• HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 28 15:52:19 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 281552
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1152 AM EDT Wed May 28 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed May 28 2025 - 12Z Thu May 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL AND COASTAL TEXAS AS WELL AS CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN KANSAS...

    ...16Z Update...

    ...Kansas...

    A new Slight Risk upgrade was introduced with this update for
    portions of Kansas and far northwestern Oklahoma. This evening, a
    southeastward moving vigorous shortwave trough will force
    thunderstorms to form, likely in a line based on CAMs guidance, but
    could evolve as multiple line segments. Meanwhile, an LLJ, though
    not a particularly robust one, will stream Gulf moisture into the
    region from the south. This LLJ will support backbuilding and
    stronger storms capable of heavy rainfall. While individual storms
    should be quite progressive as they track southeastward, any
    backbuilding along the southern end of the line as well as
    potential for new segments to form could increase the flash
    flooding instances to more widely scattered frequency. Further,
    NASA Sport soil moisture maps show that soils in the Slight Risk
    area are at or above normal for moisture, which will convert more
    rainfall to runoff.=20

    ...Texas...

    The Slight Risk area inherited from the previous forecast remains
    in place from the upper Texas Gulf Coast and Houston northeastward
    into portions of central Texas. While the complex of storms further
    south as moved into the Gulf, a remnant boundary on the eastern
    edge of the return flow/LLJ off the Gulf will support renewed
    widely scattered thunderstorm activity across this region this
    afternoon into this evening. Soils here, like in Kansas, are also
    at or above normal for moisture levels due to recent rainfall
    activity. Thus, expect the storms, especially where they train, to
    pose a widely scattered flash flooding risk.=20

    Elsewhere, the Slight Risk was removed from the lower and much of
    the middle Texas Gulf Coast as the complex of storms that caused
    flash flooding in these areas earlier this morning has moved east
    into the Gulf and no longer pose a flash flooding risk. Any further
    convective development this afternoon should be isolated enough to
    support only a Marginal Risk in this area.

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    The inherited Marginal Risk area was trimmed out of most of
    Virginia with the exception of the Hampton Roads area. Instability
    north of Hampton Roads is at or near zero, and therefore does not
    support strong convective development. However, further south where
    the Marginal remains for the Outer Banks and eastern North
    Carolina, afternoon instability is expected to increase enough to
    support convective development along a stalled stationary frontal
    boundary draped over eastern North Carolina.

    ...New Mexico and West Texas...

    The Marginal Risk area was removed with this update for this
    region. CAMs guidance is showing only a mediocre signal in this
    area, suggesting most areas see only convective showers at most. A
    lack of moisture should preclude flash flooding. A stray instance
    or two can't be ruled out, but was determined to be sub-Marginal.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 29 2025 - 12Z Fri May 30 2025

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

    ...Southeast U.S...
    The combination of shortwaves ejecting eastward out of the Southern
    Plains and the approach of a cold front from the north will lead to
    ample ascent between sfc-500mb along a stretch of elevated moisture
    between +1 to +2 deviations in PWAT anomalies. Consensus has
    increased in a broad, scattered convective regime from the Lower
    Mississippi Valley into the Southeastern U.S. leading a potpourri
    of QPF maxima within areas of convective impact. Signals at the end
    of the 00z HREF were quite bullish in the 12-hr window from 12-00z
    Thu/Fri with neighborhood probabilities for >3" between 35-60%
    across several small areas over the Central Gulf Coast, including
    some "bullseye" patterns within a few urban centers between Baton
    Rouge to Tallahassee. Thunderstorm concerns will continue until the
    front passes through any specific area south of I-40 in the
    period, so the prospects for local maxima capable of flash flooding
    are elevated when you add the lower FFG indices currently in place
    between MS/AL. This will come after seemingly 3 straight days of
    heavy rainfall at any point in time for the region, so the FFG
    recovery is pretty unlikely at this juncture. The previous SLGT
    risk inherited was generally maintained, but did expand west given
    the timing of the approaching shortwave out of TX and the
    accompanying higher QPF signatures over LA between 12-18z Thursday.


    ...Ohio Valley...
    A broad ULL positioned over the Midwest will pivot southeast with
    a positioning across the Mid-Mississippi and Western Ohio Valley
    through D2. Large scale forcing under presence of the ULL will
    generate periods of convection across the above areas with a focus
    on MO/IL/KY/IN. QPF maxima based on the ensemble bias corrected
    output was between 1.5-2.5 over Central Ohio Valley with highest
    signature over the Ohio River basin. The current outlook is still
    within the MRGL risk threshold due to the lower instability
    presence at the surface as much of the ascent is rooted in the mid
    to upper levels given the ULL/trough influence. The previous MRGL
    risk was relatively unchanged with only minor tweaks around the
    periphery to account for the latest heavy QPF distribution.

    ...Texas...
    More convection is expected over the Lone Star State on Thursday
    afternoon through the end of the period. West TX will be the
    initiation point with convection firing in-of the theta_E ridge
    positioned over the Big Bend up through the Pecos River Valley. A
    cold front will be pressing in from the north with a sharp cutoff
    of any instability presence as MUCAPE will flat-line with fropa as
    drier air advects behind the front. The best threat for convection
    will likely occur over Southwest TX with some question as to
    whether the cold front will subdue convective concerns for areas
    north of I-20 by the second half of the forecast. Guidance is split
    on how it wants to handle the shallow cold push with the NAM Nest
    the most aggressive in its latitudinal push and globals lagging
    enough to warrant storm threats as far north as the Caprock. For
    now, left a broad MRGL over the region, but there will likely be
    some fluctuations in the northern periphery of the MRGL risk area
    in place. Will be monitoring over the next succession of updates.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MID ATLANTIC, OHIO VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST...

    A potent mid-latitude trough will pivot through the Ohio Valley on
    Friday morning with a broad axis of diffluence downstream of the
    mean trough leading to a large scale forcing regime that will
    enhance regional precip field across the Mid Atlantic. At the
    surface, low pressure will navigate into the Mid Atlantic with a
    trailing cold front migrating eastward through much of the Eastern
    CONUS, interacting with a wedge of low to mid-level instability
    situated over the Central/Southern Appalachians and points east.
    Greatest thermodynamic alignment will likely be closer to the
    coastal plain, but elevated MUCAPE signatures can be found within
    the Mid Atlantic Piedmont and under the primary trough. The
    tandem of increased sfc-500mb forcing from the trough/front combo
    will lead to a scattered to widespread convective pattern that will
    induce locally heavy rainfall and potential for flash flooding.
    Timing of the ascent pattern and frontal progression will be key in
    determining the logistics of where the main axis of convection will
    occur. As of now, the best chances for convectively driven heavy
    rain are within the Central and Southern Appalachians, Southern VA
    through the NC Piedmont, and the Eastern Carolinas up to the VA
    Tidewater. These are the areas conducive for flash flooding at this
    time with localized amounts reaching 2-3" in the places hit the
    hardest. 1-2" is more likely out in the terrain of the Apps, but
    that is a signal sufficient for flashier responses due to the
    complexity of the topography. Despite the questions of timing, the
    threat remains leading to a broad MRGL risk over much of the Mid
    Atlantic with a southern inflection down towards FL as the trailing
    front will move through the region and interact with a deeper
    moisture layer and plentiful instability to induce some heavier
    convective cores capable of flash flooding in more urbanized zones.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_wjHWH19J1jrzUUrv-16PXPtgOwBARIj3gdleUKELGXy= QsohHhTnXVzcMQHts4lNSyfwcPCpRvLPc4A-s7Bo2pVcciQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_wjHWH19J1jrzUUrv-16PXPtgOwBARIj3gdleUKELGXy= QsohHhTnXVzcMQHts4lNSyfwcPCpRvLPc4A-s7Bok91-kOg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_wjHWH19J1jrzUUrv-16PXPtgOwBARIj3gdleUKELGXy= QsohHhTnXVzcMQHts4lNSyfwcPCpRvLPc4A-s7Bo2VavSJ4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 28 18:30:44 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 281830
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    230 PM EDT Wed May 28 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed May 28 2025 - 12Z Thu May 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL AND COASTAL TEXAS AS WELL AS CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN KANSAS...

    ...16Z Update...

    ...Kansas...

    A new Slight Risk upgrade was introduced with this update for
    portions of Kansas and far northwestern Oklahoma. This evening, a
    southeastward moving vigorous shortwave trough will force
    thunderstorms to form, likely in a line based on CAMs guidance, but
    could evolve as multiple line segments. Meanwhile, an LLJ, though
    not a particularly robust one, will stream Gulf moisture into the
    region from the south. This LLJ will support backbuilding and
    stronger storms capable of heavy rainfall. While individual storms
    should be quite progressive as they track southeastward, any
    backbuilding along the southern end of the line as well as
    potential for new segments to form could increase the flash
    flooding instances to more widely scattered frequency. Further,
    NASA Sport soil moisture maps show that soils in the Slight Risk
    area are at or above normal for moisture, which will convert more
    rainfall to runoff.

    ...Texas...

    The Slight Risk area inherited from the previous forecast remains
    in place from the upper Texas Gulf Coast and Houston northeastward
    into portions of central Texas. While the complex of storms further
    south as moved into the Gulf, a remnant boundary on the eastern
    edge of the return flow/LLJ off the Gulf will support renewed
    widely scattered thunderstorm activity across this region this
    afternoon into this evening. Soils here, like in Kansas, are also
    at or above normal for moisture levels due to recent rainfall
    activity. Thus, expect the storms, especially where they train, to
    pose a widely scattered flash flooding risk.

    Elsewhere, the Slight Risk was removed from the lower and much of
    the middle Texas Gulf Coast as the complex of storms that caused
    flash flooding in these areas earlier this morning has moved east
    into the Gulf and no longer pose a flash flooding risk. Any further
    convective development this afternoon should be isolated enough to
    support only a Marginal Risk in this area.

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    The inherited Marginal Risk area was trimmed out of most of
    Virginia with the exception of the Hampton Roads area. Instability
    north of Hampton Roads is at or near zero, and therefore does not
    support strong convective development. However, further south where
    the Marginal remains for the Outer Banks and eastern North
    Carolina, afternoon instability is expected to increase enough to
    support convective development along a stalled stationary frontal
    boundary draped over eastern North Carolina.

    ...New Mexico and West Texas...

    The Marginal Risk area was removed with this update for this
    region. CAMs guidance is showing only a mediocre signal in this
    area, suggesting most areas see only convective showers at most. A
    lack of moisture should preclude flash flooding. A stray instance
    or two can't be ruled out, but was determined to be sub-Marginal.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 29 2025 - 12Z Fri May 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    SOUTHEAST...

    ...19Z Update...

    The inherited Slight Risk area was removed with this update. The
    latest CAMs guidance for the period shows that the shortwave
    driving expected convection through the period will weaken, and
    struggle to organize the convection ahead of the surface cold front
    in such a way as to promote a greater than isolated flash flooding
    threat. FFGs across much of the Southeast, while slightly depressed
    from earlier rainfall, have largely recovered and while soils are a
    bit wetter than normal, the lack of organization should hold any
    flash flooding to isolated instances. Thus, the combination of high
    FFGs and no consistent signal of heavy rainfall should preclude
    more widespread Slight Risk impacts. For the Gulf Coast, the urban
    centers in the area will have the greatest threat for flash
    flooding, but that assumes the storms linger over those urban areas
    long enough to cause flash flooding.

    Conversely, the surrounding Marginal Risk was expanded to include
    more of the harder hit areas of Texas and the portions of the Mid-
    Atlantic that got a good soaking rain this morning. The
    disorganized nature of the afternoon convection could cause=20
    isolated flash flooding in these areas should the storms form over
    particularly sensitive areas.

    A secondary area of convection that begins its life in Kansas
    tonight will move across Missouri and eventually move into Kentucky
    and Indiana Thursday night. This more organized convection will
    locally increase the flash flooding threat compared to many other
    parts of the Marginal Risk area. However, these storms will be=20
    quite progressive, so defining where a potential Slight Risk with=20
    these storms is also not possible at this time, but the area will=20
    be monitored. Instability on the northern side of the complex will
    likely further hamper the storms' ability to produce rainfall
    amounts needed to cause flash flooding.

    Throughout the Marginal Risk area, it's probable, if not likely
    that locally storms will organize enough to cause Slight Risk
    impacts, but where that will occur is highly uncertain at this
    time.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MID ATLANTIC, OHIO VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST...

    ...19Z Update...

    No major changes were made to the inherited Marginal Risk area=20
    along the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast. The Marginal was expanded a
    bit due to convective uncertainty across the Southeast, while in
    the Mid-Atlantic the complex of storms from the Ohio Valley will
    continue across the area through the period. Once again, the storms
    should be moving fast enough to preclude anything other than
    isolated flash flooding, with the urban centers at a bit higher
    risk for flooding.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A potent mid-latitude trough will pivot through the Ohio Valley on
    Friday morning with a broad axis of diffluence downstream of the
    mean trough leading to a large scale forcing regime that will
    enhance regional precip field across the Mid Atlantic. At the
    surface, low pressure will navigate into the Mid Atlantic with a
    trailing cold front migrating eastward through much of the Eastern
    CONUS, interacting with a wedge of low to mid-level instability
    situated over the Central/Southern Appalachians and points east.
    Greatest thermodynamic alignment will likely be closer to the
    coastal plain, but elevated MUCAPE signatures can be found within
    the Mid Atlantic Piedmont and under the primary trough. The
    tandem of increased sfc-500mb forcing from the trough/front combo
    will lead to a scattered to widespread convective pattern that will
    induce locally heavy rainfall and potential for flash flooding.
    Timing of the ascent pattern and frontal progression will be key in
    determining the logistics of where the main axis of convection will
    occur. As of now, the best chances for convectively driven heavy
    rain are within the Central and Southern Appalachians, Southern VA
    through the NC Piedmont, and the Eastern Carolinas up to the VA
    Tidewater. These are the areas conducive for flash flooding at this
    time with localized amounts reaching 2-3" in the places hit the
    hardest. 1-2" is more likely out in the terrain of the Apps, but
    that is a signal sufficient for flashier responses due to the
    complexity of the topography. Despite the questions of timing, the
    threat remains leading to a broad MRGL risk over much of the Mid
    Atlantic with a southern inflection down towards FL as the trailing
    front will move through the region and interact with a deeper
    moisture layer and plentiful instability to induce some heavier
    convective cores capable of flash flooding in more urbanized zones.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6flt1bmIKk-S7n7HFuE1GRZ8d_YMeZwjFdSVtlsCKnOJ= gVAO2x7DXjk_Pa5OU7-qBBV7QMDOW9unw2Qu7oG8TIM2IEU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6flt1bmIKk-S7n7HFuE1GRZ8d_YMeZwjFdSVtlsCKnOJ= gVAO2x7DXjk_Pa5OU7-qBBV7QMDOW9unw2Qu7oG8Dbfgn-8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6flt1bmIKk-S7n7HFuE1GRZ8d_YMeZwjFdSVtlsCKnOJ= gVAO2x7DXjk_Pa5OU7-qBBV7QMDOW9unw2Qu7oG8andGaZo$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 28 21:45:32 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 282144
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    544 PM EDT Wed May 28 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 2133Z Thu May 29 2025 - 12Z Thu May 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL TEXAS AS WELL AS SOUTHWESTERN KANSAS...

    The Slight risk was maintained over portions of central TX,
    although do generally consider this a lower end Slight risk.
    Isolated to scattered convection the next few hours will result in
    some flash flood risk with cell mergers probable. However this=20
    convection is fighting mid level dry air and some subsidence behind
    the Gulf Coast MCV...thus unclear how organized this convection=20
    will get. It seems most likely that activity will not be as=20
    organized as the past couple nights, with limited upscale growth=20
    keeping the flash flood risk on the lower end of the Slight risk=20 scale...however we will continue to monitor convective trends.

    The Slight risk over KS was maintained, but shifted a bit=20
    southwest to better align with the axis of grater instability.=20
    While some upscale growth into a MCS or convective cluster is=20
    likely, this activity should stay quick moving limiting the=20
    magnitude of any flash flood risk. Thus primarily looking at high=20
    rainfall rate driven minor flooding of urban and/or low lying=20
    areas as the main threat tonight. However, through the evening as=20
    convection increases in coverage and organizes, we could see cell=20
    mergers result in an isolated/scattered flash flood risk over=20
    western KS and possibly far eastern CO.

    Isolated flash flooding will remain possible over portions of LA=20
    and MS as well...although generally quick northward propagation of
    convection should limit this threat.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 29 2025 - 12Z Fri May 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    SOUTHEAST...

    ...19Z Update...

    The inherited Slight Risk area was removed with this update. The
    latest CAMs guidance for the period shows that the shortwave
    driving expected convection through the period will weaken, and
    struggle to organize the convection ahead of the surface cold front
    in such a way as to promote a greater than isolated flash flooding
    threat. FFGs across much of the Southeast, while slightly depressed
    from earlier rainfall, have largely recovered and while soils are a
    bit wetter than normal, the lack of organization should hold any
    flash flooding to isolated instances. Thus, the combination of high
    FFGs and no consistent signal of heavy rainfall should preclude
    more widespread Slight Risk impacts. For the Gulf Coast, the urban
    centers in the area will have the greatest threat for flash
    flooding, but that assumes the storms linger over those urban areas
    long enough to cause flash flooding.

    Conversely, the surrounding Marginal Risk was expanded to include
    more of the harder hit areas of Texas and the portions of the Mid-
    Atlantic that got a good soaking rain this morning. The
    disorganized nature of the afternoon convection could cause
    isolated flash flooding in these areas should the storms form over
    particularly sensitive areas.

    A secondary area of convection that begins its life in Kansas
    tonight will move across Missouri and eventually move into Kentucky
    and Indiana Thursday night. This more organized convection will
    locally increase the flash flooding threat compared to many other
    parts of the Marginal Risk area. However, these storms will be
    quite progressive, so defining where a potential Slight Risk with
    these storms is also not possible at this time, but the area will
    be monitored. Instability on the northern side of the complex will
    likely further hamper the storms' ability to produce rainfall
    amounts needed to cause flash flooding.

    Throughout the Marginal Risk area, it's probable, if not likely
    that locally storms will organize enough to cause Slight Risk
    impacts, but where that will occur is highly uncertain at this
    time.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MID ATLANTIC, OHIO VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST...

    ...19Z Update...

    No major changes were made to the inherited Marginal Risk area
    along the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast. The Marginal was expanded a
    bit due to convective uncertainty across the Southeast, while in
    the Mid-Atlantic the complex of storms from the Ohio Valley will
    continue across the area through the period. Once again, the storms
    should be moving fast enough to preclude anything other than
    isolated flash flooding, with the urban centers at a bit higher
    risk for flooding.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A potent mid-latitude trough will pivot through the Ohio Valley on
    Friday morning with a broad axis of diffluence downstream of the
    mean trough leading to a large scale forcing regime that will
    enhance regional precip field across the Mid Atlantic. At the
    surface, low pressure will navigate into the Mid Atlantic with a
    trailing cold front migrating eastward through much of the Eastern
    CONUS, interacting with a wedge of low to mid-level instability
    situated over the Central/Southern Appalachians and points east.
    Greatest thermodynamic alignment will likely be closer to the
    coastal plain, but elevated MUCAPE signatures can be found within
    the Mid Atlantic Piedmont and under the primary trough. The
    tandem of increased sfc-500mb forcing from the trough/front combo
    will lead to a scattered to widespread convective pattern that will
    induce locally heavy rainfall and potential for flash flooding.
    Timing of the ascent pattern and frontal progression will be key in
    determining the logistics of where the main axis of convection will
    occur. As of now, the best chances for convectively driven heavy
    rain are within the Central and Southern Appalachians, Southern VA
    through the NC Piedmont, and the Eastern Carolinas up to the VA
    Tidewater. These are the areas conducive for flash flooding at this
    time with localized amounts reaching 2-3" in the places hit the
    hardest. 1-2" is more likely out in the terrain of the Apps, but
    that is a signal sufficient for flashier responses due to the
    complexity of the topography. Despite the questions of timing, the
    threat remains leading to a broad MRGL risk over much of the Mid
    Atlantic with a southern inflection down towards FL as the trailing
    front will move through the region and interact with a deeper
    moisture layer and plentiful instability to induce some heavier
    convective cores capable of flash flooding in more urbanized zones.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6uesgqpClYcSkJkcTBsE7SDnZEoTshrzS75su3qR32YJ= xnmA6hD_1_TfkHULkTtregkq-qjjbKThRxgKOQxCrZsCsJg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6uesgqpClYcSkJkcTBsE7SDnZEoTshrzS75su3qR32YJ= xnmA6hD_1_TfkHULkTtregkq-qjjbKThRxgKOQxCs_qZLO4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6uesgqpClYcSkJkcTBsE7SDnZEoTshrzS75su3qR32YJ= xnmA6hD_1_TfkHULkTtregkq-qjjbKThRxgKOQxC2yQNfhw$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 29 00:34:20 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 290034
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    834 PM EDT Wed May 28 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu May 29 2025 - 12Z Thu May 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHWESTERN KANSAS AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    Localized cell mergers are resulting in an isolated flash flood=20
    risk near the KS/OK border this evening. As convection continues to
    organize a few additional instances of cell merging could result=20
    in an isolated/scattered flash flood risk over western KS, northern
    OK and possibly far eastern CO. While some upscale growth into a=20
    MCS or convective cluster is likely tonight, this activity should=20
    stay quick moving limiting the magnitude of any flash flood risk.=20
    Thus primarily looking at high rainfall rate driven minor flooding=20
    of urban and/or low lying areas as the main threat tonight once=20
    that occurs.=20

    Isolated flash flooding will remain possible over portions of the
    central Gulf Coast as well. Convection has generally been
    propagating northward, however redevelopment over southeastern LA=20
    and southern MS could result in at least some flash flood risk=20
    over the next several hours. Additionally, some=20
    slowing/backbuilding of convection has recently been noted over=20
    southern AL, and with the approach of the MCV from the west,=20
    additional development could build into the central Gulf Coast=20
    area. Thus localized instances of flash flooding appear possible=20
    into the overnight hours.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu May 29 2025 - 12Z Fri May 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    SOUTHEAST...

    ...19Z Update...

    The inherited Slight Risk area was removed with this update. The
    latest CAMs guidance for the period shows that the shortwave
    driving expected convection through the period will weaken, and
    struggle to organize the convection ahead of the surface cold front
    in such a way as to promote a greater than isolated flash flooding
    threat. FFGs across much of the Southeast, while slightly depressed
    from earlier rainfall, have largely recovered and while soils are a
    bit wetter than normal, the lack of organization should hold any
    flash flooding to isolated instances. Thus, the combination of high
    FFGs and no consistent signal of heavy rainfall should preclude
    more widespread Slight Risk impacts. For the Gulf Coast, the urban
    centers in the area will have the greatest threat for flash
    flooding, but that assumes the storms linger over those urban areas
    long enough to cause flash flooding.

    Conversely, the surrounding Marginal Risk was expanded to include
    more of the harder hit areas of Texas and the portions of the Mid-
    Atlantic that got a good soaking rain this morning. The
    disorganized nature of the afternoon convection could cause
    isolated flash flooding in these areas should the storms form over
    particularly sensitive areas.

    A secondary area of convection that begins its life in Kansas
    tonight will move across Missouri and eventually move into Kentucky
    and Indiana Thursday night. This more organized convection will
    locally increase the flash flooding threat compared to many other
    parts of the Marginal Risk area. However, these storms will be
    quite progressive, so defining where a potential Slight Risk with
    these storms is also not possible at this time, but the area will
    be monitored. Instability on the northern side of the complex will
    likely further hamper the storms' ability to produce rainfall
    amounts needed to cause flash flooding.

    Throughout the Marginal Risk area, it's probable, if not likely
    that locally storms will organize enough to cause Slight Risk
    impacts, but where that will occur is highly uncertain at this
    time.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MID ATLANTIC, OHIO VALLEY, AND SOUTHEAST...

    ...19Z Update...

    No major changes were made to the inherited Marginal Risk area
    along the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast. The Marginal was expanded a
    bit due to convective uncertainty across the Southeast, while in
    the Mid-Atlantic the complex of storms from the Ohio Valley will
    continue across the area through the period. Once again, the storms
    should be moving fast enough to preclude anything other than
    isolated flash flooding, with the urban centers at a bit higher
    risk for flooding.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A potent mid-latitude trough will pivot through the Ohio Valley on
    Friday morning with a broad axis of diffluence downstream of the
    mean trough leading to a large scale forcing regime that will
    enhance regional precip field across the Mid Atlantic. At the
    surface, low pressure will navigate into the Mid Atlantic with a
    trailing cold front migrating eastward through much of the Eastern
    CONUS, interacting with a wedge of low to mid-level instability
    situated over the Central/Southern Appalachians and points east.
    Greatest thermodynamic alignment will likely be closer to the
    coastal plain, but elevated MUCAPE signatures can be found within
    the Mid Atlantic Piedmont and under the primary trough. The
    tandem of increased sfc-500mb forcing from the trough/front combo
    will lead to a scattered to widespread convective pattern that will
    induce locally heavy rainfall and potential for flash flooding.
    Timing of the ascent pattern and frontal progression will be key in
    determining the logistics of where the main axis of convection will
    occur. As of now, the best chances for convectively driven heavy
    rain are within the Central and Southern Appalachians, Southern VA
    through the NC Piedmont, and the Eastern Carolinas up to the VA
    Tidewater. These are the areas conducive for flash flooding at this
    time with localized amounts reaching 2-3" in the places hit the
    hardest. 1-2" is more likely out in the terrain of the Apps, but
    that is a signal sufficient for flashier responses due to the
    complexity of the topography. Despite the questions of timing, the
    threat remains leading to a broad MRGL risk over much of the Mid
    Atlantic with a southern inflection down towards FL as the trailing
    front will move through the region and interact with a deeper
    moisture layer and plentiful instability to induce some heavier
    convective cores capable of flash flooding in more urbanized zones.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_3CHsI_R3bTK3kOsI_cN6yfDFRi59mv8MAF8Y51Q_68x= -lFU4BOODeiNF5iZiUs5Ia9c3Xi3mq40w6S3hgEGFfJvaKI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_3CHsI_R3bTK3kOsI_cN6yfDFRi59mv8MAF8Y51Q_68x= -lFU4BOODeiNF5iZiUs5Ia9c3Xi3mq40w6S3hgEG2sjuov4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_3CHsI_R3bTK3kOsI_cN6yfDFRi59mv8MAF8Y51Q_68x= -lFU4BOODeiNF5iZiUs5Ia9c3Xi3mq40w6S3hgEGquVdh-A$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 29 07:41:43 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 290739
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    339 AM EDT Thu May 29 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu May 29 2025 - 12Z Fri May 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE SOUTHEAST, OHIO VALLEY, SOUTHERN PLAINS, AND MID MISSISSIPPI=20
    VALLEY...

    ...Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys...

    A shortwave currently analyzed across the Central Plains will
    continue to progress eastward overnight under the base of a broad
    ULL situated over the Midwest. Increased mid and upper forcing will
    aid in scattered convection through the course of the period in the
    area spanning from Eastern KS through the Central Ohio Valley.=20
    Some of the stronger convective cores will be capable of locally=20
    enhanced rainfall rates between 1-2"/hr at peak intensity leading=20
    to isolated flash flood prospects in-of the above zone. The=20
    positive news in the setup is the moisture anomalies across the
    region of interest remain near to just slightly above normal with
    NAEFS anomalies signaling less than +1 deviation for the area.
    This will limit the upper threshold of flood concerns for the
    setup, but some of the heavier cores could still cause some flash
    flood concerns within more urbanized settings and over some of the
    terrain focused areas of Southern MO, as well as Eastern KY/TN. The
    previous MRGL risk was generally maintained with only some minor
    adjustments on the northern periphery of the risk area.=20

    ...Southeast U.S...

    A shortwave trough over the Southern Plains will roll eastward
    overnight and through the period with focused ascent within the
    confines of the Southeastern U.S. Weak jet coupling from a vacating
    jet over the Tennessee Valley and approaching jet from the west
    will create a period of stronger forcing in-of the Central Gulf
    Coast early this morning with convective activity rooted in a=20
    narrow corridor of elevated theta_E's stemming from southerly flow=20
    near the coast. Expectation is for scattered heavy convection to
    initiate across Southern LA and migrate eastward with the stronger
    forcing advancing across the Southeast. Scattered thunderstorms
    will be found across off the Southeast by late-morning and beyond,
    but the progressive nature of the threat should limit the chances
    for widespread flash flooding. QPF mean between 1-2" is forecast
    along the Central Gulf Coast with some deterministic maxima between
    4-5" showing up within the 00z CAMs. This put modest (30-50%) HREF
    neighborhood probs for >3" within that zone between New Orleans to
    Mobile, but even still that signature is not going to be enough to
    move the needle outside a MRGL threat. A cold front will sweep
    through the region from northwest to southeast leading to a sharp
    shift in the environmental moisture availability and limiting
    instability region-wide. This will ultimately end the threat for
    any convection and put an end to any risk in place. For now, the
    MRGL risk remains across the Southeastern U.S. with emphasis on the
    Central Gulf Coast for best threat in the period.=20

    Further east over Southeastern SC, another round of strong
    thunderstorms will likely occur late-afternoon with the best flash
    flood risk likely within more urban zones like Charleston and small
    areas like Hilton Head. This actually the zone with the highest >3"
    probs in the country, but again, the threat is very localized for
    flash flood concerns considering the sandier soils prompting higher
    FFG's. In this case, the threat will continue to be more in-line
    with a MRGL risk leading to general maintenance of the previous
    forecast.=20

    ...Southern Plains...

    Increased ascent within the confines of a cold front pressing south
    through the Southern Plains will lead to a corridor of heavy=20
    rainfall developing upstream across the Caprock, moving southeast
    within the mean flow and expected upwind trajectory of any cold
    pool generation. Regional instability parameters point to a
    sufficiently buoyant environment along and ahead of the advancing
    cold front leading to a suitable MCS maintenance regime that will
    begin over Eastern NM and eventually work its way southeast through
    the rest of the Texas Caprock, Permian Basin, and Concho Valley by
    nightfall. HREF EAS probs for >1" are modest (20-40%) for the
    probability scheme, but a stronger neighborhood prob for >2"
    (50-80%) exists over that area referenced above. Progressive nature
    of the eventual complex should curb some of the threat, but
    scattered instances of flash flooding will be plausible where the=20
    MCS migrates overhead. The highest threat will likely be within
    more urban settings and over the Concho Valley where 3-hr FFG=20
    exceedance probs are highest (30-40%) due to antecedent soil=20
    moisture.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

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

    A potent upper trough will slowly pivot eastward while taking on a
    more neutral tilt as it swings through the Great Lakes and Ohio
    Valley on Friday. At the surface, low pressure will develop within
    the middle of an evolving jet couplet in-of the eastern portion of
    the Ohio Valley with deterministic output placing the low nearby
    Eastern KY. The entire dynamic between sfc-500mb will play an
    integral role in the potential for heavy rainfall in areas of KY/WV
    the first half of the period, shifting eastward through the
    Shenandoah of VA by the afternoon and evening Friday before=20
    providing quite the convective posture over the DMV and points=20
    northeast. 00z suite has come in much more aggressive in the=20
    presentation of heavy rainfall across the above areas with a dual=20
    maxima signature present within the ensemble means. The first max=20
    is over Eastern KY into Southern WV thanks to intense large scale=20
    ascent being driven by a powerful shortwave rotating into the=20
    region along the base of the mean trough as it approaches the=20
    region. At the surface, a narrow tongue of surface based=20
    instability will be co-located within the mid and upper level=20
    ascent max being delivered by the trough, a product of a warm front
    lifting north ahead of the aforementioned surface low off to the=20
    west. A line of thunderstorm activity will likely transpire within
    proxy of the warm front leading to enhanced rainfall rates likely=20
    to spur totals between 1.5-3" with potentially higher over a span=20
    of 3-6 hrs. before a cold front sweeps through the area in wake of=20
    the lows progression to the east-northeast.=20

    Current FFG exceedance probs for both 3 and 6hr increments are=20
    pretty robust (>50%) within the corridor referenced above, along=20
    with some hourly rate exceedance probs between 50-80% between the=20
    12-18z time frame on Friday. The signature typically correlates to=20
    a better than average threat for flash flooding, especially when=20
    you account for the antecedent soil moisture and the complex=20
    topography situated over Eastern KY and Southern WV. This allowed=20
    for an addition of a SLGT risk across these two areas.=20

    Further east, soil moisture anomalies will remain elevated thanks
    to a barrage of rainfall the past 24 hrs. and very wet conditions
    overall the past 2 weeks. As the surface low matures on its trek to
    the east and the trough begins a more negative tilt to the west,
    expectation is the for the low to begin intensifying steadily with
    a sharper deformation axis beginning to take shape across the
    Central Mid Atlantic. Heavy rains on the western flank of the low
    will likely occur across the Northern and Central Shenandoah, an=20
    area that has been hit hard over the course of May and is already=20 experiencing relatively higher stream flows. Current HREF depiction
    for 6hr exceedance probs over Northwestern VA are between 50-80%=20
    over the Blue Ridge and adjacent valley areas from Harrisonburg to=20
    just north of Winchester. A smaller max is co-located with the more
    urban centers of Northern VA towards the DC metro, but that is at=20
    the end of the hi-res temporal window. The assessment of the final=20
    6 hr period from the CAMs and the global deterministic and ensemble
    outputs in the final 12 hr time frame indicate a mass of heavy=20
    rainfall being depicted within the MD Piedmont to the Chesapeake.=20
    NAM Nest is incredibly bullish in its interpretation, likely due to
    the strong low to mid-level lapse rate signature across the area=20
    looking at forecast soundings, as well as persistent 250-750 J/kg=20
    MUCAPE still present prior to the cold front arrival. QPF output is
    around 1-2" currently for the DC/Balt Metro and surrounds for the=20
    period, a signal strong enough to warrant a targeted upgrade in the
    forecast risk. As a result and with coordination from the local=20
    Sterling, VA WFO, a SLGT risk was issued for the period across the=20
    above area.=20

    Heavy rainfall will occur further north as the low matures, but the
    instability gradient is fairly tight on the northwest periphery of
    the low as we move closer to Saturday morning. It's plausible
    places like Philadelphia and areas of Southern NJ and Southeast PA
    could see a targeted upgrade as well for the D2, but the signal is
    more borderline for those locales. The MRGL risk was maintained for
    those areas up to Northern NJ, but will be something to monitor as
    we move closer.=20


    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND...

    Powerful surface low across the Mid Atlantic on D2 will motion to
    the northeast, eventually dropping down into the 980s as it
    occludes and drifts north over New England. Residual heavy rains
    will occur across parts of Northern New England with the heaviest
    rainfall likely over Northern NH and ME, especially within the
    northeastern flank of the low where WCB process will advect deeper
    moisture poleward with weak buoyancy likely remaining over the
    region during the first 12 hrs of the D3 period. Totals of 1-2"
    with locally higher are forecast over the above zones leading to
    localized flash flood potential given the complexity of the terrain
    impacted and relatively good dynamics at play.=20

    The MRGL risk inherited was only adjusted on the western half of=20
    the risk as trends have pushed the heavier rain a little further=20
    east compared to previous forecasts. The area over Central and=20
    Western ME is the most susceptible in this pattern with potentially
    greater impact into Southern New England if the low slows down and
    brings a stronger convective output towards Eastern MA and RI the=20
    front end of D3. Will be an area to assess closely in the coming=20
    updates, but maintained the nil there for now.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_qHWxZTqReIhL1osVfhO84fdU3p1q3gTPRvssehNTgas= vC7disFYkVcDMOdlFlqtiphmGJNtYiC2ucImWR_hSkRbzSs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_qHWxZTqReIhL1osVfhO84fdU3p1q3gTPRvssehNTgas= vC7disFYkVcDMOdlFlqtiphmGJNtYiC2ucImWR_hzOJc_54$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_qHWxZTqReIhL1osVfhO84fdU3p1q3gTPRvssehNTgas= vC7disFYkVcDMOdlFlqtiphmGJNtYiC2ucImWR_hldgNb_U$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 29 15:57:48 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 291557
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1157 AM EDT Thu May 29 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu May 29 2025 - 12Z Fri May 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST, OHIO VALLEY, SOUTHERN PLAINS, AND MID MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    ...16Z Update...

    Some reshuffling of the large Marginal Risk across a large section
    of the country was done with this update. The inherited Marginal
    was removed from the Texas Gulf Coast and most of Louisiana and
    Mississippi with this update, as the area behind the ongoing
    convection tracking along the Gulf Coast should stay dry and
    relatively storm-free this afternoon with northerly flow hampering
    the moisture in this area somewhat. There is also good signal among
    the CAMs for a minimum of precipitation in this area through 12Z.

    However, the Marginal was expanded to include much of the southern
    Appalachians and much of the Florida Peninsula with this update;
    both for the same reason. Afternoon convection is likely to develop
    in these areas, which while unlikely to organize, could be slow-
    moving, tied to the sea breeze in FL, or the terrain in the Apps,
    which could lead to a localized prolonged period of heavy rain.
    Some sensitivity to flooding in these areas from moist soils would
    also support an isolated flash flooding threat.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys...

    A shortwave currently analyzed across the Central Plains will
    continue to progress eastward overnight under the base of a broad
    ULL situated over the Midwest. Increased mid and upper forcing will
    aid in scattered convection through the course of the period in the
    area spanning from Eastern KS through the Central Ohio Valley.
    Some of the stronger convective cores will be capable of locally
    enhanced rainfall rates between 1-2"/hr at peak intensity leading
    to isolated flash flood prospects in-of the above zone. The
    positive news in the setup is the moisture anomalies across the
    region of interest remain near to just slightly above normal with
    NAEFS anomalies signaling less than +1 deviation for the area.
    This will limit the upper threshold of flood concerns for the
    setup, but some of the heavier cores could still cause some flash
    flood concerns within more urbanized settings and over some of the
    terrain focused areas of Southern MO, as well as Eastern KY/TN. The
    previous MRGL risk was generally maintained with only some minor
    adjustments on the northern periphery of the risk area.

    ...Southeast U.S...

    A shortwave trough over the Southern Plains will roll eastward
    overnight and through the period with focused ascent within the
    confines of the Southeastern U.S. Weak jet coupling from a vacating
    jet over the Tennessee Valley and approaching jet from the west
    will create a period of stronger forcing in-of the Central Gulf
    Coast early this morning with convective activity rooted in a
    narrow corridor of elevated theta_E's stemming from southerly flow
    near the coast. Expectation is for scattered heavy convection to
    initiate across Southern LA and migrate eastward with the stronger
    forcing advancing across the Southeast. Scattered thunderstorms
    will be found across off the Southeast by late-morning and beyond,
    but the progressive nature of the threat should limit the chances
    for widespread flash flooding. QPF mean between 1-2" is forecast
    along the Central Gulf Coast with some deterministic maxima between
    4-5" showing up within the 00z CAMs. This put modest (30-50%) HREF
    neighborhood probs for >3" within that zone between New Orleans to
    Mobile, but even still that signature is not going to be enough to
    move the needle outside a MRGL threat. A cold front will sweep
    through the region from northwest to southeast leading to a sharp
    shift in the environmental moisture availability and limiting
    instability region-wide. This will ultimately end the threat for
    any convection and put an end to any risk in place. For now, the
    MRGL risk remains across the Southeastern U.S. with emphasis on the
    Central Gulf Coast for best threat in the period.

    Further east over Southeastern SC, another round of strong
    thunderstorms will likely occur late-afternoon with the best flash
    flood risk likely within more urban zones like Charleston and small
    areas like Hilton Head. This actually the zone with the highest >3"
    probs in the country, but again, the threat is very localized for
    flash flood concerns considering the sandier soils prompting higher
    FFG's. In this case, the threat will continue to be more in-line
    with a MRGL risk leading to general maintenance of the previous
    forecast.

    ...Southern Plains...

    Increased ascent within the confines of a cold front pressing south
    through the Southern Plains will lead to a corridor of heavy
    rainfall developing upstream across the Caprock, moving southeast
    within the mean flow and expected upwind trajectory of any cold
    pool generation. Regional instability parameters point to a
    sufficiently buoyant environment along and ahead of the advancing
    cold front leading to a suitable MCS maintenance regime that will
    begin over Eastern NM and eventually work its way southeast through
    the rest of the Texas Caprock, Permian Basin, and Concho Valley by
    nightfall. HREF EAS probs for >1" are modest (20-40%) for the
    probability scheme, but a stronger neighborhood prob for >2"
    (50-80%) exists over that area referenced above. Progressive nature
    of the eventual complex should curb some of the threat, but
    scattered instances of flash flooding will be plausible where the
    MCS migrates overhead. The highest threat will likely be within
    more urban settings and over the Concho Valley where 3-hr FFG
    exceedance probs are highest (30-40%) due to antecedent soil
    moisture.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID ATLANTIC...

    A potent upper trough will slowly pivot eastward while taking on a
    more neutral tilt as it swings through the Great Lakes and Ohio
    Valley on Friday. At the surface, low pressure will develop within
    the middle of an evolving jet couplet in-of the eastern portion of
    the Ohio Valley with deterministic output placing the low nearby
    Eastern KY. The entire dynamic between sfc-500mb will play an
    integral role in the potential for heavy rainfall in areas of KY/WV
    the first half of the period, shifting eastward through the
    Shenandoah of VA by the afternoon and evening Friday before
    providing quite the convective posture over the DMV and points
    northeast. 00z suite has come in much more aggressive in the
    presentation of heavy rainfall across the above areas with a dual
    maxima signature present within the ensemble means. The first max
    is over Eastern KY into Southern WV thanks to intense large scale
    ascent being driven by a powerful shortwave rotating into the
    region along the base of the mean trough as it approaches the
    region. At the surface, a narrow tongue of surface based
    instability will be co-located within the mid and upper level
    ascent max being delivered by the trough, a product of a warm front
    lifting north ahead of the aforementioned surface low off to the
    west. A line of thunderstorm activity will likely transpire within
    proxy of the warm front leading to enhanced rainfall rates likely
    to spur totals between 1.5-3" with potentially higher over a span
    of 3-6 hrs. before a cold front sweeps through the area in wake of
    the lows progression to the east-northeast.

    Current FFG exceedance probs for both 3 and 6hr increments are
    pretty robust (>50%) within the corridor referenced above, along
    with some hourly rate exceedance probs between 50-80% between the
    12-18z time frame on Friday. The signature typically correlates to
    a better than average threat for flash flooding, especially when
    you account for the antecedent soil moisture and the complex
    topography situated over Eastern KY and Southern WV. This allowed
    for an addition of a SLGT risk across these two areas.

    Further east, soil moisture anomalies will remain elevated thanks
    to a barrage of rainfall the past 24 hrs. and very wet conditions
    overall the past 2 weeks. As the surface low matures on its trek to
    the east and the trough begins a more negative tilt to the west,
    expectation is the for the low to begin intensifying steadily with
    a sharper deformation axis beginning to take shape across the
    Central Mid Atlantic. Heavy rains on the western flank of the low
    will likely occur across the Northern and Central Shenandoah, an
    area that has been hit hard over the course of May and is already
    experiencing relatively higher stream flows. Current HREF depiction
    for 6hr exceedance probs over Northwestern VA are between 50-80%
    over the Blue Ridge and adjacent valley areas from Harrisonburg to
    just north of Winchester. A smaller max is co-located with the more
    urban centers of Northern VA towards the DC metro, but that is at
    the end of the hi-res temporal window. The assessment of the final
    6 hr period from the CAMs and the global deterministic and ensemble
    outputs in the final 12 hr time frame indicate a mass of heavy
    rainfall being depicted within the MD Piedmont to the Chesapeake.
    NAM Nest is incredibly bullish in its interpretation, likely due to
    the strong low to mid-level lapse rate signature across the area
    looking at forecast soundings, as well as persistent 250-750 J/kg
    MUCAPE still present prior to the cold front arrival. QPF output is
    around 1-2" currently for the DC/Balt Metro and surrounds for the
    period, a signal strong enough to warrant a targeted upgrade in the
    forecast risk. As a result and with coordination from the local
    Sterling, VA WFO, a SLGT risk was issued for the period across the
    above area.

    Heavy rainfall will occur further north as the low matures, but the
    instability gradient is fairly tight on the northwest periphery of
    the low as we move closer to Saturday morning. It's plausible
    places like Philadelphia and areas of Southern NJ and Southeast PA
    could see a targeted upgrade as well for the D2, but the signal is
    more borderline for those locales. The MRGL risk was maintained for
    those areas up to Northern NJ, but will be something to monitor as
    we move closer.


    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND...

    Powerful surface low across the Mid Atlantic on D2 will motion to
    the northeast, eventually dropping down into the 980s as it
    occludes and drifts north over New England. Residual heavy rains
    will occur across parts of Northern New England with the heaviest
    rainfall likely over Northern NH and ME, especially within the
    northeastern flank of the low where WCB process will advect deeper
    moisture poleward with weak buoyancy likely remaining over the
    region during the first 12 hrs of the D3 period. Totals of 1-2"
    with locally higher are forecast over the above zones leading to
    localized flash flood potential given the complexity of the terrain
    impacted and relatively good dynamics at play.

    The MRGL risk inherited was only adjusted on the western half of
    the risk as trends have pushed the heavier rain a little further
    east compared to previous forecasts. The area over Central and
    Western ME is the most susceptible in this pattern with potentially
    greater impact into Southern New England if the low slows down and
    brings a stronger convective output towards Eastern MA and RI the
    front end of D3. Will be an area to assess closely in the coming
    updates, but maintained the nil there for now.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_YJ5CxVIabo2hLtxHv4fOWdyZgAPyhvDqpbxk8kKgZzu= 1Ua1FfRynSkE-zp6mbsN2Cb3V25PdgeLYSG0XAvGD1B1rCw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_YJ5CxVIabo2hLtxHv4fOWdyZgAPyhvDqpbxk8kKgZzu= 1Ua1FfRynSkE-zp6mbsN2Cb3V25PdgeLYSG0XAvG30vmFHI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_YJ5CxVIabo2hLtxHv4fOWdyZgAPyhvDqpbxk8kKgZzu= 1Ua1FfRynSkE-zp6mbsN2Cb3V25PdgeLYSG0XAvGoDOcRPA$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 29 19:34:30 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 291933
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    333 PM EDT Thu May 29 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu May 29 2025 - 12Z Fri May 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST, OHIO VALLEY, SOUTHERN PLAINS, AND MID MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    ...16Z Update...

    Some reshuffling of the large Marginal Risk across a large section
    of the country was done with this update. The inherited Marginal
    was removed from the Texas Gulf Coast and most of Louisiana and
    Mississippi with this update, as the area behind the ongoing
    convection tracking along the Gulf Coast should stay dry and
    relatively storm-free this afternoon with northerly flow hampering
    the moisture in this area somewhat. There is also good signal among
    the CAMs for a minimum of precipitation in this area through 12Z.

    However, the Marginal was expanded to include much of the southern
    Appalachians and much of the Florida Peninsula with this update;
    both for the same reason. Afternoon convection is likely to develop
    in these areas, which while unlikely to organize, could be slow-
    moving, tied to the sea breeze in FL, or the terrain in the Apps,
    which could lead to a localized prolonged period of heavy rain.
    Some sensitivity to flooding in these areas from moist soils would
    also support an isolated flash flooding threat.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys...

    A shortwave currently analyzed across the Central Plains will
    continue to progress eastward overnight under the base of a broad
    ULL situated over the Midwest. Increased mid and upper forcing will
    aid in scattered convection through the course of the period in the
    area spanning from Eastern KS through the Central Ohio Valley.
    Some of the stronger convective cores will be capable of locally
    enhanced rainfall rates between 1-2"/hr at peak intensity leading
    to isolated flash flood prospects in-of the above zone. The
    positive news in the setup is the moisture anomalies across the
    region of interest remain near to just slightly above normal with
    NAEFS anomalies signaling less than +1 deviation for the area.
    This will limit the upper threshold of flood concerns for the
    setup, but some of the heavier cores could still cause some flash
    flood concerns within more urbanized settings and over some of the
    terrain focused areas of Southern MO, as well as Eastern KY/TN. The
    previous MRGL risk was generally maintained with only some minor
    adjustments on the northern periphery of the risk area.

    ...Southeast U.S...

    A shortwave trough over the Southern Plains will roll eastward
    overnight and through the period with focused ascent within the
    confines of the Southeastern U.S. Weak jet coupling from a vacating
    jet over the Tennessee Valley and approaching jet from the west
    will create a period of stronger forcing in-of the Central Gulf
    Coast early this morning with convective activity rooted in a
    narrow corridor of elevated theta_E's stemming from southerly flow
    near the coast. Expectation is for scattered heavy convection to
    initiate across Southern LA and migrate eastward with the stronger
    forcing advancing across the Southeast. Scattered thunderstorms
    will be found across off the Southeast by late-morning and beyond,
    but the progressive nature of the threat should limit the chances
    for widespread flash flooding. QPF mean between 1-2" is forecast
    along the Central Gulf Coast with some deterministic maxima between
    4-5" showing up within the 00z CAMs. This put modest (30-50%) HREF
    neighborhood probs for >3" within that zone between New Orleans to
    Mobile, but even still that signature is not going to be enough to
    move the needle outside a MRGL threat. A cold front will sweep
    through the region from northwest to southeast leading to a sharp
    shift in the environmental moisture availability and limiting
    instability region-wide. This will ultimately end the threat for
    any convection and put an end to any risk in place. For now, the
    MRGL risk remains across the Southeastern U.S. with emphasis on the
    Central Gulf Coast for best threat in the period.

    Further east over Southeastern SC, another round of strong
    thunderstorms will likely occur late-afternoon with the best flash
    flood risk likely within more urban zones like Charleston and small
    areas like Hilton Head. This actually the zone with the highest >3"
    probs in the country, but again, the threat is very localized for
    flash flood concerns considering the sandier soils prompting higher
    FFG's. In this case, the threat will continue to be more in-line
    with a MRGL risk leading to general maintenance of the previous
    forecast.

    ...Southern Plains...

    Increased ascent within the confines of a cold front pressing south
    through the Southern Plains will lead to a corridor of heavy
    rainfall developing upstream across the Caprock, moving southeast
    within the mean flow and expected upwind trajectory of any cold
    pool generation. Regional instability parameters point to a
    sufficiently buoyant environment along and ahead of the advancing
    cold front leading to a suitable MCS maintenance regime that will
    begin over Eastern NM and eventually work its way southeast through
    the rest of the Texas Caprock, Permian Basin, and Concho Valley by
    nightfall. HREF EAS probs for >1" are modest (20-40%) for the
    probability scheme, but a stronger neighborhood prob for >2"
    (50-80%) exists over that area referenced above. Progressive nature
    of the eventual complex should curb some of the threat, but
    scattered instances of flash flooding will be plausible where the
    MCS migrates overhead. The highest threat will likely be within
    more urban settings and over the Concho Valley where 3-hr FFG
    exceedance probs are highest (30-40%) due to antecedent soil
    moisture.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID ATLANTIC...

    ...20Z Update...

    Continued increases in the forecast rainfall from the 12Z guidance
    suite, sufficient instability for storms, ample upper level
    forcing from a strong shortwave that rapidly turns negatively
    tilted, and soil sensitivity due to recent heavy rainfall have all
    worked to increase the concern for flash flooding across portions=20
    of the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic Friday and Friday night.
    Generally, the convection will track from west to east...so the
    portion of the Slight in Kentucky really focuses on Friday morning,
    whereas the portion in northern New Jersey is primarily focused on
    after midnight Friday night.

    Soil sensitivity to flash flooding is high as soil moisture levels
    remain well above the normal for this time of year due to rain as
    recently as yesterday, and not including any shower and isolated
    thunderstorm activity probable around the DMV region the afternoon
    and this evening. Further, possible repeating rounds of heavy rain
    on Friday interacting with the terrain and full rivers should cause
    onset of flash flooding to occur sooner...closer to the rainfall
    start time...in these areas, making any potential flooding more
    hazardous in West Virginia. Further east, urban concerns will
    increase the potential impacts from flash flooding. The storms will
    also occur in the afternoon and evening, during the diurnal warmest
    time of day, which will add more instability for the storms to feed
    on. Given all of the above, have introduced a higher end Slight=20
    from eastern Kentucky to the Baltimore metro. The 12Z HREF suite
    shows an over 50% chance of exceeding 6-hour FFGs across the DMV.

    The Slight Risk area was expanded northeast across the Philadelphia
    Metro and much of northern New Jersey with this update. While the
    storms will impact this region Friday evening and into the
    overnight, here too recent heavy rainfall will make flash flooding
    more common compared to if the soils were dry. By Friday evening
    a coastal low will be rapidly forming, and so instability will be
    waning as the precipitation shield evolves into more of a comma
    shape, with the heaviest rains along the Delaware River on the
    cold/more stable side of the low. Nevertheless, remnant instability
    and long duration of rainfall will still cause widely scattered
    instances of flash flooding. Since the low will have a comma-shape
    Friday night, the dry slot will end the rainfall sooner in some
    areas. While there is some uncertainty where it will be, it looks
    to focus along the Jersey Shore. Thus the Slight was kept from the
    coast a bit expecting the rain to end there sooner than areas along
    the Delaware River.

    The surrounding Marginal Risk was also expanded into NYC and southern
    New England for Friday night. Here too the dry slot could limit
    rainfall amounts, especially the further east you go. Upslope into
    the terrain of Connecticut and recent rains around NYC could still
    cause locally heavy rain before the dry slot moves in.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A potent upper trough will slowly pivot eastward while taking on a
    more neutral tilt as it swings through the Great Lakes and Ohio
    Valley on Friday. At the surface, low pressure will develop within
    the middle of an evolving jet couplet in-of the eastern portion of
    the Ohio Valley with deterministic output placing the low nearby
    Eastern KY. The entire dynamic between sfc-500mb will play an
    integral role in the potential for heavy rainfall in areas of KY/WV
    the first half of the period, shifting eastward through the
    Shenandoah of VA by the afternoon and evening Friday before
    providing quite the convective posture over the DMV and points
    northeast. 00z suite has come in much more aggressive in the
    presentation of heavy rainfall across the above areas with a dual
    maxima signature present within the ensemble means. The first max
    is over Eastern KY into Southern WV thanks to intense large scale
    ascent being driven by a powerful shortwave rotating into the
    region along the base of the mean trough as it approaches the
    region. At the surface, a narrow tongue of surface based
    instability will be co-located within the mid and upper level
    ascent max being delivered by the trough, a product of a warm front
    lifting north ahead of the aforementioned surface low off to the
    west. A line of thunderstorm activity will likely transpire within
    proxy of the warm front leading to enhanced rainfall rates likely
    to spur totals between 1.5-3" with potentially higher over a span
    of 3-6 hrs. before a cold front sweeps through the area in wake of
    the lows progression to the east-northeast.

    Current FFG exceedance probs for both 3 and 6hr increments are
    pretty robust (>50%) within the corridor referenced above, along
    with some hourly rate exceedance probs between 50-80% between the
    12-18z time frame on Friday. The signature typically correlates to
    a better than average threat for flash flooding, especially when
    you account for the antecedent soil moisture and the complex
    topography situated over Eastern KY and Southern WV. This allowed
    for an addition of a SLGT risk across these two areas.

    Further east, soil moisture anomalies will remain elevated thanks
    to a barrage of rainfall the past 24 hrs. and very wet conditions
    overall the past 2 weeks. As the surface low matures on its trek to
    the east and the trough begins a more negative tilt to the west,
    expectation is the for the low to begin intensifying steadily with
    a sharper deformation axis beginning to take shape across the
    Central Mid Atlantic. Heavy rains on the western flank of the low
    will likely occur across the Northern and Central Shenandoah, an
    area that has been hit hard over the course of May and is already
    experiencing relatively higher stream flows. Current HREF depiction
    for 6hr exceedance probs over Northwestern VA are between 50-80%
    over the Blue Ridge and adjacent valley areas from Harrisonburg to
    just north of Winchester. A smaller max is co-located with the more
    urban centers of Northern VA towards the DC metro, but that is at
    the end of the hi-res temporal window. The assessment of the final
    6 hr period from the CAMs and the global deterministic and ensemble
    outputs in the final 12 hr time frame indicate a mass of heavy
    rainfall being depicted within the MD Piedmont to the Chesapeake.
    NAM Nest is incredibly bullish in its interpretation, likely due to
    the strong low to mid-level lapse rate signature across the area
    looking at forecast soundings, as well as persistent 250-750 J/kg
    MUCAPE still present prior to the cold front arrival. QPF output is
    around 1-2" currently for the DC/Balt Metro and surrounds for the
    period, a signal strong enough to warrant a targeted upgrade in the
    forecast risk. As a result and with coordination from the local
    Sterling, VA WFO, a SLGT risk was issued for the period across the
    above area.

    Heavy rainfall will occur further north as the low matures, but the
    instability gradient is fairly tight on the northwest periphery of
    the low as we move closer to Saturday morning. It's plausible
    places like Philadelphia and areas of Southern NJ and Southeast PA
    could see a targeted upgrade as well for the D2, but the signal is
    more borderline for those locales. The MRGL risk was maintained for
    those areas up to Northern NJ, but will be something to monitor as
    we move closer.


    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND...

    ...20Z Update...

    Very few changes were needed to the inherited Marginal Risk, with
    maybe a small southward adjustment across Massachusetts, where
    rainfall occurring just before the start of the period 12Z Saturday
    will be ongoing into the start of the D3 period. The surface low
    will be well-formed by 12Z Saturday, with surface pressures
    dropping into the 980 mb range. However, instability will be
    lacking as New England is on the "cold" side of the low...so almost
    all of the rainfall will be stratiform. Terrain interactions will
    locally increase rainfall rates, so the Marginal, while low-end and low-confidence, remains in place.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Powerful surface low across the Mid Atlantic on D2 will motion to
    the northeast, eventually dropping down into the 980s as it
    occludes and drifts north over New England. Residual heavy rains
    will occur across parts of Northern New England with the heaviest
    rainfall likely over Northern NH and ME, especially within the
    northeastern flank of the low where WCB process will advect deeper
    moisture poleward with weak buoyancy likely remaining over the
    region during the first 12 hrs of the D3 period. Totals of 1-2"
    with locally higher are forecast over the above zones leading to
    localized flash flood potential given the complexity of the terrain
    impacted and relatively good dynamics at play.

    The MRGL risk inherited was only adjusted on the western half of
    the risk as trends have pushed the heavier rain a little further
    east compared to previous forecasts. The area over Central and
    Western ME is the most susceptible in this pattern with potentially
    greater impact into Southern New England if the low slows down and
    brings a stronger convective output towards Eastern MA and RI the
    front end of D3. Will be an area to assess closely in the coming
    updates, but maintained the nil there for now.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8U74XZqSzgYdpw2M0kP6k4vlfs9HcqqvGAYIgAPcKJJS= gQRV2i8bxAmIfFYrJgRD1PvYstKKdHBRdJtHPxWhQP43my8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8U74XZqSzgYdpw2M0kP6k4vlfs9HcqqvGAYIgAPcKJJS= gQRV2i8bxAmIfFYrJgRD1PvYstKKdHBRdJtHPxWhdxF1nio$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8U74XZqSzgYdpw2M0kP6k4vlfs9HcqqvGAYIgAPcKJJS= gQRV2i8bxAmIfFYrJgRD1PvYstKKdHBRdJtHPxWhHvIOpFQ$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 29 21:30:26 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 292130
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    530 PM EDT Thu May 29 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 2124Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Fri May 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    21z Update:
    A Slight risk was added to much of central TX with this update.
    Convection should expand in coverage and grow upscale into an MCS
    or convective cluster or two tonight. Generally looking like a
    forward propagating convective system, which should limit the
    extent/magnitude of flash flooding. However a few cell mergers and
    high rainfall rates should be enough for isolated to scattered FFG
    exceedance. This evolution is supported by both the latest HREF and
    REFS ensemble systems, as well as recent runs of the HRRR and RRFS.
    Both the HREF and REFS show neighborhood probabilities of exceeding
    3" in the 40-60% range over much of the Slight risk area...with
    much of this rain falling in just an hour or two. These rainfall=20
    rates should be high enough to produce isolated to scattered flash=20 flooding...especially over an more sensitive urban or low lying=20
    areas.

    Chenard

    ...16Z Update...

    Some reshuffling of the large Marginal Risk across a large section
    of the country was done with this update. The inherited Marginal
    was removed from the Texas Gulf Coast and most of Louisiana and
    Mississippi with this update, as the area behind the ongoing
    convection tracking along the Gulf Coast should stay dry and
    relatively storm-free this afternoon with northerly flow hampering
    the moisture in this area somewhat. There is also good signal among
    the CAMs for a minimum of precipitation in this area through 12Z.

    However, the Marginal was expanded to include much of the southern
    Appalachians and much of the Florida Peninsula with this update;
    both for the same reason. Afternoon convection is likely to develop
    in these areas, which while unlikely to organize, could be slow-
    moving, tied to the sea breeze in FL, or the terrain in the Apps,
    which could lead to a localized prolonged period of heavy rain.
    Some sensitivity to flooding in these areas from moist soils would
    also support an isolated flash flooding threat.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys...

    A shortwave currently analyzed across the Central Plains will
    continue to progress eastward overnight under the base of a broad
    ULL situated over the Midwest. Increased mid and upper forcing will
    aid in scattered convection through the course of the period in the
    area spanning from Eastern KS through the Central Ohio Valley.
    Some of the stronger convective cores will be capable of locally
    enhanced rainfall rates between 1-2"/hr at peak intensity leading
    to isolated flash flood prospects in-of the above zone. The
    positive news in the setup is the moisture anomalies across the
    region of interest remain near to just slightly above normal with
    NAEFS anomalies signaling less than +1 deviation for the area.
    This will limit the upper threshold of flood concerns for the
    setup, but some of the heavier cores could still cause some flash
    flood concerns within more urbanized settings and over some of the
    terrain focused areas of Southern MO, as well as Eastern KY/TN. The
    previous MRGL risk was generally maintained with only some minor
    adjustments on the northern periphery of the risk area.

    ...Southeast U.S...

    A shortwave trough over the Southern Plains will roll eastward
    overnight and through the period with focused ascent within the
    confines of the Southeastern U.S. Weak jet coupling from a vacating
    jet over the Tennessee Valley and approaching jet from the west
    will create a period of stronger forcing in-of the Central Gulf
    Coast early this morning with convective activity rooted in a
    narrow corridor of elevated theta_E's stemming from southerly flow
    near the coast. Expectation is for scattered heavy convection to
    initiate across Southern LA and migrate eastward with the stronger
    forcing advancing across the Southeast. Scattered thunderstorms
    will be found across off the Southeast by late-morning and beyond,
    but the progressive nature of the threat should limit the chances
    for widespread flash flooding. QPF mean between 1-2" is forecast
    along the Central Gulf Coast with some deterministic maxima between
    4-5" showing up within the 00z CAMs. This put modest (30-50%) HREF
    neighborhood probs for >3" within that zone between New Orleans to
    Mobile, but even still that signature is not going to be enough to
    move the needle outside a MRGL threat. A cold front will sweep
    through the region from northwest to southeast leading to a sharp
    shift in the environmental moisture availability and limiting
    instability region-wide. This will ultimately end the threat for
    any convection and put an end to any risk in place. For now, the
    MRGL risk remains across the Southeastern U.S. with emphasis on the
    Central Gulf Coast for best threat in the period.

    Further east over Southeastern SC, another round of strong
    thunderstorms will likely occur late-afternoon with the best flash
    flood risk likely within more urban zones like Charleston and small
    areas like Hilton Head. This actually the zone with the highest >3"
    probs in the country, but again, the threat is very localized for
    flash flood concerns considering the sandier soils prompting higher
    FFG's. In this case, the threat will continue to be more in-line
    with a MRGL risk leading to general maintenance of the previous
    forecast.

    ...Southern Plains...

    Increased ascent within the confines of a cold front pressing south
    through the Southern Plains will lead to a corridor of heavy
    rainfall developing upstream across the Caprock, moving southeast
    within the mean flow and expected upwind trajectory of any cold
    pool generation. Regional instability parameters point to a
    sufficiently buoyant environment along and ahead of the advancing
    cold front leading to a suitable MCS maintenance regime that will
    begin over Eastern NM and eventually work its way southeast through
    the rest of the Texas Caprock, Permian Basin, and Concho Valley by
    nightfall. HREF EAS probs for >1" are modest (20-40%) for the
    probability scheme, but a stronger neighborhood prob for >2"
    (50-80%) exists over that area referenced above. Progressive nature
    of the eventual complex should curb some of the threat, but
    scattered instances of flash flooding will be plausible where the
    MCS migrates overhead. The highest threat will likely be within
    more urban settings and over the Concho Valley where 3-hr FFG
    exceedance probs are highest (30-40%) due to antecedent soil
    moisture.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID ATLANTIC...

    ...20Z Update...

    Continued increases in the forecast rainfall from the 12Z guidance
    suite, sufficient instability for storms, ample upper level
    forcing from a strong shortwave that rapidly turns negatively
    tilted, and soil sensitivity due to recent heavy rainfall have all
    worked to increase the concern for flash flooding across portions
    of the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic Friday and Friday night.
    Generally, the convection will track from west to east...so the
    portion of the Slight in Kentucky really focuses on Friday morning,
    whereas the portion in northern New Jersey is primarily focused on
    after midnight Friday night.

    Soil sensitivity to flash flooding is high as soil moisture levels
    remain well above the normal for this time of year due to rain as
    recently as yesterday, and not including any shower and isolated
    thunderstorm activity probable around the DMV region the afternoon
    and this evening. Further, possible repeating rounds of heavy rain
    on Friday interacting with the terrain and full rivers should cause
    onset of flash flooding to occur sooner...closer to the rainfall
    start time...in these areas, making any potential flooding more
    hazardous in West Virginia. Further east, urban concerns will
    increase the potential impacts from flash flooding. The storms will
    also occur in the afternoon and evening, during the diurnal warmest
    time of day, which will add more instability for the storms to feed
    on. Given all of the above, have introduced a higher end Slight
    from eastern Kentucky to the Baltimore metro. The 12Z HREF suite
    shows an over 50% chance of exceeding 6-hour FFGs across the DMV.

    The Slight Risk area was expanded northeast across the Philadelphia
    Metro and much of northern New Jersey with this update. While the
    storms will impact this region Friday evening and into the
    overnight, here too recent heavy rainfall will make flash flooding
    more common compared to if the soils were dry. By Friday evening
    a coastal low will be rapidly forming, and so instability will be
    waning as the precipitation shield evolves into more of a comma
    shape, with the heaviest rains along the Delaware River on the
    cold/more stable side of the low. Nevertheless, remnant instability
    and long duration of rainfall will still cause widely scattered
    instances of flash flooding. Since the low will have a comma-shape
    Friday night, the dry slot will end the rainfall sooner in some
    areas. While there is some uncertainty where it will be, it looks
    to focus along the Jersey Shore. Thus the Slight was kept from the
    coast a bit expecting the rain to end there sooner than areas along
    the Delaware River.

    The surrounding Marginal Risk was also expanded into NYC and southern
    New England for Friday night. Here too the dry slot could limit
    rainfall amounts, especially the further east you go. Upslope into
    the terrain of Connecticut and recent rains around NYC could still
    cause locally heavy rain before the dry slot moves in.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A potent upper trough will slowly pivot eastward while taking on a
    more neutral tilt as it swings through the Great Lakes and Ohio
    Valley on Friday. At the surface, low pressure will develop within
    the middle of an evolving jet couplet in-of the eastern portion of
    the Ohio Valley with deterministic output placing the low nearby
    Eastern KY. The entire dynamic between sfc-500mb will play an
    integral role in the potential for heavy rainfall in areas of KY/WV
    the first half of the period, shifting eastward through the
    Shenandoah of VA by the afternoon and evening Friday before
    providing quite the convective posture over the DMV and points
    northeast. 00z suite has come in much more aggressive in the
    presentation of heavy rainfall across the above areas with a dual
    maxima signature present within the ensemble means. The first max
    is over Eastern KY into Southern WV thanks to intense large scale
    ascent being driven by a powerful shortwave rotating into the
    region along the base of the mean trough as it approaches the
    region. At the surface, a narrow tongue of surface based
    instability will be co-located within the mid and upper level
    ascent max being delivered by the trough, a product of a warm front
    lifting north ahead of the aforementioned surface low off to the
    west. A line of thunderstorm activity will likely transpire within
    proxy of the warm front leading to enhanced rainfall rates likely
    to spur totals between 1.5-3" with potentially higher over a span
    of 3-6 hrs. before a cold front sweeps through the area in wake of
    the lows progression to the east-northeast.

    Current FFG exceedance probs for both 3 and 6hr increments are
    pretty robust (>50%) within the corridor referenced above, along
    with some hourly rate exceedance probs between 50-80% between the
    12-18z time frame on Friday. The signature typically correlates to
    a better than average threat for flash flooding, especially when
    you account for the antecedent soil moisture and the complex
    topography situated over Eastern KY and Southern WV. This allowed
    for an addition of a SLGT risk across these two areas.

    Further east, soil moisture anomalies will remain elevated thanks
    to a barrage of rainfall the past 24 hrs. and very wet conditions
    overall the past 2 weeks. As the surface low matures on its trek to
    the east and the trough begins a more negative tilt to the west,
    expectation is the for the low to begin intensifying steadily with
    a sharper deformation axis beginning to take shape across the
    Central Mid Atlantic. Heavy rains on the western flank of the low
    will likely occur across the Northern and Central Shenandoah, an
    area that has been hit hard over the course of May and is already
    experiencing relatively higher stream flows. Current HREF depiction
    for 6hr exceedance probs over Northwestern VA are between 50-80%
    over the Blue Ridge and adjacent valley areas from Harrisonburg to
    just north of Winchester. A smaller max is co-located with the more
    urban centers of Northern VA towards the DC metro, but that is at
    the end of the hi-res temporal window. The assessment of the final
    6 hr period from the CAMs and the global deterministic and ensemble
    outputs in the final 12 hr time frame indicate a mass of heavy
    rainfall being depicted within the MD Piedmont to the Chesapeake.
    NAM Nest is incredibly bullish in its interpretation, likely due to
    the strong low to mid-level lapse rate signature across the area
    looking at forecast soundings, as well as persistent 250-750 J/kg
    MUCAPE still present prior to the cold front arrival. QPF output is
    around 1-2" currently for the DC/Balt Metro and surrounds for the
    period, a signal strong enough to warrant a targeted upgrade in the
    forecast risk. As a result and with coordination from the local
    Sterling, VA WFO, a SLGT risk was issued for the period across the
    above area.

    Heavy rainfall will occur further north as the low matures, but the
    instability gradient is fairly tight on the northwest periphery of
    the low as we move closer to Saturday morning. It's plausible
    places like Philadelphia and areas of Southern NJ and Southeast PA
    could see a targeted upgrade as well for the D2, but the signal is
    more borderline for those locales. The MRGL risk was maintained for
    those areas up to Northern NJ, but will be something to monitor as
    we move closer.


    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND...

    ...20Z Update...

    Very few changes were needed to the inherited Marginal Risk, with
    maybe a small southward adjustment across Massachusetts, where
    rainfall occurring just before the start of the period 12Z Saturday
    will be ongoing into the start of the D3 period. The surface low
    will be well-formed by 12Z Saturday, with surface pressures
    dropping into the 980 mb range. However, instability will be
    lacking as New England is on the "cold" side of the low...so almost
    all of the rainfall will be stratiform. Terrain interactions will
    locally increase rainfall rates, so the Marginal, while low-end and low-confidence, remains in place.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Powerful surface low across the Mid Atlantic on D2 will motion to
    the northeast, eventually dropping down into the 980s as it
    occludes and drifts north over New England. Residual heavy rains
    will occur across parts of Northern New England with the heaviest
    rainfall likely over Northern NH and ME, especially within the
    northeastern flank of the low where WCB process will advect deeper
    moisture poleward with weak buoyancy likely remaining over the
    region during the first 12 hrs of the D3 period. Totals of 1-2"
    with locally higher are forecast over the above zones leading to
    localized flash flood potential given the complexity of the terrain
    impacted and relatively good dynamics at play.

    The MRGL risk inherited was only adjusted on the western half of
    the risk as trends have pushed the heavier rain a little further
    east compared to previous forecasts. The area over Central and
    Western ME is the most susceptible in this pattern with potentially
    greater impact into Southern New England if the low slows down and
    brings a stronger convective output towards Eastern MA and RI the
    front end of D3. Will be an area to assess closely in the coming
    updates, but maintained the nil there for now.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-1QWFYdJTb4Tz0bFfyHRNUoruZ87lfhHvG__4A2bPwjo= X7DRH7F3ruHugBQeHQFK0E2zMuhFPHe67GZANi1vOmN5VYE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-1QWFYdJTb4Tz0bFfyHRNUoruZ87lfhHvG__4A2bPwjo= X7DRH7F3ruHugBQeHQFK0E2zMuhFPHe67GZANi1vZahGEYw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-1QWFYdJTb4Tz0bFfyHRNUoruZ87lfhHvG__4A2bPwjo= X7DRH7F3ruHugBQeHQFK0E2zMuhFPHe67GZANi1vs9-e-eY$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 30 01:00:19 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 300052
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    852 PM EDT Thu May 29 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Fri May 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    A Slight risk was maintained across central TX. Convection is
    expanding in coverage this evening along a southward shifting cold
    front. This activity should continue to expand in coverage and=20
    grow upscale into an MCS or convective cluster or two tonight.=20
    Generally looking like a forward propagating convective system,=20
    which should limit the extent/magnitude of flash flooding. However=20
    a few cell mergers this evening as convection organizes will=20
    likely lead to some flash flood risk. Even once activity becomes=20
    more progressive high rainfall rates should be enough for isolated
    to scattered FFG exceedance, especially where cell mergers briefly
    extend rainfall duration. Recent HRRR runs have indicated some=20
    upstream development overnight near the Rio Grande, which does seem
    plausible given forecast increase in low level moisture transport=20
    and instability around 4000 j/kg. If this does occur, and then=20
    merges with the approaching MCS (as the HRRR indicates) then a more
    substantial flash flood risk could evolve later tonight near the=20
    Rio Grande in south central TX.

    A Marginal risk was maintained across portions of the eastern=20
    Carolinas into far southeastern VA. Convection will continue to=20
    pose a localized flash flood risk this evening, although the=20
    activity over NC and VA is expected to weaken fairly rapidly this=20
    evening, diminishing the risk.

    The approach of a strong shortwave will potentially bring a=20
    localized flash flood risk to portions of KY/TN and southern IL/IN
    later tonight as well. Limited instability will keep rainfall=20
    rates in check...however the very dynamic nature of the approaching
    shortwave should still allow for some heavier convective elements=20
    within the broader rain shield. Rainfall could locally approach or=20
    exceed 2", potentially enough for some minor flood concerns,=20
    especially over any more sensitive urban or low lying areas.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID ATLANTIC...

    ...20Z Update...

    Continued increases in the forecast rainfall from the 12Z guidance
    suite, sufficient instability for storms, ample upper level
    forcing from a strong shortwave that rapidly turns negatively
    tilted, and soil sensitivity due to recent heavy rainfall have all
    worked to increase the concern for flash flooding across portions
    of the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic Friday and Friday night.
    Generally, the convection will track from west to east...so the
    portion of the Slight in Kentucky really focuses on Friday morning,
    whereas the portion in northern New Jersey is primarily focused on
    after midnight Friday night.

    Soil sensitivity to flash flooding is high as soil moisture levels
    remain well above the normal for this time of year due to rain as
    recently as yesterday, and not including any shower and isolated
    thunderstorm activity probable around the DMV region the afternoon
    and this evening. Further, possible repeating rounds of heavy rain
    on Friday interacting with the terrain and full rivers should cause
    onset of flash flooding to occur sooner...closer to the rainfall
    start time...in these areas, making any potential flooding more
    hazardous in West Virginia. Further east, urban concerns will
    increase the potential impacts from flash flooding. The storms will
    also occur in the afternoon and evening, during the diurnal warmest
    time of day, which will add more instability for the storms to feed
    on. Given all of the above, have introduced a higher end Slight
    from eastern Kentucky to the Baltimore metro. The 12Z HREF suite
    shows an over 50% chance of exceeding 6-hour FFGs across the DMV.

    The Slight Risk area was expanded northeast across the Philadelphia
    Metro and much of northern New Jersey with this update. While the
    storms will impact this region Friday evening and into the
    overnight, here too recent heavy rainfall will make flash flooding
    more common compared to if the soils were dry. By Friday evening
    a coastal low will be rapidly forming, and so instability will be
    waning as the precipitation shield evolves into more of a comma
    shape, with the heaviest rains along the Delaware River on the
    cold/more stable side of the low. Nevertheless, remnant instability
    and long duration of rainfall will still cause widely scattered
    instances of flash flooding. Since the low will have a comma-shape
    Friday night, the dry slot will end the rainfall sooner in some
    areas. While there is some uncertainty where it will be, it looks
    to focus along the Jersey Shore. Thus the Slight was kept from the
    coast a bit expecting the rain to end there sooner than areas along
    the Delaware River.

    The surrounding Marginal Risk was also expanded into NYC and southern
    New England for Friday night. Here too the dry slot could limit
    rainfall amounts, especially the further east you go. Upslope into
    the terrain of Connecticut and recent rains around NYC could still
    cause locally heavy rain before the dry slot moves in.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A potent upper trough will slowly pivot eastward while taking on a
    more neutral tilt as it swings through the Great Lakes and Ohio
    Valley on Friday. At the surface, low pressure will develop within
    the middle of an evolving jet couplet in-of the eastern portion of
    the Ohio Valley with deterministic output placing the low nearby
    Eastern KY. The entire dynamic between sfc-500mb will play an
    integral role in the potential for heavy rainfall in areas of KY/WV
    the first half of the period, shifting eastward through the
    Shenandoah of VA by the afternoon and evening Friday before
    providing quite the convective posture over the DMV and points
    northeast. 00z suite has come in much more aggressive in the
    presentation of heavy rainfall across the above areas with a dual
    maxima signature present within the ensemble means. The first max
    is over Eastern KY into Southern WV thanks to intense large scale
    ascent being driven by a powerful shortwave rotating into the
    region along the base of the mean trough as it approaches the
    region. At the surface, a narrow tongue of surface based
    instability will be co-located within the mid and upper level
    ascent max being delivered by the trough, a product of a warm front
    lifting north ahead of the aforementioned surface low off to the
    west. A line of thunderstorm activity will likely transpire within
    proxy of the warm front leading to enhanced rainfall rates likely
    to spur totals between 1.5-3" with potentially higher over a span
    of 3-6 hrs. before a cold front sweeps through the area in wake of
    the lows progression to the east-northeast.

    Current FFG exceedance probs for both 3 and 6hr increments are
    pretty robust (>50%) within the corridor referenced above, along
    with some hourly rate exceedance probs between 50-80% between the
    12-18z time frame on Friday. The signature typically correlates to
    a better than average threat for flash flooding, especially when
    you account for the antecedent soil moisture and the complex
    topography situated over Eastern KY and Southern WV. This allowed
    for an addition of a SLGT risk across these two areas.

    Further east, soil moisture anomalies will remain elevated thanks
    to a barrage of rainfall the past 24 hrs. and very wet conditions
    overall the past 2 weeks. As the surface low matures on its trek to
    the east and the trough begins a more negative tilt to the west,
    expectation is the for the low to begin intensifying steadily with
    a sharper deformation axis beginning to take shape across the
    Central Mid Atlantic. Heavy rains on the western flank of the low
    will likely occur across the Northern and Central Shenandoah, an
    area that has been hit hard over the course of May and is already
    experiencing relatively higher stream flows. Current HREF depiction
    for 6hr exceedance probs over Northwestern VA are between 50-80%
    over the Blue Ridge and adjacent valley areas from Harrisonburg to
    just north of Winchester. A smaller max is co-located with the more
    urban centers of Northern VA towards the DC metro, but that is at
    the end of the hi-res temporal window. The assessment of the final
    6 hr period from the CAMs and the global deterministic and ensemble
    outputs in the final 12 hr time frame indicate a mass of heavy
    rainfall being depicted within the MD Piedmont to the Chesapeake.
    NAM Nest is incredibly bullish in its interpretation, likely due to
    the strong low to mid-level lapse rate signature across the area
    looking at forecast soundings, as well as persistent 250-750 J/kg
    MUCAPE still present prior to the cold front arrival. QPF output is
    around 1-2" currently for the DC/Balt Metro and surrounds for the
    period, a signal strong enough to warrant a targeted upgrade in the
    forecast risk. As a result and with coordination from the local
    Sterling, VA WFO, a SLGT risk was issued for the period across the
    above area.

    Heavy rainfall will occur further north as the low matures, but the
    instability gradient is fairly tight on the northwest periphery of
    the low as we move closer to Saturday morning. It's plausible
    places like Philadelphia and areas of Southern NJ and Southeast PA
    could see a targeted upgrade as well for the D2, but the signal is
    more borderline for those locales. The MRGL risk was maintained for
    those areas up to Northern NJ, but will be something to monitor as
    we move closer.


    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND...

    ...20Z Update...

    Very few changes were needed to the inherited Marginal Risk, with
    maybe a small southward adjustment across Massachusetts, where
    rainfall occurring just before the start of the period 12Z Saturday
    will be ongoing into the start of the D3 period. The surface low
    will be well-formed by 12Z Saturday, with surface pressures
    dropping into the 980 mb range. However, instability will be
    lacking as New England is on the "cold" side of the low...so almost
    all of the rainfall will be stratiform. Terrain interactions will
    locally increase rainfall rates, so the Marginal, while low-end and low-confidence, remains in place.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Powerful surface low across the Mid Atlantic on D2 will motion to
    the northeast, eventually dropping down into the 980s as it
    occludes and drifts north over New England. Residual heavy rains
    will occur across parts of Northern New England with the heaviest
    rainfall likely over Northern NH and ME, especially within the
    northeastern flank of the low where WCB process will advect deeper
    moisture poleward with weak buoyancy likely remaining over the
    region during the first 12 hrs of the D3 period. Totals of 1-2"
    with locally higher are forecast over the above zones leading to
    localized flash flood potential given the complexity of the terrain
    impacted and relatively good dynamics at play.

    The MRGL risk inherited was only adjusted on the western half of
    the risk as trends have pushed the heavier rain a little further
    east compared to previous forecasts. The area over Central and
    Western ME is the most susceptible in this pattern with potentially
    greater impact into Southern New England if the low slows down and
    brings a stronger convective output towards Eastern MA and RI the
    front end of D3. Will be an area to assess closely in the coming
    updates, but maintained the nil there for now.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!63NFVABJhmYrOUOd7zHTjMpH23W1fpdAmZB-r34mWoFI= 8_hdUvBtofODMyaA5o22SjbSif2G4QmL3LIc-85W2uV-3hg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!63NFVABJhmYrOUOd7zHTjMpH23W1fpdAmZB-r34mWoFI= 8_hdUvBtofODMyaA5o22SjbSif2G4QmL3LIc-85WNS55CCc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!63NFVABJhmYrOUOd7zHTjMpH23W1fpdAmZB-r34mWoFI= 8_hdUvBtofODMyaA5o22SjbSif2G4QmL3LIc-85WhL3XEGo$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 30 08:29:53 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 300829
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    429 AM EDT Fri May 30 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE MID
    ATLANTIC/OHIO VALLEY AND A PORTION OF ADJACENT NEW YORK STATE...

    Maintained a Slight Risk area over portions of the Ohio Valley and
    the Mid-Atlantic region as well as a portion of adjacent New York=20
    state as low pressure forms and deepens/strengthens across the area
    today in response to ample upper forcing. The resulting showers=20
    and thunderstorms should be capable of producing heavy rainfall=20
    along the immediate track of the surface low pressure center and in
    the unstable airmass in the warm sector of the low later today and
    tonight. The risk of flash flooding will be greatest where there=20
    is overlap of the heavier rainfall and where soil has been made=20
    prone to run off by recent heavy rainfall. With the convection=20
    tracking from west to east...the portion of the Slight risk area in
    Kentucky really focuses early today while the portion in northern=20
    New Jersey is primarily focused during the overnight hours from
    late tonight into very early Saturday morning.=20

    Repeating rounds of heavy rain today interacting with the terrain=20
    and full rivers should cause onset of flash flooding to occur=20
    sooner to the start of the rainfall...making any potential=20
    flooding more hazardous in West Virginia while flooding concerns
    farther east will be based around urbanization. The storms will=20
    also occur in the afternoon and evening, during the diurnal warmest
    time of day, which will add more instability for the storms to=20
    feed upon.=20

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW ENGLAND...

    A surface low pressure system across the Mid Atlantic on Friday=20
    will continue to strengthen as it makes its way to the northeast on
    Saturday. Concern for heavy rains lingers across parts of New=20
    England with the heaviest rainfall likely over Northern NH and ME,=20 especially within the northeastern flank of the low where the warm=20
    conveyor belt advects deeper moisture poleward with weak buoyancy=20
    likely remaining over the region into Saturday evening. Additional=20
    rainfall amounts of 1 to 2 inches...with locally higher=20
    amounts...remain in the forecast. That amount of rain could lead to localiz=
    ed
    flash flooding given the complex terrain impacted and relatively=20
    good dynamics at play.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST UNITED STATES...

