    upslope forcing capable of slow- moving cell motions and heavy
    rainfall. A broad low-end Marginal persists over a broad area with
    potential for enhanced areas pending how the broad synoptic and
    localized mesoscale (boundaries) pattern evolves.
    The Marginal risk was expanded west through the Sacramento
    Mountains where CAMs are once again focusing enhanced diurnal
    convection.

    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture presence (1.5 sigma above normal) and general
    diurnal instability will aid in traditional afternoon and evening
    convective output across east and southeast AZ into west-central NM
    on Wednesday and the inherited Marginal Risk was maintained.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...
    Moisture plume from Erin with 2" PW converges on surface trough
    over far eastern NC providing a corridor of enhanced rainfall, most
    likely across the Outer Banks. There's enough of a signal for the
    outer rain bands to produce locally heavy rain to keep the Marginal
    Risk in place, with only minor adjustments this cycle. The most
    likely scenario is for 1-2 inches.=20


    Jackson/Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE
    SOUTHWEST, SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS THROUGH THE SOUTHEAST, AND THE
    NORTHERN PLAINS INTO MINNESOTA...

    ...Southwest...
    Lingering monsoonal moisture (PW one sigma above normal) and
    diurnal instability will trigger afternoon and evening showers and
    storms across most of central and eastern Arizona, southern Utah,
    and northwestern New Mexico. Heavy precipitation should be
    localized, but could cause flash flooding concerns for sensitive
    areas (steep terrain, burn scars, urban areas). The Marginal Risk
    is retained for the above mentioned areas for this isolated flash=20
    flood threat.

    ...South-Central Texas through the Southeast and Southern
    Appalachians...
    A slow-moving frontal boundary will sag farther into the southern
    states on Thursday and continue to serve as a focus for scattered
    showers and storms from south-central TX to western NC. Diurnal heating/instability and a broad swath of anomalous moisture will
    support locally heavy rain that could lead to isolated instances of
    flash flooding, especially in urban, poor drainage, and/or low-
    lying areas. Overall, convective organization looks like it will be
    lacking, but heavy rain may be more concentrated over the southern
    Appalachians with upslope enhancement. Furthermore, the greatest
    moisture anomaly is over Louisiana, so that area may be a target
    for an upgrade should it become apparent in CAM solutions. A broad
    Marginal Risk is in place to cover this activity from the southern
    Plains to the southern Appalachians with some expansion east to the
    central Carolinas.

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...
    An energetic upper-level shortwave is forecast to move east across
    the northern Plains and Upper Midwest Thursday afternoon and night.
    This will be accompanied by a strong surface cold front that moves
    through moisture and instability to support at least locally heavy
    rain rates with showers and storms. The front should be fairly
    progressive, limiting heavy rain potential, but convective mode
    will play a role in determining heavy rain/flash flood threats in
    this area.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...
    Moisture convergence from Erin and possibly outer bands continue
    over the Outer Banks into Thursday warranting a continuation of the
    Marginal Risk from Wednesday, at least for the first half of the
    day on Thursday before any rain bands move well off-shore.

    Dolan/Jackson/Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6g0FUoq27NZP9t5H-sIKIiF9ISzzBQAtcIRi8O5hf5ia= I5Np1Pi6gPJU-Elsf6MUH5xcPFK6c5lBojVHp-b1X88mG1w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6g0FUoq27NZP9t5H-sIKIiF9ISzzBQAtcIRi8O5hf5ia= I5Np1Pi6gPJU-Elsf6MUH5xcPFK6c5lBojVHp-b1JZyepaU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6g0FUoq27NZP9t5H-sIKIiF9ISzzBQAtcIRi8O5hf5ia= I5Np1Pi6gPJU-Elsf6MUH5xcPFK6c5lBojVHp-b1LAob_S4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 20 00:59:10 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 200058
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    858 PM EDT Tue Aug 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM PARTS OF THE
    LOWER GREAT LAKES REGION TO THE SOUTHWEST AND ACROSS PARTS OF THE
    SOUTHEAST...

    01Z Update...
    Primary updates to the ERO were based on current observation=20
    trends and recent hi-res guidance runs and included the removal of
    the Slight Risk area centered over the southern Appalachians and=20
    the Marginal Risk area over southern Texas. Activity across these=20
    areas has diminished or moved out, with no additional widespread=20 redevelopment expected overnight.

    Elsewhere, in addition to lingering monsoon activity in the
    Southwest, scattered activity is expected to continue ahead of a
    surface-to-low level boundary that currently extends from the lower
    Great Lakes region back through the Ohio Valley and Ozarks into the
    southern Plains. PWs remain high (1.75-2 in) along much of
    boundary, fueling the potential for heavy rates. Overall, activity
    is expected to wane through the evening with the loss of daytime=20
    heating. However, locally heavy amounts resulting in isolated
    runoff concerns cannot be ruled out. Therefore, the previous=20
    Marginal Risk was maintained, but adjusted based on recent guidance
    and radar/satellite trends.

    In the Southeast, reduced the previous Marginal Risk to a small=20
    portion of central Georgia and the South Carolina Lowcountry, where
    slow-moving storms fueled by ~2 inch PWs continue. Any runoff=20
    concerns produced by these storms are expected to be short-lived as
    they too are expected to continue diminishing over the next couple
    of hours.

    Pereira=20


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FROM
    SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND DOWN THE APPALACHIANS, THE MID-SOUTH AND TEXAS,
    AS WELL AS EASTERN ARIZONA...

    ...Northeast...
    Stationary front lingering over the northern Mid-Atlantic looks to
    form a convergent focus to moisture streaming north ahead of
    Hurricane Erin, particularly Wednesday night. This front and
    enhanced moisture (The 00Z ECMWF retains PW around 2"), along with
    the area from Long Island/NYC to southern New England in
    a right entrance region of a Wly jet that extends over the Gulf of
    Maine continue to point to a possible predecessor rain event (PRE).

    With the 12Z guidance, there remains some signal for a PRE over
    portions of the Northeast into southern New England, with some of
    the hi-res guidance indicating pockets of locally heavy rainfall.
    However, there remains considerable uncertainty on the placement
    and development of this, so there wasn't enough confidence to
    introduce any higher risk areas to the ERO for now, but something
    that bears watching in the next update.

