• HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion

    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

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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

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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

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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

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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

    =3D =3D =3D
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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

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 12 15:34:28 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 121534
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1134 AM EDT Thu Jun 12 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z 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...

    16Z Update: The general expectation for the MDT risk inherited has
    come to fruition this morning leading to only necessitating a
    formal "trimming away" of areas that have already been impacted and
    will see no additional threats this period. The MDT risk is now
    more confined to the middle and upper TX coasts with a minor
    expansion to the northeast to include the Beaumont area. MUCAPE=20
    gradient is well-documented within both the latest Mesoanalysis and
    the derived GOES-East satellite parameter. Values between=20
    1000-2000 J/kg are still situated within the confines of the MCS=20
    over the middle TX coast with a 2000-3000 J/kg signature still=20
    aligned upwind of the flanking line extending back inland. Cloud=20
    streaks moving northward across Deep South TX depict a sufficient=20
    moisture advection pattern continuing across the region and will=20
    play a role in the convective maintenance through the next 2-4=20
    hrs. The good news is the cold pool associated with the setup is=20
    already starting to race out into the Gulf on the northern flank of
    the complex with the back edge beginning to see some advancement=20
    of the outflow ahead of the main line which will likely degrade the
    convective pattern later this afternoon. As a result of the=20
    evolution, a sharp delineation of the convective threat for the=20
    rest of the period has materialized with a likely diffusion of the=20
    heavier rain prospects between 18-21z as noted via 12z CAMs output.
    4-8" with locally 10-15" of rainfall are plausible when the entire
    event is done for areas southwest of Houston to back along the=20
    flanking line. Rainfall rates of 2-4"/hr are possible within the=20
    strongest convective cores over the next few hrs before the
    degradation of the overall setup. Anticipating a removal of a lot
    of the risk area across coastal TX back into the I-35 corridor
    later as the threat wanes, so will be monitoring closely for that
    specific adjustment.=20

    Across Northeast TX into the ArkLaTex, MCV propagating to the
    north-northeast has allowed for a narrow band of heavier rainfall
    within the convergent sector of the low to mid-level circulation.
    This will continue to press north over the next several hrs with
    flares of additional heavier convective cores basically maintaining
    precedence through the afternoon and early evening. 2-4" areal
    average with totals as high as 5" are possible across the ArkLaTex
    through Arkansas today as additional waves of convection will
    propagate northward behind the vacating MCV leading to a
    compounding effect of heavy rainfall on saturated soils. The best
    chance for flash flooding will be within those urban zones and
    areas that have received significant rainfall the past 24 hrs.
    Considering the favorable output already, and the expectation as
    depicted from CAMs, the SLGT risk with higher-end threshold is
    still forecast over the above zones. A small expansion on the
    northern periphery of the SLGT and MRGL risks was also made to
    account for the latest HREF mean QPF signature and small adjustment
    north of the better probs for greater than 2" and 3".=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    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.

    Wegman


    ...Northern Plains...

    16Z Update: Only minor adjustments necessary for the inherited SLGT
    and MRGL risk areas across the northern tier of the CONUS. The
    forecast remains steadfast overall with little deviation in the
    expected heavy rain axis to be located within the northern
    periphery of a strong 850mb FGEN band situated west to east across
    the Northern Plains into the Upper Midwest. 12z HREF EAS prob
    fields for at least 2" is pretty high (40-60%), which is a
    testament to the agreement within the CAMs suite on the placement
    of the heavier precip threat. Rainfall rates between 1-2"/hr will
    be common in the strongest convective cores, and with training
    potential elevated due to parallel alignment of the mean wind to
    the surface/low-level based forcing mechanism(s), this will lead to
    a narrow axis of 2-4" with locally up to 5-6" plausible over the
    course of the late-afternoon and evening time frames when the event
    takes shape. Isolated flash flood concerns will extend as far
    northwest as MT with remnant shortwaves and modest instability
    maintaining a persistent convective presence during the course of
    the period with the best chances likely developing after 19z.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    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
    itself, showers and thunderstorms will once again redevelop, but
    this time further north into central Minnesota, and likely near the
    Twin Cities. The strengthening supply of moisture associated with
    the LLJ will support backbuilding and training storms, as the cold
    pools work to lock where the storms form in place, despite the
    continued northeastward movement of the synoptic-scale warm front.
    This will support a rather narrow (50-80 mile wide) corridor where
    heavy rain on the order of 1-3 inches with locally higher amounts
    are expected tonight. This should cause widely scattered instances
    of flash flooding. The Slight Risk area was nudged northward with
    this update in keeping with the latest suite of guidance, which has
    been struggling with where to place the warm-front related
    convection on the map for the last few days.

    Wegman


    ...Southeast U.S...

    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
    GA up through the Continental Divide in the Southern Mid Atlantic.
    Scattered to numerous thunderstorms with relatively slow storm=20
    motions will enhance locally heavy rainfall capabilities with rates
    between 2-3"/hr plausible in a few of the stronger cores.=20
    Urbanized zones within the region referenced above will be the most
    susceptible for flash flooding prospects with some of the latest=20
    CAMs going as high as 4-5" in some of the greater outputs=20
    anticipated. A MRGL risk is in place for the areas above with a=20
    minor expansion on the southern and western edge of the inherited=20
    risk.=20

    Kleebauer


    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!9Cgrj3qKAuD-HkFzQHvmTb0O_E0Hesp6lP5VxWstDj_1= uTo7CzGG-d5VqQbD_eOLvjmmV8YP82UBxeZ1EEsP9ePuHS4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9Cgrj3qKAuD-HkFzQHvmTb0O_E0Hesp6lP5VxWstDj_1= uTo7CzGG-d5VqQbD_eOLvjmmV8YP82UBxeZ1EEsPSbN6Az0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9Cgrj3qKAuD-HkFzQHvmTb0O_E0Hesp6lP5VxWstDj_1= uTo7CzGG-d5VqQbD_eOLvjmmV8YP82UBxeZ1EEsP3baNZqM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 12 20:03:30 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 122002
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    402 PM EDT Thu Jun 12 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z 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...