    Showers and thunderstorms will become more numerous over parts of
    the Southwest US as a plume of moisture overspreads the region=20
    from the south...with the anomalous moist airmass allowing some of
    the storms to produce locally heavy rainfall and the risk of flash
    flooding. Precipitable water values of an inch or greater should=20
    already be in place across southwest Arizona and adjacent areas of=20
    the California deserts at the start of the Day 3 period...90+=20
    percentile values for this time of year...with moisture continuing=20
    to stream into the region. With the flow aloft becoming=20
    increasingly diffluent to the east of closed low off the California
    coast at the same time that moisture continues to stream into the=20 region...storms should be in an environment conducive for heavy=20
    rainfall and the potential for repeat convection/training storms=20
    leading to the risk of flash flooding. One concern is the=20
    increasing moisture may result in sufficient cloud cover to delay=20
    or inhibit the convective initiation...but there is enough support=20
    in the guidance to support a Marginal risk at this time frame.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4z_vIr6PiXR1dgiguKyhohLllSla7WLNcWqnsVJ9JLpJ= nCXiPzQjbJ0GmZ_SMoaQOlDVvEhaTUNDPG9F9ZafRGwShwo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4z_vIr6PiXR1dgiguKyhohLllSla7WLNcWqnsVJ9JLpJ= nCXiPzQjbJ0GmZ_SMoaQOlDVvEhaTUNDPG9F9ZafA7M17Es$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4z_vIr6PiXR1dgiguKyhohLllSla7WLNcWqnsVJ9JLpJ= nCXiPzQjbJ0GmZ_SMoaQOlDVvEhaTUNDPG9F9ZafYQIUB4w$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 30 15:59:35 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 301559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Fri May 30 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    OHIO VALLEY THROUGH THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    The regional satellite imagery this morning shows a potent upper
    low moving across Ohio, and it is this feature which will help
    manifest the flash flood risk from the Ohio Valley into the Mid-
    Atlantic and Northeast today. As this low tracks northeast today,
    it will move along a baroclinic zone/surface front, helping to
    spawn a surface wave of low pressure. This low will track E/NE
    along the boundary, moving from eastern KY this morning to western
    New England by Saturday morning.

    As this low tracks northeast, it will encounter increasingly
    favorable thermodynamics, into which forcing will become more
    intense, leading to both an expansion and intensification of
    convection. The simulated reflectivity from the available CAMs are
    relatively similar with widespread showers and thunderstorms
    blossoming ahead of the low, and becoming most impressive from
    Maryland and points northeast into western New England. This is
    supported by more robust thermodynamics being drawn northward,
    characterized by a ribbon of elevated PWs of 1.25 to 1.5 inches,
    highest east of I-95, and MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. This will support
    rainfall rates for which the HREF indicates have a high a moderate
    to high chance (40-70%) of exceeding 1"/hr, and 10-20% chance of
    exceeding 2"/hr, enhanced by increasingly impressive synoptic
    ascent aided by the LLJ and favorable LFQ of a strengthening jet
    streak.

    In general, convection which develops downstream of the low will
    be progressive on 0-6km mean winds of 20-30 kts. However, aligned=20
    Corfidi vectors suggest some short-term training is possible which=20
    could lengthen these rain rates, or result in repeating rounds in=20
    some areas. Additionally, as bulk shear surges to 40-50 kts,=20
    storms will likely organize into clusters, with an even better=20
    chance for some training along I-95 from Washington, D.C. into=20
    western New England. The simulated reflectivity suggests as the=20
    surface low wraps up a dry slot will pivot in behind the primary=20
    clusters, somewhat reducing the excessive rain risk, but this is=20
    lower confidence, and a stripe of heavy rain of 1-3" is expected,=20
    with locally more than 4" (or even 5") possible from Maryland=20
    through New York as reflected by both the NBMv5.0 and the HREF. The
    inherited SLGT risk was modified only slightly for recent=20
    guidance, and expanded a bit northeast into New England.

    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW ENGLAND...

    A surface low pressure system across the Mid Atlantic on Friday
    will continue to strengthen as it makes its way to the northeast on
    Saturday. Concern for heavy rains lingers across parts of New
    England with the heaviest rainfall likely over Northern NH and ME,
    especially within the northeastern flank of the low where the warm
    conveyor belt advects deeper moisture poleward with weak buoyancy
    likely remaining over the region into Saturday evening. Additional
    rainfall amounts of 1 to 2 inches...with locally higher
    amounts...remain in the forecast. That amount of rain could lead to localiz=
    ed
    flash flooding given the complex terrain impacted and relatively
    good dynamics at play.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST UNITED STATES...

    Showers and thunderstorms will become more numerous over parts of
    the Southwest US as a plume of moisture overspreads the region
    from the south...with the anomalous moist airmass allowing some of
    the storms to produce locally heavy rainfall and the risk of flash
    flooding. Precipitable water values of an inch or greater should
    already be in place across southwest Arizona and adjacent areas of
    the California deserts at the start of the Day 3 period...90+
    percentile values for this time of year...with moisture continuing
    to stream into the region. With the flow aloft becoming
    increasingly diffluent to the east of closed low off the California
    coast at the same time that moisture continues to stream into the region...storms should be in an environment conducive for heavy
    rainfall and the potential for repeat convection/training storms
    leading to the risk of flash flooding. One concern is the
    increasing moisture may result in sufficient cloud cover to delay
    or inhibit the convective initiation...but there is enough support
    in the guidance to support a Marginal risk at this time frame.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4v4H3Ywx-dNO5dc1rzfR993S_OqfhFnio8PRaIs4xgdb= ESa5452Si3mc-K7EFeUL3R2LIFxFYXJ_yShCOpbkDuywbm8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4v4H3Ywx-dNO5dc1rzfR993S_OqfhFnio8PRaIs4xgdb= ESa5452Si3mc-K7EFeUL3R2LIFxFYXJ_yShCOpbkG9EGjN0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4v4H3Ywx-dNO5dc1rzfR993S_OqfhFnio8PRaIs4xgdb= ESa5452Si3mc-K7EFeUL3R2LIFxFYXJ_yShCOpbkNTewaAA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 30 19:07:03 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 301859
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    259 PM EDT Fri May 30 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri May 30 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    OHIO VALLEY THROUGH THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    The regional satellite imagery this morning shows a potent upper
    low moving across Ohio, and it is this feature which will help
    manifest the flash flood risk from the Ohio Valley into the Mid-
    Atlantic and Northeast today. As this low tracks northeast today,
    it will move along a baroclinic zone/surface front, helping to
    spawn a surface wave of low pressure. This low will track E/NE
    along the boundary, moving from eastern KY this morning to western
    New England by Saturday morning.

    As this low tracks northeast, it will encounter increasingly
    favorable thermodynamics, into which forcing will become more
    intense, leading to both an expansion and intensification of
    convection. The simulated reflectivity from the available CAMs are
    relatively similar with widespread showers and thunderstorms
    blossoming ahead of the low, and becoming most impressive from
    Maryland and points northeast into western New England. This is
    supported by more robust thermodynamics being drawn northward,
    characterized by a ribbon of elevated PWs of 1.25 to 1.5 inches,
    highest east of I-95, and MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. This will support
    rainfall rates for which the HREF indicates have a high a moderate
    to high chance (40-70%) of exceeding 1"/hr, and 10-20% chance of
    exceeding 2"/hr, enhanced by increasingly impressive synoptic
    ascent aided by the LLJ and favorable LFQ of a strengthening jet
    streak.

    In general, convection which develops downstream of the low will
    be progressive on 0-6km mean winds of 20-30 kts. However, aligned
    Corfidi vectors suggest some short-term training is possible which
    could lengthen these rain rates, or result in repeating rounds in
    some areas. Additionally, as bulk shear surges to 40-50 kts,
    storms will likely organize into clusters, with an even better
    chance for some training along I-95 from Washington, D.C. into
    western New England. The simulated reflectivity suggests as the
    surface low wraps up a dry slot will pivot in behind the primary
    clusters, somewhat reducing the excessive rain risk, but this is
    lower confidence, and a stripe of heavy rain of 1-3" is expected,
    with locally more than 4" (or even 5") possible from Maryland
    through New York as reflected by both the NBMv5.0 and the HREF. The
    inherited SLGT risk was modified only slightly for recent
    guidance, and expanded a bit northeast into New England.

    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF=20
    NEW ENGLAND...

    ...New England...=20
    Surface low pressure deepening in response to favorable ascent=20
    from the RRQ of an upper jet streak, height falls, and residual=20 baroclinicity along a cold front. This surface low will intensify=20
    as it tracks northward through New England, while the low-level=20
    flow downstream advects greater moisture and instability northward.
    Despite the impressive system, thermodynamics are progged to remain
    modest as reflected by forecast PWs of 1-1.25 inches, around the
    75th percentile according to the SPC sounding climatology, and
    MUCAPE of around 250 J/kg. This will support generally modest
    rainfall rates of 0.5"/hr, but locally higher is possible,
    especially within any organized convection on 30-35 kts of bulk
    shear. Storms will generally track northward at around 25 kts, but
    some short term training is possible which could additionally
    enhance the duration of any higher rainfall rates. This will
    produce swaths of 1-2" of rain as reflected by modest ensemble
    cluster probabilities, with a local maxima progged across VT where
    the deformation axis on the back side of this low will pivot,
    leading to longer duration of rainfall, despite more modest
    rainfall rates through Saturday evening, atop slightly wetter soils
    and sensitive terrain. After coordination with WFO BTV, opted to
    include a targeted slight risk where the greatest potential for
    persistent moderate to heavy rain overlaps the sensitive terrain,
    and where the highest HREF probabilities for more than 3" of rain
    exist.

    ...Southern Plains...
    Expansive trough centered over the Great Lakes will lead to
    lowering heights over the Plains, with an embedded but potent shortwave
    progged to track southward from Nebraska to Texas Saturday=20
    evening/night. This shortwave will impinge into a destabilizing=20
    environment reflected by a corridor of 1000 J/kg or more MUCAPE,=20
    collocated with PWs surging to around 1.25 inches as the SW LLJ=20
    increases to to 20-25 kts Saturday evening. Thunderstorms are=20
    expected to blossom along a decaying cold front being pushed south=20
    by this shortwave, with upscale growth and organization possible=20
    thanks to 40-50 kts of bulk shear. Rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr are=20
    progged within this maturing convection, leading to locally as much
    as 3" of rain (10-20% chance). This could produce isolated=20
    instances of flash flooding despite the general progressive nature=20
    of this convection.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    The persistent closed upper level low off of the Baja Peninsula
    will begin to fill and slowly eject northeast on Sunday, reaching
    the low Deserts of CA and Arizona by the end of the forecast
    period. As this feature pivots northeast, it will produce subtle
    height falls, but more impressively draw tropical moisture
    northward as reflected by NAEFS PWs above 1.25 inches, or above the
    99.5th percentile surging into AZ/CA/NV late D3. This will overlap
    at least modest instability, potentially as high as 250-500 J/kg,
    to support increasing convective coverage later D3.

    There remains some uncertainty into the timing of development of
    showers due to what could be enhanced cloud cover reflected by high
    700-300mb RH. This may slow destabilization and reduce convective
    coverage, which explains why ECENS/GEFS probabilities for even 1"
    of rainfall are less than 5%. However, with the impressive PW
    anomalies in place, once showers to develop they could contain rain
    rates of above 0.5"/hr, which will support at least an isolated=20
    potential for flash flooding where storms move most slowly beneath
    the upper low.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4eftSQZTj79JDRi2FVeSqXR9GOxpdmJ9VCW4Iuxl1YoF= VmPs5Xz8jfVIOolguW6zAE5Ucwn2UoEGYM0zGLK-7AZmL-E$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4eftSQZTj79JDRi2FVeSqXR9GOxpdmJ9VCW4Iuxl1YoF= VmPs5Xz8jfVIOolguW6zAE5Ucwn2UoEGYM0zGLK-0nUxcNE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4eftSQZTj79JDRi2FVeSqXR9GOxpdmJ9VCW4Iuxl1YoF= VmPs5Xz8jfVIOolguW6zAE5Ucwn2UoEGYM0zGLK-wlSmCFA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 31 00:54:16 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 310054
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    854 PM EDT Fri May 30 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sat May 31 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    OHIO VALLEY THROUGH THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    ...01Z Update...

    The western most flank of the Marginal and Slight Risk areas were
    scaled back with heavy rainfall ending there. However, this storm
    is quite the dynamic system, highlighted by the 18Z and 21Z WPC=20
    surface analyses showing the minimum low pressure areas dropping
    from 1003mb to 996mb. The storm will continue to deepen tonight as
    mentioned from day shift with the ECMWF SAT now showing MSLP=20
    values over the Delaware Valley that are near the observed minimums
    for this time of year in the CFSR database. As the storm deepens,=20
    intense 850-700mb vertical velocities along the developing occluded
    front and triple point will make for a narrow band of efficient=20
    and heavy rainfall rates that could approach 1.5"/hr as it slowly=20
    pivots over eastern PA tonight. RAP soundings north and west of the
    Philly metro area do show exceptionally saturated soundings at=20
    low-mid levels that feature warm cloud layers nearly 10,000ft=20
    deep. Instability will be lacking for the most part (<300 J/kg=20
    MUCAPE), but given the robust synoptic-scale forcings at work and=20
    ample moisture aloft, flash flooding very much remains a concern=20
    from the northern Mid-Atlantic into the Northeast tonight,
    especially along complex terrain.

    Latest 18Z HREF guidance shows a swath of moderate-to-high chance=20 probabilities (40-70%) for 12-hr rainfall totals >3" from southeast
    PA on north through the Lehigh Valley, the Poconos, and into the=20
    Lower Hudson Valley. FFGs are high enough to help limit the areal=20
    extent of potential flash flooding, but recent instances of flash=20
    flooding in northern WV, southwest PA, and near the DC/Baltimore=20
    metro areas serve as a potential precursor to additional flash=20
    flooding tonight. Complex terrain and nearby creeks and streams are
    most at-risk for flooding tonight, but urbanized flooding along and
    west of I-95 is possible as well. Note that WPC does have Mesoscale Precipitation (MPD 337) out for portions of the Mid-Atlantic
    through 0343Z this evening. Please read the MPD for additional
    flash flooding information.

    Mullinax

    --Previous Discussion--

    The regional satellite imagery this morning shows a potent upper
    low moving across Ohio, and it is this feature which will help
    manifest the flash flood risk from the Ohio Valley into the Mid-
    Atlantic and Northeast today. As this low tracks northeast today,
    it will move along a baroclinic zone/surface front, helping to
    spawn a surface wave of low pressure. This low will track E/NE
    along the boundary, moving from eastern KY this morning to western
    New England by Saturday morning.

    As this low tracks northeast, it will encounter increasingly
    favorable thermodynamics, into which forcing will become more
    intense, leading to both an expansion and intensification of
    convection. The simulated reflectivity from the available CAMs are
    relatively similar with widespread showers and thunderstorms
    blossoming ahead of the low, and becoming most impressive from
    Maryland and points northeast into western New England. This is
    supported by more robust thermodynamics being drawn northward,
    characterized by a ribbon of elevated PWs of 1.25 to 1.5 inches,
    highest east of I-95, and MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg. This will support
    rainfall rates for which the HREF indicates have a high a moderate
    to high chance (40-70%) of exceeding 1"/hr, and 10-20% chance of
    exceeding 2"/hr, enhanced by increasingly impressive synoptic
    ascent aided by the LLJ and favorable LFQ of a strengthening jet
    streak.

    In general, convection which develops downstream of the low will
    be progressive on 0-6km mean winds of 20-30 kts. However, aligned
    Corfidi vectors suggest some short-term training is possible which
    could lengthen these rain rates, or result in repeating rounds in
    some areas. Additionally, as bulk shear surges to 40-50 kts,
    storms will likely organize into clusters, with an even better
    chance for some training along I-95 from Washington, D.C. into
    western New England. The simulated reflectivity suggests as the
    surface low wraps up a dry slot will pivot in behind the primary
    clusters, somewhat reducing the excessive rain risk, but this is
    lower confidence, and a stripe of heavy rain of 1-3" is expected,
    with locally more than 4" (or even 5") possible from Maryland
    through New York as reflected by both the NBMv5.0 and the HREF. The
    inherited SLGT risk was modified only slightly for recent
    guidance, and expanded a bit northeast into New England.

    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW ENGLAND...

    ...New England...
    Surface low pressure deepening in response to favorable ascent
    from the RRQ of an upper jet streak, height falls, and residual
    baroclinicity along a cold front. This surface low will intensify
    as it tracks northward through New England, while the low-level
    flow downstream advects greater moisture and instability northward.
    Despite the impressive system, thermodynamics are progged to remain
    modest as reflected by forecast PWs of 1-1.25 inches, around the
    75th percentile according to the SPC sounding climatology, and
    MUCAPE of around 250 J/kg. This will support generally modest
    rainfall rates of 0.5"/hr, but locally higher is possible,
    especially within any organized convection on 30-35 kts of bulk
    shear. Storms will generally track northward at around 25 kts, but
    some short term training is possible which could additionally
    enhance the duration of any higher rainfall rates. This will
    produce swaths of 1-2" of rain as reflected by modest ensemble
    cluster probabilities, with a local maxima progged across VT where
    the deformation axis on the back side of this low will pivot,
    leading to longer duration of rainfall, despite more modest
    rainfall rates through Saturday evening, atop slightly wetter soils
    and sensitive terrain. After coordination with WFO BTV, opted to
    include a targeted slight risk where the greatest potential for
    persistent moderate to heavy rain overlaps the sensitive terrain,
    and where the highest HREF probabilities for more than 3" of rain
    exist.

    ...Southern Plains...
    Expansive trough centered over the Great Lakes will lead to
    lowering heights over the Plains, with an embedded but potent shortwave
    progged to track southward from Nebraska to Texas Saturday
    evening/night. This shortwave will impinge into a destabilizing
    environment reflected by a corridor of 1000 J/kg or more MUCAPE,
    collocated with PWs surging to around 1.25 inches as the SW LLJ
    increases to to 20-25 kts Saturday evening. Thunderstorms are
    expected to blossom along a decaying cold front being pushed south
    by this shortwave, with upscale growth and organization possible
    thanks to 40-50 kts of bulk shear. Rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr are
    progged within this maturing convection, leading to locally as much
    as 3" of rain (10-20% chance). This could produce isolated
    instances of flash flooding despite the general progressive nature
    of this convection.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    The persistent closed upper level low off of the Baja Peninsula
    will begin to fill and slowly eject northeast on Sunday, reaching
    the low Deserts of CA and Arizona by the end of the forecast
    period. As this feature pivots northeast, it will produce subtle
    height falls, but more impressively draw tropical moisture
    northward as reflected by NAEFS PWs above 1.25 inches, or above the
    99.5th percentile surging into AZ/CA/NV late D3. This will overlap
    at least modest instability, potentially as high as 250-500 J/kg,
    to support increasing convective coverage later D3.

    There remains some uncertainty into the timing of development of
    showers due to what could be enhanced cloud cover reflected by high
    700-300mb RH. This may slow destabilization and reduce convective
    coverage, which explains why ECENS/GEFS probabilities for even 1"
    of rainfall are less than 5%. However, with the impressive PW
    anomalies in place, once showers to develop they could contain rain
    rates of above 0.5"/hr, which will support at least an isolated
    potential for flash flooding where storms move most slowly beneath
    the upper low.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5xrp87DpLj6LE-SyKe67ChGey3Kq-lZtLl9iNSg-QOPt= puNF7gtpOpwPQS1BqL8sQlR8lt8AAPf9aJNq7FaVqjK-14A$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5xrp87DpLj6LE-SyKe67ChGey3Kq-lZtLl9iNSg-QOPt= puNF7gtpOpwPQS1BqL8sQlR8lt8AAPf9aJNq7FaVVlGg0vY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5xrp87DpLj6LE-SyKe67ChGey3Kq-lZtLl9iNSg-QOPt= puNF7gtpOpwPQS1BqL8sQlR8lt8AAPf9aJNq7FaVRhRp_CU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 31 08:28:30 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 310827
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    427 AM EDT Sat May 31 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW ENGLAND...

    ...New England...
    A deep low pressure system will continue to track northeast today
    and tonight over New England in response to favorable ascent from=20
    the right inflow region of an upper jet streak, height falls, and=20
    residual baroclinicity along a cold front while the low- level=20
    flow downstream advects greater moisture and instability northward. Thermodynamics/static instability look to remain modest as=20
    reflected by forecast PWs of 1-1.25 inches, around the 75th=20
    percentile according to the SPC sounding climatology, and MUCAPE of
    around 250 J/kg. This will support generally modest rainfall rates
    of 0.5"/hr, but locally higher is possible, especially within any=20
    organized convection on 30-35 kts of bulk shear...with swaths of=20
    1 to 2 inch amounts of rainfall. Maintained the previously issued
    Slight Risk area in the complex terrain aiding orographic
    processes and the greatest potential for persistent moderate to=20
    heavy rain overlaps the sensitive terrain, and where the highest=20
    HREF probabilities remain for more than 3" of rain exist.

    ...Southern Plains...
    Expansive trough centered over the Great Lakes will lead to lowering
    heights over the Plains, with an embedded but potent shortwave=20
    progged to track southward from Nebraska to Texas this evening and
    later tonight. This shortwave will impinge into a destabilizing=20
    environment reflected by a corridor of 1000 J/kg or more MUCAPE,=20
    collocated with precipitable water values surging to around 1.25=20
    inches as the southwesterly low level jet increases to to 20-25=20
    kts by evening. Thunderstorms are expected to blossom along a=20
    decaying cold front being pushed south by this shortwave, with=20
    upscale growth and organization possible thanks to 40-50 kts of=20
    bulk shear. Rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr are progged within this=20
    maturing convection, leading to locally as much as 3" of rain=20
    (10-20% chance). This could produce isolated instances of flash=20
    flooding despite the general progressive nature of this convection.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    Maintained the Marginal Risk area over parts of the Southwest US on
    Sunday as a persistent closed upper level low off of the Baja=20
    Peninsula interacts with a plume of deep moisture that has its=20
    origins in the subtropics. As the upper low begins to fill and=20
    slowly eject northeast on Sunday...subtle height falls in the mid-
    levels will reinforce the northward transport into the area as=20
    reflected by NAEFS PWs above 1.25 inches, or above the 99th=20
    percentile surging into AZ/CA/NV late Sunday night/early Monday=20
    morning. This will overlap of at least modest instability,=20
    potentially as high as 250-500 J/kg, to support increasing=20
    convective coverage late in the period. There remains some concern=20
    as to whether or not the increased amount of mid-level moisture=20
    leads to enhanced cloud cover and what impact that might have on=20
    the amount of coverage/intensity of convection. There was some=20
    uptick in the 31/00Z model guidance with an a corresponding=20
    increase in ECENS/GEFS probabilities for even 1" of rainfall. Even=20 so...those probabilities seem low considering the precipitable=20
    water anomalies in place and the amount of diffluent flow aloft to=20
    the east of the closed low east of the Baja peninsula. The=20
    expectation is that once showers to develop they could contain rain
    rates of above 0.5"/hr, which will support at least an isolated=20
    potential for flash flooding where storms move most slowly beneath=20
    the upper low.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS ON MONDAY/MONDAY NIGHT...

    ...Rockies to the Plains...
    Moisture that had been streaming northward into the Southwest US on
    Sunday will continue to be drawn northward on Monday as a northern
    stream trough along the US/Canadian border amplifies and a cold
    front makes its way southward. A 35 to 45 kt southerly low level
    jet develops and leads to enhanced moisture flux convergence along
    the front from Colorado into Nebraska and a part of South Dakota
    Monday night/early Tuesday morning. With added upper support from
    the entrance region of an 80 to 100 kt upper jet in the form of=20
    increasing divergence aloft and precipitable water values in the=20
    range of 1.5 to 1.75 inches pooling along the front...at or above=20
    the 90th percentile for this time of year and over 2 standardized=20 anomalies...rainfall rates in excess an inch per hour and the=20
    potential for repeat convection may result in instances of flash=20
    flooding.

    ...South Florida...
    Introduced a Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall mainly across the
    urban areas of the southern Florida peninsula as an east to west=20
    oriented front settles into the area from the north and stalls. Mid
    and upper level heights should be falling in response to the=20
    approach of a mid/upper level wave from the eastern Gulf during the afternoon...helping set the stage for scattered late day showers=20
    and thunderstorms capable of producing locally heavy rainfall.=20
    Precipitable water values of 1.75 inches or greater should be in=20
    place across the peninsula...some 1.5 to 2 standardized anomalies=20
    along the coast or just off shore over the Florida Strait.=20
    Localized rainfall rates of 1 to 2 inches per hour are possible.=20

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_QX7S8g0MeYrMPY9af4fN8ZnVnBjFGE6U8CMvPpgH14C= ILhJbtTpb8ZjqImeVNYFj1B4pSffinycKYVHn0YHy63Loa0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_QX7S8g0MeYrMPY9af4fN8ZnVnBjFGE6U8CMvPpgH14C= ILhJbtTpb8ZjqImeVNYFj1B4pSffinycKYVHn0YHiGHJQxs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_QX7S8g0MeYrMPY9af4fN8ZnVnBjFGE6U8CMvPpgH14C= ILhJbtTpb8ZjqImeVNYFj1B4pSffinycKYVHn0YH5M7zDdQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 31 11:32:03 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 311131
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    731 AM EDT Sat May 31 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1125Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW ENGLAND...

    12Z Update...
    Pivoting bands of moderate rain continue to bring 2"/3hr rainfall
    over southern NY where the Marginal is expanded through.=20
    Expanded Slight Risk over the rest of Vermont where 06Z guidance=20
    is highlighting 1.5 to 2.5" rainfall through mid-afternoon.

    Jackson


    ...New England...
    A deep low pressure system will continue to track northeast today
    and tonight over New England in response to favorable ascent from
    the right inflow region of an upper jet streak, height falls, and
    residual baroclinicity along a cold front while the low- level
    flow downstream advects greater moisture and instability northward. Thermodynamics/static instability look to remain modest as
    reflected by forecast PWs of 1-1.25 inches, around the 75th
    percentile according to the SPC sounding climatology, and MUCAPE of
    around 250 J/kg. This will support generally modest rainfall rates
    of 0.5"/hr, but locally higher is possible, especially within any
    organized convection on 30-35 kts of bulk shear...with swaths of
    1 to 2 inch amounts of rainfall. Maintained the previously issued
    Slight Risk area in the complex terrain aiding orographic
    processes and the greatest potential for persistent moderate to
    heavy rain overlaps the sensitive terrain, and where the highest
    HREF probabilities remain for more than 3" of rain exist.

    ...Southern Plains...
    Expansive trough centered over the Great Lakes will lead to lowering
    heights over the Plains, with an embedded but potent shortwave
    progged to track southward from Nebraska to Texas this evening and
    later tonight. This shortwave will impinge into a destabilizing
    environment reflected by a corridor of 1000 J/kg or more MUCAPE,
    collocated with precipitable water values surging to around 1.25
    inches as the southwesterly low level jet increases to to 20-25
    kts by evening. Thunderstorms are expected to blossom along a
    decaying cold front being pushed south by this shortwave, with
    upscale growth and organization possible thanks to 40-50 kts of
    bulk shear. Rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr are progged within this
    maturing convection, leading to locally as much as 3" of rain
    (10-20% chance). This could produce isolated instances of flash
    flooding despite the general progressive nature of this convection.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    Maintained the Marginal Risk area over parts of the Southwest US on
    Sunday as a persistent closed upper level low off of the Baja
    Peninsula interacts with a plume of deep moisture that has its
    origins in the subtropics. As the upper low begins to fill and
    slowly eject northeast on Sunday...subtle height falls in the mid-
    levels will reinforce the northward transport into the area as
    reflected by NAEFS PWs above 1.25 inches, or above the 99th
    percentile surging into AZ/CA/NV late Sunday night/early Monday
    morning. This will overlap of at least modest instability,
    potentially as high as 250-500 J/kg, to support increasing
    convective coverage late in the period. There remains some concern
    as to whether or not the increased amount of mid-level moisture
    leads to enhanced cloud cover and what impact that might have on
    the amount of coverage/intensity of convection. There was some
    uptick in the 31/00Z model guidance with an a corresponding
    increase in ECENS/GEFS probabilities for even 1" of rainfall. Even
    so...those probabilities seem low considering the precipitable
    water anomalies in place and the amount of diffluent flow aloft to
    the east of the closed low east of the Baja peninsula. The
    expectation is that once showers to develop they could contain rain
    rates of above 0.5"/hr, which will support at least an isolated
    potential for flash flooding where storms move most slowly beneath
    the upper low.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS ON MONDAY/MONDAY NIGHT...

    ...Rockies to the Plains...
    Moisture that had been streaming northward into the Southwest US on
    Sunday will continue to be drawn northward on Monday as a northern
    stream trough along the US/Canadian border amplifies and a cold
    front makes its way southward. A 35 to 45 kt southerly low level
    jet develops and leads to enhanced moisture flux convergence along
    the front from Colorado into Nebraska and a part of South Dakota
    Monday night/early Tuesday morning. With added upper support from
    the entrance region of an 80 to 100 kt upper jet in the form of
    increasing divergence aloft and precipitable water values in the
    range of 1.5 to 1.75 inches pooling along the front...at or above
    the 90th percentile for this time of year and over 2 standardized anomalies...rainfall rates in excess an inch per hour and the
    potential for repeat convection may result in instances of flash
    flooding.

    ...South Florida...
    Introduced a Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall mainly across the
    urban areas of the southern Florida peninsula as an east to west
    oriented front settles into the area from the north and stalls. Mid
    and upper level heights should be falling in response to the
    approach of a mid/upper level wave from the eastern Gulf during the afternoon...helping set the stage for scattered late day showers
    and thunderstorms capable of producing locally heavy rainfall.
    Precipitable water values of 1.75 inches or greater should be in
    place across the peninsula...some 1.5 to 2 standardized anomalies
    along the coast or just off shore over the Florida Strait.
    Localized rainfall rates of 1 to 2 inches per hour are possible.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8HnbEs0DKP3BaoxsJt9N2Rz2snE-e2GlSYoRvyIlcpIH= x0qhg6-9gt6i8pZHDgfp3MjmDJL-f5O4ClOq-t9ax5UxauU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8HnbEs0DKP3BaoxsJt9N2Rz2snE-e2GlSYoRvyIlcpIH= x0qhg6-9gt6i8pZHDgfp3MjmDJL-f5O4ClOq-t9aXAFul7o$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8HnbEs0DKP3BaoxsJt9N2Rz2snE-e2GlSYoRvyIlcpIH= x0qhg6-9gt6i8pZHDgfp3MjmDJL-f5O4ClOq-t9aw3xONGs$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 31 15:59:42 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 311559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Sat May 31 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW ENGLAND...

    ...New England...
    Impressive almost-June low pressure system will continue to track
    northeast across Maine and get pulled NW into Canada as the parent
    shortwave gets absorbed into a large closed low across Quebec. The
    model trends have continued to pivot just a bit farther west with
    the impressive deformation that will continue to support heavy rain
    rates, especially across Vermont, through this evening. Although
    instability will remain modest, generally less than 500 J/kg,
    impressive PWs around 1" (near the 75th percentile) will support
    rainfall rates within the strong ascent that could reach 1"/hr at
    times (although will generally be around 0.5"/hr). Still, this rain
    will be persistent, and Corfidi vectors becoming anti-parallel to
    the mean flow suggest training to support total rainfall for which
    the GEFS/ECENS/HREF probabilities all suggest will exceed 3 inches across
    the sensitive terrain/soils of Vermont, supporting the continued=20
    SLGT risk.

    Farther east, the high-res CAMs have become a bit more aggressive
    with rainfall rates around 1"/hr lifting north across eastern Maine
    within higher PWs (above the 90th percentile) and greater
    instability. While training here is less of a concern, clusters of
    convection organized through 30-40 kts of bulk shear could still
    produce local flash flood concerns, so the MRGL risk was pulled all
    the way into Downeast Maine.


    ...Southern Plains...
    Broad NW flow on the upwind side of an expansive trough centered
    over Ontario will persist over the Plains as an embedded but
    potent shortwave tracks SE tonight. This shortwave will push a=20
    wave of low pressure and weakening cold front south into Oklahoma=20
    tonight, where it will interact with a slowly advancing warm front=20
    out of Texas on the intensifying LLJ. This LLJ, progged to reach at
    least a modest 20-25 kts from the SW, will transport more robust=20 thermodynamics (PWs to 1.5 inches and MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg), to=20
    support expanding convection along this decaying cold front. With=20
    bulk shear expected to be in the 30-40 kt range, convection will=20
    likely grow upscale into clusters or an MCS tonight as it races=20
    southeast on 20-25 kts of 0-6km mean winds. This this will limit=20
    the duration of heavy rain, rates that will likely reach 1-2"/hr=20
    could result in isolated instances of flash flooding, especially=20
    during any short-term training that may develop on the periphery of
    this MCS. The guidance, as expected, features considerable=20
    longitudinal spread of the MCS path, which makes the cosmetic=20
    adjustments to the inherited MRGL risk the best approach for the=20
    risk area tonight.


    Weiss

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    Maintained the Marginal Risk area over parts of the Southwest US on
    Sunday as a persistent closed upper level low off of the Baja
    Peninsula interacts with a plume of deep moisture that has its
    origins in the subtropics. As the upper low begins to fill and
    slowly eject northeast on Sunday...subtle height falls in the mid-
    levels will reinforce the northward transport into the area as
    reflected by NAEFS PWs above 1.25 inches, or above the 99th
    percentile surging into AZ/CA/NV late Sunday night/early Monday
    morning. This will overlap of at least modest instability,
    potentially as high as 250-500 J/kg, to support increasing
    convective coverage late in the period. There remains some concern
    as to whether or not the increased amount of mid-level moisture
    leads to enhanced cloud cover and what impact that might have on
    the amount of coverage/intensity of convection. There was some
    uptick in the 31/00Z model guidance with an a corresponding
    increase in ECENS/GEFS probabilities for even 1" of rainfall. Even
    so...those probabilities seem low considering the precipitable
    water anomalies in place and the amount of diffluent flow aloft to
    the east of the closed low east of the Baja peninsula. The
    expectation is that once showers to develop they could contain rain
    rates of above 0.5"/hr, which will support at least an isolated
    potential for flash flooding where storms move most slowly beneath
    the upper low.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS ON MONDAY/MONDAY NIGHT...

    ...Rockies to the Plains...
    Moisture that had been streaming northward into the Southwest US on
    Sunday will continue to be drawn northward on Monday as a northern
    stream trough along the US/Canadian border amplifies and a cold
    front makes its way southward. A 35 to 45 kt southerly low level
    jet develops and leads to enhanced moisture flux convergence along
    the front from Colorado into Nebraska and a part of South Dakota
    Monday night/early Tuesday morning. With added upper support from
    the entrance region of an 80 to 100 kt upper jet in the form of
    increasing divergence aloft and precipitable water values in the
    range of 1.5 to 1.75 inches pooling along the front...at or above
    the 90th percentile for this time of year and over 2 standardized anomalies...rainfall rates in excess an inch per hour and the
    potential for repeat convection may result in instances of flash
    flooding.

    ...South Florida...
    Introduced a Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall mainly across the
    urban areas of the southern Florida peninsula as an east to west
    oriented front settles into the area from the north and stalls. Mid
    and upper level heights should be falling in response to the
    approach of a mid/upper level wave from the eastern Gulf during the afternoon...helping set the stage for scattered late day showers
    and thunderstorms capable of producing locally heavy rainfall.
    Precipitable water values of 1.75 inches or greater should be in
    place across the peninsula...some 1.5 to 2 standardized anomalies
    along the coast or just off shore over the Florida Strait.
    Localized rainfall rates of 1 to 2 inches per hour are possible.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6TRASs2u2yvg09EHGYzUyYDFi5qdWBlA0p9GR-x7-IUT= h9BRCctD6zXWpzIRN90cHHwofbHPYT5D-kyNWedmM0_7Gt0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6TRASs2u2yvg09EHGYzUyYDFi5qdWBlA0p9GR-x7-IUT= h9BRCctD6zXWpzIRN90cHHwofbHPYT5D-kyNWedmRHfIx28$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6TRASs2u2yvg09EHGYzUyYDFi5qdWBlA0p9GR-x7-IUT= h9BRCctD6zXWpzIRN90cHHwofbHPYT5D-kyNWedmeQUYcxs$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 31 20:08:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 312007
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    407 PM EDT Sat May 31 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat May 31 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW ENGLAND...

    ...New England...
    Impressive almost-June low pressure system will continue to track
    northeast across Maine and get pulled NW into Canada as the parent
    shortwave gets absorbed into a large closed low across Quebec. The
    model trends have continued to pivot just a bit farther west with
    the impressive deformation that will continue to support heavy rain
    rates, especially across Vermont, through this evening. Although
    instability will remain modest, generally less than 500 J/kg,
    impressive PWs around 1" (near the 75th percentile) will support
    rainfall rates within the strong ascent that could reach 1"/hr at
    times (although will generally be around 0.5"/hr). Still, this rain
    will be persistent, and Corfidi vectors becoming anti-parallel to
    the mean flow suggest training to support total rainfall for which
    the GEFS/ECENS/HREF probabilities all suggest will exceed 3 inches across
    the sensitive terrain/soils of Vermont, supporting the continued
    SLGT risk.

    Farther east, the high-res CAMs have become a bit more aggressive
    with rainfall rates around 1"/hr lifting north across eastern Maine
    within higher PWs (above the 90th percentile) and greater
    instability. While training here is less of a concern, clusters of
    convection organized through 30-40 kts of bulk shear could still
    produce local flash flood concerns, so the MRGL risk was pulled all
    the way into Downeast Maine.


    ...Southern Plains...
    Broad NW flow on the upwind side of an expansive trough centered
    over Ontario will persist over the Plains as an embedded but
    potent shortwave tracks SE tonight. This shortwave will push a
    wave of low pressure and weakening cold front south into Oklahoma
    tonight, where it will interact with a slowly advancing warm front
    out of Texas on the intensifying LLJ. This LLJ, progged to reach at
    least a modest 20-25 kts from the SW, will transport more robust
    thermodynamics (PWs to 1.5 inches and MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg), to
    support expanding convection along this decaying cold front. With
    bulk shear expected to be in the 30-40 kt range, convection will
    likely grow upscale into clusters or an MCS tonight as it races
    southeast on 20-25 kts of 0-6km mean winds. This this will limit
    the duration of heavy rain, rates that will likely reach 1-2"/hr
    could result in isolated instances of flash flooding, especially
    during any short-term training that may develop on the periphery of
    this MCS. The guidance, as expected, features considerable
    longitudinal spread of the MCS path, which makes the cosmetic
    adjustments to the inherited MRGL risk the best approach for the
    risk area tonight.


    Weiss

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF=20
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    Impressive closed low off the northern Baja coast (NAEFS 500mb
    heights near -2 sigma at 12Z Sunday) will gradually fill and shift
    northeast through D2, reaching Arizona by Monday morning.
    Downstream of this low, southerly flow will become more intense,
    drawing increased moisture and instability northward into the
    Southwest. This will support impressive thermodynamics as PWs surge
    to 1.25-1.5 inches, above the 99th percentile according to NAEFS
    (and in some areas above anything measured in the 06Z CFSR=20
    climatology), which will overlap with MUCAPE climbing to 250-750
    J/kg, an increase from the past few model cycles. As ascent
    increases through height falls and PVA, convection is expected to
    blossom rapidly and then organize through 25-35 kts of bulk shear.
    This organization within the favorable thermodynamics will support
    at least briefly heavy rain rates that may exceed 1"/hr (10-20%
    chance). With storm motions slowing as the upper low pivots
    overhead late D2, this could produce pockets of 1-2" of rain,
    especially in the low deserts of AZ. Farther east, aligned Corfidi
    vectors with the mean flow will allow for repeating rounds of=20
    convection to lift northward, producing other areas of 1-2" of rain
    despite the faster progression. Despite dry soils from a lack of=20
    recent rain, this could produce instances of flash flooding,=20
    including atop sensitive terrain or burn scars, and after=20
    coordination with WFOs TWC and PSR, a small SLGT risk was added for south-central AZ.

    Weiss

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS AND CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central High Plains and Central Plains...
    Baja mid-level low which will be opening over Arizona to start the
    period will continue to weaken and shear out as it becomes embedded
    within pinched westerlies south of a trough diving out of Montana.
    This will result in expanding deep layer lift through height falls
    and modest deformation expanding from the Four Corners through the
    Northern Plains, with additional ascent occurring as the northern
    stream trough drives a cold front southeastward and a jet streak
    pivots meridionally into Canada leaving favorable RRQ diffluence
    overhead, and a surface low is also forecast to develop along this
    boundary.

    This synoptic setup will produce an expansive area of lift into
    increasingly robust thermodynamics, and it is likely that a large
    area of showers and thunderstorms will develop much of D3.
    Increasing low-level flow as much as 40-50 kts at 850mb will emerge
    from the Gulf, pushing PWs to 0.75 to 1.25 inches which is
    extremely anomalous and above the 97th, or even 99th percentile,=20
    in some areas. This will overlap with MUCAPE rising to 250-1000=20
    J/kg, sufficient to produce rainfall rates of 0.5"-1"/hr. While=20
    there is still some uncertainty in the placement of the heaviest=20
    rainfall, the guidance is in general good agreement in a maximum of
    2-3", or locally higher as reflected by <10% probability for 3"/24
    hrs from the ECENS/GEFS, from eastern CO and WY through eastern=20
    NE, which is where the SLGT risk was drawn. Some of this area is=20
    the Sand Hills of NE which do not typically flood and have high=20
    FFG, but for potential and after coordination with the affected=20
    WFOs, the inherited SLGT risk was adjusted just slightly.

    Farther to the north from SD through MN, fast moving storms on
    20-30 kts of 0-6km mean winds will have the potential to train
    where Corfidi vectors are aligned to the mean wind and the cold
    front. This will offset, at least marginally, the faster motion,
    allowing for an isolated flash flood risk across this region.=20

    Farther SW, the MRGL risk was expanded into western CO and the=20
    southern half of UT where impressive PWs and slower moving storms=20
    could organize to produce areas of heavy rainfall exceeding 1 inch.
    This region is sensitive due to the variety of slot canyons and=20
    other sensitive terrain, which feature FFG that is as low as
    0.5"/1hr. After coordination with WFO SLC and GJT, the MRGL risk
    was expanded across these areas.


    ...South Florida...
    The inherited MRGL risk was maintained, but trimmed to just the SE
    portions of the peninsula to focus on the more urbanized regions of
    the state. As an upper trough digs south along the FL Panhandle and
    into the peninsula, it will push a weakening cold front and
    shortwave southward, enhancing ascent across the area. With PWs
    approaching 2" overlapped with MUCAPE above 2000 J/kg, this will
    support scattered to widespread heavy-rain producing convection on
    Monday. Mean storm motions will be generally west to east, aligned
    to the front, and this should focus storms along the SE coast where
    sea breeze interaction occurs. With rain rates expected to exceed
    2"/hr at times, this could produce above 3" of rain as reflected by
    5-20% probabilities from the SREF and ECENS.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-EsMPRoDpIP6r2DWsuzEqS9jCE2Sukv3RyBAzII3nkQN= sEDqcHBWTZdn_SFiNPSluaLcF5kRpTEfl1WPId4otoSoFwQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-EsMPRoDpIP6r2DWsuzEqS9jCE2Sukv3RyBAzII3nkQN= sEDqcHBWTZdn_SFiNPSluaLcF5kRpTEfl1WPId4oeVmX3Wg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-EsMPRoDpIP6r2DWsuzEqS9jCE2Sukv3RyBAzII3nkQN= sEDqcHBWTZdn_SFiNPSluaLcF5kRpTEfl1WPId4o2vldxHA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 1 00:51:19 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 010050
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    850 PM EDT Sat May 31 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...01Z Update...

    With rainfall rates gradually diminishing over the Northeast, the
    Slight Risk and Marginal Risk over northern New England have been
    taken out. While some localized ponding or run-off along complex
    terrain in the Green/White Mountains and across northern Maine=20
    cannot be ruled out, rainfall rates have diminished to the point=20
    where the flash flood potential is effectively done. In the Central
    Plains, the Marginal Risk was only tweaked after viewing 18Z HREF=20
    guidance and new CAMs guidance.

    Mullinax

    --Previous Discussion---

    ...Southern Plains...
    Broad NW flow on the upwind side of an expansive trough centered
    over Ontario will persist over the Plains as an embedded but
    potent shortwave tracks SE tonight. This shortwave will push a
    wave of low pressure and weakening cold front south into Oklahoma
    tonight, where it will interact with a slowly advancing warm front
    out of Texas on the intensifying LLJ. This LLJ, progged to reach at
    least a modest 20-25 kts from the SW, will transport more robust
    thermodynamics (PWs to 1.5 inches and MUCAPE above 1000 J/kg), to
    support expanding convection along this decaying cold front. With
    bulk shear expected to be in the 30-40 kt range, convection will
    likely grow upscale into clusters or an MCS tonight as it races
    southeast on 20-25 kts of 0-6km mean winds. This this will limit
    the duration of heavy rain, rates that will likely reach 1-2"/hr
    could result in isolated instances of flash flooding, especially
    during any short-term training that may develop on the periphery of
    this MCS. The guidance, as expected, features considerable
    longitudinal spread of the MCS path, which makes the cosmetic
    adjustments to the inherited MRGL risk the best approach for the
    risk area tonight.


    Weiss

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    Impressive closed low off the northern Baja coast (NAEFS 500mb
    heights near -2 sigma at 12Z Sunday) will gradually fill and shift
    northeast through D2, reaching Arizona by Monday morning.
    Downstream of this low, southerly flow will become more intense,
    drawing increased moisture and instability northward into the
    Southwest. This will support impressive thermodynamics as PWs surge
    to 1.25-1.5 inches, above the 99th percentile according to NAEFS
    (and in some areas above anything measured in the 06Z CFSR
    climatology), which will overlap with MUCAPE climbing to 250-750
    J/kg, an increase from the past few model cycles. As ascent
    increases through height falls and PVA, convection is expected to
    blossom rapidly and then organize through 25-35 kts of bulk shear.
    This organization within the favorable thermodynamics will support
    at least briefly heavy rain rates that may exceed 1"/hr (10-20%
    chance). With storm motions slowing as the upper low pivots
    overhead late D2, this could produce pockets of 1-2" of rain,
    especially in the low deserts of AZ. Farther east, aligned Corfidi
    vectors with the mean flow will allow for repeating rounds of
    convection to lift northward, producing other areas of 1-2" of rain
    despite the faster progression. Despite dry soils from a lack of
    recent rain, this could produce instances of flash flooding,
    including atop sensitive terrain or burn scars, and after
    coordination with WFOs TWC and PSR, a small SLGT risk was added for south-central AZ.

    Weiss

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS AND CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central High Plains and Central Plains...
    Baja mid-level low which will be opening over Arizona to start the
    period will continue to weaken and shear out as it becomes embedded
    within pinched westerlies south of a trough diving out of Montana.
    This will result in expanding deep layer lift through height falls
    and modest deformation expanding from the Four Corners through the
    Northern Plains, with additional ascent occurring as the northern
    stream trough drives a cold front southeastward and a jet streak
    pivots meridionally into Canada leaving favorable RRQ diffluence
    overhead, and a surface low is also forecast to develop along this
    boundary.

    This synoptic setup will produce an expansive area of lift into
    increasingly robust thermodynamics, and it is likely that a large
    area of showers and thunderstorms will develop much of D3.
    Increasing low-level flow as much as 40-50 kts at 850mb will emerge
    from the Gulf, pushing PWs to 0.75 to 1.25 inches which is
    extremely anomalous and above the 97th, or even 99th percentile,
    in some areas. This will overlap with MUCAPE rising to 250-1000
    J/kg, sufficient to produce rainfall rates of 0.5"-1"/hr. While
    there is still some uncertainty in the placement of the heaviest
    rainfall, the guidance is in general good agreement in a maximum of
    2-3", or locally higher as reflected by <10% probability for 3"/24
    hrs from the ECENS/GEFS, from eastern CO and WY through eastern
    NE, which is where the SLGT risk was drawn. Some of this area is
    the Sand Hills of NE which do not typically flood and have high
    FFG, but for potential and after coordination with the affected
    WFOs, the inherited SLGT risk was adjusted just slightly.

    Farther to the north from SD through MN, fast moving storms on
    20-30 kts of 0-6km mean winds will have the potential to train
    where Corfidi vectors are aligned to the mean wind and the cold
    front. This will offset, at least marginally, the faster motion,
    allowing for an isolated flash flood risk across this region.

    Farther SW, the MRGL risk was expanded into western CO and the
    southern half of UT where impressive PWs and slower moving storms
    could organize to produce areas of heavy rainfall exceeding 1 inch.
    This region is sensitive due to the variety of slot canyons and
    other sensitive terrain, which feature FFG that is as low as
    0.5"/1hr. After coordination with WFO SLC and GJT, the MRGL risk
    was expanded across these areas.


    ...South Florida...
    The inherited MRGL risk was maintained, but trimmed to just the SE
    portions of the peninsula to focus on the more urbanized regions of
    the state. As an upper trough digs south along the FL Panhandle and
    into the peninsula, it will push a weakening cold front and
    shortwave southward, enhancing ascent across the area. With PWs
    approaching 2" overlapped with MUCAPE above 2000 J/kg, this will
    support scattered to widespread heavy-rain producing convection on
    Monday. Mean storm motions will be generally west to east, aligned
    to the front, and this should focus storms along the SE coast where
    sea breeze interaction occurs. With rain rates expected to exceed
    2"/hr at times, this could produce above 3" of rain as reflected by
    5-20% probabilities from the SREF and ECENS.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9gCWgyaVv093rvH44NDy-XCPc0pHGlgT9Pb3QVlTetSY= THpqM7qm9-IVG7We62H7rSdME3d-BUjRdRnmbZHG5rQC_Sw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9gCWgyaVv093rvH44NDy-XCPc0pHGlgT9Pb3QVlTetSY= THpqM7qm9-IVG7We62H7rSdME3d-BUjRdRnmbZHGjtGR_wk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9gCWgyaVv093rvH44NDy-XCPc0pHGlgT9Pb3QVlTetSY= THpqM7qm9-IVG7We62H7rSdME3d-BUjRdRnmbZHGJhoBmPw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 1 08:31:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 010830
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    430 AM EDT Sun Jun 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    Impressive closed low off the northern Baja coast will gradually=20
    fill and start to shift northeastward today.Downstream of this=20
    low, southerly flow will strengthen, drawing increased moisture=20
    and instability northward into the Southwest United States. This=20
    will support impressive thermodynamics as precipitable water values=20
    surge to 1.25-1.5 inches, above the 99th percentile according to=20
    NAEFS (and in some areas above anything measured in the 06Z CFSR=20 climatology). Given the amount of overlap with MUCAPE climbing to=20
    250-750 J/kg, convection is expected to blossom rapidly and then=20
    organize through 25-35 kts of bulk shear. This organization within=20
    the favorable thermodynamics and upper level dynamics will support
    at least briefly heavy rain rates that may exceed 1"/hr (10-20%=20
    chance). With storm motions slowing as the upper low pivots=20
    overhead later this evening/tonight, this could produce pockets of
    1-2" of rain, especially in the low deserts of AZ. Farther east,=20
    aligned Corfidi vectors with the mean flow will allow for repeating
    rounds of convection to lift northward, producing other areas of=20
    1-2" of rain despite the faster progression. Saw little reason to
    make too many changes to the previously issued Slight and/or=20
    Marginal risk areas.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS AND CENTRAL PLAINS AND OVER THE SOUTHEAST
    FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Central High Plains and Central Plains...
    The mid-level low initially over Baja will continue to weaken and=20
    shear out as it becomes embedded within pinched westerlies south of
    a trough diving out of Montana. This will result in expanding deep
    layer lift through height falls and modest deformation expanding=20
    from the Four Corners through the Northern Plains as well as=20
    additional ascent occurring as the northern stream trough drives a=20
    cold front southeastward.

    This synoptic setup will produce an expansive area of lift into
    increasingly robust thermodynamics, and it is likely that a large
    area of showers and thunderstorms will develop on Monday...with=20=20
    southerly low- level flow increasing to as much as 40-50 kts at=20
    850mb helping boost precipitable water values increase to 1.00 to
    1.25 inches. This overlaps with MUCAPE rising to 250-1000 J/kg,=20
    sufficient to produce rainfall rates of 0.5"-1"/hr. While there is=20
    still some uncertainty in the placement of the heaviest rainfall,=20
    the guidance is in general good agreement in a maximum of 2-3", or=20
    locally higher as reflected by <10% probability for 3"/24 hrs from=20
    the ECENS/GEFS, from eastern CO and WY through parts of southeast
    South Dakota or eastern/northeastern Nebraska as well as in parts
    of west Texas that form along the dryline.=20

    Over parts of the Intermountain region...residual moisture from=20
    Day 1 is expected to still be in place which enhances the prospect=20
    for downpours from any slow moving storms which develop during the
    late day or evening. This region is sensitive due to the variety=20
    of slot canyons and other sensitive terrain, which feature FFG that
    is as low as 0.5"/1hr.=20


    ...South Florida...
    The 01/00Z model runs tended to show an uptick in the coverage and
    rainfall amounts over southeast Florida...resulting in the
    introduction of a Slight Risk area focused along the urbanized
    corridor. As an upper trough digs south along the FL Panhandle and
    into the peninsula, it will push a weakening cold front and=20
    shortwave southward, enhancing ascent across the area before
    stalling and potentially getting deflected northward. With PWs=20
    approaching 2" overlapped with MUCAPE above 2000 J/kg, this will=20
    support scattered to widespread heavy- rain producing convection on
    Monday with the HRRR and RRFS showing the potential for amounts of
    3 inches.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL US AND OVER A PORTION OF THE SOUTHERN FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    The front pushing south- and eastward from the Northern Plains=20
    will continue to encounter a moist airmass extending from Texas=20
    northward towards the western/central Great Lakes region...with=20
    maximum precipitable water values approaching 2.2 inches pooling=20
    ahead of the front over northern Texas and eastern Oklahoma by late
    Tuesday evening and values approaching 2 inches nearing the=20
    southern Great Lakes by the end of the outlook period.=20
    Thunderstorms forming in this airmass should be capable of=20
    producing 1 to 2 inch per hour rates. While the storms should be=20 progressive...the alignment of the mean winds with the orientation=20
    of the front does open up the potential for repeat convection or=20
    training of cells and the associated risk of flash flooding.=20

    ...Southeast Florida...
    Embedded impulses rotating around a building Atlantic ridge will
    result in showers and thunderstorms lingering across parts of the=20
    southern Florida peninsula...although the guidance was struggling=20
    with placement. Given their handling of the evolution on Day 2...a=20
    small Slight Risk area was embedded within a broader Marginal Risk=20
    area and placed based on spaghetti plots of SREF/GEFS 2 and 3 inch
    amounts.=20

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!86Cn40BKojC5fRAceIiL6dPwBwllPtQfbowNjXTir9G9= jFwY562zH_aHVJ1MEd86nfTqoVwrtNkfrbryI0UhGDR315w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!86Cn40BKojC5fRAceIiL6dPwBwllPtQfbowNjXTir9G9= jFwY562zH_aHVJ1MEd86nfTqoVwrtNkfrbryI0UhbpBjImU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!86Cn40BKojC5fRAceIiL6dPwBwllPtQfbowNjXTir9G9= jFwY562zH_aHVJ1MEd86nfTqoVwrtNkfrbryI0UhFAIa_iU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 1 15:47:56 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 011547
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1147 AM EDT Sun Jun 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    16Z Update...
    Incoming 12Z suite and HREF still support widespread showers and
    thunderstorms developing within extremely anomalous PWs downstream
    of a filling mid-level low which will pivot into AZ tonight. The
    previous discussion is still reflective of today's event, and the
    inherited MRGL/SLGT risks were modified just slightly to account
    for the new guidance. Previous Discussion below:

    Impressive closed low off the northern Baja coast will gradually
    fill and start to shift northeastward today.Downstream of this
    low, southerly flow will strengthen, drawing increased moisture
    and instability northward into the Southwest United States. This
    will support impressive thermodynamics as precipitable water values
    surge to 1.25-1.5 inches, above the 99th percentile according to
    NAEFS (and in some areas above anything measured in the 06Z CFSR
    climatology). Given the amount of overlap with MUCAPE climbing to
    250-750 J/kg, convection is expected to blossom rapidly and then
    organize through 25-35 kts of bulk shear. This organization within
    the favorable thermodynamics and upper level dynamics will support
    at least briefly heavy rain rates that may exceed 1"/hr (10-20%
    chance). With storm motions slowing as the upper low pivots
    overhead later this evening/tonight, this could produce pockets of
    1-2" of rain, especially in the low deserts of AZ. Farther east,
    aligned Corfidi vectors with the mean flow will allow for repeating
    rounds of convection to lift northward, producing other areas of
    1-2" of rain despite the faster progression.


    ...Texas...
    Low-level flow will gradually back from W to S/SW today, and
    increase to 15-25 kts across portions of eastern Texas. This will
    impinge effectively into a wavering warm front, providing ascent
    through convergence and isentropic ascent later this aftn through
    tonight. At the same time, a modest shortwave will dig southward
    towards the Arklatex, amplifying the flow and driving at least
    subtle height falls. The overlap of this ascent into PWs nearing 2
    inches and MUCAPE as high as 3000 J/kg will support expanding
    convection diving southward along the boundary, potentially growing
    upscale into clusters or an MCS this evening within favorable bulk
    shear. There is still quite a bit of longitudinal spread with the
    placement of this MCS, but where it occurs rainfall rates of
    1-2"/hr could train, leading to at least isolated instances of
    flash flooding. The inherited MRGL risk was modified cosmetically
    to best match the recent HREF exceedance probabilities.


    ...South Florida...
    A cold front dropping slowly southward will serve as a focus for
    showers and thunderstorms through today. This front is pushed
    southward by height falls within an expanding eastern CONUS trough,
    leading to some enhanced ascent, aided additionally by a weak
    impulse progged to move eastward across the southern peninsula. PWs
    south of the front will hover around 2 inches today, which is
    above the 90th percentile of the SPC sounding climatology, which
    will combine with SBCAPE reaching 2000-3000 J/kg to produce a
    favorable thermodynamic environment for heavy rainfall. The HREF
    and REFS probabilities indicate a 30-50% chance, and a 10-20%
    chance for 1"/hr and 2"/hr rates, respectively, within blossoming
    convection, and as storms train along the boundary from west to
    east, or interact with subsequent outflows/sea breeze boundaries,
    this could produce locally 3-5 inches of rain. This could result in
    localized instances of flash flooding, especially along the urban
    SW or SE coasts today.

    Weiss

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS AND CENTRAL PLAINS AND OVER THE SOUTHEAST
    FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Central High Plains and Central Plains...
    The mid-level low initially over Baja will continue to weaken and
    shear out as it becomes embedded within pinched westerlies south of
    a trough diving out of Montana. This will result in expanding deep
    layer lift through height falls and modest deformation expanding
    from the Four Corners through the Northern Plains as well as
    additional ascent occurring as the northern stream trough drives a
    cold front southeastward.

    This synoptic setup will produce an expansive area of lift into
    increasingly robust thermodynamics, and it is likely that a large
    area of showers and thunderstorms will develop on Monday...with
    southerly low- level flow increasing to as much as 40-50 kts at
    850mb helping boost precipitable water values increase to 1.00 to
    1.25 inches. This overlaps with MUCAPE rising to 250-1000 J/kg,
    sufficient to produce rainfall rates of 0.5"-1"/hr. While there is
    still some uncertainty in the placement of the heaviest rainfall,
    the guidance is in general good agreement in a maximum of 2-3", or
    locally higher as reflected by <10% probability for 3"/24 hrs from
    the ECENS/GEFS, from eastern CO and WY through parts of southeast
    South Dakota or eastern/northeastern Nebraska as well as in parts
    of west Texas that form along the dryline.

    Over parts of the Intermountain region...residual moisture from
    Day 1 is expected to still be in place which enhances the prospect
    for downpours from any slow moving storms which develop during the
    late day or evening. This region is sensitive due to the variety
    of slot canyons and other sensitive terrain, which feature FFG that
    is as low as 0.5"/1hr.


    ...South Florida...
    The 01/00Z model runs tended to show an uptick in the coverage and
    rainfall amounts over southeast Florida...resulting in the
    introduction of a Slight Risk area focused along the urbanized
    corridor. As an upper trough digs south along the FL Panhandle and
    into the peninsula, it will push a weakening cold front and
    shortwave southward, enhancing ascent across the area before
    stalling and potentially getting deflected northward. With PWs
    approaching 2" overlapped with MUCAPE above 2000 J/kg, this will
    support scattered to widespread heavy- rain producing convection on
    Monday with the HRRR and RRFS showing the potential for amounts of
    3 inches.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL US AND OVER A PORTION OF THE SOUTHERN FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    The front pushing south- and eastward from the Northern Plains
    will continue to encounter a moist airmass extending from Texas
    northward towards the western/central Great Lakes region...with
    maximum precipitable water values approaching 2.2 inches pooling
    ahead of the front over northern Texas and eastern Oklahoma by late
    Tuesday evening and values approaching 2 inches nearing the
    southern Great Lakes by the end of the outlook period.
    Thunderstorms forming in this airmass should be capable of
    producing 1 to 2 inch per hour rates. While the storms should be progressive...the alignment of the mean winds with the orientation
    of the front does open up the potential for repeat convection or
    training of cells and the associated risk of flash flooding.

    ...Southeast Florida...
    Embedded impulses rotating around a building Atlantic ridge will
    result in showers and thunderstorms lingering across parts of the
    southern Florida peninsula...although the guidance was struggling
    with placement. Given their handling of the evolution on Day 2...a
    small Slight Risk area was embedded within a broader Marginal Risk
    area and placed based on spaghetti plots of SREF/GEFS 2 and 3 inch
    amounts.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_O92R00cl4H6pFZSmwQEo4AMi1Fc73fv8_7jluYIEtmv= 5MBnIDQdVVOd9rVaoBjfL-KVk_zfasKXZHxsQEW2fR1_M6s$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_O92R00cl4H6pFZSmwQEo4AMi1Fc73fv8_7jluYIEtmv= 5MBnIDQdVVOd9rVaoBjfL-KVk_zfasKXZHxsQEW22SedXAk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_O92R00cl4H6pFZSmwQEo4AMi1Fc73fv8_7jluYIEtmv= 5MBnIDQdVVOd9rVaoBjfL-KVk_zfasKXZHxsQEW2z_h9trU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 1 18:40:11 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 011839
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    239 PM EDT Sun Jun 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Jun 01 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST...

    16Z Update...
    Incoming 12Z suite and HREF still support widespread showers and
    thunderstorms developing within extremely anomalous PWs downstream
    of a filling mid-level low which will pivot into AZ tonight. The
    previous discussion is still reflective of today's event, and the
    inherited MRGL/SLGT risks were modified just slightly to account
    for the new guidance. Previous Discussion below:

    Impressive closed low off the northern Baja coast will gradually
    fill and start to shift northeastward today.Downstream of this
    low, southerly flow will strengthen, drawing increased moisture
    and instability northward into the Southwest United States. This
    will support impressive thermodynamics as precipitable water values
    surge to 1.25-1.5 inches, above the 99th percentile according to
    NAEFS (and in some areas above anything measured in the 06Z CFSR
    climatology). Given the amount of overlap with MUCAPE climbing to
    250-750 J/kg, convection is expected to blossom rapidly and then
    organize through 25-35 kts of bulk shear. This organization within
    the favorable thermodynamics and upper level dynamics will support
    at least briefly heavy rain rates that may exceed 1"/hr (10-20%
    chance). With storm motions slowing as the upper low pivots
    overhead later this evening/tonight, this could produce pockets of
    1-2" of rain, especially in the low deserts of AZ. Farther east,
    aligned Corfidi vectors with the mean flow will allow for repeating
    rounds of convection to lift northward, producing other areas of
    1-2" of rain despite the faster progression.


    ...Texas...
    Low-level flow will gradually back from W to S/SW today, and
    increase to 15-25 kts across portions of eastern Texas. This will
    impinge effectively into a wavering warm front, providing ascent
    through convergence and isentropic ascent later this aftn through
    tonight. At the same time, a modest shortwave will dig southward
    towards the Arklatex, amplifying the flow and driving at least
    subtle height falls. The overlap of this ascent into PWs nearing 2
    inches and MUCAPE as high as 3000 J/kg will support expanding
    convection diving southward along the boundary, potentially growing
    upscale into clusters or an MCS this evening within favorable bulk
    shear. There is still quite a bit of longitudinal spread with the
    placement of this MCS, but where it occurs rainfall rates of
    1-2"/hr could train, leading to at least isolated instances of
    flash flooding. The inherited MRGL risk was modified cosmetically
    to best match the recent HREF exceedance probabilities.


    ...South Florida...
    A cold front dropping slowly southward will serve as a focus for
    showers and thunderstorms through today. This front is pushed
    southward by height falls within an expanding eastern CONUS trough,
    leading to some enhanced ascent, aided additionally by a weak
    impulse progged to move eastward across the southern peninsula. PWs
    south of the front will hover around 2 inches today, which is
    above the 90th percentile of the SPC sounding climatology, which
    will combine with SBCAPE reaching 2000-3000 J/kg to produce a
    favorable thermodynamic environment for heavy rainfall. The HREF
    and REFS probabilities indicate a 30-50% chance, and a 10-20%
    chance for 1"/hr and 2"/hr rates, respectively, within blossoming
    convection, and as storms train along the boundary from west to
    east, or interact with subsequent outflows/sea breeze boundaries,
    this could produce locally 3-5 inches of rain. This could result in
    localized instances of flash flooding, especially along the urban
    SW or SE coasts today.

    Weiss

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS AS WELL AS THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Central Plains...=20
    Mid-level low over Baja Sunday will fill and eject northeast from
    Arizona, reaching the Central Plains by the end of D2. This
    evolution will be driven by the amplification of a northern stream
    trough digging across Montana, which will help shear out the closed
    low and absorb it into the pinched westerlies. The interaction of
    these two features will result in widespread convection on Monday
    from the Four Corners all the way to the Upper Midwest as ample
    moisture from the tropical Pacific streams northward, and impinges
    into a cold front being pushed southward by the northern stream
    trough.

    As the front sags southeast through the day, it will serve as the
    primary focus for developing thunderstorm activity Monday aftn and
    Monday evening, generally from Minnesota southwest into Colorado.
    While there is still considerable spread in the longitudinal
    placement of the heaviest rain due to timing differences of the
    models, there is good agreement that heavy rain producing
    thunderstorms will be widespread along the boundary. This is due to
    pronounced ascent through low-level convergence, upper divergence,
    and isentropic ascent as the LLJ ramps up and pushes PWs to above
    1.5 inches, potentially as high as 1.75 inches across NE/SD, well
    above the 90th percentile. This elevated PW will combine with a
    ribbon of CAPE above 2000 J/kg to fuel thunderstorms with rain
    rates that have a high probability (60-70% chance) of exceeding
    1"/hr. With mean winds expected to be 10-15 kts aligned to the
    front, but Corfidi vectors becoming increasingly anti-parallel,
    some backbuilding into the higher instability and training is
    likely. This will support total rainfall that could exceed 3 inches
    in some areas, and the SLGT risk was adjusted eastward to account
    for the latest guidance from the high plains of CO eastward towards
    the Coteau des Prairies.

    To the south and west of this SLGT risk, the MRGL risk remains
    expansive as far back as the slot canyon region of UT and across
    much of CO and northern NM where afternoon thunderstorms could
    produce 0.5+"/hr rates atop sensitive terrain leading to instances
    of flash flooding. Additionally, a wave of low pressure developing
    in the lee of the Southern Rockies may push additional moderate
    rainfall across eastern CO late D2, and while this will likely be
    less intense due to weaker instability, could produce at least
    localized additional flash flooding if the rain occurs atop of
    primed soils from earlier convection.


    ...West Texas...
    Convection blossoming along the dry line Monday aftn/eve may become
    widespread, although there is quite a bit of spread both in
    location, coverage, and intensity, among the various 12Z CAMs.
    While the coverage may be somewhat modest, any storms that develop
    will be capable of producing intense rainfall rates exceeding=20
    2"/hr as they track to the E/NE at 15-20 kts. Storms on the dry
    line will likely organize through 25-35 kts of bulk shear, forming
    clusters which could briefly enhance rain rates even further, and
    lead to multiple rounds of heavy rain in some areas. FFG from the
    Rolling Plains southward towards Big Bend is only 2-2.5"/3hrs due
    to 7-day rainfall according to AHPS that has been more than 300% of
    normal. This suggests that the inherited MRGL risk is still
    warranted for any clusters of storms that move atop these more
    sensitive soils.


    ...South Florida...
    An active day of thunderstorms is again expected across South
    Florida on Monday as an impressive shortwave tracks overhead and
    interacts with a residual front draped across the region. During
    the period of peak heating /late aftn and eve/ when SBCAPE will
    climb towards 2000 J/kg and PWs surge to nearly 2.2 inches,
    approaching the daily record for MFL. The simulated reflectivity
    from the available high-res members have become much more
    aggressive, likely owing to a more pronounced tail of a jet streak
    to the east helping to drive ascent. With mean storm motions (using
    0-6km mean winds as proxy) expected to be less than 10 kts within
    modest bulk shear of 20-25 kts, clusters of storms that merge with
    outflow/sea breeze boundaries could lengthen the duration of
    rainfall rates that are expected to reach at least 2"/hr, and
    possibly exceed 3"/hr at times. This will result in heavy rain
    accumulating to 3-5", with locally higher amounts likely as
    reflected by both HREF and REFS 5"/24hr probabilities rising above
    60% along the Gold Coast. The inherited SLGT risk was modified only
    modestly for the new guidance, and instances of flash flooding
    appear likely in the urban areas D2, even moreso if heavy rain=20
    falls atop areas impacted by rainfall on D1 as well.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE=20
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES AND OVER SOUTH FLORIDA...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    The cold front pushing southeast across the central CONUS Tuesday
    may become more progressive as the Baja low from Sunday gets even
    more sheared into the westerlies, producing a more amplified trough
    axis pivoting east into the Plains. Embedded within this flow,
    multiple vorticity maxima will rotate E/NE, leading to additionally
    enhanced lift, aided significantly the latter half of D3 by
    diffluence within the RRQ of a poleward arcing jet streak
    downstream of the trough axis. This will result in expansive and
    impressive deep layer ascent from the Southern Plains through the
    Great Lakes, with return flow out of the Gulf on 30-50 kts at 850mb
    drawing impressive thermodynamics northward into the front. This
    suggests that convection will be widespread across the area
    Tuesday, which is supported by both simulated reflectivity and
    24-hr rainfall progs from the global models and ensembles, with
    rainfall rates exceeding 1"/hr likely anywhere along the front. The
    greatest risk for excessive rainfall will be from northern Texas
    through eastern Iowa where deeper warm cloud depths will produce
    more efficient rainfall rates, which will likely train SW to NE
    along the front. The SLGT risk was tailored to match the highest
    probabilities for 3"/24 hrs from the ECENS/GEFS, but some eastward
    expansion of the SLGT was also drawn to account for the AI guidance
    (AIFS, Graphcast) that is generally east of the deterministic
    models.


    ...South Florida...=20
    A meandering shortwave trough positioned over the Florida=20
    Peninsula will be the impetus for another round of scattered to=20
    widespread showers and thunderstorms Tuesday. With thermodynamics=20
    remaining robust across the region (PWs 1.75 to 2 inches and MUCAPE
    above 1000 J/kg), slow moving storms will again have the potential
    to produce excessive rain rates above 2"/hr. While there is some=20
    uncertainty into how much convective debris from Monday could limit
    coverage, the general consensus among the various ensemble camps=20
    is for another day of heavy rain, especially across South Florida,=20
    where ECENS/GEFS/SREF all suggest at least a low end risk (5-10%)=20
    for 3"/24 hrs. This will fall atop ground that will likely be=20
    sensitive from heavy rain on D2, and the inherited SLGT and MRGL=20
    risks were adjusted only cosmetically from previous.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4iPQy-J3mUCuGaLnSlEzbjiNUil1N12CUTE84f-WmrC6= 9huVbcs0T5kNb-6uSVMZ9fDu19wjHfeuTDyYwkAwdm6YmVE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4iPQy-J3mUCuGaLnSlEzbjiNUil1N12CUTE84f-WmrC6= 9huVbcs0T5kNb-6uSVMZ9fDu19wjHfeuTDyYwkAw9N2KJ0U$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4iPQy-J3mUCuGaLnSlEzbjiNUil1N12CUTE84f-WmrC6= 9huVbcs0T5kNb-6uSVMZ9fDu19wjHfeuTDyYwkAwT-5hkXA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 2 00:46:05 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 020044
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    844 PM EDT Sun Jun 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN ARIZONA...

    ...01Z Update...

    No changes were needed across the Southwest with this updated as
    the rainfall event is well underway across the region, but behaving
    as forecast.

    East from there across Texas however, slow-moving and some training
    storms have developed near and just south of the Metroplex.
    Isolated flash flooding is possible with any repeating rounds of
    storms, so the Marginal Risk was shifted west to align with current
    radar trends. Guidance suggests the storms should begin to turn and
    move southward with time, dissipating in a few hours with the loss
    of diurnal heating.

    The Marginal in Florida was dropped with this update as all
    significant convective activity in the state has ended.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS AS WELL AS THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Central Plains...
    Mid-level low over Baja Sunday will fill and eject northeast from
    Arizona, reaching the Central Plains by the end of D2. This
    evolution will be driven by the amplification of a northern stream
    trough digging across Montana, which will help shear out the closed
    low and absorb it into the pinched westerlies. The interaction of
    these two features will result in widespread convection on Monday
    from the Four Corners all the way to the Upper Midwest as ample
    moisture from the tropical Pacific streams northward, and impinges
    into a cold front being pushed southward by the northern stream
    trough.

    As the front sags southeast through the day, it will serve as the
    primary focus for developing thunderstorm activity Monday aftn and
    Monday evening, generally from Minnesota southwest into Colorado.
    While there is still considerable spread in the longitudinal
    placement of the heaviest rain due to timing differences of the
    models, there is good agreement that heavy rain producing
    thunderstorms will be widespread along the boundary. This is due to
    pronounced ascent through low-level convergence, upper divergence,
    and isentropic ascent as the LLJ ramps up and pushes PWs to above
    1.5 inches, potentially as high as 1.75 inches across NE/SD, well
    above the 90th percentile. This elevated PW will combine with a
    ribbon of CAPE above 2000 J/kg to fuel thunderstorms with rain
    rates that have a high probability (60-70% chance) of exceeding
    1"/hr. With mean winds expected to be 10-15 kts aligned to the
    front, but Corfidi vectors becoming increasingly anti-parallel,
    some backbuilding into the higher instability and training is
    likely. This will support total rainfall that could exceed 3 inches
    in some areas, and the SLGT risk was adjusted eastward to account
    for the latest guidance from the high plains of CO eastward towards
    the Coteau des Prairies.

    To the south and west of this SLGT risk, the MRGL risk remains
    expansive as far back as the slot canyon region of UT and across
    much of CO and northern NM where afternoon thunderstorms could
    produce 0.5+"/hr rates atop sensitive terrain leading to instances
    of flash flooding. Additionally, a wave of low pressure developing
    in the lee of the Southern Rockies may push additional moderate
    rainfall across eastern CO late D2, and while this will likely be
    less intense due to weaker instability, could produce at least
    localized additional flash flooding if the rain occurs atop of
    primed soils from earlier convection.


    ...West Texas...
    Convection blossoming along the dry line Monday aftn/eve may become
    widespread, although there is quite a bit of spread both in
    location, coverage, and intensity, among the various 12Z CAMs.
    While the coverage may be somewhat modest, any storms that develop
    will be capable of producing intense rainfall rates exceeding
    2"/hr as they track to the E/NE at 15-20 kts. Storms on the dry
    line will likely organize through 25-35 kts of bulk shear, forming
    clusters which could briefly enhance rain rates even further, and
    lead to multiple rounds of heavy rain in some areas. FFG from the
    Rolling Plains southward towards Big Bend is only 2-2.5"/3hrs due
    to 7-day rainfall according to AHPS that has been more than 300% of
    normal. This suggests that the inherited MRGL risk is still
    warranted for any clusters of storms that move atop these more
    sensitive soils.


    ...South Florida...
    An active day of thunderstorms is again expected across South
    Florida on Monday as an impressive shortwave tracks overhead and
    interacts with a residual front draped across the region. During
    the period of peak heating /late aftn and eve/ when SBCAPE will
    climb towards 2000 J/kg and PWs surge to nearly 2.2 inches,
    approaching the daily record for MFL. The simulated reflectivity
    from the available high-res members have become much more
    aggressive, likely owing to a more pronounced tail of a jet streak
    to the east helping to drive ascent. With mean storm motions (using
    0-6km mean winds as proxy) expected to be less than 10 kts within
    modest bulk shear of 20-25 kts, clusters of storms that merge with
    outflow/sea breeze boundaries could lengthen the duration of
    rainfall rates that are expected to reach at least 2"/hr, and
    possibly exceed 3"/hr at times. This will result in heavy rain
    accumulating to 3-5", with locally higher amounts likely as
    reflected by both HREF and REFS 5"/24hr probabilities rising above
    60% along the Gold Coast. The inherited SLGT risk was modified only
    modestly for the new guidance, and instances of flash flooding
    appear likely in the urban areas D2, even moreso if heavy rain
    falls atop areas impacted by rainfall on D1 as well.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES AND OVER SOUTH FLORIDA...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    The cold front pushing southeast across the central CONUS Tuesday
    may become more progressive as the Baja low from Sunday gets even
    more sheared into the westerlies, producing a more amplified trough
    axis pivoting east into the Plains. Embedded within this flow,
    multiple vorticity maxima will rotate E/NE, leading to additionally
    enhanced lift, aided significantly the latter half of D3 by
    diffluence within the RRQ of a poleward arcing jet streak
    downstream of the trough axis. This will result in expansive and
    impressive deep layer ascent from the Southern Plains through the
    Great Lakes, with return flow out of the Gulf on 30-50 kts at 850mb
    drawing impressive thermodynamics northward into the front. This
    suggests that convection will be widespread across the area
    Tuesday, which is supported by both simulated reflectivity and
    24-hr rainfall progs from the global models and ensembles, with
    rainfall rates exceeding 1"/hr likely anywhere along the front. The
    greatest risk for excessive rainfall will be from northern Texas
    through eastern Iowa where deeper warm cloud depths will produce
    more efficient rainfall rates, which will likely train SW to NE
    along the front. The SLGT risk was tailored to match the highest
    probabilities for 3"/24 hrs from the ECENS/GEFS, but some eastward
    expansion of the SLGT was also drawn to account for the AI guidance
    (AIFS, Graphcast) that is generally east of the deterministic
    models.


    ...South Florida...
    A meandering shortwave trough positioned over the Florida
    Peninsula will be the impetus for another round of scattered to
    widespread showers and thunderstorms Tuesday. With thermodynamics
    remaining robust across the region (PWs 1.75 to 2 inches and MUCAPE
    above 1000 J/kg), slow moving storms will again have the potential
    to produce excessive rain rates above 2"/hr. While there is some
    uncertainty into how much convective debris from Monday could limit
    coverage, the general consensus among the various ensemble camps
    is for another day of heavy rain, especially across South Florida,
    where ECENS/GEFS/SREF all suggest at least a low end risk (5-10%)
    for 3"/24 hrs. This will fall atop ground that will likely be
    sensitive from heavy rain on D2, and the inherited SLGT and MRGL
    risks were adjusted only cosmetically from previous.


    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8QOGplFMwjXA4yCBojILVOtTRNK-AKcEn6kSUmSakCPK= alcS114N2g9BqG4UqcDamXx8MGpTuL24uI0YBiU2XJQ8f-o$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8QOGplFMwjXA4yCBojILVOtTRNK-AKcEn6kSUmSakCPK= alcS114N2g9BqG4UqcDamXx8MGpTuL24uI0YBiU2IEFRJLQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8QOGplFMwjXA4yCBojILVOtTRNK-AKcEn6kSUmSakCPK= alcS114N2g9BqG4UqcDamXx8MGpTuL24uI0YBiU2rhWRpsA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 2 09:13:33 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 020913
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    513 AM EDT Mon Jun 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS AS WELL AS THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Central Plains...
    Mid- to upper-level low over the Southwest will slowly fill while=20
    ejecting east-northeast from Arizona today, reaching the Central=20
    Plains by late tonight. This evolution will be driven by the=20
    amplification of a northern stream trough digging across Montana,=20
    which will help shear out the closed low and absorb it into the=20
    pinched westerlies. The interaction of these two features will=20
    result in widespread convection from the Four Corners all the way=20
    to the Upper Midwest as ample moisture from both the tropical=20
    Pacific and western Gulf streams northward, and impinges into a=20
    cold front being pushed southward by the northern stream trough.

    As the front sags southeast through the day, it will serve as the
    primary focus for developing thunderstorm activity this afternoon=20
    and evening, generally from Minnesota southwest into Colorado.=20
    Hi-res models continue to suggest good agreement that heavy rain=20
    producing thunderstorms will be widespread along the boundary, and
    they've come into better agreement with regard to spread as well
    (best indicated by relatively high Ensemble Agreement Scale
    exceedance probabilities for 1" and 2", between 40-80% and 20-40%, respectively). This is due to pronounced ascent through low-level=20 convergence, upper divergence, and isentropic ascent as the LLJ=20
    ramps up and pushes PWs to above 1.5 inches, potentially as high as
    1.75 inches across NE/SD, well above the 90th percentile. This=20
    elevated PW will combine with a ribbon of CAPE above 2000 J/kg to=20
    fuel thunderstorms with rain rates that have a high probability=20
    (60-70% chance, per HREF 40-km neighborhood exceedance probs) of=20
    exceeding 1"/hr. With mean winds expected to be 10-15 kts aligned=20
    to the front, but Corfidi vectors becoming increasingly anti-=20
    parallel, some backbuilding into the higher instability and=20
    resulting localized pockets of training are likely. This will=20
    support total rainfall that could exceed 3 inches in some areas=20
    (indicated by HREF PMM QPF of 3-5"+), and the SLGT risk largely=20
    maintained with little adjustment needed.

    To the south and west of this SLGT risk, the MRGL risk remains
    expansive as far back as the slot canyon region of UT and southward
    to the AZ/NM border (where the MRGL risk was expanded to with this
    cycle, given persisting convection early this morning in
    association with the anomalous low-level moisture of the remnants
    of T.S. Alvin). While convection should largely end by midday over
    southeast AZ and into southwest NM as the aforementioned trough
    lifts ENE with drier air in the mid-levels moving in, afternoon
    thunderstorms are expected to build across the Intermountain West=20
    with 0.5+"/hr rates atop sensitive terrain leading to localized=20
    instances of flash flooding. Additionally, a wave of low pressure=20
    developing in the lee of the Southern Rockies will likely push=20
    additional moderate to heavy rainfall across eastern CO late
    tonight, and while this round will most likely be less intense due
    to weaker instability, localized additional flash flooding is
    possible if the rain occurs atop of primed soils from earlier=20
    convection.


    ...West Texas into Texas Panhandle and eastern OK...
    Convection blossoming along a surface trough/pseudo-dryline this=20
    afternoon and evening may become widespread, although there is=20
    still quite a bit of spread in location, coverage, and intensity=20
    among the various 00z CAMs. While the coverage may ultimately be=20
    somewhat modest, any storms that develop will be capable of=20
    producing intense rainfall rates exceeding 2"/hr (per 00z HREF=20
    40-km neighborhood probs of 10-20%) as they track to the E/NE at=20
    15-20 kts. Storms will likely organize through 25-35 kts of bulk=20
    shear, forming clusters which could briefly enhance rain rates even
    further, and may lead to multiple rounds of heavy rain in some=20
    areas. FFG from the Rolling Plains southward towards Big Bend are=20
    still as low as 2-2.5"/3hrs, despite some drying out over the past=20
    several days after an anomalously wet period earlier last week.=20
    The inherited MRGL risk remains warranted, and was expanded a good=20
    bit (both southwest and northeast into more of TX and eastern OK)=20
    to account for uncertainties among the CAMs (encompassing where 2"
    and 3" exceedance probabilities are greater than 10%).


    ...South Florida...
    An active day of thunderstorms is again expected across South
    Florida today as an impressive shortwave tracks overhead and=20
    interacts with a residual front draped across the region. During=20
    the period of peak heating (mid to late afternoon) when SBCAPE=20
    will likely climb above 2000 J/kg and PWs surge to nearly 2.2=20
    inches (per 00z HREF mean), approaching the daily record for MFL.=20
    The simulated reflectivity from the available high-res members have
    become much more aggressive, likely owing to a more pronounced=20
    tail of a jet streak to the east helping to drive ascent. With mean
    storm motions (using 0-6km mean winds as proxy) expected to be=20
    less than 10 kts within modest bulk shear of 20-25 kts, clusters of
    storms that merge with outflow/sea breeze boundaries could=20
    lengthen the duration of rainfall rates that are expected to reach=20
    at least 2"/hr, and possibly exceed 3"/hr at times (per 00z HREF
    neighborhood exceedance probs). This will likely result in heavy=20
    rain accumulating to 3-6", and may locally exceed 6" (per both=20
    HREF PMM and 5"/24hr neighborhood exceedance probabilities of
    40-70% along the Gold Coast and into the FL Keys). The inherited=20
    SLGT risk expanded a bit based on the new guidance, but remains
    capped within the 15-25% probability range (owing to the very high
    FFGs of the region with low confidence that these higher totals
    occur directly over more sensitive urban areas, as the best
    agreement is indicated to be over the less sensitive portions of
    the southwest mainland and Upper FL Keys). The MRGL was also
    expanded to include the remainder of the Lower FL Keys.=20

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES AND OVER SOUTH FLORIDA...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    The cold front pushing southeast across the central CONUS Tuesday
    may become more progressive as the Baja low from Sunday gets even
    more sheared into the westerlies, producing a more amplified trough
    axis pivoting east into the Plains. Embedded within this flow,
    multiple vorticity maxima will rotate E/NE, leading to additionally
    enhanced lift, aided significantly the latter half of D3 by
    diffluence within the RRQ of a poleward arcing jet streak
    downstream of the trough axis. This will result in expansive and
    impressive deep layer ascent from the Southern Plains through the
    Great Lakes, with return flow out of the Gulf on 30-50 kts at 850mb
    drawing impressive thermodynamics northward into the front. This
    suggests that convection will be widespread across the area
    Tuesday, which is supported by both the available CAMs (which are
    largely absent from the latter half of D2 at this juncture, though
    the RRFS and CMC-reg outputs are impressive) and the global models
    and ensembles with rainfall rates exceeding 1"/hr likely anywhere=20
    along the front. The greatest risk for excessive rainfall will be=20
    from northern Texas through southeastern Iowa and western Illinois=20
    where deeper warm cloud depths will produce more efficient rainfall
    rates, which will likely train SW to NE along the front. The SLGT=20
    risk was maintained for much of the same area (as models are in
    very good agreement on the placement of the QPF axis) which
    continue to match the highest probabilities for 2" and 3"/24 hrs=20
    from the ECENS/GEFS. The higher-end probabilities of the SLGT
    spectrum exist from northern OK into southeastern KS and central
    MO, where available CAMs suggest the best training axis will occur.=20


    ...South Florida...
    A meandering shortwave trough positioned over the Florida
    Peninsula will be the impetus for another round of scattered to
    widespread showers and thunderstorms Tuesday. With thermodynamics
    remaining robust across the region (PWs 1.75 to 2 inches and MUCAPE
    above 1000 J/kg), slow moving storms will again have the potential
    to produce excessive rain rates above 2"/hr. While there is some
    uncertainty into how much convective debris from Monday could limit
    coverage, the general consensus among the various ensemble camps
    is for another day of heavy rain, especially across South Florida,
    where models remain in good agreement suggesting 3-5" localized
    totals. This will fall atop ground that will likely be sensitive=20
    from heavy rain on D2, and the inherited SLGT and MRGL risks only
    needed minor adjustments (as the best agreement in a heavy rainfall
    axis remains in a similar position as D1, over far southern
    portions of the mainland into the Upper Keys).=20

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST INTO MUCH OF THE CENTRAL UNITED STATES, AS
    WELL AS FOR SOME PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHEAST COAST...