    ...Southern Plains through the Appalachians...
    Slow migrating cold front is the continued focal point for
    convective development Wednesday leading to widely scattered
    thunderstorms capable of localized flash flooding. Environmental
    conditions are conducive for pockets of heavy rain that would
    cause some flash flood concerns in urban centers of the Southern
    Plains through the Appalachians. Enhanced rainfall is expected in
    the mountains where complex terrain and convergent flow will aid in
    upslope forcing capable of slow- moving cell motions and heavy
    rainfall. A broad low-end Marginal persists over a broad area with
    potential for enhanced areas pending how the broad synoptic and
    localized mesoscale (boundaries) pattern evolves.
    The Marginal risk was expanded west through the Sacramento
    Mountains where CAMs are once again focusing enhanced diurnal
    convection.

    ...Southwest...
    Monsoonal moisture presence (1.5 sigma above normal) and general
    diurnal instability will aid in traditional afternoon and evening
    convective output across east and southeast AZ into west-central NM
    on Wednesday and the inherited Marginal Risk was maintained.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...
    Moisture plume from Erin with 2" PW converges on surface trough
    over far eastern NC providing a corridor of enhanced rainfall, most
    likely across the Outer Banks. There's enough of a signal for the
    outer rain bands to produce locally heavy rain to keep the Marginal
    Risk in place, with only minor adjustments this cycle. The most
    likely scenario is for 1-2 inches.


    Jackson/Taylor


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE
    SOUTHWEST, SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS THROUGH THE SOUTHEAST, AND THE
    NORTHERN PLAINS INTO MINNESOTA...

    ...Southwest...
    Lingering monsoonal moisture (PW one sigma above normal) and
    diurnal instability will trigger afternoon and evening showers and
    storms across most of central and eastern Arizona, southern Utah,
    and northwestern New Mexico. Heavy precipitation should be
    localized, but could cause flash flooding concerns for sensitive
    areas (steep terrain, burn scars, urban areas). The Marginal Risk
    is retained for the above mentioned areas for this isolated flash
    flood threat.

    ...South-Central Texas through the Southeast and Southern
    Appalachians...
    A slow-moving frontal boundary will sag farther into the southern
    states on Thursday and continue to serve as a focus for scattered
    showers and storms from south-central TX to western NC. Diurnal heating/instability and a broad swath of anomalous moisture will
    support locally heavy rain that could lead to isolated instances of
    flash flooding, especially in urban, poor drainage, and/or low-
    lying areas. Overall, convective organization looks like it will be
    lacking, but heavy rain may be more concentrated over the southern
    Appalachians with upslope enhancement. Furthermore, the greatest
    moisture anomaly is over Louisiana, so that area may be a target
    for an upgrade should it become apparent in CAM solutions. A broad
    Marginal Risk is in place to cover this activity from the southern
    Plains to the southern Appalachians with some expansion east to the
    central Carolinas.

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...
    An energetic upper-level shortwave is forecast to move east across
    the northern Plains and Upper Midwest Thursday afternoon and night.
    This will be accompanied by a strong surface cold front that moves
    through moisture and instability to support at least locally heavy
    rain rates with showers and storms. The front should be fairly
    progressive, limiting heavy rain potential, but convective mode
    will play a role in determining heavy rain/flash flood threats in
    this area.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...
    Moisture convergence from Erin and possibly outer bands continue
    over the Outer Banks into Thursday warranting a continuation of the
    Marginal Risk from Wednesday, at least for the first half of the
    day on Thursday before any rain bands move well off-shore.

    Dolan/Jackson/Taylor


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_LzccvDVDsnuDyNZra7vSAGgD50-8O_fBwFJ2_ExPtLb= 5P-qzsFYUIZ8HQtKyr_eBSeGqxgBGy_us7tKCLlYYn2Og4A$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_LzccvDVDsnuDyNZra7vSAGgD50-8O_fBwFJ2_ExPtLb= 5P-qzsFYUIZ8HQtKyr_eBSeGqxgBGy_us7tKCLlYJIrBTIs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_LzccvDVDsnuDyNZra7vSAGgD50-8O_fBwFJ2_ExPtLb= 5P-qzsFYUIZ8HQtKyr_eBSeGqxgBGy_us7tKCLlYXWqDRHs$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 20 08:14:39 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 200814
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    414 AM EDT Wed Aug 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FROM
    SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND DOWN THE APPALACHIANS, THE MID-SOUTH AND TEXAS,
    AS WELL AS EASTERN ARIZONA...

    ...Northeast...

    Combination of a transient shortwave out of Canada and a flux of
    moisture from the Atlantic will generate a period of heavy rainfall
    potential in-of the interior Northeast across Southern New England.
    Reasonable consensus in the handling of the shortwave progression
    among models lends credence to the MRGL risk forecast over NY state
    down into northern PA, but still some questions exist on the threat
    of heavier precipitation into parts of Southern New England. The
    greatest probs from NBM and HREF indicate the area from the
    Berkshires over into the Hudson Valley as the primary target for
    heavy rainfall that could exhibit threats for flash flooding,
    mainly in more urbanized settings given very dry antecedent
    conditions. Over into Southern New England to the east of the
    Berkshires, there's discrepancy on the handling of the moisture
    advection pattern and potential convergence along the northern edge
    of Hurricane Erin in the Western Atlantic and the surface ridge in
    place over maritime Canada. HREF means tend to limit the scope of
    the threat for heavy rainfall to more isolated east of the Hudson
    and Berkshire areas with some guidance indicating a stripe of heavy
    rainfall bisecting portions of MA/CT/RI before fizzling out the
    back end of the forecast. There's still some deterministic hanging
    on the idea of more prolific rainfall across LI up into Southeast
    MA and neighboring CT/RI, but that seems to have less agreement
    among even the individual ensemble members as the timing of the IVT
    pulse and connection with the transient shortwave might just miss
    the potential for a more textbook Predecessor Rainfall Event=20
    (PRE).=20

    HREF EAS probs for >1" remain elevated (50-70%) across the Hudson
    and Catskill areas of NY state over into the western slopes of the
    Berkshires. EAS probs for >2" drop off significantly with less
    consensus on the higher end threat in the same zone with even less
    signal further east where a PRE would be most prominent if one
    evolved. EC AIFS ENS has been steady with the projection of the PRE
    just barely missing with the 850-700mb moisture flux converging off
    the LI/SNE coast and moving out to sea with maybe places like
    Nantucket and eastern Suffolk the beneficiaries of the heavier
    precip potential from a PRE organization. This is still the less
    likely among the ensemble members and deterministic suite, so
    generally stayed away from any higher risk implementation unless we
    see greater consensus.=20