    16Z Update: The general expectation for the MDT risk inherited has
    come to fruition this morning leading to only necessitating a
    formal "trimming away" of areas that have already been impacted and
    will see no additional threats this period. The MDT risk is now
    more confined to the middle and upper TX coasts with a minor
    expansion to the northeast to include the Beaumont area. MUCAPE
    gradient is well-documented within both the latest Mesoanalysis and
    the derived GOES-East satellite parameter. Values between
    1000-2000 J/kg are still situated within the confines of the MCS
    over the middle TX coast with a 2000-3000 J/kg signature still
    aligned upwind of the flanking line extending back inland. Cloud
    streaks moving northward across Deep South TX depict a sufficient
    moisture advection pattern continuing across the region and will
    play a role in the convective maintenance through the next 2-4
    hrs. The good news is the cold pool associated with the setup is
    already starting to race out into the Gulf on the northern flank of
    the complex with the back edge beginning to see some advancement
    of the outflow ahead of the main line which will likely degrade the
    convective pattern later this afternoon. As a result of the
    evolution, a sharp delineation of the convective threat for the
    rest of the period has materialized with a likely diffusion of the
    heavier rain prospects between 18-21z as noted via 12z CAMs output.
    4-8" with locally 10-15" of rainfall are plausible when the entire
    event is done for areas southwest of Houston to back along the
    flanking line. Rainfall rates of 2-4"/hr are possible within the
    strongest convective cores over the next few hrs before the
    degradation of the overall setup. Anticipating a removal of a lot
    of the risk area across coastal TX back into the I-35 corridor
    later as the threat wanes, so will be monitoring closely for that
    specific adjustment.

    Across Northeast TX into the ArkLaTex, MCV propagating to the
    north-northeast has allowed for a narrow band of heavier rainfall
    within the convergent sector of the low to mid-level circulation.
    This will continue to press north over the next several hrs with
    flares of additional heavier convective cores basically maintaining
    precedence through the afternoon and early evening. 2-4" areal
    average with totals as high as 5" are possible across the ArkLaTex
    through Arkansas today as additional waves of convection will
    propagate northward behind the vacating MCV leading to a
    compounding effect of heavy rainfall on saturated soils. The best
    chance for flash flooding will be within those urban zones and
    areas that have received significant rainfall the past 24 hrs.
    Considering the favorable output already, and the expectation as
    depicted from CAMs, the SLGT risk with higher-end threshold is
    still forecast over the above zones. A small expansion on the
    northern periphery of the SLGT and MRGL risks was also made to
    account for the latest HREF mean QPF signature and small adjustment
    north of the better probs for greater than 2" and 3".

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    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.

    Wegman


    ...Northern Plains...

    16Z Update: Only minor adjustments necessary for the inherited SLGT
    and MRGL risk areas across the northern tier of the CONUS. The
    forecast remains steadfast overall with little deviation in the
    expected heavy rain axis to be located within the northern
    periphery of a strong 850mb FGEN band situated west to east across
    the Northern Plains into the Upper Midwest. 12z HREF EAS prob
    fields for at least 2" is pretty high (40-60%), which is a
    testament to the agreement within the CAMs suite on the placement
    of the heavier precip threat. Rainfall rates between 1-2"/hr will
    be common in the strongest convective cores, and with training
    potential elevated due to parallel alignment of the mean wind to
    the surface/low-level based forcing mechanism(s), this will lead to
    a narrow axis of 2-4" with locally up to 5-6" plausible over the
    course of the late-afternoon and evening time frames when the event
    takes shape. Isolated flash flood concerns will extend as far
    northwest as MT with remnant shortwaves and modest instability
    maintaining a persistent convective presence during the course of
    the period with the best chances likely developing after 19z.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    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
    itself, showers and thunderstorms will once again redevelop, but
    this time further north into central Minnesota, and likely near the
    Twin Cities. The strengthening supply of moisture associated with
    the LLJ will support backbuilding and training storms, as the cold
    pools work to lock where the storms form in place, despite the
    continued northeastward movement of the synoptic-scale warm front.
    This will support a rather narrow (50-80 mile wide) corridor where
    heavy rain on the order of 1-3 inches with locally higher amounts
    are expected tonight. This should cause widely scattered instances
    of flash flooding. The Slight Risk area was nudged northward with
    this update in keeping with the latest suite of guidance, which has
    been struggling with where to place the warm-front related
    convection on the map for the last few days.

    Wegman


    ...Southeast U.S...

    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
    GA up through the Continental Divide in the Southern Mid Atlantic.
    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 4-5" in some of the greater outputs
    anticipated. A MRGL risk is in place for the areas above with a
    minor expansion on the southern and western edge of the inherited
    risk.

    Kleebauer


    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...

    ...Arkansas/Mid-South...

    Slowly-moving upper low will be centered over the Ozarks Friday
    morning and drifting northeastward amid a very moisture-laden
    environment. Instability will remain modest as the cool core passes
    through, which will support another round of afternoon storms
    (following rainfall today) with rainfall rates of 1-2.5"/hr.=20
    Increase in LLJ overnight tomorrow night may again enhance some=20
    rainfall over the area, and have maintained the Slight Risk for=20
    excessive rainfall over the region with a small extension=20 eastward/northeastward into the stronger IVT zone. Soils are wet=20
    and FFG values will lower today/tonight, leaving the area=20
    (especially in the hillier terrain) more susceptible to=20
    localized/scattered instances of flooding. With the wettest soils=20
    in Arkansas from about Little Rock west, this area was maintained=20
    in an internally-denoted higher-end Slight Risk.=20


    ...Mid-Atlantic/Carolinas...

    Expanded the Marginal Risk northward to near the PA border and
    westward into eastern West Virginia given an increase in QPF from
    the 12Z guidance. Frontal boundary sinking southward will stall
    over the region, acting as a focus for heavier rain and rates
    (1-2"/hr) where it has been rather wet coming out of May. Over VA
    into the Carolinas, PW values will remain elevated (1.75-2.00") and
    some localized flash flooding is possible. CSU Machine Learning ERO
    guidance shows a small Slight Risk area from near the DC Metro area
    southward, so this area will need to be watched further.

    ...Northern WI/Michigan U.P....

    Area of low pressure moving eastward through MN may help drive a
    small risk for heavier rainfall over northern WI into the U.P.
    Friday morning, but instability is limited.=20

    ...Northern Rockies/Western High Plains...

    The Marginal from Montana to northeast Colorado was maintained=20
    with minimal changes along the western interface of the deeper=20
    moisture over much of the Plains.=20

    Fracasso/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. The Slight=20
    Risk area was maintained for Arkansas and Mississippi to capture
    the early morning rainfall potential and due to previous expected
    rainfall (and lower FFG values). Plentiful moisture over 1.5=20
    inches of PWAT will still support any storms that do form to be=20
    capable of heavy rainfall.=20

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    Maintained the Marginal Risk area much of the Midwest to Mid-
    Atlantic that remains in a moisture-laden environment near and
    south of a frontal boundary. Targeted upgrades to Slight Risks may
    be warranted pending rainfall distribution over the next two days
    (especially over areas that have above normal soil moisture). CSU
    Machine Learning ERO guidance does show a Slight Risk over northern
    VA so this will be monitored in future shifts.