    ...Intermountain West through Central United States...=20
    A large MRGL risk was maintained and expanded a bit across a vast
    portion of central CONUS, while an inherited SLGT risk was removed
    over TX. While some prior model runs suggested TX could see the QPF
    maxima of the day, that appears much less likely with the Red River
    of the South region now conversely having some of the lowest 1"
    exceedance probabilities (from 00z ECENS/GEFS) of the whole MRGL
    region. This is due to better separation between the two features
    of interest, 1) another mid- and upper-level closed low ejecting
    northeastward from around Southern CA into the Intermountain West
    and 2) the aforementioned cold front stalling from the Southern
    Plains into the Midwest, but with the bulk of the favorable=20
    forcing from D2 largely having exited the region (though a
    shortwave pivoting through the larger scale trough is of interest).
    While moisture and lift looks sufficient across the Intermountain=20
    West for 0.5"+/hr rates (with downscaled 00z ECMWF and GFS models=20
    depicting localized 1-2" totals amid PWATs in the vicinity of the=20
    90th percentile), the highest probabilities for 1" and 2"=20
    exceedance exist from northern AR through southern MI (with notably
    higher probabilities from the 00z ECENS over the GEFS). With=20
    considerable uncertainty at this range, opted to maintain a broad=20
    MRGL (though if a SLGT is eventually reintroduced, it's more likely
    to be located over the Mid MS Valley and Midwest region).=20


    ...Southeast Coast...=20
    The shortwave and tropical moisture from prior days rainfall looks
    to lift northward by D3, as the ridge axis over the eastern CONUS
    that stalled the feature weakens enough in the lower-levels
    (700-850 mb) to allow for northward progress. There is considerable
    uncertainty regarding the timing of the lift of this feature and
    any meaningful organization into a closed low (more likely to
    remain a surface trough), but models are in overall good agreement
    in indicating the potential for significant rainfall totals just
    offshore with this feature. Given the proximity to the coastline,
    have maintained (and expanded southward) an inherited MRGL risk.=20

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9xEl_M2Kv-KOe_NGrtbDUdij13wEijp6blUXQfdL8H6q= cKX-X0CFA7HndYjlUYn5aobzMlUtehLIofQGHf3hKh-B1Es$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9xEl_M2Kv-KOe_NGrtbDUdij13wEijp6blUXQfdL8H6q= cKX-X0CFA7HndYjlUYn5aobzMlUtehLIofQGHf3hENru80E$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9xEl_M2Kv-KOe_NGrtbDUdij13wEijp6blUXQfdL8H6q= cKX-X0CFA7HndYjlUYn5aobzMlUtehLIofQGHf3hxLM2iuI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 2 15:59:21 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 021559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Mon Jun 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS AS WELL AS THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Four Corners through the Central Plains...=20
    The CAMs have shifted just a bit north/east today with the axis of
    heaviest rain, owing to subtle evolution changes in the upper=20
    pattern. The combination of ascent through height falls,=20
    convergence along the southeast advancing front, and increased=20
    ascent in the vicinity of a developing low pressure will help focus
    convection with heavy rainfall into favorable thermodynamics.=20

    The high-res ensemble camps (both 12Z HREF and 06Z REFS) are both
    still quite aggressive with suggesting more than 3 inches of rain
    across portions of Nebraska and into IA/MN/SD, as far north as the
    Coteau des Prairies. The greatest risk for excessive rainfall
    appears to be across Nebraska, still, however, as convection along
    the cold front initiates and then builds SW into the greater
    thermodynamics as the low evolves, leading to enhanced isentropic
    ascent into the boundary. Fortunately, the area of greatest
    exceedance probabilities (50-80% chance of 3+ inches from the HREF
    and REFS) overlaps the Sandhills which are not a favorable flash=20
    flood location, or otherwise this event could necessitate a
    targeted upgrade. Still, with locally as much as 5" of rain
    possible thanks to slow moving/backbuilding rain rates of 1-2"/hr,
    at least scattered instances of flash flooding are expected, and
    the SLGT risk was maintained with only modest cosmetic=20
    adjustments.

    Farther Southwest, the ejecting upper low advancing into a region=20
    of elevated instability and extremely anomalous PWs (NAEFS PWs the=20
    maximums in the 06Z CFSR database) will promote heavy rain=20
    producing convection over the Four Corners, especially during peak
    heating. Storm motions will be weak in this area beneath the upper
    low, so as rain rates which may reach 1"/hr (10-20% chance) leading
    to 15-min rainfall that could reach 0.25-0.5 inches. Should any of
    these cells, which could be widespread, move across sensitive
    terrain features like slot canyons, instances of flash flooding
    could result, and the MRGL risk has been maintained.

    Additionally, a wave of low pressure developing in the lee of the=20
    Southern Rockies will likely push additional moderate to heavy=20
    rainfall across eastern CO late tonight, and while this round will=20
    most likely be less intense due to weaker instability, localized=20
    additional flash flooding is possible if the rain occurs atop of=20
    primed soils from earlier convection.


    ...West Texas into Texas Panhandle and western OK...=20
    The surface trough/dry line will focus convective development this
    aftn/eve as diurnal heating pushes instability to 1000-3000 J/kg.=20
    This robust CAPE will work in tandem with PWs exceeding 1.5" as SW=20
    return flow reaches 30+ kts, to produce favorable thermodynamics=20
    for heavy rain containing thunderstorms. The guidance continues to=20
    vary widely with both the timing and spatial coverage of=20
    thunderstorms today, but low-level convergence moving into the=20 thermodynamics should support at least scattered convection along=20
    this boundary as it pushes east into tonight. While uncertainty is=20
    low as far as coverage, it is high that at least a few storms will=20
    fire along this boundary, and these will rapidly intensify within=20
    this environment. Storm motions of generally 10-15 kts to the WSW=20
    will be aligned strongly right of the Corfidi vectors to suggest at
    least some training is possible as storms re-develop into the more
    robust instability before tracking ENE. Additionally, increasing=20
    bulk shear to 25-30 kts this evening may help organize storms into=20
    clusters, and the high-res indicates the greatest chance for an MCS
    type of event will be into western OK tonight. Although some parts
    of this region have more vulnerable soils due to recent heavy
    rainfall, the generally scattered nature of convection along with
    uncertainty in placement suggests the MRGL risk remains accurate,
    and this was only adjusted slightly for new guidance.


    ...South Florida and the Florida Keys...
    Near record PWs across southern Florida will produce an environment
    favorable for excessive rainfall today. PWs are progged to reach
    above 2.2 inches, which would be a daily record for MFL according
    to the SPC sounding climatology. This moisture will combine with
    MUCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg to provide extreme thermodynamics to
    support intense rainfall rates in any thunderstorms, which are
    expected to be widespread today. The primary mechanisms for ascent
    will be a weakening front stalled across the southern Peninsula, as
    well as a potent shortwave moving across the Gulf and towards the
    area, with subtle diffluence in the tail of a jet streak over the
    Atlantic additionally contributing lift. This all suggests
    widespread convection this aftn/eve, which is supported by the high
    res CAMs. Within these storms, rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr or more
    are likely (40-60% chance of exceeding 2"/hr according to both HREF
    and REFS), which through training or repeated rounds could produce
    3-6" of rainfall, with local amounts potentially approaching 8" as
    reflected by the HREF probabilities. Any amounts above 5" would=20
    likely be where multiple rounds occur, but also where storms slow=20
    or move chaotically due to boundary interactions and storm mergers.

    While this part of Florida typically takes a lot of rain to flood,
    this setup does support a more pronounced flash flood risk today.
    Despite FFGs that remain around 4"/3hrs, exceedance of this
    criteria is possible, especially over urban areas that do not drain
    as efficiently. The focus today is expected to be across the
    Keys and Gold Coast of FL, and this is where the SLGT risk is=20
    focused and has been modestly adjusted for new guidance. However,=20
    the MRGL risk encompasses much of the southern peninsula where any=20
    of these slow moving heavy rain producing thunderstorms could=20
    result in runoff and instances of flash flooding.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES AND OVER SOUTH FLORIDA...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    The cold front pushing southeast across the central CONUS Tuesday
    may become more progressive as the Baja low from Sunday gets even
    more sheared into the westerlies, producing a more amplified trough
    axis pivoting east into the Plains. Embedded within this flow,
    multiple vorticity maxima will rotate E/NE, leading to additionally
    enhanced lift, aided significantly the latter half of D3 by
    diffluence within the RRQ of a poleward arcing jet streak
    downstream of the trough axis. This will result in expansive and
    impressive deep layer ascent from the Southern Plains through the
    Great Lakes, with return flow out of the Gulf on 30-50 kts at 850mb
    drawing impressive thermodynamics northward into the front. This
    suggests that convection will be widespread across the area
    Tuesday, which is supported by both the available CAMs (which are
    largely absent from the latter half of D2 at this juncture, though
    the RRFS and CMC-reg outputs are impressive) and the global models
    and ensembles with rainfall rates exceeding 1"/hr likely anywhere
    along the front. The greatest risk for excessive rainfall will be
    from northern Texas through southeastern Iowa and western Illinois
    where deeper warm cloud depths will produce more efficient rainfall
    rates, which will likely train SW to NE along the front. The SLGT
    risk was maintained for much of the same area (as models are in
    very good agreement on the placement of the QPF axis) which
    continue to match the highest probabilities for 2" and 3"/24 hrs
    from the ECENS/GEFS. The higher-end probabilities of the SLGT
    spectrum exist from northern OK into southeastern KS and central
    MO, where available CAMs suggest the best training axis will occur.


    ...South Florida...
    A meandering shortwave trough positioned over the Florida
    Peninsula will be the impetus for another round of scattered to
    widespread showers and thunderstorms Tuesday. With thermodynamics
    remaining robust across the region (PWs 1.75 to 2 inches and MUCAPE
    above 1000 J/kg), slow moving storms will again have the potential
    to produce excessive rain rates above 2"/hr. While there is some
    uncertainty into how much convective debris from Monday could limit
    coverage, the general consensus among the various ensemble camps
    is for another day of heavy rain, especially across South Florida,
    where models remain in good agreement suggesting 3-5" localized
    totals. This will fall atop ground that will likely be sensitive
    from heavy rain on D2, and the inherited SLGT and MRGL risks only
    needed minor adjustments (as the best agreement in a heavy rainfall
    axis remains in a similar position as D1, over far southern
    portions of the mainland into the Upper Keys).

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST INTO MUCH OF THE CENTRAL UNITED STATES, AS
    WELL AS FOR SOME PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHEAST COAST...

    ...Intermountain West through Central United States...
    A large MRGL risk was maintained and expanded a bit across a vast
    portion of central CONUS, while an inherited SLGT risk was removed
    over TX. While some prior model runs suggested TX could see the QPF
    maxima of the day, that appears much less likely with the Red River
    of the South region now conversely having some of the lowest 1"
    exceedance probabilities (from 00z ECENS/GEFS) of the whole MRGL
    region. This is due to better separation between the two features
    of interest, 1) another mid- and upper-level closed low ejecting
    northeastward from around Southern CA into the Intermountain West
    and 2) the aforementioned cold front stalling from the Southern
    Plains into the Midwest, but with the bulk of the favorable
    forcing from D2 largely having exited the region (though a
    shortwave pivoting through the larger scale trough is of interest).
    While moisture and lift looks sufficient across the Intermountain
    West for 0.5"+/hr rates (with downscaled 00z ECMWF and GFS models
    depicting localized 1-2" totals amid PWATs in the vicinity of the
    90th percentile), the highest probabilities for 1" and 2"
    exceedance exist from northern AR through southern MI (with notably
    higher probabilities from the 00z ECENS over the GEFS). With
    considerable uncertainty at this range, opted to maintain a broad
    MRGL (though if a SLGT is eventually reintroduced, it's more likely
    to be located over the Mid MS Valley and Midwest region).


    ...Southeast Coast...
    The shortwave and tropical moisture from prior days rainfall looks
    to lift northward by D3, as the ridge axis over the eastern CONUS
    that stalled the feature weakens enough in the lower-levels
    (700-850 mb) to allow for northward progress. There is considerable
    uncertainty regarding the timing of the lift of this feature and
    any meaningful organization into a closed low (more likely to
    remain a surface trough), but models are in overall good agreement
    in indicating the potential for significant rainfall totals just
    offshore with this feature. Given the proximity to the coastline,
    have maintained (and expanded southward) an inherited MRGL risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7CmjlJeLPi_EbKi32QCI72pnnfStvkJZIHeYaLNozUie= GC1wjNjEHjYfytkebzFERka65C9YnIQ3XcLidG6Jm7YGeLs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7CmjlJeLPi_EbKi32QCI72pnnfStvkJZIHeYaLNozUie= GC1wjNjEHjYfytkebzFERka65C9YnIQ3XcLidG6JtqVPpow$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7CmjlJeLPi_EbKi32QCI72pnnfStvkJZIHeYaLNozUie= GC1wjNjEHjYfytkebzFERka65C9YnIQ3XcLidG6Jma2ABmY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 2 16:04:06 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 021603
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1203 PM EDT Mon Jun 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS AS WELL AS THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Four Corners through the Central Plains...
    The CAMs have shifted just a bit north/east today with the axis of
    heaviest rain, owing to subtle evolution changes in the upper
    pattern. The combination of ascent through height falls,
    convergence along the southeast advancing front, and increased
    ascent in the vicinity of a developing low pressure will help focus
    convection with heavy rainfall into favorable thermodynamics.

    The high-res ensemble camps (both 12Z HREF and 06Z REFS) are both
    still quite aggressive with suggesting more than 3 inches of rain
    across portions of Nebraska and into IA/MN/SD, as far north as the
    Coteau des Prairies. The greatest risk for excessive rainfall
    appears to be across Nebraska, still, however, as convection along
    the cold front initiates and then builds SW into the greater
    thermodynamics as the low evolves, leading to enhanced isentropic
    ascent into the boundary. Fortunately, the area of greatest
    exceedance probabilities (50-80% chance of 3+ inches from the HREF
    and REFS) overlaps the Sandhills which are not a favorable flash
    flood location, or otherwise this event could necessitate a
    targeted upgrade. Still, with locally as much as 5" of rain
    possible thanks to slow moving/backbuilding rain rates of 1-2"/hr,
    at least scattered instances of flash flooding are expected, and
    the SLGT risk was maintained with only modest cosmetic
    adjustments.

    Farther Southwest, the ejecting upper low advancing into a region
    of elevated instability and extremely anomalous PWs (NAEFS PWs the
    maximums in the 06Z CFSR database) will promote heavy rain
    producing convection over the Four Corners, especially during peak
    heating. Storm motions will be weak in this area beneath the upper
    low, so as rain rates which may reach 1"/hr (10-20% chance) leading
    to 15-min rainfall that could reach 0.25-0.5 inches. Should any of
    these cells, which could be widespread, move across sensitive
    terrain features like slot canyons, instances of flash flooding
    could result, and the MRGL risk has been maintained.

    Additionally, a wave of low pressure developing in the lee of the
    Southern Rockies will likely push additional moderate to heavy
    rainfall across eastern CO late tonight, and while this round will
    most likely be less intense due to weaker instability, localized
    additional flash flooding is possible if the rain occurs atop of
    primed soils from earlier convection.


    ...West Texas into Texas Panhandle and western OK...
    The surface trough/dry line will focus convective development this
    aftn/eve as diurnal heating pushes instability to 1000-3000 J/kg.
    This robust CAPE will work in tandem with PWs exceeding 1.5" as SW
    return flow reaches 30+ kts, to produce favorable thermodynamics
    for heavy rain containing thunderstorms. The guidance continues to
    vary widely with both the timing and spatial coverage of
    thunderstorms today, but low-level convergence moving into the
    thermodynamics should support at least scattered convection along
    this boundary as it pushes east into tonight. While uncertainty is
    low as far as coverage, it is high that at least a few storms will
    fire along this boundary, and these will rapidly intensify within
    this environment. Storm motions of generally 10-15 kts to the WSW
    will be aligned strongly right of the Corfidi vectors to suggest at
    least some training is possible as storms re-develop into the more
    robust instability before tracking ENE. Additionally, increasing
    bulk shear to 25-30 kts this evening may help organize storms into
    clusters, and the high-res indicates the greatest chance for an MCS
    type of event will be into western OK tonight. Although some parts
    of this region have more vulnerable soils due to recent heavy
    rainfall, the generally scattered nature of convection along with
    uncertainty in placement suggests the MRGL risk remains accurate,
    and this was only adjusted slightly for new guidance.


    ...South Florida and the Florida Keys...
    Near record PWs across southern Florida will produce an environment
    favorable for excessive rainfall today. PWs are progged to reach
    above 2.2 inches, which would be a daily record for MFL according
    to the SPC sounding climatology. This moisture will combine with
    MUCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg to provide extreme thermodynamics to
    support intense rainfall rates in any thunderstorms, which are
    expected to be widespread today. The primary mechanisms for ascent
    will be a weakening front stalled across the southern Peninsula, as
    well as a potent shortwave moving across the Gulf and towards the
    area, with subtle diffluence in the tail of a jet streak over the
    Atlantic additionally contributing lift. This all suggests
    widespread convection this aftn/eve, which is supported by the high
    res CAMs. Within these storms, rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr or more
    are likely (40-60% chance of exceeding 2"/hr according to both HREF
    and REFS), which through training or repeated rounds could produce
    3-6" of rainfall, with local amounts potentially approaching 8" as
    reflected by the HREF probabilities. Any amounts above 5" would
    likely be where multiple rounds occur, but also where storms slow
    or move chaotically due to boundary interactions and storm mergers.

    While this part of Florida typically takes a lot of rain to flood,
    this setup does support a more pronounced flash flood risk today.
    Despite FFGs that remain around 4"/3hrs, exceedance of this
    criteria is possible, especially over urban areas that do not drain
    as efficiently. The focus today is expected to be across the
    Keys and Gold Coast of FL, and this is where the SLGT risk is
    focused and has been modestly adjusted for new guidance. However,
    the MRGL risk encompasses much of the southern peninsula where any
    of these slow moving heavy rain producing thunderstorms could
    result in runoff and instances of flash flooding.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES AND OVER SOUTH FLORIDA...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    The cold front pushing southeast across the central CONUS Tuesday
    may become more progressive as the Baja low from Sunday gets even
    more sheared into the westerlies, producing a more amplified trough
    axis pivoting east into the Plains. Embedded within this flow,
    multiple vorticity maxima will rotate E/NE, leading to additionally
    enhanced lift, aided significantly the latter half of D3 by
    diffluence within the RRQ of a poleward arcing jet streak
    downstream of the trough axis. This will result in expansive and
    impressive deep layer ascent from the Southern Plains through the
    Great Lakes, with return flow out of the Gulf on 30-50 kts at 850mb
    drawing impressive thermodynamics northward into the front. This
    suggests that convection will be widespread across the area
    Tuesday, which is supported by both the available CAMs (which are
    largely absent from the latter half of D2 at this juncture, though
    the RRFS and CMC-reg outputs are impressive) and the global models
    and ensembles with rainfall rates exceeding 1"/hr likely anywhere
    along the front. The greatest risk for excessive rainfall will be
    from northern Texas through southeastern Iowa and western Illinois
    where deeper warm cloud depths will produce more efficient rainfall
    rates, which will likely train SW to NE along the front. The SLGT
    risk was maintained for much of the same area (as models are in
    very good agreement on the placement of the QPF axis) which
    continue to match the highest probabilities for 2" and 3"/24 hrs
    from the ECENS/GEFS. The higher-end probabilities of the SLGT
    spectrum exist from northern OK into southeastern KS and central
    MO, where available CAMs suggest the best training axis will occur.


    ...South Florida...
    A meandering shortwave trough positioned over the Florida
    Peninsula will be the impetus for another round of scattered to
    widespread showers and thunderstorms Tuesday. With thermodynamics
    remaining robust across the region (PWs 1.75 to 2 inches and MUCAPE
    above 1000 J/kg), slow moving storms will again have the potential
    to produce excessive rain rates above 2"/hr. While there is some
    uncertainty into how much convective debris from Monday could limit
    coverage, the general consensus among the various ensemble camps
    is for another day of heavy rain, especially across South Florida,
    where models remain in good agreement suggesting 3-5" localized
    totals. This will fall atop ground that will likely be sensitive
    from heavy rain on D2, and the inherited SLGT and MRGL risks only
    needed minor adjustments (as the best agreement in a heavy rainfall
    axis remains in a similar position as D1, over far southern
    portions of the mainland into the Upper Keys).

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST INTO MUCH OF THE CENTRAL UNITED STATES, AS
    WELL AS FOR SOME PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHEAST COAST...

    ...Intermountain West through Central United States...
    A large MRGL risk was maintained and expanded a bit across a vast
    portion of central CONUS, while an inherited SLGT risk was removed
    over TX. While some prior model runs suggested TX could see the QPF
    maxima of the day, that appears much less likely with the Red River
    of the South region now conversely having some of the lowest 1"
    exceedance probabilities (from 00z ECENS/GEFS) of the whole MRGL
    region. This is due to better separation between the two features
    of interest, 1) another mid- and upper-level closed low ejecting
    northeastward from around Southern CA into the Intermountain West
    and 2) the aforementioned cold front stalling from the Southern
    Plains into the Midwest, but with the bulk of the favorable
    forcing from D2 largely having exited the region (though a
    shortwave pivoting through the larger scale trough is of interest).
    While moisture and lift looks sufficient across the Intermountain
    West for 0.5"+/hr rates (with downscaled 00z ECMWF and GFS models
    depicting localized 1-2" totals amid PWATs in the vicinity of the
    90th percentile), the highest probabilities for 1" and 2"
    exceedance exist from northern AR through southern MI (with notably
    higher probabilities from the 00z ECENS over the GEFS). With
    considerable uncertainty at this range, opted to maintain a broad
    MRGL (though if a SLGT is eventually reintroduced, it's more likely
    to be located over the Mid MS Valley and Midwest region).


    ...Southeast Coast...
    The shortwave and tropical moisture from prior days rainfall looks
    to lift northward by D3, as the ridge axis over the eastern CONUS
    that stalled the feature weakens enough in the lower-levels
    (700-850 mb) to allow for northward progress. There is considerable
    uncertainty regarding the timing of the lift of this feature and
    any meaningful organization into a closed low (more likely to
    remain a surface trough), but models are in overall good agreement
    in indicating the potential for significant rainfall totals just
    offshore with this feature. Given the proximity to the coastline,
    have maintained (and expanded southward) an inherited MRGL risk.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5waTso-f2rxXq2_8NomshmnRIp3vnuU4DBAAYAqzPf3q= 5JYMZVt71EGfvroEnff5bRcIgqTvEKzf_Ha0L2ZRfwYUgb0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5waTso-f2rxXq2_8NomshmnRIp3vnuU4DBAAYAqzPf3q= 5JYMZVt71EGfvroEnff5bRcIgqTvEKzf_Ha0L2ZRMD0mxOI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5waTso-f2rxXq2_8NomshmnRIp3vnuU4DBAAYAqzPf3q= 5JYMZVt71EGfvroEnff5bRcIgqTvEKzf_Ha0L2ZRh4HuKlc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 2 19:43:59 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 021943
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    343 PM EDT Mon Jun 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 02 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS AS WELL AS THE SOUTHERN FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...Four Corners through the Central Plains...
    The CAMs have shifted just a bit north/east today with the axis of
    heaviest rain, owing to subtle evolution changes in the upper
    pattern. The combination of ascent through height falls,
    convergence along the southeast advancing front, and increased
    ascent in the vicinity of a developing low pressure will help focus
    convection with heavy rainfall into favorable thermodynamics.

    The high-res ensemble camps (both 12Z HREF and 06Z REFS) are both
    still quite aggressive with suggesting more than 3 inches of rain
    across portions of Nebraska and into IA/MN/SD, as far north as the
    Coteau des Prairies. The greatest risk for excessive rainfall
    appears to be across Nebraska, still, however, as convection along
    the cold front initiates and then builds SW into the greater
    thermodynamics as the low evolves, leading to enhanced isentropic
    ascent into the boundary. Fortunately, the area of greatest
    exceedance probabilities (50-80% chance of 3+ inches from the HREF
    and REFS) overlaps the Sandhills which are not a favorable flash
    flood location, or otherwise this event could necessitate a
    targeted upgrade. Still, with locally as much as 5" of rain
    possible thanks to slow moving/backbuilding rain rates of 1-2"/hr,
    at least scattered instances of flash flooding are expected, and
    the SLGT risk was maintained with only modest cosmetic
    adjustments.

    Farther Southwest, the ejecting upper low advancing into a region
    of elevated instability and extremely anomalous PWs (NAEFS PWs the
    maximums in the 06Z CFSR database) will promote heavy rain
    producing convection over the Four Corners, especially during peak
    heating. Storm motions will be weak in this area beneath the upper
    low, so as rain rates which may reach 1"/hr (10-20% chance) leading
    to 15-min rainfall that could reach 0.25-0.5 inches. Should any of
    these cells, which could be widespread, move across sensitive
    terrain features like slot canyons, instances of flash flooding
    could result, and the MRGL risk has been maintained.

    Additionally, a wave of low pressure developing in the lee of the
    Southern Rockies will likely push additional moderate to heavy
    rainfall across eastern CO late tonight, and while this round will
    most likely be less intense due to weaker instability, localized
    additional flash flooding is possible if the rain occurs atop of
    primed soils from earlier convection.


    ...West Texas into Texas Panhandle and western OK...
    The surface trough/dry line will focus convective development this
    aftn/eve as diurnal heating pushes instability to 1000-3000 J/kg.=20
    This robust CAPE will work in tandem with PWs exceeding 1.5" as SW=20
    return flow reaches 30+ kts, to produce favorable thermodynamics=20
    for heavy rain containing thunderstorms. The guidance continues to=20
    vary widely with both the timing and spatial coverage of=20
    thunderstorms today, but low-level convergence moving into the=20 thermodynamics should support at least scattered convection along=20
    this boundary as it pushes east into tonight. While uncertainty is=20
    low as far as coverage, it is high that at least a few storms will=20
    fire along this boundary, and these will rapidly intensify within=20
    this environment. Storm motions of generally 10-15 kts to the WSW=20
    will be aligned strongly right of the Corfidi vectors to suggest at
    least some training is possible as storms re-develop into the more
    robust instability before tracking ENE. Additionally, increasing=20
    bulk shear to 25-30 kts this evening may help organize storms into=20
    clusters, and the high-res indicates the greatest chance for an MCS
    type of event will be into western OK tonight. Although some parts
    of this region have more vulnerable soils due to recent heavy=20
    rainfall, the generally scattered nature of convection along with=20 uncertainty in placement suggests the MRGL risk remains accurate,=20
    and this was only adjusted slightly for new guidance.


    ...South Florida and the Florida Keys...
    Near record PWs across southern Florida will produce an environment
    favorable for excessive rainfall today. PWs are progged to reach
    above 2.2 inches, which would be a daily record for MFL according
    to the SPC sounding climatology. This moisture will combine with
    MUCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg to provide extreme thermodynamics to
    support intense rainfall rates in any thunderstorms, which are
    expected to be widespread today. The primary mechanisms for ascent
    will be a weakening front stalled across the southern Peninsula, as
    well as a potent shortwave moving across the Gulf and towards the
    area, with subtle diffluence in the tail of a jet streak over the
    Atlantic additionally contributing lift. This all suggests
    widespread convection this aftn/eve, which is supported by the high
    res CAMs. Within these storms, rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr or more
    are likely (40-60% chance of exceeding 2"/hr according to both HREF
    and REFS), which through training or repeated rounds could produce
    3-6" of rainfall, with local amounts potentially approaching 8" as
    reflected by the HREF probabilities. Any amounts above 5" would
    likely be where multiple rounds occur, but also where storms slow
    or move chaotically due to boundary interactions and storm mergers.

    While this part of Florida typically takes a lot of rain to flood,
    this setup does support a more pronounced flash flood risk today.
    Despite FFGs that remain around 4"/3hrs, exceedance of this
    criteria is possible, especially over urban areas that do not drain
    as efficiently. The focus today is expected to be across the
    Keys and Gold Coast of FL, and this is where the SLGT risk is
    focused and has been modestly adjusted for new guidance. However,
    the MRGL risk encompasses much of the southern peninsula where any
    of these slow moving heavy rain producing thunderstorms could
    result in runoff and instances of flash flooding.

    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES AS WELL AS SOUTH FLORIDA AND THE FLORIDA KEYS...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    An active day of convection is likely on Tuesday as a cold front
    sags across the Heartland, providing the focus for widespread
    showers and thunderstorms. This front will be pushed southeast in
    response to an amplifying northern stream trough which will dig
    across the CONUS as far south as Texas. This will drive height
    falls across the region, with embedded shortwave impulses racing
    northeast, and a poleward arcing jet streak downstream of the
    primary trough axis combining to provide additional ascent. This
    deep layer lift will work into robust thermodynamics characterized
    by an overlap of PWs above the 99th percentile (NAEFS) and a ribbon
    of MUCAPE exceeding 2000 J/kg, surging northward on 30-50 kts of
    850mb flow emerging on return flow from the Gulf.

    The CAMs continue to be in excellent agreement in the coverage of
    convection on Tuesday despite some temporal and spatial differences
    owing to timing of the front. Despite these modest differences,
    there is good agreement among the REFS and HREF ensembles to
    suggest widespread 1"/hr rain rates from the northern TX Hill
    Country all the way to the eastern Missouri Valley (probabilities
    exceeding 50% across this entire area). Although mean 0-6km winds
    of 20-30 kts indicate progressive storm motions, this flow aligned
    to the front and combined with Corfidi vectors that collapse and
    veer to the NE indicate a high potential for redevelopment to the
    SW into the more intense thermodynamics and training of cells to
    the northeast. Where this occurs, total rainfall exceeding 3" is
    likely (>60% chance in HREF/REFS) and 5" is possible (>40% chance),
    with even the global ensembles suggesting a 10-30% chance for 3" in
    this same region. The inherited SLGT risk was tailored for this new
    guidance, with the biggest adjustment being an extension SW into
    the Hill Country of TX where convection that develops along the
    tail of this front will likely feature slow storm motions and
    backbuilding to produce heavy rainfall.=20

    Although heavy rainfall is also likely in convection that develops
    northeast into the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes, storms should be
    more progressive and the Corfidi vectors suggest less opportunity
    for training, so only a MRGL risk is needed north of Iowa.


    ...South Florida and the Florida Keys...=20
    Shortwave trough over the Gulf may amplify enough to become a weak
    closed low Tuesday and then spin nearly in place as it gets=20
    suppressed beneath a Bermuda- type ridge to its northeast. This=20
    will maintain modest synoptic ascent across Florida, but some=20
    enhancement is likely as a jet streak over the Atlantic tails back=20
    to the SW, placing the favorably diffluent RRQ overtop the=20
    peninsula. This forcing will combine with continued, albeit=20
    weakening, low-level convergence along a decayed front/surface=20
    trough, to result in another day of widespread showers and=20
    thunderstorms. PWs in place will again be greater than 2 inches,=20
    above the 90th percentile according to NAEFS, combining with 1000=20
    J/kg of CAPE to produce robust thermodynamics to support rainfall=20
    rates of 2"/hr at times. There continues to be some uncertainty in=20
    the coverage of convection, as well as placement, among the various
    CAMs, somewhat lowering the confidence into D2. However, after=20
    heavy rain anticipated D1, any additional rainfall D2 could quickly
    become problematic and lead to instances of runoff and flash=20
    flooding, especially in urban areas. The inherited MRGL and SLGT=20
    risks were tailored slightly to encompass the highest probabilities
    of 1+" and 3+" on D2.

    Although not included in a risk area at this time, some of the
    guidance has become a bit more aggressive with a wave of low
    pressure developing along an inverted trough aligned to the east
    coast of Florida. If this low were to develop a bit more rapidly or
    track farther west, some heavy rain could move onshore the
    northeast Florida coast before 12Z Wednesday.


    ...Four Corners...
    A MRGL risk was expanded westward from the Central Plains to the
    UT/NV/AZ borders with this update. The guidance has become more
    aggressive with showers and thunderstorms blossoming during the=20
    aftn/evening as forcing intensifies from broad divergence=20
    downstream of a closed low filling and moving into the Desert=20
    Southwest, producing ascent atop a wavering frontal boundary=20
    positioned over the region. This lift will impinge into favorable thermodynamics with PWs reaching above 0.75 inches into a bubble of
    MUCAPE of 750-1000 J/kg. Mean storm motions will be weak, generally
    around 5 kts, so with rainfall rates which have a 5-15% chance of
    exceeding 1"/hr, these slow motions could result in locally as much
    as 1" of rainfall in a short period of time. If this occurs over
    sensitive soils, urban areas, or terrain features, instances of
    flash flooding could result.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, THE FOUR CORNERS, AND THE SOUTHEAST COAST...

    ...Four Corners...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the
    upper low over northern Baja fills and ejects northeast atop the
    Four Corners. The accompanying ascent will move into continued
    anomalous PWs which will exceed the 99th percentile according to
    NAEFS. This will fuel widespread convection with rainfall rates of
    0.5"/hr, or at times higher, likely., and storms will likely move=20
    slowly beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of=20
    heavy rain. Although total rainfall will be modest in most areas=20
    (24-hr probability from the ECENS/GEFS for 1" peaks around 25%),=20
    where the heavy rain impacts sensitive terrain features or urban
    areas, or should heavier rain impact the wetter soils in the CO/NM
    high plains, instances of flash flooding could result.

    ...Mid-Mississippi Valley to Great Lakes...
    The cold front from D2 will continue its trek eastward on
    Wednesday, but will start to slow and become aligned more west to
    east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching shortwave
    over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within the flow
    will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri to
    Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of
    thunderstorms is expected on D3. Storm motions along the front are
    likely to be progressive, lifting off to the northeast on 0-6km
    mean winds of 20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi vectors aligned both to
    this mean wind and the front suggests a potential for training. As
    rainfall rates peak above 1"/hr within favorable thermodynamics,
    this could result in stripes of heavy rainfall for which the
    SREF/ECENS/GEFS ensembles indicate have a 20-30% chance of
    exceeding 1", with some low-end probabilities (5% or less) of
    exceeding 3". The MRGL risk was split, with the Central Plains
    removed from the risk on D3 due to a more progressive front and
    some NVA behind impulses, but also extended a bit northeast to
    reach the Canadian border for isolated flash flood potential.

    ...Southeast Coast...
    Guidance has become more aggressive with a wave of low pressure
    potentially developing along an inverted trough shifting northeast
    along the FL/GA/SC coasts. While NHC has placed a 10% probability
    of tropical or sub-tropical development on this feature, regardless
    of whether a circulation forms or not, there is increasing
    confidence that heavy rain will spread across the FL Peninsula and
    then rotate onshore the GA/SC coasts on Wednesday. With PWs in the
    vicinity progged to exceed 2", above the 90th percentile,=20
    supported by warm cloud depths that may exceed 15,000 ft, efficient
    rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr will be likely in any showers/thunderstorms.
    It is possible that the heaviest rainfall will remain just=20
    offshore, but impressive moisture convergence from Jacksonville, FL
    to Charleston, SC should support waves of heavy rainfall=20
    regardless of development of this system, and although EFI is
    modest, it does capture the region of greatest potential at this
    time range. Additionally, plentiful tropical moisture across the=20
    rest of the FL Peninsula and a shortwave continuing to pivot across
    the Gulf could enhance rainfall over much of Florida Wednesday,=20
    and the MRGL risk was expanded from Winyah Bay, along the coastal=20
    plain of GA/SC, and across much of the FL Peninsula.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8kfhvDsiRtAmK5cPfjeT9H7RUz2N0lVDbUKhH40aGL-V= WIWSGF2x0Hsu88AmbtSC8xBHHOqEiH5OQw-D41BVPNg9uxQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8kfhvDsiRtAmK5cPfjeT9H7RUz2N0lVDbUKhH40aGL-V= WIWSGF2x0Hsu88AmbtSC8xBHHOqEiH5OQw-D41BV4YVDCCw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8kfhvDsiRtAmK5cPfjeT9H7RUz2N0lVDbUKhH40aGL-V= WIWSGF2x0Hsu88AmbtSC8xBHHOqEiH5OQw-D41BV02fiJwg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 3 00:42:12 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 030042
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    842 PM EDT Mon Jun 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central Plains...

    The Slight Risk area was trimmed southeastward out of the Sand
    Hills and behind the line of storms currently bisecting Nebraska.
    As expected, the storms across Nebraska are barely moving, and are
    producing rain rates to 3 inches per hour in otherwise normally dry
    areas. Thus, the Slight remains in place for central and much of
    eastern Nebraska. When the storms begin to move, likely as the line
    interacts with a second progressive line of storms across west
    Kansas, they should propagate eastward, so areas west of the line
    should remain with relatively little rainfall.

    The surrounding Marginal across Minnesota was trimmed as the storms
    in that area are very progressive. While there may be some
    redevelopment of shower activity later tonight, it is not expected
    to result in any flooding concerns.

    The Marginal in west Texas and western Oklahoma remains largely
    intact as potential backbuilding of the line could result in
    localized training, which may produce an isolated flash flood or
    two.

    The Slight across south Florida has been downgraded with this
    update as the peak rainfall rates from storms have come way down as
    the storms have congealed into a larger MCS, but with relatively
    low embedded rainfall rates. Most areas seeing rates below an inch
    per hour should preclude anything other than isolated flash
    flooding through the evening.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES AS WELL AS SOUTH FLORIDA AND THE FLORIDA KEYS...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    An active day of convection is likely on Tuesday as a cold front
    sags across the Heartland, providing the focus for widespread
    showers and thunderstorms. This front will be pushed southeast in
    response to an amplifying northern stream trough which will dig
    across the CONUS as far south as Texas. This will drive height
    falls across the region, with embedded shortwave impulses racing
    northeast, and a poleward arcing jet streak downstream of the
    primary trough axis combining to provide additional ascent. This
    deep layer lift will work into robust thermodynamics characterized
    by an overlap of PWs above the 99th percentile (NAEFS) and a ribbon
    of MUCAPE exceeding 2000 J/kg, surging northward on 30-50 kts of
    850mb flow emerging on return flow from the Gulf.

    The CAMs continue to be in excellent agreement in the coverage of
    convection on Tuesday despite some temporal and spatial differences
    owing to timing of the front. Despite these modest differences,
    there is good agreement among the REFS and HREF ensembles to
    suggest widespread 1"/hr rain rates from the northern TX Hill
    Country all the way to the eastern Missouri Valley (probabilities
    exceeding 50% across this entire area). Although mean 0-6km winds
    of 20-30 kts indicate progressive storm motions, this flow aligned
    to the front and combined with Corfidi vectors that collapse and
    veer to the NE indicate a high potential for redevelopment to the
    SW into the more intense thermodynamics and training of cells to
    the northeast. Where this occurs, total rainfall exceeding 3" is
    likely (>60% chance in HREF/REFS) and 5" is possible (>40% chance),
    with even the global ensembles suggesting a 10-30% chance for 3" in
    this same region. The inherited SLGT risk was tailored for this new
    guidance, with the biggest adjustment being an extension SW into
    the Hill Country of TX where convection that develops along the
    tail of this front will likely feature slow storm motions and
    backbuilding to produce heavy rainfall.

    Although heavy rainfall is also likely in convection that develops
    northeast into the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes, storms should be
    more progressive and the Corfidi vectors suggest less opportunity
    for training, so only a MRGL risk is needed north of Iowa.


    ...South Florida and the Florida Keys...
    Shortwave trough over the Gulf may amplify enough to become a weak
    closed low Tuesday and then spin nearly in place as it gets
    suppressed beneath a Bermuda- type ridge to its northeast. This
    will maintain modest synoptic ascent across Florida, but some
    enhancement is likely as a jet streak over the Atlantic tails back
    to the SW, placing the favorably diffluent RRQ overtop the
    peninsula. This forcing will combine with continued, albeit
    weakening, low-level convergence along a decayed front/surface
    trough, to result in another day of widespread showers and
    thunderstorms. PWs in place will again be greater than 2 inches,
    above the 90th percentile according to NAEFS, combining with 1000
    J/kg of CAPE to produce robust thermodynamics to support rainfall
    rates of 2"/hr at times. There continues to be some uncertainty in
    the coverage of convection, as well as placement, among the various
    CAMs, somewhat lowering the confidence into D2. However, after
    heavy rain anticipated D1, any additional rainfall D2 could quickly
    become problematic and lead to instances of runoff and flash
    flooding, especially in urban areas. The inherited MRGL and SLGT
    risks were tailored slightly to encompass the highest probabilities
    of 1+" and 3+" on D2.

    Although not included in a risk area at this time, some of the
    guidance has become a bit more aggressive with a wave of low
    pressure developing along an inverted trough aligned to the east
    coast of Florida. If this low were to develop a bit more rapidly or
    track farther west, some heavy rain could move onshore the
    northeast Florida coast before 12Z Wednesday.


    ...Four Corners...
    A MRGL risk was expanded westward from the Central Plains to the
    UT/NV/AZ borders with this update. The guidance has become more
    aggressive with showers and thunderstorms blossoming during the
    aftn/evening as forcing intensifies from broad divergence
    downstream of a closed low filling and moving into the Desert
    Southwest, producing ascent atop a wavering frontal boundary
    positioned over the region. This lift will impinge into favorable thermodynamics with PWs reaching above 0.75 inches into a bubble of
    MUCAPE of 750-1000 J/kg. Mean storm motions will be weak, generally
    around 5 kts, so with rainfall rates which have a 5-15% chance of
    exceeding 1"/hr, these slow motions could result in locally as much
    as 1" of rainfall in a short period of time. If this occurs over
    sensitive soils, urban areas, or terrain features, instances of
    flash flooding could result.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, THE FOUR CORNERS, AND THE SOUTHEAST COAST...

    ...Four Corners...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the
    upper low over northern Baja fills and ejects northeast atop the
    Four Corners. The accompanying ascent will move into continued
    anomalous PWs which will exceed the 99th percentile according to
    NAEFS. This will fuel widespread convection with rainfall rates of
    0.5"/hr, or at times higher, likely., and storms will likely move
    slowly beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of
    heavy rain. Although total rainfall will be modest in most areas
    (24-hr probability from the ECENS/GEFS for 1" peaks around 25%),
    where the heavy rain impacts sensitive terrain features or urban
    areas, or should heavier rain impact the wetter soils in the CO/NM
    high plains, instances of flash flooding could result.

    ...Mid-Mississippi Valley to Great Lakes...
    The cold front from D2 will continue its trek eastward on
    Wednesday, but will start to slow and become aligned more west to
    east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching shortwave
    over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within the flow
    will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri to
    Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of
    thunderstorms is expected on D3. Storm motions along the front are
    likely to be progressive, lifting off to the northeast on 0-6km
    mean winds of 20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi vectors aligned both to
    this mean wind and the front suggests a potential for training. As
    rainfall rates peak above 1"/hr within favorable thermodynamics,
    this could result in stripes of heavy rainfall for which the
    SREF/ECENS/GEFS ensembles indicate have a 20-30% chance of
    exceeding 1", with some low-end probabilities (5% or less) of
    exceeding 3". The MRGL risk was split, with the Central Plains
    removed from the risk on D3 due to a more progressive front and
    some NVA behind impulses, but also extended a bit northeast to
    reach the Canadian border for isolated flash flood potential.

    ...Southeast Coast...
    Guidance has become more aggressive with a wave of low pressure
    potentially developing along an inverted trough shifting northeast
    along the FL/GA/SC coasts. While NHC has placed a 10% probability
    of tropical or sub-tropical development on this feature, regardless
    of whether a circulation forms or not, there is increasing
    confidence that heavy rain will spread across the FL Peninsula and
    then rotate onshore the GA/SC coasts on Wednesday. With PWs in the
    vicinity progged to exceed 2", above the 90th percentile,
    supported by warm cloud depths that may exceed 15,000 ft, efficient
    rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr will be likely in any showers/thunderstorms.
    It is possible that the heaviest rainfall will remain just
    offshore, but impressive moisture convergence from Jacksonville, FL
    to Charleston, SC should support waves of heavy rainfall
    regardless of development of this system, and although EFI is
    modest, it does capture the region of greatest potential at this
    time range. Additionally, plentiful tropical moisture across the
    rest of the FL Peninsula and a shortwave continuing to pivot across
    the Gulf could enhance rainfall over much of Florida Wednesday,
    and the MRGL risk was expanded from Winyah Bay, along the coastal
    plain of GA/SC, and across much of the FL Peninsula.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_Nv0_imDNZUpR-fgoC7KaxWLsiGHz0fGfAujLDhVF5F-= GQRFMEOrcDE8k5uj-kokUnZZgZm_KV_r5ZS0A2SWORYKua0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_Nv0_imDNZUpR-fgoC7KaxWLsiGHz0fGfAujLDhVF5F-= GQRFMEOrcDE8k5uj-kokUnZZgZm_KV_r5ZS0A2SWkmo6sNs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_Nv0_imDNZUpR-fgoC7KaxWLsiGHz0fGfAujLDhVF5F-= GQRFMEOrcDE8k5uj-kokUnZZgZm_KV_r5ZS0A2SWab-ONNo$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 3 08:31:02 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 030830
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    430 AM EDT Tue Jun 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES AS WELL AS SOUTH FLORIDA AND THE FLORIDA KEYS...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    An active day of convection is expected today as a cold front sags
    across the Heartland, providing the focus for widespread showers=20
    and thunderstorms. This front will be pushed southeast in response=20
    to an amplifying northern stream trough which will dig across the=20
    CONUS as far south as Texas. This will drive height falls across=20
    the region, with embedded shortwave impulses racing northeast, and=20
    a poleward arcing jet streak downstream of the primary trough axis=20
    combining to provide additional ascent. This deep layer lift will=20
    work into robust thermodynamics characterized by an overlap of
    1.8-2.0" PWs (above the 99th percentile per NAEFS) and a ribbon of
    MUCAPE exceeding 2000 J/kg (through northern MO), surging northward
    on 30-50 kts of 850mb flow emerging on return flow from the Gulf.

    The CAMs have continued to be in excellent agreement in the coverage
    of convection, while also recently coming into better agreement on=20=20 temporal and spatial differences (owing to timing of the front).=20
    CAMs indicate widespread 1"/hr rain rates from the northern TX=20
    Hill Country all the way to the eastern Missouri Valley=20
    (40-km neighborhood 1"/1-hr probabilities exceeding 50% across=20
    this entire area), and these probabilities increase from north to
    south overtime today (as overnight convection likely remains active
    in the morning, then grows upscale during the day). Although mean=20
    0-6km winds of 20-30 kts indicate progressive storm motions, this=20
    flow aligned to the front and combined with Corfidi vectors that=20
    collapse and veer to the NE indicate a high potential for=20
    redevelopment to the SW into the more intense thermodynamics and=20
    training of cells to the northeast. Where this occurs, localized
    rainfall totals exceeding 3" are likely (50-80% 3"/24-hr
    neighborhood exceedance probs across the entire Slight risk area,=20
    per 00z HREF). The best spatial agreement for 2"+ totals (per 00z
    HREF EAS 2"/24-hr exceedance probs) are located within the core of
    the central and northern portions of the Slight risk, from central
    OK through southeast KS and central MO (where 5" neighborhood
    exceedance probabilities are also greatest, as high as 30-50%). The
    inherited SLGT risk was tailored to this new guidance, but very
    little change was necessary. The Slight risk over TX is considered
    the lowest confidence, as spatial agreement (per HREF EAS probs) is
    lowest here (though convection that does manage to develop along=20
    the tail of this front well into the night will likely feature=20
    slow storm motions and backbuilding, with 5" neighborhood
    exceedance probabilities still as high as 20-30%).

    Although heavy rainfall is also likely in convection that develops
    northeast into the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes, storms should be
    more progressive and the Corfidi vectors suggest less opportunity
    for training, so only a MRGL risk is maintained north of IA.


    ...South Florida and the Florida Keys...
    A shortwave trough over the Gulf has amplified enough overnight to
    become a weak closed low early this morning, and is expected to=20
    spin nearly in place as it gets suppressed beneath a Bermuda- type=20
    ridge to its northeast. This will maintain modest synoptic ascent=20
    across Florida, but some enhancement is likely as a jet streak=20
    over the Atlantic tails back to the SW, placing the favorably=20
    diffluent RRQ overtop the peninsula. This forcing will combine=20
    with continued low-level convergence along a decayed front/surface
    trough, resulting in another day of widespread showers and=20
    thunderstorms. PWs in place will again be greater than 2 inches,=20
    above the 90th percentile according to NAEFS, combining with 1000=20
    J/kg of CAPE to produce robust thermodynamics to support rainfall=20
    rates of 2"/hr at times. There continues to be some uncertainty in=20
    the coverage of convection among the various CAMs, but better
    agreement in the placement of 3"+ amount (per HREF EAS probs) along
    the southwest coast of FL has necessitated an expansion of the SLGT
    to just south of Tampa Bay. While FFG exceedance probs are highest
    across this area, have also maintained the SLGT for the remainder
    of South FL (including all of the FL Keys and the Miami metro) as
    localized 5" totals remain possible (with HREF 40-km neighborhood=20
    3"/24-hr exceedance probs of 30-50% in very close proximity).=20

    Although not included in a risk area at this time, some of the
    guidance has continued to be a bit more aggressive with a wave of=20
    low pressure developing along an inverted trough aligned to the=20
    east coast of Florida. If this low were to develop a bit more=20
    rapidly or track farther west, some heavy rain could move onshore=20
    the northeast Florida coast before 12Z Wednesday.


    ...Four Corners...
    A MRGL risk was further expanded westward with this cycle, now
    encompassing southeastern portions of CA through NV/UT/AZ and the
    Four Corners region into the the Central Plains. The guidance has
    continues to be more aggressive with showers and thunderstorms=20
    blossoming during the afternoon/evening as forcing intensifies=20
    from broad divergence downstream of a closed low filling and moving
    into the Desert Southwest, producing ascent atop a wavering=20
    frontal boundary positioned over the region. This lift will impinge
    into favorable thermodynamics with PWs reaching above 0.75 inches=20
    into a bubble of MUCAPE of 750-1000 J/kg. Mean storm motions will=20
    be weak, generally around 5 kts, so with rainfall rates which have=20
    a 10-40% chance of exceeding 1"/hr (per 00z HREF 40-km neighborhood
    1"/1-hr exceedance probs), these slow motions could result in=20
    locally as much as 1" of rainfall in a short period of time. If=20
    this occurs over sensitive soils, urban areas, or terrain features,
    instances of flash flooding could result.=20

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, SOUTHERN PLAINS, THE
    FOUR CORNERS, AND THE SOUTHEAST COAST...

    ...Four Corners into Central/Southern High Plains...=20
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the=20
    upper low over northern Baja fills and ejects northeast atop the=20
    Four Corners. The accompanying ascent will move into continued=20
    anomalous PWs which will exceed the 99th percentile (per NAEFS).=20
    This will fuel widespread convection capable of localized rainfall
    rates of 0.5"/hr (or at times higher). Storms will likely move=20
    slowly beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of=20
    heavy rain. Although total rainfall will be modest in most areas=20
    (as reflected by relatively low 24-hr probability from ECENS/GEFS=20
    for 1" exceedance), where the heavy rain impacts sensitive terrain
    features or urban areas instances of flash flooding could result.
    Probabilities have also increased a bit (particularly from the new
    00z ECENS suite) further east into the Central/Southern High=20
    Plains and the MRGL risk has been expanded accordingly. Should
    models come into better agreement, additional expansion may be
    needed further south into West TX (and with additional CAM guidance
    and agreement, an upgrade to SLGT may also be needed).=20

    ...Southern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley to Great Lakes...
    The cold front from D1 will continue its trek eastward on=20
    Wednesday, but will start to slow and become aligned more west to=20
    east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching shortwave=20
    over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within the flow=20
    will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri to=20
    Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of=20
    thunderstorms is expected on D2 (though some models are also
    indicated potential for isolated convective development farther=20
    southwest into portions of the Southern Plains). Storm motions=20
    along the front are likely to be progressive, lifting off to the=20
    northeast on 0-6km mean winds of 20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi=20
    vectors aligned both to this mean wind and the front suggests a=20
    potential for training. As rainfall rates peak above 1"/hr within=20
    favorable thermodynamics, this could result in stripes of heavy=20
    rainfall with ensembles indicating 10-40% chance of exceeding 1"=20
    and up to 10% probabilities for exceeding 2" (with the new ECENS=20
    being the most aggressive). The inherited MRGL risk was maintained=20
    (and expanded a bit southwest) with this update.

    ...Southeast Coast...
    Guidance continues to be somewhat aggressive with a wave of low=20
    pressure potentially developing along an inverted trough shifting=20
    northeast along the FL/GA/SC coasts. While NHC continues to
    indicate a 10% probability of tropical or sub-tropical development
    with this feature, regardless of whether a circulation forms or=20
    not, there continues to be increasing confidence that heavy rain=20
    will spread across the FL Peninsula and then rotate onshore the=20
    GA/SC coasts on Wednesday. There also has been a clear model trend
    of potential increased convective development farther inland to=20
    the FL Panhandle and into southeast AL and southwest GA (likely=20
    due to a stronger closed low and the associated dynamics), so the=20
    MRGL was expanded to reflect this. With PWs progged to exceed 2",=20
    above the 90th percentile, supported by warm cloud depths that may=20
    exceed 15,000 ft, efficient rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr will be=20
    likely in any showers/thunderstorms. It certainly remains possible=20
    that the heaviest rainfall in association with the potential=20
    surface low will remain just offshore, but impressive moisture=20
    convergence from Jacksonville, FL to Charleston, SC should support=20
    waves of heavy rainfall regardless of development of this system.=20 Additionally, plentiful tropical moisture across the rest of the FL
    Peninsula and a shortwave continuing to pivot across the Gulf=20
    could enhance rainfall over much of Florida Wednesday, and the MRGL
    was maintained accordingly (with the exception of the FL Keys,=20
    which were removed due to model consensus that convection will be=20
    pulling away northward by 12z Weds).=20

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    SOUTHERN KANSAS AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
    Modest return flow from the Gulf overnight on D2 looks to result in
    elevated PWs once again into the Southern Plains by D3, as DPVA in
    association with the aforementioned upper-low (now shortwave) may
    help to spur more significant convective organization and growth.
    While models are still in rather substantial disagreement on the
    scale of organization and ultimate placement of higher QPF amounts,
    there's enough agreement to reintroduce a SLGT to portions of
    KS/OK (where ECENS best overlaps the stronger GEFS signal).
    Downscaled GFS and ECMWF solutions suggest the potential for
    localized 2-3" totals (as do the respective ensemble exceedance
    probs).=20

    ...Southeast/Southern Mid-Atlantic Coast...
    Guidance continues to indicate the potential for further
    development of the aforementioned wave of low pressure. Regardless
    of any tropical or sub-tropical development of this feature, heavy
    rainfall is likely to remain in close proximity to the coast into
    D3. The MRGL was expanded a bit to cover the range of solutions
    from the models at this juncture.=20

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!61fTKTUo-z5_sqmEo8c_0aeXdBE19act46Qaqa5ZtMNA= ILHXWTzpgFnuPqevY5t8RkUeBMgt4f1Q36WfGBeyiENfivg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!61fTKTUo-z5_sqmEo8c_0aeXdBE19act46Qaqa5ZtMNA= ILHXWTzpgFnuPqevY5t8RkUeBMgt4f1Q36WfGBeyl2jtnhg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!61fTKTUo-z5_sqmEo8c_0aeXdBE19act46Qaqa5ZtMNA= ILHXWTzpgFnuPqevY5t8RkUeBMgt4f1Q36WfGBeys5buqoU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 3 15:58:12 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 031557
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1157 AM EDT Tue Jun 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES, SOUTH FLORIDA AND THE FLORIDA KEYS, AND
    SOUTHWEST...

    ...16Z Update...

    The main change to the previous outlook was to introduce a Slight=20
    Risk across parts of the Southwest. Moisture levels are high for=20
    this time of year, with the VEF/Las Vegas 12Z sounding setting a=20
    daily record for PW at 1.07", which is close to the 90th percentile
    even during the peak of the monsoon season/early August. The SPC=20 Mesoanalysis shows some low end bulk shear around 30kt in northwest
    Arizona, perhaps allowing for convection to be more sustained and=20
    organized. Instability is also quite high for this time of year,=20
    with the Extreme Forecast Index maxed out for CAPE over the next=20
    couple of days. These ingredients added up to introducing a Slight=20
    Risk for far eastern California/far southern Nevada and into=20
    northern Arizona. Also, expanded the Marginal Risk west a bit in=20
    California to at least cover the San Bernadino Mountains where=20
    convection can anchor.

    Elsewhere, the Slight Risk for parts of the central U.S. still=20
    looks in good shape, with a locally higher end risk from Oklahoma=20
    into central Missouri. Expanded the southern end of the Slight a=20
    bit per newer guidance. Only minor changes were made to the risk=20
    areas in the southern half of Florida as well.

    Tate

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    An active day of convection is expected today as a cold front sags
    across the Heartland, providing the focus for widespread showers
    and thunderstorms. This front will be pushed southeast in response
    to an amplifying northern stream trough which will dig across the
    CONUS as far south as Texas. This will drive height falls across
    the region, with embedded shortwave impulses racing northeast, and
    a poleward arcing jet streak downstream of the primary trough axis
    combining to provide additional ascent. This deep layer lift will
    work into robust thermodynamics characterized by an overlap of
    1.8-2.0" PWs (above the 99th percentile per NAEFS) and a ribbon of
    MUCAPE exceeding 2000 J/kg (through northern MO), surging northward
    on 30-50 kts of 850mb flow emerging on return flow from the Gulf.

    The CAMs have continued to be in excellent agreement in the coverage
    of convection, while also recently coming into better agreement on
    temporal and spatial differences (owing to timing of the front).
    CAMs indicate widespread 1"/hr rain rates from the northern TX
    Hill Country all the way to the eastern Missouri Valley
    (40-km neighborhood 1"/1-hr probabilities exceeding 50% across
    this entire area), and these probabilities increase from north to
    south overtime today (as overnight convection likely remains active
    in the morning, then grows upscale during the day). Although mean
    0-6km winds of 20-30 kts indicate progressive storm motions, this
    flow aligned to the front and combined with Corfidi vectors that
    collapse and veer to the NE indicate a high potential for
    redevelopment to the SW into the more intense thermodynamics and
    training of cells to the northeast. Where this occurs, localized
    rainfall totals exceeding 3" are likely (50-80% 3"/24-hr
    neighborhood exceedance probs across the entire Slight risk area,
    per 00z HREF). The best spatial agreement for 2"+ totals (per 00z
    HREF EAS 2"/24-hr exceedance probs) are located within the core of
    the central and northern portions of the Slight risk, from central
    OK through southeast KS and central MO (where 5" neighborhood
    exceedance probabilities are also greatest, as high as 30-50%). The
    inherited SLGT risk was tailored to this new guidance, but very
    little change was necessary. The Slight risk over TX is considered
    the lowest confidence, as spatial agreement (per HREF EAS probs) is
    lowest here (though convection that does manage to develop along
    the tail of this front well into the night will likely feature
    slow storm motions and backbuilding, with 5" neighborhood
    exceedance probabilities still as high as 20-30%).

    Although heavy rainfall is also likely in convection that develops
    northeast into the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes, storms should be
    more progressive and the Corfidi vectors suggest less opportunity
    for training, so only a MRGL risk is maintained north of IA.


    ...South Florida and the Florida Keys...
    A shortwave trough over the Gulf has amplified enough overnight to
    become a weak closed low early this morning, and is expected to
    spin nearly in place as it gets suppressed beneath a Bermuda- type
    ridge to its northeast. This will maintain modest synoptic ascent
    across Florida, but some enhancement is likely as a jet streak
    over the Atlantic tails back to the SW, placing the favorably
    diffluent RRQ overtop the peninsula. This forcing will combine
    with continued low-level convergence along a decayed front/surface
    trough, resulting in another day of widespread showers and
    thunderstorms. PWs in place will again be greater than 2 inches,
    above the 90th percentile according to NAEFS, combining with 1000
    J/kg of CAPE to produce robust thermodynamics to support rainfall
    rates of 2"/hr at times. There continues to be some uncertainty in
    the coverage of convection among the various CAMs, but better
    agreement in the placement of 3"+ amount (per HREF EAS probs) along
    the southwest coast of FL has necessitated an expansion of the SLGT
    to just south of Tampa Bay. While FFG exceedance probs are highest
    across this area, have also maintained the SLGT for the remainder
    of South FL (including all of the FL Keys and the Miami metro) as
    localized 5" totals remain possible (with HREF 40-km neighborhood
    3"/24-hr exceedance probs of 30-50% in very close proximity).

    Although not included in a risk area at this time, some of the
    guidance has continued to be a bit more aggressive with a wave of
    low pressure developing along an inverted trough aligned to the
    east coast of Florida. If this low were to develop a bit more
    rapidly or track farther west, some heavy rain could move onshore
    the northeast Florida coast before 12Z Wednesday.


    ...Four Corners...
    A MRGL risk was further expanded westward with this cycle, now
    encompassing southeastern portions of CA through NV/UT/AZ and the
    Four Corners region into the the Central Plains. The guidance has
    continues to be more aggressive with showers and thunderstorms
    blossoming during the afternoon/evening as forcing intensifies
    from broad divergence downstream of a closed low filling and moving
    into the Desert Southwest, producing ascent atop a wavering
    frontal boundary positioned over the region. This lift will impinge
    into favorable thermodynamics with PWs reaching above 0.75 inches
    into a bubble of MUCAPE of 750-1000 J/kg. Mean storm motions will
    be weak, generally around 5 kts, so with rainfall rates which have
    a 10-40% chance of exceeding 1"/hr (per 00z HREF 40-km neighborhood
    1"/1-hr exceedance probs), these slow motions could result in
    locally as much as 1" of rainfall in a short period of time. If
    this occurs over sensitive soils, urban areas, or terrain features,
    instances of flash flooding could result.

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, SOUTHERN PLAINS, THE
    FOUR CORNERS, AND THE SOUTHEAST COAST...

    ...Four Corners into Central/Southern High Plains...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the
    upper low over northern Baja fills and ejects northeast atop the
    Four Corners. The accompanying ascent will move into continued
    anomalous PWs which will exceed the 99th percentile (per NAEFS).
    This will fuel widespread convection capable of localized rainfall
    rates of 0.5"/hr (or at times higher). Storms will likely move
    slowly beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of
    heavy rain. Although total rainfall will be modest in most areas
    (as reflected by relatively low 24-hr probability from ECENS/GEFS
    for 1" exceedance), where the heavy rain impacts sensitive terrain
    features or urban areas instances of flash flooding could result.
    Probabilities have also increased a bit (particularly from the new
    00z ECENS suite) further east into the Central/Southern High
    Plains and the MRGL risk has been expanded accordingly. Should
    models come into better agreement, additional expansion may be
    needed further south into West TX (and with additional CAM guidance
    and agreement, an upgrade to SLGT may also be needed).

    ...Southern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley to Great Lakes...
    The cold front from D1 will continue its trek eastward on
    Wednesday, but will start to slow and become aligned more west to
    east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching shortwave
    over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within the flow
    will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri to
    Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of
    thunderstorms is expected on D2 (though some models are also
    indicated potential for isolated convective development farther
    southwest into portions of the Southern Plains). Storm motions
    along the front are likely to be progressive, lifting off to the
    northeast on 0-6km mean winds of 20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi
    vectors aligned both to this mean wind and the front suggests a
    potential for training. As rainfall rates peak above 1"/hr within
    favorable thermodynamics, this could result in stripes of heavy
    rainfall with ensembles indicating 10-40% chance of exceeding 1"
    and up to 10% probabilities for exceeding 2" (with the new ECENS
    being the most aggressive). The inherited MRGL risk was maintained
    (and expanded a bit southwest) with this update.

    ...Southeast Coast...
    Guidance continues to be somewhat aggressive with a wave of low
    pressure potentially developing along an inverted trough shifting
    northeast along the FL/GA/SC coasts. While NHC continues to
    indicate a 10% probability of tropical or sub-tropical development
    with this feature, regardless of whether a circulation forms or
    not, there continues to be increasing confidence that heavy rain
    will spread across the FL Peninsula and then rotate onshore the
    GA/SC coasts on Wednesday. There also has been a clear model trend
    of potential increased convective development farther inland to
    the FL Panhandle and into southeast AL and southwest GA (likely
    due to a stronger closed low and the associated dynamics), so the
    MRGL was expanded to reflect this. With PWs progged to exceed 2",
    above the 90th percentile, supported by warm cloud depths that may
    exceed 15,000 ft, efficient rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr will be
    likely in any showers/thunderstorms. It certainly remains possible
    that the heaviest rainfall in association with the potential
    surface low will remain just offshore, but impressive moisture
    convergence from Jacksonville, FL to Charleston, SC should support
    waves of heavy rainfall regardless of development of this system.
    Additionally, plentiful tropical moisture across the rest of the FL
    Peninsula and a shortwave continuing to pivot across the Gulf
    could enhance rainfall over much of Florida Wednesday, and the MRGL
    was maintained accordingly (with the exception of the FL Keys,
    which were removed due to model consensus that convection will be
    pulling away northward by 12z Weds).

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHERN KANSAS AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
    Modest return flow from the Gulf overnight on D2 looks to result in
    elevated PWs once again into the Southern Plains by D3, as DPVA in
    association with the aforementioned upper-low (now shortwave) may
    help to spur more significant convective organization and growth.
    While models are still in rather substantial disagreement on the
    scale of organization and ultimate placement of higher QPF amounts,
    there's enough agreement to reintroduce a SLGT to portions of
    KS/OK (where ECENS best overlaps the stronger GEFS signal).
    Downscaled GFS and ECMWF solutions suggest the potential for
    localized 2-3" totals (as do the respective ensemble exceedance
    probs).

    ...Southeast/Southern Mid-Atlantic Coast...
    Guidance continues to indicate the potential for further
    development of the aforementioned wave of low pressure. Regardless
    of any tropical or sub-tropical development of this feature, heavy
    rainfall is likely to remain in close proximity to the coast into
    D3. The MRGL was expanded a bit to cover the range of solutions
    from the models at this juncture.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7tkxp5z4oH_UeauLES1yMiueFAKv_BvmB1pRofB9dxLV= lEoAcQpUDm5k_v-FhB8E1DkYFiqBUV0U_fAu8fLN_6eu1CU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7tkxp5z4oH_UeauLES1yMiueFAKv_BvmB1pRofB9dxLV= lEoAcQpUDm5k_v-FhB8E1DkYFiqBUV0U_fAu8fLN62r9Z6M$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7tkxp5z4oH_UeauLES1yMiueFAKv_BvmB1pRofB9dxLV= lEoAcQpUDm5k_v-FhB8E1DkYFiqBUV0U_fAu8fLN5HDM_9k$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 3 18:54:41 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 031854
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    254 PM EDT Tue Jun 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1846Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST KANSAS...

    ...19Z Special Update...

    A Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this update for
    portions of southeastern Kansas. A training line of heavy
    thunderstorms has set up along and south of I-35 in and east of
    Wichita is producing areas of considerable flash flooding. Rates in
    the convection currently are over 2 inches per hour, and showing no
    signs of weakening. The line of storms is nearly stationary, with=20
    additional convection forming southwest of the area which are=20
    likely to train over these same areas over the next several hours.=20
    Localized totals of 7 inches have already fallen in the hardest hit
    areas. It's likely some areas will exceed 10 inches of rain before
    the line eventually moves off to the east. Additional significant
    flash flooding, including Flash Flood Emergencies, are likely over
    the next several hours.

    Please see MPD 351 at wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/metwatch/metwatch_mpd_multi.php?md=3D0351&yr=3D2025 for additional details.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, SOUTHERN PLAINS, THE
    FOUR CORNERS, AND THE SOUTHEAST COAST...

    ...Four Corners into Central/Southern High Plains...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the
    upper low over northern Baja fills and ejects northeast atop the
    Four Corners. The accompanying ascent will move into continued
    anomalous PWs which will exceed the 99th percentile (per NAEFS).
    This will fuel widespread convection capable of localized rainfall
    rates of 0.5"/hr (or at times higher). Storms will likely move
    slowly beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of
    heavy rain. Although total rainfall will be modest in most areas
    (as reflected by relatively low 24-hr probability from ECENS/GEFS
    for 1" exceedance), where the heavy rain impacts sensitive terrain
    features or urban areas instances of flash flooding could result.
    Probabilities have also increased a bit (particularly from the new
    00z ECENS suite) further east into the Central/Southern High
    Plains and the MRGL risk has been expanded accordingly. Should
    models come into better agreement, additional expansion may be
    needed further south into West TX (and with additional CAM guidance
    and agreement, an upgrade to SLGT may also be needed).

    ...Southern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley to Great Lakes...
    The cold front from D1 will continue its trek eastward on
    Wednesday, but will start to slow and become aligned more west to
    east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching shortwave
    over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within the flow
    will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri to
    Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of
    thunderstorms is expected on D2 (though some models are also
    indicated potential for isolated convective development farther
    southwest into portions of the Southern Plains). Storm motions
    along the front are likely to be progressive, lifting off to the
    northeast on 0-6km mean winds of 20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi
    vectors aligned both to this mean wind and the front suggests a
    potential for training. As rainfall rates peak above 1"/hr within
    favorable thermodynamics, this could result in stripes of heavy
    rainfall with ensembles indicating 10-40% chance of exceeding 1"
    and up to 10% probabilities for exceeding 2" (with the new ECENS
    being the most aggressive). The inherited MRGL risk was maintained
    (and expanded a bit southwest) with this update.

    ...Southeast Coast...
    Guidance continues to be somewhat aggressive with a wave of low
    pressure potentially developing along an inverted trough shifting
    northeast along the FL/GA/SC coasts. While NHC continues to
    indicate a 10% probability of tropical or sub-tropical development
    with this feature, regardless of whether a circulation forms or
    not, there continues to be increasing confidence that heavy rain
    will spread across the FL Peninsula and then rotate onshore the
    GA/SC coasts on Wednesday. There also has been a clear model trend
    of potential increased convective development farther inland to
    the FL Panhandle and into southeast AL and southwest GA (likely
    due to a stronger closed low and the associated dynamics), so the
    MRGL was expanded to reflect this. With PWs progged to exceed 2",
    above the 90th percentile, supported by warm cloud depths that may
    exceed 15,000 ft, efficient rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr will be
    likely in any showers/thunderstorms. It certainly remains possible
    that the heaviest rainfall in association with the potential
    surface low will remain just offshore, but impressive moisture
    convergence from Jacksonville, FL to Charleston, SC should support
    waves of heavy rainfall regardless of development of this system.
    Additionally, plentiful tropical moisture across the rest of the FL
    Peninsula and a shortwave continuing to pivot across the Gulf
    could enhance rainfall over much of Florida Wednesday, and the MRGL
    was maintained accordingly (with the exception of the FL Keys,
    which were removed due to model consensus that convection will be
    pulling away northward by 12z Weds).

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHERN KANSAS AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
    Modest return flow from the Gulf overnight on D2 looks to result in
    elevated PWs once again into the Southern Plains by D3, as DPVA in
    association with the aforementioned upper-low (now shortwave) may
    help to spur more significant convective organization and growth.
    While models are still in rather substantial disagreement on the
    scale of organization and ultimate placement of higher QPF amounts,
    there's enough agreement to reintroduce a SLGT to portions of
    KS/OK (where ECENS best overlaps the stronger GEFS signal).
    Downscaled GFS and ECMWF solutions suggest the potential for
    localized 2-3" totals (as do the respective ensemble exceedance
    probs).

    ...Southeast/Southern Mid-Atlantic Coast...
    Guidance continues to indicate the potential for further
    development of the aforementioned wave of low pressure. Regardless
    of any tropical or sub-tropical development of this feature, heavy
    rainfall is likely to remain in close proximity to the coast into
    D3. The MRGL was expanded a bit to cover the range of solutions
    from the models at this juncture.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_UAe9dx8cR-946MorpedZBOkRc6KTO7CN5dkeZJRtcp_= oimsOJC4ePVEekmjeH00qamdbQLTc5IEAkur5BuI_7uMbuQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_UAe9dx8cR-946MorpedZBOkRc6KTO7CN5dkeZJRtcp_= oimsOJC4ePVEekmjeH00qamdbQLTc5IEAkur5BuI1716aKg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_UAe9dx8cR-946MorpedZBOkRc6KTO7CN5dkeZJRtcp_= oimsOJC4ePVEekmjeH00qamdbQLTc5IEAkur5BuI_ij-Fa0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 3 20:21:25 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 032020
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    420 PM EDT Tue Jun 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL UNITED STATES, SOUTH FLORIDA AND THE FLORIDA KEYS, AND
    SOUTHWEST...

    ...16Z Update...

    The main change to the previous outlook was to introduce a Slight
    Risk across parts of the Southwest. Moisture levels are high for
    this time of year, with the VEF/Las Vegas 12Z sounding setting a
    daily record for PW at 1.07", which is close to the 90th percentile
    even during the peak of the monsoon season/early August. The SPC
    Mesoanalysis shows some low end bulk shear around 30kt in northwest
    Arizona, perhaps allowing for convection to be more sustained and
    organized. Instability is also quite high for this time of year,
    with the Extreme Forecast Index maxed out for CAPE over the next
    couple of days. These ingredients added up to introducing a Slight
    Risk for far eastern California/far southern Nevada and into
    northern Arizona. Also, expanded the Marginal Risk west a bit in
    California to at least cover the San Bernadino Mountains where
    convection can anchor.

    Elsewhere, the Slight Risk for parts of the central U.S. still
    looks in good shape, with a locally higher end risk from Oklahoma
    into central Missouri. Expanded the southern end of the Slight a
    bit per newer guidance. Only minor changes were made to the risk
    areas in the southern half of Florida as well.

    Tate

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Texas to the Great Lakes...
    An active day of convection is expected today as a cold front sags
    across the Heartland, providing the focus for widespread showers
    and thunderstorms. This front will be pushed southeast in response
    to an amplifying northern stream trough which will dig across the
    CONUS as far south as Texas. This will drive height falls across
    the region, with embedded shortwave impulses racing northeast, and
    a poleward arcing jet streak downstream of the primary trough axis
    combining to provide additional ascent. This deep layer lift will
    work into robust thermodynamics characterized by an overlap of
    1.8-2.0" PWs (above the 99th percentile per NAEFS) and a ribbon of
    MUCAPE exceeding 2000 J/kg (through northern MO), surging northward
    on 30-50 kts of 850mb flow emerging on return flow from the Gulf.

    The CAMs have continued to be in excellent agreement in the coverage
    of convection, while also recently coming into better agreement on
    temporal and spatial differences (owing to timing of the front).
    CAMs indicate widespread 1"/hr rain rates from the northern TX
    Hill Country all the way to the eastern Missouri Valley
    (40-km neighborhood 1"/1-hr probabilities exceeding 50% across
    this entire area), and these probabilities increase from north to
    south overtime today (as overnight convection likely remains active
    in the morning, then grows upscale during the day). Although mean
    0-6km winds of 20-30 kts indicate progressive storm motions, this
    flow aligned to the front and combined with Corfidi vectors that
    collapse and veer to the NE indicate a high potential for
    redevelopment to the SW into the more intense thermodynamics and
    training of cells to the northeast. Where this occurs, localized
    rainfall totals exceeding 3" are likely (50-80% 3"/24-hr
    neighborhood exceedance probs across the entire Slight risk area,
    per 00z HREF). The best spatial agreement for 2"+ totals (per 00z
    HREF EAS 2"/24-hr exceedance probs) are located within the core of
    the central and northern portions of the Slight risk, from central
    OK through southeast KS and central MO (where 5" neighborhood
    exceedance probabilities are also greatest, as high as 30-50%). The
    inherited SLGT risk was tailored to this new guidance, but very
    little change was necessary. The Slight risk over TX is considered
    the lowest confidence, as spatial agreement (per HREF EAS probs) is
    lowest here (though convection that does manage to develop along
    the tail of this front well into the night will likely feature
    slow storm motions and backbuilding, with 5" neighborhood
    exceedance probabilities still as high as 20-30%).

    Although heavy rainfall is also likely in convection that develops
    northeast into the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes, storms should be
    more progressive and the Corfidi vectors suggest less opportunity
    for training, so only a MRGL risk is maintained north of IA.


    ...South Florida and the Florida Keys...
    A shortwave trough over the Gulf has amplified enough overnight to
    become a weak closed low early this morning, and is expected to
    spin nearly in place as it gets suppressed beneath a Bermuda- type
    ridge to its northeast. This will maintain modest synoptic ascent
    across Florida, but some enhancement is likely as a jet streak
    over the Atlantic tails back to the SW, placing the favorably
    diffluent RRQ overtop the peninsula. This forcing will combine
    with continued low-level convergence along a decayed front/surface
    trough, resulting in another day of widespread showers and
    thunderstorms. PWs in place will again be greater than 2 inches,
    above the 90th percentile according to NAEFS, combining with 1000
    J/kg of CAPE to produce robust thermodynamics to support rainfall
    rates of 2"/hr at times. There continues to be some uncertainty in
    the coverage of convection among the various CAMs, but better
    agreement in the placement of 3"+ amount (per HREF EAS probs) along
    the southwest coast of FL has necessitated an expansion of the SLGT
    to just south of Tampa Bay. While FFG exceedance probs are highest
    across this area, have also maintained the SLGT for the remainder
    of South FL (including all of the FL Keys and the Miami metro) as
    localized 5" totals remain possible (with HREF 40-km neighborhood
    3"/24-hr exceedance probs of 30-50% in very close proximity).

    Although not included in a risk area at this time, some of the
    guidance has continued to be a bit more aggressive with a wave of
    low pressure developing along an inverted trough aligned to the
    east coast of Florida. If this low were to develop a bit more
    rapidly or track farther west, some heavy rain could move onshore
    the northeast Florida coast before 12Z Wednesday.


    ...Four Corners...
    A MRGL risk was further expanded westward with this cycle, now
    encompassing southeastern portions of CA through NV/UT/AZ and the
    Four Corners region into the the Central Plains. The guidance has
    continues to be more aggressive with showers and thunderstorms
    blossoming during the afternoon/evening as forcing intensifies
    from broad divergence downstream of a closed low filling and moving
    into the Desert Southwest, producing ascent atop a wavering
    frontal boundary positioned over the region. This lift will impinge
    into favorable thermodynamics with PWs reaching above 0.75 inches
    into a bubble of MUCAPE of 750-1000 J/kg. Mean storm motions will
    be weak, generally around 5 kts, so with rainfall rates which have
    a 10-40% chance of exceeding 1"/hr (per 00z HREF 40-km neighborhood
    1"/1-hr exceedance probs), these slow motions could result in
    locally as much as 1" of rainfall in a short period of time. If
    this occurs over sensitive soils, urban areas, or terrain features,
    instances of flash flooding could result.

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST, MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, SOUTHERN PLAINS, THE FOUR=20 CORNERS/DESERT SOUTHWEST, AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...2030Z Update...

    Changes to the Day 2 ERO for this cycle were relatively minor.
    Expanded the Four Corners Marginal Risk on the western side to
    encompass parts of eastern California and southern Nevada. HREF
    probabilities for exceeding 3 and 6 hour FFG guidance are scattered
    through much of the Southwest once again Wednesday. However, the
    HREF mean etc. shows lower instability compared to today (Tuesday)
    and support aloft is not quite as strong, so held off from a Slight
    Risk, but expect possibly isolated to scattered flash flooding, but
    possibly less focused. Another area to watch for a potential=20
    Slight is the southern High Plains, for nocturnal convection that=20
    may produce heavy rain rates before 12Z Thursday, but looks to ramp
    up specifically Thursday/Day 3 period. Meanwhile, expanded the=20
    Marginal Risk in south-central Texas for some Wednesday morning=20
    ongoing convection. The Southeast to Florida Marginal Risk remains=20
    similar to the previous outlook.

    Tate

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Four Corners into Central/Southern High Plains...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the
    upper low over northern Baja fills and ejects northeast atop the
    Four Corners. The accompanying ascent will move into continued
    anomalous PWs which will exceed the 99th percentile (per NAEFS).
    This will fuel widespread convection capable of localized rainfall
    rates of 0.5"/hr (or at times higher). Storms will likely move
    slowly beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of
    heavy rain. Although total rainfall will be modest in most areas
    (as reflected by relatively low 24-hr probability from ECENS/GEFS
    for 1" exceedance), where the heavy rain impacts sensitive terrain
    features or urban areas instances of flash flooding could result.
    Probabilities have also increased a bit (particularly from the new
    00z ECENS suite) further east into the Central/Southern High
    Plains and the MRGL risk has been expanded accordingly. Should
    models come into better agreement, additional expansion may be
    needed further south into West TX (and with additional CAM guidance
    and agreement, an upgrade to SLGT may also be needed).

    ...Southern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley to Great Lakes...
    The cold front from D1 will continue its trek eastward on
    Wednesday, but will start to slow and become aligned more west to
    east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching shortwave
    over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within the flow
    will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri to
    Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of
    thunderstorms is expected on D2 (though some models are also
    indicated potential for isolated convective development farther
    southwest into portions of the Southern Plains). Storm motions
    along the front are likely to be progressive, lifting off to the
    northeast on 0-6km mean winds of 20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi
    vectors aligned both to this mean wind and the front suggests a
    potential for training. As rainfall rates peak above 1"/hr within
    favorable thermodynamics, this could result in stripes of heavy
    rainfall with ensembles indicating 10-40% chance of exceeding 1"
    and up to 10% probabilities for exceeding 2" (with the new ECENS
    being the most aggressive). The inherited MRGL risk was maintained
    (and expanded a bit southwest) with this update.

    ...Southeast...
    Guidance continues to be somewhat aggressive with=20
    a wave of low pressure potentially developing along an inverted=20
    trough shifting northeast along the FL/GA/SC coasts. While NHC=20
    continues to indicate a 10% probability of tropical or sub-tropical
    development with this feature, regardless of whether a circulation
    forms or not, there continues to be increasing confidence that=20
    heavy rain will spread across the FL Peninsula and then rotate=20
    onshore the GA/SC coasts on Wednesday. There also has been a clear=20
    model trend of potential increased convective development farther=20
    inland to the FL Panhandle and into southeast AL and southwest GA=20
    (likely due to a stronger closed low and the associated dynamics),=20
    so the MRGL was expanded to reflect this. With PWs progged to=20
    exceed 2", above the 90th percentile, supported by warm cloud=20
    depths that may exceed 15,000 ft, efficient rainfall rates of=20
    1-2"/hr will be likely in any showers/thunderstorms. It certainly=20
    remains possible that the heaviest rainfall in association with the
    potential surface low will remain just offshore, but impressive=20
    moisture convergence from Jacksonville, FL to Charleston, SC should
    support waves of heavy rainfall regardless of development of this=20
    system. Additionally, plentiful tropical moisture across the rest=20
    of the FL Peninsula and a shortwave continuing to pivot across the=20
    Gulf could enhance rainfall over much of Florida Wednesday, and the
    MRGL was maintained accordingly (with the exception of the FL=20
    Keys, which were removed due to model consensus that convection=20
    will be pulling away northward by 12z Weds).

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central Great Basin to Central/Southern Plains into the Ohio Valley... Thursday/Day 3 should see a similar pattern as Wednesday/Day 2,=20
    with a broad positively tilted trough axis across the West and=20
    shortwaves moving through. Pacific moisture (continuing to be over=20
    the 90th percentile for PWs) will stream northeastward just ahead=20
    of the trough to produce scattered convection across the central=20
    Great Basin toward the central Rockies, so expanded the Marginal=20
    Risk into these areas with the axis just a bit north of the=20
    previous couple of days.=20

    Farther east, an initial shortwave will force convection in the=20
    southern High Plains Wednesday night into Thursday morning. Then a=20
    renewed low level jet will push moisture and instability a bit=20
    farther north into Oklahoma/Kansas Thursday night and likely=20
    sustain convection that originates in Colorado, leading to heavy=20
    rain rates. For this issuance, combined both these areas into the=20
    Slight Risk. There continues to be some model spread in heavy=20
    rainfall placement and with which MCS may lead to the heavier=20
    totals, with most recent ECENS probabilities of exceeding 1" and 2"
    focused in Oklahoma whereas GEFS probabilities are centered in=20
    Kansas. So more refinements may be necessary in future cycles.=20
    Expanded the Marginal farther south in West Texas for convection=20
    with heavy rain rates just east of the dryline.

    To the east, moisture pooling along a meandering front may lead to
    locally heavy rain across the Mid-Mississippi Valley and Ohio=20
    Valley toward the Lower Great Lakes region. A Marginal Risk remains
    in place for these areas. Considered a Marginal Risk stretching=20
    into northern New England near/ahead of the front where above=20
    normal moisture and instability are likely, but model QPFs were not
    very heavy. There is likely a nonzero probability though so will=20
    continue to monitor.