    The MRGL risk from the previous forecast was unchanged in this
    forecast with a threat of convectively driven rainfall most aligned
    from I-80 and points south with more dynamical heavy rain support
    for areas north where the shortwave will traverse. Pockets of
    convection exhibiting 1-2"/hr will be plausible in-of the Mid
    Atlantic urban corridor with the best threat likely between I-70
    and I-80 across MD/PA/NJ to the east of the Blue Ridge. Some
    guidance have been indicating a localized maxima over Southern NJ
    near the Philadelphia metro, likely attributed to some convergence
    from the advection pattern to the south and mid-level perturbation
    migrating across Southern PA. Something to monitor over the course
    of CAMs output.=20=20

    ...Southern Plains through the Appalachians...

    Slow migration of a cold front through the central and eastern
    CONUS will continue into Wednesday as the frontal progression will
    lead to yet another focus of convection firing near and along the
    front as it moves into a more favorable environment of elevated
    moisture and instability. There are two areas of interest for today
    with regards to more regional maxima in QPF; one over east TX and
    the second over the Central Appalachians in WV/southwest VA. Both
    are amplified in the threat due to the approach of mid-level energy
    that will enhance convective development during peak diurnal
    destabilization. WV into VA will have the assistance of terrain to
    help with the evolving convergence pattern as the front migrates
    into the Appalachian front later today. Some of the CAMs output has
    been relatively robust for the region in question with HREF
    neighborhood probs for >2" running between 60-80% from the Smoky
    Mountains, northeast through the WV Highlands and Southern Laurels
    in PA. Environment favors this area considering the pronounced
    theta_E tongue situated over the above locations, a signature that
    exemplifies the best proxy for greatest instability/thermodynamic
    support. Mean flow remains on the lighter side as well with the
    expectation for storms to move slowly and drift more east to
    southeast with the steering pattern. This sets up well for locally
    heavy rainfall in those complex terrain areas of the Appalachians
    leading to more of a risk of flash flooding in adjacent valley
    towns. Considering some of the drier antecedent conditions and more
    localized flash flood prospects, the MRGL risk was maintained from
    the previous forecast, but if guidance trends upward in the
    potential, would not be shocked to see a targeted upgrade in the
    next update.

    The threat over TX is more simplified with an abundance of surface
    based instability as SBCAPE is forecast to be between 2000-3500
    J/kg across east TX with the frontal approach. PWATs pooling to
    between 2-2.25" based on areal average forecast from the HREF along
    with the instability maxima leads to a threat of 2-3"/hr rates with
    higher instantaneous rates that could easily subject areas from LA
    over into east TX to see localized flash flood concerns. There's
    not a particularly organized zone of convection being forecast with
    more of a scattered signature among the CAMs, so the threat is
    truly localized and falls well within the MRGL risk threshold.
    Thus, little changes were necessary from the previous forecast.

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture and strong diurnal destabilization will yield
    another day of widely scattered heavy rain prospects across the
    higher terrain of eastern AZ into far western NM. The main areas of
    concern will continue to be the Huachucas in Cochise county AZ and
    across the eastern Mogollon Rim to the north. There's no real
    organized signature to point out that could yield a higher risk
    area, so the MRGL risk was generally maintained with little to no
    adjustment.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...

    Outer periphery of Hurricane Erin will lead to an uptick in
    regional moisture as signaled by a consistent PWAT increase to
    above 2" across Cape Hatteras and neighboring areas within the
    Pamlico sound. The threat for >2" remains low with the primary
    concerns likely the combination of locally heavy rain coupling with
    coastal flooding to exacerbate areal flood concerns across the
    Outer Banks. Tropical Storm Warnings remain in place with locally
    heavy rainfall wording in the forecast from outer bands, so to
    remain consistent with messaging, elected to maintain continuity
    from previous forecast as the threat has not wavered the past 24
    hrs.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST, SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, EASTERN
    NORTH CAROLINA, UPPER MIDWEST, AND SOUTHWEST U.S...

    ...Southwest...

    Elevated monsoonal moisture lingering under the western ridge will
    lead to yet another afternoon of scattered convective development
    across much of the desert Southwest and accompanying terrain.=20
    PWATs running slightly above normal across the region will provide=20
    just enough deep layer moisture to couple with relevant diurnal=20
    buoyancy to account for periods of heavy rainfall in some of the=20
    stronger convective cores that materialize Thursday afternoon into=20
    the evening. Totals generally will fall <1" over the Southwest when
    looking at areal averages, however some 1-2" totals are certainly
    plausible in the setup with the best threat for impacts likely in
    those slot canyon areas, drainage across complex terrain into=20
    adjacent valleys, and remnant burn scar locations. The previous
    MRGL forecast was generally maintained with only minor adjustments
    to the edges of the risk.

    ...Texas through the Southeast and Southern Appalachians...

    Our slowly progressing front will continue to wander further south
    with yet another day of convective firing near and along the front
    as it migrates through south-central TX and towards the Gulf
    coast. The front will arc back into the Southern Appalachians where
    scattered thunderstorm activity is likely to occur for at least one
    more day in the terrain with the northern extent extending up into
    Southern WV and Southwest VA. The signal is still scattered in
    terms of convective coverage and flash flood prospects leaning
    towards isolated when assessing the HREF probs for hourly rates
    and FFG exceedance probs in the 12-00z window Thu/Fri. Convection
    will likely dissipate slowly after sunset with the loss of diurnal
    heating and surface decoupling putting a cap on the threat. Totals
    between 3-5" are most common among some of the stronger cores in
    guidance, a target that characteristically covers a MRGL risk with
    some targeted SLGT risk opportunities if the signal becomes more
    favorable within a favored area for flash flooding (IE: urbanized
    zones and terrain). For now, the MRGL risk from previous forecast
    was generally maintained with minor adjustments based on 00z QPF
    footprint.