    Fracasso/Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-op0PBiZVctE8T_Ck9Xj-3ORHNd0BGGihOIxvzphA7ha= scX_xl4JswLCNi_pvh7jVz1ph2svG6huroHK35CMVTaQFYo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-op0PBiZVctE8T_Ck9Xj-3ORHNd0BGGihOIxvzphA7ha= scX_xl4JswLCNi_pvh7jVz1ph2svG6huroHK35CMsI34UJA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-op0PBiZVctE8T_Ck9Xj-3ORHNd0BGGihOIxvzphA7ha= scX_xl4JswLCNi_pvh7jVz1ph2svG6huroHK35CMh_6ZXKI$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 13 01:01:04 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 130100
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    900 PM EDT Thu Jun 12 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Mid-Upper Texas Coast into the Lower-Mid Mississippi Valley...

    01Z Update: As the shortwave slowly pivots towards and eventually=20
    east of the ArkLaTex, broad-scale subsidence/NVA will push into the
    area from the west. This along with the general airmass=20
    stabilization following the MCS earlier today will lead to a more=20
    limited flash flood risk heading into the overnight period -- even=20
    with some return low-level flow off the Gulf (albeit weak). The=20
    latest CAM guidance, including recent HRRR and RRFS runs, are=20
    fairly light with additional rainfall overnight along areas hit=20
    hard earlier (Mid-Upper TX Coast); however, given the heavy=20
    rainfall earlier and thus low FFG values, will maintain a Marginal=20
    Risk area over what was a Moderate.

    Elsewhere, downstream of the slow-moving upper trough do anticipate
    a localized risk of flash flooding within the diffuse, secondary
    Warm Conveyor Belt off the Gulf and into the mid-level deformation
    axis/comma head pivoting across northern AR and southern MO.=20

    Hurley

    ...Northern Plains...

    16Z Update: Only minor adjustments necessary for the inherited SLGT
    and MRGL risk areas across the northern tier of the CONUS. The
    forecast remains steadfast overall with little deviation in the
    expected heavy rain axis to be located within the northern
    periphery of a strong 850mb FGEN band situated west to east across
    the Northern Plains into the Upper Midwest. 12z HREF EAS prob
    fields for at least 2" is pretty high (40-60%), which is a
    testament to the agreement within the CAMs suite on the placement
    of the heavier precip threat. Rainfall rates between 1-2"/hr will
    be common in the strongest convective cores, and with training
    potential elevated due to parallel alignment of the mean wind to
    the surface/low-level based forcing mechanism(s), this will lead to
    a narrow axis of 2-4" with locally up to 5-6" plausible over the
    course of the late-afternoon and evening time frames when the event
    takes shape. Isolated flash flood concerns will extend as far
    northwest as MT with remnant shortwaves and modest instability
    maintaining a persistent convective presence during the course of
    the period with the best chances likely developing after 19z.

    Kleebauer


    ...Southeast U.S...

    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
    GA up through the Continental Divide in the Southern Mid Atlantic.
    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 4-5" in some of the greater outputs
    anticipated. A MRGL risk is in place for the areas above with a
    minor expansion on the southern and western edge of the inherited
    risk.

    Kleebauer


    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...

    ...Arkansas/Mid-South...

    Slowly-moving upper low will be centered over the Ozarks Friday
    morning and drifting northeastward amid a very moisture-laden
    environment. Instability will remain modest as the cool core passes
    through, which will support another round of afternoon storms
    (following rainfall today) with rainfall rates of 1-2.5"/hr.
    Increase in LLJ overnight tomorrow night may again enhance some
    rainfall over the area, and have maintained the Slight Risk for
    excessive rainfall over the region with a small extension eastward/northeastward into the stronger IVT zone. Soils are wet
    and FFG values will lower today/tonight, leaving the area
    (especially in the hillier terrain) more susceptible to
    localized/scattered instances of flooding. With the wettest soils
    in Arkansas from about Little Rock west, this area was maintained
    in an internally-denoted higher-end Slight Risk.


    ...Mid-Atlantic/Carolinas...

    Expanded the Marginal Risk northward to near the PA border and
    westward into eastern West Virginia given an increase in QPF from
    the 12Z guidance. Frontal boundary sinking southward will stall
    over the region, acting as a focus for heavier rain and rates
    (1-2"/hr) where it has been rather wet coming out of May. Over VA
    into the Carolinas, PW values will remain elevated (1.75-2.00") and
    some localized flash flooding is possible. CSU Machine Learning ERO
    guidance shows a small Slight Risk area from near the DC Metro area
    southward, so this area will need to be watched further.

    ...Northern WI/Michigan U.P....

    Area of low pressure moving eastward through MN may help drive a
    small risk for heavier rainfall over northern WI into the U.P.
    Friday morning, but instability is limited.

    ...Northern Rockies/Western High Plains...

    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.

    Fracasso/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. The Slight
    Risk area was maintained for Arkansas and Mississippi to capture
    the early morning rainfall potential and due to previous expected
    rainfall (and lower FFG values). Plentiful moisture over 1.5
    inches of PWAT will still support any storms that do form to be
    capable of heavy rainfall.

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    Maintained the Marginal Risk area much of the Midwest to Mid-
    Atlantic that remains in a moisture-laden environment near and
    south of a frontal boundary. Targeted upgrades to Slight Risks may
    be warranted pending rainfall distribution over the next two days
    (especially over areas that have above normal soil moisture). CSU
    Machine Learning ERO guidance does show a Slight Risk over northern
    VA so this will be monitored in future shifts.

    Fracasso/Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4xt_EiXqjGMNeX0mjrHnOcl4CZ6nN2zNWWTCkco5B8gI= 40EbKGw4WFsrOq6PfCJrvWv-vAIFs7kWmCXydtZOhM-WDQg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4xt_EiXqjGMNeX0mjrHnOcl4CZ6nN2zNWWTCkco5B8gI= 40EbKGw4WFsrOq6PfCJrvWv-vAIFs7kWmCXydtZOQU1WjrE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4xt_EiXqjGMNeX0mjrHnOcl4CZ6nN2zNWWTCkco5B8gI= 40EbKGw4WFsrOq6PfCJrvWv-vAIFs7kWmCXydtZOgYp0rQs$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 13 07:48:30 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 130748
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    348 AM EDT Fri Jun 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE=20 MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, NORTHWEST GULF COAST, & SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC=20
    STATES...

    ...Much of the Eastern half of the country...=20
    A slow-moving deep layer cyclone moves east across portions of the
    Midwest from near the MO/KS/AR/OK broad border junction into IL.=20
    Moisture and effective bulk shear will be plentiful while ML CAPE=20
    will be sufficient for organized convection in a number of areas --
    in the warm advection pattern just ahead of the low across=20
    portions of MO/IL and within its inflow bands/fronts across=20
    AR/Delta Region of MS and Tidewater VA/portions of the Potomac. All
    three areas have Slight Risks, with the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic=20
    portions new for this update. The risk percentage for AR is in=20
    decline as the heavy rain signal appears better elsewhere, but=20
    lowish flash flood guidance and the Ozarks should prove sufficient=20
    for widely scattered to scattered flash flood concerns. Flash flood
    guidance is many ares appears compromised by recent rainfall=20
    (during the past week). Hourly rain amounts to 2.5" with local=20
    totals to 5" are most probable within the Slight Risk areas.