    ...Southeast/Carolina Coast...
    Model guidance indicates a low pressure system potentially just=20
    onshore in the Carolinas near the Atlantic coast on Thursday. This=20
    system is most likely to be frontal but with a low end chance of=20
    becoming tropical or subtropical per NHC. Heaviest rainfall totals=20
    are forecast to stay offshore. However, wraparound moisture will=20
    stream into coastal areas with PWs above the 90th if not 95th=20
    percentile. Instability though generally looks to remain below 1000
    J/km west of the low, which may limit rain rates somewhat. Per=20
    coordination with the Morehead City (MHX) WFO, antecedent=20
    conditions are wetter than normal along coastal areas due to recent
    rain. So will continue to monitor this area for a Slight Risk=20
    eventually, but will await better model convergence and see if=20
    instability increases. Expanded the preexisting Marginal west a bit
    per some 12Z models that were farther inland.


    Tate/Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5HWwYnbhvunoaFFbNBB_fCN8Y3WrzquRXbTMlcNq10MV= QCd2o6TZMhRDINEcMp0ysShnugHQ-RxpbecDr5QRzil__44$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5HWwYnbhvunoaFFbNBB_fCN8Y3WrzquRXbTMlcNq10MV= QCd2o6TZMhRDINEcMp0ysShnugHQ-RxpbecDr5QRamq9KZs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5HWwYnbhvunoaFFbNBB_fCN8Y3WrzquRXbTMlcNq10MV= QCd2o6TZMhRDINEcMp0ysShnugHQ-RxpbecDr5QRoz6NcuM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 3 23:10:29 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 032309
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    709 PM EDT Tue Jun 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 03 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST KANSAS...

    ...19Z Special Update...

    A Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this update for
    portions of southeastern Kansas. A training line of heavy
    thunderstorms has set up along and south of I-35 in and east of
    Wichita is producing areas of considerable flash flooding. Rates in
    the convection currently are over 2 inches per hour, and showing no
    signs of weakening. The line of storms is nearly stationary, with=20
    additional convection forming southwest of the area which are=20
    likely to train over these same areas over the next several hours.=20
    Localized totals of 7 inches have already fallen in the hardest hit
    areas. It's likely some areas will exceed 10 inches of rain before
    the line eventually moves off to the east. Additional significant
    flash flooding, including Flash Flood Emergencies, are likely over
    the next several hours.

    Please see MPD 351 at wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/metwatch/metwatch_mpd_multi.php?md=3D0351&yr=3D2025 for additional details.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST, MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, SOUTHERN PLAINS, THE FOUR=20 CORNERS/DESERT SOUTHWEST, AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...2030Z Update...

    Changes to the Day 2 ERO for this cycle were relatively minor.
    Expanded the Four Corners Marginal Risk on the western side to
    encompass parts of eastern California and southern Nevada. HREF
    probabilities for exceeding 3 and 6 hour FFG guidance are scattered
    through much of the Southwest once again Wednesday. However, the
    HREF mean etc. shows lower instability compared to today (Tuesday)
    and support aloft is not quite as strong, so held off from a Slight
    Risk, but expect possibly isolated to scattered flash flooding, but
    possibly less focused. Another area to watch for a potential=20
    Slight is the southern High Plains, for nocturnal convection that=20
    may produce heavy rain rates before 12Z Thursday, but looks to ramp
    up specifically Thursday/Day 3 period. Meanwhile, expanded the=20
    Marginal Risk in south-central Texas for some Wednesday morning=20
    ongoing convection. The Southeast to Florida Marginal Risk remains=20
    similar to the previous outlook.

    Tate

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Four Corners into Central/Southern High Plains...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the
    upper low over northern Baja fills and ejects northeast atop the
    Four Corners. The accompanying ascent will move into continued
    anomalous PWs which will exceed the 99th percentile (per NAEFS).
    This will fuel widespread convection capable of localized rainfall
    rates of 0.5"/hr (or at times higher). Storms will likely move
    slowly beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of
    heavy rain. Although total rainfall will be modest in most areas
    (as reflected by relatively low 24-hr probability from ECENS/GEFS
    for 1" exceedance), where the heavy rain impacts sensitive terrain
    features or urban areas instances of flash flooding could result.
    Probabilities have also increased a bit (particularly from the new
    00z ECENS suite) further east into the Central/Southern High
    Plains and the MRGL risk has been expanded accordingly. Should
    models come into better agreement, additional expansion may be
    needed further south into West TX (and with additional CAM guidance
    and agreement, an upgrade to SLGT may also be needed).

    ...Southern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley to Great Lakes...
    The cold front from D1 will continue its trek eastward on
    Wednesday, but will start to slow and become aligned more west to
    east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching shortwave
    over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within the flow
    will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri to
    Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of
    thunderstorms is expected on D2 (though some models are also
    indicated potential for isolated convective development farther
    southwest into portions of the Southern Plains). Storm motions
    along the front are likely to be progressive, lifting off to the
    northeast on 0-6km mean winds of 20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi
    vectors aligned both to this mean wind and the front suggests a
    potential for training. As rainfall rates peak above 1"/hr within
    favorable thermodynamics, this could result in stripes of heavy
    rainfall with ensembles indicating 10-40% chance of exceeding 1"
    and up to 10% probabilities for exceeding 2" (with the new ECENS
    being the most aggressive). The inherited MRGL risk was maintained
    (and expanded a bit southwest) with this update.

    ...Southeast...
    Guidance continues to be somewhat aggressive with=20
    a wave of low pressure potentially developing along an inverted=20
    trough shifting northeast along the FL/GA/SC coasts. While NHC=20
    continues to indicate a 10% probability of tropical or sub-tropical
    development with this feature, regardless of whether a circulation
    forms or not, there continues to be increasing confidence that=20
    heavy rain will spread across the FL Peninsula and then rotate=20
    onshore the GA/SC coasts on Wednesday. There also has been a clear=20
    model trend of potential increased convective development farther=20
    inland to the FL Panhandle and into southeast AL and southwest GA=20
    (likely due to a stronger closed low and the associated dynamics),=20
    so the MRGL was expanded to reflect this. With PWs progged to=20
    exceed 2", above the 90th percentile, supported by warm cloud=20
    depths that may exceed 15,000 ft, efficient rainfall rates of=20
    1-2"/hr will be likely in any showers/thunderstorms. It certainly=20
    remains possible that the heaviest rainfall in association with the
    potential surface low will remain just offshore, but impressive=20
    moisture convergence from Jacksonville, FL to Charleston, SC should
    support waves of heavy rainfall regardless of development of this=20
    system. Additionally, plentiful tropical moisture across the rest=20
    of the FL Peninsula and a shortwave continuing to pivot across the=20
    Gulf could enhance rainfall over much of Florida Wednesday, and the
    MRGL was maintained accordingly (with the exception of the FL=20
    Keys, which were removed due to model consensus that convection=20
    will be pulling away northward by 12z Weds).

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central Great Basin to Central/Southern Plains into the Ohio Valley... Thursday/Day 3 should see a similar pattern as Wednesday/Day 2,=20
    with a broad positively tilted trough axis across the West and=20
    shortwaves moving through. Pacific moisture (continuing to be over=20
    the 90th percentile for PWs) will stream northeastward just ahead=20
    of the trough to produce scattered convection across the central=20
    Great Basin toward the central Rockies, so expanded the Marginal=20
    Risk into these areas with the axis just a bit north of the=20
    previous couple of days.=20

    Farther east, an initial shortwave will force convection in the=20
    southern High Plains Wednesday night into Thursday morning. Then a=20
    renewed low level jet will push moisture and instability a bit=20
    farther north into Oklahoma/Kansas Thursday night and likely=20
    sustain convection that originates in Colorado, leading to heavy=20
    rain rates. For this issuance, combined both these areas into the=20
    Slight Risk. There continues to be some model spread in heavy=20
    rainfall placement and with which MCS may lead to the heavier=20
    totals, with most recent ECENS probabilities of exceeding 1" and 2"
    focused in Oklahoma whereas GEFS probabilities are centered in=20
    Kansas. So more refinements may be necessary in future cycles.=20
    Expanded the Marginal farther south in West Texas for convection=20
    with heavy rain rates just east of the dryline.

    To the east, moisture pooling along a meandering front may lead to
    locally heavy rain across the Mid-Mississippi Valley and Ohio=20
    Valley toward the Lower Great Lakes region. A Marginal Risk remains
    in place for these areas. Considered a Marginal Risk stretching=20
    into northern New England near/ahead of the front where above=20
    normal moisture and instability are likely, but model QPFs were not
    very heavy. There is likely a nonzero probability though so will=20
    continue to monitor.

    ...Southeast/Carolina Coast...
    Model guidance indicates a low pressure system potentially just=20
    onshore in the Carolinas near the Atlantic coast on Thursday. This=20
    system is most likely to be frontal but with a low end chance of=20
    becoming tropical or subtropical per NHC. Heaviest rainfall totals=20
    are forecast to stay offshore. However, wraparound moisture will=20
    stream into coastal areas with PWs above the 90th if not 95th=20
    percentile. Instability though generally looks to remain below 1000
    J/km west of the low, which may limit rain rates somewhat. Per=20
    coordination with the Morehead City (MHX) WFO, antecedent=20
    conditions are wetter than normal along coastal areas due to recent
    rain. So will continue to monitor this area for a Slight Risk=20
    eventually, but will await better model convergence and see if=20
    instability increases. Expanded the preexisting Marginal west a bit
    per some 12Z models that were farther inland.


    Tate/Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9RRhsR4EkagdCoYQqdj0O0dd5clmSKq3mp582ziBPr8L= SCjqxdEEAxwvRm8PZpxlEhmy-5BC9ylBeA7pC5M-LyMcub0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9RRhsR4EkagdCoYQqdj0O0dd5clmSKq3mp582ziBPr8L= SCjqxdEEAxwvRm8PZpxlEhmy-5BC9ylBeA7pC5M-O3pTwJM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9RRhsR4EkagdCoYQqdj0O0dd5clmSKq3mp582ziBPr8L= SCjqxdEEAxwvRm8PZpxlEhmy-5BC9ylBeA7pC5M-naPUuo0$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 4 00:46:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 040045
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    845 PM EDT Tue Jun 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    PLAINS INTO MISSOURI AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHEASTERN
    CALIFORNIA AND NORTHERN ARIZONA...

    ...01Z Update...

    The storms across the middle of the country have become much more
    progressive and are therefore winding down as regards the flooding
    threat. There remains some potential for pre-line cells to moisten
    up the soils before the line moves through, so the Slight remains
    from where the line is now through the inherited forecast. There is
    some potential in the guidance for renewed mostly shower activity
    in this same area after about 09Z or so, and given the sensitivity
    in some of those areas, have left the Slight intact east of the
    line of storms.

    In Florida, the convection has waned and the heaviest convection is
    largely offshore and in the Keys. Certainly periods of heavy rain
    will remain possible through the night, but are unlikely to cause
    more than isolated flash flooding.

    The inherited Marginal and Slight Risk areas out west remain
    largely unchanged, albeit with a small expansion of the Marginal
    into the L.A. Basin, given the ongoing showers and storms there.
    The storms will likely wane in coverage post-sunset, but there
    remains a few more hours of flash flooding potential, especially
    into parts of southern California, northern Arizona and
    northwestern New Mexico for the next few hours.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST, MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, SOUTHERN PLAINS, THE FOUR CORNERS/DESERT SOUTHWEST, AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...2030Z Update...

    Changes to the Day 2 ERO for this cycle were relatively minor.
    Expanded the Four Corners Marginal Risk on the western side to
    encompass parts of eastern California and southern Nevada. HREF
    probabilities for exceeding 3 and 6 hour FFG guidance are scattered
    through much of the Southwest once again Wednesday. However, the
    HREF mean etc. shows lower instability compared to today (Tuesday)
    and support aloft is not quite as strong, so held off from a Slight
    Risk, but expect possibly isolated to scattered flash flooding, but
    possibly less focused. Another area to watch for a potential
    Slight is the southern High Plains, for nocturnal convection that
    may produce heavy rain rates before 12Z Thursday, but looks to ramp
    up specifically Thursday/Day 3 period. Meanwhile, expanded the
    Marginal Risk in south-central Texas for some Wednesday morning
    ongoing convection. The Southeast to Florida Marginal Risk remains
    similar to the previous outlook.

    Tate

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Four Corners into Central/Southern High Plains...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the
    upper low over northern Baja fills and ejects northeast atop the
    Four Corners. The accompanying ascent will move into continued
    anomalous PWs which will exceed the 99th percentile (per NAEFS).
    This will fuel widespread convection capable of localized rainfall
    rates of 0.5"/hr (or at times higher). Storms will likely move
    slowly beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of
    heavy rain. Although total rainfall will be modest in most areas
    (as reflected by relatively low 24-hr probability from ECENS/GEFS
    for 1" exceedance), where the heavy rain impacts sensitive terrain
    features or urban areas instances of flash flooding could result.
    Probabilities have also increased a bit (particularly from the new
    00z ECENS suite) further east into the Central/Southern High
    Plains and the MRGL risk has been expanded accordingly. Should
    models come into better agreement, additional expansion may be
    needed further south into West TX (and with additional CAM guidance
    and agreement, an upgrade to SLGT may also be needed).

    ...Southern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley to Great Lakes...
    The cold front from D1 will continue its trek eastward on
    Wednesday, but will start to slow and become aligned more west to
    east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching shortwave
    over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within the flow
    will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri to
    Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of
    thunderstorms is expected on D2 (though some models are also
    indicated potential for isolated convective development farther
    southwest into portions of the Southern Plains). Storm motions
    along the front are likely to be progressive, lifting off to the
    northeast on 0-6km mean winds of 20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi
    vectors aligned both to this mean wind and the front suggests a
    potential for training. As rainfall rates peak above 1"/hr within
    favorable thermodynamics, this could result in stripes of heavy
    rainfall with ensembles indicating 10-40% chance of exceeding 1"
    and up to 10% probabilities for exceeding 2" (with the new ECENS
    being the most aggressive). The inherited MRGL risk was maintained
    (and expanded a bit southwest) with this update.

    ...Southeast...
    Guidance continues to be somewhat aggressive with
    a wave of low pressure potentially developing along an inverted
    trough shifting northeast along the FL/GA/SC coasts. While NHC
    continues to indicate a 10% probability of tropical or sub-tropical
    development with this feature, regardless of whether a circulation
    forms or not, there continues to be increasing confidence that
    heavy rain will spread across the FL Peninsula and then rotate
    onshore the GA/SC coasts on Wednesday. There also has been a clear
    model trend of potential increased convective development farther
    inland to the FL Panhandle and into southeast AL and southwest GA
    (likely due to a stronger closed low and the associated dynamics),
    so the MRGL was expanded to reflect this. With PWs progged to
    exceed 2", above the 90th percentile, supported by warm cloud
    depths that may exceed 15,000 ft, efficient rainfall rates of
    1-2"/hr will be likely in any showers/thunderstorms. It certainly
    remains possible that the heaviest rainfall in association with the
    potential surface low will remain just offshore, but impressive
    moisture convergence from Jacksonville, FL to Charleston, SC should
    support waves of heavy rainfall regardless of development of this
    system. Additionally, plentiful tropical moisture across the rest
    of the FL Peninsula and a shortwave continuing to pivot across the
    Gulf could enhance rainfall over much of Florida Wednesday, and the
    MRGL was maintained accordingly (with the exception of the FL
    Keys, which were removed due to model consensus that convection
    will be pulling away northward by 12z Weds).

    Churchill/Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central Great Basin to Central/Southern Plains into the Ohio Valley... Thursday/Day 3 should see a similar pattern as Wednesday/Day 2,
    with a broad positively tilted trough axis across the West and
    shortwaves moving through. Pacific moisture (continuing to be over
    the 90th percentile for PWs) will stream northeastward just ahead
    of the trough to produce scattered convection across the central
    Great Basin toward the central Rockies, so expanded the Marginal
    Risk into these areas with the axis just a bit north of the
    previous couple of days.

    Farther east, an initial shortwave will force convection in the
    southern High Plains Wednesday night into Thursday morning. Then a
    renewed low level jet will push moisture and instability a bit
    farther north into Oklahoma/Kansas Thursday night and likely
    sustain convection that originates in Colorado, leading to heavy
    rain rates. For this issuance, combined both these areas into the
    Slight Risk. There continues to be some model spread in heavy
    rainfall placement and with which MCS may lead to the heavier
    totals, with most recent ECENS probabilities of exceeding 1" and 2"
    focused in Oklahoma whereas GEFS probabilities are centered in
    Kansas. So more refinements may be necessary in future cycles.
    Expanded the Marginal farther south in West Texas for convection
    with heavy rain rates just east of the dryline.

    To the east, moisture pooling along a meandering front may lead to
    locally heavy rain across the Mid-Mississippi Valley and Ohio
    Valley toward the Lower Great Lakes region. A Marginal Risk remains
    in place for these areas. Considered a Marginal Risk stretching
    into northern New England near/ahead of the front where above
    normal moisture and instability are likely, but model QPFs were not
    very heavy. There is likely a nonzero probability though so will
    continue to monitor.

    ...Southeast/Carolina Coast...
    Model guidance indicates a low pressure system potentially just
    onshore in the Carolinas near the Atlantic coast on Thursday. This
    system is most likely to be frontal but with a low end chance of
    becoming tropical or subtropical per NHC. Heaviest rainfall totals
    are forecast to stay offshore. However, wraparound moisture will
    stream into coastal areas with PWs above the 90th if not 95th
    percentile. Instability though generally looks to remain below 1000
    J/km west of the low, which may limit rain rates somewhat. Per
    coordination with the Morehead City (MHX) WFO, antecedent
    conditions are wetter than normal along coastal areas due to recent
    rain. So will continue to monitor this area for a Slight Risk
    eventually, but will await better model convergence and see if
    instability increases. Expanded the preexisting Marginal west a bit
    per some 12Z models that were farther inland.


    Tate/Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_Ty5COwn-VATafHay1hlMCOkcTFWzeoHcNbYe5wjwVmZ= 84eJLuBASejprmh2VkKPO2MStkE2_tc-UxFRH0A42-tXyho$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_Ty5COwn-VATafHay1hlMCOkcTFWzeoHcNbYe5wjwVmZ= 84eJLuBASejprmh2VkKPO2MStkE2_tc-UxFRH0A4j728h3U$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_Ty5COwn-VATafHay1hlMCOkcTFWzeoHcNbYe5wjwVmZ= 84eJLuBASejprmh2VkKPO2MStkE2_tc-UxFRH0A48DHBDF4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 4 09:31:35 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 040931=20
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    531 AM EDT Wed Jun 4 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE GREAT BASIN AND SOUTHWEST, THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND
    COASTAL SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...Southwest and Four Corners into Central/Southern High Plains...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the=20
    upper low over northern Baja (that helped produce localized 2-3"=20
    totals over the past 24 hours across portions of CA/NV/AZ border=20
    region) fills and ejects northeast atop the Four Corners. The=20
    accompanying ascent will move into continued anomalous PWs which=20
    will exceed the 99th percentile (per NAEFS), associated with
    remnant moisture from former T.S. Alvin. This will fuel widespread
    convection capable of localized rainfall rates of 0.5"-1.0"/hr (or
    at times even higher, per 00z HREF 40-km neighborhood 1"/1-hr=20
    exceedance probs as high as 20-30%). Storms will likely move slowly
    beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of localized
    heavy rainfall. Given prevailing 1-hr Flash Flood Guidance of
    0.5"-1.0" from the CA/NV/AZ border region into the Four Corners
    region, these rainfall rates may have locally significant impacts
    to sensitive terrain features (such as slot canyons and dry washes)=20
    or urban instances of flash flooding could result. While the overall
    coverage of flash flooding should be somewhat modest (i.e. isolated
    to widely scattered), decided to introduce a relatively large SLGT
    given the continued highly anomalous moisture, the overachieving=20
    nature of the convection over the past 24 hours, and the relatively
    high exceedance probabilities from the CAMs. The main limiting=20
    factor may be instability, given the prevalence of cloud cover this
    morning which could significant limit diurnal heating. However, HREF
    mean suggests at least 500-1000 J/kg of SB CAPE, and the ensemble=20
    max is as high as 1000-2000 J/kg (should significant erosion of=20
    cloud cover occur, the higher-end may be realized in spots).=20

    Farther east into the Central/Southern Rockies and High Plains,=20
    Flash Flood Guidance is generally higher and uncertainty remains
    high with regard to any substantial convective organization. While
    HREF exceedance probs are relatively high (20-30% for 3" threshold)
    over the TX Panhandle, the FV3 is an overall outlier to the rest of
    the ensemble. A targeted SLGT upgrade may be necessary later today,
    should models come into better agreement on organized convection.=20


    ...Southern Plains, Lower-Mid Mississippi Valley, Great Lakes...=20
    The cold front over the central CONUS will continue on its trek=20
    eastward today, but will start to slow and become aligned more west
    to east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching=20
    shortwave over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within=20
    the flow will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri=20
    to Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of t'storms
    is expected. Storm motions along the front are likely to be=20
    progressive, lifting off to the northeast on 0-6km mean winds of=20
    20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi vectors aligned both to this mean=20
    wind and the front suggests a potential for training. A SLGT risk=20
    was introduced for southeast MO into southern IL, where HREF=20
    exceedance probs for 3" and 5" thresholds are concentrated (30-60%=20
    and 10-30%, respectively). Much of these totals may occur over a=20
    relatively short period of time, as 1-2"/hr rainfall rates locally=20 train/repeat over the same areas.=20

    Farther south into the Southern Plains, thunderstorms from this
    morning should tend to wane over time, but will present a localized
    flash flood threat through about 15z (with the HREF indicating some
    potential for redevelopment after 00z, though FFGs are much higher
    in this region).=20


    ...Southeast...
    An inverted surface trough crossing the northern FL Peninsula with
    an accompanying mid-upper low (centered near the Big Bend) will=20
    shift northeast along the FL/GA/SC coasts, having already drawn=20
    substantial tropical moisture northward (along with accompanying=20
    showers and thunderstorms). While the NHC continues to indicate a=20
    10% probability of tropical or sub-tropical development in=20
    association with this feature, heavy rainfall is increasingly a=20
    concern (whether or not a circulation ultimately forms, though a=20 non-tropical low is expected to). While the bulk of the heavy=20
    precipitation is still expected to occur mainly offshore of (with=20
    the most significant HREF signal offshore of SC, specifically),=20
    there are concerns that prolonged heavy rainfall could impact=20
    portions of the coastline. A SLGT risk was introduced to coastal=20
    portions of SC, where rainfall totals in excessive of 5" are most=20
    likely to occur (per HREF exceedance probs of 20-30%, which is also
    in-line with the corresponding 10-yr ARI and co- located with the=20
    best EAS probs, indicating relatively good spatial agreement as=20
    well). This includes the relatively sensitive Charleston metro=20
    area, and any localized flooding impacts may be exacerbated by=20
    high tide. Outside of this specific area, locally heavy rainfall=20
    could result in more isolated instances of flash flooding across=20
    much of FL and adjacent portions of southeast AL, southern and=20
    central GA, and into more of SC/NC (depending with the northern=20
    extent of the MRGL largely dependent on timing differences with the
    northward progression of convection). Local 3" exceedance probs=20
    are relatively high throughout this region (20-60%), though absent
    of significant convective organization these totals should largely
    be below the relatively high FFGs that prevail (which are as high=20
    as 4-5" over 6-hr).=20

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Intermountain West to Central/Southern Plains...
    Thursday/Day 2 should see a similar pattern as Wednesday/Day 1,=20
    with a broad positively tilted trough axis across the West and=20
    shortwaves moving through. Pacific moisture (continuing to be over=20
    the 90th percentile for PWs, and as high as the 99th percentile,=20
    per NAEFS) will stream northeastward just ahead of the trough to=20
    produce scattered convection across the central Great Basin toward=20
    the central Rockies, where the Marginal Risk has been maintained=20
    (and adjusted to the latest data).=20

    Farther east, an initial shortwave will force convection in the
    southern High Plains tonight into Thursday morning, then a renewed
    low-level jet (30-40 kts at 925-850mb) will push moisture and=20
    instability a bit farther north into Oklahoma/Kansas Thursday
    night. This will likely sustain convection (or perhaps reinitiate
    convection from a remnant MCV) that originates in CO/NM, leading=20
    to heavy rain rates (that potentially persist and repeat over the
    same areas). While there continues to be spread in the guidance=20
    regarding whether there are ultimately two separate areas of
    convection (one near the TX Panhandle and Permian Basin and another
    near the KS/OK border) or one more consolidated area of convection
    (likely somewhere inbetween), have maintained and adjusted the
    associated SLGT risk (which is centered near the highest ECENS 2"
    and 3" exceedance probs). Further refinements are expected with the
    addition of the remainder of the CAM suite later today (and could
    result in higher confidence of upper-end SLGT probabilities, should
    CAMs come into relatively good agreement).=20


    ...Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and Lower Great Lakes...=20
    Moisture pooling along a meandering front may lead to locally=20
    heavy rain across the Mid-Lower MS Valley and OH/TN Valleys toward=20
    the Lower Great Lakes region. A Marginal Risk was adjusted eastward
    across this region from prior cycles, owing to trends in the
    placement of the frontal zone. Still considered a Marginal Risk=20
    stretching into northern New England near/ahead of the front where=20
    above normal moisture and instability are likely, but have judged=20
    model QPFs remain not too heavy. There is likely a non-zero=20
    probability for localized flash flooding, which will continue to be monitored.=20


    ...Southeast/Carolina Coast...
    A non-tropical low pressure system is forecast to be tracking just
    onshore in the Carolinas on Thursday, and models continue to
    indicate significant rainfall totals mainly just offshore in
    association with tropical moisture. While this system is most=20
    likely to remain frontal/baroclinic in nature, there is still a=20
    low-end chance (near 10% per the NHC) of a tropical or sub-tropical
    low consolidating within the persistent tropical convection offshore.
    Even though the heaviest rainfall totals are forecast to stay=20
    offshore, wraparound moisture is expected to stream into coastal=20
    areas with PWs near the 95th percentile (per NAEFS). Have
    maintained a MRGL risk for the new Day 2, owing to uncertainties
    with regard to how things ultimately develop, but current ensemble
    probs (available CAMs and GEFS/ECENS) suggest 2-3" areal averages=20
    for the NC coast (which has the greatest chance of being locally=20
    upgraded to a SLGT with subsequent updates). Farther west and south
    of the low, lack of instability and focused low-level moisture=20
    transport looks to limit rain rates and subsequent totals (though=20
    lingering flooding may still be ongoing from D1 rainfall).

    Churchill/Tate


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    OKLAHOMA...

    ...Southern Plains...=20
    Convection looks to remain active in the Southern Plains from
    overnight Thursday into Friday morning, fueled by a 30-40 kt low-
    level jet and likely ongoing MCS(s). In addition, the trailing
    frontal zone is unlikely to move much as the upper-level pattern
    remains blocky. Models indicate that another shortwave could fuel
    yet more organized convective coverage into Friday night, this time
    originating from the northern stream and digging southeastward from
    the central Rockies/High Plains. The LLJ should reinvigorate once
    again, and this is a recipe for heavy rainfall with training and
    repeating over many of the same areas a distinct possibility. While
    there is a fair amount of spread in the global guidance at this
    range with QPF output, the consensus cluster is pretty well
    situated over central OK (with some solutions suggesting farther
    eastward progress of high totals into portions of northwest AR and
    southwest MO). Maintained the inherited SLGT risk over the best
    ensemble signal (where 00z GEFS/ECENS 2" and 3" exceedance probs
    overall quite well). As confidence increases, the SLGT risk region
    may expand (with potential for a targeted Moderate upgrade in
    subsequent outlooks, depending largely on how much rainfall=20
    transpires on Thursday and how well QPF on Friday overlaps).=20


    ...MS/TN/OH Valleys into Great Lakes and Appalachians...
    Moisture looks to continue to pool along a meandering front in=20
    this blocky pattern, which may continue to lead to locally heavy=20
    rain across the Lower-Middle MS Valley and OH/TN Valleys toward=20
    the Lower Great Lakes region. The MRGL was maintained and adjusted,
    and subsequent targeted SLGT(s) may be necessary with increasing
    overall PWs and the potential for localized totals beginning to add
    up from multiple days. In addition, expanded the inherited MRGL
    risk eastward into much of the Appalachians, as models come into
    better agreement that better moisture and subsequent convection
    will start to move into those more sensitive areas.=20=20

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6w1O9vzfMZOtYloTjXFkInDyuNSnxbAqVHmlxBXT1z5V= kbIUjxnqAV6ViD2fCna79Fs44ZUnGIslxvFBQykTzqIVPm8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6w1O9vzfMZOtYloTjXFkInDyuNSnxbAqVHmlxBXT1z5V= kbIUjxnqAV6ViD2fCna79Fs44ZUnGIslxvFBQykT8iW7c5U$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6w1O9vzfMZOtYloTjXFkInDyuNSnxbAqVHmlxBXT1z5V= kbIUjxnqAV6ViD2fCna79Fs44ZUnGIslxvFBQykT-u4HT4U$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 4 16:11:01 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 041610
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1210 PM EDT Wed Jun 4 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE GREAT BASIN AND SOUTHWEST, THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND
    COASTAL SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...16z update...

    The development of an earlier-than-usual cumulus field over parts=20
    of east-central AZ/west-central NM, where an area of shallow=20
    instability is in place along with a relatively fast moving upper=20
    jet (75-85kts), could support short fused convection this morning.
    The marginal risk area was expanded on its southern periphery to=20
    account for this. The slight risk areas over the Midwest and South=20
    Carolina were expanded to account for an uptick in qpf in the
    latest global/hires guidance. The Midwest slight was expanded=20
    northwestward across Illinois and Indiana while the Southeast=20
    slight risk was expanded northward to encompass the entire South=20
    Carolina coast.

    Kebede

    ...Southwest and Four Corners into Central/Southern High Plains...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the
    upper low over northern Baja (that helped produce localized 2-3"
    totals over the past 24 hours across portions of CA/NV/AZ border
    region) fills and ejects northeast atop the Four Corners. The
    accompanying ascent will move into continued anomalous PWs which
    will exceed the 99th percentile (per NAEFS), associated with
    remnant moisture from former T.S. Alvin. This will fuel widespread
    convection capable of localized rainfall rates of 0.5"-1.0"/hr (or
    at times even higher, per 00z HREF 40-km neighborhood 1"/1-hr
    exceedance probs as high as 20-30%). Storms will likely move slowly
    beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of localized
    heavy rainfall. Given prevailing 1-hr Flash Flood Guidance of
    0.5"-1.0" from the CA/NV/AZ border region into the Four Corners
    region, these rainfall rates may have locally significant impacts
    to sensitive terrain features (such as slot canyons and dry washes)
    or urban instances of flash flooding could result. While the overall
    coverage of flash flooding should be somewhat modest (i.e. isolated
    to widely scattered), decided to introduce a relatively large SLGT
    given the continued highly anomalous moisture, the overachieving
    nature of the convection over the past 24 hours, and the relatively
    high exceedance probabilities from the CAMs. The main limiting
    factor may be instability, given the prevalence of cloud cover this
    morning which could significant limit diurnal heating. However, HREF
    mean suggests at least 500-1000 J/kg of SB CAPE, and the ensemble
    max is as high as 1000-2000 J/kg (should significant erosion of
    cloud cover occur, the higher-end may be realized in spots).

    Farther east into the Central/Southern Rockies and High Plains,
    Flash Flood Guidance is generally higher and uncertainty remains
    high with regard to any substantial convective organization. While
    HREF exceedance probs are relatively high (20-30% for 3" threshold)
    over the TX Panhandle, the FV3 is an overall outlier to the rest of
    the ensemble. A targeted SLGT upgrade may be necessary later today,
    should models come into better agreement on organized convection.


    ...Southern Plains, Lower-Mid Mississippi Valley, Great Lakes...
    The cold front over the central CONUS will continue on its trek
    eastward today, but will start to slow and become aligned more west
    to east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching
    shortwave over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within
    the flow will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri
    to Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of t'storms
    is expected. Storm motions along the front are likely to be
    progressive, lifting off to the northeast on 0-6km mean winds of
    20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi vectors aligned both to this mean
    wind and the front suggests a potential for training. A SLGT risk
    was introduced for southeast MO into southern IL, where HREF
    exceedance probs for 3" and 5" thresholds are concentrated (30-60%
    and 10-30%, respectively). Much of these totals may occur over a
    relatively short period of time, as 1-2"/hr rainfall rates locally
    train/repeat over the same areas.

    Farther south into the Southern Plains, thunderstorms from this
    morning should tend to wane over time, but will present a localized
    flash flood threat through about 15z (with the HREF indicating some
    potential for redevelopment after 00z, though FFGs are much higher
    in this region).


    ...Southeast...
    An inverted surface trough crossing the northern FL Peninsula with
    an accompanying mid-upper low (centered near the Big Bend) will
    shift northeast along the FL/GA/SC coasts, having already drawn
    substantial tropical moisture northward (along with accompanying
    showers and thunderstorms). While the NHC continues to indicate a
    10% probability of tropical or sub-tropical development in
    association with this feature, heavy rainfall is increasingly a
    concern (whether or not a circulation ultimately forms, though a
    non-tropical low is expected to). While the bulk of the heavy
    precipitation is still expected to occur mainly offshore of (with
    the most significant HREF signal offshore of SC, specifically),
    there are concerns that prolonged heavy rainfall could impact
    portions of the coastline. A SLGT risk was introduced to coastal
    portions of SC, where rainfall totals in excessive of 5" are most
    likely to occur (per HREF exceedance probs of 20-30%, which is also
    in-line with the corresponding 10-yr ARI and co- located with the
    best EAS probs, indicating relatively good spatial agreement as
    well). This includes the relatively sensitive Charleston metro
    area, and any localized flooding impacts may be exacerbated by
    high tide. Outside of this specific area, locally heavy rainfall
    could result in more isolated instances of flash flooding across
    much of FL and adjacent portions of southeast AL, southern and
    central GA, and into more of SC/NC (depending with the northern
    extent of the MRGL largely dependent on timing differences with the
    northward progression of convection). Local 3" exceedance probs
    are relatively high throughout this region (20-60%), though absent
    of significant convective organization these totals should largely
    be below the relatively high FFGs that prevail (which are as high
    as 4-5" over 6-hr).

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Intermountain West to Central/Southern Plains...
    Thursday/Day 2 should see a similar pattern as Wednesday/Day 1,
    with a broad positively tilted trough axis across the West and
    shortwaves moving through. Pacific moisture (continuing to be over
    the 90th percentile for PWs, and as high as the 99th percentile,
    per NAEFS) will stream northeastward just ahead of the trough to
    produce scattered convection across the central Great Basin toward
    the central Rockies, where the Marginal Risk has been maintained
    (and adjusted to the latest data).

    Farther east, an initial shortwave will force convection in the
    southern High Plains tonight into Thursday morning, then a renewed
    low-level jet (30-40 kts at 925-850mb) will push moisture and
    instability a bit farther north into Oklahoma/Kansas Thursday
    night. This will likely sustain convection (or perhaps reinitiate
    convection from a remnant MCV) that originates in CO/NM, leading
    to heavy rain rates (that potentially persist and repeat over the
    same areas). While there continues to be spread in the guidance
    regarding whether there are ultimately two separate areas of
    convection (one near the TX Panhandle and Permian Basin and another
    near the KS/OK border) or one more consolidated area of convection
    (likely somewhere inbetween), have maintained and adjusted the
    associated SLGT risk (which is centered near the highest ECENS 2"
    and 3" exceedance probs). Further refinements are expected with the
    addition of the remainder of the CAM suite later today (and could
    result in higher confidence of upper-end SLGT probabilities, should
    CAMs come into relatively good agreement).


    ...Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and Lower Great Lakes...
    Moisture pooling along a meandering front may lead to loclatestally
    heavy rain across the Mid-Lower MS Valley and OH/TN Valleys toward
    the Lower Great Lakes region. A Marginal Risk was adjusted=20
    eastward across this region from prior cycles, owing to trends in=20
    the placement of the frontal zone. Still considered a Marginal Risk
    stretching into northern New England near/ahead of the front where
    above normal moisture and instability are likely, but have judged=20
    model QPFs remain not too heavy. There is likely a non-zero=20
    probability for localized flash flooding, which will continue to be
    monitored.


    ...Southeast/Carolina Coast...
    A non-tropical low pressure system is forecast to be tracking just
    onshore in the Carolinas on Thursday, and models continue to
    indicate significant rainfall totals mainly just offshore in
    association with tropical moisture. While this system is most
    likely to remain frontal/baroclinic in nature, there is still a
    low-end chance (near 10% per the NHC) of a tropical or sub-tropical
    low consolidating within the persistent tropical convection offshore.
    Even though the heaviest rainfall totals are forecast to stay
    offshore, wraparound moisture is expected to stream into coastal
    areas with PWs near the 95th percentile (per NAEFS). Have
    maintained a MRGL risk for the new Day 2, owing to uncertainties
    with regard to how things ultimately develop, but current ensemble
    probs (available CAMs and GEFS/ECENS) suggest 2-3" areal averages
    for the NC coast (which has the greatest chance of being locally
    upgraded to a SLGT with subsequent updates). Farther west and south
    of the low, lack of instability and focused low-level moisture
    transport looks to limit rain rates and subsequent totals (though
    lingering flooding may still be ongoing from D1 rainfall).

    Churchill/Tate


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    OKLAHOMA...

    ...Southern Plains...
    Convection looks to remain active in the Southern Plains from
    overnight Thursday into Friday morning, fueled by a 30-40 kt low-
    level jet and likely ongoing MCS(s). In addition, the trailing
    frontal zone is unlikely to move much as the upper-level pattern
    remains blocky. Models indicate that another shortwave could fuel
    yet more organized convective coverage into Friday night, this time
    originating from the northern stream and digging southeastward from
    the central Rockies/High Plains. The LLJ should reinvigorate once
    again, and this is a recipe for heavy rainfall with training and
    repeating over many of the same areas a distinct possibility. While
    there is a fair amount of spread in the global guidance at this
    range with QPF output, the consensus cluster is pretty well
    situated over central OK (with some solutions suggesting farther
    eastward progress of high totals into portions of northwest AR and
    southwest MO). Maintained the inherited SLGT risk over the best
    ensemble signal (where 00z GEFS/ECENS 2" and 3" exceedance probs
    overall quite well). As confidence increases, the SLGT risk region
    may expand (with potential for a targeted Moderate upgrade in
    subsequent outlooks, depending largely on how much rainfall
    transpires on Thursday and how well QPF on Friday overlaps).


    ...MS/TN/OH Valleys into Great Lakes and Appalachians...
    Moisture looks to continue to pool along a meandering front in
    this blocky pattern, which may continue to lead to locally heavy
    rain across the Lower-Middle MS Valley and OH/TN Valleys toward
    the Lower Great Lakes region. The MRGL was maintained and adjusted,
    and subsequent targeted SLGT(s) may be necessary with increasing
    overall PWs and the potential for localized totals beginning to add
    up from multiple days. In addition, expanded the inherited MRGL
    risk eastward into much of the Appalachians, as models come into
    better agreement that better moisture and subsequent convection
    will start to move into those more sensitive areas.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8LaMutra3NlLAri6VkMW5dXOGw7XBT16QjP498y9j3-0= tlOjyppb8ugSganpnBSUMfBIan8lZoYsbpnRO0ZI45vrZkU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8LaMutra3NlLAri6VkMW5dXOGw7XBT16QjP498y9j3-0= tlOjyppb8ugSganpnBSUMfBIan8lZoYsbpnRO0ZIfqP9AEE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8LaMutra3NlLAri6VkMW5dXOGw7XBT16QjP498y9j3-0= tlOjyppb8ugSganpnBSUMfBIan8lZoYsbpnRO0ZIuGpb3FA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 4 20:28:11 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 042026
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    426 PM EDT Wed Jun 4 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jun 04 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE GREAT BASIN AND SOUTHWEST, THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND
    COASTAL SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...16z update...

    The development of an earlier-than-usual cumulus field over parts
    of east-central AZ/west-central NM, where an area of shallow
    instability is in place along with a relatively fast moving upper
    jet (75-85kts), could support short fused convection this morning.
    The marginal risk area was expanded on its southern periphery to
    account for this. The slight risk areas over the Midwest and South
    Carolina were expanded to account for an uptick in qpf in the
    latest global/hires guidance. The Midwest slight was expanded
    northwestward across Illinois and Indiana while the Southeast
    slight risk was expanded northward to encompass the entire South
    Carolina coast.

    Kebede

    ...Southwest and Four Corners into Central/Southern High Plains...
    Another active day of showers and thunderstorms expected as the
    upper low over northern Baja (that helped produce localized 2-3"
    totals over the past 24 hours across portions of CA/NV/AZ border
    region) fills and ejects northeast atop the Four Corners. The
    accompanying ascent will move into continued anomalous PWs which
    will exceed the 99th percentile (per NAEFS), associated with
    remnant moisture from former T.S. Alvin. This will fuel widespread
    convection capable of localized rainfall rates of 0.5"-1.0"/hr (or
    at times even higher, per 00z HREF 40-km neighborhood 1"/1-hr
    exceedance probs as high as 20-30%). Storms will likely move slowly
    beneath the upper trough, leading to a longer duration of localized
    heavy rainfall. Given prevailing 1-hr Flash Flood Guidance of
    0.5"-1.0" from the CA/NV/AZ border region into the Four Corners
    region, these rainfall rates may have locally significant impacts
    to sensitive terrain features (such as slot canyons and dry washes)
    or urban instances of flash flooding could result. While the overall
    coverage of flash flooding should be somewhat modest (i.e. isolated
    to widely scattered), decided to introduce a relatively large SLGT
    given the continued highly anomalous moisture, the overachieving
    nature of the convection over the past 24 hours, and the relatively
    high exceedance probabilities from the CAMs. The main limiting
    factor may be instability, given the prevalence of cloud cover this
    morning which could significant limit diurnal heating. However, HREF
    mean suggests at least 500-1000 J/kg of SB CAPE, and the ensemble
    max is as high as 1000-2000 J/kg (should significant erosion of
    cloud cover occur, the higher-end may be realized in spots).

    Farther east into the Central/Southern Rockies and High Plains,
    Flash Flood Guidance is generally higher and uncertainty remains
    high with regard to any substantial convective organization. While
    HREF exceedance probs are relatively high (20-30% for 3" threshold)
    over the TX Panhandle, the FV3 is an overall outlier to the rest of
    the ensemble. A targeted SLGT upgrade may be necessary later today,
    should models come into better agreement on organized convection.


    ...Southern Plains, Lower-Mid Mississippi Valley, Great Lakes...
    The cold front over the central CONUS will continue on its trek
    eastward today, but will start to slow and become aligned more west
    to east as its tail gets pulled northward by an approaching
    shortwave over the Four Corners region. Shortwaves embedded within
    the flow will continue to race northeast, especially from Missouri
    to Michigan, which is where the greatest concentration of t'storms
    is expected. Storm motions along the front are likely to be
    progressive, lifting off to the northeast on 0-6km mean winds of
    20-30 kts, but weaker Corfidi vectors aligned both to this mean
    wind and the front suggests a potential for training. A SLGT risk
    was introduced for southeast MO into southern IL, where HREF
    exceedance probs for 3" and 5" thresholds are concentrated (30-60%
    and 10-30%, respectively). Much of these totals may occur over a
    relatively short period of time, as 1-2"/hr rainfall rates locally
    train/repeat over the same areas.

    Farther south into the Southern Plains, thunderstorms from this
    morning should tend to wane over time, but will present a localized
    flash flood threat through about 15z (with the HREF indicating some
    potential for redevelopment after 00z, though FFGs are much higher
    in this region).


    ...Southeast...
    An inverted surface trough crossing the northern FL Peninsula with
    an accompanying mid-upper low (centered near the Big Bend) will
    shift northeast along the FL/GA/SC coasts, having already drawn
    substantial tropical moisture northward (along with accompanying
    showers and thunderstorms). While the NHC continues to indicate a
    10% probability of tropical or sub-tropical development in
    association with this feature, heavy rainfall is increasingly a
    concern (whether or not a circulation ultimately forms, though a
    non-tropical low is expected to). While the bulk of the heavy
    precipitation is still expected to occur mainly offshore of (with
    the most significant HREF signal offshore of SC, specifically),
    there are concerns that prolonged heavy rainfall could impact
    portions of the coastline. A SLGT risk was introduced to coastal
    portions of SC, where rainfall totals in excessive of 5" are most
    likely to occur (per HREF exceedance probs of 20-30%, which is also
    in-line with the corresponding 10-yr ARI and co- located with the
    best EAS probs, indicating relatively good spatial agreement as
    well). This includes the relatively sensitive Charleston metro
    area, and any localized flooding impacts may be exacerbated by
    high tide. Outside of this specific area, locally heavy rainfall
    could result in more isolated instances of flash flooding across
    much of FL and adjacent portions of southeast AL, southern and
    central GA, and into more of SC/NC (depending with the northern
    extent of the MRGL largely dependent on timing differences with the
    northward progression of convection). Local 3" exceedance probs
    are relatively high throughout this region (20-60%), though absent
    of significant convective organization these totals should largely
    be below the relatively high FFGs that prevail (which are as high
    as 4-5" over 6-hr).

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS AND COASTAL NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...2030z update...

    A slight risk was introduced for much of the North Carolina coast
    with this afternoon's update. Models have increased qpf magnitudes
    and coverage through the Outer Banks and some inland areas where a
    marginal risk is also in effect to account for any convective=20
    bands that penetrate into eastern NC. Most notably, the Euro=20
    trended faster with its axis of precipitation/convection along the=20
    NC coast. Forecast details remain mostly the same. The marginal=20
    over southwestern Texas was expanded south toward the Mexican=20
    border.


    Kebede

    ...Intermountain West to Central/Southern Plains...
    Thursday/Day 2 should see a similar pattern as Wednesday/Day 1,
    with a broad positively tilted trough axis across the West and
    shortwaves moving through. Pacific moisture (continuing to be over
    the 90th percentile for PWs, and as high as the 99th percentile,
    per NAEFS) will stream northeastward just ahead of the trough to
    produce scattered convection across the central Great Basin toward
    the central Rockies, where the Marginal Risk has been maintained
    (and adjusted to the latest data).

    Farther east, an initial shortwave will force convection in the
    southern High Plains tonight into Thursday morning, then a renewed
    low-level jet (30-40 kts at 925-850mb) will push moisture and
    instability a bit farther north into Oklahoma/Kansas Thursday
    night. This will likely sustain convection (or perhaps reinitiate
    convection from a remnant MCV) that originates in CO/NM, leading
    to heavy rain rates (that potentially persist and repeat over the
    same areas). While there continues to be spread in the guidance
    regarding whether there are ultimately two separate areas of
    convection (one near the TX Panhandle and Permian Basin and another
    near the KS/OK border) or one more consolidated area of convection
    (likely somewhere inbetween), have maintained and adjusted the
    associated SLGT risk (which is centered near the highest ECENS 2"
    and 3" exceedance probs). Further refinements are expected with the
    addition of the remainder of the CAM suite later today (and could
    result in higher confidence of upper-end SLGT probabilities, should
    CAMs come into relatively good agreement).


    ...Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and Lower Great Lakes...
    Moisture pooling along a meandering front may lead to loclatestally
    heavy rain across the Mid-Lower MS Valley and OH/TN Valleys toward
    the Lower Great Lakes region. A Marginal Risk was adjusted
    eastward across this region from prior cycles, owing to trends in
    the placement of the frontal zone. Still considered a Marginal Risk
    stretching into northern New England near/ahead of the front where
    above normal moisture and instability are likely, but have judged
    model QPFs remain not too heavy. There is likely a non-zero
    probability for localized flash flooding, which will continue to be
    monitored.


    ...Southeast/Carolina Coast...
    A non-tropical low pressure system is forecast to be tracking just
    onshore in the Carolinas on Thursday, and models continue to
    indicate significant rainfall totals mainly just offshore in
    association with tropical moisture. While this system is most
    likely to remain frontal/baroclinic in nature, there is still a
    low-end chance (near 10% per the NHC) of a tropical or sub-tropical
    low consolidating within the persistent tropical convection offshore.
    Even though the heaviest rainfall totals are forecast to stay
    offshore, wraparound moisture is expected to stream into coastal
    areas with PWs near the 95th percentile (per NAEFS). Have
    maintained a MRGL risk for the new Day 2, owing to uncertainties
    with regard to how things ultimately develop, but current ensemble
    probs (available CAMs and GEFS/ECENS) suggest 2-3" areal averages
    for the NC coast (which has the greatest chance of being locally
    upgraded to a SLGT with subsequent updates). Farther west and south
    of the low, lack of instability and focused low-level moisture
    transport looks to limit rain rates and subsequent totals (though
    lingering flooding may still be ongoing from D1 rainfall).

    Churchill/Tate


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    OKLAHOMA INTO NORTHERN ARKANSAS AND SOUTHERN MISSOURI...

    ...2030z update...

    The inherited marginal risk area was maintained with little to no
    adjustments made, though there continues to be the opportunities
    for upgrades along the spine of the stationary front draped across
    the Ohio Valley and Northeast. The slight risk over the Southern=20
    Plains and Lower/Middle Mississippi Valley was expanded eastward=20
    into northern Arkansas and southern Missouri. MCS(s) moving along=20
    an instability pool of 1000-3000J/Kg and 1.5-2in. PWATs could=20
    produce robust rainfall rates Friday afternoon/evening. Low FFGs=20
    from recent rainfall and increased qpf/24h 1-2in exceedance=20
    probabilities in today's 12z guidance support the expansion.=20
    There's also a continued signal for a slight risk in the 12z 1-2=20
    year 24hr ARI exceedance and UFVS first guess fields.

    Kebede

    ...Southern Plains...
    Convection looks to remain active in the Southern Plains from
    overnight Thursday into Friday morning, fueled by a 30-40 kt low-
    level jet and likely ongoing MCS(s). In addition, the trailing
    frontal zone is unlikely to move much as the upper-level pattern
    remains blocky. Models indicate that another shortwave could fuel
    yet more organized convective coverage into Friday night, this time
    originating from the northern stream and digging southeastward from
    the central Rockies/High Plains. The LLJ should reinvigorate once
    again, and this is a recipe for heavy rainfall with training and
    repeating over many of the same areas a distinct possibility. While
    there is a fair amount of spread in the global guidance at this
    range with QPF output, the consensus cluster is pretty well
    situated over central OK (with some solutions suggesting farther
    eastward progress of high totals into portions of northwest AR and
    southwest MO). Maintained the inherited SLGT risk over the best
    ensemble signal (where 00z GEFS/ECENS 2" and 3" exceedance probs
    overall quite well). As confidence increases, the SLGT risk region
    may expand (with potential for a targeted Moderate upgrade in
    subsequent outlooks, depending largely on how much rainfall
    transpires on Thursday and how well QPF on Friday overlaps).


    ...MS/TN/OH Valleys into Great Lakes and Appalachians...
    Moisture looks to continue to pool along a meandering front in
    this blocky pattern, which may continue to lead to locally heavy
    rain across the Lower-Middle MS Valley and OH/TN Valleys toward
    the Lower Great Lakes region. The MRGL was maintained and adjusted,
    and subsequent targeted SLGT(s) may be necessary with increasing
    overall PWs and the potential for localized totals beginning to add
    up from multiple days. In addition, expanded the inherited MRGL
    risk eastward into much of the Appalachians, as models come into
    better agreement that better moisture and subsequent convection
    will start to move into those more sensitive areas.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6qsYpjcNnsjDF1fMh7XNQwDZSs5kNTC1SUzG0YKsXVAs= _mILOW67QZoYNB6sTwAmSC7ab43KXXXBLy57tsaeYZXZyPg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6qsYpjcNnsjDF1fMh7XNQwDZSs5kNTC1SUzG0YKsXVAs= _mILOW67QZoYNB6sTwAmSC7ab43KXXXBLy57tsae-PwZ9ew$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6qsYpjcNnsjDF1fMh7XNQwDZSs5kNTC1SUzG0YKsXVAs= _mILOW67QZoYNB6sTwAmSC7ab43KXXXBLy57tsae-hlhOG4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 5 00:27:17 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 050026
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    826 PM EDT Wed Jun 4 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS, MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE GREAT LAKES,
    AND THE IMMEDIATE CAROLINA COAST...

    ....Southern High Plains...

    Mid-level shortwave will exit out of the Southern Rockies with
    convection maintaining organization as it crosses over Eastern NM
    into the TX Panhandle and adjacent Caprock. Sufficient buoyancy and
    ascent within the proxy of a modest 40-45kt speed max will be
    enough to maintain the convective output currently migrating across North-Central NM. Upscale growth within the cluster is anticipated
    with the assistance of a modest LLJ component feeding into the
    convection on its expected path. A few other pockets of convection
    will be plausible across portions of Southeast CO and over the High
    Plains down through Southeast NM. Totals of 1-2" with locally
    higher are forecast leading to isolated flash flood concerns in any
    given area with emphasis on more urbanized zones due to higher
    runoff potential. A MRGL risk remains for the above zones.=20

    ...Mid-Mississippi through the Great Lakes...

    Continued migration of several weak shortwave impulses over top a quasi-stationary boundary extending from OK up into MI will lead to
    more convective clusters moving over areas of MO/IL/IN and
    eventually MI as we move into the morning. A few weak surface lows
    have been analyzed within the front with each of the lows expected
    to move northeast along the front with the boundary slowly trudging
    eastward. Overlap of rainfall into areas that already saw 1-3" of
    rain will lead to some prospect of flash flooding in the above
    zones with a lesser chance outside those areas, but still within
    the lower bound of the MRGL risk threshold. 18z HREF neighborhood
    probs were pretty robust for >3" in places across IL/MO, but
    assessment of those probabilities led to a bias on the high side
    with some of the older CAMs guidance (ARW family) that exacerbated
    the output. Considering the progression of the precip pattern, the
    previous SLGT was removed with the MRGL risk favored for areas from
    Northeast AR up through South-Central and Southeastern MI and
    points in-between.=20

    ...Carolina Coast...

    Inverted trough analyzed off the SC coast will continue to plague
    the immediate coastal areas with the heaviest precip footprint
    currently just offshore of CHS with a migration to the north.
    Strong low-level convergence signature will remain over the
    northern periphery of a weak surface reflection organizing over the
    Southeast coast. A band of heavier rain will occur between CHS up
    through MHX with the greatest opportunity for heavier rates and
    flash flooding likely locked to the coastal plain and more prone
    urban areas. PWATs running near climatological peak across that
    area (2-2.2" expected) depicts a moisture rich profile capable of
    locally enhanced rates and totals that could easily reach 2-3" with
    isolated to 4" in a few of the harder hit areas. Right now, that
    chance seems to be more north than what was alluded to earlier in
    the D1 with places from Myrtle Beach through Wilmington to
    Morehead City the more likely to see the heaviest rainfall. The
    sandier soils will help keep the worst of the potential at bay, so
    the threat is more relegated to the MRGL risk category when
    assessing trends. As a result, the previous SLGT risk was dropped
    with a MRGL across portions of the immediate SC and Southeastern NC
    coast.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS AND COASTAL NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...2030z update...

    A slight risk was introduced for much of the North Carolina coast
    with this afternoon's update. Models have increased qpf magnitudes
    and coverage through the Outer Banks and some inland areas where a
    marginal risk is also in effect to account for any convective
    bands that penetrate into eastern NC. Most notably, the Euro
    trended faster with its axis of precipitation/convection along the
    NC coast. Forecast details remain mostly the same. The marginal
    over southwestern Texas was expanded south toward the Mexican
    border.


    Kebede

    ...Intermountain West to Central/Southern Plains...
    Thursday/Day 2 should see a similar pattern as Wednesday/Day 1,
    with a broad positively tilted trough axis across the West and
    shortwaves moving through. Pacific moisture (continuing to be over
    the 90th percentile for PWs, and as high as the 99th percentile,
    per NAEFS) will stream northeastward just ahead of the trough to
    produce scattered convection across the central Great Basin toward
    the central Rockies, where the Marginal Risk has been maintained
    (and adjusted to the latest data).

    Farther east, an initial shortwave will force convection in the
    southern High Plains tonight into Thursday morning, then a renewed
    low-level jet (30-40 kts at 925-850mb) will push moisture and
    instability a bit farther north into Oklahoma/Kansas Thursday
    night. This will likely sustain convection (or perhaps reinitiate
    convection from a remnant MCV) that originates in CO/NM, leading
    to heavy rain rates (that potentially persist and repeat over the
    same areas). While there continues to be spread in the guidance
    regarding whether there are ultimately two separate areas of
    convection (one near the TX Panhandle and Permian Basin and another
    near the KS/OK border) or one more consolidated area of convection
    (likely somewhere inbetween), have maintained and adjusted the
    associated SLGT risk (which is centered near the highest ECENS 2"
    and 3" exceedance probs). Further refinements are expected with the
    addition of the remainder of the CAM suite later today (and could
    result in higher confidence of upper-end SLGT probabilities, should
    CAMs come into relatively good agreement).


    ...Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and Lower Great Lakes...
    Moisture pooling along a meandering front may lead to locally heavy
    rain across the Mid-Lower MS Valley and OH/TN Valleys toward the=20
    Lower Great Lakes region. A Marginal Risk was adjusted eastward=20
    across this region from prior cycles, owing to trends in the=20
    placement of the frontal zone. Still considered a Marginal Risk=20
    stretching into northern New England near/ahead of the front where=20
    above normal moisture and instability are likely, but have judged=20
    model QPFs remain not too heavy. There is likely a non-zero=20
    probability for localized flash flooding, which will continue to be
    monitored.


    ...Southeast/Carolina Coast...
    A non-tropical low pressure system is forecast to be tracking just
    onshore in the Carolinas on Thursday, and models continue to
    indicate significant rainfall totals mainly just offshore in
    association with tropical moisture. While this system is most
    likely to remain frontal/baroclinic in nature, there is still a
    low-end chance (near 10% per the NHC) of a tropical or sub-tropical
    low consolidating within the persistent tropical convection offshore.
    Even though the heaviest rainfall totals are forecast to stay
    offshore, wraparound moisture is expected to stream into coastal
    areas with PWs near the 95th percentile (per NAEFS). Have
    maintained a MRGL risk for the new Day 2, owing to uncertainties
    with regard to how things ultimately develop, but current ensemble
    probs (available CAMs and GEFS/ECENS) suggest 2-3" areal averages
    for the NC coast (which has the greatest chance of being locally
    upgraded to a SLGT with subsequent updates). Farther west and south
    of the low, lack of instability and focused low-level moisture
    transport looks to limit rain rates and subsequent totals (though
    lingering flooding may still be ongoing from D1 rainfall).

    Churchill/Tate


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    OKLAHOMA INTO NORTHERN ARKANSAS AND SOUTHERN MISSOURI...

    ...2030z update...

    The inherited marginal risk area was maintained with little to no
    adjustments made, though there continues to be the opportunities
    for upgrades along the spine of the stationary front draped across
    the Ohio Valley and Northeast. The slight risk over the Southern
    Plains and Lower/Middle Mississippi Valley was expanded eastward
    into northern Arkansas and southern Missouri. MCS(s) moving along
    an instability pool of 1000-3000J/Kg and 1.5-2in. PWATs could
    produce robust rainfall rates Friday afternoon/evening. Low FFGs
    from recent rainfall and increased qpf/24h 1-2in exceedance
    probabilities in today's 12z guidance support the expansion.
    There's also a continued signal for a slight risk in the 12z 1-2
    year 24hr ARI exceedance and UFVS first guess fields.

    Kebede

    ...Southern Plains...
    Convection looks to remain active in the Southern Plains from
    overnight Thursday into Friday morning, fueled by a 30-40 kt low-
    level jet and likely ongoing MCS(s). In addition, the trailing
    frontal zone is unlikely to move much as the upper-level pattern
    remains blocky. Models indicate that another shortwave could fuel
    yet more organized convective coverage into Friday night, this time
    originating from the northern stream and digging southeastward from
    the central Rockies/High Plains. The LLJ should reinvigorate once
    again, and this is a recipe for heavy rainfall with training and
    repeating over many of the same areas a distinct possibility. While
    there is a fair amount of spread in the global guidance at this
    range with QPF output, the consensus cluster is pretty well
    situated over central OK (with some solutions suggesting farther
    eastward progress of high totals into portions of northwest AR and
    southwest MO). Maintained the inherited SLGT risk over the best
    ensemble signal (where 00z GEFS/ECENS 2" and 3" exceedance probs
    overall quite well). As confidence increases, the SLGT risk region
    may expand (with potential for a targeted Moderate upgrade in
    subsequent outlooks, depending largely on how much rainfall
    transpires on Thursday and how well QPF on Friday overlaps).


    ...MS/TN/OH Valleys into Great Lakes and Appalachians...
    Moisture looks to continue to pool along a meandering front in
    this blocky pattern, which may continue to lead to locally heavy
    rain across the Lower-Middle MS Valley and OH/TN Valleys toward
    the Lower Great Lakes region. The MRGL was maintained and adjusted,
    and subsequent targeted SLGT(s) may be necessary with increasing
    overall PWs and the potential for localized totals beginning to add
    up from multiple days. In addition, expanded the inherited MRGL
    risk eastward into much of the Appalachians, as models come into
    better agreement that better moisture and subsequent convection
    will start to move into those more sensitive areas.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6cXagtFsr0vCoWLGs9uIWGVME6xrfBCFPVOFeyOikkFQ= b465B8I5yZIvxe5HPg6DZ-gLJlYaPloH51zC6xNEjZAt-68$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6cXagtFsr0vCoWLGs9uIWGVME6xrfBCFPVOFeyOikkFQ= b465B8I5yZIvxe5HPg6DZ-gLJlYaPloH51zC6xNEeyJgxUw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6cXagtFsr0vCoWLGs9uIWGVME6xrfBCFPVOFeyOikkFQ= b465B8I5yZIvxe5HPg6DZ-gLJlYaPloH51zC6xNEyec8wXE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 5 08:06:08 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 050805
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    405 AM EDT Thu Jun 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central to Southern Plains...
    Shortwave energy embedded in the west southwesterly mid to upper=20
    level flow across the Central to Southern Plains will support=20
    additional organized convection late Thursday afternoon into=20
    Thursday night/early Friday morning across portions of the Central
    to Southern Plains. The low level southerly flow expected to=20
    strengthen Thursday afternoon into the northward moving warm front=20
    across the Southern Plains, igniting convection across southeast=20
    Colorado, with this activity then enhancing as it treks east=20
    southward across southern KS and northern OK. The previous broad=20
    slight risk area was narrowed to better align with the higher HREF=20 neighborhood probabilities for 2 and 3"+ amounts and where the HREF
    EAS probabilities for 1"+ amounts were highest, indicating where=20
    hi res guidance was in better agreement. South of this west to east
    slight risk area, there was less agreement on convective placement
    across western TX. The previous slight risk area was reduced to=20
    marginal given this and higher FFG values.=20

    Upstream across the Southern Great Basin into the Southern to
    Central Rockies...no changes made to the previous slight risk=20
    area. PW values expected to remain well above average from southern
    NV into northern AZ, Southern UT and western CO, supporting=20
    another day of widespread scattered convection, locally heavy rains
    and isolated runoff issues.=20

    ..Lower Lakes, OH Valley into the Mid to Lower MS Valley...
    PW values also expected to remain above average in the vicinity of
    the nearly stationary frontal boundary stretching from the lower
    Lakes, southwest into the OH Valley and Mid to Lower MS Valley. A
    broad marginal risk area was maintained from previous issuances for
    localized heavy rainfall and isolated runoff issues. The previous
    marginal risk area was narrowed to better reflect latest model=20
    consensus on the moderate to locally heavy qpf axis.

    ...Coastal SC into eastern NC...
    A weak surface low, accompanied by an axis of above average PW
    values will push northeast along the SC/NC coasts day 1. The=20
    latest model consensus is for the axis of the heaviest=20
    precipitation to remain offshore, indicated by fairly high HREF EAS probabilities for 1, 2 and 3"+ totals off the NC coast. Given=20
    this, the previous slight risk area over the central NC coast was=20
    removed. There is consensus for an inland max day 1 qpf across=20
    southeast NC. The HREF neighborhood probabilities are fairly high=20
    for 2 and 3"+ amounts, although there is not good overlap in=20
    placement as EAS probabilities are much lower for these values.=20
    Considered a slight risk here, but with FFG values high and low EAS probabilities for the 2 and 3"+ amounts, the risk was kept at=20
    marginal.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    OKLAHOMA INTO THE KANSAS, OKLAHOMA, MISSOURI, ARKANSAS BORDER=20
    REGION...

    ...Oklahoma into the OK/KS/MO/Ar border area...=20
    Another round of shortwave energy forecast to drop east=20
    southeastward from the Central Rockies into the Central to Southern
    Plains Friday into Friday night/early Saturday. This will support=20
    potential for another round of organized convection in the vicinity
    of the west to east oriented frontal zone. PW values along this=20
    front will remain above average...2+ standard deviations above the=20
    mean, supporting heavy precip potential. There is fairly good=20
    model consensus for an axis of heavy rains along this front across=20
    much of OK into the OK/KS/MO/AR border region. Only some slight=20
    changes to the previous slight risk area to reflect this qpf axis=20
    consensus.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Central to Southern Rockies...=20
    Not a lot of changes expected to the large scale flow from day 1=20
    across the southern Great Basin into the Central Rockies. PW values
    forecast to remain above average with additional shortwave energy=20
    moving across the region in the west south west flow aloft. This=20
    should support another day of widespread scattered convection and=20
    localized heavy rain and isolated runoff issues. The marginal risk=20
    was extended back across these areas to be more similar to the day=20
    1 period given the similar overall conditions day 2.

    ...Mid MS Valley, OH Valley into New England...
    Similar to the day 1 period, an axis of above average PW values=20
    will stretch along the slow moving front stretching from the Mid MS
    Valley, OH Valley into New England. There is good model consensus=20
    on a broad region of moderate to locally heavy precip amounts along
    this front. Only some minor changes to reflect the latest model=20
    qpf axis consensus made to the previous broad marginal risk area=20
    across these regions.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE
    VALLEY...

    The second round of height falls moving into the Central to=20
    Southern Plains day 2 will continue to push east southeast toward=20
    the Mid to Lower MS Valley, OH and TN Valleys. Upper difluence is=20
    forecast to be well defined Saturday into Saturday night/early=20
    Sunday in an axis of above average PW values that will remain along
    the west to east oriented frontal boundary across these areas.=20
    This should support potential for another round of organized=20
    convection along this front. There is some spread with the qpf=20
    axes, but consensus that heavy amounts are possible along this=20
    front. The previous slight risk area was expanded eastward=20
    considerably from eastern OK, across much of AR, western TN and=20
    northern MS.=20

    ...Northern New England...
    A sharpening northern stream trof will push surface low pressure
    across northern New England on Sunday. There is fairly good model=20
    consensus for moderate to locally heavy precip totals across=20
    northern New England. Only some slight changes to the previous=20
    marginal risk area, extending it into all of northern Maine to=20
    cover the model qpf spread.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!89dzLwMlhVOWUMxxjGcPo0W_ePUINbUdrOnfn7_-L70L= OecVrf0gWVudtgwYAkqiK3Uh7IxROZzMVowHrzFns_f3dz0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!89dzLwMlhVOWUMxxjGcPo0W_ePUINbUdrOnfn7_-L70L= OecVrf0gWVudtgwYAkqiK3Uh7IxROZzMVowHrzFnwXidjcg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!89dzLwMlhVOWUMxxjGcPo0W_ePUINbUdrOnfn7_-L70L= OecVrf0gWVudtgwYAkqiK3Uh7IxROZzMVowHrzFnfU-Wi8s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 5 15:58:07 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 051556
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1156 AM EDT Thu Jun 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central to Southern Plains...

    With scattered to widespread storms expected across much of the=20
    country in an active late Spring pattern, a locally higher threat=20
    for flash flooding exists over portions of the Central/Southern=20
    Plains where greater coverage of heavy rainfall is expected with=20
    the development of a convective system later this evening. An=20
    environment very conducive to thunderstorm development will evolve=20
    today as a weak triple point develops in southeastern Colorado with
    high moisture, instability in place south of a warm front and=20
    ahead of a dryline extending southward through the southern High=20
    Plains. Afternoon convection developing off the Raton Mesa/High=20
    Plains will feed off the higher theta-e air and strengthening low=20
    level flow ahead of the triple point into the evening hours,=20
    expanding in coverage as cold pools combine/mature and with any=20
    additional development eastward along the warm front. Anomalously=20
    high moisture in place may lead to rain rates upwards of 2-2.5" per
    hour. While the system should remain progressive, the high rain=20
    rates and storm coverage will bring the threat for locally heavy=20
    rain totals as high as 3-4" and scattered instances of flash=20
    flooding along the system path. This path is currently most likely=20
    from southwestern Kansas/the Oklahoma Panhandle/the northeastern TX
    Panhandle later this evening east-southeast through southern=20
    Kansas and northern Oklahoma into the early morning hours Friday.=20
    Elsewhere, additional individual storms ahead of the dryline=20
    southward through the Texas Panhandle/west Texas will also bring=20
    the threat for some locally heavy downpours and isolated flash=20
    flooding.=20

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Southern to Central Rockies...

    Another day of scattered to widespread diurnal convection is=20
    expected throughout the region with upper-troughing and colder=20
    temperatures aloft and the presence of a lingering frontal=20
    boundary. Anomalously high moisture (PWs upwards of 2-2.5 standard=20 deviations above the mean) may lead to some locally heavy downpours
    with rain rates of 0.5-1" bringing the threat for some isolated=20
    instances of flash flooding, particularly for terrain sensitive=20
    areas and burn scars.=20

    ..Lower Lakes, OH Valley into the Mid to Lower MS Valley...

    PW values also expected to remain above average in the vicinity of
    the nearly stationary frontal boundary stretching from the lower=20
    Lakes, southwest into the OH Valley and Mid to Lower MS Valley. A=20
    broad marginal risk area was maintained from previous issuances for
    localized heavy rainfall and isolated runoff issues. The previous=20
    marginal risk area was modified to better reflect latest model=20
    consensus on the moderate to locally heavy qpf axis.

    ...Eastern and Coastal Carolinas...

    Thunderstorms continue this morning/early afternoon in a modifying
    airmass lifting northward through the central/eastern/coastal=20
    Carolinas east of a weak surface low. Anomalously high moisture=20
    values streaming in from the Atlantic (PWs 2-2.5 standard=20
    deviations above the mean) and increasing instability (ML CAPE=20
    around 1000 J/KG) may lead to some efficient rainfall rates of 1-2"
    per hour. While the heaviest rainfall is expected to remain=20
    offshore and FFGs remain high, these rates may lead to some=20
    isolated flash flooding concerns, particularly for coastal=20
    locations that may see a few repeated rounds of storms lifting=20
    northward. The threat should diminish through the evening hours as=20
    the low moves offshore.=20

    Putnam

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    OKLAHOMA INTO THE KANSAS, OKLAHOMA, MISSOURI, ARKANSAS BORDER
    REGION...

    ...Oklahoma into the OK/KS/MO/Ar border area...
    Another round of shortwave energy forecast to drop east
    southeastward from the Central Rockies into the Central to Southern
    Plains Friday into Friday night/early Saturday. This will support
    potential for another round of organized convection in the vicinity
    of the west to east oriented frontal zone. PW values along this
    front will remain above average...2+ standard deviations above the
    mean, supporting heavy precip potential. There is fairly good
    model consensus for an axis of heavy rains along this front across
    much of OK into the OK/KS/MO/AR border region. Only some slight
    changes to the previous slight risk area to reflect this qpf axis
    consensus.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Central to Southern Rockies...
    Not a lot of changes expected to the large scale flow from day 1
    across the southern Great Basin into the Central Rockies. PW values
    forecast to remain above average with additional shortwave energy
    moving across the region in the west south west flow aloft. This
    should support another day of widespread scattered convection and
    localized heavy rain and isolated runoff issues. The marginal risk
    was extended back across these areas to be more similar to the day
    1 period given the similar overall conditions day 2.

    ...Mid MS Valley, OH Valley into New England...
    Similar to the day 1 period, an axis of above average PW values
    will stretch along the slow moving front stretching from the Mid MS
    Valley, OH Valley into New England. There is good model consensus
    on a broad region of moderate to locally heavy precip amounts along
    this front. Only some minor changes to reflect the latest model
    qpf axis consensus made to the previous broad marginal risk area
    across these regions.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE
    VALLEY...

    The second round of height falls moving into the Central to
    Southern Plains day 2 will continue to push east southeast toward
    the Mid to Lower MS Valley, OH and TN Valleys. Upper difluence is
    forecast to be well defined Saturday into Saturday night/early
    Sunday in an axis of above average PW values that will remain along
    the west to east oriented frontal boundary across these areas.
    This should support potential for another round of organized
    convection along this front. There is some spread with the qpf
    axes, but consensus that heavy amounts are possible along this
    front. The previous slight risk area was expanded eastward
    considerably from eastern OK, across much of AR, western TN and
    northern MS.

    ...Northern New England...
    A sharpening northern stream trof will push surface low pressure
    across northern New England on Sunday. There is fairly good model
    consensus for moderate to locally heavy precip totals across
    northern New England. Only some slight changes to the previous
    marginal risk area, extending it into all of northern Maine to
    cover the model qpf spread.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7KqhMQi6qbPdYxvm3yANc3qcAarGkXZ1O-3QTjDk19iV= x8nbXUVeCar8tBoSPoGFA6KBgiGEOKpRFclgAk3kKORROQs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7KqhMQi6qbPdYxvm3yANc3qcAarGkXZ1O-3QTjDk19iV= x8nbXUVeCar8tBoSPoGFA6KBgiGEOKpRFclgAk3kNSn7QQw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7KqhMQi6qbPdYxvm3yANc3qcAarGkXZ1O-3QTjDk19iV= x8nbXUVeCar8tBoSPoGFA6KBgiGEOKpRFclgAk3kE1kz_mc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 5 20:03:03 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 052002
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    402 PM EDT Thu Jun 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central to Southern Plains...

    With scattered to widespread storms expected across much of the
    country in an active late Spring pattern, a locally higher threat
    for flash flooding exists over portions of the Central/Southern
    Plains where greater coverage of heavy rainfall is expected with
    the development of a convective system later this evening. An
    environment very conducive to thunderstorm development will evolve
    today as a weak triple point develops in southeastern Colorado with
    high moisture, instability in place south of a warm front and
    ahead of a dryline extending southward through the southern High
    Plains. Afternoon convection developing off the Raton Mesa/High
    Plains will feed off the higher theta-e air and strengthening low
    level flow ahead of the triple point into the evening hours,
    expanding in coverage as cold pools combine/mature and with any
    additional development eastward along the warm front. Anomalously
    high moisture in place may lead to rain rates upwards of 2-2.5" per
    hour. While the system should remain progressive, the high rain
    rates and storm coverage will bring the threat for locally heavy
    rain totals as high as 3-4" and scattered instances of flash
    flooding along the system path. This path is currently most likely
    from southwestern Kansas/the Oklahoma Panhandle/the northeastern TX
    Panhandle later this evening east-southeast through southern
    Kansas and northern Oklahoma into the early morning hours Friday.
    Elsewhere, additional individual storms ahead of the dryline
    southward through the Texas Panhandle/west Texas will also bring
    the threat for some locally heavy downpours and isolated flash
    flooding.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Southern to Central Rockies...

    Another day of scattered to widespread diurnal convection is
    expected throughout the region with upper-troughing and colder
    temperatures aloft and the presence of a lingering frontal
    boundary. Anomalously high moisture (PWs upwards of 2-2.5 standard
    deviations above the mean) may lead to some locally heavy downpours
    with rain rates of 0.5-1" bringing the threat for some isolated
    instances of flash flooding, particularly for terrain sensitive
    areas and burn scars.

    ..Lower Lakes, OH Valley into the Mid to Lower MS Valley...

    PW values also expected to remain above average in the vicinity of
    the nearly stationary frontal boundary stretching from the lower
    Lakes, southwest into the OH Valley and Mid to Lower MS Valley. A
    broad marginal risk area was maintained from previous issuances for
    localized heavy rainfall and isolated runoff issues. The previous
    marginal risk area was modified to better reflect latest model
    consensus on the moderate to locally heavy qpf axis.

    ...Eastern and Coastal Carolinas...

    Thunderstorms continue this morning/early afternoon in a modifying
    airmass lifting northward through the central/eastern/coastal
    Carolinas east of a weak surface low. Anomalously high moisture
    values streaming in from the Atlantic (PWs 2-2.5 standard
    deviations above the mean) and increasing instability (ML CAPE
    around 1000 J/KG) may lead to some efficient rainfall rates of 1-2"
    per hour. While the heaviest rainfall is expected to remain
    offshore and FFGs remain high, these rates may lead to some
    isolated flash flooding concerns, particularly for coastal
    locations that may see a few repeated rounds of storms lifting
    northward. The threat should diminish through the evening hours as
    the low moves offshore.

    Putnam

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    OKLAHOMA INTO THE KANSAS, OKLAHOMA, MISSOURI, ARKANSAS BORDER
    REGION...

    ...2030Z Update...

    ...Oklahoma into the OK/KS/MO/Ar border area...

    Ongoing convection associated with an MCS passing through eastern=20
    Oklahoma during the day 1 period may continue into day 2 Friday=20
    morning, with a continued risk for locally heavy rainfall and=20
    scattered flash flooding. Otherwise, the previous forecast remains=20
    on track, and similar to day 1 in both nature and location, with=20
    the expectation that afternoon/evening thunderstorms developing=20
    ahead of a triple point low located over the central/southern High=20
    Plains will grow upscale into an MCS. This system should track=20 east-southeastward through Oklahoma late Friday night/early=20
    Saturday with an attendant risk for locally heavy rainfall rates of
    1-2" and totals of 2-4" leading to scattered instances of flash=20
    flooding.=20

    ...Mid MS, Ohio, and Tennessee Valleys...

    A complex forecast is apparent for this region given the potential
    for an ongoing and/or influence from an overnight MCS Thursday=20
    night/Friday morning. Hi-res guidance suggests that an MCS=20
    developing over the central/southern High Plains and passing=20
    eastward through the central/southern Plains Thursday night/Friday=20
    morning will continue eastward into the Middle=20
    Mississippi/Ohio/Tennessee Valleys Friday afternoon. Any sustained=20 convection may also be augmented by redevelopment along associated=20
    outflow boundary(s), which would help to focus what would be a more
    nebulous distribution of storms and lead to more widespread,=20
    higher rainfall totals supportive of a greater flash flood threat.=20 Regardless of the influence of this MCS, the prior forecast remains
    on track. The presence of an anomalously moist, unstable airmass=20
    along and ahead of the quasi-stationary frontal boundary will be=20
    enough to trigger scattered to widespread thunderstorms capable of=20
    locally heavy rainfall and at least isolated flash flooding.=20

    ...New England...

    A frontal wave forming along a cold front draped through southern=20
    New England westward through the Lower Great Lakes will help=20
    encourage a moist, southerly return flow from the Atlantic=20
    northward through New England during the day Friday. Multiple=20
    shortwave passages and a warm conveyer belt setup will lead to=20
    multiple rounds of thunderstorms producing locally heavy rainfall.=20
    An axis with a potentially higher threat was noted from the eastern Catskills/greater Albany northeastward through northwestern=20
    Massachusetts, southern Vermont, and central New Hampshire,=20
    particularly given the sensitivity of the more complex terrain=20
    through the region. However, with the latest hi-res guidance still=20 relatively localized on higher totals, have held at a Marginal Risk
    for now pending a confirmation/increase in potentially more=20
    widespread, higher totals.=20

    Putnam

    ...Previous Forecast...

    ...Oklahoma into the OK/KS/MO/Ar border area...
    Another round of shortwave energy forecast to drop east=20
    southeastward from the Central Rockies into the Central to Southern
    Plains Friday into Friday night/early Saturday. This will support=20
    potential for another round of organized convection in the vicinity
    of the west to east oriented frontal zone. PW values along this=20
    front will remain above average...2+ standard deviations above the=20
    mean, supporting heavy precip potential. There is fairly good model
    consensus for an axis of heavy rains along this front across much=20
    of OK into the OK/KS/MO/AR border region. Only some slight changes=20
    to the previous slight risk area to reflect this qpf axis=20
    consensus.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Central to Southern Rockies...
    Not a lot of changes expected to the large scale flow from day 1=20
    across the southern Great Basin into the Central Rockies. PW values
    forecast to remain above average with additional shortwave energy=20
    moving across the region in the west south west flow aloft. This=20
    should support another day of widespread scattered convection and=20
    localized heavy rain and isolated runoff issues. The marginal risk=20
    was extended back across these areas to be more similar to the day=20
    1 period given the similar overall conditions day 2.

    ...Mid MS Valley, OH Valley into New England...
    Similar to the day 1 period, an axis of above average PW values=20
    will stretch along the slow moving front stretching from the Mid MS
    Valley, OH Valley into New England. There is good model consensus=20
    on a broad region of moderate to locally heavy precip amounts along
    this front. Only some minor changes to reflect the latest model=20
    qpf axis consensus made to the previous broad marginal risk area=20
    across these regions.

    Oravec


    Day 3 Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER=20
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE=20
    VALLEY...

    ...2030Z Update...

    The prior forecast remains on track with respect to the Southern=20
    Plains eastward through the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys
    with only minor areal adjustments based on the latest 12Z=20
    guidance. Further north, forecast rainfall totals have come down in
    New England, with guidance now suggestive of only some relatively=20
    isolated totals around 1". Have maintained a Marginal Risk for now=20
    but given the lower totals and more progressive nature of the cold=20
    front Saturday, a threat for even isolated flooding may not=20
    ultimately materialize and will be re-evaluatd in subsequent=20
    outlooks.=20

    Putnam

    ...Previous Forecast...

    The second round of height falls moving into the Central to=20
    Southern Plains day 2 will continue to push east southeast toward=20
    the Mid to Lower MS Valley, OH and TN Valleys. Upper difluence is=20
    forecast to be well defined Saturday into Saturday night/early=20
    Sunday in an axis of above average PW values that will remain along
    the west to east oriented frontal boundary across these areas.=20
    This should support potential for another round of organized=20
    convection along this front. There is some spread with the qpf=20
    axes, but consensus that heavy amounts are possible along this=20
    front. The previous slight risk area was expanded eastward=20
    considerably from eastern OK, across much of AR, western TN and=20
    northern MS.

    ...Northern New England...
    A sharpening northern stream trof will push surface low pressure=20
    across northern New England on Sunday. There is fairly good model=20
    consensus for moderate to locally heavy precip totals across=20
    northern New England. Only some slight changes to the previous=20
    marginal risk area, extending it into all of northern Maine to=20
    cover the model qpf spread.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8VMeKykPxayEyVAdSFuurJL5PaRKldruHbeN6cKaoiGe= 6opYB9aqCB9BCLAlNAAoR3RuUPqdZo0Q2m-PTnNdqxFv5qA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8VMeKykPxayEyVAdSFuurJL5PaRKldruHbeN6cKaoiGe= 6opYB9aqCB9BCLAlNAAoR3RuUPqdZo0Q2m-PTnNdLo907Rs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8VMeKykPxayEyVAdSFuurJL5PaRKldruHbeN6cKaoiGe= 6opYB9aqCB9BCLAlNAAoR3RuUPqdZo0Q2m-PTnNd-B_Qe_0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 5 20:17:43 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 052017=20
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    417 PM EDT Thu Jun 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Jun 05 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central to Southern Plains...

    With scattered to widespread storms expected across much of the
    country in an active late Spring pattern, a locally higher threat
    for flash flooding exists over portions of the Central/Southern
    Plains where greater coverage of heavy rainfall is expected with
    the development of a convective system later this evening. An
    environment very conducive to thunderstorm development will evolve
    today as a weak triple point develops in southeastern Colorado with
    high moisture, instability in place south of a warm front and
    ahead of a dryline extending southward through the southern High
    Plains. Afternoon convection developing off the Raton Mesa/High
    Plains will feed off the higher theta-e air and strengthening low
    level flow ahead of the triple point into the evening hours,
    expanding in coverage as cold pools combine/mature and with any
    additional development eastward along the warm front. Anomalously
    high moisture in place may lead to rain rates upwards of 2-2.5" per
    hour. While the system should remain progressive, the high rain
    rates and storm coverage will bring the threat for locally heavy
    rain totals as high as 3-4" and scattered instances of flash
    flooding along the system path. This path is currently most likely
    from southwestern Kansas/the Oklahoma Panhandle/the northeastern TX
    Panhandle later this evening east-southeast through southern
    Kansas and northern Oklahoma into the early morning hours Friday.
    Elsewhere, additional individual storms ahead of the dryline
    southward through the Texas Panhandle/west Texas will also bring
    the threat for some locally heavy downpours and isolated flash
    flooding.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Southern to Central Rockies...

    Another day of scattered to widespread diurnal convection is
    expected throughout the region with upper-troughing and colder
    temperatures aloft and the presence of a lingering frontal
    boundary. Anomalously high moisture (PWs upwards of 2-2.5 standard
    deviations above the mean) may lead to some locally heavy downpours
    with rain rates of 0.5-1" bringing the threat for some isolated
    instances of flash flooding, particularly for terrain sensitive
    areas and burn scars.

    ..Lower Lakes, OH Valley into the Mid to Lower MS Valley...

    PW values also expected to remain above average in the vicinity of
    the nearly stationary frontal boundary stretching from the lower
    Lakes, southwest into the OH Valley and Mid to Lower MS Valley. A
    broad marginal risk area was maintained from previous issuances for
    localized heavy rainfall and isolated runoff issues. The previous
    marginal risk area was modified to better reflect latest model
    consensus on the moderate to locally heavy qpf axis.

    ...Eastern and Coastal Carolinas...

    Thunderstorms continue this morning/early afternoon in a modifying
    airmass lifting northward through the central/eastern/coastal
    Carolinas east of a weak surface low. Anomalously high moisture
    values streaming in from the Atlantic (PWs 2-2.5 standard
    deviations above the mean) and increasing instability (ML CAPE
    around 1000 J/KG) may lead to some efficient rainfall rates of 1-2"
    per hour. While the heaviest rainfall is expected to remain
    offshore and FFGs remain high, these rates may lead to some
    isolated flash flooding concerns, particularly for coastal
    locations that may see a few repeated rounds of storms lifting
    northward. The threat should diminish through the evening hours as
    the low moves offshore.

    Putnam

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    OKLAHOMA INTO THE KANSAS, OKLAHOMA, MISSOURI, ARKANSAS BORDER
    REGION...

    ...2030Z Update...

    ...Oklahoma into the OK/KS/MO/Ar border area...