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    An energetic upper-level shortwave is forecast to move east across
    the northern Plains and Upper Midwest Thursday afternoon through
    the overnight. A strong cold front trailing a strengthening surface
    low over southern Canada will aid in surface based forcing to
    couple with the improving mid and upper dynamics as the trough
    migrates along the Canadian border. Sufficient buoyancy and
    moisture anomalies of 1-2 deviations above normal will exist along
    and ahead of the front coinciding with a strong, yet progressive
    line of thunderstorms that will be capable of isolated flash flood
    prospects thanks to hourly rates between 1-2"/hr expected. Guidance
    remains steadfast in its interpretation of the setup lending
    confidence in maintaining continuity from previous forecast with
    only small adjustments on the western flank of the risk area to
    account for timing adjustments.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST, SOUTHEAST, AND CENTRAL ROCKIES ...

    ...Southwest to Central Rockies...

    Western ridge will shift to the west by the end of the week with
    the monsoonal moisture pattern also migrating westward to include
    more of the Great Basin and areas around the Colorado river basin.
    PWAT anomalies ~ +1 deviation and strong surface destabilization
    will yield a fairly widespread convective regime across the
    Southwestern part of the CONUS with heavy rain signatures littered
    among the activity. Rates up to 1-1.5"/hr in the strongest cores
    will likely promote flash flood concerns in those more prone dry
    washes, slot canyons, and burn scars residing over the region. The
    threat extends into the Central Rockies as shortwaves round the
    eastern flank of the ridge and aid in convective initiation over
    the terrain of Central CO. Signal currently runs within the MRGL
    threshold, but will assess for prospects of targeted upgrades if
    any specific area stands out as we get closer to the event with
    CAMs input.

    ...Southeast...

    The slow-moving front that will plague the South through the week
    will finally hit a road block once it reaches the Gulf coast
    becoming a focal quasi-stationary front by Friday morning.
    Hurricane Erin will be exiting off into the northwest Atlantic by
    this point, but the prominent in-flow trailing the storm will
    continue across the Western Atlantic leading to pooling moisture
    situated along the confines of the boundary. PWATs will surge with
    areal average 2.25-2.5" encompassing a majority of the Gulf coast
    from LA over towards the Southeast coastal plain between
    Wilmington, NC down into northern FL. The combination of elevated
    deep layer moisture, instability, and enhanced surface convergence
    along the front will yield some fairly prolific rainfall makers in
    any convective scheme during the period. The best signature for
    heavy rain is more likely to occur over the SC/GA coast where
    there's a stronger sfc-850mb convergence signature near the coast
    leading to an area of ~2" of precip currently forecast in the area.
    This is even prior to hi-res model forecasts, a testament to a=20
    growing signature for heavy rain prospects that could very well=20
    necessitate an upgrade in future forecasts, especially as we add=20
    more CAMs input. For now, a broad MRGL exists across a good portion
    of the Southeastern U.S.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6XBqcJ28JdrjCuMCfoGJ4UckeNsSxGridaUuI0_ZBY7b= OhLSHDGiTAoC2AWUNeJT0D_bFDwsWja5x0QeLKWzeL_wsZ8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6XBqcJ28JdrjCuMCfoGJ4UckeNsSxGridaUuI0_ZBY7b= OhLSHDGiTAoC2AWUNeJT0D_bFDwsWja5x0QeLKWzlBk3G-E$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6XBqcJ28JdrjCuMCfoGJ4UckeNsSxGridaUuI0_ZBY7b= OhLSHDGiTAoC2AWUNeJT0D_bFDwsWja5x0QeLKWzj_cI99U$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 20 15:46:44 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 201546
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1146 AM EDT Wed Aug 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FROM
    SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND DOWN THE APPALACHIANS, THE MID-SOUTH AND TEXAS,
    AS WELL AS EASTERN ARIZONA...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The overall outlook is on track, with only minimal changes to
    include southern/southwestern New Mexico in Marginal
    risk/probabilities for flash flooding this afternoon. Although
    slightly drier air has filtered in to some of the terrain of
    southern New Mexico this morning, objective analyses still indicate
    areas of 1-1.25 inch PW values in the area that, when combined with
    strong insolation, should promote isolated thunderstorm activity
    for a few hours this afternoon/evening. Active burn scars and
    sensitive terrain areas could experience excessive runoff depending
    on the specific location of heavier downpours.

    Elsewhere, a broad axis of deep convection is expected from
    Pennsylvania south/southwestward through the Appalachians, Deep
    South, and southern Plains this afternoon and evening. Model
    solutions vary on the extent of convective coverage especially in
    the central Applachians, although it appears that a few spots of 2
    inch rainfall totals are likely. Marginal risk probabilities seem
    appropriate for the convective scenario today, though a special
    upgrade to Slight in a later outlook cannot be completely ruled
    out.

    Lastly, although most models keep heavy rainfall chances just north
    of the international border near North Dakota this evening, strong
    height falls and strengthing mid-level flow should overspread a
    stout low-level jet across the Dakotas, where abundant moisture
    should promote moderate to strong instability profiles. A
    conditional risk of flash flooding may evolve along the
    international border, especially if training convection can
    materialize as depicted by high-res NAM solutions. The relatively
    small spatial extent of conditional risk precludes any upgrade at
    this time, although the region will be monitored for any uptick in
    convective trends especially after 00Z.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northeast...

    Combination of a transient shortwave out of Canada and a flux of
    moisture from the Atlantic will generate a period of heavy rainfall
    potential in-of the interior Northeast across Southern New England.
    Reasonable consensus in the handling of the shortwave progression
    among models lends credence to the MRGL risk forecast over NY state
    down into northern PA, but still some questions exist on the threat
    of heavier precipitation into parts of Southern New England. The
    greatest probs from NBM and HREF indicate the area from the
    Berkshires over into the Hudson Valley as the primary target for
    heavy rainfall that could exhibit threats for flash flooding,
    mainly in more urbanized settings given very dry antecedent
    conditions. Over into Southern New England to the east of the
    Berkshires, there's discrepancy on the handling of the moisture
    advection pattern and potential convergence along the northern edge
    of Hurricane Erin in the Western Atlantic and the surface ridge in
    place over maritime Canada. HREF means tend to limit the scope of
    the threat for heavy rainfall to more isolated east of the Hudson
    and Berkshire areas with some guidance indicating a stripe of heavy
    rainfall bisecting portions of MA/CT/RI before fizzling out the
    back end of the forecast. There's still some deterministic hanging
    on the idea of more prolific rainfall across LI up into Southeast
    MA and neighboring CT/RI, but that seems to have less agreement
    among even the individual ensemble members as the timing of the IVT
    pulse and connection with the transient shortwave might just miss
    the potential for a more textbook Predecessor Rainfall Event
    (PRE).