    ...Northwest Gulf Coast...
    Showers and thunderstorms are forecast to retrograde from southwest
    LA across sensitive areas of Southeast TX during the morning hours
    within an area of low-level convergence and retreating/eroding=20
    instability. This is another area where hourly rain amounts to 2.5"
    with local totals to 5" are more probable due to sufficient=20
    effective bulk shear, moisture, and instability, which would be=20
    most problematic where it rained heavily on Thursday and within=20
    urban areas.


    ...Northern WI/Michigan U.P....
    Area of low pressure moving eastward through MN helps drive a=20
    risk for heavy rainfall within narrow bands from MN across=20
    northern WI Friday morning. Instability appears sufficient in spots
    (500+ J/kg of MU CAPE) for pockets of organized convection capable
    of heavy rainfall, but isentropic lift/low- to mid-level=20
    frontogenesis is expected to aid heavy rainfall production as well.
    Hourly amounts to 2" with local amounts to 4" are possible where=20
    cells train.


    ...Northern Rockies/Western High Plains...
    The Marginal Risk across Montana maintained along the western=20
    interface of the deeper moisture and instability over much of the=20
    Plains on the leading edge of a quasi-stationary upper level trough.

    Roth



    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN AND NEAR
    VIRGINIA & ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...Southern Plains, Southeast, Tennessee & Ohio Valleys, & the
    Mid-Atlantic States...=20
    A deep layer cyclone drops southeast from IL into KY with time. The
    system remains quite moist with sufficient effective bulk shear
    along and near its associated fronts with greater instability,
    particularly across portions of the Plains as mid-level capping is
    increasing due to a strengthening 500 hPa ridge across NM, though
    the cap is breakable. Because of this greater instability, a few=20
    pieces of guidance are quite wet somewhere in the neighborhood of=20
    OK and KS, where the 00z GFS, 00z NAM, and especially the 00z=20
    Canadian are quite wet, showing maxima of 5-13". Hourly rain=20
    amounts to 2.5" appear likely in this environment. Cell training=20
    due to storms moving south-southeast down the stationary=20
    instability gradient would be problematic if it occurs within a=20
    long enough band over several hours. An upgrade to a Slight Risk=20
    was made here at the expense of AR due to the significant/increased
    potential to its west. Should guidance converge on wet solutions,=20
    further upgrades could occur.

    Along the system's stationary front to the east, another day of
    high moisture, sufficient instability and effective bulk shear team
    up for heavy rainfall in and near Virginia. Hourly rain amounts to
    2.5" with local amounts to 5" are most probable within the new=20
    Slight Risk area. Urban areas and places with increasing soil=20
    saturation due to the previous day of heavy rainfall would be most=20
    at risk for issues.


    ...In and near the Iowa/Minnesota border...
    A warm advection pattern returns to the region, bringing
    precipitable water values up to 1.75" and sufficient effective bulk
    shear and instability for organized convection. After rainfall on
    Thursday and Friday, soils should be increasingly saturated/
    compromised at this point. However, the guidance spread on the
    heavy rain signal is quite large...best across southeast SD and
    southern MN. While increasing warmth at 700 hPa is seen across the
    central High Plains, any mid-level capping should be minimal.
    However, the broad reservoir of instability to the southwest could keep southward shifts in the guidance minimal between now and when the=20
    convection materializes on Saturday. Played it cautious and=20
    introduced a Marginal Risk for the heavy rain potential on=20
    Saturday. Hourly amounts to 2" and local totals to 4" are possible,
    given the available ingredients. This could be from a combination=20
    of cell training and occasional mesocyclone formation. The degree=20
    of the flash flood threat would depend on whether or not urban=20
    centers received this heavy rainfall or if/where soils were=20
    sufficiently compromised over previous days within impacted areas.

    Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS IN AND NEAR THE
    VIRGINIAS...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic States...
    Another round of organized convection within a very moist
    environment with sufficient effective bulk shear and instability is
    expected near a stationary boundary. Like previous days, hourly=20
    rain amounts to 2.5" with local amounts to 5" are possible. A new=20
    Slight Risk area was added to account for both the heavy rain=20
    potential in urban centers and what should be increasingly=20
    saturated soils due to expected rainfall on Friday and Saturday.


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Lower Mississippi Valley...
    A "ring of fire" type of setup appears to be in the offing for=20
    this region as ridging continues to build across NM, upper
    troughing remains stagnant across the Pacific Northwest, and the
    deep layer cyclone moves from KY towards WV. Temperatures at 700=20
    hPa continue to warm somewhat across portions of the Rockies and=20
    the central High Plains, strengthening the mid-level capping=20
    inversion and increasing the instability available/forward=20
    propagation odds for any organized convective complex that forms=20
    around the ridge's periphery. The region with the highest heavy=20
    rain potential appears to be from the southern Plains/Midwest=20
    southeastward near a possible Mesoscale Convective System. There is
    significant model spread on location, keeping the risk level as=20
    Marginal at this time. However, higher end potential exists for any
    convection that can train along the instability gradient from
    roughly eastern KS through AR, as seen in different ways on the=20
    00z NAM, 00z UKMET, and 00z Canadian Regional solutions which show=20
    local maxima in the 4-7" range. Should the guidance converge, an=20
    increased threat level could be prudent.

    Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5oTA0Mv-F2hbhjDRLIomkZ1H52goqQAgtqskbECkaePa= nnkvLvDWgJz9L56GilavYhb1aeiTmTkgU_gAJ9fWCJwWMgs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5oTA0Mv-F2hbhjDRLIomkZ1H52goqQAgtqskbECkaePa= nnkvLvDWgJz9L56GilavYhb1aeiTmTkgU_gAJ9fWHG7tMGY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5oTA0Mv-F2hbhjDRLIomkZ1H52goqQAgtqskbECkaePa= nnkvLvDWgJz9L56GilavYhb1aeiTmTkgU_gAJ9fWntIcd7s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 13 11:52:07 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 131150
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    750 AM EDT Fri Jun 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE=20 MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, NORTHWEST GULF COAST, & SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC=20
    STATES...

    ...12Z Outlook Update...
    An expansion of the Slight Risk area was made over south-central=20
    Louisiana. Recent radar mosaic imagery depicts a slow-moving=20
    cluster of thunderstorms with very heavy rain rates that may=20
    persist across that area for several hours. Additional areas of 3-5
    inch rainfall totals (with locally higher amounts) are possible.=20
    Refer to MPD 427 for additional information.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Much of the Eastern half of the country...=20
    A slow-moving deep layer cyclone moves east across portions of the
    Midwest from near the MO/KS/AR/OK broad border junction into IL.=20
    Moisture and effective bulk shear will be plentiful while ML CAPE=20
    will be sufficient for organized convection in a number of areas --
    in the warm advection pattern just ahead of the low across=20
    portions of MO/IL and within its inflow bands/fronts across=20
    AR/Delta Region of MS and Tidewater VA/portions of the Potomac. All
    three areas have Slight Risks, with the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic=20
    portions new for this update. The risk percentage for AR is in=20
    decline as the heavy rain signal appears better elsewhere, but=20
    lowish flash flood guidance and the Ozarks should prove sufficient=20
    for widely scattered to scattered flash flood concerns. Flash flood
    guidance is many ares appears compromised by recent rainfall=20
    (during the past week). Hourly rain amounts to 2.5" with local=20
    totals to 5" are most probable within the Slight Risk areas.