    Ongoing convection associated with an MCS passing through eastern
    Oklahoma during the day 1 period may continue into day 2 Friday
    morning, with a continued risk for locally heavy rainfall and
    scattered flash flooding. Otherwise, the previous forecast remains
    on track, and similar to day 1 in both nature and location, with
    the expectation that afternoon/evening thunderstorms developing
    ahead of a triple point low located over the central/southern High
    Plains will grow upscale into an MCS. This system should track east-southeastward through Oklahoma late Friday night/early
    Saturday with an attendant risk for locally heavy rainfall rates of
    1-2" and totals of 2-4" leading to scattered instances of flash
    flooding.

    ...Mid MS, Ohio, and Tennessee Valleys...

    A complex forecast is apparent for this region given the potential
    for an ongoing and/or influence from an overnight MCS Thursday
    night/Friday morning. Hi-res guidance suggests that an MCS
    developing over the central/southern High Plains and passing
    eastward through the central/southern Plains Thursday night/Friday
    morning will continue eastward into the Middle
    Mississippi/Ohio/Tennessee Valleys Friday afternoon. Any sustained
    convection may also be augmented by redevelopment along associated
    outflow boundary(s), which would help to focus what would be a more
    nebulous distribution of storms and lead to more widespread,
    higher rainfall totals supportive of a greater flash flood threat.
    Regardless of the influence of this MCS, the prior forecast remains
    on track. The presence of an anomalously moist, unstable airmass
    along and ahead of the quasi-stationary frontal boundary will be
    enough to trigger scattered to widespread thunderstorms capable of
    locally heavy rainfall and at least isolated flash flooding.

    ...New England...

    A frontal wave forming along a cold front draped through southern
    New England westward through the Lower Great Lakes will help
    encourage a moist, southerly return flow from the Atlantic
    northward through New England during the day Friday. Multiple
    shortwave passages and a warm conveyer belt setup will lead to
    multiple rounds of thunderstorms producing locally heavy rainfall.
    An axis with a potentially higher threat was noted from the eastern Catskills/greater Albany northeastward through northwestern
    Massachusetts, southern Vermont, and central New Hampshire,
    particularly given the sensitivity of the more complex terrain
    through the region. However, with the latest hi-res guidance still
    relatively localized on higher totals, have held at a Marginal Risk
    for now pending a confirmation/increase in potentially more
    widespread, higher totals.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Forecast...

    ...Oklahoma into the OK/KS/MO/Ar border area...
    Another round of shortwave energy forecast to drop east
    southeastward from the Central Rockies into the Central to Southern
    Plains Friday into Friday night/early Saturday. This will support
    potential for another round of organized convection in the vicinity
    of the west to east oriented frontal zone. PW values along this
    front will remain above average...2+ standard deviations above the
    mean, supporting heavy precip potential. There is fairly good model
    consensus for an axis of heavy rains along this front across much
    of OK into the OK/KS/MO/AR border region. Only some slight changes
    to the previous slight risk area to reflect this qpf axis
    consensus.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Central to Southern Rockies...
    Not a lot of changes expected to the large scale flow from day 1
    across the southern Great Basin into the Central Rockies. PW values
    forecast to remain above average with additional shortwave energy
    moving across the region in the west south west flow aloft. This
    should support another day of widespread scattered convection and
    localized heavy rain and isolated runoff issues. The marginal risk
    was extended back across these areas to be more similar to the day
    1 period given the similar overall conditions day 2.

    ...Mid MS Valley, OH Valley into New England...
    Similar to the day 1 period, an axis of above average PW values
    will stretch along the slow moving front stretching from the Mid MS
    Valley, OH Valley into New England. There is good model consensus
    on a broad region of moderate to locally heavy precip amounts along
    this front. Only some minor changes to reflect the latest model
    qpf axis consensus made to the previous broad marginal risk area
    across these regions.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE
    VALLEY...

    ...2030Z Update...

    The prior forecast remains on track with respect to the Southern
    Plains eastward through the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys
    with only minor areal adjustments based on the latest 12Z
    guidance. Further north, forecast rainfall totals have come down in
    New England, with guidance now suggestive of only some relatively
    isolated totals around 1". Have maintained a Marginal Risk for now
    but given the lower totals and more progressive nature of the cold
    front Saturday, a threat for even isolated flooding may not
    ultimately materialize and will be re-evaluatd in subsequent
    outlooks.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Forecast...

    The second round of height falls moving into the Central to
    Southern Plains day 2 will continue to push east southeast toward
    the Mid to Lower MS Valley, OH and TN Valleys. Upper difluence is
    forecast to be well defined Saturday into Saturday night/early
    Sunday in an axis of above average PW values that will remain along
    the west to east oriented frontal boundary across these areas.
    This should support potential for another round of organized
    convection along this front. There is some spread with the qpf
    axes, but consensus that heavy amounts are possible along this
    front. The previous slight risk area was expanded eastward
    considerably from eastern OK, across much of AR, western TN and
    northern MS.

    ...Northern New England...
    A sharpening northern stream trof will push surface low pressure
    across northern New England on Sunday. There is fairly good model
    consensus for moderate to locally heavy precip totals across
    northern New England. Only some slight changes to the previous
    marginal risk area, extending it into all of northern Maine to
    cover the model qpf spread.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9jC18W7owmrvGLivaxyxrJO5g8YxtOIyEqrjrS1KgkR9= UkzxuUYX61B1A-p7bOPmlgHLpEpswPMv1DBiP_LzRf8H08o$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9jC18W7owmrvGLivaxyxrJO5g8YxtOIyEqrjrS1KgkR9= UkzxuUYX61B1A-p7bOPmlgHLpEpswPMv1DBiP_LzsOC-MUs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9jC18W7owmrvGLivaxyxrJO5g8YxtOIyEqrjrS1KgkR9= UkzxuUYX61B1A-p7bOPmlgHLpEpswPMv1DBiP_Lz0nordR8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 6 00:34:17 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 060033
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    833 PM EDT Thu Jun 5 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central to Southern Plains...

    A broad area of convection this evening across the High Plains=20
    down into Southwest TX will account for 3 areas of focus for the=20
    remainder of the D1 ERO. The most significant of the heavy rain=20
    prospects is currently in the initial phase with a strong=20
    mesocyclone over Southeast CO likely to propagate downstream and=20
    grow upscale with aid from a budding nocturnal LLJ positioned=20
    across KS/OK and points south. 50+ kt deep layer shear will help=20
    maintain a relevant kinematic environment capable of enhancing and
    sustaining an eventual MCS moving southeast from Southwestern KS
    down through Northern OK during the overnight period, mainly
    following the northern edge of a theta_E gradient situated across
    the above zone. Despite forward momentum of the eventual MCS,
    embedded convective cores will be capable of locally enhanced
    rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr with totals likely reaching 2-3" in the
    path of the MCS with some 3-5" totals possible over the upwind side
    of the complex. For more information on this threat, please see MPD
    #372.

    Across the Texas Caprock down into Southwest TX, a few supercells
    will eventually grow upscale and migrate slowly to the east leading
    a trail of heavy rainfall in their paths over the next 3-6 hrs=20
    before waning overnight. The conglomeration over Southwest TX will=20
    maintain the greatest footprint in heavy rain coverage with the=20
    highest flash flood threat likely over the terrain areas
    encompassing the Davis and Glass Mtns, and along the I-10 corridor
    situated in the Stockton Plateau. Multiple flash flood warnings are
    already in effect for those areas with totals likely breaching 2"
    in several areas across the above zones by the end of the event.
    These setups can be tricky and prolonged heavy rain threats beyond
    current CAMs inference are unfortunately common as cold pool
    convergence can maintain cell clustering longer than normal.=20

    The zone across CO/KS/OK maintained the previous SLGT risk with a
    minor extension on the western flank of the risk. The MRGL was kept
    for much of West TX with the best flash flood risks likely over the
    Caprock of TX into Northwest TX near the Red River, and over
    Southwest TX within the Davis/Glass Mtn area and adjacent Stockton
    Plateau.=20

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Central Sierras...

    Elongated surface trough and attendant surface low across the
    Southern Sierras will maintain a positively buoyant environment
    within the confines of the Sierras down into the Southern Great
    Basin (See MPD #373 for details on the setup across the Great Basin).
    Visible satellite over the West indicates two distinct surface=20
    boundaries bisecting Southern NV into Southern UT and across
    Northern AZ to the Colorado River Basin at the CA/AZ border.=20
    Mesoanalysis across the area indicates a relative instability=20
    maximum within that portion of the Desert Southwest with SBCAPE=20
    ~500-1000 J/kg aligned over Northwestern AZ into Southern NV, a=20
    stripe over the Central Sierra's where locally heavy rainfall is=20
    already producing some flash flood concerns in the Foothills. The=20
    threat for convection lingering between 01-04z is pretty high when=20
    assessing hourly CAMs, and projects well considering the=20
    environment in place. This is a signature typically seen as one=20
    that can prolong heavy rain potential over the region, an area very
    susceptible to flash flooding concerns with stronger convective=20
    cores. A MRGL risk was maintained over the Southern Great Basin=20
    with an extension up through the Central Sierra's given the local=20 instability maximum situated over the area with ongoing=20
    thunderstorms.=20

    ..Ohio Valley into the Northern Mid Atlantic...

    Area convection continues to fire within the terrain across WV and
    Western PA with a tongue of instability remaining along and ahead
    of a cold front analyzed from the Ohio Valley into the Northeast.
    Shear remains confined over NY State with less deep layer shear as
    you move south leading to the strongest thunderstorm activity
    situated across Southern NY state. A quick 1-2" will be plausible
    within the environment in place this evening with a trend in less
    coverage anticipated after 03z. A shortwave currently analyzed over
    the Mid-Mississippi Valley will slide eastward overnight with a
    better dynamical input positioned across the Eastern Ohio Valley
    early tomorrow morning as CAMs initiate another round of convection
    across OH and Western PA after 09z. Despite a weaker surface based
    instability prog over the area, there's enough of a combination of
    boundary layer buoyancy and mid-level ascent to enhance area
    convection capable of isolated flash flood potential during the
    early morning hours. As a result, the previous MRGL risk was
    maintained within that zone of Southern OH, extending northeast
    into Southern NY State with an alignment closely tied to the cold
    front progression this evening.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    OKLAHOMA INTO THE KANSAS, OKLAHOMA, MISSOURI, ARKANSAS BORDER
    REGION...

    ...2030Z Update...

    ...Oklahoma into the OK/KS/MO/Ar border area...

    Ongoing convection associated with an MCS passing through eastern
    Oklahoma during the day 1 period may continue into day 2 Friday
    morning, with a continued risk for locally heavy rainfall and
    scattered flash flooding. Otherwise, the previous forecast remains
    on track, and similar to day 1 in both nature and location, with
    the expectation that afternoon/evening thunderstorms developing
    ahead of a triple point low located over the central/southern High
    Plains will grow upscale into an MCS. This system should track east-southeastward through Oklahoma late Friday night/early
    Saturday with an attendant risk for locally heavy rainfall rates of
    1-2" and totals of 2-4" leading to scattered instances of flash
    flooding.

    ...Mid MS, Ohio, and Tennessee Valleys...

    A complex forecast is apparent for this region given the potential
    for an ongoing and/or influence from an overnight MCS Thursday
    night/Friday morning. Hi-res guidance suggests that an MCS
    developing over the central/southern High Plains and passing
    eastward through the central/southern Plains Thursday night/Friday
    morning will continue eastward into the Middle
    Mississippi/Ohio/Tennessee Valleys Friday afternoon. Any sustained
    convection may also be augmented by redevelopment along associated
    outflow boundary(s), which would help to focus what would be a more
    nebulous distribution of storms and lead to more widespread,
    higher rainfall totals supportive of a greater flash flood threat.
    Regardless of the influence of this MCS, the prior forecast remains
    on track. The presence of an anomalously moist, unstable airmass
    along and ahead of the quasi-stationary frontal boundary will be
    enough to trigger scattered to widespread thunderstorms capable of
    locally heavy rainfall and at least isolated flash flooding.

    ...New England...

    A frontal wave forming along a cold front draped through southern
    New England westward through the Lower Great Lakes will help
    encourage a moist, southerly return flow from the Atlantic
    northward through New England during the day Friday. Multiple
    shortwave passages and a warm conveyer belt setup will lead to
    multiple rounds of thunderstorms producing locally heavy rainfall.
    An axis with a potentially higher threat was noted from the eastern Catskills/greater Albany northeastward through northwestern
    Massachusetts, southern Vermont, and central New Hampshire,
    particularly given the sensitivity of the more complex terrain
    through the region. However, with the latest hi-res guidance still
    relatively localized on higher totals, have held at a Marginal Risk
    for now pending a confirmation/increase in potentially more
    widespread, higher totals.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Forecast...

    ...Oklahoma into the OK/KS/MO/Ar border area...
    Another round of shortwave energy forecast to drop east
    southeastward from the Central Rockies into the Central to Southern
    Plains Friday into Friday night/early Saturday. This will support
    potential for another round of organized convection in the vicinity
    of the west to east oriented frontal zone. PW values along this
    front will remain above average...2+ standard deviations above the
    mean, supporting heavy precip potential. There is fairly good model
    consensus for an axis of heavy rains along this front across much
    of OK into the OK/KS/MO/AR border region. Only some slight changes
    to the previous slight risk area to reflect this qpf axis
    consensus.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Central to Southern Rockies...
    Not a lot of changes expected to the large scale flow from day 1
    across the southern Great Basin into the Central Rockies. PW values
    forecast to remain above average with additional shortwave energy
    moving across the region in the west south west flow aloft. This
    should support another day of widespread scattered convection and
    localized heavy rain and isolated runoff issues. The marginal risk
    was extended back across these areas to be more similar to the day
    1 period given the similar overall conditions day 2.

    ...Mid MS Valley, OH Valley into New England...
    Similar to the day 1 period, an axis of above average PW values
    will stretch along the slow moving front stretching from the Mid MS
    Valley, OH Valley into New England. There is good model consensus
    on a broad region of moderate to locally heavy precip amounts along
    this front. Only some minor changes to reflect the latest model
    qpf axis consensus made to the previous broad marginal risk area
    across these regions.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE
    VALLEY...

    ...2030Z Update...

    The prior forecast remains on track with respect to the Southern
    Plains eastward through the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys
    with only minor areal adjustments based on the latest 12Z
    guidance. Further north, forecast rainfall totals have come down in
    New England, with guidance now suggestive of only some relatively
    isolated totals around 1". Have maintained a Marginal Risk for now
    but given the lower totals and more progressive nature of the cold
    front Saturday, a threat for even isolated flooding may not
    ultimately materialize and will be re-evaluatd in subsequent
    outlooks.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Forecast...

    The second round of height falls moving into the Central to
    Southern Plains day 2 will continue to push east southeast toward
    the Mid to Lower MS Valley, OH and TN Valleys. Upper difluence is
    forecast to be well defined Saturday into Saturday night/early
    Sunday in an axis of above average PW values that will remain along
    the west to east oriented frontal boundary across these areas.
    This should support potential for another round of organized
    convection along this front. There is some spread with the qpf
    axes, but consensus that heavy amounts are possible along this
    front. The previous slight risk area was expanded eastward
    considerably from eastern OK, across much of AR, western TN and
    northern MS.

    ...Northern New England...
    A sharpening northern stream trof will push surface low pressure
    across northern New England on Sunday. There is fairly good model
    consensus for moderate to locally heavy precip totals across
    northern New England. Only some slight changes to the previous
    marginal risk area, extending it into all of northern Maine to
    cover the model qpf spread.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!58PM3lYvXPLgB0VLwWVGUSax1kTudsU1hgPTPAtj7R95= UACbR97VBZkYpeIdEEOo2uOjIplV2bqsafLYo7Z0mZuBLOM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!58PM3lYvXPLgB0VLwWVGUSax1kTudsU1hgPTPAtj7R95= UACbR97VBZkYpeIdEEOo2uOjIplV2bqsafLYo7Z0yNHPe4A$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!58PM3lYvXPLgB0VLwWVGUSax1kTudsU1hgPTPAtj7R95= UACbR97VBZkYpeIdEEOo2uOjIplV2bqsafLYo7Z0KJfFdG0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 6 08:17:15 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 060817
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    417 AM EDT Fri Jun 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS, THE LOWER OHIO, LOWER TENNESSEE AND=20
    MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS AND FROM EAST CENTRAL NEW YORK STATE
    INTO CENTRAL NEW ENGLAND...

    ...South-Central Plains.....
    There is a strong model signal for another round of organized
    convection late Friday afternoon into Friday night/early hours of
    Saturday across the south-central plains as additional shortwave=20
    energy is forecast to drop east southeastward from the Central=20
    Rockies into the Central to Southern Plains Friday into Friday=20
    night/early Saturday. The low level flow is expected to again
    strengthen into the west to east oriented frontal zone across the
    Southern Plains, supporting potential for another round of=20
    organized convection in the vicinity of this front. PW values=20
    along this front will remain above average...2+ standard deviations
    above the mean, supporting heavy precip potential. There is fairly
    good model consensus for an axis of heavy rains along this front=20
    from far southeast CO/far southwest KS, across much of OK into the
    OK/KS/MO/AR border region. The slight risk was drawn to fit the
    axis of the highest HREF neighborhood probabilities for 2"+ amounts
    and the HREF EAS axis of highest probabilities for 1"+ amounts. The
    next round of organized convection will likely track along the same
    areas that are currently receiving heavy rainfall late Thursday
    evening into early Friday.

    ...Mid Mississippi Valley, Lower Ohio Valley, Lower Tennessee=20
    Valley...
    The lead area of shortwave energy initiating current early morning
    convection across the Southern Plains will be pushing toward the=20
    Mid Mississippi Valley, Lower Ohio and Lower Tennessee Valleys=20
    Friday afternoon/evening. Similar to areas upstream along the west=20
    to east oriented frontal zone that extends into the Mid MS, Lower=20
    OH,Lower TN Valley, PW values will be above average, 2+ standard=20
    deviations above the mean. Convection likely to enhance Friday=20 afternoon/evening ahead of these height falls in the much above=20
    average PW axis, supporting heavy rain potential and localized=20
    flooding issues. A slight risk area was added from the previous=20
    issuance, aligned with where the axis of the highest HREF=20
    neighborhood probabilities for 2"+ amounts and the HREF EAS axis of
    highest probabilities for 1"+ amounts are forecast.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Central to Southern Rockies...
    Not a lot of changes expected to the large scale flow across the=20
    southern Great Basin into the Central Rockies. PW values forecast=20
    to remain above average with additional shortwave energy moving=20
    across the region in the west south west flow aloft. This should=20
    support another day of widespread scattered convection and=20
    localized heavy rain and isolated runoff issues. No significant
    changes made to the previous marginal risk area across this region.

    ...East-central New York into Central New England...=20
    A slight risk area was added for portions of east-central New York
    State into central New England from central to southern New=20
    Hampshire, across southeast Vermont, western Massachusetts into=20
    east central NY state. There is good agreement in the last hi res=20
    guidance for enhancing convection in the 1800 UTC Friday to 0000=20
    UTC Saturday period in the axis of above average PW values along=20
    the slow moving frontal boundary draped across this area. The=20
    slight risk was drawn to fit where the axis of high HREF=20
    neighborhood probabilities are for 2 & 3"+ totals. This corresponds
    also to where the HREF hourly probabilities for 1"+ totals are=20
    high in the 1800 UTC Friday to 0000 UTC Saturday period.=20

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE
    VALLEY...

    ...Lower Arkansas, Lower Mississippi and Lower Tennessee Valleys..
    The second round of height falls moving into the Central to
    Southern Plains day 1 will continue to push east southeast toward=20
    the Mid to Lower MS Valley, OH and TN Valleys during day 2. Upper=20
    difluence is forecast to be well defined Saturday into Saturday=20
    night/early Sunday in an axis of above average PW values that will=20
    remain along the west to east oriented frontal boundary across=20
    these areas. This should support potential for another round of=20
    organized convection along this front. There is some spread with=20
    the qpf axes, but consensus that heavy amounts are possible along=20
    this front. The slight risk area was extended approximately 50m to
    100 miles farther to the southeast across northern MS and northern
    AL to cover the current model spread.

    ...East central NY State into Central to Northern New England...
    Another round of convection possible early day 2 along the frontal
    boundary pushing through the northeast as a sharpening northern=20
    stream trof pushes eastward across northern NY into New England.=20
    The HREF neighborhood probabilities for the 12 hour period from=20
    1200 UTC Saturday to 0000 UTC Sunday, are high along this front for
    1 and 2"+ amounts. The previous marginal risk area was extended=20
    farther west into east central NY state to cover these higher 12=20
    hour probabilities. There may need to be an upgrade to the risk=20
    level in future issuances depending upon where the heavy rains=20
    occur during day 1.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS NORTH TEXAS
    INTO SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...North Texas/Southern Oklahoma...
    Additional shortwave energy likely to push east southeastward late
    Sunday afternoon/evening from the lee of the Central to Southern=20
    Rockies into the Southern Plains. This will again re-strengthen=20
    the low level flow into the west to east oriented front forecast to
    remain across the Southern Plains, supporting another round of=20
    organized convection along the front. There is fairly good=20
    agreement on the day 3 qpf axes in the models. resulting in good=20
    continuity with the slight risk area. The marginal risk area was=20
    extended farther to the northwest into southeast Colorado to cover=20
    the model qpf spread.
    =20
    ...Lower Mississippi Valley into the Southern-Central Appalachians
    and Mid-Atlantic...

    Broadly diffluent mid to upper level flow expected day 3 ahead of
    the height falls pushing out of the Mid to Lower MS Valley, TN and
    OH Valley region. With PW values expected to be above average...1.5
    to 2+ standard deviations above the mean...widespread scattered
    convection possible from the Lower MS Valley, across the Southern
    to Central Appalachians and into the Mid-Atlantic. The previous
    marginal risk area that was across the South was extended north
    through the Southern to Central Appalachians and into the Mid-
    Atlantic across the lower FFG values.


    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!77T76gXyvfEfB_VlpAqYYQvYyYB-T-tcn3VCCm1CHHLd= L4fnR-DsjMsPzRkPZQkxo8Ew414LtCwkh25GC9mCdPtx_1U$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!77T76gXyvfEfB_VlpAqYYQvYyYB-T-tcn3VCCm1CHHLd= L4fnR-DsjMsPzRkPZQkxo8Ew414LtCwkh25GC9mCGFdk-O4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!77T76gXyvfEfB_VlpAqYYQvYyYB-T-tcn3VCCm1CHHLd= L4fnR-DsjMsPzRkPZQkxo8Ew414LtCwkh25GC9mC-TAcK_c$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 6 15:57:54 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 061556
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1156 AM EDT Fri Jun 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS, THE LOWER OHIO, LOWER TENNESSEE AND MIDDLE=20
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS AND NEW ENGLAND...

    16Z Update...=20
    Prior discussion remains valid outside of a few changes based on
    morning guidance. Overall, a stationary boundary stretching over
    2000 miles from the Northeast to the Southwest will provide a focus
    for numerous convective complexes of varying size and magnitude.
    Widely scattered instances of flash flooding can be expected with
    the potential for locally considerable impacts.

    A SLGT risk was added for the LUB CWA in western TX along with the
    expanded MRGL along the dry line to the TX Big Bend. Similar setup
    to yesterday is expected to compound the potential for isolated to
    scattered flash flooding, particularly if developing HP supercells
    this afternoon impact urban regions with 2-5" totals.=20

    Additionally, the SLGT risk across New England was expanded a bit=20
    based on current radar and satellite trends showing a shortwave=20
    passing over the Interior Northeast that will help spark=20
    thunderstorm activity along an east- west oriented stationary front
    extending through southern New England into central PA. 12Z HREF=20
    and most 12Z CAMs are particularly impressive with the high-end=20
    potential over NH given slow-moving convection initiating off the=20
    higher elevations. 12Z HREF probabilities for greater than 5" are=20
    as high as 25% across parts of NH.

    For the Ohio and Tennessee valleys, the SLGT risk was expanded
    eastward into eastern KY based on latest radar trends as a potent
    MCV over southern MO riding along the stationary front draped over
    the Ohio Valley. See MPD 308 for more information. 12Z HREF was not
    overly impressive in magnitude across this region for 2"+ amounts,
    but coverage is expected to widespread enough to lead to scattered
    instances of flash flooding.

    Snell


    Previous Discussion...

    ...South-Central Plains.....
    There is a strong model signal for another round of organized
    convection late Friday afternoon into Friday night/early hours of
    Saturday across the south-central plains as additional shortwave
    energy is forecast to drop east southeastward from the Central
    Rockies into the Central to Southern Plains Friday into Friday
    night/early Saturday. The low level flow is expected to again
    strengthen into the west to east oriented frontal zone across the
    Southern Plains, supporting potential for another round of
    organized convection in the vicinity of this front. PW values
    along this front will remain above average...2+ standard deviations
    above the mean, supporting heavy precip potential. There is fairly
    good model consensus for an axis of heavy rains along this front
    from far southeast CO/far southwest KS, across much of OK into the
    OK/KS/MO/AR border region. The slight risk was drawn to fit the
    axis of the highest HREF neighborhood probabilities for 2"+ amounts
    and the HREF EAS axis of highest probabilities for 1"+ amounts. The
    next round of organized convection will likely track along the same
    areas that are currently receiving heavy rainfall late Thursday
    evening into early Friday for northern OK, compounding the
    potential flash flooding concerns and leading to the potential for
    more widespread and considerable impacts overnight.

    ...Mid Mississippi Valley, Lower Ohio Valley, Lower Tennessee
    Valley...
    The lead area of shortwave energy initiating current early morning
    convection across the Southern Plains will be pushing toward the
    Mid Mississippi Valley, Lower Ohio and Lower Tennessee Valleys
    Friday afternoon/evening. Similar to areas upstream along the west
    to east oriented frontal zone that extends into the Mid MS, Lower
    OH,Lower TN Valley, PW values will be above average, 2+ standard
    deviations above the mean. Convection likely to enhance Friday afternoon/evening ahead of these height falls in the much above
    average PW axis, supporting heavy rain potential and localized
    flooding issues. A slight risk area was added from the previous
    issuance, aligned with where the axis of the highest HREF
    neighborhood probabilities for 2"+ amounts and the HREF EAS axis of
    highest probabilities for 1"+ amounts are forecast.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Central to Southern Rockies...
    Not a lot of changes expected to the large scale flow across the
    southern Great Basin into the Central Rockies. PW values forecast
    to remain above average with additional shortwave energy moving
    across the region in the west south west flow aloft. This should
    support another day of widespread scattered convection and
    localized heavy rain and isolated runoff issues. No significant
    changes made to the previous marginal risk area across this region.

    ...East-central New York into Central New England...
    A slight risk area was added for portions of east-central New York
    State into central New England from central to southern New
    Hampshire, across southeast Vermont, western Massachusetts into
    east central NY state. There is good agreement in the last hi res
    guidance for enhancing convection in the 1800 UTC Friday to 0000
    UTC Saturday period in the axis of above average PW values along
    the slow moving frontal boundary draped across this area. The
    slight risk was drawn to fit where the axis of high HREF
    neighborhood probabilities are for 2 & 3"+ totals. This corresponds
    also to where the HREF hourly probabilities for 1"+ totals are
    high in the 1800 UTC Friday to 0000 UTC Saturday period.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE
    VALLEY...

    ...Lower Arkansas, Lower Mississippi and Lower Tennessee Valleys..
    The second round of height falls moving into the Central to
    Southern Plains day 1 will continue to push east southeast toward
    the Mid to Lower MS Valley, OH and TN Valleys during day 2. Upper
    difluence is forecast to be well defined Saturday into Saturday
    night/early Sunday in an axis of above average PW values that will
    remain along the west to east oriented frontal boundary across
    these areas. This should support potential for another round of
    organized convection along this front. There is some spread with
    the qpf axes, but consensus that heavy amounts are possible along
    this front. The slight risk area was extended approximately 50m to
    100 miles farther to the southeast across northern MS and northern
    AL to cover the current model spread.

    ...East central NY State into Central to Northern New England...
    Another round of convection possible early day 2 along the frontal
    boundary pushing through the northeast as a sharpening northern
    stream trof pushes eastward across northern NY into New England.
    The HREF neighborhood probabilities for the 12 hour period from
    1200 UTC Saturday to 0000 UTC Sunday, are high along this front for
    1 and 2"+ amounts. The previous marginal risk area was extended
    farther west into east central NY state to cover these higher 12
    hour probabilities. There may need to be an upgrade to the risk
    level in future issuances depending upon where the heavy rains
    occur during day 1.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS NORTH TEXAS
    INTO SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...North Texas/Southern Oklahoma...
    Additional shortwave energy likely to push east southeastward late
    Sunday afternoon/evening from the lee of the Central to Southern
    Rockies into the Southern Plains. This will again re-strengthen
    the low level flow into the west to east oriented front forecast to
    remain across the Southern Plains, supporting another round of
    organized convection along the front. There is fairly good
    agreement on the day 3 qpf axes in the models. resulting in good
    continuity with the slight risk area. The marginal risk area was
    extended farther to the northwest into southeast Colorado to cover
    the model qpf spread.

    ...Lower Mississippi Valley into the Southern-Central Appalachians
    and Mid-Atlantic...

    Broadly diffluent mid to upper level flow expected day 3 ahead of
    the height falls pushing out of the Mid to Lower MS Valley, TN and
    OH Valley region. With PW values expected to be above average...1.5
    to 2+ standard deviations above the mean...widespread scattered
    convection possible from the Lower MS Valley, across the Southern
    to Central Appalachians and into the Mid-Atlantic. The previous
    marginal risk area that was across the South was extended north
    through the Southern to Central Appalachians and into the Mid-
    Atlantic across the lower FFG values.


    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8vVVhpE2WalifTwq_biKxs_HNxASFULPjk_ixf1-s9OT= _XaJh727rbDvfLFohQduTURWVPh6cgGZcLuU9X1wPc3q9lM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8vVVhpE2WalifTwq_biKxs_HNxASFULPjk_ixf1-s9OT= _XaJh727rbDvfLFohQduTURWVPh6cgGZcLuU9X1wcgCywKM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8vVVhpE2WalifTwq_biKxs_HNxASFULPjk_ixf1-s9OT= _XaJh727rbDvfLFohQduTURWVPh6cgGZcLuU9X1w8x3qDFs$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 6 19:46:20 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 061944
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    344 PM EDT Fri Jun 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Jun 06 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS, THE LOWER OHIO, LOWER TENNESSEE AND MIDDLE
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS AND NEW ENGLAND...

    16Z Update...
    Prior discussion remains valid outside of a few changes based on
    morning guidance. Overall, a stationary boundary stretching over
    2000 miles from the Northeast to the Southwest will provide a focus
    for numerous convective complexes of varying size and magnitude.
    Widely scattered instances of flash flooding can be expected with
    the potential for locally considerable impacts.

    A SLGT risk was added for the LUB CWA in western TX along with the
    expanded MRGL along the dry line to the TX Big Bend. Similar setup
    to yesterday is expected to compound the potential for isolated to
    scattered flash flooding, particularly if developing HP supercells
    this afternoon impact urban regions with 2-5" totals.

    Additionally, the SLGT risk across New England was expanded a bit
    based on current radar and satellite trends showing a shortwave
    passing over the Interior Northeast that will help spark
    thunderstorm activity along an east- west oriented stationary front
    extending through southern New England into central PA. 12Z HREF
    and most 12Z CAMs are particularly impressive with the high-end
    potential over NH given slow-moving convection initiating off the
    higher elevations. 12Z HREF probabilities for greater than 5" are
    as high as 25% across parts of NH.

    For the Ohio and Tennessee valleys, the SLGT risk was expanded
    eastward into eastern KY based on latest radar trends as a potent
    MCV over southern MO riding along the stationary front draped over
    the Ohio Valley. See MPD 308 for more information. 12Z HREF was not
    overly impressive in magnitude across this region for 2"+ amounts,
    but coverage is expected to widespread enough to lead to scattered
    instances of flash flooding.

    Snell


    Previous Discussion...

    ...South-Central Plains.....
    There is a strong model signal for another round of organized
    convection late Friday afternoon into Friday night/early hours of
    Saturday across the south-central plains as additional shortwave
    energy is forecast to drop east southeastward from the Central
    Rockies into the Central to Southern Plains Friday into Friday
    night/early Saturday. The low level flow is expected to again
    strengthen into the west to east oriented frontal zone across the
    Southern Plains, supporting potential for another round of
    organized convection in the vicinity of this front. PW values
    along this front will remain above average...2+ standard deviations
    above the mean, supporting heavy precip potential. There is fairly
    good model consensus for an axis of heavy rains along this front
    from far southeast CO/far southwest KS, across much of OK into the
    OK/KS/MO/AR border region. The slight risk was drawn to fit the
    axis of the highest HREF neighborhood probabilities for 2"+ amounts
    and the HREF EAS axis of highest probabilities for 1"+ amounts. The
    next round of organized convection will likely track along the same
    areas that are currently receiving heavy rainfall late Thursday
    evening into early Friday for northern OK, compounding the
    potential flash flooding concerns and leading to the potential for
    more widespread and considerable impacts overnight.

    ...Mid Mississippi Valley, Lower Ohio Valley, Lower Tennessee
    Valley...
    The lead area of shortwave energy initiating current early morning
    convection across the Southern Plains will be pushing toward the
    Mid Mississippi Valley, Lower Ohio and Lower Tennessee Valleys
    Friday afternoon/evening. Similar to areas upstream along the west
    to east oriented frontal zone that extends into the Mid MS, Lower
    OH,Lower TN Valley, PW values will be above average, 2+ standard
    deviations above the mean. Convection likely to enhance Friday afternoon/evening ahead of these height falls in the much above
    average PW axis, supporting heavy rain potential and localized
    flooding issues. A slight risk area was added from the previous
    issuance, aligned with where the axis of the highest HREF
    neighborhood probabilities for 2"+ amounts and the HREF EAS axis of
    highest probabilities for 1"+ amounts are forecast.

    ...Southern Great Basin into the Central to Southern Rockies...
    Not a lot of changes expected to the large scale flow across the
    southern Great Basin into the Central Rockies. PW values forecast
    to remain above average with additional shortwave energy moving
    across the region in the west south west flow aloft. This should
    support another day of widespread scattered convection and
    localized heavy rain and isolated runoff issues. No significant
    changes made to the previous marginal risk area across this region.

    ...East-central New York into Central New England...
    A slight risk area was added for portions of east-central New York
    State into central New England from central to southern New
    Hampshire, across southeast Vermont, western Massachusetts into
    east central NY state. There is good agreement in the last hi res
    guidance for enhancing convection in the 1800 UTC Friday to 0000
    UTC Saturday period in the axis of above average PW values along
    the slow moving frontal boundary draped across this area. The
    slight risk was drawn to fit where the axis of high HREF
    neighborhood probabilities are for 2 & 3"+ totals. This corresponds
    also to where the HREF hourly probabilities for 1"+ totals are
    high in the 1800 UTC Friday to 0000 UTC Saturday period.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE
    VALLEY...

    ...Eastern Oklahoma and Northeast Texas to Central/Northern
    Alabama...
    The second round of height falls moving into the Central
    to Southern Plains day 1 will continue to push east southeast=20
    toward the Mid to Lower MS Valley, OH and TN Valleys during day 2.=20
    Upper difluence is forecast to be well defined Saturday into=20
    Saturday night/early Sunday in an axis of above average PW values=20
    that will remain along the west to east oriented frontal boundary=20
    across these areas. This should support potential for another round
    of organized convection along this front as well as near a well-
    defined mid-level circulation passing to the north into the Ohio
    Valley. There is some spread with the qpf axes, but consensus that
    heavy amounts are possible. The inherited Slight Risk area was=20
    shifted a bit south and removed from most of TN given southern=20
    trends with the early morning MCS and related redevelopment along=20
    the associated lingering outflow boundary through the early evening
    into northeast TX.

    ...Middle Mississippi and Ohio Valleys...
    Mid-level wave ejecting out of the central Plains Saturday morning
    will continue to push eastward across the Ohio Valley. This
    feature will aid in increased moisture return and shear to provide
    for scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms. The inherited
    Marginal Risk was expanded northward to capture this trend of more precipitation attached to the mid-level low. A Slight Risk may be=20
    necessary across the Ohio Valley from southern IL to northern KY=20
    and southern OH, but this area is conditional on whether enough=20
    instability can build ahead of the mid-level shortwave pushing=20
    eastward. Should guidance come into better agreement this upgrade=20
    may be needed, with latest HREF probs for at least 2"/6-hr up to=20
    40%. Antecedent conditions are also rather wet, so that will need
    to be considered as well with current convection for the next
    overnight update.

    ...Northeast PA through New England...
    Another round of convection possible early day 2 along the frontal
    boundary pushing through the northeast as a sharpening northern=20
    stream trof pushes eastward across northern NY into New England.=20
    The HREF neighborhood probabilities for the 12 hour period from=20
    1200 UTC Saturday to 0000 UTC Sunday, are high along this front for
    1 and 2"+ amounts. The previous marginal risk area was extended=20
    farther west into northeast PA to cover these higher 12 hour=20
    probabilities. There may need to be an upgrade to the risk level in
    future issuances depending upon where the heavy rains occur during
    day 1.

    Snell/Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS NORTHERN=20
    TEXAS AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...Southern Plains to the Southeast...
    Additional shortwave energy likely to push east southeastward late
    Sunday afternoon/evening from the lee of the Central to Southern=20
    Rockies into the Southern Plains under the influence of a much
    stronger upper level low centered over the north-central United
    States. This will again re- strengthen the low level flow into the
    west to east oriented front forecast to remain across the Southern
    Plains, supporting another round of organized convection along the
    front. There is fairly good agreement on the day 3 qpf axes in the
    models. Resulting in good continuity with the slight risk area=20
    with only a subtle expansion and south shift where widespread rainfall
    amounts of 2-4" are expected and higher amounts possible.=20
    Additional thunderstorm activity is expected from early morning=20
    convection and afternoon redevelopment along the frontal boundary=20
    through the Southeast, with mostly isolated flash flooding=20
    concerns.

    ...Central Appalachians and Upper Ohio Valley...

    Meanwhile, the mid-level wave progressing across the Ohio Valley on
    day 2 will continue into the central Appalachians and northern
    Mid-Atlantic while interacting with a lingering frontal boundary.
    This will produce additional areas of scattered areas of convection
    and the potential for isolated instances of flash flooding within
    typically sensitive terrain. There remains higher than average
    uncertainty regarding the speed of this system, which could impact
    the eventual flash flood risk area.


    Snell/Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4wJlP-pBzTQQ-hBjPQfe6UauP6A8H_VP-jiV7rOOWyae= GSs0TeGr5pK0gDhiq4tfhFQB_Y8G620U3T1AaDZBtlRXCbI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4wJlP-pBzTQQ-hBjPQfe6UauP6A8H_VP-jiV7rOOWyae= GSs0TeGr5pK0gDhiq4tfhFQB_Y8G620U3T1AaDZB_PG55Hk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4wJlP-pBzTQQ-hBjPQfe6UauP6A8H_VP-jiV7rOOWyae= GSs0TeGr5pK0gDhiq4tfhFQB_Y8G620U3T1AaDZBpist2Os$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 7 00:51:11 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 070050
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    850 PM EDT Fri Jun 6 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025

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

    ...Texas Caprock...

    Multiple supercells will continue to plague the area within WFO
    Lubbock, TX CWA bounds with cells originally forming within the=20
    Caprock and moving eastward within the mean layer flow. Sufficient=20
    buoyancy and shear across the Southern High Plains will maintain=20
    severe thunderstorm posture for at least another 2-4 hours before=20
    any convection begins to collapse, or even induce cell mergers in=20
    the case of the activity between the NM/TX state lines through=20
    Northwest TX. Rainfall rates between 2-3"/hr with intra-hour rates=20
    up to 5"/hr will lead to flash flood concerns over an area still=20
    recovering from yesterdays barrage of rainfall from a similar=20
    convective evolution. The previous SLGT was generally maintained=20
    with a minor expansion to the northern edge to encompass left-=20
    moving supercells that are making headway towards the southern=20
    portion of the Panhandle.

    ...Southern Plains to Ozarks...

    A repeat of the pattern last evening with multiple mesocyclones
    currently situated over the Southeast CO Front Range will shift
    southeast with general motion with the upwind propagation vector. A
    distinct split heavy rain axis will transpire across the eastern TX
    Panhandle into OK with another across the Northern half of OK into
    Southern KS as the cells eventually merger into a large MCS that
    will propagate southeast towards Eastern OK into the Northwest AR
    Ozarks by the end of the forecast. Heavy rainfall between 2-4" with
    locally as high as 5" are forecast within the confines of the
    northern half of the expected complex, crossing through a region
    with saturated antecedent grounds thanks to the previous mornings
    MCS that hit the same areas as expected tonight. Anywhere from the
    I-40 corridor on north will have the potential for flash flooding
    due to the MCS with a high-end SLGT risk positioned over the OK/KS
    border where 1/3/6 hour FFG's have been significantly degraded from
    previous activity last night into this morning. The SLGT risk was
    expanded on the northern edge from previous update to attribute to
    the latest heavy QPF footprint on the upwind side of the expected
    MCS development this evening.=20

    ...Ohio Valley...

    Large cluster of thunderstorms capable of 1-2"/hr rates will
    continue to maneuver eastward through the Ohio River Basin down
    into KY with a secondary batch of convection moving through TN with
    a few stronger cores. Shortwave energy associated with the cell
    conglomeration will motion eastward into the Central Appalachian
    Front leading to scattered heavier convection to shuffle through
    the Ohio River basin and KY into WV overnight. Signals for a few
    heavier cells over the terrain of Eastern KY into WV have been
    steady in the CAMs through the course of the day with some areas
    already been affected by previous heavy rain output during the D1
    time frame. FFG's remain relatively low in those areas from all the
    prior precip with some areas likely to reach over 2" in 24 hrs from
    all the convective impact in the time period. Considering the
    threat for heavy precip in back-to-back posture, a SLGT risk was
    maintained over KY and expanded to the east to include WV where
    hourly CAMs have been more aggressive with heavier QPF signals in
    the latest iterations.=20

    ...West Texas...

    Sufficient surface based instability on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg
    has allowed for scattered thunderstorms development across
    Southeast NM down through the Upper Trans Pecos of TX. Mean storm
    motions of 15-20 kts to the east should maintain relatively steady
    forward momentum of convection through the evening, but any strong
    convective core could throw out an easy 1-2" total within a short
    period of time leading to localized flash flood concerns over
    Southeast NM, Northwest Permian Basin, down through the mountains
    of Southwest TX. A MRGL risk remains for those areas, but was
    trimmed on either side to fit a more narrow axis where storms could
    survive before hitting a more capped environment near the Pecos
    river and points east.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE
    VALLEY...

    ...Eastern Oklahoma and Northeast Texas to Central/Northern
    Alabama...
    The second round of height falls moving into the Central
    to Southern Plains day 1 will continue to push east southeast
    toward the Mid to Lower MS Valley, OH and TN Valleys during day 2.
    Upper difluence is forecast to be well defined Saturday into
    Saturday night/early Sunday in an axis of above average PW values
    that will remain along the west to east oriented frontal boundary
    across these areas. This should support potential for another round
    of organized convection along this front as well as near a well-
    defined mid-level circulation passing to the north into the Ohio
    Valley. There is some spread with the qpf axes, but consensus that
    heavy amounts are possible. The inherited Slight Risk area was
    shifted a bit south and removed from most of TN given southern
    trends with the early morning MCS and related redevelopment along
    the associated lingering outflow boundary through the early evening
    into northeast TX.

    ...Middle Mississippi and Ohio Valleys...
    Mid-level wave ejecting out of the central Plains Saturday morning
    will continue to push eastward across the Ohio Valley. This
    feature will aid in increased moisture return and shear to provide
    for scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms. The inherited
    Marginal Risk was expanded northward to capture this trend of more precipitation attached to the mid-level low. A Slight Risk may be
    necessary across the Ohio Valley from southern IL to northern KY
    and southern OH, but this area is conditional on whether enough
    instability can build ahead of the mid-level shortwave pushing
    eastward. Should guidance come into better agreement this upgrade
    may be needed, with latest HREF probs for at least 2"/6-hr up to
    40%. Antecedent conditions are also rather wet, so that will need
    to be considered as well with current convection for the next
    overnight update.

    ...Northeast PA through New England...
    Another round of convection possible early day 2 along the frontal
    boundary pushing through the northeast as a sharpening northern
    stream trof pushes eastward across northern NY into New England.
    The HREF neighborhood probabilities for the 12 hour period from
    1200 UTC Saturday to 0000 UTC Sunday, are high along this front for
    1 and 2"+ amounts. The previous marginal risk area was extended
    farther west into northeast PA to cover these higher 12 hour
    probabilities. There may need to be an upgrade to the risk level in
    future issuances depending upon where the heavy rains occur during
    day 1.

    Snell/Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS NORTHERN
    TEXAS AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...Southern Plains to the Southeast...
    Additional shortwave energy likely to push east southeastward late
    Sunday afternoon/evening from the lee of the Central to Southern
    Rockies into the Southern Plains under the influence of a much
    stronger upper level low centered over the north-central United
    States. This will again re- strengthen the low level flow into the
    west to east oriented front forecast to remain across the Southern
    Plains, supporting another round of organized convection along the
    front. There is fairly good agreement on the day 3 qpf axes in the
    models. Resulting in good continuity with the slight risk area
    with only a subtle expansion and south shift where widespread rainfall
    amounts of 2-4" are expected and higher amounts possible.
    Additional thunderstorm activity is expected from early morning
    convection and afternoon redevelopment along the frontal boundary
    through the Southeast, with mostly isolated flash flooding
    concerns.

    ...Central Appalachians and Upper Ohio Valley...

    Meanwhile, the mid-level wave progressing across the Ohio Valley on
    day 2 will continue into the central Appalachians and northern
    Mid-Atlantic while interacting with a lingering frontal boundary.
    This will produce additional areas of scattered areas of convection
    and the potential for isolated instances of flash flooding within
    typically sensitive terrain. There remains higher than average
    uncertainty regarding the speed of this system, which could impact
    the eventual flash flood risk area.


    Snell/Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8bFxNAbUFDIaVU8rw9qh3eafpD_GdAT2somu7R5wpmFG= T0fIy4m-3bWup9TIVcmrvzWZsGlOYSUZ9Ol1ko4PisXQtqA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8bFxNAbUFDIaVU8rw9qh3eafpD_GdAT2somu7R5wpmFG= T0fIy4m-3bWup9TIVcmrvzWZsGlOYSUZ9Ol1ko4PlpvyfSE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8bFxNAbUFDIaVU8rw9qh3eafpD_GdAT2somu7R5wpmFG= T0fIy4m-3bWup9TIVcmrvzWZsGlOYSUZ9Ol1ko4Pve-CJeY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 7 08:13:17 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 070813
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    413 AM EDT Sat Jun 7 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE LOWER
    ARKANSAS VALLEY, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER TENNESSEE
    VALLEY AND OVER CENTRAL NEW ENGLAND...

    The next round of shortwave energy pushing into the Central to
    Southern Plains early Saturday morning will progress into the Lower
    MO Valley/Mid MS Valley/OH Valley region during the day Saturday.
    This upper trof will become more negatively tilted with a well
    defined area of upper difluence pushing eastward. Convection=20
    likely to enhance in this broad upper difluence region where PW=20
    values will remain 1.5 to 2+ standard deviations above the mean
    across a large region from the OH Valley, south into the Mid to=20
    Lower MS Valley and TN Valley. Across the northern portions of the=20 precipitation area from the Lower OH/Mid MS Valley region,=20
    consensus is for the next round of precip to fall just to the north
    of where the heavy amounts fell over the past 24 hours. This=20
    should reduce the risk of runoff issues. Given that there is not=20
    expected to be a significant overlap of day 1 precip with the=20
    previous 24 hours observed precip, the risk level was kept as=20
    marginal here.

    Farther to the south, not a lot of changes made to the broad slight
    risk area from the Lower AR, Lower MS Valley, east into northern MS
    and northern AL. The slight risk area continues to fit well with
    the axis of high HREF neighborhood probabilities for 1 and 2"+
    amounts this period. There may be more than 1 round of convection
    to move across this region. The initial, early day 1 from the
    convection currently enhancing over the Southern Plains, followed
    by a second round late Saturday afternoon along the surface frontal
    boundary. With each round of convection, hourly rainfall totals of
    .50-1"+ possible.

    ...Southeast NY State into New England...=20
    Another round of convection likely day 1 along the frontal=20
    boundary pushing through the northeast as a sharpening northern=20
    stream trof pushes across the Northeast. A slight risk area was
    introduced from the previous issuance to correspond to where there
    is an overlap between heavy precip from Friday afternoon and
    expected additional heavy precip between 1500 UTC Sat and 0000 UTC
    Sun. This corresponds to an area from north central MA, across=20
    southern NH into southwest ME. In this region the latest HREF=20
    probabilities for .50 and 1"+ hourly amounts are fairly high and=20
    where soils have become increasingly saturated.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS NORTHERN
    TEXAS AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...Southern Plains to the Southeast...
    The latest guidance remains consistent in showing additional=20
    shortwave energy pushing east southeastward late Sunday=20
    afternoon/evening from the lee of the Central to Southern Rockies=20
    into the Southern Plains in the northwest flow on the south side=20
    of a stronger upper level low centered over the north-central=20
    United States. This will again re-strengthen the low level flow=20
    into the west to east oriented front forecast to remain across the=20
    Southern Plains, supporting another round of organized convection=20
    along the front. There continues to be fairly good agreement on=20
    the potential for an axes of heavy precip day 2, resulting in good
    continuity with the slight risk area with only some small changes
    to reflect the latest forecasts. This next round of organized
    convection will likely be fairly progressive, similar to what
    occurred farther to the north Thursday night into early Friday and
    Friday night into early Saturday. Still, there is likelihood of=20
    widespread rainfall amounts of 1-2" with localized amounts up to=20
    4". Soils are not as saturated as areas farther north, but=20
    localized runoff issues are still likely.

    ...Central Appalachians into the Mid-Atlantic...
    The negatively tilted shortwave coming out of the OH Valley late=20
    day 1 will push across the Central Appalachians into the Mid-
    Atlantic day 2. There is a fair amount of spread with model qpfs,=20
    but a signal for the potential for locally heavy rains in the=20
    continued well defined area of upper difluence ahead of these=20
    height falls in an axis of above average PW values...1.5 to 2+=20
    standard deviations above the mean. There were only some minor=20
    changes made to the previous marginal risk across the Central=20
    Appalachians into the Mid- Atlantic, continuing to center it across
    areas that have lower ffg values.


    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE SOUTHERN
    PLAINS, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, NORTHEAST THROUGH THE TENNESSEE
    VALLEY, UPPER OHIO VALLEY AND INTO THE EASTERN GREAT LAKES...

    There is good agreement in the latest guidance with the slow
    eastward push of the closed low through the Upper Lakes day 3 and
    the broad upper troffing extending south of this center through the
    MS and OH Valleys. A broad region of above average PW values will
    continue to stretch across the southern tier from the Southern
    Plains, east across the Lower MS Valley and into the Southeast
    along and ahead of the lead west to east oriented front. Another
    axis of above average PW values will push northeastward across the
    TN and OH Valleys into the Lower Lakes ahead of a secondary front
    rotating through the cyclonic flow on the southeast side of the
    strong closed low over the Upper Lakes. Along each frontal
    boundary, widespread moderate to locally heavy precip totals are
    likely. Model agreement, however, is not great with placement of
    maximum amounts, leading to overall low confidence in where
    anything but a marginal risk could be drawn. Overall, the previous
    broad marginal risk area fits well with the latest model qpf
    spread, with no significant changes made to previous outlook for
    the new day 3 outlook.


    Oravec

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8xOB7VqGX4DFrq84MeZJKpGwWHkJJJzTp1pDgz3yIahp= Sfw87igisJhDTx4nDydijzKynmlYn_nN2LMs-3oaVfjTg8o$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8xOB7VqGX4DFrq84MeZJKpGwWHkJJJzTp1pDgz3yIahp= Sfw87igisJhDTx4nDydijzKynmlYn_nN2LMs-3oapRuHtus$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8xOB7VqGX4DFrq84MeZJKpGwWHkJJJzTp1pDgz3yIahp= Sfw87igisJhDTx4nDydijzKynmlYn_nN2LMs-3oa_bcH_Oc$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 7 15:22:11 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 071520
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1120 AM EDT Sat Jun 7 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF THE EASTERN
    UNITED STATES...WITH SLIGHT RISKS IN SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND... THE
    OHIO RIVER VALLEY...AND MID-SOUTH...

    An active day of heavy rainfall and flash flooding is expected
    across a large portion of the eastern United States, with the
    Marginal Risk area now encompassing the majority of the land area
    in the CONUS east of 95W longitude. This is due to a broad region
    of near to above normal tropospheric moisture (via PW anomalies)
    and sufficient instability for convective rain bands and
    thunderstorms.

    Generally, the broad zone of heavy rainfall risk can be divided
    into three main areas of concern, all indicated by a regional-scale
    Slight Risk maximum now:

    1. In the Northeast, where low-topped convection has organized into
    narrow bands of efficient heavy rainfall. MRMS analysis indicates
    almost no ice present in these convective bands, with 30 dBZ echo
    tops generally shy of the -10C level. In other words, warm rain
    processes are dominant and any organized convective rain band could
    produce localized heavy rainfall. The area of greatest concern is
    probably from active area of flash flooding in the Hudson Valley
    near Albany, NY eastward through Massachusetts and northern
    Connecticut to the Boston metro area. There should naturally be=20
    increasing low-level convergence with the existing front draped=20
    across the region, and increasing easterly flow near the coast=20
    around the north side of the offshore low. Aloft, a coupled jet=20
    structure should lead to enough divergence to focus convection.

    2. The Ohio River Valley region, particularly the middle and upper
    Ohio Valley from late this afternoon well into the overnight hours.
    This will be due to scattered convective rain bands and perhaps
    some thunderstorms developing in advance of an eastward propagating
    mid-upper level wave, and developing surface low by this afternoon,
    currently centered over IA- MO. This should allow for some
    organized convective bands in the warm air advection regime. Model
    forecast soundings show increasing PWs to near or above the 90th
    percentile for early June and tall, skinny CAPE profiles that are a
    good match for efficient, low-topped convective flash flood events.
    Of particular concern will be the potential for flash flooding
    overnight in the central Appalachian region from eastern Kentucky
    and southeast Ohio into West Virginia and southwest Pennsylvania.
    Models show southwest low-level inflow increasing into the
    mountains in a very moist environment, with the right entrance
    region of an upper level jet streak providing divergence aloft. All
    of this should support an organized heavy rain threat and the
    structure of the instability profile will keep convection low-
    topped and dominated by warm rain processes. Locally significant
    flash flooding will be possible given the terrain in the area and
    relatively wet antecedent conditions.

    3. Across the mid-South where a forward propagating MCS has already
    generated some flash flooding in central Arkansas, but appears to
    begin accelerating. Renewed development and/or stalling and
    training will be possible along the southern periphery of the cold
    pool later today, and hi-res models do show localized corridors of
    heavy rainfall that would be sufficient to cause flash flooding.
    The Slight Risk was shifted south to account for observational
    trends indicating the current position of the cold pool and
    convective line, and the projected motion over the next few
    hours.

    Lamers


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS NORTHERN
    TEXAS AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...Southern Plains to the Southeast...
    The latest guidance remains consistent in showing additional
    shortwave energy pushing east southeastward late Sunday
    afternoon/evening from the lee of the Central to Southern Rockies
    into the Southern Plains in the northwest flow on the south side
    of a stronger upper level low centered over the north-central
    United States. This will again re-strengthen the low level flow
    into the west to east oriented front forecast to remain across the
    Southern Plains, supporting another round of organized convection
    along the front. There continues to be fairly good agreement on
    the potential for an axes of heavy precip day 2, resulting in good
    continuity with the slight risk area with only some small changes
    to reflect the latest forecasts. This next round of organized
    convection will likely be fairly progressive, similar to what
    occurred farther to the north Thursday night into early Friday and
    Friday night into early Saturday. Still, there is likelihood of
    widespread rainfall amounts of 1-2" with localized amounts up to
    4". Soils are not as saturated as areas farther north, but
    localized runoff issues are still likely.

    ...Central Appalachians into the Mid-Atlantic...
    The negatively tilted shortwave coming out of the OH Valley late
    day 1 will push across the Central Appalachians into the Mid-
    Atlantic day 2. There is a fair amount of spread with model qpfs,
    but a signal for the potential for locally heavy rains in the
    continued well defined area of upper difluence ahead of these
    height falls in an axis of above average PW values...1.5 to 2+
    standard deviations above the mean. There were only some minor
    changes made to the previous marginal risk across the Central
    Appalachians into the Mid- Atlantic, continuing to center it across
    areas that have lower ffg values.


    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE SOUTHERN
    PLAINS, LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, NORTHEAST THROUGH THE TENNESSEE
    VALLEY, UPPER OHIO VALLEY AND INTO THE EASTERN GREAT LAKES...

    There is good agreement in the latest guidance with the slow
    eastward push of the closed low through the Upper Lakes day 3 and
    the broad upper troffing extending south of this center through the
    MS and OH Valleys. A broad region of above average PW values will
    continue to stretch across the southern tier from the Southern
    Plains, east across the Lower MS Valley and into the Southeast
    along and ahead of the lead west to east oriented front. Another
    axis of above average PW values will push northeastward across the
    TN and OH Valleys into the Lower Lakes ahead of a secondary front
    rotating through the cyclonic flow on the southeast side of the
    strong closed low over the Upper Lakes. Along each frontal
    boundary, widespread moderate to locally heavy precip totals are
    likely. Model agreement, however, is not great with placement of
    maximum amounts, leading to overall low confidence in where
    anything but a marginal risk could be drawn. Overall, the previous
    broad marginal risk area fits well with the latest model qpf
    spread, with no significant changes made to previous outlook for
    the new day 3 outlook.


    Oravec

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!94whDg0a3KxU9mSepEt5Ayah1gNWktqb4fyc8EsEhmGZ= 6xgXeBa166o6u_DnoHLf6fed6JvbbW5fq8IAbiNTcT5Ua6U$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!94whDg0a3KxU9mSepEt5Ayah1gNWktqb4fyc8EsEhmGZ= 6xgXeBa166o6u_DnoHLf6fed6JvbbW5fq8IAbiNTgJ_Zfug$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!94whDg0a3KxU9mSepEt5Ayah1gNWktqb4fyc8EsEhmGZ= 6xgXeBa166o6u_DnoHLf6fed6JvbbW5fq8IAbiNTq-WzF0A$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 7 20:12:46 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 072012
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    412 PM EDT Sat Jun 7 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Jun 07 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS MUCH OF THE EASTERN
    UNITED STATES...WITH SLIGHT RISKS IN SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND... THE
    OHIO RIVER VALLEY...AND MID-SOUTH...

    An active day of heavy rainfall and flash flooding is expected
    across a large portion of the eastern United States, with the
    Marginal Risk area now encompassing the majority of the land area
    in the CONUS east of 95W longitude. This is due to a broad region
    of near to above normal tropospheric moisture (via PW anomalies)
    and sufficient instability for convective rain bands and
    thunderstorms.

    Generally, the broad zone of heavy rainfall risk can be divided
    into three main areas of concern, all indicated by a regional-scale
    Slight Risk maximum now:

    1. In the Northeast, where low-topped convection has organized into
    narrow bands of efficient heavy rainfall. MRMS analysis indicates
    almost no ice present in these convective bands, with 30 dBZ echo
    tops generally shy of the -10C level. In other words, warm rain
    processes are dominant and any organized convective rain band could
    produce localized heavy rainfall. The area of greatest concern is
    probably from active area of flash flooding in the Hudson Valley
    near Albany, NY eastward through Massachusetts and northern
    Connecticut to the Boston metro area. There should naturally be
    increasing low-level convergence with the existing front draped
    across the region, and increasing easterly flow near the coast
    around the north side of the offshore low. Aloft, a coupled jet
    structure should lead to enough divergence to focus convection.

    2. The Ohio River Valley region, particularly the middle and upper
    Ohio Valley from late this afternoon well into the overnight hours.
    This will be due to scattered convective rain bands and perhaps
    some thunderstorms developing in advance of an eastward propagating
    mid-upper level wave, and developing surface low by this afternoon,
    currently centered over IA- MO. This should allow for some
    organized convective bands in the warm air advection regime. Model
    forecast soundings show increasing PWs to near or above the 90th
    percentile for early June and tall, skinny CAPE profiles that are a
    good match for efficient, low-topped convective flash flood events.
    Of particular concern will be the potential for flash flooding
    overnight in the central Appalachian region from eastern Kentucky
    and southeast Ohio into West Virginia and southwest Pennsylvania.
    Models show southwest low-level inflow increasing into the
    mountains in a very moist environment, with the right entrance
    region of an upper level jet streak providing divergence aloft. All
    of this should support an organized heavy rain threat and the
    structure of the instability profile will keep convection low-
    topped and dominated by warm rain processes. Locally significant
    flash flooding will be possible given the terrain in the area and
    relatively wet antecedent conditions.

    3. Across the mid-South where a forward propagating MCS has already
    generated some flash flooding in central Arkansas, but appears to
    begin accelerating. Renewed development and/or stalling and
    training will be possible along the southern periphery of the cold
    pool later today, and hi-res models do show localized corridors of
    heavy rainfall that would be sufficient to cause flash flooding.
    The Slight Risk was shifted south to account for observational
    trends indicating the current position of the cold pool and
    convective line, and the projected motion over the next few
    hours.

    Lamers


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN THE CENTRAL
    APPALACHIANS AND MID ATLANTIC... AS WELL AS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...Central Appalachians into the Mid-Atlantic...
    The heavy rain and associated flash flood threat is likely to be
    ongoing across portions of the region at the beginning of the
    outlook period (12 UTC Sunday). Model guidance today has generally
    begun to focus the QPF signal across the region such that there is
    much better consistency between the global ensembles and hi-res
    ensembles (both RRFS experimental ensemble and HREF operational).
    Therefore, confidence was sufficiently high to go with a relatively
    big departure from the existing more focused Marginal Risk area,=20
    and go with a broad Slight Risk. The biggest change was to areas of
    eastern Virginia and central Maryland, which previously had ERO
    probabilities of less than 5 percent, but hi-res guidance is now
    consistently showing some localized maxima in excess of 3 inches
    into the coastal plain.

    Greatest concern within the Slight Risk area is in the Allegheny
    Mountains, Potomac Highlands and Laurel Highlands of northeast=20
    West Virginia, the Maryland Panhandle, far southwest Pennsylvania,
    as well as the Shenandoah Valley and Blue Ridge Mountain region of
    far northwest Virginia. These areas have been very wet lately, with
    30-day rainfall double to triple the normal amount, and a
    significant portion of the same area received between 1 and 4
    inches of rain in the past day or so.

    Rainfall may be enhanced in these areas by a subtle southeasterly
    low-level jet that should increase between 06 UTC and 18 UTC Sunday
    due to a developing low level cyclone ahead of an eastward=20
    propagating mid-upper level wave. If the low becomes situated near
    the OH-WV border by the beginning of the outlook period, which has
    been a trend over the past couple model cycles (along with a deeper
    low overall), the LLJ would be likely to be enhanced. This may
    create orographic enhancement to the rainfall and could help some
    convective features and bands persist for a greater duration where
    the orographic enhancement is most pronounced. Any convection is
    likely to be low-topped, with model forecast soundings showing a
    high melting level (above 12,000 feet) and a low equilibrium level
    (between -10C and -20C), with PWs above the 90th percentile for
    early June. This would be likely to lead to dominance of=20
    efficient, warm rain processes with little to no ice present in the
    cloud. This could support rapidly developing flash flooding where=20
    convective features can persist.

    Meanwhile, further east into the coastal plain and I-95 urban
    corridor from Richmond to Baltimore, models have also converged on
    an increased heavy rainfall threat. In these areas, greater
    instability will be present -- enough to support organized clusters
    of thunderstorms that could produce very heavy rain rates at times.
    The heavy rain should be less persistent as compared to the
    mountainous areas, but that would be offset by higher instantaneous
    rain rates. Therefore, these areas were also included in the Slight
    Risk and could see some flash flooding impacts.

    ...Southern Plains to the Southeast...
    Fewer changes were made to the existing Day 2 outlook from the
    Southern Plains into the Gulf Coast region. A Slight Risk remains
    centered on North Texas and southern Oklahoma, and many models now
    show a rainfall maxima in excess of 3 inches somewhere in the
    area. Although a forward propagating MCS may develop with time,
    there is enough signal in the model guidance for a corridor of
    enhanced QPF that some training of intense convection seems
    possible. This would be most likely either via (1) individual cells
    and clusters developing near the front ahead of the advancing
    convective line and subsequent cell mergers, or (2) slowing or
    stalling of the convective line on the southwest periphery of the
    developing cold pool. If either of these scenarios develops, flash
    flooding would be possible via heavy rainfall sustained for a
    couple hours at any one location.

    Although the Gulf Coast is not in a Slight Risk at this time, it
    will need to be monitored, as some (but not all) recent hi-res
    model runs show significant localized rainfall extremes in excess
    of 6 inches. An examination of individual model runs indicates this
    would be most likely where convective outflows interact with the
    coastal convergence zone.

    Lamers


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS A LARGE PORTION
    OF THE SOUTHERN AND EASTERN UNITED STATES...

    Very few changes were made to the existing Marginal Risk, which
    encompassed a broad area in the southern and eastern United States
    along and ahead of a slowly advancing cold front. The air mass
    ahead of the front will be characterized by above normal PWs and
    widespread moderate to strong instability. Therefore, a day with
    abundant areas of active convection containing relatively high
    rain rates is expected. Confidence is not very high at this time in
    the detail, particularly where concentrated areas of heavy rainfall
    and/or localized extreme events may occur. However, based on
    today's model guidance, this seems most likely in the following
    locations, where a Slight Risk upgrade may eventually be needed:

    1. Eastern Great Lakes and Central Appalachians. Instability is
    projected to be more limited in these areas, but recent rainfall
    may lead to wet conditions in advance, and there is better model
    consensus on areas of over 1 inch QPF.

    2. The Gulf Coast. A combination of strong instability and high PWs
    would support organized convection and high rain rates, but there
    is less model agreement on placement.

    3. West Texas into Northeast New Mexico. PWs will be increasing and
    quite anomalous (over the 90th percentile) along with fairly strong instability. These areas will be removed from stronger mid-upper
    level flow, likely leading to overall slower storm motions.

    Lamers

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_4GMDhd9X08RfFh9KZGQ-y9VGRZW2AuWYA9QfmAkOmhR= EAEZ5rPWEscNmJIBB3p_08-XGzi9qkSzlDTBdU0lQjkDNIg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_4GMDhd9X08RfFh9KZGQ-y9VGRZW2AuWYA9QfmAkOmhR= EAEZ5rPWEscNmJIBB3p_08-XGzi9qkSzlDTBdU0ll4MYF-8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_4GMDhd9X08RfFh9KZGQ-y9VGRZW2AuWYA9QfmAkOmhR= EAEZ5rPWEscNmJIBB3p_08-XGzi9qkSzlDTBdU0llI-ypV4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 8 00:47:06 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 080046
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    846 PM EDT Sat Jun 7 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN THE OHIO RIVER=20
    VALLEY AND MID-SOUTH INTO THE SOUTHEAST...

    01Z Update...

    ...Midwest and Central Appalachians...
    Thunderstorms will continue develop in advance of an eastward=20
    moving wave currently along the MO/IL border. This activity should
    mainly form along the warm front currently extending from StL
    through southern IN and organize a bit in the warm air advection=20
    regime. PW increases behind the front to around 1.75", above the=20
    90th percentile for early June, along with tall, skinny CAPE=20
    profiles per model soundings that will make for efficient, low-=20
    topped convection and scattered flash flood events. Of particular=20
    concern will be the potential for flash flooding overnight from
    central IN along the mid-upper OH Valley through WV. Southwest=20
    low- level inflow increases over the terrain in the very moist=20
    environment with the right entrance region of an upper level jet=20
    streak providing divergence aloft. Locally significant flash=20
    flooding will be possible given the terrain and relatively wet=20
    antecedent conditions of the Slight Risk area.

    ...Mid-South through Southeast...
    Forward propagating MCS pushes east over SC this evening with fast
    motion. The leading cells that developed ahead of the line when it
    was over GA are not occurring as much over SC, so the associated
    flash flood threat is low overnight.

    The next line of activity has developed across south-central AR and
    is moving close to its orientation axis, causing repeating cells.
    This will continue until enough cold pool can develop to begin a
    propagation southeast into LA and over north-central MS/AL which
    continues rest of the overnight. Despite dry antecedent conditions
    and high FFG, the Slight Risk is maintained for potential for 2-4"
    rainfall with high hourly rates and potential scattered instances
    of flash flooding.

    ...Southern Plains...
    Third consecutive night of supercells from the south-central High
    Plains developing and shifting southeast. Expanded a Marginal Risk
    from North Texas to these cells based on current motion and CAM
    guidance like recent runs of the RRFS which maintain this activity
    through tonight. This swath is mainly between the heaviest rain
    from last night, but there is an isolated flash flood threat as
    this activity propagates southeast.


    ...Northeast...
    Low pressure has shifted well east of New England bringing rainfall
    with it. Some heavy rain remains along the front over Long Island,
    though the rates are not excessive. The EROs in the Northeast have
    been removed.


    Lamers/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN THE CENTRAL
    APPALACHIANS AND MID ATLANTIC... AS WELL AS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...Central Appalachians into the Mid-Atlantic...
    The heavy rain and associated flash flood threat is likely to be
    ongoing across portions of the region at the beginning of the
    outlook period (12 UTC Sunday). Model guidance today has generally
    begun to focus the QPF signal across the region such that there is
    much better consistency between the global ensembles and hi-res
    ensembles (both RRFS experimental ensemble and HREF operational).
    Therefore, confidence was sufficiently high to go with a relatively
    big departure from the existing more focused Marginal Risk area,
    and go with a broad Slight Risk. The biggest change was to areas of
    eastern Virginia and central Maryland, which previously had ERO
    probabilities of less than 5 percent, but hi-res guidance is now
    consistently showing some localized maxima in excess of 3 inches
    into the coastal plain.

    Greatest concern within the Slight Risk area is in the Allegheny
    Mountains, Potomac Highlands and Laurel Highlands of northeast
    West Virginia, the Maryland Panhandle, far southwest Pennsylvania,
    as well as the Shenandoah Valley and Blue Ridge Mountain region of
    far northwest Virginia. These areas have been very wet lately, with
    30-day rainfall double to triple the normal amount, and a
    significant portion of the same area received between 1 and 4
    inches of rain in the past day or so.

    Rainfall may be enhanced in these areas by a subtle southeasterly
    low-level jet that should increase between 06 UTC and 18 UTC Sunday
    due to a developing low level cyclone ahead of an eastward
    propagating mid-upper level wave. If the low becomes situated near
    the OH-WV border by the beginning of the outlook period, which has
    been a trend over the past couple model cycles (along with a deeper
    low overall), the LLJ would be likely to be enhanced. This may
    create orographic enhancement to the rainfall and could help some
    convective features and bands persist for a greater duration where
    the orographic enhancement is most pronounced. Any convection is
    likely to be low-topped, with model forecast soundings showing a
    high melting level (above 12,000 feet) and a low equilibrium level
    (between -10C and -20C), with PWs above the 90th percentile for
    early June. This would be likely to lead to dominance of
    efficient, warm rain processes with little to no ice present in the
    cloud. This could support rapidly developing flash flooding where
    convective features can persist.

    Meanwhile, further east into the coastal plain and I-95 urban
    corridor from Richmond to Baltimore, models have also converged on
    an increased heavy rainfall threat. In these areas, greater
    instability will be present -- enough to support organized clusters
    of thunderstorms that could produce very heavy rain rates at times.
    The heavy rain should be less persistent as compared to the
    mountainous areas, but that would be offset by higher instantaneous
    rain rates. Therefore, these areas were also included in the Slight
    Risk and could see some flash flooding impacts.

    ...Southern Plains to the Southeast...
    Fewer changes were made to the existing Day 2 outlook from the
    Southern Plains into the Gulf Coast region. A Slight Risk remains
    centered on North Texas and southern Oklahoma, and many models now
    show a rainfall maxima in excess of 3 inches somewhere in the
    area. Although a forward propagating MCS may develop with time,
    there is enough signal in the model guidance for a corridor of
    enhanced QPF that some training of intense convection seems
    possible. This would be most likely either via (1) individual cells
    and clusters developing near the front ahead of the advancing
    convective line and subsequent cell mergers, or (2) slowing or
    stalling of the convective line on the southwest periphery of the
    developing cold pool. If either of these scenarios develops, flash
    flooding would be possible via heavy rainfall sustained for a
    couple hours at any one location.

    Although the Gulf Coast is not in a Slight Risk at this time, it
    will need to be monitored, as some (but not all) recent hi-res
    model runs show significant localized rainfall extremes in excess
    of 6 inches. An examination of individual model runs indicates this
    would be most likely where convective outflows interact with the
    coastal convergence zone.

    Lamers


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS A LARGE=20
    PORTION OF THE SOUTHERN AND EASTERN UNITED STATES...

    Very few changes were made to the existing Marginal Risk, which
    encompassed a broad area in the southern and eastern United States
    along and ahead of a slowly advancing cold front. The air mass
    ahead of the front will be characterized by above normal PWs and
    widespread moderate to strong instability. Therefore, a day with
    abundant areas of active convection containing relatively high
    rain rates is expected. Confidence is not very high at this time in
    the detail, particularly where concentrated areas of heavy rainfall
    and/or localized extreme events may occur. However, based on
    today's model guidance, this seems most likely in the following
    locations, where a Slight Risk upgrade may eventually be needed:

    1. Eastern Great Lakes and Central Appalachians. Instability is
    projected to be more limited in these areas, but recent rainfall
    may lead to wet conditions in advance, and there is better model
    consensus on areas of over 1 inch QPF.

    2. The Gulf Coast. A combination of strong instability and high PWs
    would support organized convection and high rain rates, but there
    is less model agreement on placement.

    3. West Texas into Northeast New Mexico. PWs will be increasing and
    quite anomalous (over the 90th percentile) along with fairly=20
    strong instability. These areas will be removed from stronger mid-
    upper level flow, likely leading to overall slower storm motions.

    Lamers

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!68MVeN01KxIOgEs6ioVF0ddvyj0xe4hC0yd2gmxYpb09= 5yFxWyKE_1AYTz-1_llTL5oLRAN5oppO_dkJe9O65z18gjM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!68MVeN01KxIOgEs6ioVF0ddvyj0xe4hC0yd2gmxYpb09= 5yFxWyKE_1AYTz-1_llTL5oLRAN5oppO_dkJe9O6fJZs-tE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!68MVeN01KxIOgEs6ioVF0ddvyj0xe4hC0yd2gmxYpb09= 5yFxWyKE_1AYTz-1_llTL5oLRAN5oppO_dkJe9O6_1SbK4U$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 8 12:36:23 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 081236
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    836 AM EDT Sun Jun 8 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 1235Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS, SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC...

    1230z Update:=20
    We went ahead and upgraded to a Slight risk across portions of
    central MS and AL. A corridor of persistent low level convergence
    is supporting an axis of training convection this morning. See MPD
    #400 for more details on this isolated to scattered flash flood=20
    threat.

    Chenard

    ...Southern Plains...

    A southward moving upper level shortwave rounding the western
    periphery of a potent upper level low will support a strong cold
    front tracking south across the central Plains this afternoon and
    evening. Meanwhile, ample Gulf moisture in place across Texas and
    along the Gulf moisture will advect northward ahead of the cold
    front, drawn to the front my the pressure differential. The result
    of these clashing air masses will be widespread convective
    development, partially aided further by the dry line, across the
    Panhandles and western Oklahoma mid-to-late afternoon. In addition
    to significant severe potential with the abundant shear in the area
    from these clashing boundaries, the storms will be moving over a
    very sensitive area for soil moisture due to numerous rounds of
    recent rainfall across the Panhandles and the Red River Valley.
    This supports the continuance of the Slight Risk across much of the
    region, including a higher-end Slight in and around the Wichita
    Falls, TX area. The higher-end risk is due in part to some CAMs
    agreement for additional training and cell mergers in the early
    evening.

    As is fairly typical of areas of strong thunderstorms and
    supercells, their merger into a single area of storms should
    accompany a faster forward speed, which should gradually decrease
    the flash flooding potential across the region into the overnight
    hours tonight. There is much greater disagreement as to whether
    additional shower and thunderstorm activity will develop behind the
    area of storms, which are very likely to set up along a preexisting
    cold-pool boundary. The coverage and intensity of the storms is
    highly uncertain, but a preponderance of the guidance suggesting
    the storms will develop and track southeastward over many of the
    same areas, particularly on the Texas side of the state line, could
    support a higher flash flooding threat. While the issuance of an
    upgraded Moderate Risk for these areas is not out of the question,
    it will likely take seeing the whites of the storms' eyes to have
    the confidence for such an upgrade. This will also be highly
    dependent on how the storms behave with the initial MCS development
    over these areas.

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    A developing upper level shortwave will team up with a surface low
    and associated showers and a few storms early this morning across
    the Mid-Atlantic. With daytime heating and advection of additional
    moisture and instability, expect the rainfall across the area to
    become increasingly convective across the Slight Risk area. These
    storms will be capable of heavy rainfall with potential for widely
    scattered flash flooding. This portion of the Mid-Atlantic is also
    very sensitive to heavy rainfall due to recent heavy rains over the
    past week or so. Topographic concerns will also be present as the
    mountains funnel any heavy rain quickly into the adjacent river
    valleys. Expect the heaviest rainfall to occur south and west of
    the warm front associated with the surface low. There is
    considerable uncertainty as to how far north and east the warm
    front will get, as the surface low will be weakening due to
    interactions with the mountains. Thus, by this afternoon the
    instability and moisture supporting the storms will be the primary
    forcing supporting their capability of producing heavy rain.

    Given these aforementioned uncertainties, the inherited Slight Risk
    area is largely the same. The biggest change with this update was
    to expand the Slight Risk northwestward to include the Pittsburgh
    metro area. The heaviest rains are likely to fall along a northwest
    to southeast oriented line from Pittsburgh to the Hampton Roads
    area of southeast Virginia. There is significant uncertainty around
    the DC metro area due to distance from the greatest forcing and how
    far north and east the warm front can get, with the most likely
    scenario for the DMV area to be missed by the heaviest rains, which
    stay south and west. However, given the sensitivities and urban
    concerns requiring less rain to produce flash flooding, the Slight
    Risk was left in effect for this update in the DC area. Once again
    the Virginia suburbs will have the greatest chance of seeing the
    most consistent heavy rains.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER OHIO
    VALLEY THROUGH CENTRAL NEW YORK...

    ...Upper Ohio Valley through Central New York...

    A potent upper level low over the Great Lakes on Monday will become increasingly negatively tilted through the period as a shortwave
    and the low itself begin the process of rejoining the jet stream.
    Thus, expect the upper low and any flow around it over the
    Northeast to become more southwesterly with time. At the surface, a
    strong cold front will rapidly sweep across the Midwest. That front
    will be slower-moving in northern areas as the upper level pattern
    becomes more amplified. Thus, the storms that will develop ahead of
    the cold front will be slower moving from Pennsylvania north into
    New York, supporting a higher likelihood for training. Ahead of
    this cold front, Gulf moisture will be drawn northeastward,
    supported by the increasing upper level forcing as the trough
    becomes more negatively tilted by Monday evening.

    Longer-range CAMs guidance shows multiple rounds of storms tracking
    across Pennsylvania and New York through the period, being driven
    by different impulses of upper level energy as those shortwave
    troughs track more south to north with time. While duration of the
    heavier rains will be lesser on Monday across WV, MD, and VA,
    expected heavy rainfall from the Day 1/Sunday period in this area
    should lower the FFGs in the area by the Day 2/Monday period. Thus,
    the Slight Risk includes areas expecting less rainfall on Monday
    afternoon. Meanwhile in PA and NY, sensitive soils will still be
    present, as well as topographic concerns, so the higher threat for
    flash flooding will be into western and central NY.

    ...Southeast...

    Across the Southeast, expect multiple rounds of storms to cross
    Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia through the period. The storms
    will be supported by periodic passages of shortwave disturbances in
    the upper levels, but they will be much further in between
    disturbances as compared with areas further north, as the Southeast
    will be further from the greatest forcing associated with the low
    over the Great Lakes. Partially offsetting this will be the
    proximity to the Gulf, which will allow for there to be far more
    moisture available for the storms as compared with areas further
    north. Soils in this area are around average for moisture content
    as there has been some time for the soils to dry out from past
    rainfall events. This has allowed FFGs to recover quite a bit, and
    the high FFGs will play a big role at tampering the severity and
    frequency of instances of flash flooding due to the heavy rains.
    Thus, for now, the area remains in a Marginal risk, but will be
    evaluated with future updates for upgrade potential.

    ...Texas...

    Significant uncertainty remains in the potential for flash flooding
    across Texas on Monday. The cold front impacting much of north
    Texas on Sunday will push further south, turning the predominant
    flow out of the north across the northern half of the state. This
    should allow for advection of drier air. Ample solar heating will
    still promote the development of instability, as well as any
    evapotranspiration in the area. Thus, expect at least some shower
    and thunderstorm activity again on Monday, albeit more likely on
    Monday night. Given the sensitivities from heavy rains in this
    area, the lesser coverage and duration of storms may still be
    enough to eventually need a targeted Slight Risk upgrade between
    now and Monday afternoon, but the confidence is not quite there
    yet.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF WEST
    TEXAS AND SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...West Texas and New Mexico...

    After potentially leftover convection in the early morning hours of
    Tuesday from Monday night's convection, much of the day across the
    Slight Risk area will be mostly dry. With peak solar heating in the
    late afternoon, however, a strengthening subtropical shortwave
    ejecting out of the Southwest will interact with the plentiful Gulf
    moisture already in place across west Texas. This will result in
    widespread convective development Tuesday evening. There is
    significant uncertainty however with the nature, coverage, and
    strength of the thunderstorms, as well as where and when they will
    impact any one area. Given that, and the spread in the guidance,
    the Slight Risk was expanded westward into New Mexico to account
    for potential development off the Sacramento Mountains, and any dry
    line convection. Regardless, there remains enough agreement that
    given plentiful recent rainfall and convective activity across West
    Texas, this new round of rain should result in widely scattered
    instances of flash flooding. This may be start of another period of
    daily thunderstorms in this area through the mid-range.

    ...New England...

    Convective activity in this region will be ongoing at the start of
    the period and continue through the day as Atlantic moisture is
    drawn northward ahead of a NNE moving upper level trough that will
    be rejoining the jet stream. The rainfall should be largely over in
    New England by Tuesday evening. Given most of the day the rainfall
    will be in the cooler, more stable part of the day, expect lesser
    rainfall rates. Thus, the inherited Marginal Risk was left
    unchanged with this update.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_HFzITSmDs_zBeDG7WKeYCqgPMmd0PmdeHBoIu506LoT= fTbklmtCJWKwUIARkC4M7cao5sJCXFJRv8SIO4Mfq1n-FK0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_HFzITSmDs_zBeDG7WKeYCqgPMmd0PmdeHBoIu506LoT= fTbklmtCJWKwUIARkC4M7cao5sJCXFJRv8SIO4MfXQ_fjx4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_HFzITSmDs_zBeDG7WKeYCqgPMmd0PmdeHBoIu506LoT= fTbklmtCJWKwUIARkC4M7cao5sJCXFJRv8SIO4Mf8r6Bu9U$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 8 15:47:51 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 081547
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1147 AM EDT Sun Jun 8 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS...GULF COAST...AND MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...
    Very few changes were made to the existing Day 1 outlook over this
    region, with observational trends generally matching earlier
    forecasts fairly well. The initial round of rain has moved through
    much of the Slight Risk area as of 15 UTC, and has produced a
    fairly widespread 0.5 to 1.0 inches of rain in much of the area. As
    cloud cover partially clears in the wake of the area of stratiform
    rain, rapid destabilization is occurring, and this is already
    beginning to support convective initiation. Although the PWs may be
    slightly lower in this area of clearing, they are still relatively
    high (around 1.4 to 1.5 inches) around the 90th percentile for
    early June. The combination of the increasingly strong instability
    and relatively deep moisture should support hourly rain rates of 1
    to 2 inches per hour in the most vigorous and organized convection.
    This may lead to flash flooding, particularly in situations where
    the rain rates can be sustained for more than an hour, and either
    in the mountainous areas of N WV, W MD, SW PA that have been very
    wet lately, or in urbanized areas in the coastal plain.

    ...Gulf Coast...
    Training and backbuilding thunderstorm activity has been far more
    persistent this morning in portions of E MS and C AL than models
    have been indicating. However, 12 UTC hi-res guidance appears to
    generally have a better handle on the current mesoscale environment
    and state of the convection. There is good agreement that the
    convective line itself and/or the associated gust front will make
    steady progress toward the coast today, and then begin to stall
    later this afternoon or early tonight. This may focus additional
    convective clusters and lines later today and tonight, with a
    favorable configuration for backbuilding (southwesterly inflow with
    an upstream reservoir of strong instability). The combination of
    the very high CAPE values, and anomalously high PWs around 2=20
    inches, will support very heavy hourly rain rates approaching or
    exceeding 2 inches in the most organized convective clusters. If
    the gust front interacts with the coastal convergence zone and
    anchors convection somewhere near the coastline, heavy rain rates
    could persist for several hours and lead to a locally extreme
    rainfall event with potential for significant flash flooding.

    ...Southern Plains...
    The heavy rainfall and associated flash flooding threat in this
    region is more conditional, given excellent hi-res model agreement
    in a very organized, rapidly forward propagating bowing line late
    this afternoon and this evening. Although the instantaneous rain
    rates in the line itself would be likely to be high, the fast
    forward speed would likely mitigate that factor a bit. Corridors of
    heavy rainfall in these cases tend to occur either:

    1. Near the poleward bookend vortex, which can tend to move slower
    and still have relatively high rain rates. In this case, that would
    be most likely over portions of SC OK, although the fast forward=20
    motion of the line makes it uncertain how impactful this would be=20
    from a rainfall perspective.