    HREF EAS probs for >1" remain elevated (50-70%) across the Hudson
    and Catskill areas of NY state over into the western slopes of the
    Berkshires. EAS probs for >2" drop off significantly with less
    consensus on the higher end threat in the same zone with even less
    signal further east where a PRE would be most prominent if one
    evolved. EC AIFS ENS has been steady with the projection of the PRE
    just barely missing with the 850-700mb moisture flux converging off
    the LI/SNE coast and moving out to sea with maybe places like
    Nantucket and eastern Suffolk the beneficiaries of the heavier
    precip potential from a PRE organization. This is still the less
    likely among the ensemble members and deterministic suite, so
    generally stayed away from any higher risk implementation unless we
    see greater consensus.

    The MRGL risk from the previous forecast was unchanged in this
    forecast with a threat of convectively driven rainfall most aligned
    from I-80 and points south with more dynamical heavy rain support
    for areas north where the shortwave will traverse. Pockets of
    convection exhibiting 1-2"/hr will be plausible in-of the Mid
    Atlantic urban corridor with the best threat likely between I-70
    and I-80 across MD/PA/NJ to the east of the Blue Ridge. Some
    guidance have been indicating a localized maxima over Southern NJ
    near the Philadelphia metro, likely attributed to some convergence
    from the advection pattern to the south and mid-level perturbation
    migrating across Southern PA. Something to monitor over the course
    of CAMs output.

    ...Southern Plains through the Appalachians...

    Slow migration of a cold front through the central and eastern
    CONUS will continue into Wednesday as the frontal progression will
    lead to yet another focus of convection firing near and along the
    front as it moves into a more favorable environment of elevated
    moisture and instability. There are two areas of interest for today
    with regards to more regional maxima in QPF; one over east TX and
    the second over the Central Appalachians in WV/southwest VA. Both
    are amplified in the threat due to the approach of mid-level energy
    that will enhance convective development during peak diurnal
    destabilization. WV into VA will have the assistance of terrain to
    help with the evolving convergence pattern as the front migrates
    into the Appalachian front later today. Some of the CAMs output has
    been relatively robust for the region in question with HREF
    neighborhood probs for >2" running between 60-80% from the Smoky
    Mountains, northeast through the WV Highlands and Southern Laurels
    in PA. Environment favors this area considering the pronounced
    theta_E tongue situated over the above locations, a signature that
    exemplifies the best proxy for greatest instability/thermodynamic
    support. Mean flow remains on the lighter side as well with the
    expectation for storms to move slowly and drift more east to
    southeast with the steering pattern. This sets up well for locally
    heavy rainfall in those complex terrain areas of the Appalachians
    leading to more of a risk of flash flooding in adjacent valley
    towns. Considering some of the drier antecedent conditions and more
    localized flash flood prospects, the MRGL risk was maintained from
    the previous forecast, but if guidance trends upward in the
    potential, would not be shocked to see a targeted upgrade in the
    next update.

    The threat over TX is more simplified with an abundance of surface
    based instability as SBCAPE is forecast to be between 2000-3500
    J/kg across east TX with the frontal approach. PWATs pooling to
    between 2-2.25" based on areal average forecast from the HREF along
    with the instability maxima leads to a threat of 2-3"/hr rates with
    higher instantaneous rates that could easily subject areas from LA
    over into east TX to see localized flash flood concerns. There's
    not a particularly organized zone of convection being forecast with
    more of a scattered signature among the CAMs, so the threat is
    truly localized and falls well within the MRGL risk threshold.
    Thus, little changes were necessary from the previous forecast.

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture and strong diurnal destabilization will yield
    another day of widely scattered heavy rain prospects across the
    higher terrain of eastern AZ into far western NM. The main areas of
    concern will continue to be the Huachucas in Cochise county AZ and
    across the eastern Mogollon Rim to the north. There's no real
    organized signature to point out that could yield a higher risk
    area, so the MRGL risk was generally maintained with little to no
    adjustment.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...

    Outer periphery of Hurricane Erin will lead to an uptick in
    regional moisture as signaled by a consistent PWAT increase to
    above 2" across Cape Hatteras and neighboring areas within the
    Pamlico sound. The threat for >2" remains low with the primary
    concerns likely the combination of locally heavy rain coupling with
    coastal flooding to exacerbate areal flood concerns across the
    Outer Banks. Tropical Storm Warnings remain in place with locally
    heavy rainfall wording in the forecast from outer bands, so to
    remain consistent with messaging, elected to maintain continuity
    from previous forecast as the threat has not wavered the past 24
    hrs.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST, SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, EASTERN
    NORTH CAROLINA, UPPER MIDWEST, AND SOUTHWEST U.S...

    ...Southwest...

    Elevated monsoonal moisture lingering under the western ridge will
    lead to yet another afternoon of scattered convective development
    across much of the desert Southwest and accompanying terrain.
    PWATs running slightly above normal across the region will provide
    just enough deep layer moisture to couple with relevant diurnal
    buoyancy to account for periods of heavy rainfall in some of the
    stronger convective cores that materialize Thursday afternoon into
    the evening. Totals generally will fall <1" over the Southwest when
    looking at areal averages, however some 1-2" totals are certainly
    plausible in the setup with the best threat for impacts likely in
    those slot canyon areas, drainage across complex terrain into
    adjacent valleys, and remnant burn scar locations. The previous
    MRGL forecast was generally maintained with only minor adjustments
    to the edges of the risk.

    ...Texas through the Southeast and Southern Appalachians...

    Our slowly progressing front will continue to wander further south
    with yet another day of convective firing near and along the front
    as it migrates through south-central TX and towards the Gulf
    coast. The front will arc back into the Southern Appalachians where
    scattered thunderstorm activity is likely to occur for at least one
    more day in the terrain with the northern extent extending up into
    Southern WV and Southwest VA. The signal is still scattered in
    terms of convective coverage and flash flood prospects leaning
    towards isolated when assessing the HREF probs for hourly rates
    and FFG exceedance probs in the 12-00z window Thu/Fri. Convection
    will likely dissipate slowly after sunset with the loss of diurnal
    heating and surface decoupling putting a cap on the threat. Totals
    between 3-5" are most common among some of the stronger cores in
    guidance, a target that characteristically covers a MRGL risk with
    some targeted SLGT risk opportunities if the signal becomes more
    favorable within a favored area for flash flooding (IE: urbanized
    zones and terrain). For now, the MRGL risk from previous forecast
    was generally maintained with minor adjustments based on 00z QPF
    footprint.