    ...Northwest Gulf Coast...
    Showers and thunderstorms are forecast to retrograde from southwest
    LA across sensitive areas of Southeast TX during the morning hours
    within an area of low-level convergence and retreating/eroding=20
    instability. This is another area where hourly rain amounts to 2.5"
    with local totals to 5" are more probable due to sufficient=20
    effective bulk shear, moisture, and instability, which would be=20
    most problematic where it rained heavily on Thursday and within=20
    urban areas.


    ...Northern WI/Michigan U.P....
    Area of low pressure moving eastward through MN helps drive a=20
    risk for heavy rainfall within narrow bands from MN across=20
    northern WI Friday morning. Instability appears sufficient in spots
    (500+ J/kg of MU CAPE) for pockets of organized convection capable
    of heavy rainfall, but isentropic lift/low- to mid-level=20
    frontogenesis is expected to aid heavy rainfall production as well.
    Hourly amounts to 2" with local amounts to 4" are possible where=20
    cells train.


    ...Northern Rockies/Western High Plains...
    The Marginal Risk across Montana maintained along the western=20
    interface of the deeper moisture and instability over much of the=20
    Plains on the leading edge of a quasi-stationary upper level trough.

    Roth



    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN AND NEAR
    VIRGINIA & ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...Southern Plains, Southeast, Tennessee & Ohio Valleys, & the
    Mid-Atlantic States...=20
    A deep layer cyclone drops southeast from IL into KY with time. The
    system remains quite moist with sufficient effective bulk shear
    along and near its associated fronts with greater instability,
    particularly across portions of the Plains as mid-level capping is
    increasing due to a strengthening 500 hPa ridge across NM, though
    the cap is breakable. Because of this greater instability, a few=20
    pieces of guidance are quite wet somewhere in the neighborhood of=20
    OK and KS, where the 00z GFS, 00z NAM, and especially the 00z=20
    Canadian are quite wet, showing maxima of 5-13". Hourly rain=20
    amounts to 2.5" appear likely in this environment. Cell training=20
    due to storms moving south-southeast down the stationary=20
    instability gradient would be problematic if it occurs within a=20
    long enough band over several hours. An upgrade to a Slight Risk=20
    was made here at the expense of AR due to the significant/increased
    potential to its west. Should guidance converge on wet solutions,=20
    further upgrades could occur.

    Along the system's stationary front to the east, another day of
    high moisture, sufficient instability and effective bulk shear team
    up for heavy rainfall in and near Virginia. Hourly rain amounts to
    2.5" with local amounts to 5" are most probable within the new=20
    Slight Risk area. Urban areas and places with increasing soil=20
    saturation due to the previous day of heavy rainfall would be most=20
    at risk for issues.


    ...In and near the Iowa/Minnesota border...
    A warm advection pattern returns to the region, bringing
    precipitable water values up to 1.75" and sufficient effective bulk
    shear and instability for organized convection. After rainfall on
    Thursday and Friday, soils should be increasingly saturated/
    compromised at this point. However, the guidance spread on the
    heavy rain signal is quite large...best across southeast SD and
    southern MN. While increasing warmth at 700 hPa is seen across the
    central High Plains, any mid-level capping should be minimal.
    However, the broad reservoir of instability to the southwest could keep southward shifts in the guidance minimal between now and when the=20
    convection materializes on Saturday. Played it cautious and=20
    introduced a Marginal Risk for the heavy rain potential on=20
    Saturday. Hourly amounts to 2" and local totals to 4" are possible,
    given the available ingredients. This could be from a combination=20
    of cell training and occasional mesocyclone formation. The degree=20
    of the flash flood threat would depend on whether or not urban=20
    centers received this heavy rainfall or if/where soils were=20
    sufficiently compromised over previous days within impacted areas.

    Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS IN AND NEAR THE
    VIRGINIAS...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic States...
    Another round of organized convection within a very moist
    environment with sufficient effective bulk shear and instability is
    expected near a stationary boundary. Like previous days, hourly=20
    rain amounts to 2.5" with local amounts to 5" are possible. A new=20
    Slight Risk area was added to account for both the heavy rain=20
    potential in urban centers and what should be increasingly=20
    saturated soils due to expected rainfall on Friday and Saturday.


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Lower Mississippi Valley...
    A "ring of fire" type of setup appears to be in the offing for=20
    this region as ridging continues to build across NM, upper
    troughing remains stagnant across the Pacific Northwest, and the
    deep layer cyclone moves from KY towards WV. Temperatures at 700=20
    hPa continue to warm somewhat across portions of the Rockies and=20
    the central High Plains, strengthening the mid-level capping=20
    inversion and increasing the instability available/forward=20
    propagation odds for any organized convective complex that forms=20
    around the ridge's periphery. The region with the highest heavy=20
    rain potential appears to be from the southern Plains/Midwest=20
    southeastward near a possible Mesoscale Convective System. There is
    significant model spread on location, keeping the risk level as=20
    Marginal at this time. However, higher end potential exists for any
    convection that can train along the instability gradient from
    roughly eastern KS through AR, as seen in different ways on the=20
    00z NAM, 00z UKMET, and 00z Canadian Regional solutions which show=20
    local maxima in the 4-7" range. Should the guidance converge, an=20
    increased threat level could be prudent.

    Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-YywShRNxmgmiYXBfDipxgyu6oQAqnmxmtT4Or5YA-Bm= DGvzUruJsDt3KpehafV5p6_S4If0t5_wyknl5nrqd9lyYR0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-YywShRNxmgmiYXBfDipxgyu6oQAqnmxmtT4Or5YA-Bm= DGvzUruJsDt3KpehafV5p6_S4If0t5_wyknl5nrqJUcBwgQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-YywShRNxmgmiYXBfDipxgyu6oQAqnmxmtT4Or5YA-Bm= DGvzUruJsDt3KpehafV5p6_S4If0t5_wyknl5nrqgk_aVk4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 13 16:00:06 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 131559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Fri Jun 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, NORTHWEST GULF COAST, & SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    STATES...