    2. Or along the upshear flank of the cold pool. That seems
    plausible in this case, and would be most likely either in far
    SW OK or in western N TX. In particular, a corridor of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flooding would seem more likely if
    convective development occurs near a lingering front in advance of
    the main forward propagating MCS, thereby increasing the duration
    of the heavy rainfall. However, it's unclear whether this
    antecedent development and the eventual gust front location will be co-located.=20

    Therefore, the Slight Risk was maintained given these
    uncertainties, and was only nudged slightly to the southwest to
    account for latest observational data trends and hi-res guidance.

    Lamers


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER OHIO
    VALLEY THROUGH CENTRAL NEW YORK...

    ...Upper Ohio Valley through Central New York...

    A potent upper level low over the Great Lakes on Monday will become increasingly negatively tilted through the period as a shortwave
    and the low itself begin the process of rejoining the jet stream.
    Thus, expect the upper low and any flow around it over the
    Northeast to become more southwesterly with time. At the surface, a
    strong cold front will rapidly sweep across the Midwest. That front
    will be slower-moving in northern areas as the upper level pattern
    becomes more amplified. Thus, the storms that will develop ahead of
    the cold front will be slower moving from Pennsylvania north into
    New York, supporting a higher likelihood for training. Ahead of
    this cold front, Gulf moisture will be drawn northeastward,
    supported by the increasing upper level forcing as the trough
    becomes more negatively tilted by Monday evening.

    Longer-range CAMs guidance shows multiple rounds of storms tracking
    across Pennsylvania and New York through the period, being driven
    by different impulses of upper level energy as those shortwave
    troughs track more south to north with time. While duration of the
    heavier rains will be lesser on Monday across WV, MD, and VA,
    expected heavy rainfall from the Day 1/Sunday period in this area
    should lower the FFGs in the area by the Day 2/Monday period. Thus,
    the Slight Risk includes areas expecting less rainfall on Monday
    afternoon. Meanwhile in PA and NY, sensitive soils will still be
    present, as well as topographic concerns, so the higher threat for
    flash flooding will be into western and central NY.

    ...Southeast...

    Across the Southeast, expect multiple rounds of storms to cross
    Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia through the period. The storms
    will be supported by periodic passages of shortwave disturbances in
    the upper levels, but they will be much further in between
    disturbances as compared with areas further north, as the Southeast
    will be further from the greatest forcing associated with the low
    over the Great Lakes. Partially offsetting this will be the
    proximity to the Gulf, which will allow for there to be far more
    moisture available for the storms as compared with areas further
    north. Soils in this area are around average for moisture content
    as there has been some time for the soils to dry out from past
    rainfall events. This has allowed FFGs to recover quite a bit, and
    the high FFGs will play a big role at tampering the severity and
    frequency of instances of flash flooding due to the heavy rains.
    Thus, for now, the area remains in a Marginal risk, but will be
    evaluated with future updates for upgrade potential.

    ...Texas...

    Significant uncertainty remains in the potential for flash flooding
    across Texas on Monday. The cold front impacting much of north
    Texas on Sunday will push further south, turning the predominant
    flow out of the north across the northern half of the state. This
    should allow for advection of drier air. Ample solar heating will
    still promote the development of instability, as well as any
    evapotranspiration in the area. Thus, expect at least some shower
    and thunderstorm activity again on Monday, albeit more likely on
    Monday night. Given the sensitivities from heavy rains in this
    area, the lesser coverage and duration of storms may still be
    enough to eventually need a targeted Slight Risk upgrade between
    now and Monday afternoon, but the confidence is not quite there
    yet.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF WEST
    TEXAS AND SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...West Texas and New Mexico...

    After potentially leftover convection in the early morning hours of
    Tuesday from Monday night's convection, much of the day across the
    Slight Risk area will be mostly dry. With peak solar heating in the
    late afternoon, however, a strengthening subtropical shortwave
    ejecting out of the Southwest will interact with the plentiful Gulf
    moisture already in place across west Texas. This will result in
    widespread convective development Tuesday evening. There is
    significant uncertainty however with the nature, coverage, and
    strength of the thunderstorms, as well as where and when they will
    impact any one area. Given that, and the spread in the guidance,
    the Slight Risk was expanded westward into New Mexico to account
    for potential development off the Sacramento Mountains, and any dry
    line convection. Regardless, there remains enough agreement that
    given plentiful recent rainfall and convective activity across West
    Texas, this new round of rain should result in widely scattered
    instances of flash flooding. This may be start of another period of
    daily thunderstorms in this area through the mid-range.

    ...New England...

    Convective activity in this region will be ongoing at the start of
    the period and continue through the day as Atlantic moisture is
    drawn northward ahead of a NNE moving upper level trough that will
    be rejoining the jet stream. The rainfall should be largely over in
    New England by Tuesday evening. Given most of the day the rainfall
    will be in the cooler, more stable part of the day, expect lesser
    rainfall rates. Thus, the inherited Marginal Risk was left
    unchanged with this update.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5aUQslzEGp0yufBV5f61uEajX4JmCcVZJeTGj2qIqjs1= IIR283Rwl-sOrHTj7V3FADeVzkRxjCPkMrh2aMwqukkT6Nw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5aUQslzEGp0yufBV5f61uEajX4JmCcVZJeTGj2qIqjs1= IIR283Rwl-sOrHTj7V3FADeVzkRxjCPkMrh2aMwqyC-zuyI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5aUQslzEGp0yufBV5f61uEajX4JmCcVZJeTGj2qIqjs1= IIR283Rwl-sOrHTj7V3FADeVzkRxjCPkMrh2aMwqzt6p5tY$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 8 19:49:20 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 081949
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    349 PM EDT Sun Jun 8 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Jun 08 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS...GULF COAST...AND MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...
    Very few changes were made to the existing Day 1 outlook over this
    region, with observational trends generally matching earlier
    forecasts fairly well. The initial round of rain has moved through
    much of the Slight Risk area as of 15 UTC, and has produced a
    fairly widespread 0.5 to 1.0 inches of rain in much of the area. As
    cloud cover partially clears in the wake of the area of stratiform
    rain, rapid destabilization is occurring, and this is already
    beginning to support convective initiation. Although the PWs may be
    slightly lower in this area of clearing, they are still relatively
    high (around 1.4 to 1.5 inches) around the 90th percentile for
    early June. The combination of the increasingly strong instability
    and relatively deep moisture should support hourly rain rates of 1
    to 2 inches per hour in the most vigorous and organized convection.
    This may lead to flash flooding, particularly in situations where
    the rain rates can be sustained for more than an hour, and either
    in the mountainous areas of N WV, W MD, SW PA that have been very
    wet lately, or in urbanized areas in the coastal plain.

    ...Gulf Coast...
    Training and backbuilding thunderstorm activity has been far more
    persistent this morning in portions of E MS and C AL than models
    have been indicating. However, 12 UTC hi-res guidance appears to
    generally have a better handle on the current mesoscale environment
    and state of the convection. There is good agreement that the
    convective line itself and/or the associated gust front will make
    steady progress toward the coast today, and then begin to stall
    later this afternoon or early tonight. This may focus additional
    convective clusters and lines later today and tonight, with a
    favorable configuration for backbuilding (southwesterly inflow with
    an upstream reservoir of strong instability). The combination of
    the very high CAPE values, and anomalously high PWs around 2
    inches, will support very heavy hourly rain rates approaching or
    exceeding 2 inches in the most organized convective clusters. If
    the gust front interacts with the coastal convergence zone and
    anchors convection somewhere near the coastline, heavy rain rates
    could persist for several hours and lead to a locally extreme
    rainfall event with potential for significant flash flooding.

    ...Southern Plains...
    The heavy rainfall and associated flash flooding threat in this
    region is more conditional, given excellent hi-res model agreement
    in a very organized, rapidly forward propagating bowing line late
    this afternoon and this evening. Although the instantaneous rain
    rates in the line itself would be likely to be high, the fast
    forward speed would likely mitigate that factor a bit. Corridors of
    heavy rainfall in these cases tend to occur either:

    1. Near the poleward bookend vortex, which can tend to move slower
    and still have relatively high rain rates. In this case, that would
    be most likely over portions of SC OK, although the fast forward
    motion of the line makes it uncertain how impactful this would be
    from a rainfall perspective.

    2. Or along the upshear flank of the cold pool. That seems
    plausible in this case, and would be most likely either in far
    SW OK or in western N TX. In particular, a corridor of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flooding would seem more likely if
    convective development occurs near a lingering front in advance of
    the main forward propagating MCS, thereby increasing the duration
    of the heavy rainfall. However, it's unclear whether this
    antecedent development and the eventual gust front location will be
    co-located.

    Therefore, the Slight Risk was maintained given these
    uncertainties, and was only nudged slightly to the southwest to
    account for latest observational data trends and hi-res guidance.

    Lamers


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN PORTIONS OF
    PENNSYLVANIA AND NEW YORK...AS WELL AS THE GULF COAST...

    ...Northeast and Ohio Valley...

    Convective lines are expected to develop Monday just ahead of a
    strong, steadily advancing cold front over the eastern Great Lakes
    and Ohio Valley, and eventually advancing into the interior
    Northeast (PA and NY in particular). A narrow plume of PWs around
    1.5 inches and moderate instability should support heavy rain rates
    on the order of 1-2 inches per hour in the most intense activity.
    The Slight Risk was maintained but retracted a bit to be focused
    primarily in Pennsylvania and southern New York. The model QPF
    signal was reduced a bit in eastern Ohio and West Virginia. Greater
    confidence in the possibility of training thunderstorms or
    convective rain bands exists over PA and NY where the deep layer
    mean wind will be more parallel to the cold front orientation.
    Further southwest into portions of SE OH, WV, KY, TN, the HREF and
    experimental RRFS ensemble both show a scattering of low chances of
    rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance on a 1-hr or 3-hr basis,
    but overall ensemble mean QPF is lower and the mean wind is more
    crosswise to the cold front. This suggests convective lines should
    be more progressive and any flash flooding impacts may be more
    isolated.

    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...

    A Slight Risk was introduced from SE MS into S AL, SW and C GA, and
    the FL Panhandle. Multi-model ensemble QPFs show the greatest
    chances of 2+ inches of rainfall now increasingly concentrated in
    this area. Scattered clusters of thunderstorms are expected to
    develop by Monday afternoon across the Gulf Coast region in an
    environment characterized by strong instability and PWs around 2
    inches. The availability of deep moisture and favorable instability
    would support very heavy rain rates. While hi-res models differ a
    bit on the details, they all generally show clusters and lines of
    thunderstorms developing in west-east oriented bands along
    mesoscale boundaries. Some of these boundaries may be related to
    convection from the day and night prior, or increasingly the
    arrival of a synoptic cold front from the northwest. Any lines that
    are oriented in this fashion would be more parallel to the deep
    layer mean wind and could create corridors of training convection
    and swaths of localized heavy rainfall.=20

    ...West Texas and New Mexico...

    For now, a broad Marginal Risk was maintained in these areas as any concentrated areas of heavy rainfall would likely be highly
    dependent on the convective evolution from Sunday afternoon into
    Monday morning across the region. A forward propagating MCS across
    S OK and N TX should push an outflow boundary somewhere into C TX,
    and that could become a feature that focuses renewed convective
    development on Monday. Broad low-level east to southeast flow from
    the coastal plain all the way into W TX and E NM should cause PWs
    to gradually increase, and support scattered convection well into
    C/E NM during the afternoon hours. Some hi-res models show this
    activity in NM coalescing into a MCS and pushing southeastward into
    W TX during the evening and overnight, and existing boundaries
    would be important to that process as well. It's possible a Slight
    Risk may be needed in future outlook updates.

    Lamers


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF WEST
    TEXAS AND SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...West Texas, Texas Hill Country, and Southwest New Mexico...

    Greater confidence exists in a heavy rainfall event on Tuesday
    (compared to Monday) in SE NM and W/C TX. A shortwave ejecting out
    of the Desert Southwest will push through NM early Tuesday and
    approach the Slight Risk area over the aforementioned region. The
    combination of abundant deep moisture, with PWs generally above the
    90th percentile for early June, strong instability, the approaching
    shortwave, and upper level divergence will favor widespread
    thunderstorm activity. Deep layer mean winds will not be
    particularly strong, around 10-15 knots, which should favor slow
    eastward propagation with time. It seems most likely that
    convective initiation will occur closer to the Sacramento,
    Guadalupe, and Davis Mountains from SE NM into far W TX, near the
    nose of a low-level moisture transport maximum. Slow propagation of
    convective clusters could then lead to flash flooding issues from
    near those areas, to eventually as far east as the Edwards Plateau
    and Texas Hill Country.

    Lamers


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8XGL2i_OSwnHEoKk6CXtAhKP3cGc4Jnsr3YWD9b9_ilr= qJM4eXveBf0z9KlBxC7j4C2wjcystZFhd_fFXsciaISq-Mw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8XGL2i_OSwnHEoKk6CXtAhKP3cGc4Jnsr3YWD9b9_ilr= qJM4eXveBf0z9KlBxC7j4C2wjcystZFhd_fFXsci7AE7eBM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8XGL2i_OSwnHEoKk6CXtAhKP3cGc4Jnsr3YWD9b9_ilr= qJM4eXveBf0z9KlBxC7j4C2wjcystZFhd_fFXsci5CRmA68$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 9 00:58:07 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 090057
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    857 PM EDT Sun Jun 8 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE SOUTHERN=20
    PLAINS TO THE GULF COAST...AS WELL AS THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    01Z Update...

    ...Southern Plains to the Lower Mississippi Valley...=20
    A cluster of heavy thunderstorms over the TX Panhandle and=20
    Northwest TX this evening will further develop into a forward=20
    propagating bowing line (or lines) that last through the night and=20
    reach the Gulf Coast Monday morning. High shear should allow the
    existing supercells to persist and congeal into organized MCSs.=20
    Corridors of heavy rainfall in these MCS cases tend to occur in=20
    the left bookend vortex, along the upshear flank of the cold pool,
    and with repeating cells which in this case would be activity=20
    developing ahead of the main organized system.=20

    Recent HRRR and RRFS runs are in decent agreement with widespread
    coverage of 2-4" across NW and North TX (upshear flanking side of
    the activity), southern OK and Northwest LA (left bookend of
    activity) through 12Z. This forward propagating system should
    increase forward speed late tonight, allowing it to at least
    approach the upper TX coast by 12Z.=20

    Therefore, the Slight Risk was expanded a bit south in TX and LA
    with the Marginal extended to the Gulf Coast including the Houston
    metro.

    For further information on TX flooding potential this evening please
    see MPD 405 and further downstream MPDs overnight.

    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    Convection that fired on the outflow from morning heavy
    thunderstorms over central MS/AL continues this evening with 30kt
    bulk shear helping maintain supercell segments over southern AL. An
    approaching impulse from TX should allow westward propagation of
    this activity which CAMs have shown all day today. The 23Z HRRR=20
    keys in on central MS to Mobile AL as the greatest heavy rain risk
    corridor (2-5") which is a bit farther west than previous runs.=20
    Therefore, the Slight Risk was expanded west through southern MS.

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...
    Shrank western end of Slight Risk where activity has waned with the
    cold frontal passage west of the Appalachian Crest. Maintained the
    Slight Risk over the rest of the Mid-Atlantic where activity is
    ongoing. Please see MPD 404 for further info.

    ...Midwest...
    Pre-cold frontal activity is progged from recent HRRRs to redevelop
    overnight as it shifts east. Given lower FFG over central/eastern
    IN and southeast MI, the Marginal Risk is expanded up through the
    Detroit area. Robust activity over central MO this evening is
    progged to shift over southern IL overnight, so the Marginal Risk
    was expanded there too.


    Lamers/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN PORTIONS OF
    PENNSYLVANIA AND NEW YORK...AS WELL AS THE GULF COAST...

    ...Northeast and Ohio Valley...
    Convective lines are expected to develop Monday just ahead of a=20
    strong, steadily advancing cold front over the eastern Great Lakes=20
    and Ohio Valley, and eventually advancing into the interior=20
    Northeast (PA and NY in particular). A narrow plume of PWs around=20
    1.5 inches and moderate instability should support heavy rain rates
    on the order of 1-2 inches per hour in the most intense activity.=20
    The Slight Risk was maintained but retracted a bit to be focused=20
    primarily in Pennsylvania and southern New York. The model QPF=20
    signal was reduced a bit in eastern Ohio and West Virginia. Greater
    confidence in the possibility of training thunderstorms or=20
    convective rain bands exists over PA and NY where the deep layer=20
    mean wind will be more parallel to the cold front orientation.=20
    Further southwest into portions of SE OH, WV, KY, TN, the HREF and=20 experimental RRFS ensemble both show a scattering of low chances of
    rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance on a 1-hr or 3-hr basis,=20
    but overall ensemble mean QPF is lower and the mean wind is more=20
    crosswise to the cold front. This suggests convective lines should=20
    be more progressive and any flash flooding impacts may be more=20
    isolated.

    ...Gulf Coast and Southeast...
    A Slight Risk was introduced from SE MS into S AL, SW and C GA,=20
    and the FL Panhandle. Multi-model ensemble QPFs show the greatest=20
    chances of 2+ inches of rainfall now increasingly concentrated in=20
    this area. Scattered clusters of thunderstorms are expected to=20
    develop by Monday afternoon across the Gulf Coast region in an=20
    environment characterized by strong instability and PWs around 2=20
    inches. The availability of deep moisture and favorable instability
    would support very heavy rain rates. While hi-res models differ a=20
    bit on the details, they all generally show clusters and lines of=20 thunderstorms developing in west-east oriented bands along=20
    mesoscale boundaries. Some of these boundaries may be related to=20
    convection from the day and night prior, or increasingly the=20
    arrival of a synoptic cold front from the northwest. Any lines that
    are oriented in this fashion would be more parallel to the deep=20
    layer mean wind and could create corridors of training convection=20
    and swaths of localized heavy rainfall.

    ...West Texas and New Mexico...
    For now, a broad Marginal Risk was maintained in these areas as=20
    any concentrated areas of heavy rainfall would likely be highly=20
    dependent on the convective evolution from Sunday afternoon into=20
    Monday morning across the region. A forward propagating MCS across=20
    S OK and N TX should push an outflow boundary somewhere into C TX,=20
    and that could become a feature that focuses renewed convective=20
    development on Monday. Broad low-level east to southeast flow from=20
    the coastal plain all the way into W TX and E NM should cause PWs=20
    to gradually increase, and support scattered convection well into=20
    C/E NM during the afternoon hours. Some hi-res models show this=20
    activity in NM coalescing into a MCS and pushing southeastward into
    W TX during the evening and overnight, and existing boundaries=20
    would be important to that process as well. It's possible a Slight=20
    Risk may be needed in future outlook updates.

    Lamers


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF WEST
    TEXAS AND SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...West Texas, Texas Hill Country, and Southwest New Mexico...
    Greater confidence exists in a heavy rainfall event on Tuesday=20
    (compared to Monday) in SE NM and W/C TX. A shortwave ejecting out=20
    of the Desert Southwest will push through NM early Tuesday and=20
    approach the Slight Risk area over the aforementioned region. The=20 combination of abundant deep moisture, with PWs generally above the
    90th percentile for early June, strong instability, the=20
    approaching shortwave, and upper level divergence will favor=20
    widespread thunderstorm activity. Deep layer mean winds will not be particularly strong, around 10-15 knots, which should favor slow=20
    eastward propagation with time. It seems most likely that=20
    convective initiation will occur closer to the Sacramento,=20
    Guadalupe, and Davis Mountains from SE NM into far W TX, near the=20
    nose of a low-level moisture transport maximum. Slow propagation of
    convective clusters could then lead to flash flooding issues from=20
    near those areas, to eventually as far east as the Edwards Plateau=20
    and Texas Hill Country.

    Lamers


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6T0Kd9WHtsIfx4H6PpFJlFXDZSS_BfMo6l5ag1VabOpv= guYdiFaJkDf772HTn_b6iid2KwLTPDil6Fs_NKTWPJcdVuc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6T0Kd9WHtsIfx4H6PpFJlFXDZSS_BfMo6l5ag1VabOpv= guYdiFaJkDf772HTn_b6iid2KwLTPDil6Fs_NKTWWQ0-tEQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6T0Kd9WHtsIfx4H6PpFJlFXDZSS_BfMo6l5ag1VabOpv= guYdiFaJkDf772HTn_b6iid2KwLTPDil6Fs_NKTWiu4v8L4$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 9 08:16:27 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 090816
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    416 AM EDT Mon Jun 9 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHEAST, SOUTHEAST, AND SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...Northeast...

    A vertically stacked low over the Great Lakes will track north-
    northeast into Ontario through the period. South and east of the
    low, upper level divergence and forcing will be maximized as a 100
    kt jet streak and enhanced divergence from a shortwave rounding the
    southern side of the low will all increase the forcing for showers
    and thunderstorms in the Slight Risk area of Pennsylvania and
    western New York. At the surface, a potent cold front will be
    moving east from the Great Lakes/Midwest and into Pennsylvania and
    New York. The front will contribute additional forcing for storms.
    Somewhat limited Gulf moisture will stream northward ahead of the
    front, raising PWATs to as high as 1.5 inches. Instability will
    also increase with daytime heating with MUCAPE values between 500=20
    and 1,500 J/kg, with the greatest instability into Pennsylvania.

    CAMs guidance generally agree on multiple lines of showers with
    embedded storms moving across PA and NY today into tonight. The
    storms will mostly be in the late afternoon and into tonight. Due
    to multiple rounds of rain, soils will be primed ahead of the
    heaviest storms tonight. Each line of showers and storms will be
    quick-moving, which should temper the flash flooding threat
    somewhat. However, topographic concerns and well-above-normal=20
    antecedent soil moisture conditions from recent rainfall will both
    work to increase the flash flooding threat. The inherited Slight is
    largely intact with only some trimming across eastern NY as the
    heaviest rain looks to stay further west.

    ...Southeast...

    Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms are expected to
    traverse across the Southeast today and tonight. The first round of
    storms is ongoing from southern Mississippi into southern Alabama
    and the western Florida Panhandle. The storms are being supplied
    with ample Gulf moisture as PWATs are well above 1.75 inches in
    most areas with a southwesterly mid-level flow. Meanwhile, a potent
    shortwave at the base of the trough will force additional
    convection. Cold pool interactions should cause more storms to
    form. As the shortwave crosses the Southeast this evening, the=20
    storms should evolve upscale from random clusters of storms to a=20
    line of storms. The line should clear the storms across the north,
    but as the surface cold front begins to stall, backbuilding storms
    will become increasingly possible in many of the same areas of
    southern Mississippi to the western Florida Panhandle that are
    currently seeing convective activity.

    Storms from last night as well as the ongoing convection near and
    just inland from the Gulf Coast have locally greatly decreased the
    FFGs in the area. Additional convection this afternoon and evening
    should have no trouble causing widely scattered instances of flash
    flooding. Further north, greater potential for repeating storms
    into the Birmingham and Atlanta metros led to a small expansion of
    the Slight into northeastern Georgia.

    ...Southern Plains...

    For eastern NM and west Texas, Monday will largely be a break day
    from most of the convection. The area will be on the back edge of a
    stalled out cold front, which will be moving eastward into the
    Southeast, as it's back edge gets left behind, resulting in a
    stationary boundary across northern Texas. Very limited upper level
    forcing will keep most convective activity this afternoon and
    evening limited in coverage. Most of the CAMs show a single cluster
    of storms that originate in eastern NM during the afternoon and
    evening, then track along the stationary front across portions of
    west Texas. In isolation, this would normally barely amount to a
    Marginal Risk, as the cluster should be fairly isolated, with
    limited convection anywhere around it, and will be quick-moving.
    However, most of these areas have seen numerous rounds of heavy=20
    rain from storms originating off the dryline almost every single
    day, including at present, so soils have been well saturated, and
    will struggle to keep up with yet another round of heavy rain, even
    if it should be relatively brief in duration. A new Slight Risk
    area was introduced with this update, but will be somewhat
    dependent on the storms tracking over recently hard hit areas, and
    there being some pre-cluster storms that likely form ahead of it,
    and then are absorbed into the larger cluster. Thus, this is a
    low-confidence and lower-end Slight Risk for this region.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHEASTERN
    NEW MEXICO INTO MUCH OF WEST TEXAS...

    Yet another round of widespread heavy shower and thunderstorm
    activity will impact much of far southeastern New Mexico and west
    Texas again Tuesday and Tuesday night. While some lingering storms
    will be ongoing at the start of the period in parts of the Hill
    Country of central Texas, the bulk of the activity will be during
    the late afternoon into the overnight. Maximum daytime heating
    across the area will increase the instability across much of west
    Texas as abundant Gulf moisture remains over the area south of a
    stationary front over northern Texas. Storms will blossom in
    coverage towards sunset as the LLJ of additional Gulf moisture
    strengthens. The convection will both interact with the stationary
    front, a possible dryline in southeastern NM and far west Texas,
    and some subtle, but still important upper level impulses that
    eject out of the southern Rockies.=20

    There has been little change in the ERO risk areas as the signal=20
    remains consistent targeting west Texas for shower and storm=20
    activity. The Slight remains quite large in part due to the=20
    widespread area of west Texas that has seen heavy rain recently,=20
    resulting in wetter than normal soils, especially north towards the
    Panhandle.

    The Marginal Risk along the Gulf Coast and eastern seaboard also
    remains largely unchanged. Storms will be ongoing into New England
    at the start of the period, with some chance for largely
    disorganized convection from the Gulf Coast to the Carolinas. While
    some of these areas have also been hard hit with heavy rains in
    recent days, the lack of confidence in much organization to the
    storms favors a continuation of the Marginal Risk. Cell
    interactions will likely cause localized Slight Risk impacts along
    the Gulf Coast, but where that will happen remains highly
    uncertain.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA...

    Deep Gulf moisture will advect north across much of Texas (and the
    Southeast for that matter) on Wednesday and Wednesday night. Slow-
    moving upper level shortwave energy will shift east across Texas
    through the period. The stationary front that had been across north
    Texas for much of the prior 2 days will begin to lift north as a
    warm front, especially Wednesday night as the nocturnal
    strengthening of the LLJ overcomes what little southward push of
    drier air north of the front is left. Meanwhile across West Texas,
    the typical dry line will also advance eastward, which will work to
    uplift the moisture and cause more widespread shower and
    thunderstorm activity. While the storms may be around in isolated
    clusters through the day, the greatest concentration of storms will
    initiate in the late afternoon and persist through the overnight.
    Many of the same areas of northern Texas will be hit with multiple
    rounds of storms once again. A higher-end Slight is in effect from
    east of Lubbock through the Metroplex, and from southwestern
    Oklahoma to around the Austin metro. It's very possible that a
    Moderate Risk upgrade may be needed for a portion of this area with
    increasing confidence and CAMs analysis of the convective scenario.
    Once again, the storms alone would not quite get the risk to a
    Moderate level, but the combination of the storms and antecedent
    very wet soil conditions.

    Up north towards the MN/IA border and southern WI, a subtle
    shortwave in the jet will interact with a weaker portion of the LLJ
    which will run into a drier air mass to the north. Showers and
    storms may train eastward across this region. However, instability
    will be a tremendous limiting factor in the potential for flash
    flooding. Soils are at or below normal for moisture in the area,
    which also will not help with flash flooding potential. A Marginal
    Risk remains in effect with few changes.

    The Marginal risk in Montana was also maintained with a small
    eastward expansion towards the border of ND. Areas of convection
    will cross MT through the period, but will be few and far between.
    Low FFGs in this area could allow for isolated instances of flash
    flooding where there are favorable cell interactions.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8_OYAmYX-6DRJEKtv3WtkpFuSJHCFlFq_bQ2XXGOT61T= 8yxHKM4wSUHheecpSqlYh8KdPzVUBnjyNq_C--WAW5444Dk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8_OYAmYX-6DRJEKtv3WtkpFuSJHCFlFq_bQ2XXGOT61T= 8yxHKM4wSUHheecpSqlYh8KdPzVUBnjyNq_C--WA0o8kq08$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8_OYAmYX-6DRJEKtv3WtkpFuSJHCFlFq_bQ2XXGOT61T= 8yxHKM4wSUHheecpSqlYh8KdPzVUBnjyNq_C--WAkt69F7I$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 9 15:59:21 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 091559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Mon Jun 9 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHEAST, SOUTHEAST, GULF COAST, AND SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    16Z Update...
    Expanded Slight in west Texas=20
    Added a Slight around the Houston metro.

    ...Northeast...
    Occluded low over Wisconsin this morning will track northeast over
    the U.P. of Michigan tonight. South and east of the low, upper=20
    level divergence and forcing will be maximized as a 100 kt jet=20
    streak and enhanced divergence from a shortwave rounding the=20
    southern side of the low will increase the forcing for thunderstorms
    in the Slight Risk area of Pennsylvania and western New York. At=20
    the surface, a potent cold front will be moving east from the Great Lakes/Midwest and into Pennsylvania and New York. The front will=20
    contribute additional forcing for storms. Somewhat limited Gulf=20
    moisture will stream northward ahead of the front, raising PWATs up to
    1.5 inches (1.5 sigma above normal). Instability will also=20
    increase with daytime heating with MUCAPE values between 500 and=20
    1,500 J/kg, with the greatest instability into Pennsylvania.

    12Z CAMs generally agree that the current activity moving from Ohio
    intensifies diurnally across PA and NY. Soil moisture is elevated
    from recent rains, though storms will be quick- moving, which=20
    should temper the flash flooding threat somewhat. However,=20
    topographic and urbanized concerns warrants maintenance of the
    Slight Risk with some further trimming out on the eastern side in
    NY per coordination with WFO BTV.=20

    ...Southeast...
    Multiple rounds of heavy thunderstorms are expected to traverse=20
    across the Southeast through. Ample Gulf moisture is being supplied
    on strong (30kt) low level flow with as PWATs 1.75 to 2 inches=20
    over MS/AL/GA where activity should focus/repeat. Meanwhile, a=20
    potent shortwave at the base of the trough currently over the=20
    lower-mid Miss River and cold pool interactions from ongoing=20
    activity will force additional convection. As the shortwave crosses
    the Southeast this evening, the storms should evolve upscale from=20
    random clusters to lines. As the surface cold front begins to=20
    stall, backbuilding storms will become increasingly possible in=20
    many of the same areas of southern Mississippi to the western=20
    Florida Panhandle that saw convective activity this morning.

    Widely scattered instances of flash flooding can be expected inland
    from the central Gulf Coast where a Slight Risk is maintained.=20

    ...Texas and New Mexico...=20
    12Z CAMs continue to ramp up convective activity today developing
    this afternoon off the southern Rockies with organized thunderstorm
    clusters shifting southeast over west into central TX overnight.
    Much of this activity is west/south of heavy precip from recent
    days, but given Gulf-sourced moisture extending up through west
    Texas (1.5 sigma above normal) and high instability, the Slight
    Risk is maintained and expanded a bit more into central Texas for
    overnight concerns.

    Furthermore, a boundary around the Houston metro activates this
    afternoon with a risk for repeating heavy thunderstorms there. A
    Slight Risk was raised around the greater Houston metro.

    Wegman/Jackson

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHEASTERN
    NEW MEXICO INTO MUCH OF WEST TEXAS...

    Yet another round of widespread heavy shower and thunderstorm
    activity will impact much of far southeastern New Mexico and west
    Texas again Tuesday and Tuesday night. While some lingering storms
    will be ongoing at the start of the period in parts of the Hill
    Country of central Texas, the bulk of the activity will be during
    the late afternoon into the overnight. Maximum daytime heating
    across the area will increase the instability across much of west
    Texas as abundant Gulf moisture remains over the area south of a
    stationary front over northern Texas. Storms will blossom in
    coverage towards sunset as the LLJ of additional Gulf moisture
    strengthens. The convection will both interact with the stationary
    front, a possible dryline in southeastern NM and far west Texas,
    and some subtle, but still important upper level impulses that
    eject out of the southern Rockies.

    There has been little change in the ERO risk areas as the signal
    remains consistent targeting west Texas for shower and storm
    activity. The Slight remains quite large in part due to the
    widespread area of west Texas that has seen heavy rain recently,
    resulting in wetter than normal soils, especially north towards the
    Panhandle.

    The Marginal Risk along the Gulf Coast and eastern seaboard also
    remains largely unchanged. Storms will be ongoing into New England
    at the start of the period, with some chance for largely
    disorganized convection from the Gulf Coast to the Carolinas. While
    some of these areas have also been hard hit with heavy rains in
    recent days, the lack of confidence in much organization to the
    storms favors a continuation of the Marginal Risk. Cell
    interactions will likely cause localized Slight Risk impacts along
    the Gulf Coast, but where that will happen remains highly
    uncertain.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA...

    Deep Gulf moisture will advect north across much of Texas (and the
    Southeast for that matter) on Wednesday and Wednesday night. Slow-
    moving upper level shortwave energy will shift east across Texas
    through the period. The stationary front that had been across north
    Texas for much of the prior 2 days will begin to lift north as a
    warm front, especially Wednesday night as the nocturnal
    strengthening of the LLJ overcomes what little southward push of
    drier air north of the front is left. Meanwhile across West Texas,
    the typical dry line will also advance eastward, which will work to
    uplift the moisture and cause more widespread shower and
    thunderstorm activity. While the storms may be around in isolated
    clusters through the day, the greatest concentration of storms will
    initiate in the late afternoon and persist through the overnight.
    Many of the same areas of northern Texas will be hit with multiple
    rounds of storms once again. A higher-end Slight is in effect from
    east of Lubbock through the Metroplex, and from southwestern
    Oklahoma to around the Austin metro. It's very possible that a
    Moderate Risk upgrade may be needed for a portion of this area with
    increasing confidence and CAMs analysis of the convective scenario.
    Once again, the storms alone would not quite get the risk to a
    Moderate level, but the combination of the storms and antecedent
    very wet soil conditions.

    Up north towards the MN/IA border and southern WI, a subtle
    shortwave in the jet will interact with a weaker portion of the LLJ
    which will run into a drier air mass to the north. Showers and
    storms may train eastward across this region. However, instability
    will be a tremendous limiting factor in the potential for flash
    flooding. Soils are at or below normal for moisture in the area,
    which also will not help with flash flooding potential. A Marginal
    Risk remains in effect with few changes.

    The Marginal risk in Montana was also maintained with a small
    eastward expansion towards the border of ND. Areas of convection
    will cross MT through the period, but will be few and far between.
    Low FFGs in this area could allow for isolated instances of flash
    flooding where there are favorable cell interactions.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_bIplAvtfOM0MAq78TZQHtQen152_YNENexipo68yigf= Wy6r7fsTuqPZaG6wUmgx_yZNyFYOohHCY1iG5iSVf0VH3eE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_bIplAvtfOM0MAq78TZQHtQen152_YNENexipo68yigf= Wy6r7fsTuqPZaG6wUmgx_yZNyFYOohHCY1iG5iSVyqwd28g$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_bIplAvtfOM0MAq78TZQHtQen152_YNENexipo68yigf= Wy6r7fsTuqPZaG6wUmgx_yZNyFYOohHCY1iG5iSV_4jHw74$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 9 20:28:59 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 092028
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    428 PM EDT Mon Jun 9 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 09 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHEAST, SOUTHEAST, GULF COAST, AND SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    16Z Update...
    Expanded Slight in west Texas
    Added a Slight around the Houston metro.

    ...Northeast...
    Occluded low over Wisconsin this morning will track northeast over
    the U.P. of Michigan tonight. South and east of the low, upper
    level divergence and forcing will be maximized as a 100 kt jet
    streak and enhanced divergence from a shortwave rounding the
    southern side of the low will increase the forcing for thunderstorms
    in the Slight Risk area of Pennsylvania and western New York. At
    the surface, a potent cold front will be moving east from the Great Lakes/Midwest and into Pennsylvania and New York. The front will
    contribute additional forcing for storms. Somewhat limited Gulf
    moisture will stream northward ahead of the front, raising PWATs up to
    1.5 inches (1.5 sigma above normal). Instability will also
    increase with daytime heating with MUCAPE values between 500 and
    1,500 J/kg, with the greatest instability into Pennsylvania.

    12Z CAMs generally agree that the current activity moving from Ohio
    intensifies diurnally across PA and NY. Soil moisture is elevated
    from recent rains, though storms will be quick- moving, which
    should temper the flash flooding threat somewhat. However,
    topographic and urbanized concerns warrants maintenance of the
    Slight Risk with some further trimming out on the eastern side in
    NY per coordination with WFO BTV.

    ...Southeast...
    Multiple rounds of heavy thunderstorms are expected to traverse
    across the Southeast through. Ample Gulf moisture is being supplied
    on strong (30kt) low level flow with as PWATs 1.75 to 2 inches
    over MS/AL/GA where activity should focus/repeat. Meanwhile, a
    potent shortwave at the base of the trough currently over the
    lower-mid Miss River and cold pool interactions from ongoing
    activity will force additional convection. As the shortwave crosses
    the Southeast this evening, the storms should evolve upscale from
    random clusters to lines. As the surface cold front begins to
    stall, backbuilding storms will become increasingly possible in
    many of the same areas of southern Mississippi to the western
    Florida Panhandle that saw convective activity this morning.

    Widely scattered instances of flash flooding can be expected inland
    from the central Gulf Coast where a Slight Risk is maintained.

    ...Texas and New Mexico...
    12Z CAMs continue to ramp up convective activity today developing
    this afternoon off the southern Rockies with organized thunderstorm
    clusters shifting southeast over west into central TX overnight.
    Much of this activity is west/south of heavy precip from recent
    days, but given Gulf-sourced moisture extending up through west
    Texas (1.5 sigma above normal) and high instability, the Slight
    Risk is maintained and expanded a bit more into central Texas for
    overnight concerns.

    Furthermore, a boundary around the Houston metro activates this
    afternoon with a risk for repeating heavy thunderstorms there. A
    Slight Risk was raised around the greater Houston metro.

    Wegman/Jackson

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHEASTERN
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS...

    21Z Update...

    ...South-Central U.S./Texas...=20
    Yet another round of widespread heavy thunderstorm activity=20
    Tuesday over portions of the south- central CONUS. Diurnal activity
    originating on the Sacramento Mtns in NM will shift southeast over
    west TX through the evening. Abundant Gulf moisture remains over=20
    the area south of a stationary front over northern Texas. Storms=20
    will blossom in coverage towards sunset as the LLJ of additional=20
    Gulf moisture strengthens. The convection will both interact with=20
    the stationary front, a possible dryline in southeastern NM and far
    west Texas, and some subtle, but still important upper level=20
    impulses that eject out of the southern Rockies.

    The main change with 12Z guidance, particularly with CAMs today has
    been a focus farther south...south of the TX Panhandle. Therefore
    the northern portion of the Slight Risk was trimmed south with a
    bit more of the Rio Grande downstream of the Big Bend included.=20

    ...Gulf Coast and Eastern Seaboard...
    The Marginal Risk along the Gulf Coast and eastern seaboard again=20
    remains largely unchanged. Main risks include ongoing storms in=20
    New England at the start of the period, with some chance for=20
    largely disorganized convection from the Gulf Coast to the=20
    Carolinas. While some of these areas have also been hard hit with=20
    heavy rains in recent days, the lack of confidence in much=20
    organization to the storms favors a continuation of the Marginal=20
    Risk. Cell interactions are still likely to cause localized Slight
    Risk-level impacts along the Gulf Coast, but uncertainty remains at
    this time.

    Wegman/Jackson

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA...

    21Z Update...

    ...Southern Plains/Texas/Gulf Coast...
    Deep Gulf moisture will advect north across much of Texas and the=20
    Southeast on Wednesday. Slow- moving upper level shortwave energy=20
    will shift east across Texas through the period. The stationary=20
    front that had been across north-central Texas for much of the=20
    prior two days should begin to lift north as a warm front,=20
    especially Wednesday night as the nocturnal strengthening of the=20
    LLJ overcomes what little southward push of drier air north of the=20
    front is left. Meanwhile across West Texas, the typical dry line=20
    will also advance eastward, which will work to uplift the moisture=20
    and cause more widespread shower and thunderstorm activity. While=20
    the storms may be around in isolated clusters through the day, the=20
    greatest concentration of storms should initiate in the late=20
    afternoon and persist through the overnight. There is potential for
    some of the same areas of northern Texas will be hit with multiple
    rounds of storms once again. A higher-end Slight is in effect for
    portions of North Texas into southern Oklahoma.

    The main note for this area is guidance has wide variation of the
    main QPF axis. This includes the experimental RRFS which for 12Z
    highlights eastern Texas only for higher rainfall. However, global
    and regional models are farther west/north. Since uncertainty
    reigns, only small modifications to the Slight Risk were made -
    generally an east shift.

    The Marginal Risk was expanded east over the central Gulf Coast
    based on confidence of higher QPF inland from the coast.

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Up north towards the MN/IA border and southern WI, a subtle
    shortwave in the jet will interact with a weaker portion of the LLJ
    which will run into a drier air mass to the north. Showers and
    storms may train eastward across this region. However, instability
    will be a tremendous limiting factor in the potential for flash
    flooding. Soils are at or below normal for moisture in the area,
    which also will not help with flash flooding potential. A Marginal
    Risk remains in effect with a minor south expansion based on 12Z
    consensus including the ECMWF and GFS.

    ...Montana/Northern Rockies...
    Further south and east expansion of Marginal risk into the northern
    Plains and northern Rockies. Areas of convection will cross MT=20
    through the period, but the main concern at this time is coverage
    which may be somewhat limited. Low FFGs over this area could allow
    for isolated instances of flash flooding where there are favorable
    cell and terrain interactions.

    Wegman/Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5HNnjDzsDU3uipbYGHjj-_DDiLg3BMyr5v3qoc_UsRew= 74GxJGT63i9dRemiVXwGIU11618NBR05kYugLVwmpfFhMcc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5HNnjDzsDU3uipbYGHjj-_DDiLg3BMyr5v3qoc_UsRew= 74GxJGT63i9dRemiVXwGIU11618NBR05kYugLVwmzCVzBpE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5HNnjDzsDU3uipbYGHjj-_DDiLg3BMyr5v3qoc_UsRew= 74GxJGT63i9dRemiVXwGIU11618NBR05kYugLVwmtH4HlgU$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 10 00:54:22 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 100054
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    854 PM EDT Mon Jun 9 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHEAST, SOUTHEAST, GULF COAST, AND SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...01Z Update...
    Cut back on the western portions of the Slight and Marginal Risk
    areas across the OH Valley into western NY-PA, while also=20
    extending the Slight a little farther south to include more of=20
    western MD and a portion of northeast WV and far northwest VA. This
    largely based on observational and HRRR trends, with MPD #413 in=20
    effect through just after midnight EDT. Elsewhere, more minor=20
    modifications were made, again per the latest guidance and=20
    observational trends, including the latest (18Z) HREF exceedance=20 probabilities.=20

    Hurley

    Previous discussion below..

    ...Northeast...
    Occluded low over Wisconsin this morning will track northeast over
    the U.P. of Michigan tonight. South and east of the low, upper
    level divergence and forcing will be maximized as a 100 kt jet
    streak and enhanced divergence from a shortwave rounding the
    southern side of the low will increase the forcing for thunderstorms
    in the Slight Risk area of Pennsylvania and western New York. At
    the surface, a potent cold front will be moving east from the Great Lakes/Midwest and into Pennsylvania and New York. The front will
    contribute additional forcing for storms. Somewhat limited Gulf
    moisture will stream northward ahead of the front, raising PWATs up to
    1.5 inches (1.5 sigma above normal). Instability will also
    increase with daytime heating with MUCAPE values between 500 and
    1,500 J/kg, with the greatest instability into Pennsylvania.

    12Z CAMs generally agree that the current activity moving from Ohio
    intensifies diurnally across PA and NY. Soil moisture is elevated
    from recent rains, though storms will be quick- moving, which
    should temper the flash flooding threat somewhat. However,
    topographic and urbanized concerns warrants maintenance of the
    Slight Risk with some further trimming out on the eastern side in
    NY per coordination with WFO BTV.

    ...Southeast...
    Multiple rounds of heavy thunderstorms are expected to traverse
    across the Southeast through. Ample Gulf moisture is being supplied
    on strong (30kt) low level flow with as PWATs 1.75 to 2 inches
    over MS/AL/GA where activity should focus/repeat. Meanwhile, a
    potent shortwave at the base of the trough currently over the
    lower-mid Miss River and cold pool interactions from ongoing
    activity will force additional convection. As the shortwave crosses
    the Southeast this evening, the storms should evolve upscale from
    random clusters to lines. As the surface cold front begins to
    stall, backbuilding storms will become increasingly possible in
    many of the same areas of southern Mississippi to the western
    Florida Panhandle that saw convective activity this morning.

    Widely scattered instances of flash flooding can be expected inland
    from the central Gulf Coast where a Slight Risk is maintained.

    ...Texas and New Mexico...
    12Z CAMs continue to ramp up convective activity today developing
    this afternoon off the southern Rockies with organized thunderstorm
    clusters shifting southeast over west into central TX overnight.
    Much of this activity is west/south of heavy precip from recent
    days, but given Gulf-sourced moisture extending up through west
    Texas (1.5 sigma above normal) and high instability, the Slight
    Risk is maintained and expanded a bit more into central Texas for
    overnight concerns.

    Furthermore, a boundary around the Houston metro activates this
    afternoon with a risk for repeating heavy thunderstorms there. A
    Slight Risk was raised around the greater Houston metro.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHEASTERN
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS...

    21Z Update...

    ...South-Central U.S./Texas...
    Yet another round of widespread heavy thunderstorm activity
    Tuesday over portions of the south- central CONUS. Diurnal activity
    originating on the Sacramento Mtns in NM will shift southeast over
    west TX through the evening. Abundant Gulf moisture remains over
    the area south of a stationary front over northern Texas. Storms
    will blossom in coverage towards sunset as the LLJ of additional
    Gulf moisture strengthens. The convection will both interact with
    the stationary front, a possible dryline in southeastern NM and far
    west Texas, and some subtle, but still important upper level
    impulses that eject out of the southern Rockies.

    The main change with 12Z guidance, particularly with CAMs today has
    been a focus farther south...south of the TX Panhandle. Therefore
    the northern portion of the Slight Risk was trimmed south with a
    bit more of the Rio Grande downstream of the Big Bend included.

    ...Gulf Coast and Eastern Seaboard...
    The Marginal Risk along the Gulf Coast and eastern seaboard again
    remains largely unchanged. Main risks include ongoing storms in
    New England at the start of the period, with some chance for
    largely disorganized convection from the Gulf Coast to the
    Carolinas. While some of these areas have also been hard hit with
    heavy rains in recent days, the lack of confidence in much
    organization to the storms favors a continuation of the Marginal
    Risk. Cell interactions are still likely to cause localized Slight
    Risk-level impacts along the Gulf Coast, but uncertainty remains at
    this time.

    Wegman/Jackson

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA...

    21Z Update...

    ...Southern Plains/Texas/Gulf Coast...
    Deep Gulf moisture will advect north across much of Texas and the
    Southeast on Wednesday. Slow- moving upper level shortwave energy
    will shift east across Texas through the period. The stationary
    front that had been across north-central Texas for much of the
    prior two days should begin to lift north as a warm front,
    especially Wednesday night as the nocturnal strengthening of the
    LLJ overcomes what little southward push of drier air north of the
    front is left. Meanwhile across West Texas, the typical dry line
    will also advance eastward, which will work to uplift the moisture
    and cause more widespread shower and thunderstorm activity. While
    the storms may be around in isolated clusters through the day, the
    greatest concentration of storms should initiate in the late
    afternoon and persist through the overnight. There is potential for
    some of the same areas of northern Texas will be hit with multiple
    rounds of storms once again. A higher-end Slight is in effect for
    portions of North Texas into southern Oklahoma.

    The main note for this area is guidance has wide variation of the
    main QPF axis. This includes the experimental RRFS which for 12Z
    highlights eastern Texas only for higher rainfall. However, global
    and regional models are farther west/north. Since uncertainty
    reigns, only small modifications to the Slight Risk were made -
    generally an east shift.

    The Marginal Risk was expanded east over the central Gulf Coast
    based on confidence of higher QPF inland from the coast.

    ...Upper Midwest...
    Up north towards the MN/IA border and southern WI, a subtle
    shortwave in the jet will interact with a weaker portion of the LLJ
    which will run into a drier air mass to the north. Showers and
    storms may train eastward across this region. However, instability
    will be a tremendous limiting factor in the potential for flash
    flooding. Soils are at or below normal for moisture in the area,
    which also will not help with flash flooding potential. A Marginal
    Risk remains in effect with a minor south expansion based on 12Z
    consensus including the ECMWF and GFS.

    ...Montana/Northern Rockies...
    Further south and east expansion of Marginal risk into the northern
    Plains and northern Rockies. Areas of convection will cross MT
    through the period, but the main concern at this time is coverage
    which may be somewhat limited. Low FFGs over this area could allow
    for isolated instances of flash flooding where there are favorable
    cell and terrain interactions.

    Wegman/Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4RmaYTSgBrGSBtcUGNn-bOf5YohJyMyEVDqDy1mBe_Ug= Wmn56sxPAUTfZIu_JQ3KO58oD2u2XPIzrpB3lRSldDKSKFY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4RmaYTSgBrGSBtcUGNn-bOf5YohJyMyEVDqDy1mBe_Ug= Wmn56sxPAUTfZIu_JQ3KO58oD2u2XPIzrpB3lRSlkCaq02Q$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4RmaYTSgBrGSBtcUGNn-bOf5YohJyMyEVDqDy1mBe_Ug= Wmn56sxPAUTfZIu_JQ3KO58oD2u2XPIzrpB3lRSlNQfIo0Q$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 10 08:22:33 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 100821
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    421 AM EDT Tue Jun 10 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS...

    Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms will impact portions
    of southern and western Texas today into tonight. The first round
    ongoing now in west Texas may persist in a weakened and likely
    non-impactful form (from a flooding perspective, at least) past 12Z
    this morning across central Texas. Generally the only expected
    impact from these storms will be a priming (or continued
    saturation) of the soils.=20

    New storms may begin to develop as early as midday across the
    Trans-Pecos and Edwards Plateau regions of west Texas. They'll
    develop in large part due to an influx of deep Gulf moisture into
    southwest Texas, with PWATs up to 1.5 inches, or about 2 sigma
    above normal for that area of west Texas. This amount of
    atmospheric moisture along with maximum solar heating for this time
    of year will allow instability to become extreme in some areas,
    likely exceeding 4,000 J/kg. Thus, in addition to any severe
    threat, the storms will be more than capable of producing very
    heavy rain, with rates of 3+ inches per hour with the strongest=20
    storms. The storms will likely congeal in the Edwards Plateau
    region late in the afternoon, generally following the Rio Grande
    south and east. With atmospheric moisture only increasing as the
    storms move towards the Gulf, they will remain prolific rainmakers
    well into the overnight hours.

    Soils across the Edwards Plateau and south-central Texas are very
    dry, with most of the recent heavy rainfall occurring well north of
    this area. While this will work to inhibit riverine flooding, the
    soils should initially be quite hydrophobic because they've been so
    dry, increasing the flash flooding threat. Thus, a higher end
    Slight is in effect for the area from San Antonio west to the Rio
    Grande.

    Elsewhere, a stalled out front just inland from the Gulf Coast in
    the Southeast may act as a catalyst for additional convection from
    Houston east to the Carolinas. Despite the presence of the front,
    there will be little to organize the storms, which will still have
    plentiful tropical moisture to work with, so the Marginal Risk was
    maintained. Further north, drier air should preclude any flooding
    along the Delmarva, while the forcing remains west of Maine...so
    those areas were removed from the Marginal with this update.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    A strong low-level jet will continue to advect abundant Gulf
    moisture northward across the southern Plains on Wednesday. This
    moisture will run into the dryline across west Texas, which in turn
    will result in renewed rounds of convection forming along the
    dryline, or remnant cold pool boundaries from prior convection. The
    new storms will drop their own cold pools, likely causing
    additional convection. Since moisture replenishment will be
    constant, the storms should have no trouble maintaining themselves
    as they move across Texas. Expect at least some morning convection
    to be ongoing at the start of the period from the overnight storms
    in Day 1. However, as on previous days, the lion's share of the
    heavy rainfall across Texas will result from afternoon convection
    congealing into one or more MCSs during the overnight period when
    the LLJ ramps up.=20

    The primary source of uncertainty, as is very common with
    convection, is where the convection forms. Depending on the
    guidance, that could be anywhere across the eastern half of Texas.
    While the consensus is along the I-35 corridor from south of San
    Antonio to the Oklahoma state line, the variance longitudinally is
    from the Permian Basin to the Louisiana state line. This
    uncertainty with both where the convection will form and how
    organized it will be largely precluded any potential Moderate Risk
    upgrades, although several urban areas including the Metroplex,=20
    Waco, Austin, and San Antonio may all have a higher flash flooding=20
    threat. Further, the signal for heavy rain has decreased somewhat,
    which also reduced any confidence in any upgrades at this time.

    Elsewhere across the Southeast, the abundance of atmospheric
    moisture all along the Gulf Coast should support almost any=20
    convection having at least some potential to cause isolated flash=20
    flooding. Given that and somewhat higher rainfall amounts forecast,
    the Marginal Risk was expanded greatly to include the rest of the=20
    Gulf Coast and up the Atlantic coast to North Carolina with this=20
    update. Tidal flooding with the full Strawberry Moon may compound=20
    any flooding from rainfall at the shore.

    The Marginal Risks in the upper Midwest and across much of Montana
    were largely unchanged with this update. The LLJ, or an extension
    thereof will provide moisture for storms to draw from in both these
    areas, as upper level shortwave disturbances provide the forcing
    for those storms to form and loosely organize. Drier soils in these
    areas should preclude all but an isolated flash flooding threat.

    Other than the extension of the Marginal Risk in the Southeast,
    changes elsewhere were minor, with a southward nudge to the Slight
    in Texas.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA...

    ...Southern Plains...

    A rinse and repeat pattern across Texas will continue on Thursday
    as plentiful Gulf moisture from an increasingly strong LLJ
    continues to advect northward across the southern Plains. It
    appears that the storms will shift slightly further east as
    compared to Wednesday, but the I-35 corridor from San Antonio
    through the Metroplex to Oklahoma City appears to still be in the
    bullseye for the most rainfall, especially in Texas. While a
    higher-end Slight remains in effect across this area, should
    current rainfall amounts hold, then a Moderate Risk may eventually
    be needed as the effects from multiple consecutive days featuring
    storms dropping heavy rain lower the thresholds needed for
    additional flash flooding to develop. Once again the guidance is
    all over the place, which is fairly normal for a Day 3 forecast for
    convection in the summer. Thus, for now, will hold off on any
    upgrades. What can be said is by this point, a more well defined
    corridor of heavier rain appears likely to have developed,
    generally tied to a dry line that inches eastward with each passing
    day.=20

    ...Southern Minnesota...

    Forecast rainfall amounts have increased significantly across
    southern Minnesota as the guidance suggests a mesolow forms across Nebraska/South Dakota/Iowa and slowly drifts east, latching on to
    the northern extent of the plume of Gulf moisture gradually
    expanding across much of the Southeast by Thursday. This low will
    provide the forcing, with plentiful moisture and a decent frontal
    boundary to its north all acting to support training and
    backbuilding thunderstorms across southern Minnesota, including the
    Twin Cities. With some potential for overlap on the southern side
    of the storms with rainfall from the Day 2/Wednesday period, and
    the rapid increase in forecast rainfall, a Slight Risk upgrade was
    introduced with this update. Storms are likely to develop further
    west back across the Dakotas and eastern Montana, but the greatest
    forcing and thus, highest risk of flash flooding will be into
    Minnesota.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7CEBJAsByiNZz1ikzJgZ_VWf1lLgvIL3aepA1dYTE1Y8= OR9Sk1u3LurdjiQGZwXoDLEcMED1pzAPHUX2EkRPcM9dhak$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7CEBJAsByiNZz1ikzJgZ_VWf1lLgvIL3aepA1dYTE1Y8= OR9Sk1u3LurdjiQGZwXoDLEcMED1pzAPHUX2EkRP4Uo8ETY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7CEBJAsByiNZz1ikzJgZ_VWf1lLgvIL3aepA1dYTE1Y8= OR9Sk1u3LurdjiQGZwXoDLEcMED1pzAPHUX2EkRPjWD7ox8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 10 15:59:14 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 101559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Tue Jun 10 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS...

    ...Texas...

    Another round of showers and thunderstorms will impact portions of
    southern and western Texas this afternoon into tonight. Ongoing=20
    convection over northeastern Texas is slowly weakening though new
    activity is developing downstream over LA along an elevated
    boundary.=20

    New storms should develop this afternoon across the Trans-Pecos=20
    and Edwards Plateau regions of west Texas. Deep Gulf moisture (PW
    values > 1.5" or +2 sigma) combined with maximum solar heating will
    allow instability to become extreme in some areas, likely=20
    exceeding 4,000 J/kg. Thus, in addition to any severe threat, the=20
    storms will be more than capable of producing very heavy rain, with
    rates of 3+ inches per hour with the strongest storms. The storms=20
    will likely congeal in the Edwards Plateau region late in the=20
    afternoon, generally following the Rio Grande south and east. With=20 atmospheric moisture only increasing as the storms move towards the
    Gulf, they will remain prolific rainmakers well into the overnight
    hours. 12Z HREF probs still show 3"/hr probs >30% in some areas.=20

    Soils across the Edwards Plateau and south-central Texas are very
    dry, with most of the recent heavy rainfall occurring well north of
    this area. While this will work to inhibit riverine flooding, the
    soils should initially be quite hydrophobic because they've been so
    dry, increasing the flash flooding threat. Thus, a higher end
    Slight is in effect for the area from San Antonio west to the Rio
    Grande.

    ...Southeast and Northeast...

    Elsewhere, a stalled out front just inland from the Gulf Coast in
    the Southeast may act as a catalyst for additional convection from
    eastern Texas eastward to the Carolinas. Despite the presence of=20
    the front and plenty of tropical moisture, there will be little to
    organize the storms. The Marginal Risk was maintained with an
    expectation of only isolated heavier rainfall. Farther north,=20
    rainfall ahead of an advancing cold front into the Northeast may
    add to soggier soils from this morning's rainfall, so the Marginal
    Risk outline was maintained here as well for this afternoon.=20

    Wegman/Fracasso

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    A strong low-level jet will continue to advect abundant Gulf
    moisture northward across the southern Plains on Wednesday. This
    moisture will run into the dryline across west Texas, which in turn
    will result in renewed rounds of convection forming along the
    dryline, or remnant cold pool boundaries from prior convection. The
    new storms will drop their own cold pools, likely causing
    additional convection. Since moisture replenishment will be
    constant, the storms should have no trouble maintaining themselves
    as they move across Texas. Expect at least some morning convection
    to be ongoing at the start of the period from the overnight storms
    in Day 1. However, as on previous days, the lion's share of the
    heavy rainfall across Texas will result from afternoon convection
    congealing into one or more MCSs during the overnight period when
    the LLJ ramps up.

    The primary source of uncertainty, as is very common with
    convection, is where the convection forms. Depending on the
    guidance, that could be anywhere across the eastern half of Texas.
    While the consensus is along the I-35 corridor from south of San
    Antonio to the Oklahoma state line, the variance longitudinally is
    from the Permian Basin to the Louisiana state line. This
    uncertainty with both where the convection will form and how
    organized it will be largely precluded any potential Moderate Risk
    upgrades, although several urban areas including the Metroplex,
    Waco, Austin, and San Antonio may all have a higher flash flooding
    threat. Further, the signal for heavy rain has decreased somewhat,
    which also reduced any confidence in any upgrades at this time.

    Elsewhere across the Southeast, the abundance of atmospheric
    moisture all along the Gulf Coast should support almost any
    convection having at least some potential to cause isolated flash
    flooding. Given that and somewhat higher rainfall amounts forecast,
    the Marginal Risk was expanded greatly to include the rest of the
    Gulf Coast and up the Atlantic coast to North Carolina with this
    update. Tidal flooding with the full Strawberry Moon may compound
    any flooding from rainfall at the shore.

    The Marginal Risks in the upper Midwest and across much of Montana
    were largely unchanged with this update. The LLJ, or an extension
    thereof will provide moisture for storms to draw from in both these
    areas, as upper level shortwave disturbances provide the forcing
    for those storms to form and loosely organize. Drier soils in these
    areas should preclude all but an isolated flash flooding threat.

    Other than the extension of the Marginal Risk in the Southeast,
    changes elsewhere were minor, with a southward nudge to the Slight
    in Texas.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA...

    ...Southern Plains...

    A rinse and repeat pattern across Texas will continue on Thursday
    as plentiful Gulf moisture from an increasingly strong LLJ
    continues to advect northward across the southern Plains. It
    appears that the storms will shift slightly further east as
    compared to Wednesday, but the I-35 corridor from San Antonio
    through the Metroplex to Oklahoma City appears to still be in the
    bullseye for the most rainfall, especially in Texas. While a
    higher-end Slight remains in effect across this area, should
    current rainfall amounts hold, then a Moderate Risk may eventually
    be needed as the effects from multiple consecutive days featuring
    storms dropping heavy rain lower the thresholds needed for
    additional flash flooding to develop. Once again the guidance is
    all over the place, which is fairly normal for a Day 3 forecast for
    convection in the summer. Thus, for now, will hold off on any
    upgrades. What can be said is by this point, a more well defined
    corridor of heavier rain appears likely to have developed,
    generally tied to a dry line that inches eastward with each passing
    day.

    ...Southern Minnesota...

    Forecast rainfall amounts have increased significantly across
    southern Minnesota as the guidance suggests a mesolow forms across Nebraska/South Dakota/Iowa and slowly drifts east, latching on to
    the northern extent of the plume of Gulf moisture gradually
    expanding across much of the Southeast by Thursday. This low will
    provide the forcing, with plentiful moisture and a decent frontal
    boundary to its north all acting to support training and
    backbuilding thunderstorms across southern Minnesota, including the
    Twin Cities. With some potential for overlap on the southern side
    of the storms with rainfall from the Day 2/Wednesday period, and
    the rapid increase in forecast rainfall, a Slight Risk upgrade was
    introduced with this update. Storms are likely to develop further
    west back across the Dakotas and eastern Montana, but the greatest
    forcing and thus, highest risk of flash flooding will be into
    Minnesota.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_uIuiAEGsVp8CbvaekeCYOi4R1ETsZ05rmk_vn3Tbth0= wSn-9z9oB-A_nm3zUakqeTeFu9re-Vje8-zJLy5tiKK8aa0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_uIuiAEGsVp8CbvaekeCYOi4R1ETsZ05rmk_vn3Tbth0= wSn-9z9oB-A_nm3zUakqeTeFu9re-Vje8-zJLy5tVbkaG88$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_uIuiAEGsVp8CbvaekeCYOi4R1ETsZ05rmk_vn3Tbth0= wSn-9z9oB-A_nm3zUakqeTeFu9re-Vje8-zJLy5tWBSF3g4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 10 19:42:34 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 101942
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    342 PM EDT Tue Jun 10 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 10 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS...

    ...Texas...

    Another round of showers and thunderstorms will impact portions of
    southern and western Texas this afternoon into tonight. Ongoing
    convection over northeastern Texas is slowly weakening though new
    activity is developing downstream over LA along an elevated
    boundary.

    New storms should develop this afternoon across the Trans-Pecos
    and Edwards Plateau regions of west Texas. Deep Gulf moisture (PW
    values > 1.5" or +2 sigma) combined with maximum solar heating will
    allow instability to become extreme in some areas, likely
    exceeding 4,000 J/kg. Thus, in addition to any severe threat, the
    storms will be more than capable of producing very heavy rain, with
    rates of 3+ inches per hour with the strongest storms. The storms
    will likely congeal in the Edwards Plateau region late in the
    afternoon, generally following the Rio Grande south and east. With
    atmospheric moisture only increasing as the storms move towards the
    Gulf, they will remain prolific rainmakers well into the overnight
    hours. 12Z HREF probs still show 3"/hr probs >30% in some areas.

    Soils across the Edwards Plateau and south-central Texas are very
    dry, with most of the recent heavy rainfall occurring well north of
    this area. While this will work to inhibit riverine flooding, the
    soils should initially be quite hydrophobic because they've been so
    dry, increasing the flash flooding threat. Thus, a higher end
    Slight is in effect for the area from San Antonio west to the Rio
    Grande.

    ...Southeast and Northeast...

    Elsewhere, a stalled out front just inland from the Gulf Coast in
    the Southeast may act as a catalyst for additional convection from
    eastern Texas eastward to the Carolinas. Despite the presence of
    the front and plenty of tropical moisture, there will be little to
    organize the storms. The Marginal Risk was maintained with an
    expectation of only isolated heavier rainfall. Farther north,
    rainfall ahead of an advancing cold front into the Northeast may
    add to soggier soils from this morning's rainfall, so the Marginal
    Risk outline was maintained here as well for this afternoon.

    Wegman/Fracasso

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...Texas into the Southeast...

    A strong low-level jet will continue to advect abundant Gulf
    moisture northward across the southern Plains on Wednesday. This
    moisture will run into the dryline across west Texas, which in turn
    will result in renewed rounds of convection forming along the
    dryline, or remnant cold pool boundaries from prior convection. The
    new storms will drop their own cold pools, likely causing
    additional convection. Since moisture replenishment will be
    constant, the storms should have no trouble maintaining themselves
    as they move across Texas. Expect at least some morning convection
    to be ongoing at the start of the period from the overnight storms
    in Day 1 which have acted to increase soil moisture (and lower FFG
    values). However, as on previous days, the lion's share of the=20
    heavy rainfall across Texas will result from afternoon convection=20
    congealing into one or more MCSs during the overnight period when=20
    the LLJ ramps up.

    The primary source of uncertainty, as is very common with
    convection, is where the convection forms. Depending on the
    guidance, that could be anywhere across the eastern half of Texas.
    While the consensus is along the I-35 corridor from south of San
    Antonio to the Oklahoma state line, the variance longitudinally is
    from the Permian Basin to the Louisiana state line and has not yet
    converged even with another cycle of guidance. This uncertainty=20
    with both where the convection will form and how organized it will=20
    be largely precluded any potential Moderate Risk upgrades, although
    several urban areas including the Metroplex, Waco, Austin, and San
    Antonio may all have a higher flash flooding threat. Further, their
    remains a separation (north-south) between the HREF guidance and
    RRFS ensemble guidance, which also reduced any confidence in any=20
    upgrades at this time. However, the rather high 10th percentile
    amounts nearing 0.75-1.00" around and just south of the Metroplex
    does decrease the potential for just Marginal impacts. 90th
    percentile QPF was well above 4-6" with some more aggressive CAMs
    showing closer to 10" over the 24-hr period. Both the GEFS
    M-Climate QPF (near max values) and ECMWF EFI/SoT (0.7-0.8/near 1)
    suggest that potential is real.

    Elsewhere across the Southeast, the abundance of atmospheric
    moisture all along the Gulf Coast should support almost any
    convection having at least some potential to cause isolated flash
    flooding. Tidal flooding with the full Strawberry Moon may=20
    compound any flooding from rainfall at the shore. Maintained the=20
    expansive Marginal Risk that also includes Florida where a modest=20
    surge in moisture may support heavier rain totals over=20
    southern/southwest portions of the state.

    ...Western High Plains and the Corn Belt...

    The Marginal Risks in the upper Midwest and across much of Montana
    were largely unchanged with this update. The LLJ, or an extension=20
    thereof, will provide moisture for storms to draw from in both=20
    these areas, as upper level shortwave disturbances provide the=20
    forcing for those storms to form and loosely organize. Drier soils=20
    in these areas should preclude all but an isolated flash flooding=20
    threat. However, more sensitive areas along the Divide/Northern
    Rockies would also be at risk from comparatively less QPF than
    farther east.=20

    Wegman/Fracasso

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA...

    ...Southern Plains...

    Mid-level shortwave will slowly move through the area Thursday but
    will favor a similar area in eastern Texas as day 2. Plentiful=20
    Gulf moisture from an increasingly strong LLJ continues to advect=20
    northward across the southern Plains. It appears that the storms=20
    will shift slightly further east as compared to Wednesday, but the=20
    I-35 corridor from San Antonio through the Metroplex to Oklahoma=20
    City appears to still be in the bullseye for the most rainfall,=20
    especially in Texas. While a higher-end Slight was maintained across
    this area, a Moderate Risk areas may be needed depending on how the
    rainfall footprint evolves over the next two days. The guidance is
    all over the place, which is fairly normal for a Day 3 forecast=20
    for convection in the summer, with hints of a north-south
    bifurcation in the QPF (e.g., GFS, RRFS, and ECMWF-AIFS QPF).=20

    ...Southern Minnesota...

    Northern extent of the plume of Gulf moisture will surge northward
    and intersect a mid-level shortwave and surface boundary from
    southern SD eastward into southern MN. This setup will support=20
    training and backbuilding thunderstorms across southern Minnesota,=20
    including the Twin Cities, on Thursday. With some potential for=20
    overlap on the southern side of the storms with rainfall from the=20
    Day 2/Wednesday period, the Slight Risk was maintained from
    overnight. Model QPF was quite displaced north-south across MN
    (e.g., NAM, GFS, and RRFS farther north) but will hedge on the=20
    southern side of the QPF spread closer to the better instability
    (and playing into the typical bias). Storms are likely to develop=20
    further west back across the Dakotas and eastern Montana, but the=20
    greatest forcing and thus, highest risk of flash flooding will be=20
    into Minnesota.

    Wegman/Fracasso


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9VcIqjDchJU-TCgPQK4nZ16axRbKHJeJhU6YhsCzunk5= hsNkLqe1HrVczL8gl051uvZWhpK9nsu3rXrhaXSHaPeTCHE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9VcIqjDchJU-TCgPQK4nZ16axRbKHJeJhU6YhsCzunk5= hsNkLqe1HrVczL8gl051uvZWhpK9nsu3rXrhaXSH3u7VNhk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9VcIqjDchJU-TCgPQK4nZ16axRbKHJeJhU6YhsCzunk5= hsNkLqe1HrVczL8gl051uvZWhpK9nsu3rXrhaXSHehWuYPA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 11 00:19:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 110018
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    818 PM EDT Tue Jun 10 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS...

    ...01Z Update...
    Pared a bit of the Marginal Risk area, including portions of the=20
    Gulf Coast region from the Upper TX Coast through central LA, based
    on the latest observational trends (mosaic
    radar/satellite/mesoanalysis) and current HRRR/HREF output. Given
    the sub-7.0 C/KM mid level lapse rates along with 0-6km bulk shear
    values of 25kts or less, predominately pulse-variety convection=20
    will wane significantly in intensity and areal-extent after sunset
    per the negative dCAPE/dt trends from the latest SPC mesoanalysis.

    Slight Risk area area across TX still looks good, though per the
    latest observational and guidance trends, did include a little=20
    more of South TX along the Rio Grande.=20

    Hurley


    Previous discussion...

    ...Texas...
    Another round of showers and thunderstorms will impact portions of
    southern and western Texas this afternoon into tonight. Ongoing=20
    convection over northeastern Texas is slowly weakening though new=20
    activity is developing downstream over LA along an elevated=20
    boundary.

    New storms should develop this afternoon across the Trans-Pecos
    and Edwards Plateau regions of west Texas. Deep Gulf moisture (PW
    values > 1.5" or +2 sigma) combined with maximum solar heating will
    allow instability to become extreme in some areas, likely
    exceeding 4,000 J/kg. Thus, in addition to any severe threat, the
    storms will be more than capable of producing very heavy rain, with
    rates of 3+ inches per hour with the strongest storms. The storms
    will likely congeal in the Edwards Plateau region late in the
    afternoon, generally following the Rio Grande south and east. With
    atmospheric moisture only increasing as the storms move towards the
    Gulf, they will remain prolific rainmakers well into the overnight
    hours. 12Z HREF probs still show 3"/hr probs >30% in some areas.

    Soils across the Edwards Plateau and south-central Texas are very
    dry, with most of the recent heavy rainfall occurring well north of
    this area. While this will work to inhibit riverine flooding, the
    soils should initially be quite hydrophobic because they've been so
    dry, increasing the flash flooding threat. Thus, a higher end
    Slight is in effect for the area from San Antonio west to the Rio
    Grande.


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...Texas into the Southeast...

    A strong low-level jet will continue to advect abundant Gulf
    moisture northward across the southern Plains on Wednesday. This
    moisture will run into the dryline across west Texas, which in turn
    will result in renewed rounds of convection forming along the
    dryline, or remnant cold pool boundaries from prior convection. The
    new storms will drop their own cold pools, likely causing
    additional convection. Since moisture replenishment will be
    constant, the storms should have no trouble maintaining themselves
    as they move across Texas. Expect at least some morning convection
    to be ongoing at the start of the period from the overnight storms
    in Day 1 which have acted to increase soil moisture (and lower FFG
    values). However, as on previous days, the lion's share of the
    heavy rainfall across Texas will result from afternoon convection
    congealing into one or more MCSs during the overnight period when
    the LLJ ramps up.

    The primary source of uncertainty, as is very common with
    convection, is where the convection forms. Depending on the
    guidance, that could be anywhere across the eastern half of Texas.
    While the consensus is along the I-35 corridor from south of San
    Antonio to the Oklahoma state line, the variance longitudinally is
    from the Permian Basin to the Louisiana state line and has not yet
    converged even with another cycle of guidance. This uncertainty
    with both where the convection will form and how organized it will
    be largely precluded any potential Moderate Risk upgrades, although
    several urban areas including the Metroplex, Waco, Austin, and San
    Antonio may all have a higher flash flooding threat. Further, their
    remains a separation (north-south) between the HREF guidance and
    RRFS ensemble guidance, which also reduced any confidence in any
    upgrades at this time. However, the rather high 10th percentile
    amounts nearing 0.75-1.00" around and just south of the Metroplex
    does decrease the potential for just Marginal impacts. 90th
    percentile QPF was well above 4-6" with some more aggressive CAMs
    showing closer to 10" over the 24-hr period. Both the GEFS
    M-Climate QPF (near max values) and ECMWF EFI/SoT (0.7-0.8/near 1)
    suggest that potential is real.

    Elsewhere across the Southeast, the abundance of atmospheric
    moisture all along the Gulf Coast should support almost any
    convection having at least some potential to cause isolated flash
    flooding. Tidal flooding with the full Strawberry Moon may
    compound any flooding from rainfall at the shore. Maintained the
    expansive Marginal Risk that also includes Florida where a modest
    surge in moisture may support heavier rain totals over
    southern/southwest portions of the state.

    ...Western High Plains and the Corn Belt...

    The Marginal Risks in the upper Midwest and across much of Montana
    were largely unchanged with this update. The LLJ, or an extension
    thereof, will provide moisture for storms to draw from in both
    these areas, as upper level shortwave disturbances provide the
    forcing for those storms to form and loosely organize. Drier soils
    in these areas should preclude all but an isolated flash flooding
    threat. However, more sensitive areas along the Divide/Northern
    Rockies would also be at risk from comparatively less QPF than
    farther east.

    Wegman/Fracasso

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA...

    ...Southern Plains...

    Mid-level shortwave will slowly move through the area Thursday but
    will favor a similar area in eastern Texas as day 2. Plentiful
    Gulf moisture from an increasingly strong LLJ continues to advect
    northward across the southern Plains. It appears that the storms
    will shift slightly further east as compared to Wednesday, but the
    I-35 corridor from San Antonio through the Metroplex to Oklahoma
    City appears to still be in the bullseye for the most rainfall,
    especially in Texas. While a higher-end Slight was maintained across
    this area, a Moderate Risk areas may be needed depending on how the
    rainfall footprint evolves over the next two days. The guidance is
    all over the place, which is fairly normal for a Day 3 forecast
    for convection in the summer, with hints of a north-south
    bifurcation in the QPF (e.g., GFS, RRFS, and ECMWF-AIFS QPF).

    ...Southern Minnesota...

    Northern extent of the plume of Gulf moisture will surge northward
    and intersect a mid-level shortwave and surface boundary from
    southern SD eastward into southern MN. This setup will support
    training and backbuilding thunderstorms across southern Minnesota,
    including the Twin Cities, on Thursday. With some potential for
    overlap on the southern side of the storms with rainfall from the
    Day 2/Wednesday period, the Slight Risk was maintained from
    overnight. Model QPF was quite displaced north-south across MN
    (e.g., NAM, GFS, and RRFS farther north) but will hedge on the
    southern side of the QPF spread closer to the better instability
    (and playing into the typical bias). Storms are likely to develop
    further west back across the Dakotas and eastern Montana, but the
    greatest forcing and thus, highest risk of flash flooding will be
    into Minnesota.

    Wegman/Fracasso


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5RC8m2kOnRfggO2jfCEdmq0NAiJOhSUQNbPoivAsu1oM= QWTAC4iPTdsvwwoRdH3t1HosCTOrsUKi_0PT_TvS1i6gnC8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5RC8m2kOnRfggO2jfCEdmq0NAiJOhSUQNbPoivAsu1oM= QWTAC4iPTdsvwwoRdH3t1HosCTOrsUKi_0PT_TvS0234Q8Y$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5RC8m2kOnRfggO2jfCEdmq0NAiJOhSUQNbPoivAsu1oM= QWTAC4iPTdsvwwoRdH3t1HosCTOrsUKi_0PT_TvSgSXOxbk$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 11 08:15:19 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 110814
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    414 AM EDT Wed Jun 11 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...Texas...

    In coordination with FWD/Dallas, TX and HGX/Houston, TX forecast
    offices, a Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this update
    for portions of central Texas. As is typical with summertime
    convection, the signal is a mess. The current MCS in central Texas
    is largely agreed upon in the CAMs guidance to persist well into
    the afternoon and advance across the rest of east Texas and into=20
    Louisiana, as a broken but slow moving line of storms. Most of the
    guidance suggests new convection will form in the afternoon with
    peak heating and instability across the Texas Moderate and Slight
    Risk areas. Those storms will generally track north and east,=20
    which will follow behind the first round of storms into east=20
    Texas. Most importantly, yet another round forms during the
    overnight, likely in the Moderate Risk area. This too will
    organize into an MCS, but the southern end of those storms may hang
    back and backbuild, resulting in prolonged heavy rain in a narrow
    swath somewhere in central Texas.

    While this is the broad scenario expected, the details of each
    round of storms will play a large role as to the coverage and
    severity of flash flooding today and tonight. The majority of the
    guidance suggests this will be most prevalent in the Moderate Risk
    area of central Texas, but this is far from unanimous, with a
    second grouping of guidance suggesting these storms form further
    south towards Houston. Thus, this is an unusually low confidence
    Moderate Risk for the Day 1 period. Compounding concerns is that
    much of northern and central Texas has seen multiple rounds of
    heavy rain in recent days, including at present, which has
    sufficiently saturated soils across the area. Thus, multiple inches
    of rain associated with these storms which will be drawing on air
    with PWATs to 2 inches, will quickly overwhelm streams and creeks,
    especially in urban areas, resulting in flash flooding. These very
    favorable antecedent conditions have also contributed to confidence
    increasing for a Moderate Risk upgrade.

    HREF guidance should neighborhood probabilities for at least 3
    inches of rain today and tonight in the Moderate Risk area of over
    70%, and a 20-50% chance of over 5 inches of rain. Given the
    abundance of moisture available, both slow moving storms, multiple
    rounds of heavy rain in some areas, and the potential for training
    and back building will all work to increase the flash flooding
    potential across much of eastern Texas, also supporting the
    Moderate Risk upgrade.

    As the convective evolution becomes more clear through the day and
    into tonight, it's likely there may need to be adjustments to the
    Moderate Risk area, which as mentioned above, appears most likely
    to extend south to the Houston Metro. However, given the multiple
    rounds of rain that have impacted the DFW Metroplex in recent days,
    and the heavy rain that has hit San Antonio over the past few
    hours, any storms favoring any of those metros could require the
    Moderate Risk to expand to those areas of the Texas Triangle.

    ...Gulf Coast through the Carolinas...

    A stalled front along the Gulf Coast will act as a focus for
    afternoon and evening convection due to an abundance of Gulf
    moisture available for the storms to draw from. The broad Marginal
    Risk remains in place for all of the rest of the Gulf Coast and
    through the Carolinas. The signal has expanded a bit north so the
    Marginal was expanded north as well to the Hampton Roads area.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    The Marginal Risk in the area around the MN/IA border has been left
    largely unchanged, with most of the concerning convection likely
    occurring late tonight at the nose of the LLJ.

    ...Idaho/Montana...

    The Marginal Risk was left largely unchanged here as well with
    periods of rain occurring over mostly hydrophobic soils resulting
    in localized flash flooding, particularly around any burn scars.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION AND MUCH OF EASTERN TEXAS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA
    INTO WESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...Arklatex Region & East Texas...

    Strong southerly flow of deep Gulf moisture will continue across
    east Texas and the Arklatex region on Thursday. There will very
    likely be an ongoing MCS across eastern Texas at the start of the
    period Thursday, which will progress eastward into Arkansas and
    Louisiana through the day. There may be a lull in most of the
    shower and thunderstorm activity for the afternoon hours in many=20
    areas, but renewed activity will develop through the evening as the
    LLJ restrengthens, and a slow moving upper level shortwave helps
    drive a dryline east over Oklahoma and Texas, which will cause
    numerous storms to form and organize into an MCS near the Arklatex
    region through the overnight, as PWATs remain up near 2 inches,
    promoting very heavy rainfall with the strongest storms. Once
    again, this region has been hard hit with heavy rain in recent
    days, and therefore this latest round of heavy rain will not take
    much to result in flash flooding. Depending on how much rain falls
    in this region on Day 1/Wednesday, it is possible a Moderate Risk
    upgrade may be needed for this region as well as confidence
    increases and the CAMs include the Thursday night period. There is
    enough uncertainty as to how far west the storms are (which will be
    highly dependent on the placement of the dryline), and therefore,
    the Metroplex, Houston, and Austin remain included in a higher end
    Slight Risk, which extends into the southeast corner of Oklahoma
    and adjacent western Arkansas counties.

    ...Southern Minnesota into Western Wisconsin...

    At the nose of the upper level jet, a mesolow is likely to form=20
    over the central Plains Thursday afternoon, which will then drift=20
    northeast into Iowa on Thursday night. Abundant Gulf moisture will=20
    ride northward ahead of the low, running into a strong stationary=20
    front which will likely be set up over central Minnesota. This=20
    front will provide the lift for training and backbuilding=20
    thunderstorms across much of southern Minnesota Thursday afternoon=20
    and evening. The storms appear likely to impact all of the Twin=20
    Cities and surrounding suburbs, which when added to the wetter=20
    soils from any rainfall from Day 1/Wednesday, may result in widely=20
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The Slight Risk area was=20
    nudged northward with this update, following the latest changes in=20
    the ensemble guidance, but rainfall amounts are largely unchanged.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION INTO PORTIONS OF THE MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    A slow-moving upper level trough will drift east across Oklahoma
    and Arkansas through the period. It will draw on abundant Gulf
    moisture with PWATs at or above 2 inches to force numerous slow
    moving thunderstorms to develop from northeast Texas northeast to
    the Mississippi-Ohio River confluence. The southerly flow will also
    upslope into the Ozarks of central Arkansas, likely resulting in
    localized increases in rainfall rates across much of Arkansas on
    Friday and especially into Friday night. Given the expanded
    eastward movement of the storms, the inherited Slight Risk was
    expanded significantly north and east into the mid-Mississippi
    Valley with this update. A higher-end Slight is in effect for the
    Arklatex region through much of central Arkansas, where the
    heaviest rainfall is expected. Periods of heavy rain across the
    Arklatex and western Arkansas are expected from the Day 2/Thursday
    period, which will greatly moisten the antecedent soil conditions
    in advance of the heavy rainfall expected on Friday and Friday
    night. Here too, a Moderate Risk upgrade may be needed with future
    updates should the preponderance of guidance remain consistent at
    targeting the Arklatex and central Arkansas with the heaviest
    rainfall.

    New Marginal Risk areas were added across much of the Great Lakes,
    where training storms may cause isolated flash flooding, the
    northeast corner of Colorado due to some upslope with the flow
    turning southeasterly into an expected stationary front over that
    area, and the third consecutive day of moderate rainfall across
    much of central Montana, aided by increasing divergence ahead of a
    potent shortwave moving across the Pacific Northwest by Friday
    night. In each of these areas, only isolated flash flooding is
    expected as the signal for heavy rain in these areas remains
    diffuse.

    Isolated to scattered disorganized convection is likely to impact
    much of the eastern seaboard Friday afternoon with peak heating.
    Given the increasing moisture moving up the coast, any storms that
    remain in a given area for too long or backbuild along their cold
    pools could cause isolated instances of flash flooding. Given a
    lack of discernible forcing, for now have left the area out of a
    Marginal citing a less than 5% chance of flash flooding, but the
    threat is non-zero. The Marginal may need to be expanded eastward
    across much of the eastern seaboard in the coming days should
    current trends continue.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-KgE6B5evz00A9z__X26ujh2BBC1tFgIwCZx0zgWMK05= fos0VZEfZ28SjoB2swyrAAqKcfXSiRCaG8ZWHyqhIKwYubU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-KgE6B5evz00A9z__X26ujh2BBC1tFgIwCZx0zgWMK05= fos0VZEfZ28SjoB2swyrAAqKcfXSiRCaG8ZWHyqhqci2u88$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-KgE6B5evz00A9z__X26ujh2BBC1tFgIwCZx0zgWMK05= fos0VZEfZ28SjoB2swyrAAqKcfXSiRCaG8ZWHyqhZHEpb1s$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 11 15:46:09 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 111545
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1145 AM EDT Wed Jun 11 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...Texas...

