FOUS30 KWBC 160821 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 421 AM EDT Tue Jun 16 2026 Day 1 Valid 12Z Tue Jun 16 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 17 2026 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE TEXAS GULF COAST THROUGH THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... An impressive and dynamic setup with multiple mesoscale features is expected to develop through the day today from the Texas Gulf Coast through the lower Mississippi Valley. The most rainfall for the day will occur through this morning. A tropical disturbance over Deep South Texas will support the strengthening of the typical diurnal low level jet out over the Gulf, driving a plume of impressively deep tropical moisture northward into the Texas and Louisiana Gulf Coasts. Meanwhile a stationary front currently over southern Arkansas and northern Mississippi will advance southward as a cold front due to a disturbance and push of cooler drier air south behind the front. This clash of air masses will result in continued upscale development of storms that have broken out over northern Louisiana through the overnight and into Tuesday morning. FFGs are already lower in many spots west from the western tip of Mississippi. This nearly stationary line of training storms is likely to persist well into the afternoon, which could make for a narrow but nevertheless severe area of very high totals of storm total rainfall, especially into western Mississippi. Guidance has suggested this narrow corridor, highlighted in much of the guidance since yesterday along the I-20 corridor has now shifted a few counties south, extending from Alexandria, LA east almost to Hattiesburg, MS. The inherited Moderate Risk for this area was trimmed on the north side both with the current start of convection in this corridor and the southward trend in the guidance. Meanwhile, a number of other pieces of CAMs guidance suggest that the showers and storms developing along the immediate coast roughly from Galveston/Trinity Bays east to Lafayette, LA will be the primary and dominant line of showers and storms impacting the northwestern Gulf Coast today. This line would from largely from sea breeze/frictional convergence of the strong onshore southerly flow into the coast. The front to the north may play a role in maintaining the storms where they are, but would likely play a secondary role. Should this line develop robustly, it will force the aforementioned line of storms over northern LA/southwest MS eastward, resulting in less rain over northern/central LA. Most likely there will be a combination of the two, with the east- northeastward moving storms along the southwest Louisiana coast continuing with the line to the northeast over western Mississippi. Once again the Moderate Risk here remains in place with few changes. Finally, further south along the Texas Gulf Coast, the larger synoptic level disturbance, responsible for the heavy rains and flash flooding over Deep South Texas yesterday will likely eject east into the Gulf today. As it does so, it will create localized bands of heavy rain along the Middle Texas Coast, which will then advect northeast to join the line east of Houston. This area from Corpus Christi to Houston remains the most uncertain portion of the Moderate Risk area, as a small south/east shift in the track of the disturbance will take the lion's share of the associated rainfall ahead of the low track out over the open Gulf, and greatly limit any rainfall today along the coast. The inherited Moderate Risk was trimmed completely south of Corpus Christi, with just a Slight along the immediate lower Texas Gulf Coast to account for ongoing rains in the area. The threat will shift off the coast by late this afternoon. With all three areas of heavy rain above, they will all diminish and dissipate as a significant heavy rain threat by this evening. Occasional showers and a storm or two may impact the immediate Gulf Coast through the overnight, but for the most part the heavy rain threat through tonight should be minimal. Wegman Day 2 Valid 12Z Wed Jun 17 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 18 2026 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER TEXAS GULF COAST THROUGH SOUTHWESTERN LOUISIANA... ...Gulf Coast... An upper level shortwave disturbance over the northwestern Gulf will likely contribute to the development of a small surface low or surface trough along the Texas Gulf Coast on Wednesday. This disturbance will gradually track parallel to the coast towards the northeast, and move into southwestern Louisiana this evening. The exact track of the center of circulation will remain the distinctive factor determining how much rain penetrates inland along the Texas coast, including into the Houston Metro. Some of the CAMs guidance has trended west with the track of the low, which will prolong a period of heavy rain into Houston as cells ride northwestward ahead of the low in a small but very potent band of heavy rain. It will be potent not just because of the multiple sources of forcing for the heavy rain, but also the sheer amount of atmospheric moisture that will be available for the storms to tap into. PWATs will remain