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    An energetic upper-level shortwave is forecast to move east across
    the northern Plains and Upper Midwest Thursday afternoon through
    the overnight. A strong cold front trailing a strengthening surface
    low over southern Canada will aid in surface based forcing to
    couple with the improving mid and upper dynamics as the trough
    migrates along the Canadian border. Sufficient buoyancy and
    moisture anomalies of 1-2 deviations above normal will exist along
    and ahead of the front coinciding with a strong, yet progressive
    line of thunderstorms that will be capable of isolated flash flood
    prospects thanks to hourly rates between 1-2"/hr expected. Guidance
    remains steadfast in its interpretation of the setup lending
    confidence in maintaining continuity from previous forecast with
    only small adjustments on the western flank of the risk area to
    account for timing adjustments.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST, SOUTHEAST, AND CENTRAL ROCKIES ...

    ...Southwest to Central Rockies...

    Western ridge will shift to the west by the end of the week with
    the monsoonal moisture pattern also migrating westward to include
    more of the Great Basin and areas around the Colorado river basin.
    PWAT anomalies ~ +1 deviation and strong surface destabilization
    will yield a fairly widespread convective regime across the
    Southwestern part of the CONUS with heavy rain signatures littered
    among the activity. Rates up to 1-1.5"/hr in the strongest cores
    will likely promote flash flood concerns in those more prone dry
    washes, slot canyons, and burn scars residing over the region. The
    threat extends into the Central Rockies as shortwaves round the
    eastern flank of the ridge and aid in convective initiation over
    the terrain of Central CO. Signal currently runs within the MRGL
    threshold, but will assess for prospects of targeted upgrades if
    any specific area stands out as we get closer to the event with
    CAMs input.

    ...Southeast...

    The slow-moving front that will plague the South through the week
    will finally hit a road block once it reaches the Gulf coast
    becoming a focal quasi-stationary front by Friday morning.
    Hurricane Erin will be exiting off into the northwest Atlantic by
    this point, but the prominent in-flow trailing the storm will
    continue across the Western Atlantic leading to pooling moisture
    situated along the confines of the boundary. PWATs will surge with
    areal average 2.25-2.5" encompassing a majority of the Gulf coast
    from LA over towards the Southeast coastal plain between
    Wilmington, NC down into northern FL. The combination of elevated
    deep layer moisture, instability, and enhanced surface convergence
    along the front will yield some fairly prolific rainfall makers in
    any convective scheme during the period. The best signature for
    heavy rain is more likely to occur over the SC/GA coast where
    there's a stronger sfc-850mb convergence signature near the coast
    leading to an area of ~2" of precip currently forecast in the area.
    This is even prior to hi-res model forecasts, a testament to a
    growing signature for heavy rain prospects that could very well
    necessitate an upgrade in future forecasts, especially as we add
    more CAMs input. For now, a broad MRGL exists across a good portion
    of the Southeastern U.S.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6r3RrkJnBc3MTO3PK9b0Ej3Jp5U2QL1HwZXcPCpfZQAs= BQfAT_mwktCI77OTrhQUPl99S0lSMjZ0VHvN9GJBHmBUTRg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6r3RrkJnBc3MTO3PK9b0Ej3Jp5U2QL1HwZXcPCpfZQAs= BQfAT_mwktCI77OTrhQUPl99S0lSMjZ0VHvN9GJBB3wMqWQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6r3RrkJnBc3MTO3PK9b0Ej3Jp5U2QL1HwZXcPCpfZQAs= BQfAT_mwktCI77OTrhQUPl99S0lSMjZ0VHvN9GJBDHmscJk$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Aug 20 19:33:42 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 201933
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    333 PM EDT Wed Aug 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Aug 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN EFFECT FROM
    SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND DOWN THE APPALACHIANS, THE MID-SOUTH AND TEXAS,
    AS WELL AS EASTERN ARIZONA...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The overall outlook is on track, with only minimal changes to
    include southern/southwestern New Mexico in Marginal
    risk/probabilities for flash flooding this afternoon. Although
    slightly drier air has filtered in to some of the terrain of
    southern New Mexico this morning, objective analyses still indicate
    areas of 1-1.25 inch PW values in the area that, when combined with
    strong insolation, should promote isolated thunderstorm activity
    for a few hours this afternoon/evening. Active burn scars and
    sensitive terrain areas could experience excessive runoff depending
    on the specific location of heavier downpours.

    Elsewhere, a broad axis of deep convection is expected from
    Pennsylvania south/southwestward through the Appalachians, Deep
    South, and southern Plains this afternoon and evening. Model
    solutions vary on the extent of convective coverage especially in
    the central Applachians, although it appears that a few spots of 2
    inch rainfall totals are likely. Marginal risk probabilities seem
    appropriate for the convective scenario today, though a special
    upgrade to Slight in a later outlook cannot be completely ruled
    out.

    Lastly, although most models keep heavy rainfall chances just north
    of the international border near North Dakota this evening, strong
    height falls and strengthing mid-level flow should overspread a
    stout low-level jet across the Dakotas, where abundant moisture
    should promote moderate to strong instability profiles. A
    conditional risk of flash flooding may evolve along the
    international border, especially if training convection can
    materialize as depicted by high-res NAM solutions. The relatively
    small spatial extent of conditional risk precludes any upgrade at
    this time, although the region will be monitored for any uptick in
    convective trends especially after 00Z.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northeast...