    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    Stalled frontal boundary stretching across the Delmarva Peninsula
    towards the Upper Ohio Valley will combine with increasing=20
    atmospheric moisture content (1.5-2.0" PWs by this evening) to=20
    create efficient rainfall rates within thunderstorms. The southerly
    mid-level flow will be aided by an upper low currently analyzed=20
    over southern MO, but with troughing stretching from the Midwest to
    the western Gulf. Convection is most likely to trigger first=20
    across the Carolinas and the elevated terrain of the Blue Ridge up=20
    through the central Appalachians. Mean column wind speeds of 20 kts
    out of the west should promote some propagation of storms,=20
    especially once a cold pool is established, but complex terrain and
    areas right along the frontal boundary could exhibit some training
    potential along with rainfall rates up to 2"/hr. The inherited=20
    Slight Risk was maintained and expanded a bit westward to encompass
    more of the sensitive Blue Ridge mountains of central/northern VA.
    12z HREF guidance depicts 30-50% chances for 3" totals within 6=20
    hours this evening across central VA. This along with the available
    moisture content and nearby frontal boundary support the potential
    for scattered instances of flash flooding and the potential for=20
    localized considerable impacts in the sensitive terrain near the=20
    Blue Ridge as well as urban locations between southern MD and=20
    northeast NC. However, some guidance (including the 12z HRRR and=20 experimental 06z RRFS) are mostly void of excessive rainfall=20
    coverage, which does prompt some uncertainty during the D1 period.


    ...Mid-Mississippi Valley and Lower Ohio Valley...
    The inherited Slight risks were consolidated to focus on the
    eastern and southern flanks of the mid-level low churning over the
    region. Isolated flash flooding is still possible across parts of
    central MO/IL underneath and near the low center, but coverage of
    heavy rain does not seem widespread enough to warrant a Slight
    Risk. Moisture and effective bulk shear will be plentiful across
    much of the Mid-Missippi Valley and lower Ohio Valley while ML=20
    CAPE will be sufficient for organized convection in a number of=20
    areas. PW values of 1.75-2.0" will near the 90th climatological
    percentile per the 00z ECENS. The risk percentage for AR is in=20
    decline as the heavy rain signal appears better elsewhere, but=20
    lowish flash flood guidance and the Ozarks should prove sufficient=20
    for widely scattered to scattered flash flood concerns, especially
    given the potential for storms to re-ignite late tonight under the
    influence of an increasing low-level jet. Flash flood guidance is=20
    many ares appears compromised by recent rainfall (during the past=20
    week). Overall, the expectation is for isolated to scattered
    instances of flash flooding and the greatest concern located within
    urban and poor drainage locations.


    ...Northwest Gulf Coast...
    Showers and thunderstorms are forecast to retrograde from southwest
    LA across sensitive areas of Southeast TX this morning within an=20
    area of low- level convergence and retreating/eroding instability.
    This occurring after extreme rainfall amounts (7"+) impacted
    south-central LA early this morning. Additional hourly rain=20
    amounts to 2.5" with local totals to 5" are probable along the
    northwest Gulf Coast due to sufficient effective bulk shear,=20
    moisture, and instability, which would be most problematic where it
    rained heavily on Thursday and within urban areas. 12z HREF
    probabilities for greater than 5" in 6 hrs are 15-20% and scattered
    throughout the region.


    ...Texas Panhandle and Caprock Region...
    Dryline convection this evening is expected along much of the High
    Plains, but also as far south as the Texas Panhandle and western
    Texas where 1-1.25" PWs remain. 3-hr FFGs in the region are below=20
    3" and have been somewhat wet as of the last month (100-200% of=20
    normal for some locations). A Marginal Risk was added given the=20
    potential for numerous thunderstorms, while progressing eastward=20
    steadily, could merge and lead to brief periods of training.=20

    ...Northern WI/Michigan U.P....
    Area of low pressure moving eastward through MN helps drive a
    risk for heavy rainfall within narrow bands from MN across
    northern WI Friday morning. Instability appears sufficient in spots
    (500+ J/kg of MU CAPE) for pockets of organized convection capable
    of heavy rainfall, but isentropic lift/low- to mid-level
    frontogenesis is expected to aid heavy rainfall production as well.
    Hourly amounts to 1.5" with local amounts to 3" are possible where
    cells train. The inherited Marginal Risk was shrunk based on radar
    and latest CAM trends.


    ...Northern Rockies/Western High Plains...
    The Marginal Risk across Montana maintained along the western
    interface of the deeper moisture and instability over much of the
    Plains on the leading edge of a quasi-stationary upper level trough.

    Snell/Roth



    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN AND NEAR
    VIRGINIA & ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...Southern Plains, Southeast, Tennessee & Ohio Valleys, & the
    Mid-Atlantic States...
    A deep layer cyclone drops southeast from IL into KY with time. The
    system remains quite moist with sufficient effective bulk shear
    along and near its associated fronts with greater instability,
    particularly across portions of the Plains as mid-level capping is
    increasing due to a strengthening 500 hPa ridge across NM, though
    the cap is breakable. Because of this greater instability, a few
    pieces of guidance are quite wet somewhere in the neighborhood of
    OK and KS, where the 00z GFS, 00z NAM, and especially the 00z
    Canadian are quite wet, showing maxima of 5-13". Hourly rain
    amounts to 2.5" appear likely in this environment. Cell training
    due to storms moving south-southeast down the stationary
    instability gradient would be problematic if it occurs within a
    long enough band over several hours. An upgrade to a Slight Risk
    was made here at the expense of AR due to the significant/increased
    potential to its west. Should guidance converge on wet solutions,
    further upgrades could occur.

    Along the system's stationary front to the east, another day of
    high moisture, sufficient instability and effective bulk shear team
    up for heavy rainfall in and near Virginia. Hourly rain amounts to
    2.5" with local amounts to 5" are most probable within the new
    Slight Risk area. Urban areas and places with increasing soil
    saturation due to the previous day of heavy rainfall would be most
    at risk for issues.


    ...In and near the Iowa/Minnesota border...
    A warm advection pattern returns to the region, bringing
    precipitable water values up to 1.75" and sufficient effective bulk
    shear and instability for organized convection. After rainfall on
    Thursday and Friday, soils should be increasingly saturated/
    compromised at this point. However, the guidance spread on the
    heavy rain signal is quite large...best across southeast SD and
    southern MN. While increasing warmth at 700 hPa is seen across the
    central High Plains, any mid-level capping should be minimal.
    However, the broad reservoir of instability to the southwest could keep southward shifts in the guidance minimal between now and when the
    convection materializes on Saturday. Played it cautious and
    introduced a Marginal Risk for the heavy rain potential on
    Saturday. Hourly amounts to 2" and local totals to 4" are possible,
    given the available ingredients. This could be from a combination
    of cell training and occasional mesocyclone formation. The degree
    of the flash flood threat would depend on whether or not urban
    centers received this heavy rainfall or if/where soils were
    sufficiently compromised over previous days within impacted areas.

    Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS IN AND NEAR THE
    VIRGINIAS...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic States...
    Another round of organized convection within a very moist
    environment with sufficient effective bulk shear and instability is
    expected near a stationary boundary. Like previous days, hourly
    rain amounts to 2.5" with local amounts to 5" are possible. A new
    Slight Risk area was added to account for both the heavy rain
    potential in urban centers and what should be increasingly
    saturated soils due to expected rainfall on Friday and Saturday.


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Lower Mississippi Valley...
    A "ring of fire" type of setup appears to be in the offing for
    this region as ridging continues to build across NM, upper
    troughing remains stagnant across the Pacific Northwest, and the
    deep layer cyclone moves from KY towards WV. Temperatures at 700
    hPa continue to warm somewhat across portions of the Rockies and
    the central High Plains, strengthening the mid-level capping
    inversion and increasing the instability available/forward
    propagation odds for any organized convective complex that forms
    around the ridge's periphery. The region with the highest heavy
    rain potential appears to be from the southern Plains/Midwest
    southeastward near a possible Mesoscale Convective System. There is
    significant model spread on location, keeping the risk level as
    Marginal at this time. However, higher end potential exists for any
    convection that can train along the instability gradient from
    roughly eastern KS through AR, as seen in different ways on the
    00z NAM, 00z UKMET, and 00z Canadian Regional solutions which show
    local maxima in the 4-7" range. Should the guidance converge, an
    increased threat level could be prudent.

    Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7aw02bAUYpnNEauvwAYJse6SK0EC-OnX5KD0cJ0r8Br8= HM4DdQMFZdSz9TQlVYe7Dmm6b0L7kPsX8N1MyPOmrV6GNGI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7aw02bAUYpnNEauvwAYJse6SK0EC-OnX5KD0cJ0r8Br8= HM4DdQMFZdSz9TQlVYe7Dmm6b0L7kPsX8N1MyPOmPUXBnaU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7aw02bAUYpnNEauvwAYJse6SK0EC-OnX5KD0cJ0r8Br8= HM4DdQMFZdSz9TQlVYe7Dmm6b0L7kPsX8N1MyPOmAzvk62Q$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 13 19:49:09 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 131948
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    348 PM EDT Fri Jun 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Jun 13 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, NORTHWEST GULF COAST, & SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC
    STATES...


    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    Stalled frontal boundary stretching across the Delmarva Peninsula
    towards the Upper Ohio Valley will combine with increasing
    atmospheric moisture content (1.5-2.0" PWs by this evening) to
    create efficient rainfall rates within thunderstorms. The southerly
    mid-level flow will be aided by an upper low currently analyzed
    over southern MO, but with troughing stretching from the Midwest to
    the western Gulf. Convection is most likely to trigger first
    across the Carolinas and the elevated terrain of the Blue Ridge up
    through the central Appalachians. Mean column wind speeds of 20 kts
    out of the west should promote some propagation of storms,
    especially once a cold pool is established, but complex terrain and
    areas right along the frontal boundary could exhibit some training
    potential along with rainfall rates up to 2"/hr. The inherited
    Slight Risk was maintained and expanded a bit westward to encompass
    more of the sensitive Blue Ridge mountains of central/northern VA.
    12z HREF guidance depicts 30-50% chances for 3" totals within 6
    hours this evening across central VA. This along with the available
    moisture content and nearby frontal boundary support the potential
    for scattered instances of flash flooding and the potential for
    localized considerable impacts in the sensitive terrain near the
    Blue Ridge as well as urban locations between southern MD and
    northeast NC. However, some guidance (including the 12z HRRR and
    experimental 06z RRFS) are mostly void of excessive rainfall
    coverage, which does prompt some uncertainty during the D1 period.


    ...Mid-Mississippi Valley and Lower Ohio Valley...
    The inherited Slight risks were consolidated to focus on the
    eastern and southern flanks of the mid-level low churning over the
    region. Isolated flash flooding is still possible across parts of
    central MO/IL underneath and near the low center, but coverage of
    heavy rain does not seem widespread enough to warrant a Slight
    Risk. Moisture and effective bulk shear will be plentiful across
    much of the Mid-Missippi Valley and lower Ohio Valley while ML
    CAPE will be sufficient for organized convection in a number of
    areas. PW values of 1.75-2.0" will near the 90th climatological
    percentile per the 00z ECENS. The risk percentage for AR is in
    decline as the heavy rain signal appears better elsewhere, but
    lowish flash flood guidance and the Ozarks should prove sufficient
    for widely scattered to scattered flash flood concerns, especially
    given the potential for storms to re-ignite late tonight under the
    influence of an increasing low-level jet. Flash flood guidance is
    many ares appears compromised by recent rainfall (during the past
    week). Overall, the expectation is for isolated to scattered
    instances of flash flooding and the greatest concern located within
    urban and poor drainage locations.


    ...Northwest Gulf Coast...
    Showers and thunderstorms are forecast to retrograde from southwest
    LA across sensitive areas of Southeast TX this morning within an
    area of low- level convergence and retreating/eroding instability.
    This occurring after extreme rainfall amounts (7"+) impacted
    south-central LA early this morning. Additional hourly rain
    amounts to 2.5" with local totals to 5" are probable along the
    northwest Gulf Coast due to sufficient effective bulk shear,
    moisture, and instability, which would be most problematic where it
    rained heavily on Thursday and within urban areas. 12z HREF
    probabilities for greater than 5" in 6 hrs are 15-20% and scattered
    throughout the region.


    ...Texas Panhandle and Caprock Region...
    Dryline convection this evening is expected along much of the High
    Plains, but also as far south as the Texas Panhandle and western
    Texas where 1-1.25" PWs remain. 3-hr FFGs in the region are below
    3" and have been somewhat wet as of the last month (100-200% of
    normal for some locations). A Marginal Risk was added given the
    potential for numerous thunderstorms, while progressing eastward
    steadily, could merge and lead to brief periods of training.

    ...Northern WI/Michigan U.P....
    Area of low pressure moving eastward through MN helps drive a
    risk for heavy rainfall within narrow bands from MN across
    northern WI Friday morning. Instability appears sufficient in spots
    (500+ J/kg of MU CAPE) for pockets of organized convection capable
    of heavy rainfall, but isentropic lift/low- to mid-level
    frontogenesis is expected to aid heavy rainfall production as well.
    Hourly amounts to 1.5" with local amounts to 3" are possible where
    cells train. The inherited Marginal Risk was shrunk based on radar
    and latest CAM trends.


    ...Northern Rockies/Western High Plains...
    The Marginal Risk across Montana maintained along the western
    interface of the deeper moisture and instability over much of the
    Plains on the leading edge of a quasi-stationary upper level trough.

    Snell/Roth



    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR CENTRAL/EASTERN
    VIRGINIA & ACROSS PORTIONS OF EASTERN KANSAS/OKLAHOMA...