exceptionally high, likely peaking in the upper 2s as the low reaches its peak intensity this afternoon. While the predominant southerly flow will advect some instability into the low, extensive cloud cover will work against achieving heavy rainfall rates in many cases. The hydrology will become increasingly favorable for flash flooding even with less than optimal rainfall rates as prior days' rains combine with the new rainfall to continue lowering FFGs. The Moderate Risk was nudged west in coordination with HGX/Houston, TX forecast office to include all of the Houston Metro. Prolonged northwestward moving cells in a narrow band could easily start causing flash flooding problems over the Houston metro should the track optimize. Further east, there is more certainty with heavy rainfall rates impacting the area from Beaumont east into southwestern Louisiana. Southerly flow exactly orthogonal to the coast, frictional convergence, and then the low itself impacting the area from late in the day Wednesday through Wednesday night will all contribute to additional heavy rains over an area of Louisiana already hard hit from the current rain and expected rain in the area on Day 1. The Moderate Risk area was little changed from inherited in this area. Further north and east, the heavy rain threat will concentrate over the Wednesday night timeframe. As the low and associated upper level disturbance move into Louisiana, a leading band of heavy rain, oriented southwest to northeast, will overspread portions of central and eastern Louisiana and continue into western Mississippi. There is considerable uncertainty how far into Mississippi the heavy rain gets. But it will likely extend from the coast south of Lafayette northeast through Baton Rouge and into southwestern Mississippi. Here too, favorable hydrology due to wet soils from heavy rains from today/Day 1 will contribute to any resultant flash flooding. For now, this appears to stay west of New Orleans, but will likely be too close for comfort, and the New Orleans Metro could see occasional heavy rain from passing cells. ...Midwest... Very few changes were needed to the large Slight Risk across much of the Midwest on Wednesday. A strong and impressively potent low driving eastward from the Plains will run into increasing amounts of deep tropical moisture as it moves into the Great Lakes. This will contribute to increasing coverage of showers and storms, first with its warm front from Chicago east along Michigan's southern border, then followed very quickly in some areas by stronger storms associated with the low's cold front. Favorable hydrology from several bouts of heavy rain over the past week will support flash flooding development. However, this low and its associated storms will be racing eastward. Thus, duration of heavy rain will be very limiting in many areas. For the corridor forming the northern half of the Slight Risk area, heavy rain duration will be longer, as the warm front and associated elevated convection quickly followed by stronger convection with the cold front could allow for some areas to see multiple hours with interspersed heavy rain through the day. Instability may be more limited in this area however, so that will work against heavy rains. For the southern half of the Slight, there will be significantly more moisture and instability for the storms to work with as they race southeastward, so rainfall rates should be higher than further north. However, it's likely just the cold front's storms that will impact most areas, so it's one shot and done. Training and backbuilding won't be a concern until you get back into Missouri and Kansas. Once again, the soils remain wet in these areas, so it may be enough to get widely scattered instances of flash flooding, particularly in urban areas. As is typical this time of year, the cold front will hang up on its southern and western periphery, as it runs into the southwesterly low level jet. This will greatly extend the potential for heavy rain from southeastern Kansas through southern Missouri Wednesday night. These areas have also been hard hit with heavy rain in recent days, as well as the topography of the Ozarks, so the Slight remains in place there with few changes. Wegman Day 3 Valid 12Z Thu Jun 18 2026 - 12Z Fri Jun 19 2026 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY THROUGH CENTRAL ALABAMA... ...Lower Mississippi Valley through Central Alabama... The tropical low and its associated moisture are expected to start the Day 3 period over northern Louisiana or western Mississippi. The leading band of heavy rain will be ongoing from eastern Louisiana into southern Mississippi. The low will slowly drift eastward across Mississippi through the day, then gradually increase its forward speed Thursday night as it tracks east across Alabama and ends the period in northern Georgia. A very persistent heavy band of rain will remain south and east of the low center throughout the Day 3 period. This will focus the heaviest rains in the Moderate Risk corridor from central Louisiana through central Alabama. Prolonged southerly flow of the deep tropical moisture with PWATs to 2.5 inches will support development and redevelopment of convection