    Combination of a transient shortwave out of Canada and a flux of
    moisture from the Atlantic will generate a period of heavy rainfall
    potential in-of the interior Northeast across Southern New England.
    Reasonable consensus in the handling of the shortwave progression
    among models lends credence to the MRGL risk forecast over NY state
    down into northern PA, but still some questions exist on the threat
    of heavier precipitation into parts of Southern New England. The
    greatest probs from NBM and HREF indicate the area from the
    Berkshires over into the Hudson Valley as the primary target for
    heavy rainfall that could exhibit threats for flash flooding,
    mainly in more urbanized settings given very dry antecedent
    conditions. Over into Southern New England to the east of the
    Berkshires, there's discrepancy on the handling of the moisture
    advection pattern and potential convergence along the northern edge
    of Hurricane Erin in the Western Atlantic and the surface ridge in
    place over maritime Canada. HREF means tend to limit the scope of
    the threat for heavy rainfall to more isolated east of the Hudson
    and Berkshire areas with some guidance indicating a stripe of heavy
    rainfall bisecting portions of MA/CT/RI before fizzling out the
    back end of the forecast. There's still some deterministic hanging
    on the idea of more prolific rainfall across LI up into Southeast
    MA and neighboring CT/RI, but that seems to have less agreement
    among even the individual ensemble members as the timing of the IVT
    pulse and connection with the transient shortwave might just miss
    the potential for a more textbook Predecessor Rainfall Event
    (PRE).

    HREF EAS probs for >1" remain elevated (50-70%) across the Hudson
    and Catskill areas of NY state over into the western slopes of the
    Berkshires. EAS probs for >2" drop off significantly with less
    consensus on the higher end threat in the same zone with even less
    signal further east where a PRE would be most prominent if one
    evolved. EC AIFS ENS has been steady with the projection of the PRE
    just barely missing with the 850-700mb moisture flux converging off
    the LI/SNE coast and moving out to sea with maybe places like
    Nantucket and eastern Suffolk the beneficiaries of the heavier
    precip potential from a PRE organization. This is still the less
    likely among the ensemble members and deterministic suite, so
    generally stayed away from any higher risk implementation unless we
    see greater consensus.

    The MRGL risk from the previous forecast was unchanged in this
    forecast with a threat of convectively driven rainfall most aligned
    from I-80 and points south with more dynamical heavy rain support
    for areas north where the shortwave will traverse. Pockets of
    convection exhibiting 1-2"/hr will be plausible in-of the Mid
    Atlantic urban corridor with the best threat likely between I-70
    and I-80 across MD/PA/NJ to the east of the Blue Ridge. Some
    guidance have been indicating a localized maxima over Southern NJ
    near the Philadelphia metro, likely attributed to some convergence
    from the advection pattern to the south and mid-level perturbation
    migrating across Southern PA. Something to monitor over the course
    of CAMs output.

    ...Southern Plains through the Appalachians...

    Slow migration of a cold front through the central and eastern
    CONUS will continue into Wednesday as the frontal progression will
    lead to yet another focus of convection firing near and along the
    front as it moves into a more favorable environment of elevated
    moisture and instability. There are two areas of interest for today
    with regards to more regional maxima in QPF; one over east TX and
    the second over the Central Appalachians in WV/southwest VA. Both
    are amplified in the threat due to the approach of mid-level energy
    that will enhance convective development during peak diurnal
    destabilization. WV into VA will have the assistance of terrain to
    help with the evolving convergence pattern as the front migrates
    into the Appalachian front later today. Some of the CAMs output has
    been relatively robust for the region in question with HREF
    neighborhood probs for >2" running between 60-80% from the Smoky
    Mountains, northeast through the WV Highlands and Southern Laurels
    in PA. Environment favors this area considering the pronounced
    theta_E tongue situated over the above locations, a signature that
    exemplifies the best proxy for greatest instability/thermodynamic
    support. Mean flow remains on the lighter side as well with the
    expectation for storms to move slowly and drift more east to
    southeast with the steering pattern. This sets up well for locally
    heavy rainfall in those complex terrain areas of the Appalachians
    leading to more of a risk of flash flooding in adjacent valley
    towns. Considering some of the drier antecedent conditions and more
    localized flash flood prospects, the MRGL risk was maintained from
    the previous forecast, but if guidance trends upward in the
    potential, would not be shocked to see a targeted upgrade in the
    next update.

    The threat over TX is more simplified with an abundance of surface
    based instability as SBCAPE is forecast to be between 2000-3500
    J/kg across east TX with the frontal approach. PWATs pooling to
    between 2-2.25" based on areal average forecast from the HREF along
    with the instability maxima leads to a threat of 2-3"/hr rates with
    higher instantaneous rates that could easily subject areas from LA
    over into east TX to see localized flash flood concerns. There's
    not a particularly organized zone of convection being forecast with
    more of a scattered signature among the CAMs, so the threat is
    truly localized and falls well within the MRGL risk threshold.
    Thus, little changes were necessary from the previous forecast.

    ...Southwest...

    Monsoonal moisture and strong diurnal destabilization will yield
    another day of widely scattered heavy rain prospects across the
    higher terrain of eastern AZ into far western NM. The main areas of
    concern will continue to be the Huachucas in Cochise county AZ and
    across the eastern Mogollon Rim to the north. There's no real
    organized signature to point out that could yield a higher risk
    area, so the MRGL risk was generally maintained with little to no
    adjustment.

    ...Eastern North Carolina...

    Outer periphery of Hurricane Erin will lead to an uptick in
    regional moisture as signaled by a consistent PWAT increase to
    above 2" across Cape Hatteras and neighboring areas within the
    Pamlico sound. The threat for >2" remains low with the primary
    concerns likely the combination of locally heavy rain coupling with
    coastal flooding to exacerbate areal flood concerns across the
    Outer Banks. Tropical Storm Warnings remain in place with locally
    heavy rainfall wording in the forecast from outer bands, so to
    remain consistent with messaging, elected to maintain continuity
    from previous forecast as the threat has not wavered the past 24
    hrs.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Aug 21 2025 - 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST, SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS, SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS, EASTERN
    NORTH CAROLINA, UPPER MIDWEST, AND SOUTHWEST U.S...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    The overall forecast is on track. Small expansions were made to
    expand Marginal risk into more of southern Minnesota, far western
    Wisconsin, and far notherwestern Iowa. Height falls associated with
    a mid-level wave over southern Canadian provinces will overspread
    this region late in the forecast period (toward early Friday
    morning), assisting in isolated to scattered thunderstorm
    development. These storms should move over areas of Minnesota and
    Wisconsin that have been wet over the past couple weeks, supporting
    isolated instances of excessive runoff - especially with any
    training convection that may materialize.