    16Z Update: The forecast premise remains the same with 12z CAMs
    finally all catching on to a better degree of what has occurred,
    what is occurring, and general expectations going forward. Expected
    to see a redevelopment of convection across East-Central TX this
    afternoon within a pocket of higher theta_E remaining over the I-45
    corridor between DFW/HOU, aligned well within the higher CAPE,
    lower CIN depiction on the recent RAP Mesoanalysis. This will
    congeal and move northeast allowing for some of the areas hit hard
    this morning to get hit again in wake of the departing complex
    moving through the ArkLaTex. Multiple FFW's have occurred to the
    southeast of the DFW metro, an area where local FFG's have taken a
    hit over the past 24-36 hrs. This setup will allow for a continued
    impact in those zones, so the MDT was expanded a bit further to the
    northeast to account for the trends in the latest CAMs and
    impacted areas.=20

    ULL progression over West TX will maintain a posture of relatively
    modest buoyancy returning over the Concho Valley down through the
    eastern Edwards Plateau and adjacent Hill Country by late-afternoon
    and evening. Stronger mid-level perturbations pivoting around the
    ULL center will eventually rotate back around and provide a
    significant increase in regional ascent within the above zone
    leading to cell initiation back over areas hit pretty hard the past
    24 hrs. Incredibly low FFG's (<1" over 1/3/6 hr intervals) are
    centered over Hill Country with much of the CAMs depicting some
    action moving back over the area creating an environment capable of
    inducing flash flood prospects over the region as CAMs print out
    1-2"/hr rates in some of the stronger convection in the area. By
    the evening, the increasing large scale forcing will navigate into
    Central TX with the I-35 corridor between DFW to San Antonio and 50
    miles either side becoming the primary target for heavy rainfall.=20
    Return flow within the 850-700mb level is expected to allow for
    greater low-level convergence across the area with convection
    orienting more southwest to northeast with some training prospects
    along the tight theta_E gradient anticipated between eastern Hill
    Country and the I-45 corridor. HREF blended mean QPF is very high
    (3-5") within the I-35 corridor between Austin to Waco leading to
    40-60% neighborhood probs for >5" over the area. Will need to
    monitor for areas south of Austin as a secondary maxima down
    towards New Braunfels and San Antonio has been showing up on
    guidance with some of the higher probs for >5" also expanding into
    that zone. With those locations inheriting higher FFG's, prospects
    for flash flooding a bit less than those to the north, but a
    higher-end SLGT is now forecast for that area with some potential
    of an expansion of the MDT if trends continue.=20

    The SLGT was removed over CRP and parts of Deep South TX in
    conjunction with radar trends. The southern tip of TX, including
    the Brownsville/McAllen area was removed from any ERO as the area
    will maintain a relative min in QPF for the period.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    In coordination with FWD/Dallas, TX and HGX/Houston, TX forecast
    offices, a Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this update
    for portions of central Texas. As is typical with summertime
    convection, the signal is a mess. The current MCS in central Texas
    is largely agreed upon in the CAMs guidance to persist well into
    the afternoon and advance across the rest of east Texas and into
    Louisiana, as a broken but slow moving line of storms. Most of the
    guidance suggests new convection will form in the afternoon with
    peak heating and instability across the Texas Moderate and Slight
    Risk areas. Those storms will generally track north and east,
    which will follow behind the first round of storms into east
    Texas. Most importantly, yet another round forms during the
    overnight, likely in the Moderate Risk area. This too will
    organize into an MCS, but the southern end of those storms may hang
    back and backbuild, resulting in prolonged heavy rain in a narrow
    swath somewhere in central Texas.

    While this is the broad scenario expected, the details of each
    round of storms will play a large role as to the coverage and
    severity of flash flooding today and tonight. The majority of the
    guidance suggests this will be most prevalent in the Moderate Risk
    area of central Texas, but this is far from unanimous, with a
    second grouping of guidance suggesting these storms form further
    south towards Houston. Thus, this is an unusually low confidence
    Moderate Risk for the Day 1 period. Compounding concerns is that
    much of northern and central Texas has seen multiple rounds of
    heavy rain in recent days, including at present, which has
    sufficiently saturated soils across the area. Thus, multiple inches
    of rain associated with these storms which will be drawing on air
    with PWATs to 2 inches, will quickly overwhelm streams and creeks,
    especially in urban areas, resulting in flash flooding. These very
    favorable antecedent conditions have also contributed to confidence
    increasing for a Moderate Risk upgrade.

    HREF guidance should neighborhood probabilities for at least 3
    inches of rain today and tonight in the Moderate Risk area of over
    70%, and a 20-50% chance of over 5 inches of rain. Given the
    abundance of moisture available, both slow moving storms, multiple
    rounds of heavy rain in some areas, and the potential for training
    and back building will all work to increase the flash flooding
    potential across much of eastern Texas, also supporting the
    Moderate Risk upgrade.

    As the convective evolution becomes more clear through the day and
    into tonight, it's likely there may need to be adjustments to the
    Moderate Risk area, which as mentioned above, appears most likely
    to extend south to the Houston Metro. However, given the multiple
    rounds of rain that have impacted the DFW Metroplex in recent days,
    and the heavy rain that has hit San Antonio over the past few
    hours, any storms favoring any of those metros could require the
    Moderate Risk to expand to those areas of the Texas Triangle.

    Wegman


    ...Gulf Coast through the Carolinas...

    16Z Update: Minor expansion north of the MRGL across parts of the
    Lower Mississippi Valley as 12z CAMs came in a bit north with the
    heavier precip today. Still looking at locally robust rates of
    2-3"/hr in the heaviest convection, but very much more pulse
    variety as you align between Central LA across the South and up
    into the VA Tidewater. Modest neighborhood probabilities for >3"
    (35-50%) exist over parts of the Central Gulf Coast and Coastal NC,
    so the threat for at least low-end MRGL persists. No changes we
    made in those regions.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A stalled front along the Gulf Coast will act as a focus for
    afternoon and evening convection due to an abundance of Gulf
    moisture available for the storms to draw from. The broad Marginal
    Risk remains in place for all of the rest of the Gulf Coast and
    through the Carolinas. The signal has expanded a bit north so the
    Marginal was expanded north as well to the Hampton Roads area.

    Wegman


    ...Upper Midwest...

    16Z Update: The MRGL was expanded a bit eastward to include
    western Milwaukee metro, but otherwise the threat remains on the
    low-end of MRGL. A relatively high probability on the EAS of at=20
    least 1" across parts of Northern IA and Southwest WI exist
    (60-80%), but a significant drop off in the probs (<15%) for at=20
    least 2" means the threat is capped between 1-3" for the general=20
    max. With antecedent moisture pretty low over the area, this is a
    setup coincident with a MRGL.=20

    Kleebauer=20

    ..Previous Discussion..

    The Marginal Risk in the area around the MN/IA border has been left
    largely unchanged, with most of the concerning convection likely
    occurring late tonight at the nose of the LLJ.

    Wegman


    ...Idaho/Montana...

    16Z Update: PWATs running between 1.5-2.5 deviations above normal
    across the Northern Rockies and interior PAC NW will lead to
    locally heavy rainfall potential over Eastern OR through much of
    ID/MT/WY this afternoon and early-evening before dissipating with
    loss of diurnal heating. CAMs indicate the risk of 1-2" of rainfall
    in heavier cores which would certainly cause problems in any urban
    zones and remnant burn scares. The MRGL was expanded through WY and
    adjusted a touch south. The threat remains sufficient for a broad
    risk area given the environment in place.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    The Marginal Risk was left largely unchanged here as well with
    periods of rain occurring over mostly hydrophobic soils resulting
    in localized flash flooding, particularly around any burn scars.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION AND MUCH OF EASTERN TEXAS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA
    INTO WESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...Arklatex Region & East Texas...

    Strong southerly flow of deep Gulf moisture will continue across
    east Texas and the Arklatex region on Thursday. There will very
    likely be an ongoing MCS across eastern Texas at the start of the
    period Thursday, which will progress eastward into Arkansas and
    Louisiana through the day. There may be a lull in most of the
    shower and thunderstorm activity for the afternoon hours in many
    areas, but renewed activity will develop through the evening as the
    LLJ restrengthens, and a slow moving upper level shortwave helps
    drive a dryline east over Oklahoma and Texas, which will cause
    numerous storms to form and organize into an MCS near the Arklatex
    region through the overnight, as PWATs remain up near 2 inches,
    promoting very heavy rainfall with the strongest storms. Once
    again, this region has been hard hit with heavy rain in recent
    days, and therefore this latest round of heavy rain will not take
    much to result in flash flooding. Depending on how much rain falls
    in this region on Day 1/Wednesday, it is possible a Moderate Risk
    upgrade may be needed for this region as well as confidence
    increases and the CAMs include the Thursday night period. There is
    enough uncertainty as to how far west the storms are (which will be
    highly dependent on the placement of the dryline), and therefore,
    the Metroplex, Houston, and Austin remain included in a higher end
    Slight Risk, which extends into the southeast corner of Oklahoma
    and adjacent western Arkansas counties.

    ...Southern Minnesota into Western Wisconsin...

    At the nose of the upper level jet, a mesolow is likely to form
    over the central Plains Thursday afternoon, which will then drift
    northeast into Iowa on Thursday night. Abundant Gulf moisture will
    ride northward ahead of the low, running into a strong stationary
    front which will likely be set up over central Minnesota. This
    front will provide the lift for training and backbuilding
    thunderstorms across much of southern Minnesota Thursday afternoon
    and evening. The storms appear likely to impact all of the Twin
    Cities and surrounding suburbs, which when added to the wetter
    soils from any rainfall from Day 1/Wednesday, may result in widely
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The Slight Risk area was
    nudged northward with this update, following the latest changes in
    the ensemble guidance, but rainfall amounts are largely unchanged.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION INTO PORTIONS OF THE MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    A slow-moving upper level trough will drift east across Oklahoma
    and Arkansas through the period. It will draw on abundant Gulf
    moisture with PWATs at or above 2 inches to force numerous slow
    moving thunderstorms to develop from northeast Texas northeast to
    the Mississippi-Ohio River confluence. The southerly flow will also
    upslope into the Ozarks of central Arkansas, likely resulting in
    localized increases in rainfall rates across much of Arkansas on
    Friday and especially into Friday night. Given the expanded
    eastward movement of the storms, the inherited Slight Risk was
    expanded significantly north and east into the mid-Mississippi
    Valley with this update. A higher-end Slight is in effect for the
    Arklatex region through much of central Arkansas, where the
    heaviest rainfall is expected. Periods of heavy rain across the
    Arklatex and western Arkansas are expected from the Day 2/Thursday
    period, which will greatly moisten the antecedent soil conditions
    in advance of the heavy rainfall expected on Friday and Friday
    night. Here too, a Moderate Risk upgrade may be needed with future
    updates should the preponderance of guidance remain consistent at
    targeting the Arklatex and central Arkansas with the heaviest
    rainfall.

    New Marginal Risk areas were added across much of the Great Lakes,
    where training storms may cause isolated flash flooding, the
    northeast corner of Colorado due to some upslope with the flow
    turning southeasterly into an expected stationary front over that
    area, and the third consecutive day of moderate rainfall across
    much of central Montana, aided by increasing divergence ahead of a
    potent shortwave moving across the Pacific Northwest by Friday
    night. In each of these areas, only isolated flash flooding is
    expected as the signal for heavy rain in these areas remains
    diffuse.

    Isolated to scattered disorganized convection is likely to impact
    much of the eastern seaboard Friday afternoon with peak heating.
    Given the increasing moisture moving up the coast, any storms that
    remain in a given area for too long or backbuild along their cold
    pools could cause isolated instances of flash flooding. Given a
    lack of discernible forcing, for now have left the area out of a
    Marginal citing a less than 5% chance of flash flooding, but the
    threat is non-zero. The Marginal may need to be expanded eastward
    across much of the eastern seaboard in the coming days should
    current trends continue.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8LycBScaiZ1SzQ01Z_wb8e-GEBM-hxHO7UhGAP8OkRa7= CsPOEJeXkRh1f892s-jlkmCrw_KT3VF7IAROTr_jlmaUnD0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8LycBScaiZ1SzQ01Z_wb8e-GEBM-hxHO7UhGAP8OkRa7= CsPOEJeXkRh1f892s-jlkmCrw_KT3VF7IAROTr_jIOHiTMw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8LycBScaiZ1SzQ01Z_wb8e-GEBM-hxHO7UhGAP8OkRa7= CsPOEJeXkRh1f892s-jlkmCrw_KT3VF7IAROTr_jbmvpypo$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 11 19:42:25 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 111942
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    342 PM EDT Wed Jun 11 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jun 11 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...Texas...

    16Z Update: The forecast premise remains the same with 12z CAMs
    finally all catching on to a better degree of what has occurred,
    what is occurring, and general expectations going forward. Expected
    to see a redevelopment of convection across East-Central TX this
    afternoon within a pocket of higher theta_E remaining over the I-45
    corridor between DFW/HOU, aligned well within the higher CAPE,
    lower CIN depiction on the recent RAP Mesoanalysis. This will
    congeal and move northeast allowing for some of the areas hit hard
    this morning to get hit again in wake of the departing complex
    moving through the ArkLaTex. Multiple FFW's have occurred to the
    southeast of the DFW metro, an area where local FFG's have taken a
    hit over the past 24-36 hrs. This setup will allow for a continued
    impact in those zones, so the MDT was expanded a bit further to the
    northeast to account for the trends in the latest CAMs and
    impacted areas.

    ULL progression over West TX will maintain a posture of relatively
    modest buoyancy returning over the Concho Valley down through the
    eastern Edwards Plateau and adjacent Hill Country by late-afternoon
    and evening. Stronger mid-level perturbations pivoting around the
    ULL center will eventually rotate back around and provide a
    significant increase in regional ascent within the above zone
    leading to cell initiation back over areas hit pretty hard the past
    24 hrs. Incredibly low FFG's (<1" over 1/3/6 hr intervals) are
    centered over Hill Country with much of the CAMs depicting some
    action moving back over the area creating an environment capable of
    inducing flash flood prospects over the region as CAMs print out
    1-2"/hr rates in some of the stronger convection in the area. By
    the evening, the increasing large scale forcing will navigate into
    Central TX with the I-35 corridor between DFW to San Antonio and 50
    miles either side becoming the primary target for heavy rainfall.
    Return flow within the 850-700mb level is expected to allow for
    greater low-level convergence across the area with convection
    orienting more southwest to northeast with some training prospects
    along the tight theta_E gradient anticipated between eastern Hill
    Country and the I-45 corridor. HREF blended mean QPF is very high
    (3-5") within the I-35 corridor between Austin to Waco leading to
    40-60% neighborhood probs for >5" over the area. Will need to
    monitor for areas south of Austin as a secondary maxima down
    towards New Braunfels and San Antonio has been showing up on
    guidance with some of the higher probs for >5" also expanding into
    that zone. With those locations inheriting higher FFG's, prospects
    for flash flooding a bit less than those to the north, but a
    higher-end SLGT is now forecast for that area with some potential
    of an expansion of the MDT if trends continue.

    The SLGT was removed over CRP and parts of Deep South TX in
    conjunction with radar trends. The southern tip of TX, including
    the Brownsville/McAllen area was removed from any ERO as the area
    will maintain a relative min in QPF for the period.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    In coordination with FWD/Dallas, TX and HGX/Houston, TX forecast
    offices, a Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this update
    for portions of central Texas. As is typical with summertime
    convection, the signal is a mess. The current MCS in central Texas
    is largely agreed upon in the CAMs guidance to persist well into
    the afternoon and advance across the rest of east Texas and into
    Louisiana, as a broken but slow moving line of storms. Most of the
    guidance suggests new convection will form in the afternoon with
    peak heating and instability across the Texas Moderate and Slight
    Risk areas. Those storms will generally track north and east,
    which will follow behind the first round of storms into east
    Texas. Most importantly, yet another round forms during the
    overnight, likely in the Moderate Risk area. This too will
    organize into an MCS, but the southern end of those storms may hang
    back and backbuild, resulting in prolonged heavy rain in a narrow
    swath somewhere in central Texas.

    While this is the broad scenario expected, the details of each
    round of storms will play a large role as to the coverage and
    severity of flash flooding today and tonight. The majority of the
    guidance suggests this will be most prevalent in the Moderate Risk
    area of central Texas, but this is far from unanimous, with a
    second grouping of guidance suggesting these storms form further
    south towards Houston. Thus, this is an unusually low confidence
    Moderate Risk for the Day 1 period. Compounding concerns is that
    much of northern and central Texas has seen multiple rounds of
    heavy rain in recent days, including at present, which has
    sufficiently saturated soils across the area. Thus, multiple inches
    of rain associated with these storms which will be drawing on air
    with PWATs to 2 inches, will quickly overwhelm streams and creeks,
    especially in urban areas, resulting in flash flooding. These very
    favorable antecedent conditions have also contributed to confidence
    increasing for a Moderate Risk upgrade.

    HREF guidance should neighborhood probabilities for at least 3
    inches of rain today and tonight in the Moderate Risk area of over
    70%, and a 20-50% chance of over 5 inches of rain. Given the
    abundance of moisture available, both slow moving storms, multiple
    rounds of heavy rain in some areas, and the potential for training
    and back building will all work to increase the flash flooding
    potential across much of eastern Texas, also supporting the
    Moderate Risk upgrade.

    As the convective evolution becomes more clear through the day and
    into tonight, it's likely there may need to be adjustments to the
    Moderate Risk area, which as mentioned above, appears most likely
    to extend south to the Houston Metro. However, given the multiple
    rounds of rain that have impacted the DFW Metroplex in recent days,
    and the heavy rain that has hit San Antonio over the past few
    hours, any storms favoring any of those metros could require the
    Moderate Risk to expand to those areas of the Texas Triangle.

    Wegman


    ...Gulf Coast through the Carolinas...

    16Z Update: Minor expansion north of the MRGL across parts of the
    Lower Mississippi Valley as 12z CAMs came in a bit north with the
    heavier precip today. Still looking at locally robust rates of
    2-3"/hr in the heaviest convection, but very much more pulse
    variety as you align between Central LA across the South and up
    into the VA Tidewater. Modest neighborhood probabilities for >3"
    (35-50%) exist over parts of the Central Gulf Coast and Coastal NC,
    so the threat for at least low-end MRGL persists. No changes we
    made in those regions.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A stalled front along the Gulf Coast will act as a focus for
    afternoon and evening convection due to an abundance of Gulf
    moisture available for the storms to draw from. The broad Marginal
    Risk remains in place for all of the rest of the Gulf Coast and
    through the Carolinas. The signal has expanded a bit north so the
    Marginal was expanded north as well to the Hampton Roads area.

    Wegman


    ...Upper Midwest...

    16Z Update: The MRGL was expanded a bit eastward to include
    western Milwaukee metro, but otherwise the threat remains on the
    low-end of MRGL. A relatively high probability on the EAS of at
    least 1" across parts of Northern IA and Southwest WI exist
    (60-80%), but a significant drop off in the probs (<15%) for at
    least 2" means the threat is capped between 1-3" for the general
    max. With antecedent moisture pretty low over the area, this is a
    setup coincident with a MRGL.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    The Marginal Risk in the area around the MN/IA border has been left
    largely unchanged, with most of the concerning convection likely
    occurring late tonight at the nose of the LLJ.

    Wegman


    ...Idaho/Montana...

    16Z Update: PWATs running between 1.5-2.5 deviations above normal
    across the Northern Rockies and interior PAC NW will lead to
    locally heavy rainfall potential over Eastern OR through much of
    ID/MT/WY this afternoon and early-evening before dissipating with
    loss of diurnal heating. CAMs indicate the risk of 1-2" of rainfall
    in heavier cores which would certainly cause problems in any urban
    zones and remnant burn scares. The MRGL was expanded through WY and
    adjusted a touch south. The threat remains sufficient for a broad
    risk area given the environment in place.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    The Marginal Risk was left largely unchanged here as well with
    periods of rain occurring over mostly hydrophobic soils resulting
    in localized flash flooding, particularly around any burn scars.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION AND MUCH OF EASTERN TEXAS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA
    INTO WESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...Arklatex Region & East Texas...

    20Z Update: Modest expansion of the SLGT risk was necessary given
    the forecast QPF footprint of the heavier returns as far south as
    San Antonio and as far east as the middle TX coast. High-end SLGT
    is forecast for much of East TX through the ArkLaTex where
    antecedent soil moisture will be elevated after today's activity
    with a large 2-4+" rainfall likely dropping area FFG's
    significantly by this evening. 12z HREF neighborhood probabilities
    are relatively high (20-40%) for >5" across the area between
    CRP/EWX/HOU with a secondary probability maxima located over the
    ArkLaTex (15-30%). Guidance is coming into alignment on the
    heaviest precip being located in these two zones with scattered
    high amounts in the middle of the two regions, mainly within the
    I-45 corridor. A MDT risk was debated, but with the convective
    scheme initially still under some uncertainty, did not want to
    initiate an upgrade if trends in overnight QPF shift in positioning
    or magnitude. HREF EAS signals are high for >1" but drop off
    significantly when assessing >2", so there's still some discrepancy
    on specifics. Like for the D1, if models trend more favorably for
    any one area, there is a chance for a targeted upgrade over either
    of the two regions. For now, a broad SLGT risk remains with
    expansion through the Ozarks given the recent convective QPF trends
    over the more sensitive area for flash flood prospects.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    Strong southerly flow of deep Gulf moisture will continue across=20
    east Texas and the Arklatex region on Thursday. There will very=20
    likely be an ongoing MCS across eastern Texas at the start of the=20
    period Thursday, which will progress eastward into Arkansas and=20
    Louisiana through the day. There may be a lull in most of the=20
    shower and thunderstorm activity for the afternoon hours in many=20
    areas, but renewed activity will develop through the evening as the
    LLJ restrengthens, and a slow moving upper level shortwave helps=20
    drive a dryline east over Oklahoma and Texas, which will cause=20
    numerous storms to form and organize into an MCS near the Arklatex=20
    region through the overnight, as PWATs remain up near 2 inches,=20
    promoting very heavy rainfall with the strongest storms. Once=20
    again, this region has been hard hit with heavy rain in recent=20
    days, and therefore this latest round of heavy rain will not take=20
    much to result in flash flooding. Depending on how much rain falls=20
    in this region on Day 1/Wednesday, it is possible a Moderate Risk=20
    upgrade may be needed for this region as well as confidence=20
    increases and the CAMs include the Thursday night period. There is=20
    enough uncertainty as to how far west the storms are (which will be
    highly dependent on the placement of the dryline), and therefore,=20
    the Metroplex, Houston, and Austin remain included in a higher end=20
    Slight Risk, which extends into the southeast corner of Oklahoma=20
    and adjacent western Arkansas counties.

    Wegman


    ...Southern Minnesota into Western Wisconsin...

    20Z Update: The SLGT risk expansion to the north was initiated for
    the afternoon update, once again with the general QPF maxima
    bisecting the I-94 area and points west. A strong signal for >2" of
    rainfall is now present within the latest HREF EAS prob fields
    (40-60%), a testament to the consistency in CAMs with the placement
    of the heaviest QPF maximum that's forecast. Areal average totals=20
    of 2-3" are becoming more likely with the setup with local maxima
    between 4-6" plausible as neighborhood probs for >5" run between
    40-60%, as well across west-central MN. Training threat is the
    reasoning for this potential with hourly rates likely between
    1-2"/hr in the heaviest convective cores. Area FFG's are modest
    within each 1/3/6 hr interval, but could still take some rainfall
    initially prior to problems ensuing. Considering all of the above,
    the SLGT risk was generally maintained, but did adjust the overall
    risk area further west to account for the latest QPF shift in the
    hi-res and bias corrected ensemble.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    At the nose of the upper level jet, a mesolow is likely to form=20
    over the central Plains Thursday afternoon, which will then drift=20
    northeast into Iowa on Thursday night. Abundant Gulf moisture will=20
    ride northward ahead of the low, running into a strong stationary=20
    front which will likely be set up over central Minnesota. This=20
    front will provide the lift for training and backbuilding=20
    thunderstorms across much of southern Minnesota Thursday afternoon=20
    and evening. The storms appear likely to impact all of the Twin=20
    Cities and surrounding suburbs, which when added to the wetter=20
    soils from any rainfall from Day 1/Wednesday, may result in widely=20
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The Slight Risk area was=20
    nudged northward with this update, following the latest changes in=20
    the ensemble guidance, but rainfall amounts are largely unchanged.

    Wegman


    ...Carolina Piedmont through East Georgia...

    A combination of elevated moisture across the Southeast and strong
    differential heating away from the coastal plain will lead to a
    corridor of enhanced SBCAPE on the order of 2500-3500 J/kg across
    East GA up through the western half of the SC Piedmont. Scattered
    to numerous thunderstorms with relatively slow storm motions will
    enhance locally heavy rainfall capabilties with rates between
    2-3"/hr plausible in a few of the stronger cores. Urbanized zones
    within the region referenced above will be the most susceptible for
    flash flooding prospects with some of the latest CAMs going as high
    as 4-6" in some of the greater outputs anticipated. A MRGL risk was
    added to convey the threat and correlates well with the latest UFVS
    First Guess Fields.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION INTO PORTIONS OF THE MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    20Z Update: Main change in the period was a split of the MRGL risk
    across the Great Lakes/Ohio Valley area with now two separate risk
    areas with a large nil between the areas of interest. The SLGT risk
    threat with higher end potential still exists over the ArkLaTex
    into the Arkansas Ozarks with a chance at a targeted upgrade given
    the overlap signature of heavy rainfall (ArkLaTex) for 3
    consecutive periods. Ensemble bias corrected QPF trended a bit
    north with the heavier precip footprint, but this might be
    attributed more to the bias of a few models likely too far north
    with the expected maxima. Didn't deviate too far away from what was
    inherited across the Lower Mississippi Valley.=20

    The MRGL risks in place are on the lower end of the threshold with
    more isolated flash flood risks comparitively in either region.
    Best risk will likely be over Northern WI up towards Duluth for the
    Midwest MRGL and across MT for the western MRGL risk where ascent
    pattern is most favorable.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A slow-moving upper level trough will drift east across Oklahoma
    and Arkansas through the period. It will draw on abundant Gulf
    moisture with PWATs at or above 2 inches to force numerous slow
    moving thunderstorms to develop from northeast Texas northeast to
    the Mississippi-Ohio River confluence. The southerly flow will also
    upslope into the Ozarks of central Arkansas, likely resulting in
    localized increases in rainfall rates across much of Arkansas on
    Friday and especially into Friday night. Given the expanded
    eastward movement of the storms, the inherited Slight Risk was
    expanded significantly north and east into the mid-Mississippi
    Valley with this update. A higher-end Slight is in effect for the
    Arklatex region through much of central Arkansas, where the
    heaviest rainfall is expected. Periods of heavy rain across the
    Arklatex and western Arkansas are expected from the Day 2/Thursday
    period, which will greatly moisten the antecedent soil conditions
    in advance of the heavy rainfall expected on Friday and Friday
    night. Here too, a Moderate Risk upgrade may be needed with future
    updates should the preponderance of guidance remain consistent at
    targeting the Arklatex and central Arkansas with the heaviest
    rainfall.

    New Marginal Risk areas were added across much of the Great Lakes,
    where training storms may cause isolated flash flooding, the
    northeast corner of Colorado due to some upslope with the flow
    turning southeasterly into an expected stationary front over that
    area, and the third consecutive day of moderate rainfall across
    much of central Montana, aided by increasing divergence ahead of a
    potent shortwave moving across the Pacific Northwest by Friday
    night. In each of these areas, only isolated flash flooding is
    expected as the signal for heavy rain in these areas remains
    diffuse.

    Isolated to scattered disorganized convection is likely to impact
    much of the eastern seaboard Friday afternoon with peak heating.
    Given the increasing moisture moving up the coast, any storms that
    remain in a given area for too long or backbuild along their cold
    pools could cause isolated instances of flash flooding. Given a
    lack of discernible forcing, for now have left the area out of a
    Marginal citing a less than 5% chance of flash flooding, but the
    threat is non-zero. The Marginal may need to be expanded eastward
    across much of the eastern seaboard in the coming days should
    current trends continue.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9fm45BxGpPIsktPB2lGtbIdORzboffTqvHi_xpPMtsBs= 0S-KYNhSIy2tdyUbIA0TUXWQHLMntficIsm4xCitgHiVNEo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9fm45BxGpPIsktPB2lGtbIdORzboffTqvHi_xpPMtsBs= 0S-KYNhSIy2tdyUbIA0TUXWQHLMntficIsm4xCitJxvOXW4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9fm45BxGpPIsktPB2lGtbIdORzboffTqvHi_xpPMtsBs= 0S-KYNhSIy2tdyUbIA0TUXWQHLMntficIsm4xCitm5dusiM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 11 23:30:32 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 112330
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    730 PM EDT Wed Jun 11 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 230Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...Texas...
    23Z Update: Tweaks were made to the outlook areas based on late
    afternoon observational trends, but mostly due to the recent trends
    in the guidance -- in particular the recent HRRR/RRFS as well as
    the 18Z HREF. This resulted in a subtle southward shift in both the
    Moderate and Slight Risk areas across portions of South and South-
    Central TX, with the Moderate Risk area now encompassing both the
    Austin and San Antonio metro areas.=20

    Across the Moderate Risk area, increasing large-scale ascent=20
    overnight ahead of the slow-moving upper shortwave along with a=20
    favorable thermodynamic profile (PWs aoa 2" and MUCAPEs 1500-2000=20
    J/Kg) will make for highly efficient warm rain processes within a=20
    ribbon of strong low-level moisture transport (+2 to 2.5 standard=20
    deviations above normal). Meanwhile, easterly QLCS progression will
    likely retard somewhat overnight as per the shrinking Corfidi=20
    Vectors, as the LLJ increases and veers, aligning nearly parallel=20
    and approaching the same magnitude of the mean 850-300 mb flow.=20
    This will enhance the risk of cell training, which is expected to
    maximize within the Moderate Risk area.

    Per the latest (18Z) HREF, probabilities of 12hr rainfall exceeding
    5" through 12Z Thu peak between 40-60% within the Moderate Risk
    area, while isolated probabilities of 20-30% of >8" are also noted.=20

    Hurley


    ..Previous Discussion..

    ...Texas...
    16Z Update: The forecast premise remains the same with 12z CAMs=20
    finally all catching on to a better degree of what has occurred,=20
    what is occurring, and general expectations going forward. Expected
    to see a redevelopment of convection across East-Central TX this=20
    afternoon within a pocket of higher theta_E remaining over the I-45
    corridor between DFW/HOU, aligned well within the higher CAPE,=20
    lower CIN depiction on the recent RAP Mesoanalysis. This will=20
    congeal and move northeast allowing for some of the areas hit hard=20
    this morning to get hit again in wake of the departing complex=20
    moving through the ArkLaTex. Multiple FFW's have occurred to the=20
    southeast of the DFW metro, an area where local FFG's have taken a=20
    hit over the past 24-36 hrs. This setup will allow for a continued=20
    impact in those zones, so the MDT was expanded a bit further to the
    northeast to account for the trends in the latest CAMs and=20
    impacted areas.

    ULL progression over West TX will maintain a posture of relatively
    modest buoyancy returning over the Concho Valley down through the
    eastern Edwards Plateau and adjacent Hill Country by late-afternoon
    and evening. Stronger mid-level perturbations pivoting around the
    ULL center will eventually rotate back around and provide a
    significant increase in regional ascent within the above zone
    leading to cell initiation back over areas hit pretty hard the past
    24 hrs. Incredibly low FFG's (<1" over 1/3/6 hr intervals) are
    centered over Hill Country with much of the CAMs depicting some
    action moving back over the area creating an environment capable of
    inducing flash flood prospects over the region as CAMs print out
    1-2"/hr rates in some of the stronger convection in the area. By
    the evening, the increasing large scale forcing will navigate into
    Central TX with the I-35 corridor between DFW to San Antonio and 50
    miles either side becoming the primary target for heavy rainfall.
    Return flow within the 850-700mb level is expected to allow for
    greater low-level convergence across the area with convection
    orienting more southwest to northeast with some training prospects
    along the tight theta_E gradient anticipated between eastern Hill
    Country and the I-45 corridor. HREF blended mean QPF is very high
    (3-5") within the I-35 corridor between Austin to Waco leading to
    40-60% neighborhood probs for >5" over the area. Will need to
    monitor for areas south of Austin as a secondary maxima down
    towards New Braunfels and San Antonio has been showing up on
    guidance with some of the higher probs for >5" also expanding into
    that zone. With those locations inheriting higher FFG's, prospects
    for flash flooding a bit less than those to the north, but a
    higher-end SLGT is now forecast for that area with some potential
    of an expansion of the MDT if trends continue.

    The SLGT was removed over CRP and parts of Deep South TX in
    conjunction with radar trends. The southern tip of TX, including
    the Brownsville/McAllen area was removed from any ERO as the area
    will maintain a relative min in QPF for the period.


    ...Gulf Coast through the Carolinas...
    16Z Update: Minor expansion north of the MRGL across parts of the=20
    Lower Mississippi Valley as 12z CAMs came in a bit north with the=20
    heavier precip today. Still looking at locally robust rates of=20
    2-3"/hr in the heaviest convection, but very much more pulse=20
    variety as you align between Central LA across the South and up=20
    into the VA Tidewater. Modest neighborhood probabilities for >3"=20
    (35-50%) exist over parts of the Central Gulf Coast and Coastal NC,
    so the threat for at least low-end MRGL persists. No changes we=20
    made in those regions.


    ...Upper Midwest... 16Z Update: The MRGL was expanded a bit=20
    eastward to include western Milwaukee metro, but otherwise the=20
    threat remains on the low-end of MRGL. A relatively high=20
    probability on the EAS of at least 1" across parts of Northern IA=20
    and Southwest WI exist (60-80%), but a significant drop off in the=20
    probs (<15%) for at least 2" means the threat is capped between=20
    1-3" for the general max. With antecedent moisture pretty low over=20
    the area, this is a setup coincident with a MRGL.


    ...Idaho/Montana...
    16Z Update: PWATs running between 1.5-2.5 deviations above normal=20
    across the Northern Rockies and interior PAC NW will lead to=20
    locally heavy rainfall potential over Eastern OR through much of=20
    ID/MT/WY this afternoon and early-evening before dissipating with=20
    loss of diurnal heating. CAMs indicate the risk of 1-2" of rainfall
    in heavier cores which would certainly cause problems in any urban
    zones and remnant burn scares. The MRGL was expanded through WY=20
    and adjusted a touch south. The threat remains sufficient for a=20
    broad risk area given the environment in place.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION AND MUCH OF EASTERN TEXAS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA
    INTO WESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...Arklatex Region & East Texas...

    20Z Update: Modest expansion of the SLGT risk was necessary given
    the forecast QPF footprint of the heavier returns as far south as
    San Antonio and as far east as the middle TX coast. High-end SLGT
    is forecast for much of East TX through the ArkLaTex where
    antecedent soil moisture will be elevated after today's activity
    with a large 2-4+" rainfall likely dropping area FFG's
    significantly by this evening. 12z HREF neighborhood probabilities
    are relatively high (20-40%) for >5" across the area between
    CRP/EWX/HOU with a secondary probability maxima located over the
    ArkLaTex (15-30%). Guidance is coming into alignment on the
    heaviest precip being located in these two zones with scattered
    high amounts in the middle of the two regions, mainly within the
    I-45 corridor. A MDT risk was debated, but with the convective
    scheme initially still under some uncertainty, did not want to
    initiate an upgrade if trends in overnight QPF shift in positioning
    or magnitude. HREF EAS signals are high for >1" but drop off
    significantly when assessing >2", so there's still some discrepancy
    on specifics. Like for the D1, if models trend more favorably for
    any one area, there is a chance for a targeted upgrade over either
    of the two regions. For now, a broad SLGT risk remains with
    expansion through the Ozarks given the recent convective QPF trends
    over the more sensitive area for flash flood prospects.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    Strong southerly flow of deep Gulf moisture will continue across
    east Texas and the Arklatex region on Thursday. There will very
    likely be an ongoing MCS across eastern Texas at the start of the
    period Thursday, which will progress eastward into Arkansas and
    Louisiana through the day. There may be a lull in most of the
    shower and thunderstorm activity for the afternoon hours in many
    areas, but renewed activity will develop through the evening as the
    LLJ restrengthens, and a slow moving upper level shortwave helps
    drive a dryline east over Oklahoma and Texas, which will cause
    numerous storms to form and organize into an MCS near the Arklatex
    region through the overnight, as PWATs remain up near 2 inches,
    promoting very heavy rainfall with the strongest storms. Once
    again, this region has been hard hit with heavy rain in recent
    days, and therefore this latest round of heavy rain will not take
    much to result in flash flooding. Depending on how much rain falls
    in this region on Day 1/Wednesday, it is possible a Moderate Risk
    upgrade may be needed for this region as well as confidence
    increases and the CAMs include the Thursday night period. There is
    enough uncertainty as to how far west the storms are (which will be
    highly dependent on the placement of the dryline), and therefore,
    the Metroplex, Houston, and Austin remain included in a higher end
    Slight Risk, which extends into the southeast corner of Oklahoma
    and adjacent western Arkansas counties.

    Wegman


    ...Southern Minnesota into Western Wisconsin...

    20Z Update: The SLGT risk expansion to the north was initiated for
    the afternoon update, once again with the general QPF maxima
    bisecting the I-94 area and points west. A strong signal for >2" of
    rainfall is now present within the latest HREF EAS prob fields
    (40-60%), a testament to the consistency in CAMs with the placement
    of the heaviest QPF maximum that's forecast. Areal average totals
    of 2-3" are becoming more likely with the setup with local maxima
    between 4-6" plausible as neighborhood probs for >5" run between
    40-60%, as well across west-central MN. Training threat is the
    reasoning for this potential with hourly rates likely between
    1-2"/hr in the heaviest convective cores. Area FFG's are modest
    within each 1/3/6 hr interval, but could still take some rainfall
    initially prior to problems ensuing. Considering all of the above,
    the SLGT risk was generally maintained, but did adjust the overall
    risk area further west to account for the latest QPF shift in the
    hi-res and bias corrected ensemble.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    At the nose of the upper level jet, a mesolow is likely to form
    over the central Plains Thursday afternoon, which will then drift
    northeast into Iowa on Thursday night. Abundant Gulf moisture will
    ride northward ahead of the low, running into a strong stationary
    front which will likely be set up over central Minnesota. This
    front will provide the lift for training and backbuilding
    thunderstorms across much of southern Minnesota Thursday afternoon
    and evening. The storms appear likely to impact all of the Twin
    Cities and surrounding suburbs, which when added to the wetter
    soils from any rainfall from Day 1/Wednesday, may result in widely
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The Slight Risk area was
    nudged northward with this update, following the latest changes in
    the ensemble guidance, but rainfall amounts are largely unchanged.

    Wegman


    ...Carolina Piedmont through East Georgia...

    A combination of elevated moisture across the Southeast and strong
    differential heating away from the coastal plain will lead to a
    corridor of enhanced SBCAPE on the order of 2500-3500 J/kg across
    East GA up through the western half of the SC Piedmont. Scattered
    to numerous thunderstorms with relatively slow storm motions will
    enhance locally heavy rainfall capabilities with rates between
    2-3"/hr plausible in a few of the stronger cores. Urbanized zones
    within the region referenced above will be the most susceptible for
    flash flooding prospects with some of the latest CAMs going as high
    as 4-6" in some of the greater outputs anticipated. A MRGL risk was
    added to convey the threat and correlates well with the latest UFVS
    First Guess Fields.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION INTO PORTIONS OF THE MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    20Z Update: Main change in the period was a split of the MRGL risk
    across the Great Lakes/Ohio Valley area with now two separate risk
    areas with a large nil between the areas of interest. The SLGT risk
    threat with higher end potential still exists over the ArkLaTex
    into the Arkansas Ozarks with a chance at a targeted upgrade given
    the overlap signature of heavy rainfall (ArkLaTex) for 3
    consecutive periods. Ensemble bias corrected QPF trended a bit
    north with the heavier precip footprint, but this might be
    attributed more to the bias of a few models likely too far north
    with the expected maxima. Didn't deviate too far away from what was
    inherited across the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    The MRGL risks in place are on the lower end of the threshold with
    more isolated flash flood risks comparatively in either region.
    Best risk will likely be over Northern WI up towards Duluth for the
    Midwest MRGL and across MT for the western MRGL risk where ascent
    pattern is most favorable.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A slow-moving upper level trough will drift east across Oklahoma
    and Arkansas through the period. It will draw on abundant Gulf
    moisture with PWATs at or above 2 inches to force numerous slow
    moving thunderstorms to develop from northeast Texas northeast to
    the Mississippi-Ohio River confluence. The southerly flow will also
    upslope into the Ozarks of central Arkansas, likely resulting in
    localized increases in rainfall rates across much of Arkansas on
    Friday and especially into Friday night. Given the expanded
    eastward movement of the storms, the inherited Slight Risk was
    expanded significantly north and east into the mid-Mississippi
    Valley with this update. A higher-end Slight is in effect for the
    Arklatex region through much of central Arkansas, where the
    heaviest rainfall is expected. Periods of heavy rain across the
    Arklatex and western Arkansas are expected from the Day 2/Thursday
    period, which will greatly moisten the antecedent soil conditions
    in advance of the heavy rainfall expected on Friday and Friday
    night. Here too, a Moderate Risk upgrade may be needed with future
    updates should the preponderance of guidance remain consistent at
    targeting the Arklatex and central Arkansas with the heaviest
    rainfall.

    New Marginal Risk areas were added across much of the Great Lakes,
    where training storms may cause isolated flash flooding, the
    northeast corner of Colorado due to some upslope with the flow
    turning southeasterly into an expected stationary front over that
    area, and the third consecutive day of moderate rainfall across
    much of central Montana, aided by increasing divergence ahead of a
    potent shortwave moving across the Pacific Northwest by Friday
    night. In each of these areas, only isolated flash flooding is
    expected as the signal for heavy rain in these areas remains
    diffuse.

    Isolated to scattered disorganized convection is likely to impact
    much of the eastern seaboard Friday afternoon with peak heating.
    Given the increasing moisture moving up the coast, any storms that
    remain in a given area for too long or backbuild along their cold
    pools could cause isolated instances of flash flooding. Given a
    lack of discernible forcing, for now have left the area out of a
    Marginal citing a less than 5% chance of flash flooding, but the
    threat is non-zero. The Marginal may need to be expanded eastward
    across much of the eastern seaboard in the coming days should
    current trends continue.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-7I6kC__p8tokgLM-ak7eYH8WRP-KAxwQC_FvLOLqF-B= et5qm5ww9uyVpEmnCkX5FyqteD6MzvcaHLH9J02QMKtWeD4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-7I6kC__p8tokgLM-ak7eYH8WRP-KAxwQC_FvLOLqF-B= et5qm5ww9uyVpEmnCkX5FyqteD6MzvcaHLH9J02Qiqi9iqo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-7I6kC__p8tokgLM-ak7eYH8WRP-KAxwQC_FvLOLqF-B= et5qm5ww9uyVpEmnCkX5FyqteD6MzvcaHLH9J02QvDmLKz8$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 12 00:39:07 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 120038
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    838 PM EDT Wed Jun 11 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...Texas...
    23Z Update: Tweaks were made to the outlook areas based on late
    afternoon observational trends, but mostly due to the recent trends
    in the guidance -- in particular the recent HRRR/RRFS as well as
    the 18Z HREF. This resulted in a subtle southward shift in both the
    Moderate and Slight Risk areas across portions of South and South-
    Central TX, with the Moderate Risk area now encompassing both the
    Austin and San Antonio metro areas.

    Across the Moderate Risk area, increasing large-scale ascent
    overnight ahead of the slow-moving upper shortwave along with a
    favorable thermodynamic profile (PWs aoa 2" and MUCAPEs 1500-2000
    J/Kg) will make for highly efficient warm rain processes within a
    ribbon of strong low-level moisture transport (+2 to 2.5 standard
    deviations above normal). Meanwhile, easterly QLCS progression will
    likely retard somewhat overnight as per the shrinking Corfidi
    Vectors, as the LLJ increases and veers, aligning nearly parallel
    and approaching the same magnitude of the mean 850-300 mb flow.
    This will enhance the risk of cell training, which is expected to
    maximize within the Moderate Risk area.

    Per the latest (18Z) HREF, probabilities of 12hr rainfall exceeding
    5" through 12Z Thu peak between 40-60% within the Moderate Risk
    area, while isolated probabilities of 20-30% of >8" are also noted.

    Hurley


    ..Previous Discussion..

    ...Texas...
    16Z Update: The forecast premise remains the same with 12z CAMs
    finally all catching on to a better degree of what has occurred,
    what is occurring, and general expectations going forward. Expected
    to see a redevelopment of convection across East-Central TX this
    afternoon within a pocket of higher theta_E remaining over the I-45
    corridor between DFW/HOU, aligned well within the higher CAPE,
    lower CIN depiction on the recent RAP Mesoanalysis. This will
    congeal and move northeast allowing for some of the areas hit hard
    this morning to get hit again in wake of the departing complex
    moving through the ArkLaTex. Multiple FFW's have occurred to the
    southeast of the DFW metro, an area where local FFG's have taken a
    hit over the past 24-36 hrs. This setup will allow for a continued
    impact in those zones, so the MDT was expanded a bit further to the
    northeast to account for the trends in the latest CAMs and
    impacted areas.

    ULL progression over West TX will maintain a posture of relatively
    modest buoyancy returning over the Concho Valley down through the
    eastern Edwards Plateau and adjacent Hill Country by late-afternoon
    and evening. Stronger mid-level perturbations pivoting around the
    ULL center will eventually rotate back around and provide a
    significant increase in regional ascent within the above zone
    leading to cell initiation back over areas hit pretty hard the past
    24 hrs. Incredibly low FFG's (<1" over 1/3/6 hr intervals) are
    centered over Hill Country with much of the CAMs depicting some
    action moving back over the area creating an environment capable of
    inducing flash flood prospects over the region as CAMs print out
    1-2"/hr rates in some of the stronger convection in the area. By
    the evening, the increasing large scale forcing will navigate into
    Central TX with the I-35 corridor between DFW to San Antonio and 50
    miles either side becoming the primary target for heavy rainfall.
    Return flow within the 850-700mb level is expected to allow for
    greater low-level convergence across the area with convection
    orienting more southwest to northeast with some training prospects
    along the tight theta_E gradient anticipated between eastern Hill
    Country and the I-45 corridor. HREF blended mean QPF is very high
    (3-5") within the I-35 corridor between Austin to Waco leading to
    40-60% neighborhood probs for >5" over the area. Will need to
    monitor for areas south of Austin as a secondary maxima down
    towards New Braunfels and San Antonio has been showing up on
    guidance with some of the higher probs for >5" also expanding into
    that zone. With those locations inheriting higher FFG's, prospects
    for flash flooding a bit less than those to the north, but a
    higher-end SLGT is now forecast for that area with some potential
    of an expansion of the MDT if trends continue.

    The SLGT was removed over CRP and parts of Deep South TX in
    conjunction with radar trends. The southern tip of TX, including
    the Brownsville/McAllen area was removed from any ERO as the area
    will maintain a relative min in QPF for the period.


    ...Gulf Coast through the Carolinas...
    16Z Update: Minor expansion north of the MRGL across parts of the
    Lower Mississippi Valley as 12z CAMs came in a bit north with the
    heavier precip today. Still looking at locally robust rates of
    2-3"/hr in the heaviest convection, but very much more pulse
    variety as you align between Central LA across the South and up
    into the VA Tidewater. Modest neighborhood probabilities for >3"
    (35-50%) exist over parts of the Central Gulf Coast and Coastal NC,
    so the threat for at least low-end MRGL persists. No changes we
    made in those regions.


    ...Upper Midwest... 16Z Update: The MRGL was expanded a bit
    eastward to include western Milwaukee metro, but otherwise the
    threat remains on the low-end of MRGL. A relatively high
    probability on the EAS of at least 1" across parts of Northern IA
    and Southwest WI exist (60-80%), but a significant drop off in the
    probs (<15%) for at least 2" means the threat is capped between
    1-3" for the general max. With antecedent moisture pretty low over
    the area, this is a setup coincident with a MRGL.


    ...Idaho/Montana...
    16Z Update: PWATs running between 1.5-2.5 deviations above normal
    across the Northern Rockies and interior PAC NW will lead to
    locally heavy rainfall potential over Eastern OR through much of
    ID/MT/WY this afternoon and early-evening before dissipating with
    loss of diurnal heating. CAMs indicate the risk of 1-2" of rainfall
    in heavier cores which would certainly cause problems in any urban
    zones and remnant burn scares. The MRGL was expanded through WY
    and adjusted a touch south. The threat remains sufficient for a
    broad risk area given the environment in place.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION AND MUCH OF EASTERN TEXAS AS WELL AS FOR SOUTHERN MINNESOTA
    INTO WESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...Arklatex Region & East Texas...

    20Z Update: Modest expansion of the SLGT risk was necessary given
    the forecast QPF footprint of the heavier returns as far south as
    San Antonio and as far east as the middle TX coast. High-end SLGT
    is forecast for much of East TX through the ArkLaTex where
    antecedent soil moisture will be elevated after today's activity
    with a large 2-4+" rainfall likely dropping area FFG's
    significantly by this evening. 12z HREF neighborhood probabilities
    are relatively high (20-40%) for >5" across the area between
    CRP/EWX/HOU with a secondary probability maxima located over the
    ArkLaTex (15-30%). Guidance is coming into alignment on the
    heaviest precip being located in these two zones with scattered
    high amounts in the middle of the two regions, mainly within the
    I-45 corridor. A MDT risk was debated, but with the convective
    scheme initially still under some uncertainty, did not want to
    initiate an upgrade if trends in overnight QPF shift in positioning
    or magnitude. HREF EAS signals are high for >1" but drop off
    significantly when assessing >2", so there's still some discrepancy
    on specifics. Like for the D1, if models trend more favorably for
    any one area, there is a chance for a targeted upgrade over either
    of the two regions. For now, a broad SLGT risk remains with
    expansion through the Ozarks given the recent convective QPF trends
    over the more sensitive area for flash flood prospects.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    Strong southerly flow of deep Gulf moisture will continue across
    east Texas and the Arklatex region on Thursday. There will very
    likely be an ongoing MCS across eastern Texas at the start of the
    period Thursday, which will progress eastward into Arkansas and
    Louisiana through the day. There may be a lull in most of the
    shower and thunderstorm activity for the afternoon hours in many
    areas, but renewed activity will develop through the evening as the
    LLJ restrengthens, and a slow moving upper level shortwave helps
    drive a dryline east over Oklahoma and Texas, which will cause
    numerous storms to form and organize into an MCS near the Arklatex
    region through the overnight, as PWATs remain up near 2 inches,
    promoting very heavy rainfall with the strongest storms. Once
    again, this region has been hard hit with heavy rain in recent
    days, and therefore this latest round of heavy rain will not take
    much to result in flash flooding. Depending on how much rain falls
    in this region on Day 1/Wednesday, it is possible a Moderate Risk
    upgrade may be needed for this region as well as confidence
    increases and the CAMs include the Thursday night period. There is
    enough uncertainty as to how far west the storms are (which will be
    highly dependent on the placement of the dryline), and therefore,
    the Metroplex, Houston, and Austin remain included in a higher end
    Slight Risk, which extends into the southeast corner of Oklahoma
    and adjacent western Arkansas counties.

    Wegman


    ...Southern Minnesota into Western Wisconsin...

    20Z Update: The SLGT risk expansion to the north was initiated for
    the afternoon update, once again with the general QPF maxima
    bisecting the I-94 area and points west. A strong signal for >2" of
    rainfall is now present within the latest HREF EAS prob fields
    (40-60%), a testament to the consistency in CAMs with the placement
    of the heaviest QPF maximum that's forecast. Areal average totals
    of 2-3" are becoming more likely with the setup with local maxima
    between 4-6" plausible as neighborhood probs for >5" run between
    40-60%, as well across west-central MN. Training threat is the
    reasoning for this potential with hourly rates likely between
    1-2"/hr in the heaviest convective cores. Area FFG's are modest
    within each 1/3/6 hr interval, but could still take some rainfall
    initially prior to problems ensuing. Considering all of the above,
    the SLGT risk was generally maintained, but did adjust the overall
    risk area further west to account for the latest QPF shift in the
    hi-res and bias corrected ensemble.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    At the nose of the upper level jet, a mesolow is likely to form
    over the central Plains Thursday afternoon, which will then drift
    northeast into Iowa on Thursday night. Abundant Gulf moisture will
    ride northward ahead of the low, running into a strong stationary
    front which will likely be set up over central Minnesota. This
    front will provide the lift for training and backbuilding
    thunderstorms across much of southern Minnesota Thursday afternoon
    and evening. The storms appear likely to impact all of the Twin
    Cities and surrounding suburbs, which when added to the wetter
    soils from any rainfall from Day 1/Wednesday, may result in widely
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The Slight Risk area was
    nudged northward with this update, following the latest changes in
    the ensemble guidance, but rainfall amounts are largely unchanged.

    Wegman


    ...Carolina Piedmont through East Georgia...

    A combination of elevated moisture across the Southeast and strong
    differential heating away from the coastal plain will lead to a
    corridor of enhanced SBCAPE on the order of 2500-3500 J/kg across
    East GA up through the western half of the SC Piedmont. Scattered
    to numerous thunderstorms with relatively slow storm motions will
    enhance locally heavy rainfall capabilities with rates between
    2-3"/hr plausible in a few of the stronger cores. Urbanized zones
    within the region referenced above will be the most susceptible for
    flash flooding prospects with some of the latest CAMs going as high
    as 4-6" in some of the greater outputs anticipated. A MRGL risk was
    added to convey the threat and correlates well with the latest UFVS
    First Guess Fields.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ARKLATEX
    REGION INTO PORTIONS OF THE MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    20Z Update: Main change in the period was a split of the MRGL risk
    across the Great Lakes/Ohio Valley area with now two separate risk
    areas with a large nil between the areas of interest. The SLGT risk
    threat with higher end potential still exists over the ArkLaTex
    into the Arkansas Ozarks with a chance at a targeted upgrade given
    the overlap signature of heavy rainfall (ArkLaTex) for 3
    consecutive periods. Ensemble bias corrected QPF trended a bit
    north with the heavier precip footprint, but this might be
    attributed more to the bias of a few models likely too far north
    with the expected maxima. Didn't deviate too far away from what was
    inherited across the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    The MRGL risks in place are on the lower end of the threshold with
    more isolated flash flood risks comparatively in either region.
    Best risk will likely be over Northern WI up towards Duluth for the
    Midwest MRGL and across MT for the western MRGL risk where ascent
    pattern is most favorable.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A slow-moving upper level trough will drift east across Oklahoma
    and Arkansas through the period. It will draw on abundant Gulf
    moisture with PWATs at or above 2 inches to force numerous slow
    moving thunderstorms to develop from northeast Texas northeast to
    the Mississippi-Ohio River confluence. The southerly flow will also
    upslope into the Ozarks of central Arkansas, likely resulting in
    localized increases in rainfall rates across much of Arkansas on
    Friday and especially into Friday night. Given the expanded
    eastward movement of the storms, the inherited Slight Risk was
    expanded significantly north and east into the mid-Mississippi
    Valley with this update. A higher-end Slight is in effect for the
    Arklatex region through much of central Arkansas, where the
    heaviest rainfall is expected. Periods of heavy rain across the
    Arklatex and western Arkansas are expected from the Day 2/Thursday
    period, which will greatly moisten the antecedent soil conditions
    in advance of the heavy rainfall expected on Friday and Friday
    night. Here too, a Moderate Risk upgrade may be needed with future
    updates should the preponderance of guidance remain consistent at
    targeting the Arklatex and central Arkansas with the heaviest
    rainfall.

    New Marginal Risk areas were added across much of the Great Lakes,
    where training storms may cause isolated flash flooding, the
    northeast corner of Colorado due to some upslope with the flow
    turning southeasterly into an expected stationary front over that
    area, and the third consecutive day of moderate rainfall across
    much of central Montana, aided by increasing divergence ahead of a
    potent shortwave moving across the Pacific Northwest by Friday
    night. In each of these areas, only isolated flash flooding is
    expected as the signal for heavy rain in these areas remains
    diffuse.

    Isolated to scattered disorganized convection is likely to impact
    much of the eastern seaboard Friday afternoon with peak heating.
    Given the increasing moisture moving up the coast, any storms that
    remain in a given area for too long or backbuild along their cold
    pools could cause isolated instances of flash flooding. Given a
    lack of discernible forcing, for now have left the area out of a
    Marginal citing a less than 5% chance of flash flooding, but the
    threat is non-zero. The Marginal may need to be expanded eastward
    across much of the eastern seaboard in the coming days should
    current trends continue.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_c0AcTMP7YOOZmXeoqxhrk_JozxVzBByW0CMCyMcEX8p= XjOJ3_P9qBwb75RP0OxoXHZ7Br295OCiRv-DSvb5TRtnpew$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_c0AcTMP7YOOZmXeoqxhrk_JozxVzBByW0CMCyMcEX8p= XjOJ3_P9qBwb75RP0OxoXHZ7Br295OCiRv-DSvb5MqwR6WM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_c0AcTMP7YOOZmXeoqxhrk_JozxVzBByW0CMCyMcEX8p= XjOJ3_P9qBwb75RP0OxoXHZ7Br295OCiRv-DSvb5AkuX37k$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 12 08:16:29 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 120815
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    415 AM EDT Thu Jun 12 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 12 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST TEXAS...

    ...Texas through Arkansas...

    In coordination with HGX/Houston, TX forecast office, a Moderate
    Risk upgrade was introduced with this update. Convection blossoming
    over central Texas right now is forming in response to increased
    upper level divergence ahead of a sharp upper level trough over
    west Texas. This trough is also supporting a potent LLJ advecting
    deep tropical moisture out of the Gulf and into east Texas. This
    steady supply of plentiful moisture along with a very slow-moving
    upper level trough are both primary ingredients for slow-moving
    thunderstorms capable of producing very heavy rainfall. Storm
    coverage will continue to increase so that by the start of the
    period later this morning, a well-defined MCS will have developed
    north and west of Houston. The storms will build southeastward
    towards the Gulf as they advect towards the moisture and
    instability source. Additional storms forming along the coast will
    also advect north into the MCS. Since the southerly flow associated
    with the LLJ will continue through the day, this will promote
    backbuilding storms along the cold pools of the existing storms,
    resulting in new activity. The result will be several hours of
    heavy rainfall in some areas, which even in areas with higher FFGs,
    are likely to be exceeded due to the prolonged duration of heavy
    rain in any one area.

    On the south side of the MCS, the backbuilding storms may form an
    east-west oriented line which could train over the areas that part
    of the line moves over. This will locally further enhance any flash
    flooding threat, which would be enhanced further should it occur
    over Houston or another urban area. Antecedent soil conditions have
    already been saturated in many areas of southeast Texas, so this
    additional rainfall could cause flash flooding quickly.

    The MCS will gradually develop into a southeastward moving line
    through the morning hours, which should gradually reduce the flash
    flooding threat as the storms approach the Louisiana state line.
    Urban concerns in and around Houston will also increase the flash
    flooding threat. The good news is by midday or so, the line will be
    diminishing and will be moving largely orthogonal to the
    orientation of the line, which will greatly decrease the time any
    one area sees heavy rain. Further, instability and competing
    sources of forcing should disrupt the MCS in typical diurnal
    fashion. This too should work to reduce the flash flooding threat.
    Thus, the Moderate Risk is really just for the morning and early
    afternoon, and will likely be able to be downgraded this afternoon.

    Further north into Arkansas, the northern end of the MCS will cause
    additional storms to form across the state this morning. Most
    areas will see a break through the day, but additional convection
    forming this afternoon through tonight behind a developing mesolow
    will add to the precipitation totals. Further topographic
    influences with the Ozarks may add upsloping to the forcing
    mechanisms. Thus, expect a secondary "bullseye" of heavy rainfall
    across much of central to southwestern Arkansas. The Slight Risk
    area was adjusted eastward with this update as the guidance better
    resolves the ongoing shower and thunderstorm activity. The risk
    areas were generally reduced from the DFW Metroplex west, and
    increased in central Louisiana and central Arkansas. A higher-end
    Slight is in effect for the area from the Moderate Risk north and
    east into central Arkansas.

    ...Northern Plains...

    At the northernmost head of the LLJ of deep tropical moisture out
    of the Gulf across Minnesota, the plume of moisture will run into a
    warm front that will add lift to the atmosphere as the moisture
    runs up the frontal interface. Divergence aloft in the right
    entrance region of a 120 kt jet will also support shower and
    thunderstorm development in the fast upper level westerly flow
    associated with the jet. Shower and thunderstorm activity have
    already broken out along the Minnesota/Iowa border this morning. As
    the warm front lifts north through the day, the coverage of
    rainfall will diminish a bit with daytime heating disrupting the
    synoptic scale lift in favor of much more chaotic local forcings.
    By tonight however, as the typical diurnal LLJ reestablishes=20
    itself, showers and thunderstorms will once again redevelop, but=20
    this time further north into central Minnesota, and likely near the
    Twin Cities. The strengthening supply of moisture associated with=20
    the LLJ will support backbuilding and training storms, as the cold=20
    pools work to lock where the storms form in place, despite the=20
    continued northeastward movement of the synoptic-scale warm front.=20
    This will support a rather narrow (50-80 mile wide) corridor where=20
    heavy rain on the order of 1-3 inches with locally higher amounts=20
    are expected tonight. This should cause widely scattered instances=20
    of flash flooding. The Slight Risk area was nudged northward with=20
    this update in keeping with the latest suite of guidance, which has
    been struggling with where to place the warm-front related=20
    convection on the map for the last few days.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    ARKANSAS...

    The very slow moving upper level trough will continue to drift
    across Missouri and Arkansas through the period. Continued
    northward advection of deep tropical moisture will run into the
    Ozarks as a dryline also gradually pushes east out of the Plains.
    The combination of each of these forcings over an area with
    topography and likely very wet antecedent soil conditions will all
    support continued potential for scattered instances of flash
    flooding across much of Arkansas. The heaviest rain will likely
    hold off until after midnight Friday night, with the diurnal
    strengthening of the low level jet, a faster push of the dryline
    and associated sharp gradient in moisture, as well as the peak
    divergence as the upper level shortwave trough amplifies a bit.
    All of these support the continuation of the Slight Risk over
    Arkansas, which was shrunk a bit due to better confidence in the
    placement of the heaviest rain, allowing areas further north
    towards Paducah to be dropped from the Slight Risk. With the
    wettest soils in Arkansas from about Little Rock west, this area
    was maintained in a higher-end Slight with this update.

    Elsewhere, lingering rain from Minnesota east through the U.P. will
    support isolated instances of flash flooding in that region,
    largely on Friday morning. A new Marginal Risk was introduced from
    southeast Virginia through the Carolinas and into Georgia. While
    convection in this area will likely remain disorganized and
    dominated by cold pool forcings, the abundance of moisture on the
    order of over 2 inches of PWAT will still favor any storms that
    form having the capability of multiple inch per hour rainfall
    rates. The Marginal from Montana to northeast Colorado was
    maintained with minimal changes along the western interface of the
    deeper moisture over much of the Plains.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL
    ARKANSAS THROUGH NORTHERN MISSISSIPPI...

    ...Arkansas through Alabama...

    After multiple days of shower and thunderstorm activity in this
    area, there should be some decrease in the organization of the
    overall shower and thunderstorm activity expected Saturday from
    Arkansas east through Alabama. Despite that decrease, very wet
    soils through Mississippi and a lingering frontal boundary
    providing some forcing should still lead to enough organization to
    support widely scattered instances of flash flooding. For this
    region, a Slight Risk area was introduced for Arkansas and
    Mississippi with this update. The flash flooding risk has likely
    decreased a bit due to a lack of upper level support by Saturday,
    so the Slight Risk remains a lower end Slight. Plentiful moisture
    over 1.5 inches of PWAT will still support any storms that do form
    to be capable of heavy rainfall. Further, a lack of forcing and
    organization will increase the time any storms may impact any one
    area, to include much of the period, day and night. In other words,
    there isn't one specific period of time where the threat for heavy
    rain and subsequent flash flooding is significantly higher than any
    other point.

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    A second signal for heavy rain has shown in the guidance across
    northern Virginia and into portions of the Tidewater. A slow,
    southward moving front over PA will interact with the divergence
    ahead of the slow-moving shortwave trough that caused the problems
    with flooding further west the past couple days. Since this signal
    is relatively new and highly subject to change, a Slight risk
    upgrade has not yet been introduced, but is being considered.
    Should the heavy rain signal drift north to the DMV area, then a
    Slight Risk will likely be needed.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_thF755kK_pkRvE5GsnQa9mfxSxwFw9EPyBvhicxFvmy= JSSh4Otw83-2zOg2maESmIGjB1iGLbrR8jJuEfYsN5u3eic$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_thF755kK_pkRvE5GsnQa9mfxSxwFw9EPyBvhicxFvmy= JSSh4Otw83-2zOg2maESmIGjB1iGLbrR8jJuEfYsNiBrxlE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_thF755kK_pkRvE5GsnQa9mfxSxwFw9EPyBvhicxFvmy= JSSh4Otw83-2zOg2maESmIGjB1iGLbrR8jJuEfYsipZxt7E$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 17 15:58:49 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 171558
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1158 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE SOUTH-CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS...

    ...Central Appalachians to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Extreme thermodynamics expanding across the eastern CONUS will=20
    produce an environment favorable for widespread convection with=20
    heavy rainfall today and tonight.

    A broad Bermuda-type ridge centered off the southeast Atlantic=20
    coast will expand northwestward, while a shortwave trough persists=20
    over the Mississippi/Ohio Valleys. This will accelerate the SWly=20
    850-500mb flow which contains multiple mid-level impulses that=20
    provide waves of enhanced ascent from the Central Gulf Coast=20
    through the Mid-Atlantic states.=20

    12Z CAMs remain in good agreement on diurnal expansion of=20
    thunderstorms in a swath from Louisiana into Upstate NY, though=20
    poorly organized with bulk shear 20-25 kts and progressive to the=20
    northeast on 20-30 kts of mean layer wind. However, any storm will=20
    likely contain impressive rain rates in deep Gulf-sourced moisture=20
    with PWs up around 2" through this swath. Daily record high PW is=20
    possible at both OKX and PIT. This high PW and deep warm cloud=20
    depths of 13000-14000 ft will support high hourly rainfall,=20
    particularly around south-central PA that remains a favored area=20
    for QPF max today where a warm front is lifting.

    12Z HREF neighborhood probs have 20-30% risk of of exceeding=20
    2"/hr in south-central PA where a Moderate Risk persists. Sub-=20
    hourly rain rates of 3-4"/hr are possible in this environment.=20

    FFG is extremely compromised in parts of the central Appalachians
    with a Slight Risk remaining for eastern KY into northern PA. The
    Marginal Risk still extending all the way to the central Gulf=20
    Coast where isolated flash flooding is ongoing.


    ...South-Central Plains into the Midwest...=20
    16Z Update...
    Shrank north side of Slight Risk to focus on organized convective
    activity over KS (where a Moderate Risk persists) with expansion
    downstream in OK and western MO.=20

    A potent shortwave shifts across the central Rockies this=20
    afternoon and amplifies sharply over the Plains this evening. This=20
    should enable vigorous terrain induced convection off the Front=20
    Range into WY with some organization as it shift east this evening.

    This will be after the ongoing activity centered on KS which is
    after a powerful MCS blew through last night. Impressive ascent=20
    downstream of this shortwave will impinge into a cold front draped=20
    across the Plains, resulting in surface low pressure development=20
    this evening as well. This will enhance ascent locally, especially
    as the LLJ ramps up to 40-50 kts, and is locally additionally=20
    enhanced downstream of the developing low pressure, especially in=20
    KS/OK. This LLJ will draw impressive thermodynamics northward=20
    reflected by PWs rising above 1.75 inches collocated with MUCAPE=20
    potentially exceeding 4000 J/kg. Where this LLJ converges both=20
    along its nose and into the wavering surface front, convection is=20
    expected to develop this evening, and then grow upscale and=20
    intensify tonight. The 12Z CAM consensus is for southern KS to be=20
    the MCS focus this evening with repeating heavy rain where earlier=20
    activity fell, raising the threat level.


    Weiss/Jackson

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE MID-
    SOUTH THROUGH THE GREAT LAKES, AND FOR PORTIONS OF THE COASTAL
    MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    ...Central States/Midwest...
    A shortwave lifting northeast embedded within a larger trough axis
    centered over the Mississippi Valley will combine with the RRQ of a
    departing upper jet streak to deepen a surface low pressure
    emerging out of Missouri early Wednesday. This low will track
    steadily northeast, reaching Michigan Wednesday evening and then
    departing into Ontario by Thursday morning. This low will move
    along a baroclinic zone to the northeast, dragging its accompanying
    cold front to the east and into the Midwest by the end of D2,
    leading to enhanced convergence/ascent across that region as well.

    The associated lift will surge into an environment which will
    support scattered to widespread convection with heavy rainfall.
    Intensifying 850mb inflow from the Gulf will draw higher PWs
    (nearing 2") and instability (MUCAPE above 2000 J/kg) northward to
    support heavy rainfall. There may be two areas of heaviest rainfall
    across this region on Wednesday, one in a strengthening deformation
    axis NW of the surface low track, and a second in a corridor of
    convection which develops along the front.

    Within the deformation, the 850mb winds will lift a theta-e ridge
    northward and cyclonically around the low pressure, producing an
    axis of moderate to heavy rainfall which will pivot northeast.
    Instability within this deformation will be modest, and elevated
    within a modest TROWAL, so rain rates will be somewhat restricted
    as reflected by 1"/hr rain rate probabilities from the HREF
    (through 00Z Thursday) that peak around 20-40%. However, rainfall
    will be persistent as cells track along the axis, leading to a
    prolonged period of moderate rain with embedded higher rain rates.
    This will produce an axis with GEFS, ECENS, and SREF probabilities
    indicating a 5-15% chance for 3" of rain, which may result in
    localized excessive rainfall impacts.

    Farther south along the front, instability is much more robust and
    this is reflected by rainfall rate probabilities that reach 60% for
    1"/hr and 20-30% for 2"/hr. However, coverage of precipitation will
    be more scattered as thunderstorms develop along the front and
    organize into clusters moving rapidly to the northeast along the
    front itself. This could result in some training/repeating, but the
    progressive nature of individual cells should limit the overall
    flash flood risk. Rainfall across this region could again exceed 3"
    in a few areas as noted by similarly low probabilities of 3"/24hrs,
    but the more intense rates still support a MRGL risk of excessive
    rainfall.


    ...Coastal Mid-Atlantic...
    Continued return flow around a Bermuda-type ridge off the Southeast
    coast will maintain broad southwesterly flow to pump elevated PWs
    northward into the Mid-Atlantic on Wednesday. PWs above 1.75 inches
    (above the 97th percentile according to NAEFS) will remain over the
    region, as a weak surface trough swings eastward, moving offshore
    Wednesday night. This weak convergent axis moving through the area
    concurrent with an embedded mid-level vorticity maxima into these
    robust thermodynamics will result in thunderstorms with rain
    rates of 1-2"/hr. Despite the relatively isolated to scattered
    nature of convection expected, any of these torrential rain rates
    atop the more urban areas could cause isolated instances of flash
    flooding, and the MRGL risk was adjusted accordingly.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS THROUGH NEW ENGLAND...

    A mid-level longwave trough axis will progress eastward from the
    Mississippi Valley to the Atlantic coast on Thursday. This trough
    will push an accompanying surface cold front beneath it, and this
    front is progged to move off the coast by 12Z Friday /end of D3/.
    The overlap of the front with its parent trough will drive a narrow
    but strong corridor of lift through height falls/convergence, into
    an environment supportive of convection with heavy rain. Despite
    the rapid progression of this front, a MRGL risk for excessive
    rainfall exists due to potential short-duration training of
    thunderstorms due to mean 0-6km winds that are parallel to the
    boundary. With rain rates likely eclipsing 1"/hr at times, this
    should produce stripes of 1-2" of rainfall, with locally as much as
    3" in a few locations as suggested by GEFS and SREF 3"/24hr
    probabilities. While in general this suggests only an isolated
    flash flood risk, and the updated MRGL risk, should any heavier
    rain fall atop the more vulnerable soils of the central
    Appalachians, a targeted SLGT could be needed in future updates.

    Weiss



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6BPY652rQbxu4_WsZ5TFekf2smTDl6IyKrWgYycl4CsM= OTv0uQv0O8vToX8BC2XYPsya6bd1FJ44SjQL0w_pElsCXhw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6BPY652rQbxu4_WsZ5TFekf2smTDl6IyKrWgYycl4CsM= OTv0uQv0O8vToX8BC2XYPsya6bd1FJ44SjQL0w_pkT4snvw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6BPY652rQbxu4_WsZ5TFekf2smTDl6IyKrWgYycl4CsM= OTv0uQv0O8vToX8BC2XYPsya6bd1FJ44SjQL0w_p6a9rDKY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 17 20:33:57 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 172032
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    432 PM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE SOUTH-CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS...

    ...Central Appalachians to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Extreme thermodynamics expanding across the eastern CONUS will
    produce an environment favorable for widespread convection with
    heavy rainfall today and tonight.

    A broad Bermuda-type ridge centered off the southeast Atlantic
    coast will expand northwestward, while a shortwave trough persists
    over the Mississippi/Ohio Valleys. This will accelerate the SWly
    850-500mb flow which contains multiple mid-level impulses that
    provide waves of enhanced ascent from the Central Gulf Coast
    through the Mid-Atlantic states.

    12Z CAMs remain in good agreement on diurnal expansion of
    thunderstorms in a swath from Louisiana into Upstate NY, though
    poorly organized with bulk shear 20-25 kts and progressive to the
    northeast on 20-30 kts of mean layer wind. However, any storm will
    likely contain impressive rain rates in deep Gulf-sourced moisture
    with PWs up around 2" through this swath. Daily record high PW is
    possible at both OKX and PIT. This high PW and deep warm cloud
    depths of 13000-14000 ft will support high hourly rainfall,
    particularly around south-central PA that remains a favored area
    for QPF max today where a warm front is lifting.

    12Z HREF neighborhood probs have 20-30% risk of of exceeding
    2"/hr in south-central PA where a Moderate Risk persists. Sub-
    hourly rain rates of 3-4"/hr are possible in this environment.

    FFG is extremely compromised in parts of the central Appalachians
    with a Slight Risk remaining for eastern KY into northern PA. The
    Marginal Risk still extending all the way to the central Gulf
    Coast where isolated flash flooding is ongoing.


    ...South-Central Plains into the Midwest...
    16Z Update...
    Shrank north side of Slight Risk to focus on organized convective
    activity over KS (where a Moderate Risk persists) with expansion
    downstream in OK and western MO.

    A potent shortwave shifts across the central Rockies this
    afternoon and amplifies sharply over the Plains this evening. This
    should enable vigorous terrain induced convection off the Front
    Range into WY with some organization as it shift east this evening.

    This will be after the ongoing activity centered on KS which is
    after a powerful MCS blew through last night. Impressive ascent
    downstream of this shortwave will impinge into a cold front draped
    across the Plains, resulting in surface low pressure development
    this evening as well. This will enhance ascent locally, especially
    as the LLJ ramps up to 40-50 kts, and is locally additionally
    enhanced downstream of the developing low pressure, especially in
    KS/OK. This LLJ will draw impressive thermodynamics northward
    reflected by PWs rising above 1.75 inches collocated with MUCAPE
    potentially exceeding 4000 J/kg. Where this LLJ converges both
    along its nose and into the wavering surface front, convection is
    expected to develop this evening, and then grow upscale and
    intensify tonight. The 12Z CAM consensus is for southern KS to be
    the MCS focus this evening with repeating heavy rain where earlier
    activity fell, raising the threat level.


    Weiss/Jackson

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    MICHIGAN...

    ...Central States/Midwest...
    21Z Update...
    Slight Risk introduced for the L.P. of Michigan.

    A shortwave trough lifts north from northern Missouri through the=20
    L.P. of Michigan Wednesday. This is in advance of the longer wave=20
    trough axis shifting east from the central Plains Wednesday and in=20
    the right entrance region of a SWly upper jet streak lingering over
    the northern Great Lakes through this time. These dynamics will=20
    allow the surface low pressure coincident with the shortwave to=20
    deepen through its track as it crosses northern Illinois and the=20
    L.P. of MI. This low will move along a baroclinic zone to the=20
    northeast, dragging its accompanying cold front east into the=20
    Midwest Wednesday afternoon and tracking over the Mid-South and
    Ohio Valleys Wednesday night, leading to two main swaths of heavy=20
    rain.=20

    The environment along the low track will support prolonged
    convergence/ascent as intensifying 850mb inflow from the Gulf will
    draw higher PWs (1.75 to 2") and with sufficient instability=20
    (MUCAPE around 1000 J/kg) northward. Within the deformation, the=20
    850mb winds will lift a theta-e ridge northward and cyclonically=20
    around the low pressure, producing an axis of moderate to heavy=20
    rainfall within a modest TROWAL that will pivot northeast. The=20
    confidence on higher rain rates have increased with 12Z HREF=20
    neighborhood probabilities for 1"/hr rates now 40-60% over the=20
    central/lower L.P. through the afternoon (with 2-4" likely in the=20
    swath which warrants an introduction of a Slight Risk despite the=20
    typically higher FFGs in MI. Rates do ramp up over northern IL and=20 especially over Chicago, so a Slight Risk could become warranted=20
    for the Chicago metro should trends continue to increase.

    Farther south along the front, instability is more robust with=20
    MUCAPE progged to be 1000-2000 J/kg, promoting scattered convection
    with embedded heavy rates particularly in the late
    afternoon/evening over southern Missouri and Arkansas east into Kentucky/Indiana. This area should also have ongoing activity from
    tonight which will further precondition soils. Given the
    progressive nature of the activity, the Marginal is maintained=20
    with expansion over OK/northeast TX/southern AR and central KY/TN.


    ...Mid-Atlantic into New England...=20
    Continued return flow around a Bermuda-type ridge off the=20
    Southeast coast will maintain broad southwesterly flow to pump=20
    elevated PWs northward into the Mid- Atlantic on Wednesday. PWs=20
    reach 2" Wednesday afternoon from the DC metro up through southern=20
    New England as a weak surface trough swings east over the Midwest.
    Despite the relatively isolated to scattered nature of convection=20
    expected, any of these torrential rain rates atop the more urban=20
    areas could cause isolated instances of flash flooding, and the=20
    Marginal Risk is maintained/expanded a bit into central PA where=20
    morning activity should be occurring from overnight tonight.=20


    Weiss/Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR AN AREA FROM
    THE MID-SOUTH THROUGH INTERIOR NEW ENGLAND...

    A mid-level longwave trough axis will progress eastward from the lower/mid-Mississippi Valley to the Atlantic coast on Thursday.=20
    This trough will push an accompanying surface cold front beneath=20
    it, and this front is progged to reach the Eastern Seaboard by 12Z=20
    Friday. The overlap of the front with its parent trough will drive=20
    another strong corridor of lift through height falls/convergence,=20
    into an environment supportive of convection with heavy rain.=20
    Despite the rapid progression of this front, the Marginal Risk is
    expanded from TN through southern AR due to potential short-=20
    duration training of thunderstorms due to mean 0-6km winds that are
    parallel to the boundary. With rain rates likely eclipsing 1"/hr=20
    at times, this should produce stripes of 1-2" of rainfall, with=20
    locally as much as 3" in a few locations as suggested by 12Z=20
    consensus including the experimental RRFS which is the first CAM to
    go out through Day 3. While in general this pattern suggests only=20
    an isolated flash flood risk, there are rather vulnerable soils in=20
    the central Appalachians, so a targeted Slight could be needed in=20
    future updates, particularly as it gets more into the typical CAM=20
    range.

    Weiss/Jackson



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4xRtXbkMWQigPKZm6s171rymLDRVTvgBThWBxzyhLmHc= N95LRG4MEYU-N3fuQvXlEz5k4HHDqytmjqG9a7oVgPf_PPQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4xRtXbkMWQigPKZm6s171rymLDRVTvgBThWBxzyhLmHc= N95LRG4MEYU-N3fuQvXlEz5k4HHDqytmjqG9a7oV_ae3apk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4xRtXbkMWQigPKZm6s171rymLDRVTvgBThWBxzyhLmHc= N95LRG4MEYU-N3fuQvXlEz5k4HHDqytmjqG9a7oVRONrMDY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 18 00:55:14 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 180055
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    855 PM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE SOUTH-CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS...

    01Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...
    Greatest threat for excessive rainfall overnight continues to be
    focused mainly over southeast Kansas and a small part of adjoining
    states. Too early to trim more than a small part of the western=20
    and northern periphery given on-going convection although warming=20
    cloud top temperatures suggest model guidance is on-track for=20
    diminishing flash flooding threat to the north and west of on-going
    Moderate Risk area.

    Farther west...maintained the Moderate Risk area in the Central
    Appalachians given on-going convection and satellite imagery still
    showing convection located upstream. The WoFS runs continue to
    favor the area along and north of the Mason Dixon Line into the
    late evening/early morning hours while convection elsewhere in the
    eastern US fades by 04Z or so,

    Bann



    ...Central Appalachians to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Extreme thermodynamics expanding across the eastern CONUS will
    produce an environment favorable for widespread convection with
    heavy rainfall today and tonight.

    A broad Bermuda-type ridge centered off the southeast Atlantic
    coast will expand northwestward, while a shortwave trough persists
    over the Mississippi/Ohio Valleys. This will accelerate the SWly
    850-500mb flow which contains multiple mid-level impulses that
    provide waves of enhanced ascent from the Central Gulf Coast
    through the Mid-Atlantic states.

    12Z CAMs remain in good agreement on diurnal expansion of
    thunderstorms in a swath from Louisiana into Upstate NY, though
    poorly organized with bulk shear 20-25 kts and progressive to the
    northeast on 20-30 kts of mean layer wind. However, any storm will
    likely contain impressive rain rates in deep Gulf-sourced moisture
    with PWs up around 2" through this swath. Daily record high PW is
    possible at both OKX and PIT. This high PW and deep warm cloud
    depths of 13000-14000 ft will support high hourly rainfall,
    particularly around south-central PA that remains a favored area
    for QPF max today where a warm front is lifting.

    12Z HREF neighborhood probs have 20-30% risk of of exceeding
    2"/hr in south-central PA where a Moderate Risk persists. Sub-
    hourly rain rates of 3-4"/hr are possible in this environment.

    FFG is extremely compromised in parts of the central Appalachians
    with a Slight Risk remaining for eastern KY into northern PA. The
    Marginal Risk still extending all the way to the central Gulf
    Coast where isolated flash flooding is ongoing.


    ...South-Central Plains into the Midwest...
    16Z Update...
    Shrank north side of Slight Risk to focus on organized convective
    activity over KS (where a Moderate Risk persists) with expansion
    downstream in OK and western MO.

    A potent shortwave shifts across the central Rockies this
    afternoon and amplifies sharply over the Plains this evening. This
    should enable vigorous terrain induced convection off the Front
    Range into WY with some organization as it shift east this evening.

    This will be after the ongoing activity centered on KS which is
    after a powerful MCS blew through last night. Impressive ascent
    downstream of this shortwave will impinge into a cold front draped
    across the Plains, resulting in surface low pressure development
    this evening as well. This will enhance ascent locally, especially
    as the LLJ ramps up to 40-50 kts, and is locally additionally
    enhanced downstream of the developing low pressure, especially in
    KS/OK. This LLJ will draw impressive thermodynamics northward
    reflected by PWs rising above 1.75 inches collocated with MUCAPE
    potentially exceeding 4000 J/kg. Where this LLJ converges both
    along its nose and into the wavering surface front, convection is
    expected to develop this evening, and then grow upscale and
    intensify tonight. The 12Z CAM consensus is for southern KS to be
    the MCS focus this evening with repeating heavy rain where earlier
    activity fell, raising the threat level.


    Weiss/Jackson

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    MICHIGAN...

    ...Central States/Midwest...
    21Z Update...
    Slight Risk introduced for the L.P. of Michigan.

    A shortwave trough lifts north from northern Missouri through the
    L.P. of Michigan Wednesday. This is in advance of the longer wave
    trough axis shifting east from the central Plains Wednesday and in
    the right entrance region of a SWly upper jet streak lingering over
    the northern Great Lakes through this time. These dynamics will
    allow the surface low pressure coincident with the shortwave to
    deepen through its track as it crosses northern Illinois and the
    L.P. of MI. This low will move along a baroclinic zone to the
    northeast, dragging its accompanying cold front east into the
    Midwest Wednesday afternoon and tracking over the Mid-South and
    Ohio Valleys Wednesday night, leading to two main swaths of heavy
    rain.

    The environment along the low track will support prolonged
    convergence/ascent as intensifying 850mb inflow from the Gulf will
    draw higher PWs (1.75 to 2") and with sufficient instability
    (MUCAPE around 1000 J/kg) northward. Within the deformation, the
    850mb winds will lift a theta-e ridge northward and cyclonically
    around the low pressure, producing an axis of moderate to heavy
    rainfall within a modest TROWAL that will pivot northeast. The
    confidence on higher rain rates have increased with 12Z HREF
    neighborhood probabilities for 1"/hr rates now 40-60% over the
    central/lower L.P. through the afternoon (with 2-4" likely in the
    swath which warrants an introduction of a Slight Risk despite the
    typically higher FFGs in MI. Rates do ramp up over northern IL and
    especially over Chicago, so a Slight Risk could become warranted
    for the Chicago metro should trends continue to increase.

    Farther south along the front, instability is more robust with
    MUCAPE progged to be 1000-2000 J/kg, promoting scattered convection
    with embedded heavy rates particularly in the late
    afternoon/evening over southern Missouri and Arkansas east into Kentucky/Indiana. This area should also have ongoing activity from
    tonight which will further precondition soils. Given the
    progressive nature of the activity, the Marginal is maintained
    with expansion over OK/northeast TX/southern AR and central KY/TN.


    ...Mid-Atlantic into New England...
    Continued return flow around a Bermuda-type ridge off the
    Southeast coast will maintain broad southwesterly flow to pump
    elevated PWs northward into the Mid- Atlantic on Wednesday. PWs
    reach 2" Wednesday afternoon from the DC metro up through southern
    New England as a weak surface trough swings east over the Midwest.
    Despite the relatively isolated to scattered nature of convection
    expected, any of these torrential rain rates atop the more urban
    areas could cause isolated instances of flash flooding, and the
    Marginal Risk is maintained/expanded a bit into central PA where
    morning activity should be occurring from overnight tonight.


    Weiss/Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR AN AREA FROM
    THE MID-SOUTH THROUGH INTERIOR NEW ENGLAND...