ahead of the main band associated with the low. Thus, heavy rain with multiple inches of rain per hour rain rates are expected through the Moderate Risk area. Soils in Louisiana and Mississippi are already saturated now even before Days 1 and 2's rains. While some parts of central Alabama have dry soils, that should change as the soils are primed today/Day 1. Thus, by Day 3, the entire Moderate Risk area should have well wetter than normal soils. Thus, hydrology will play a big role in flash flood development. For western areas, nearly constant heavy rain in Days 1-2 will make flooding into D3/Thursday very easy. Further east into Alabama, the southerly flow of deep tropical moisture will last longer as the low tracks eastward, so there will be a longer period where heavy rain may be occurring over Alabama. In coordination with BMX/Birmingham, AL forecast office, the Moderate Risk was expanded east across central Alabama with this update. Even once the low center passes, the air mass will be largely unchanged behind the low, as the tropical air mass will still be in place into the lower Mississippi Valley, thus, the low's cold front could continue to produce storms into southern Alabama into Thursday night. ...Ohio Valley... The northern edge of the deep tropical air mass supporting the tropical low to the south will bump up against a strong cold front that will be set up along the Ohio River on Thursday. As the plentiful moisture on southwesterly flow runs into the front, training thunderstorms are expected through much of Kentucky, particularly the southern half, Thursday afternoon and evening. This could lead to a prolonged period of heavy rain due to training and backbuilding thunderstorms over the region. For this reason, an internal higher-end Slight was issued for the southern 2/3 of the state. The Slight into the mid-Appalachians was trimmed on the northern side around Pittsburgh, PA due to less moisture making it that far north and east, and with the cold front over Kentucky concentrating the storms further west, coverage of storms into West Virginia also appears to have diminished in the guidance. Thus, the Slight was dropped to a lower-end Slight. At the western end of the front into southeastern Oklahoma and parts of Arkansas, an MCS may develop late Thursday night as the nocturnal jet intensifies. A Slight Risk was drawn in from far north Texas along the MO/AR border to the Mississippi/Ohio River confluence for expected slow-moving and training storms along much of the front, though the highest concentration of storms should be into southeastern Oklahoma. Wegman Day 4 and Day 5 Valid 12Z Fri Jun 19 2026 - 12Z Sun Jun 21 2026 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS, MID SOUTH, AND SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS ON DAY 4... ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE PARTS OF THE MIDWEST ON DAY 5... Day 4's (Friday) Excessive Rainfall threat remains fixed across much of the South. The combination of the lingering disturbance, that may become a more formidable surface cyclone, will reside within an environment that contains >2.0" PWs over much of the Mid-South. Sufficient instability aloft will continue to support thunderstorms that can produce highly efficient rainfall rates. Much of the region will also have received a steady dousing of heavy rainfall during the work-week as well, priming soils for more potential flash flooding. Farther west, a shortwave trough over TX and the return of low-level SErly flow will introduce will reintroduce more Gulf moisture over central TX and as far west as southwest NM. The TX Hill Country is most prone to flash flooding, although some localized flash flooding over the Guadalupe and Sacramento mountains could also transpire. By Day 5 (Saturday), a potent 500mb shortwave trough over the Great Basin will race east towards the Northern Rockies around midday and reach the northern High Plains by Saturday night. As a cold front races south from Canada, a warm front lifting north through the Central Plains will deliver a plume of anomalous moisture and foster an increasingly unstable environment over the Midwest by late Saturday. While the exact placement of the developing thunderstorm activity varies by model, they all show a deepening surface low over the Central Plains and a strengthening LLJ that results in a >500 kg/m/s IVT field over the Midwest. Storms should be able to produce efficient rainfall rates thanks to a growing shield of >1.5" PWs over the MO River Valley, which does surpass the 90th climatological percentile. For these reasons, a Day 5 Slight Risk was introduced. Farther south, a weakening frontal boundary and residual anomalous moisture aloft will help trigger additional storms from South TX on east across many of the Gulf Coast States. Given the South's increasingly sensitive soils and the presence of PWs hovering around 2.0", thunderstorms could produce localized flash flooding Saturday afternoon and evening. Mullinax Day 1 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoints.txt Day 2 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/98epoints.txt Day 3 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/99epoints.txt $$