    Elsewhere, deep convection is still expected to prompt isolated
    flash flooding across the Southwest and from Texas eastward through
    the southern/central Appalachians. See the previous discussion
    below for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southwest...

    Elevated monsoonal moisture lingering under the western ridge will
    lead to yet another afternoon of scattered convective development
    across much of the desert Southwest and accompanying terrain.
    PWATs running slightly above normal across the region will provide
    just enough deep layer moisture to couple with relevant diurnal
    buoyancy to account for periods of heavy rainfall in some of the
    stronger convective cores that materialize Thursday afternoon into
    the evening. Totals generally will fall <1" over the Southwest when
    looking at areal averages, however some 1-2" totals are certainly
    plausible in the setup with the best threat for impacts likely in
    those slot canyon areas, drainage across complex terrain into
    adjacent valleys, and remnant burn scar locations. The previous
    MRGL forecast was generally maintained with only minor adjustments
    to the edges of the risk.

    ...Texas through the Southeast and Southern Appalachians...

    Our slowly progressing front will continue to wander further south
    with yet another day of convective firing near and along the front
    as it migrates through south-central TX and towards the Gulf
    coast. The front will arc back into the Southern Appalachians where
    scattered thunderstorm activity is likely to occur for at least one
    more day in the terrain with the northern extent extending up into
    Southern WV and Southwest VA. The signal is still scattered in
    terms of convective coverage and flash flood prospects leaning
    towards isolated when assessing the HREF probs for hourly rates
    and FFG exceedance probs in the 12-00z window Thu/Fri. Convection
    will likely dissipate slowly after sunset with the loss of diurnal
    heating and surface decoupling putting a cap on the threat. Totals
    between 3-5" are most common among some of the stronger cores in
    guidance, a target that characteristically covers a MRGL risk with
    some targeted SLGT risk opportunities if the signal becomes more
    favorable within a favored area for flash flooding (IE: urbanized
    zones and terrain). For now, the MRGL risk from previous forecast
    was generally maintained with minor adjustments based on 00z QPF
    footprint.

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    An energetic upper-level shortwave is forecast to move east across
    the northern Plains and Upper Midwest Thursday afternoon through
    the overnight. A strong cold front trailing a strengthening surface
    low over southern Canada will aid in surface based forcing to
    couple with the improving mid and upper dynamics as the trough
    migrates along the Canadian border. Sufficient buoyancy and
    moisture anomalies of 1-2 deviations above normal will exist along
    and ahead of the front coinciding with a strong, yet progressive
    line of thunderstorms that will be capable of isolated flash flood
    prospects thanks to hourly rates between 1-2"/hr expected. Guidance
    remains steadfast in its interpretation of the setup lending
    confidence in maintaining continuity from previous forecast with
    only small adjustments on the western flank of the risk area to
    account for timing adjustments.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Aug 22 2025 - 12Z Sat Aug 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST, SOUTHEAST, AND CENTRAL ROCKIES ...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...

    Minor spatial adjustments were made to the outlook, particularly to
    add southeast Texas and southwest Louisiana to the Marginal Risk.
    Models depict a convective signal in those areas, but vary with
    respect to specific timing. Nevertheless, a weak front and
    favorable kinematics for slow-moving convection should encourage a
    few spots of heavy rainfall near the Houston and Lake Charles areas
    (and vicinity), prompting low-end flash flood probabilities.

    The Marginal Risk was also expanded across the Southwest. A
    favorable pattern for clusters of thunderstorms to evolve from
    higher terrain westward toward the Lower Colorado River Valley
    exists, and both convective coverage and instability/moisture
    profiles suggest at least isolated flash flood potential across the
    area. A Slight Risk upgrade was considered, and may be needed in
    later outlook cycles.

    See the previous discussion below for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southwest to Central Rockies...

    Western ridge will shift to the west by the end of the week with
    the monsoonal moisture pattern also migrating westward to include
    more of the Great Basin and areas around the Colorado river basin.
    PWAT anomalies ~ +1 deviation and strong surface destabilization
    will yield a fairly widespread convective regime across the
    Southwestern part of the CONUS with heavy rain signatures littered
    among the activity. Rates up to 1-1.5"/hr in the strongest cores
    will likely promote flash flood concerns in those more prone dry
    washes, slot canyons, and burn scars residing over the region. The
    threat extends into the Central Rockies as shortwaves round the
    eastern flank of the ridge and aid in convective initiation over
    the terrain of Central CO. Signal currently runs within the MRGL
    threshold, but will assess for prospects of targeted upgrades if
    any specific area stands out as we get closer to the event with
    CAMs input.

    ...Southeast...

    The slow-moving front that will plague the South through the week
    will finally hit a road block once it reaches the Gulf coast
    becoming a focal quasi-stationary front by Friday morning.
    Hurricane Erin will be exiting off into the northwest Atlantic by
    this point, but the prominent in-flow trailing the storm will
    continue across the Western Atlantic leading to pooling moisture
    situated along the confines of the boundary. PWATs will surge with
    areal average 2.25-2.5" encompassing a majority of the Gulf coast
    from LA over towards the Southeast coastal plain between
    Wilmington, NC down into northern FL. The combination of elevated
    deep layer moisture, instability, and enhanced surface convergence
    along the front will yield some fairly prolific rainfall makers in
    any convective scheme during the period. The best signature for
    heavy rain is more likely to occur over the SC/GA coast where
    there's a stronger sfc-850mb convergence signature near the coast
    leading to an area of ~2" of precip currently forecast in the area.
    This is even prior to hi-res model forecasts, a testament to a
    growing signature for heavy rain prospects that could very well
    necessitate an upgrade in future forecasts, especially as we add
    more CAMs input. For now, a broad MRGL exists across a good portion
    of the Southeastern U.S.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4FLljjvNquIkWLjGM8uirCB2drPrKNjcMCdJz7f062_6= khGqqf0gMLWPIIhQRDZOJUINpV4PBms2241Ca60DMDEmbXg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4FLljjvNquIkWLjGM8uirCB2drPrKNjcMCdJz7f062_6= khGqqf0gMLWPIIhQRDZOJUINpV4PBms2241Ca60DjFF8FQk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4FLljjvNquIkWLjGM8uirCB2drPrKNjcMCdJz7f062_6= khGqqf0gMLWPIIhQRDZOJUINpV4PBms2241Ca60DQK7xDR0$=20

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