    A mid-level longwave trough axis will progress eastward from the lower/mid-Mississippi Valley to the Atlantic coast on Thursday.
    This trough will push an accompanying surface cold front beneath
    it, and this front is progged to reach the Eastern Seaboard by 12Z
    Friday. The overlap of the front with its parent trough will drive
    another strong corridor of lift through height falls/convergence,
    into an environment supportive of convection with heavy rain.
    Despite the rapid progression of this front, the Marginal Risk is
    expanded from TN through southern AR due to potential short-
    duration training of thunderstorms due to mean 0-6km winds that are
    parallel to the boundary. With rain rates likely eclipsing 1"/hr
    at times, this should produce stripes of 1-2" of rainfall, with
    locally as much as 3" in a few locations as suggested by 12Z
    consensus including the experimental RRFS which is the first CAM to
    go out through Day 3. While in general this pattern suggests only
    an isolated flash flood risk, there are rather vulnerable soils in
    the central Appalachians, so a targeted Slight could be needed in
    future updates, particularly as it gets more into the typical CAM
    range.

    Weiss/Jackson



    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9usRTlitbfj5G968To8mjUB2XJ6p9hbUOqfioPt3xYmX= BmFWi2OZyN6yX4ON8PinecxiUXf3gy-yC89OYAf1XMSbaqY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9usRTlitbfj5G968To8mjUB2XJ6p9hbUOqfioPt3xYmX= BmFWi2OZyN6yX4ON8PinecxiUXf3gy-yC89OYAf1zzRewoc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9usRTlitbfj5G968To8mjUB2XJ6p9hbUOqfioPt3xYmX= BmFWi2OZyN6yX4ON8PinecxiUXf3gy-yC89OYAf1W8Z5Dbk$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 18 08:09:43 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 180808
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    408 AM EDT Wed Jun 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    GREAT LAKES AND THE MID-SOUTH STATES...

    ...Great Lakes through the Mid-Mississippi Valley...=20
    Strung out shortwave embedded within amplifying mid-level flow=20
    will swing northeast today as the primary trough axis shifts from=20
    the Central Plains to the Ohio Valley. The collocated height=20
    falls/PVA accompanying this energy will interact with the modest=20
    RRQ of a departing upper jet streak to help deepen a surface low=20
    advecting northeast into the Great Lakes. This low will strengthen=20
    along a cold front, leading scattered to widespread showers and=20 thunderstorms, but with two more focused regions of excessive=20
    rainfall.

    The greatest risk for heavy rain capable of producing flash flooding=20
    appears to be centered across the lower peninsula (L.P.) of=20
    Michigan. Here the surface low will track, with heavy rain along a
    warm front occurring ahead of the low, and secondary moderate rain
    with embedded convection occurring along a deformation axis in the
    same region. 850mb flow ahead of the low will surge to 20-30kts,=20
    drawing PWs as high as 1.75 inches into MI, coincident with MUCAPE=20
    nearing 1000 J/kg. This will support rainfall rates that have a=20
    moderate chance (40-60%) of exceeding 1"/hr at times. The heaviest=20
    rain rates are expected along the leading warm front thanks to=20
    stronger instability this evening, and during that time the=20
    combination of 20-30 kts of bulk shear and 0-6km mean winds aligned
    to the front, despite progressive speeds near 30 kts, will support
    rainfall that will likely (70% chance) reach 3", and may reach as=20
    much as 5" in a few isolated locations. This could result in=20
    instances of flash flooding (15-25% chance of 3-hr FFG exceedance)=20
    despite generally dry antecedent conditions, and the SLGT risk was=20 maintained with modest cosmetic adjustments.

    Farther to the south, the cold front will be the primary mechanism=20
    for ascent/convective development as it tracks east from the Central=20
    Plains to the Tennessee Valley. This front will impinge upon intense=20 thermodynamics characterized by MUCAPE above 3000 J/kg and PWs=20
    approaching 2 inches. Thunderstorms will likely develop along the=20
    length of this front during peak instability, and where bulk shear
    exceeds 25 kts, generally from IN through AR, clusters of more=20
    organized convection are expected. While cells will generally move
    rapidly along the front, Corfidi vectors progged to collapse to=20
    just 5-10 kts suggests some backbuilding/short term training, which
    could enhance rainfall to more than 3 inches in some areas. There=20
    is considerable latitudinal spread in the axis of highest rainfall=20
    potential between the HREF and REFS members, leading to lower=20
    confidence in placement of heaviest rain. However, the EAS
    probabilities from both ensemble clusters, while varying greatly in
    magnitude, are focused generally in the same area, and atop a
    region of more sensitive soils and lower FFG due to 7-day rainfall
    more than 300% of normal. A SLGT risk was added to this area to
    better message the potential for this heavy rain falling atop
    vulnerable soil conditions.


    ...Mid-Atlantic into New England...=20
    Southwest return flow around a Bermuda-type ridge off the=20
    Southeast coast will continue today, pumping elevated moisture=20
    northward into the Mid-Atlantic States. PWs are forecast to reach=20
    around 2 inches, which, if achieved, would exceed the daily record
    at IAD and the surrounding region. This PW will be spread through=20
    the entire column as reflected by long-skinny CAPE profiles among=20
    the regional soundings, indicating efficient rainfall processes=20
    within thunderstorms that develop along a weak surface trough=20
    skirting across the area. Both the HREF and REFS probabilities=20
    indicate a moderate potential (30-50%) for 1"/hr rates, which=20
    despite generally progressive motion could cause axes of 2-3" of=20
    rain where multiple rounds occur. If any of this heavy rain falls=20
    atop urban areas or more sensitive soils from recent rain (where=20
    FFG is as low as 1-1.5"/3hrs), isolated instances of flash flooding
    could result.

    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE MID-=20
    SOUTH THROUGH INTERIOR NEW ENGLAND...

    Mid-level trough axis initially positioned across the Mississippi
    Valley will become more progressive on Thursday as it weakens in
    response to an expanding ridge over the Southern Plains. As this
    trough weakens and move quickly towards the Atlantic coast, a
    surface cold front beneath it will additionally track eastward,
    likely exiting the Mid-Atlantic and New England coasts by Friday
    morning, while lingering into the Southeast. This front will
    provide a focus for convective development Thursday, especially
    during peak heating as downstream SW 850mb flow of 25-35 kts surges
    PWs to 1.75+ inches, reflective of an environment that will support
    extremely efficient rainfall within thunderstorms. This indicates
    that despite the rapid frontal progression, and accompanying
    forward motion of thunderstorms (0-6km mean winds 20-25 kts),
    intense rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr could still produce isolated
    impacts, especially where any repeating storms can occur, or if
    heavier rain falls atop urban areas or more sensitive soils.

    At this time no SLGT risks have been introduced as storm motions
    may be more perpendicular to the front, and thus, mostly
    progressive. However, there is at least a subtle signal for some=20
    heavier rainfall across the Central Appalachians. This area is=20
    extremely sensitive due to recent heavy rainfall (7-day rainfall=20
    150-300 percent of normal) which has primed soils and reduced FFG=20
    to 1-2"/3hrs. If this signal increases, a targeted SLGT risk may be
    needed across these most vulnerable areas.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    GREAT LAKES AND PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES...

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Low pressure emerging from the Northern High Plains will extend a
    warm front downstream and into the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes. As
    this warm front lifts steadily northeast, especially the latter
    half of D3 /Friday night/, it will serve as a focus for blossoming
    convection. The downstream amplifying 850mb flow lifting out of the
    Gulf will reach as high as 40-50 kts into the Upper Midwest, and
    with the presence of the low to the west, these winds will back
    steadily to the SE to surge higher PWs, approaching 1.75 inches,
    into the warm front and into MN/WI. The combination of moisture
    convergence and isentropic ascent invof this front will help expand
    clusters of thunderstorms Friday night, leading to an axis of heavy
    rain that has a modest potential (10% or less from the ECENS/SREF)
    of exceeding 3 inches. Despite high FFG across this region,
    isolated flash flooding could result from this rainfall.


    ...Northern Rockies...
    Extremely anomalous mid-level low will dig into the Pacific=20
    Northwest Friday, pushing 500mb heights to below the 00Z minimum of
    the climatological database from NAEFS. Where intense height
    falls/PVA combine with the increasing diffluence along the LFQ of a
    Pacific jet streak, surface pressure falls will result, leading to
    a deepening low pressure moving from ID into MT. The increasingly
    backed low-level flow ahead of this system will cause 850mb winds
    to surge out of the E at 15-25 kts, lifting favorably to upslope
    into the terrain while additionally transporting a ribbon of PWs
    above 1 inch into the High Plains and banking into the eastern side
    of the Rockies. This will cause expanding precipitation, with
    embedded rainfall rates above 0.5"/hr where a narrow corridor of
    instability exists over northern MT. Locally heavy rainfall of
    1-2", with locally higher amounts, will result, leading to the
    potential for isolated flash flooding atop FFG that is only
    1-1.5"/3hrs.

    Weiss

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71OJxlxUOzrmEo30bmp08fuDkTWbOeuDPuzw1sDOyHBl= joZLCfy6fvfTuPgUEkZHWea--jYFnQ-ME3Gq1WO5q6PexWM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71OJxlxUOzrmEo30bmp08fuDkTWbOeuDPuzw1sDOyHBl= joZLCfy6fvfTuPgUEkZHWea--jYFnQ-ME3Gq1WO5OjGa588$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71OJxlxUOzrmEo30bmp08fuDkTWbOeuDPuzw1sDOyHBl= joZLCfy6fvfTuPgUEkZHWea--jYFnQ-ME3Gq1WO5irzmg2s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 18 15:58:21 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 181557
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1157 AM EDT Wed Jun 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    GREAT LAKES AND THE MID-SOUTH STATES...

    ...Great Lakes through the Mid-Mississippi Valley...
    Strung out shortwave embedded within amplifying mid-level flow
    will swing northeastward today as the primary trough axis shifts=20
    from the Central Plains to the Ohio Valley. The collocated height=20
    falls/PVA accompanying this energy will interact with the modest=20
    RRQ of a departing upper jet streak to help deepen a surface low=20
    moving into the Great Lakes. This low will strengthen along the
    front, leading to scattered/widespread showers and thunderstorms,=20
    but with two focused regions of excessive rainfall -- northern=20
    Illinois across Lower Michigan and from near Memphis into Kentucky.

    The greatest risk for heavy rain capable of producing flash flooding
    appears to be centered across the lower peninsula (L.P.) of
    Michigan. Heavy rain is favored along a warm front ahead of the=20
    low track, and along a deformation axis in the same region with=20
    embedded convection (some occurring already this morning/noontime).
    850mb flow ahead of the low will surge to 20-30kts, drawing PWs as
    high as 1.75 inches into MI, coincident with MUCAPE nearing 1000=20
    J/kg. This will support rainfall rates that have a moderate chance=20
    (40-60%) of exceeding 1"/hr at times. The heaviest rain rates are=20
    expected along the leading warm front thanks to stronger=20
    instability this evening, and during that time the combination of=20
    20-30 kts of bulk shear and 0-6km mean winds aligned to the front,=20
    despite progressive speeds near 30 kts, will support rainfall that=20
    will likely (70% chance) reach 3", and may reach as much as 5" in a
    few isolated locations. This could result in instances of flash=20
    flooding (15-30% chance of 3-hr FFG exceedance) despite generally=20
    dry antecedent conditions, and the SLGT risk was maintained here.

    Farther to the south, the cold front will be the primary mechanism
    for ascent/convective development as it tracks east from the Central
    Plains to the Tennessee Valley. This front will impinge upon intense thermodynamics characterized by MUCAPE above 3000 J/kg and PWs
    approaching 2 inches (>90th percentile). Thunderstorms will likely
    develop along the length of this front during peak instability,=20
    and where bulk shear exceeds 25 kts, generally from IN through AR,=20
    clusters of more organized convection are expected. While cells=20
    will generally move rapidly along the front, Corfidi vectors=20
    progged to collapse to just 5-10 kts suggests some=20
    backbuilding/short term training, which could enhance rainfall to=20
    more than 3 inches in some areas (max ensemble rainfall is 5-7").=20
    There is still some latitudinal spread in the axis of highest=20
    rainfall potential between the HREF and REFS members, leading to=20
    lower confidence in placement of heaviest rain. However, the EAS=20 probabilities from both ensemble clusters, while varying greatly in
    magnitude, are focused generally in the same area, and atop a=20
    region of more sensitive soils and lower FFG due to 7-day rainfall=20
    more than 300% of normal. The SLGT risk was maintained in this area
    due to the potential for this heavy rain falling atop vulnerable=20
    soil conditions.


    ...Mid-Atlantic into New England...
    Southwest return flow around a Bermuda-type ridge off the
    Southeast coast will continue today, pumping elevated moisture
    northward into the Mid-Atlantic States. PWs are forecast to reach
    around 2 inches (12Z IAD sounding was 2.15" / 99th percentile /
    near-record for this time of year per the ESAT). This PW will be=20
    spread through the entire column as reflected by long-skinny CAPE=20
    profiles among the regional soundings, indicating efficient=20
    rainfall processes within thunderstorms that develop along a weak=20
    surface trough skirting across the area. Both the HREF and REFS=20 probabilities indicate a moderate potential (30-50%) for 1"/hr=20
    rates, which, despite generally progressive motion, could cause=20
    axes of 2-3" of rain where multiple rounds occur (especially over
    the Mid-Atlantic DC-PHL-TTN). Recent HREF/RRFS members show=20
    potential for >4" rainfall in this urban corridor. If any of this=20
    heavy rain falls atop these urban areas or more sensitive soils=20
    from recent rain (where FFG is as low as 1-1.5"/3hrs), instances=20
    of flash flooding could result. Maintained the Marginal risk here=20
    due to the expected coverage (more isolated) though local impacts=20
    may be significant depending on the exact placement.=20

    Fracasso/Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE MID-
    SOUTH THROUGH INTERIOR NEW ENGLAND...

    Mid-level trough axis initially positioned across the Mississippi
    Valley will become more progressive on Thursday as it weakens in
    response to an expanding ridge over the Southern Plains. As this
    trough weakens and move quickly towards the Atlantic coast, a
    surface cold front beneath it will additionally track eastward,
    likely exiting the Mid-Atlantic and New England coasts by Friday
    morning, while lingering into the Southeast. This front will
    provide a focus for convective development Thursday, especially
    during peak heating as downstream SW 850mb flow of 25-35 kts surges
    PWs to 1.75+ inches, reflective of an environment that will support
    extremely efficient rainfall within thunderstorms. This indicates
    that despite the rapid frontal progression, and accompanying
    forward motion of thunderstorms (0-6km mean winds 20-25 kts),
    intense rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr could still produce isolated
    impacts, especially where any repeating storms can occur, or if
    heavier rain falls atop urban areas or more sensitive soils.

    At this time no SLGT risks have been introduced as storm motions
    may be more perpendicular to the front, and thus, mostly
    progressive. However, there is at least a subtle signal for some
    heavier rainfall across the Central Appalachians. This area is
    extremely sensitive due to recent heavy rainfall (7-day rainfall
    150-300 percent of normal) which has primed soils and reduced FFG
    to 1-2"/3hrs. If this signal increases, a targeted SLGT risk may be
    needed across these most vulnerable areas.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    GREAT LAKES AND PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES...

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Low pressure emerging from the Northern High Plains will extend a
    warm front downstream and into the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes. As
    this warm front lifts steadily northeast, especially the latter
    half of D3 /Friday night/, it will serve as a focus for blossoming
    convection. The downstream amplifying 850mb flow lifting out of the
    Gulf will reach as high as 40-50 kts into the Upper Midwest, and
    with the presence of the low to the west, these winds will back
    steadily to the SE to surge higher PWs, approaching 1.75 inches,
    into the warm front and into MN/WI. The combination of moisture
    convergence and isentropic ascent invof this front will help expand
    clusters of thunderstorms Friday night, leading to an axis of heavy
    rain that has a modest potential (10% or less from the ECENS/SREF)
    of exceeding 3 inches. Despite high FFG across this region,
    isolated flash flooding could result from this rainfall.


    ...Northern Rockies...
    Extremely anomalous mid-level low will dig into the Pacific
    Northwest Friday, pushing 500mb heights to below the 00Z minimum of
    the climatological database from NAEFS. Where intense height
    falls/PVA combine with the increasing diffluence along the LFQ of a
    Pacific jet streak, surface pressure falls will result, leading to
    a deepening low pressure moving from ID into MT. The increasingly
    backed low-level flow ahead of this system will cause 850mb winds
    to surge out of the E at 15-25 kts, lifting favorably to upslope
    into the terrain while additionally transporting a ribbon of PWs
    above 1 inch into the High Plains and banking into the eastern side
    of the Rockies. This will cause expanding precipitation, with
    embedded rainfall rates above 0.5"/hr where a narrow corridor of
    instability exists over northern MT. Locally heavy rainfall of
    1-2", with locally higher amounts, will result, leading to the
    potential for isolated flash flooding atop FFG that is only
    1-1.5"/3hrs.

    Weiss

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ID-R8j36IB4Kl9qYlyqFx8tNxJpXzYHRl6F24LVaOXi= 0xZSZXJDfnzHDiq0LQ4f7SYRpnGbAZbFBoHxF5kg6j1qXNk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ID-R8j36IB4Kl9qYlyqFx8tNxJpXzYHRl6F24LVaOXi= 0xZSZXJDfnzHDiq0LQ4f7SYRpnGbAZbFBoHxF5kgVk5l6XM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ID-R8j36IB4Kl9qYlyqFx8tNxJpXzYHRl6F24LVaOXi= 0xZSZXJDfnzHDiq0LQ4f7SYRpnGbAZbFBoHxF5kgC7NSgxY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 18 20:06:44 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 182006
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    406 PM EDT Wed Jun 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    GREAT LAKES AND THE MID-SOUTH STATES...

    ...Great Lakes through the Mid-Mississippi Valley...
    Strung out shortwave embedded within amplifying mid-level flow
    will swing northeastward today as the primary trough axis shifts
    from the Central Plains to the Ohio Valley. The collocated height
    falls/PVA accompanying this energy will interact with the modest
    RRQ of a departing upper jet streak to help deepen a surface low
    moving into the Great Lakes. This low will strengthen along the
    front, leading to scattered/widespread showers and thunderstorms,
    but with two focused regions of excessive rainfall -- northern
    Illinois across Lower Michigan and from near Memphis into Kentucky.

    The greatest risk for heavy rain capable of producing flash flooding
    appears to be centered across the lower peninsula (L.P.) of
    Michigan. Heavy rain is favored along a warm front ahead of the
    low track, and along a deformation axis in the same region with
    embedded convection (some occurring already this morning/noontime).
    850mb flow ahead of the low will surge to 20-30kts, drawing PWs as
    high as 1.75 inches into MI, coincident with MUCAPE nearing 1000
    J/kg. This will support rainfall rates that have a moderate chance
    (40-60%) of exceeding 1"/hr at times. The heaviest rain rates are
    expected along the leading warm front thanks to stronger
    instability this evening, and during that time the combination of
    20-30 kts of bulk shear and 0-6km mean winds aligned to the front,
    despite progressive speeds near 30 kts, will support rainfall that
    will likely (70% chance) reach 3", and may reach as much as 5" in a
    few isolated locations. This could result in instances of flash
    flooding (15-30% chance of 3-hr FFG exceedance) despite generally
    dry antecedent conditions, and the SLGT risk was maintained here.

    Farther to the south, the cold front will be the primary mechanism
    for ascent/convective development as it tracks east from the Central
    Plains to the Tennessee Valley. This front will impinge upon intense thermodynamics characterized by MUCAPE above 3000 J/kg and PWs
    approaching 2 inches (>90th percentile). Thunderstorms will likely
    develop along the length of this front during peak instability,
    and where bulk shear exceeds 25 kts, generally from IN through AR,
    clusters of more organized convection are expected. While cells
    will generally move rapidly along the front, Corfidi vectors
    progged to collapse to just 5-10 kts suggests some
    backbuilding/short term training, which could enhance rainfall to
    more than 3 inches in some areas (max ensemble rainfall is 5-7").
    There is still some latitudinal spread in the axis of highest
    rainfall potential between the HREF and REFS members, leading to
    lower confidence in placement of heaviest rain. However, the EAS
    probabilities from both ensemble clusters, while varying greatly in
    magnitude, are focused generally in the same area, and atop a
    region of more sensitive soils and lower FFG due to 7-day rainfall
    more than 300% of normal. The SLGT risk was maintained in this area
    due to the potential for this heavy rain falling atop vulnerable
    soil conditions.


    ...Mid-Atlantic into New England...
    Southwest return flow around a Bermuda-type ridge off the
    Southeast coast will continue today, pumping elevated moisture
    northward into the Mid-Atlantic States. PWs are forecast to reach
    around 2 inches (12Z IAD sounding was 2.15" / 99th percentile /
    near-record for this time of year per the ESAT). This PW will be
    spread through the entire column as reflected by long-skinny CAPE
    profiles among the regional soundings, indicating efficient
    rainfall processes within thunderstorms that develop along a weak
    surface trough skirting across the area. Both the HREF and REFS
    probabilities indicate a moderate potential (30-50%) for 1"/hr
    rates, which, despite generally progressive motion, could cause
    axes of 2-3" of rain where multiple rounds occur (especially over
    the Mid-Atlantic DC-PHL-TTN). Recent HREF/RRFS members show
    potential for >4" rainfall in this urban corridor. If any of this
    heavy rain falls atop these urban areas or more sensitive soils
    from recent rain (where FFG is as low as 1-1.5"/3hrs), instances
    of flash flooding could result. Maintained the Marginal risk here
    due to the expected coverage (more isolated) though local impacts
    may be significant depending on the exact placement.

    Fracasso/Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE MID-
    SOUTH THROUGH INTERIOR NEW ENGLAND...

    2030Z update... no significant changes to the forecast.

    Fracasso

    Mid-level trough axis initially positioned across the Mississippi
    Valley will become more progressive on Thursday as it weakens in
    response to an expanding ridge over the Southern Plains. As this
    trough weakens and moves quickly towards the Atlantic coast, a
    surface cold front beneath it will additionally track eastward,
    likely exiting the Mid-Atlantic and New England coasts by Friday
    morning, while lingering into the Southeast. This front will
    provide a focus for convective development Thursday, especially
    during peak heating as downstream SW 850mb flow of 25-35 kts surges
    PWs to 1.75+ inches, reflective of an environment that will support
    extremely efficient rainfall within thunderstorms. This indicates
    that despite the rapid frontal progression, and accompanying
    forward motion of thunderstorms (0-6km mean winds 20-25 kts),
    intense rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr could still produce isolated
    impacts, especially where any repeating storms can occur, or if
    heavier rain falls atop urban areas or more sensitive soils.

    At this time no SLGT risks have been introduced as storm motions
    may be more perpendicular to the front, and thus, mostly
    progressive. However, there is at least a subtle signal for some
    heavier rainfall across the Central Appalachians. This area is
    extremely sensitive due to recent heavy rainfall (7-day rainfall
    150-300 percent of normal) which has primed soils and reduced FFG
    to 1-2"/3hrs. If this signal increases, a targeted SLGT risk may be
    needed across these most vulnerable areas.=20

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    GREAT LAKES AND PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES...

    2030Z update... expanded the Marginal risk outline across the
    northern Plains due to spread in the 12Z guidance. Otherwise, no
    significant changes.=20

    Fracasso

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Low pressure emerging from the Northern High Plains will extend a
    warm front downstream and into the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes. As
    this warm front lifts steadily northeast, especially the latter
    half of D3 /Friday night/, it will serve as a focus for blossoming
    convection. The downstream amplifying 850mb flow lifting out of the
    Gulf will reach as high as 40-50 kts into the Upper Midwest, and
    with the presence of the low to the west, these winds will back
    steadily to the SE to surge higher PWs, approaching 1.75 inches,
    into the warm front and into MN/WI. The combination of moisture
    convergence and isentropic ascent invof this front will help expand
    clusters of thunderstorms Friday night, leading to an axis of heavy
    rain that has some potential (10% or less from the=20
    NBM/GEFS/CMCE/ECENS/SREF) of exceeding 3 inches. Despite high FFG=20
    across this region, isolated flash flooding could result from this=20 rainfall.=20


    ...Northern Rockies...
    Extremely anomalous mid-level low will dig into the Pacific
    Northwest Friday, pushing 500mb heights to below the 00Z minimum of
    the climatological database from NAEFS. Where intense height
    falls/PVA combine with the increasing diffluence along the LFQ of a
    Pacific jet streak, surface pressure falls will result, leading to
    a deepening low pressure moving from ID into MT. The increasingly
    backed low-level flow ahead of this system will cause 850mb winds
    to surge out of the E at 15-25 kts, lifting favorably to upslope
    into the terrain while additionally transporting a ribbon of PWs
    above 1 inch into the High Plains and banking into the eastern side
    of the Rockies. This will cause expanding precipitation, with
    embedded rainfall rates above 0.5"/hr where a narrow corridor of
    instability exists over northern MT. Locally heavy rainfall of
    1-2", with locally higher amounts, will result, leading to the
    potential for isolated flash flooding atop FFG that is only
    1-1.5"/3hrs.

    Weiss

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!44a-vFHulf2ymr8OuRviIb5jQiYe_E6SFnUS9v15CMp3= ZX6UFZcCuBprVw5KSdyGndkPu-mHEVEOi7eivDxuixP3VKQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!44a-vFHulf2ymr8OuRviIb5jQiYe_E6SFnUS9v15CMp3= ZX6UFZcCuBprVw5KSdyGndkPu-mHEVEOi7eivDxuS7lrufA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!44a-vFHulf2ymr8OuRviIb5jQiYe_E6SFnUS9v15CMp3= ZX6UFZcCuBprVw5KSdyGndkPu-mHEVEOi7eivDxue_PtJ_8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 19 00:58:04 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 190057
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    857 PM EDT Wed Jun 18 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    GREAT LAKES AND THE MID-SOUTH STATES...

    01Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...
    The area extending from parts of the southern and eastern Great
    Lakes into the Mid-South remain the primary concern for excessive
    rainfall this evening and into the overnight hours. The HRRR and
    HREF keep pushing showers and thunderstorms southward across parts
    of the Ohio and Tennessee Valley with spotty 15 percent
    neighborhood probabilities of rainfall exceeding 1-hour flash=20
    flood guidance in parts of Tennessee. Farther north...the threat of
    heavy to potentially excessive rainfall lingers as mid-level=20
    height falls continue tracking northeastward and support from a=20
    departing upper jet streak. In some cases..the concern arises from=20 repeat/training convection.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...Great Lakes through the Mid-Mississippi Valley...
    Strung out shortwave embedded within amplifying mid-level flow
    will swing northeastward today as the primary trough axis shifts
    from the Central Plains to the Ohio Valley. The collocated height
    falls/PVA accompanying this energy will interact with the modest
    RRQ of a departing upper jet streak to help deepen a surface low
    moving into the Great Lakes. This low will strengthen along the
    front, leading to scattered/widespread showers and thunderstorms,
    but with two focused regions of excessive rainfall -- northern
    Illinois across Lower Michigan and from near Memphis into Kentucky.

    The greatest risk for heavy rain capable of producing flash flooding
    appears to be centered across the lower peninsula (L.P.) of
    Michigan. Heavy rain is favored along a warm front ahead of the
    low track, and along a deformation axis in the same region with
    embedded convection (some occurring already this morning/noontime).
    850mb flow ahead of the low will surge to 20-30kts, drawing PWs as
    high as 1.75 inches into MI, coincident with MUCAPE nearing 1000
    J/kg. This will support rainfall rates that have a moderate chance
    (40-60%) of exceeding 1"/hr at times. The heaviest rain rates are
    expected along the leading warm front thanks to stronger
    instability this evening, and during that time the combination of
    20-30 kts of bulk shear and 0-6km mean winds aligned to the front,
    despite progressive speeds near 30 kts, will support rainfall that
    will likely (70% chance) reach 3", and may reach as much as 5" in a
    few isolated locations. This could result in instances of flash
    flooding (15-30% chance of 3-hr FFG exceedance) despite generally
    dry antecedent conditions, and the SLGT risk was maintained here.

    Farther to the south, the cold front will be the primary mechanism
    for ascent/convective development as it tracks east from the Central
    Plains to the Tennessee Valley. This front will impinge upon intense thermodynamics characterized by MUCAPE above 3000 J/kg and PWs
    approaching 2 inches (>90th percentile). Thunderstorms will likely
    develop along the length of this front during peak instability,
    and where bulk shear exceeds 25 kts, generally from IN through AR,
    clusters of more organized convection are expected. While cells
    will generally move rapidly along the front, Corfidi vectors
    progged to collapse to just 5-10 kts suggests some
    backbuilding/short term training, which could enhance rainfall to
    more than 3 inches in some areas (max ensemble rainfall is 5-7").
    There is still some latitudinal spread in the axis of highest
    rainfall potential between the HREF and REFS members, leading to
    lower confidence in placement of heaviest rain. However, the EAS
    probabilities from both ensemble clusters, while varying greatly in
    magnitude, are focused generally in the same area, and atop a
    region of more sensitive soils and lower FFG due to 7-day rainfall
    more than 300% of normal. The SLGT risk was maintained in this area
    due to the potential for this heavy rain falling atop vulnerable
    soil conditions.


    ...Mid-Atlantic into New England...
    Southwest return flow around a Bermuda-type ridge off the
    Southeast coast will continue today, pumping elevated moisture
    northward into the Mid-Atlantic States. PWs are forecast to reach
    around 2 inches (12Z IAD sounding was 2.15" / 99th percentile /
    near-record for this time of year per the ESAT). This PW will be
    spread through the entire column as reflected by long-skinny CAPE
    profiles among the regional soundings, indicating efficient
    rainfall processes within thunderstorms that develop along a weak
    surface trough skirting across the area. Both the HREF and REFS
    probabilities indicate a moderate potential (30-50%) for 1"/hr
    rates, which, despite generally progressive motion, could cause
    axes of 2-3" of rain where multiple rounds occur (especially over
    the Mid-Atlantic DC-PHL-TTN). Recent HREF/RRFS members show
    potential for >4" rainfall in this urban corridor. If any of this
    heavy rain falls atop these urban areas or more sensitive soils
    from recent rain (where FFG is as low as 1-1.5"/3hrs), instances
    of flash flooding could result. Maintained the Marginal risk here
    due to the expected coverage (more isolated) though local impacts
    may be significant depending on the exact placement.

    Fracasso/Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE MID-
    SOUTH THROUGH INTERIOR NEW ENGLAND...

    2030Z update... no significant changes to the forecast.

    Fracasso

    Mid-level trough axis initially positioned across the Mississippi
    Valley will become more progressive on Thursday as it weakens in
    response to an expanding ridge over the Southern Plains. As this
    trough weakens and moves quickly towards the Atlantic coast, a
    surface cold front beneath it will additionally track eastward,
    likely exiting the Mid-Atlantic and New England coasts by Friday
    morning, while lingering into the Southeast. This front will
    provide a focus for convective development Thursday, especially
    during peak heating as downstream SW 850mb flow of 25-35 kts surges
    PWs to 1.75+ inches, reflective of an environment that will support
    extremely efficient rainfall within thunderstorms. This indicates
    that despite the rapid frontal progression, and accompanying
    forward motion of thunderstorms (0-6km mean winds 20-25 kts),
    intense rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr could still produce isolated
    impacts, especially where any repeating storms can occur, or if
    heavier rain falls atop urban areas or more sensitive soils.

    At this time no SLGT risks have been introduced as storm motions
    may be more perpendicular to the front, and thus, mostly
    progressive. However, there is at least a subtle signal for some
    heavier rainfall across the Central Appalachians. This area is
    extremely sensitive due to recent heavy rainfall (7-day rainfall
    150-300 percent of normal) which has primed soils and reduced FFG
    to 1-2"/3hrs. If this signal increases, a targeted SLGT risk may be
    needed across these most vulnerable areas.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    GREAT LAKES AND PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES...

    2030Z update... expanded the Marginal risk outline across the
    northern Plains due to spread in the 12Z guidance. Otherwise, no
    significant changes.

    Fracasso

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Low pressure emerging from the Northern High Plains will extend a
    warm front downstream and into the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes. As
    this warm front lifts steadily northeast, especially the latter
    half of D3 /Friday night/, it will serve as a focus for blossoming
    convection. The downstream amplifying 850mb flow lifting out of the
    Gulf will reach as high as 40-50 kts into the Upper Midwest, and
    with the presence of the low to the west, these winds will back
    steadily to the SE to surge higher PWs, approaching 1.75 inches,
    into the warm front and into MN/WI. The combination of moisture
    convergence and isentropic ascent invof this front will help expand
    clusters of thunderstorms Friday night, leading to an axis of heavy
    rain that has some potential (10% or less from the
    NBM/GEFS/CMCE/ECENS/SREF) of exceeding 3 inches. Despite high FFG
    across this region, isolated flash flooding could result from this
    rainfall.


    ...Northern Rockies...
    Extremely anomalous mid-level low will dig into the Pacific
    Northwest Friday, pushing 500mb heights to below the 00Z minimum of
    the climatological database from NAEFS. Where intense height
    falls/PVA combine with the increasing diffluence along the LFQ of a
    Pacific jet streak, surface pressure falls will result, leading to
    a deepening low pressure moving from ID into MT. The increasingly
    backed low-level flow ahead of this system will cause 850mb winds
    to surge out of the E at 15-25 kts, lifting favorably to upslope
    into the terrain while additionally transporting a ribbon of PWs
    above 1 inch into the High Plains and banking into the eastern side
    of the Rockies. This will cause expanding precipitation, with
    embedded rainfall rates above 0.5"/hr where a narrow corridor of
    instability exists over northern MT. Locally heavy rainfall of
    1-2", with locally higher amounts, will result, leading to the
    potential for isolated flash flooding atop FFG that is only
    1-1.5"/3hrs.

    Weiss

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!95lkhXbPCR8RTVF8O03kVvXV9Md2ubSsBFVSSqBLxEbS= 9AZDHLwEUuY83H4Fq13DfO6-l3pBSYpOth0X7KHdJbHSMzY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!95lkhXbPCR8RTVF8O03kVvXV9Md2ubSsBFVSSqBLxEbS= 9AZDHLwEUuY83H4Fq13DfO6-l3pBSYpOth0X7KHd-K5aPSc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!95lkhXbPCR8RTVF8O03kVvXV9Md2ubSsBFVSSqBLxEbS= 9AZDHLwEUuY83H4Fq13DfO6-l3pBSYpOth0X7KHd7Uubfss$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 19 07:46:01 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 190744
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    344 AM EDT Thu Jun 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

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

    ...Central Appalachians...

    Cold front progression from the Ohio Valley through the Eastern
    CONUS will lead to scattered instances of heavy convection along
    and just ahead of the front during its evolution. As of now, the
    highlight will be a steady forward motion of cells given the mean
    field and general speed shear located within the warm sector of the synoptically driven ascent field. Thunderstorms from eastern OH
    down through the Tennessee Valley and points east will be capable
    of 1-2"/hr rates within any convective development thanks to
    relevant buoyancy out ahead of the surface front and deep moist
    plume still running between +1 to +2 deviations above normal from
    the Southeast CONUS up through New England. The greatest area of
    concern remains the interior Mid Atlantic positioned between WV up
    through far eastern OH and Western PA where remnant soils have been significantly compromised over a succession of 5 straight
    convective impact days. Area FFG's for 1hr indices are down as low
    as 0.5/hr for exceedance with some spots even lower within the
    confines of the Central Appalachians in Northern WV and the
    northern Laurels in PA. The prospects for considerable rates and
    training potential are lower than previous days due to the more
    progressive nature of precip, but the environment is very capable
    of producing rates sufficient for localized flooding in those areas
    that have been hardest hit. In coordination with the local WFO's
    across the interior Mid Atlantic, a targeted SLGT risk was added
    for the areas with the lowest FFG's and more susceptible flash
    flood capabilities.=20

    ...Mid Atlantic and Northeast...

    Across the Mid Atlantic and Northeast, the front will produce some
    heavy thunderstorms capable of flash flooding within the urban
    corridor extending from Richmond up through NYC, however the
    progressive nature of the storms should curb the worst impacts and
    relegate to a more isolated threat with the urban centers the most
    at risk within the nature of the setup. A quick 1-2" with locally
    higher is forecast over the above I-95 megalopolis corridor, but
    the threat is not anticipated to be widespread with areal average
    QPF closer to ~0.5" in most areas with stripes of heavier QPF noted
    in the 00z HREF blended mean output. This entire area up through
    parts of New England remain firmly in a MRGL with a small chance of
    upgrade over parts of the Mid Atlantic if morning CAMs indicate
    more aggressive signals.=20=20

    ...Southeast...

    Another heavy rain scenario is depicted over parts of the Lower=20
    Mississippi into the Southeast U.S. where convection developing=20
    overnight into a MCS will lead to heavy rain pushing south through=20
    parts of AR/MS/AL tomorrow morning with an flanking line
    potentially inducing some backbuilding/training scenarios over
    Southern AR. The expected magnitude of the precip should thwart
    significant flash flood concerns within the primary axis of the
    complex, but a few areas could certainly be impacted enough to
    produce localized flash flooding. Over the flanking side of the
    complex back west, that area will need to be monitored closely due
    to the backbuilding potential and slower storm motions as mean flow
    is much weaker and more susceptible to this potential. A MRGL risk
    is in place over the Southeast to highlight the threat.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST AND PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES...

    ...Upper Midwest...=20

    Amplified mid and upper pattern across the Western CONUS into the
    Northern Plains will lead to a stout area of low pressure
    developing across the Western High Plains, moving east through the
    Upper Midwest as we move through Friday into Saturday morning.
    South of the area will see a strong ridge pattern unfold creating
    an enhanced thermal gradient pattern with a budding warm sector and
    ample surface based instability with most guidance inferring
    3000-5000 J/kg of SBCAPE across the area between the eastern
    Dakotas over into the Upper Midwest by Friday evening. Split jet
    max ejecting northeast out of the Plains will lead to increasing
    ascent within the diffluent area of the jet and along the eastern
    flank of the intensifying surface low. Thunderstorms will blossom
    across the Eastern Dakotas and quickly advance eastward with
    upscale growth thanks to the speed shear presence and strong
    thermal gradient to maintain general MCS structure. Inflow around
    the eastern flank of the low will aid in the overall maintenance=20
    of the expected complex with smaller convective cells forming out
    ahead and being integrated into the complex as it maneuvers through
    MN. Areal QPF within the latest blend and ensemble bias corrected
    forecast indicates a general 0.5-1" coverage with maxima likely to
    locally exceed 2" over a short period of time within a zone
    extending through Central MN into the Arrowhead. Will monitor for
    backbuilding within the flanking portion of any complex which could
    lead to local enhancement of precip and enhance flash flood
    prospects in pockets where the MCS crosses. For now, the
    progression of the MCS would favor limited training potential and
    more impacts based on enhanced rates given the favorable upper
    level dynamics, instability, and rich moisture pull within the
    eastern side of the surface low. The previous MRGL risk was
    maintained with only some minor adjustments based on QPF
    distribution this forecast.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Guidance remains pretty locked in for the anticipated evolution of
    the next disturbance entering the Pacific Northwest with convective
    impacts forecast for the Northern Rockies and adjacent areas to the
    east. Extremely anomalous mid- level low will dig into the Pacific
    Northwest Friday, pushing 500mb heights to below the 00Z minimum=20
    of the climatological database from NAEFS. Where intense height=20
    falls/PVA combine with the increasing diffluence along the LFQ of a
    Pacific jet streak, surface pressure falls will result, leading to
    a deepening low pressure moving from ID into MT. The increasingly=20
    backed low-level flow ahead of this system will cause 850mb winds=20
    to surge out of the E at 15-25 kts, lifting favorably to upslope=20
    into the terrain while additionally transporting a ribbon of PWs=20
    above 1 inch into the High Plains and banking into the eastern side
    of the Rockies. This will cause expanding precipitation, with=20
    embedded rainfall rates above 0.5"/hr where a narrow corridor of=20
    instability exists over northern MT. Locally heavy rainfall of=20
    1-2", with locally higher amounts, will result, leading to the=20
    potential for isolated flash flooding atop FFG that is only=20
    1-1.5"/3hrs. The previous MRGL risk was maintained given the
    expected evolution with general run to run continuity among
    deterministic and global ensemble means.=20=20

    Weiss/Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHERN GREAT LAKES, INTERIOR NORTHEAST, AND NORTHERN MONTANA...

    ...Northern Great Lakes into the Northeast...=20

    Shortwave progression out of the Upper Midwest will ride along the
    northern periphery of our expansive ridge as we move through
    Saturday. Ensemble consensus pins the energy over the Northern
    Great Lakes with remnant thunderstorms propagating through the
    Michigan U.P. into adjacent Ontario with a break in convective
    activity in the CONUS before the disturbance re-emerges over
    Upstate NY and Northern New England. Some discrepancy on the
    northern extent of the shortwave progression as the ECMWF bias is
    further north with sights on Western ME and far northern VT/NH as
    the impact points. Other guidance is suggesting a bit further south
    into Upstate NY through Central New England with heavier precip
    threats more likely into the central and northern Hudson Valley.
    This is a period to monitor closely as flash flood impacts will be=20
    tied to the progression of a fairly robust complex as it exits out
    of Canada. QPF distribution is skewed towards heavier precip
    located within North Country of NY state with some secondary maxima
    over Northern New England down through the Adirondacks. Heavy rain
    over the U.P. may be progressive enough to curb significant
    impacts, but the eastern portion of the U.P. is the area of concern
    with the vacating complex as it moves quickly through the region.
    The MRGL risk inherited was adjusted slightly to account for the
    uncertainty in the exact progression of the complex.=20

    ...Northern Montana...

    Our potent mid-upper trough will meander over the Pacific Northwest
    with a strong shortwave migrating out of the base of the trough,
    eventually closing off right along the International Border to the
    northeast of Glacier National. Surface low development in-of the
    closed upper reflection should provide a narrow axis of convergence
    just outside the eastern slopes of the Rockies generating a period
    of heavy rainfall in the adjacent valleys to the east of the
    mountains. Height falls across the region will be significant
    creating favorable mid-level lapse rates within any convective
    scheme along with ample moisture advection east of the terrain. The
    threat is very much tied to the northern tier of MT where the
    convergence pattern is greatest. The threat is less pronounced
    further south and east comparatively, however some inference of a
    few mid-level perturbations ejecting downstream over Northern WY
    into Southern MT could provide a secondary area of focus for heavy
    rainfall. For now, the main threat within the QPF distribution is
    for locally heavy rainfall in that small zone of convergence under
    the surface low formation near the border. Local 1-2" is forecast
    in that area with some ensemble QPF output closer to 3" not too far
    away into Canada. Targeted MRGL risk for that area east of the
    terrain remains with little change from previous forecast.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!56BSvfMw9YWFmM9LCwvbYHu9XGLMZ2GECRR6XzUHkXOE= WrqnG0Uy1ajaAqCzR62nlqukYBLzbP3KCDmKFgclkJOO1p4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!56BSvfMw9YWFmM9LCwvbYHu9XGLMZ2GECRR6XzUHkXOE= WrqnG0Uy1ajaAqCzR62nlqukYBLzbP3KCDmKFgclVngLghE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!56BSvfMw9YWFmM9LCwvbYHu9XGLMZ2GECRR6XzUHkXOE= WrqnG0Uy1ajaAqCzR62nlqukYBLzbP3KCDmKFgclrrnCNSE$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 19 15:54:33 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 191554
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1154 AM EDT Thu Jun 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    ...Central Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic, and the Northeast...=20
    A potent shortwave will amplify as it tracks northeast from the=20
    Great Lakes to along the northern New England/Canadian border,=20
    potentially becoming negatively tilted by tonight. This will help=20
    to deepen a surface low moving in tandem with its parent trough,=20
    which will in turn drive the accompanying cold front rapidly to the
    east. By 12Z Friday, this front should be offshore New England and
    the Mid- Atlantic, but before that occurs scattered thunderstorms=20
    with heavy rain are likely along it.

    The downstream environment from this front is extremely favorable=20
    for thunderstorms containing heavy rain. PWs will surge northward on=20
    SW 850mb flow of 30 kts, reaching 1.75 to 2 inches, or higher, from=20
    the Mid-Atlantic into New England, which will be above daily records=20 according to the SPC sounding climatology. This intense PW plume=20
    will combine with a narrow corridor of MUCAPE progged to exceed 2000=20
    J/kg from NC through ME, to support heavy rainfall within=20
    convection. Although the CAMs are generally modest with their=20
    coverage today, expect scattered to numerous thunderstorms to=20
    develop during peak heating, with modest bulk shear of 25-30 kts=20
    supporting at least isolated clusters in an otherwise pulse-type=20 environment. Due to the impressive PWs and tall skinny CAPE=20
    profiles, max hourly rainfall could reach 2-3" according to the REFS=20
    and HREF guidance, which would be sufficient to cause runoff and=20
    isolated flash flooding.=20

    Although the flash flood risk today is generally isolated due to=20
    fast storm motions and minimal training, there is a slightly higher=20
    risk for impacts across the Central Appalachians, generally in WV=20
    and PA, where antecedent conditions (7-day rainfall more than 400%=20
    of normal according to AHPS) have resulted in severely compromised=20
    FFG as low as 1"/3hrs. Despite progressive cell motion, HREF=20
    exceedance probabilities rise to 15-25% in this area, and it is=20
    possible that even fast-moving heavy rain producers could cause=20
    impacts, so the SLGT risk has been maintained. Additionally, after
    coordination with WFO LWX, a targeted SLGT risk has been added for
    generally the I-95 urban corridor of northern VA and MD where the
    high-res CAMs suggest some local focusing of thunderstorms this
    afternoon with heavy rain which could produce as much as 3" of
    rainfall atop sensitive areas which received heavy rain on
    Wednesday.

    Farther north into New England, mean 0-6km winds remain quick at 20-
    30 kts, but are more aligned parallel to the Corfidi vectors and the=20
    front, suggesting an enhanced training risk. However, instability=20
    and PWs are more modest, so rain intensity will be decreased as=20
    forecast by lower 1"/hr rain rate probabilities from the HREF.=20
    Although total rainfall could reach 3" in some areas from northern=20
    VT through northern ME, the excessive rain risk remains in the MRGL=20 category.


    ...Southeast...=20
    The same front that will race across the Mid-Atlantic and=20
    Northeast, will trail back into the Southeast today. Although this=20
    front is likely to decay by this evening, the residual convergence=20
    zone will linger as it becomes embedded within more zonal flow=20
    south of the primary trough. Convection ongoing early this morning=20
    from AR to AL will weaken, but the accompanying outflow may merge=20
    with the weakening front to provide additional impetus for=20
    convective development thanks to robust thermodynamics=20
    characterized by PWs of around 1.75 inches and MUCAPE of 2000-3000=20
    J/kg. This will create scattered thunderstorms this aftn/eve with=20
    rainfall rates of more than 2"/hr. Although there is some=20
    uncertainty into how the weakening front will evolve (some CAMs=20
    suggest the outflow will surge all the way to the Gulf Coast), any=20
    storms that do form have the potential to train as Corfidi vectors=20
    collapse to around 5 kts so storms could move west to east and=20
    repeat through the evening. Both the HREF and REFS guidance=20
    indicate a 30-40% chance of 3" of rain, which could produce=20
    isolated flash flooding today.


    ...Florida Peninsula...=20
    Bermuda-type ridge off the Southeast Coast will produce weak=20
    easterly flow over the FL Peninsula today. As afternoon heating=20
    commences and instability climbs above 2000 J/kg, scattered=20
    afternoon thunderstorms will develop. Initially, these will occur=20
    on the sea breeze, but as the Atlantic coast sea breeze pushes=20
    westward and a weak jet streak develops downstream of a longwave=20
    trough dropping across the Southeast, additional development is=20
    likely along this boundary and due to storm mergers/boundary=20
    interactions. This will likely be most prevalent near the SW coast=20
    of FL where the Gulf Coast sea breeze will be pinned, fueling=20
    multiple rounds of slow moving thunderstorms. With PWs progged=20
    around 1.75", rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr are expected, producing=20
    hourly rainfall as much as 3" according to both the RRFS and HRRR=20
    models, and total rainfall over 5" possible (20-40%) in localized=20
    areas. Should this rain occur atop more urban areas, especially=20
    along the Sun Coast, instances of flash flooding could result.


    ...Upper Midwest...
    A cold front dropping out of Canada today will slow and stall
    across Minnesota this evening in response to flattening 500mb flow
    aloft as a ridge build atop the Southern Plains. Return flow
    circling this expanding ridge will amplify tonight, with 850mb
    winds potentially reaching above 50 kts on S/SW flow emerging from
    the Central Plains and surging into the front. This LLJ will
    resupply favorable thermodynamics into the region as reflected by
    an overlap of PWs above 1.25 inches and MUCAPE exceeding 2000 J/kg
    to support thunderstorm development. Storms that develop along this
    boundary may train from WNW to ESE as mean winds parallel the
    front, and with rain rate probabilities reaching 40-60% for 1"/hr,
    2-3" of rain is possible as noted by the HREF PMM and 3"/24hr
    probabilities reaching 20-30. Despite relatively high FFG, training
    of these rain rates where they produce the locally higher stripes
    of rain could cause instances of flash flooding tonight.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER
    MIDWEST AND PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    Amplified mid and upper pattern across the Western CONUS into the
    Northern Plains will lead to a stout area of low pressure
    developing across the Western High Plains, moving east through the
    Upper Midwest as we move through Friday into Saturday morning.
    South of the area will see a strong ridge pattern unfold creating
    an enhanced thermal gradient pattern with a budding warm sector and
    ample surface based instability with most guidance inferring
    3000-5000 J/kg of SBCAPE across the area between the eastern
    Dakotas over into the Upper Midwest by Friday evening. Split jet
    max ejecting northeast out of the Plains will lead to increasing
    ascent within the diffluent area of the jet and along the eastern
    flank of the intensifying surface low. Thunderstorms will blossom
    across the Eastern Dakotas and quickly advance eastward with
    upscale growth thanks to the speed shear presence and strong
    thermal gradient to maintain general MCS structure. Inflow around
    the eastern flank of the low will aid in the overall maintenance
    of the expected complex with smaller convective cells forming out
    ahead and being integrated into the complex as it maneuvers through
    MN. Areal QPF within the latest blend and ensemble bias corrected
    forecast indicates a general 0.5-1" coverage with maxima likely to
    locally exceed 2" over a short period of time within a zone
    extending through Central MN into the Arrowhead. Will monitor for
    backbuilding within the flanking portion of any complex which could
    lead to local enhancement of precip and enhance flash flood
    prospects in pockets where the MCS crosses. For now, the
    progression of the MCS would favor limited training potential and
    more impacts based on enhanced rates given the favorable upper
    level dynamics, instability, and rich moisture pull within the
    eastern side of the surface low. The previous MRGL risk was
    maintained with only some minor adjustments based on QPF
    distribution this forecast.

    ...Northern Rockies...

    Guidance remains pretty locked in for the anticipated evolution of
    the next disturbance entering the Pacific Northwest with convective
    impacts forecast for the Northern Rockies and adjacent areas to the
    east. Extremely anomalous mid- level low will dig into the Pacific
    Northwest Friday, pushing 500mb heights to below the 00Z minimum
    of the climatological database from NAEFS. Where intense height
    falls/PVA combine with the increasing diffluence along the LFQ of a
    Pacific jet streak, surface pressure falls will result, leading to
    a deepening low pressure moving from ID into MT. The increasingly
    backed low-level flow ahead of this system will cause 850mb winds
    to surge out of the E at 15-25 kts, lifting favorably to upslope
    into the terrain while additionally transporting a ribbon of PWs
    above 1 inch into the High Plains and banking into the eastern side
    of the Rockies. This will cause expanding precipitation, with
    embedded rainfall rates above 0.5"/hr where a narrow corridor of
    instability exists over northern MT. Locally heavy rainfall of
    1-2", with locally higher amounts, will result, leading to the
    potential for isolated flash flooding atop FFG that is only
    1-1.5"/3hrs. The previous MRGL risk was maintained given the
    expected evolution with general run to run continuity among
    deterministic and global ensemble means.

    Weiss/Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHERN GREAT LAKES, INTERIOR NORTHEAST, AND NORTHERN MONTANA...

    ...Northern Great Lakes into the Northeast...

    Shortwave progression out of the Upper Midwest will ride along the
    northern periphery of our expansive ridge as we move through
    Saturday. Ensemble consensus pins the energy over the Northern
    Great Lakes with remnant thunderstorms propagating through the
    Michigan U.P. into adjacent Ontario with a break in convective
    activity in the CONUS before the disturbance re-emerges over
    Upstate NY and Northern New England. Some discrepancy on the
    northern extent of the shortwave progression as the ECMWF bias is
    further north with sights on Western ME and far northern VT/NH as
    the impact points. Other guidance is suggesting a bit further south
    into Upstate NY through Central New England with heavier precip
    threats more likely into the central and northern Hudson Valley.
    This is a period to monitor closely as flash flood impacts will be
    tied to the progression of a fairly robust complex as it exits out
    of Canada. QPF distribution is skewed towards heavier precip
    located within North Country of NY state with some secondary maxima
    over Northern New England down through the Adirondacks. Heavy rain
    over the U.P. may be progressive enough to curb significant
    impacts, but the eastern portion of the U.P. is the area of concern
    with the vacating complex as it moves quickly through the region.
    The MRGL risk inherited was adjusted slightly to account for the
    uncertainty in the exact progression of the complex.

    ...Northern Montana...

    Our potent mid-upper trough will meander over the Pacific Northwest
    with a strong shortwave migrating out of the base of the trough,
    eventually closing off right along the International Border to the
    northeast of Glacier National. Surface low development in-of the
    closed upper reflection should provide a narrow axis of convergence
    just outside the eastern slopes of the Rockies generating a period
    of heavy rainfall in the adjacent valleys to the east of the
    mountains. Height falls across the region will be significant
    creating favorable mid-level lapse rates within any convective
    scheme along with ample moisture advection east of the terrain. The
    threat is very much tied to the northern tier of MT where the
    convergence pattern is greatest. The threat is less pronounced
    further south and east comparatively, however some inference of a
    few mid-level perturbations ejecting downstream over Northern WY
    into Southern MT could provide a secondary area of focus for heavy
    rainfall. For now, the main threat within the QPF distribution is
    for locally heavy rainfall in that small zone of convergence under
    the surface low formation near the border. Local 1-2" is forecast
    in that area with some ensemble QPF output closer to 3" not too far
    away into Canada. Targeted MRGL risk for that area east of the
    terrain remains with little change from previous forecast.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5c1GRLA-w9n_TvgubvDdUZj-QSVFLKb0mGno3Yddq2Ev= DZFGYx_WFiKv7STtjSh1o2ATxM4g__hFMFMQI0-fSYgBALc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5c1GRLA-w9n_TvgubvDdUZj-QSVFLKb0mGno3Yddq2Ev= DZFGYx_WFiKv7STtjSh1o2ATxM4g__hFMFMQI0-fy78o16Y$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5c1GRLA-w9n_TvgubvDdUZj-QSVFLKb0mGno3Yddq2Ev= DZFGYx_WFiKv7STtjSh1o2ATxM4g__hFMFMQI0-fLhf8LOk$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 19 19:19:18 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 191919
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    319 PM EDT Thu Jun 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    ...Central Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic, and the Northeast...
    A potent shortwave will amplify as it tracks northeast from the
    Great Lakes to along the northern New England/Canadian border,
    potentially becoming negatively tilted by tonight. This will help
    to deepen a surface low moving in tandem with its parent trough,
    which will in turn drive the accompanying cold front rapidly to the
    east. By 12Z Friday, this front should be offshore New England and
    the Mid- Atlantic, but before that occurs scattered thunderstorms
    with heavy rain are likely along it.

    The downstream environment from this front is extremely favorable
    for thunderstorms containing heavy rain. PWs will surge northward on
    SW 850mb flow of 30 kts, reaching 1.75 to 2 inches, or higher, from
    the Mid-Atlantic into New England, which will be above daily records
    according to the SPC sounding climatology. This intense PW plume
    will combine with a narrow corridor of MUCAPE progged to exceed 2000
    J/kg from NC through ME, to support heavy rainfall within
    convection. Although the CAMs are generally modest with their
    coverage today, expect scattered to numerous thunderstorms to
    develop during peak heating, with modest bulk shear of 25-30 kts
    supporting at least isolated clusters in an otherwise pulse-type
    environment. Due to the impressive PWs and tall skinny CAPE
    profiles, max hourly rainfall could reach 2-3" according to the REFS
    and HREF guidance, which would be sufficient to cause runoff and
    isolated flash flooding.

    Although the flash flood risk today is generally isolated due to
    fast storm motions and minimal training, there is a slightly higher
    risk for impacts across the Central Appalachians, generally in WV
    and PA, where antecedent conditions (7-day rainfall more than 400%
    of normal according to AHPS) have resulted in severely compromised
    FFG as low as 1"/3hrs. Despite progressive cell motion, HREF
    exceedance probabilities rise to 15-25% in this area, and it is
    possible that even fast-moving heavy rain producers could cause
    impacts, so the SLGT risk has been maintained. Additionally, after
    coordination with WFO LWX, a targeted SLGT risk has been added for
    generally the I-95 urban corridor of northern VA and MD where the
    high-res CAMs suggest some local focusing of thunderstorms this
    afternoon with heavy rain which could produce as much as 3" of
    rainfall atop sensitive areas which received heavy rain on
    Wednesday.

    Farther north into New England, mean 0-6km winds remain quick at 20-
    30 kts, but are more aligned parallel to the Corfidi vectors and the
    front, suggesting an enhanced training risk. However, instability
    and PWs are more modest, so rain intensity will be decreased as
    forecast by lower 1"/hr rain rate probabilities from the HREF.
    Although total rainfall could reach 3" in some areas from northern
    VT through northern ME, the excessive rain risk remains in the MRGL
    category.


    ...Southeast...
    The same front that will race across the Mid-Atlantic and
    Northeast, will trail back into the Southeast today. Although this
    front is likely to decay by this evening, the residual convergence
    zone will linger as it becomes embedded within more zonal flow
    south of the primary trough. Convection ongoing early this morning
    from AR to AL will weaken, but the accompanying outflow may merge
    with the weakening front to provide additional impetus for
    convective development thanks to robust thermodynamics
    characterized by PWs of around 1.75 inches and MUCAPE of 2000-3000
    J/kg. This will create scattered thunderstorms this aftn/eve with
    rainfall rates of more than 2"/hr. Although there is some
    uncertainty into how the weakening front will evolve (some CAMs
    suggest the outflow will surge all the way to the Gulf Coast), any
    storms that do form have the potential to train as Corfidi vectors
    collapse to around 5 kts so storms could move west to east and
    repeat through the evening. Both the HREF and REFS guidance
    indicate a 30-40% chance of 3" of rain, which could produce
    isolated flash flooding today.


    ...Florida Peninsula...
    Bermuda-type ridge off the Southeast Coast will produce weak
    easterly flow over the FL Peninsula today. As afternoon heating
    commences and instability climbs above 2000 J/kg, scattered
    afternoon thunderstorms will develop. Initially, these will occur
    on the sea breeze, but as the Atlantic coast sea breeze pushes
    westward and a weak jet streak develops downstream of a longwave
    trough dropping across the Southeast, additional development is
    likely along this boundary and due to storm mergers/boundary
    interactions. This will likely be most prevalent near the SW coast
    of FL where the Gulf Coast sea breeze will be pinned, fueling
    multiple rounds of slow moving thunderstorms. With PWs progged
    around 1.75", rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr are expected, producing
    hourly rainfall as much as 3" according to both the RRFS and HRRR
    models, and total rainfall over 5" possible (20-40%) in localized
    areas. Should this rain occur atop more urban areas, especially
    along the Sun Coast, instances of flash flooding could result.


    ...Upper Midwest...
    A cold front dropping out of Canada today will slow and stall
    across Minnesota this evening in response to flattening 500mb flow
    aloft as a ridge build atop the Southern Plains. Return flow
    circling this expanding ridge will amplify tonight, with 850mb
    winds potentially reaching above 50 kts on S/SW flow emerging from
    the Central Plains and surging into the front. This LLJ will
    resupply favorable thermodynamics into the region as reflected by
    an overlap of PWs above 1.25 inches and MUCAPE exceeding 2000 J/kg
    to support thunderstorm development. Storms that develop along this
    boundary may train from WNW to ESE as mean winds parallel the
    front, and with rain rate probabilities reaching 40-60% for 1"/hr,
    2-3" of rain is possible as noted by the HREF PMM and 3"/24hr
    probabilities reaching 20-30. Despite relatively high FFG, training
    of these rain rates where they produce the locally higher stripes
    of rain could cause instances of flash flooding tonight.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE=20
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    An amplifying mid-level trough deepening into an impressive closed
    low (500mb heights below the 1st percentile according to NAEFS)
    will dig across the Pacific Northwest Friday into Saturday.
    Downstream of this feature, resultant strong deep layer lift will
    spread through divergence and height falls into the Northern
    Rockies and Northern Plains, with vorticity lobes shedding from the
    primary gyre to enhance downstream ascent. At the surface, a
    wavering front will remain draped from Montana through Minnesota,
    and the interaction of this baroclinic zone with the mid-level
    ascent will cause surface cyclogenesis in the High Plains, and this
    low will race northeastward, reaching the western Great Lakes by
    the end of D2.

    Downstream of the primary trough axis, low-level 850mb flow will
    accelerate to as much as 50 kts in response to a tightening=20
    gradient, and push a plume of impressive PWs as high as 1.75 inches
    (above the NAEFS 97th percentile) into the Upper Midwest. This=20
    plume will then be pulled northward and westward by backing 850mb=20
    winds, accompanied by an instability surge (MUCAPE) of more than
    3000 J/kg. This setup will support increasing convection Saturday
    evening/night along the elevated baroclinic zone where moisture
    confluence and isentropic lift overall, leading to widespread=20
    shower and thunderstorm development. Storms that blossom along this
    boundary will likely train west to east along the front, and
    organize into clusters or an MCS in response to intense 0-6km bulk
    shear of 50+ kts. In the extreme thermodynamics, rainfall rates
    have a high chance (>70%) of exceeding 1"/hr, with locally more
    than 2"/hr rates possible (20% chance). Where training occurs, this
    may result in corridors of 3" of rainfall or more, with both the
    HREF and REFS focusing the greatest risk from eastern ND through
    the western U.P of MI. Despite elevated FFG in this area, these
    intense rates could overwhelm soils to cause instances of flash
    flooding, but the anticipated filtration capacity of the soils due
    to recent dryness limit the risk category to just a MRGL at this
    time.

    However, there appears to be a locally higher threat around Lake=20
    Superior and into the Arrowhead of Minnesota. Here, recent rainfall
    earlier this week was significant, which has resulted in 7-day AHPS
    rainfall that is more than 300% of normal. Despite that, FFG has
    remained elevated and exceedance probabilities from the HREF are
    just around 15%, but the REFS is much higher (30-40%). While the
    REFS has been a bit overdone with recent events, the uptick in QPF
    noted in model trends atop sensitive areas is concerning for a
    slightly higher risk for flash flooding despite generally fast=20
    storm motions. After coordination with WFO DLH, a targeted SLGT=20
    risk was added to enhance the messaging for potential impacts.


    ...Northern Rockies...
    The same anomalous upper low closing over the Pacific Northwest
    will help deepen a surface low over WY through Saturday. Intense
    downstream southerly flow over the Plains will surge elevated PWs
    and instability northward, with backed flow invof the low pulling
    these thermodynamics NW into the Northern Rockies. This will result
    in the accompanying theta-e axis lifting NW into the region as a
    modest TROWAL, helping to enhance elevated instability which would
    otherwise be confined to the east across the High Plains. The
    easterly flow around this low pressure will favorably upslope into
    the terrain as well, providing additional ascent, which in the
    presence of a ribbon of PWs above 1 inch will result in expanding
    precipitation with rainfall rates likely eclipsing 0.5"/hr at
    times. Slow moving and repeating showers and thunderstorms,
    embedded within a broader stratiform rain shield, are expected,
    especially immediately adjacent to the higher terrain. This will
    produce an axis of 1-3" of rainfall which may result in runoff and
    isolated instances of flash flooding.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHERN GREAT LAKES, INTERIOR NORTHEAST, AND NORTHERN ROCKIES...

    ...Northern Great Lakes through Northern New England...
    A stationary front draped from ND through Michigan will transition
    to a warm front and lift northeast on Saturday. This evolution will
    be driven by an expanding mid-level ridge centered over the TN VLY,
    which will result in rising heights and developing SW flow from the
    Plains into the Great Lakes. This synoptic change will push the
    boundary northeast as a warm front, along which a shortwave
    ejecting from the amplifying closed low in the west will track east
    from Minnesota to Vermont in the pinched and progressive flow. This
    overlap of ascent will drive increasing convection which will
    likely organize into clusters due to 30-40 kts of bulk shear, and
    then track progressively around the amplifying ridge. Storm motions
    will be quick to the east, but favorable thermodynamics to support
    heavy rain rates of 1-2"/hr could result in isolated instances of
    flash flooding, primarily where any repeating convection occurs.


    ...Northern Rockies...=20
    The closed and anomalously strong 500mb low across the interior=20
    Pacific Northwest will close off near southern Alberta, at least=20
    briefly, before opening and beginning to pivot the entire trough=20
    eastward by Sunday morning. The surface low pressure over WY on=20
    Saturday will respond by lifting northeast beneath the core of this
    mid-level low, resulting in an axis of accelerated low-level flow=20
    to draw moisture and instability northwest into the Northern=20
    Rockies. The impressive deep layer ascent through height falls=20
    combined with upslope ascent on easterly flow will result in=20
    widespread moderate to heavy rain, with embedded convection=20
    producing locally 0.5"/hr rainfall rates, especially beneath the=20
    elevated instability/TROWAL pivoting southward. With=20
    repeating/training cells with moderate to heavy rain moving across=20
    areas just east of the higher terrain expected, this could result=20
    in axes of as much as 3" of rain as forecast by 10-20%=20
    probabilities from the ECENS and GEFS. The inherited MRGL risk=20
    remains in place, with only minor adjustments tailored for updated=20
    guidance.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7WGfnYT1VACouYRC4sIgniElYyS8eplyy92zYLU1rtAQ= B7myvKemjvv3MuhnQs0IJccAtVESfnLj2tmAEriAI2T7_JQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7WGfnYT1VACouYRC4sIgniElYyS8eplyy92zYLU1rtAQ= B7myvKemjvv3MuhnQs0IJccAtVESfnLj2tmAEriAp-A6xmA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7WGfnYT1VACouYRC4sIgniElYyS8eplyy92zYLU1rtAQ= B7myvKemjvv3MuhnQs0IJccAtVESfnLj2tmAEriAUJhED-8$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 20 00:48:08 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 200047
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    847 PM EDT Thu Jun 19 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL AND EASTERN UNITED STATES...

    01Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...
    Maintained several of the Marginal Risk areas in the Upper
    Midwest...southern Plains and the Northeast US where there was
    stronger dynamics and greater instability. Elsewhere...enough
    stabilization has occurred following the passage of a cold front in
    the eastern part of the country combined with the loss of daytime
    heating to remove territory from the Marginal risk. There was a=20
    slight broadening of the Marginal risk area in the Upper Midwest=20
    where the latest runs of the high resolution guidance was moving=20
    convection more southward towards the better instability. Shifted=20
    the Marginal westward a bit given radar trends this evening for=20
    ongoing convection to build westward into Oklahoma from near the=20 Oklahoma/Arkansas state line. Finally...maintained the Marginal=20
    Risk area in parts of northern New England as a convective line was
    approaching from the west with the potential for local rainfall=20
    rates approaching 2 inches per hour. Elsewhere...the risk of=20
    excessive rainfall was diminishing fairly quickly but felt it too=20
    early to remove the risk areas at this point.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...Central Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic, and the Northeast...
    A potent shortwave will amplify as it tracks northeast from the
    Great Lakes to along the northern New England/Canadian border,
    potentially becoming negatively tilted by tonight. This will help
    to deepen a surface low moving in tandem with its parent trough,
    which will in turn drive the accompanying cold front rapidly to the
    east. By 12Z Friday, this front should be offshore New England and
    the Mid- Atlantic, but before that occurs scattered thunderstorms
    with heavy rain are likely along it.

    The downstream environment from this front is extremely favorable
    for thunderstorms containing heavy rain. PWs will surge northward on
    SW 850mb flow of 30 kts, reaching 1.75 to 2 inches, or higher, from
    the Mid-Atlantic into New England, which will be above daily records
    according to the SPC sounding climatology. This intense PW plume
    will combine with a narrow corridor of MUCAPE progged to exceed 2000
    J/kg from NC through ME, to support heavy rainfall within
    convection. Although the CAMs are generally modest with their
    coverage today, expect scattered to numerous thunderstorms to
    develop during peak heating, with modest bulk shear of 25-30 kts
    supporting at least isolated clusters in an otherwise pulse-type
    environment. Due to the impressive PWs and tall skinny CAPE
    profiles, max hourly rainfall could reach 2-3" according to the REFS
    and HREF guidance, which would be sufficient to cause runoff and
    isolated flash flooding.

    Although the flash flood risk today is generally isolated due to
    fast storm motions and minimal training, there is a slightly higher
    risk for impacts across the Central Appalachians, generally in WV
    and PA, where antecedent conditions (7-day rainfall more than 400%
    of normal according to AHPS) have resulted in severely compromised
    FFG as low as 1"/3hrs. Despite progressive cell motion, HREF
    exceedance probabilities rise to 15-25% in this area, and it is
    possible that even fast-moving heavy rain producers could cause
    impacts, so the SLGT risk has been maintained. Additionally, after
    coordination with WFO LWX, a targeted SLGT risk has been added for
    generally the I-95 urban corridor of northern VA and MD where the
    high-res CAMs suggest some local focusing of thunderstorms this
    afternoon with heavy rain which could produce as much as 3" of
    rainfall atop sensitive areas which received heavy rain on
    Wednesday.

    Farther north into New England, mean 0-6km winds remain quick at 20-
    30 kts, but are more aligned parallel to the Corfidi vectors and the
    front, suggesting an enhanced training risk. However, instability
    and PWs are more modest, so rain intensity will be decreased as
    forecast by lower 1"/hr rain rate probabilities from the HREF.
    Although total rainfall could reach 3" in some areas from northern
    VT through northern ME, the excessive rain risk remains in the MRGL
    category.


    ...Southeast...
    The same front that will race across the Mid-Atlantic and
    Northeast, will trail back into the Southeast today. Although this
    front is likely to decay by this evening, the residual convergence
    zone will linger as it becomes embedded within more zonal flow
    south of the primary trough. Convection ongoing early this morning
    from AR to AL will weaken, but the accompanying outflow may merge
    with the weakening front to provide additional impetus for
    convective development thanks to robust thermodynamics
    characterized by PWs of around 1.75 inches and MUCAPE of 2000-3000
    J/kg. This will create scattered thunderstorms this aftn/eve with
    rainfall rates of more than 2"/hr. Although there is some
    uncertainty into how the weakening front will evolve (some CAMs
    suggest the outflow will surge all the way to the Gulf Coast), any
    storms that do form have the potential to train as Corfidi vectors
    collapse to around 5 kts so storms could move west to east and
    repeat through the evening. Both the HREF and REFS guidance
    indicate a 30-40% chance of 3" of rain, which could produce
    isolated flash flooding today.


    ...Florida Peninsula...
    Bermuda-type ridge off the Southeast Coast will produce weak
    easterly flow over the FL Peninsula today. As afternoon heating
    commences and instability climbs above 2000 J/kg, scattered
    afternoon thunderstorms will develop. Initially, these will occur
    on the sea breeze, but as the Atlantic coast sea breeze pushes
    westward and a weak jet streak develops downstream of a longwave
    trough dropping across the Southeast, additional development is
    likely along this boundary and due to storm mergers/boundary
    interactions. This will likely be most prevalent near the SW coast
    of FL where the Gulf Coast sea breeze will be pinned, fueling
    multiple rounds of slow moving thunderstorms. With PWs progged
    around 1.75", rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr are expected, producing
    hourly rainfall as much as 3" according to both the RRFS and HRRR
    models, and total rainfall over 5" possible (20-40%) in localized
    areas. Should this rain occur atop more urban areas, especially
    along the Sun Coast, instances of flash flooding could result.


    ...Upper Midwest...
    A cold front dropping out of Canada today will slow and stall
    across Minnesota this evening in response to flattening 500mb flow
    aloft as a ridge build atop the Southern Plains. Return flow
    circling this expanding ridge will amplify tonight, with 850mb
    winds potentially reaching above 50 kts on S/SW flow emerging from
    the Central Plains and surging into the front. This LLJ will
    resupply favorable thermodynamics into the region as reflected by
    an overlap of PWs above 1.25 inches and MUCAPE exceeding 2000 J/kg
    to support thunderstorm development. Storms that develop along this
    boundary may train from WNW to ESE as mean winds parallel the
    front, and with rain rate probabilities reaching 40-60% for 1"/hr,
    2-3" of rain is possible as noted by the HREF PMM and 3"/24hr
    probabilities reaching 20-30. Despite relatively high FFG, training
    of these rain rates where they produce the locally higher stripes
    of rain could cause instances of flash flooding tonight.


    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Upper Midwest...
    An amplifying mid-level trough deepening into an impressive closed
    low (500mb heights below the 1st percentile according to NAEFS)
    will dig across the Pacific Northwest Friday into Saturday.
    Downstream of this feature, resultant strong deep layer lift will
    spread through divergence and height falls into the Northern
    Rockies and Northern Plains, with vorticity lobes shedding from the
    primary gyre to enhance downstream ascent. At the surface, a
    wavering front will remain draped from Montana through Minnesota,
    and the interaction of this baroclinic zone with the mid-level
    ascent will cause surface cyclogenesis in the High Plains, and this
    low will race northeastward, reaching the western Great Lakes by
    the end of D2.

    Downstream of the primary trough axis, low-level 850mb flow will
    accelerate to as much as 50 kts in response to a tightening
    gradient, and push a plume of impressive PWs as high as 1.75 inches
    (above the NAEFS 97th percentile) into the Upper Midwest. This
    plume will then be pulled northward and westward by backing 850mb
    winds, accompanied by an instability surge (MUCAPE) of more than
    3000 J/kg. This setup will support increasing convection Saturday
    evening/night along the elevated baroclinic zone where moisture
    confluence and isentropic lift overall, leading to widespread
    shower and thunderstorm development. Storms that blossom along this
    boundary will likely train west to east along the front, and
    organize into clusters or an MCS in response to intense 0-6km bulk
    shear of 50+ kts. In the extreme thermodynamics, rainfall rates
    have a high chance (>70%) of exceeding 1"/hr, with locally more
    than 2"/hr rates possible (20% chance). Where training occurs, this
    may result in corridors of 3" of rainfall or more, with both the
    HREF and REFS focusing the greatest risk from eastern ND through
    the western U.P of MI. Despite elevated FFG in this area, these
    intense rates could overwhelm soils to cause instances of flash
    flooding, but the anticipated filtration capacity of the soils due
    to recent dryness limit the risk category to just a MRGL at this
    time.

    However, there appears to be a locally higher threat around Lake
    Superior and into the Arrowhead of Minnesota. Here, recent rainfall
    earlier this week was significant, which has resulted in 7-day AHPS
    rainfall that is more than 300% of normal. Despite that, FFG has
    remained elevated and exceedance probabilities from the HREF are
    just around 15%, but the REFS is much higher (30-40%). While the
    REFS has been a bit overdone with recent events, the uptick in QPF
    noted in model trends atop sensitive areas is concerning for a
    slightly higher risk for flash flooding despite generally fast
    storm motions. After coordination with WFO DLH, a targeted SLGT
    risk was added to enhance the messaging for potential impacts.


    ...Northern Rockies...
    The same anomalous upper low closing over the Pacific Northwest
    will help deepen a surface low over WY through Saturday. Intense
    downstream southerly flow over the Plains will surge elevated PWs
    and instability northward, with backed flow invof the low pulling
    these thermodynamics NW into the Northern Rockies. This will result
    in the accompanying theta-e axis lifting NW into the region as a
    modest TROWAL, helping to enhance elevated instability which would
    otherwise be confined to the east across the High Plains. The
    easterly flow around this low pressure will favorably upslope into
    the terrain as well, providing additional ascent, which in the
    presence of a ribbon of PWs above 1 inch will result in expanding
    precipitation with rainfall rates likely eclipsing 0.5"/hr at
    times. Slow moving and repeating showers and thunderstorms,
    embedded within a broader stratiform rain shield, are expected,
    especially immediately adjacent to the higher terrain. This will
    produce an axis of 1-3" of rainfall which may result in runoff and
    isolated instances of flash flooding.


    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHERN GREAT LAKES, INTERIOR NORTHEAST, AND NORTHERN ROCKIES...

    ...Northern Great Lakes through Northern New England...
    A stationary front draped from ND through Michigan will transition
    to a warm front and lift northeast on Saturday. This evolution will
    be driven by an expanding mid-level ridge centered over the TN VLY,
    which will result in rising heights and developing SW flow from the
    Plains into the Great Lakes. This synoptic change will push the
    boundary northeast as a warm front, along which a shortwave
    ejecting from the amplifying closed low in the west will track east
    from Minnesota to Vermont in the pinched and progressive flow. This
    overlap of ascent will drive increasing convection which will
    likely organize into clusters due to 30-40 kts of bulk shear, and
    then track progressively around the amplifying ridge. Storm motions
    will be quick to the east, but favorable thermodynamics to support
    heavy rain rates of 1-2"/hr could result in isolated instances of
    flash flooding, primarily where any repeating convection occurs.


    ...Northern Rockies...
    The closed and anomalously strong 500mb low across the interior
    Pacific Northwest will close off near southern Alberta, at least
    briefly, before opening and beginning to pivot the entire trough
    eastward by Sunday morning. The surface low pressure over WY on
    Saturday will respond by lifting northeast beneath the core of this
    mid-level low, resulting in an axis of accelerated low-level flow
    to draw moisture and instability northwest into the Northern
    Rockies. The impressive deep layer ascent through height falls
    combined with upslope ascent on easterly flow will result in
    widespread moderate to heavy rain, with embedded convection
    producing locally 0.5"/hr rainfall rates, especially beneath the
    elevated instability/TROWAL pivoting southward. With
    repeating/training cells with moderate to heavy rain moving across
    areas just east of the higher terrain expected, this could result
    in axes of as much as 3" of rain as forecast by 10-20%
    probabilities from the ECENS and GEFS. The inherited MRGL risk
    remains in place, with only minor adjustments tailored for updated
    guidance.

    Weiss


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!99Au86bpIgmkSBCK2QbKqsxuQ6Ufz3Sgc7Oiqw0f3B-v= jTidFCIJVeGUb_EQP2WB0TP_I2YtipibLx6baiIfUtF18ws$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!99Au86bpIgmkSBCK2QbKqsxuQ6Ufz3Sgc7Oiqw0f3B-v= jTidFCIJVeGUb_EQP2WB0TP_I2YtipibLx6baiIfrmvQQ0g$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!99Au86bpIgmkSBCK2QbKqsxuQ6Ufz3Sgc7Oiqw0f3B-v= jTidFCIJVeGUb_EQP2WB0TP_I2YtipibLx6baiIfVm9k1n4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 20 08:04:34 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 200802
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    402 AM EDT Fri Jun 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper Midwest...
    Model guidance indicates a well defined mid level shortwave will
    eject east out of the Rockies and into the Northern Plains this=20
    afternoon into tonight, with a surface low moving from southern MT=20
    into the Dakotas. High res guidance show convection developing near
    the MT/ND border this afternoon to the north of a warm front. An=20
    increasing low level jet by evening likely supports upscale growth=20
    of this activity as it moves eastward across ND. This convection=20
    will likely be quick moving, however 1"+ per hour rainfall appears=20
    probable and a localized flash flood risk is possible. A Marginal=20
    risk was expanded west into these areas.

    A Slight risk was maintained across portions of northeast MN,
    and was expanded some with this update to include more of northern
    MN and far northern WI. An impressive low level jet and moisture=20
    transport axis will quickly evolve this evening into the overnight=20
    hours. Also looking at a pool of extreme instability on the order=20
    of 4000-5000 j/kg, and PWs increasing towards 2". While the=20
    progressive MCS tracks east across ND, we should see some=20
    downstream development over eastern ND into northern MN on the nose
    of this intense low level jet and along the instability gradient.=20
    Some west to east training of this activity is possible ahead of=20
    the upstream MCS that will also eventually push across the area.=20

    The degree of training remains a bit unclear, but do note that both
    the 00z HRRR and RRFS show a narrow swath of 3-5" of rainfall.=20
    Given the instability and moisture in place, totals of this=20
    magnitude do seem plausible. Also some uncertainty on the axis of=20
    heaviest rainfall, which should end up pretty narrow. The better=20
    instability will be south, however a strong mid level cap will be=20
    advecting northward likely putting a limit on how far south=20
    organized convection will get. The current Slight risk area=20
    encompasses the highest HREF probabilities, and while a bit broader
    than what will probably happen, accounts for some latitudinal=20
    uncertainty. Overall think isolated to scattered flash flooding=20
    could evolve from this setup, especially if there is overlap with=20
    the heavy rainfall axis from a couple days ago over northeast MN.

    ...Iowa...
    Convection is currently moving southeast across portions of MN and
    IA, and some of this will likely be still ongoing at 12z this
    morning. The 12z HREF and recent HRRR/RRFS runs show some brief
    backbuilding potential this morning on the nose of the low level=20
    moisture transport axis across eastern IA. Localized amounts over=20
    3" appear possible, and an isolated flash flood threat could exist=20
    this morning.

    ...Northern Rockies...
    A strong mid level low moving into the Pacific Northwest will=20
    focus impressive synoptic ascent over MT today into tonight. This=20
    will result in increasing shower coverage, with PWs increasing=20
    towards the climatological 90th percentile as well. Instability is
    likely the main limiting factor for excessive rainfall, and the=20
    probability of exceeding 1" per hour rain is pretty low because of
    this. However do think we will get some weak instability, which=20
    combined with the impressive dynamics, should still allow for some
    embedded heavier convective cores with over 0.5" per hour rain.=20
    Most areas will probably see closer to 1" of rain, however=20
    localized amounts over 2" are supported by the 00z high res models
    which could result in an isolated flash flood risk.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHERN GREAT LAKES, INTERIOR NORTHEAST, AND NORTHERN ROCKIES...

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Convection will likely be ongoing at 12z Sat across portions of
    northern MI into the UP. The overall convective complex should be
    propagating eastward pretty quickly by this time, although it may=20
    still have a west to east orientation to it allowing for some=20
    training. The 00z HREF indicates 1" per hour exceedance=20
    neighborhood probabilities upwards of 60%, and 2" exceedance around
    20%. HREF blended mean QPF is in the 2-3" range and these amounts=20
    seem plausible wherever the convective training axis is Saturday=20
    morning. Amounts higher than this will probable be hard to come by=20
    given the quick system movement, however even totals of this=20
    magnitude could result in a localized flash flood threat. Some=20
    latitudinal differences in the convective axis are noted, with both
    northern MI and the UP of MI potentially impacted.

    ...New England...
    The aforementioned convection over MI will try to move into=20
    portions of NY during the day Saturday. The maintenance of the=20
    activity is unclear as it will be moving into a more stable=20
    airmass. Generally think convection will weaken as it moves into=20 NY...however with daytime heating some increase in instability over
    central NY could support at least some additional convective=20
    development during the day.=20

    By Saturday night steeper lapse rates advect into the
    Northeast, resulting in what should be a pretty rapid increase in
    MUCAPE over western NY into northern New England. A well defined
    mid level shortwave and increasing low level moisture transport
    will probably kick of organized convective development over
    southern Canada by Saturday evening. This activity should track
    into portions of NY and northern New England overnight into early
    Sunday. It seems likely that this activity will have a better
    chance of persisting into NY and New England given what should be=20
    a very strong axis of low level moisture transport over top steep=20
    mid level lapse rates. In fact we could very well have an=20
    impressive MCS diving into NY and northern New England later=20
    Saturday night. The specifics remain a bit unclear, but at least a=20
    localized flash flood risk seems probable even with a forward=20
    propagating system. Certainly a chance this setup keeps some=20
    backbuilding convection across the area, and possible we will=20
    eventually need a Slight risk. However, given the uncertainty=20
    regarding the details, think a Marginal risk will suffice for now.

    ...Northwest Montana...
    A Marginal risk was maintained across portions of northwest MT=20
    where rainfall will continue into Saturday. By this time this=20
    region will be within the comma head of the low, and looking at=20
    more stratiform rain with lower rates. Thus probably not really a=20
    flash flood risk by this point, but with storm total rainfall=20
    potentially into the 3-4" range, some possible flood impacts still=20
    justify a Marginal risk. Snow levels will drop towards 4000 feet=20
    by this time as well, so flood impacts will stay below that level.

    Chenard


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF EASTERN NEW MEXICO AND SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    Sunday is likely the beginning of what will be a multi day period
    of excessive rainfall potential over NM. The mid/upper level=20
    pattern features a near record to record ridge over the eastern=20
    U.S. and a well defined longwave trough over the west. Southerly=20
    flow in between these features will supply ample moisture to NM,=20
    with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea. Thus no=20
    surprise that forecast PWs are well over the 90th percentile, and=20
    possibly approaching near record levels for late June. The better=20
    forcing from the western trough should hold of until Monday and=20
    Tuesday (see the day 4 and 5 EROs), but by Sunday we should at=20
    least have enough moisture and instability around for isolated to=20
    scattered convective development. This appears to be a solid=20
    Marginal risk with localized flash flooding expected...and can not=20
    rule out eventually needing a Slight risk. Sometimes these first=20
    day of the event situations can overperform as the clean start can
    allow for more destabilization and greater convective coverage=20
    than expected. However with Monday and Tuesday currently expected=20
    to be the bigger days, will keep this day 3 as a Marginal for now=20
    and continue to monitor trends.

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71TGEbWfJP2TjHsxkp4BLcwL7zZfXlHJ3tqFl54DedH3= TKsV37Xy05uKNEF84bBFXbAs0omRM2RgZ10xiYDR_vP6lVI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71TGEbWfJP2TjHsxkp4BLcwL7zZfXlHJ3tqFl54DedH3= TKsV37Xy05uKNEF84bBFXbAs0omRM2RgZ10xiYDRl_RIaNw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71TGEbWfJP2TjHsxkp4BLcwL7zZfXlHJ3tqFl54DedH3= TKsV37Xy05uKNEF84bBFXbAs0omRM2RgZ10xiYDR4jE6JDg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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