    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    Along a stationary front, another day of high moisture, sufficient
    instability and effective bulk shear team up for heavy rainfall in
    Virginia and specifically focus near southeast Virginia as the
    front slides south by the evening hours. Widespread light to
    locally moderate rainfall across the northern Mid-Atlantic should
    tighten the thermal gradient in the region and potentially provide
    a better focus for storms compared to Day 1. PWs are forecast to=20
    remain near 2" and around the 90th climatological percentile. CAMs=20
    depict widespread amounts of 2-4" possible with localized totals=20
    potentially exceeding 5" (12z HREF probs for greater than 5" are=20
    20-40%), with the greatest potential in southeast Virginia. Urban=20
    areas and places with increasing soil saturation due to the=20
    previous day of heavy rainfall would be most at risk for issues.

    ...Southern Plains, Southeast, and Tennessee/Ohio Valleys...
    A deep layer cyclone drops southeast from IL into KY with time.=20
    The system remains quite moist with sufficient effective bulk shear
    along and near its associated fronts with greater instability,=20
    particularly across portions of the Plains as mid-level capping is=20 increasing due to a strengthening 500 hPa ridge across NM, though=20
    the cap is breakable especially near remnant MCVs from overnight
    convection ejecting from the High Plains D1. Because of this=20
    greater instability, a few pieces of guidance are quite wet=20
    somewhere in the neighborhood of OK and KS, especially the 12z NAM,
    00z CMC, and several CAMs showing maxima of 5-13". Hourly rain=20
    amounts to 2.5" appear likely in this environment. Cell training=20
    due to storms moving south- southeast down the stationary=20
    instability gradient would be problematic if it occurs within a=20
    long enough band over several hours. The inherited Slight Risk was
    maintained with only minor adjustments. Should guidance converge=20
    on wet solutions, further upgrades could occur.

    Closer to the deep layer cyclone churning over the Ohio Valley,
    slow moving convection and brief organized training is possible.
    A more cellular convective mode is likely near the cyclone over the
    Ohio Valley, where isolated flash flooding could occur. Along the
    southern flanking inflow band, mean wind becomes more westerly and
    parallel to developing convection across central and northern
    AL/MS. This is an area that could warrant an upgrade to a Slight
    Risk if more confidence arises in better convective organization=20
    conducive for scattered flash flooding. At the moment, more=20
    isolated and localized flooding is more probable.


    ...In and near the Iowa/Minnesota border...
    A warm advection pattern returns to the region, bringing
    precipitable water values up to 1.75" and sufficient effective bulk
    shear and instability for organized convection. After rainfall on
    Thursday and Friday, soils should be increasingly saturated/
    compromised at this point. However, the guidance spread on the
    heavy rain signal is quite large...best across southeast SD and
    southern MN. While increasing warmth at 700 hPa is seen across the
    central High Plains, any mid-level capping should be minimal.
    However, the broad reservoir of instability to the southwest could keep southward shifts in the guidance minimal between now and when the
    convection materializes on Saturday. Hourly amounts to 2" and=20
    local totals to 4" are possible, given the available ingredients
    and potential lingering MCV to move eastward into the region from
    D1. This could be from a combination of cell training and=20
    occasional mesocyclone formation. The degree of the flash flood=20
    threat would depend on whether or not urban centers received this=20
    heavy rainfall or if/where soils were sufficiently compromised over
    previous days within impacted areas.

    Snell/Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR MUCH OF VIRGINIA
    AND INTO PARTS OF THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic States and Central Appalachians...
    Another round of organized convection within a very moist
    environment with sufficient effective bulk shear and instability is
    expected near a stationary boundary. Like previous days, hourly
    rain amounts to 2.5" with local amounts to 5" are possible.
    However, by Sunday the influence of a strung-out upper low will
    near the region and provide better forcing for greater coverage in
    moderate to heavy rainfall. The previous Slight Risk was expanded=20
    westward in order to encompass more of WV and western VA to account
    for the heavy rain potential in sensitive terrain of the central=20 Appalachians on the western slopes given predominantly west-=20
    southwesterly flow. Once again, flooding impacts will be=20
    exacerbated in urban centers and what should be increasingly=20
    saturated soils due to expected rainfall on Friday and Saturday.=20
    Outside the CAM range for this outlook, but most global guidance=20
    suggests at least 2-3" totals are likely to be common within the=20
    Slight Risk. Given the potential soil sensitivity in this region=20
    and the expected coverage of convection by Day 3, further upgrades=20
    may be necessary.


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Lower Mississippi Valley...
    A "ring of fire" type of setup appears to be in the offing for
    this region as ridging continues to build across NM, upper
    troughing remains stagnant across the Pacific Northwest, and the
    deep layer cyclone moves from KY towards WV. Temperatures at 700
    hPa continue to warm somewhat across portions of the Rockies and
    the central High Plains, strengthening the mid-level capping
    inversion and increasing the instability available/forward
    propagation odds for any organized convective complex that forms
    around the ridge's periphery. The region with the highest heavy
    rain potential appears to be from the southern Plains/Midwest
    southeastward near a possible Mesoscale Convective System. There is
    significant model spread on location, keeping the risk level as
    Marginal at this time. However, higher end potential exists for any
    convection that can train along the instability gradient from
    roughly eastern KS through AR, as seen in different ways on the
    global solutions and experimental RRFS which show local maxima in=20
    the 4-7" range. Should the guidance converge, an increased threat=20
    level could be prudent.

    Snell/Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9lwMizRr4l8u6doi5WqpSk-7z6b2y7pZyVX5DuHZVu8-= _l1cooY_hrh-qjNUEMsKkhfm23STyHUODy9DQPO3z1KBAN0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9lwMizRr4l8u6doi5WqpSk-7z6b2y7pZyVX5DuHZVu8-= _l1cooY_hrh-qjNUEMsKkhfm23STyHUODy9DQPO3ncCZFSI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9lwMizRr4l8u6doi5WqpSk-7z6b2y7pZyVX5DuHZVu8-= _l1cooY_hrh-qjNUEMsKkhfm23STyHUODy9DQPO3zyabmJ0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 13 23:16:16 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 132314
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    714 PM EDT Fri Jun 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    MID-SOUTH INTO THE TENNESSEE AND OHIO VALLEYS, CENTRAL=20
    APPALACHIANS INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC, AND THE NORTHWEST GULF COAST...

    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    2300 UTC Update -- Pulled the Slight and Marginal Risk areas a
    little farther west (from the Atlantic Coast) based on the latest
    observational trends along with recent HRRR/RRFS runs and the 18Z
    HREF exceedance probabilities.=20

    Hurley

    Previous Discussion...Stalled frontal boundary stretching across=20
    the Delmarva Peninsula towards the Upper Ohio Valley will combine=20
    with increasing atmospheric moisture content (1.5-2.0" PWs by this=20
    evening) to create efficient rainfall rates within thunderstorms.=20
    The southerly mid-level flow will be aided by an upper low=20
    currently analyzed over southern MO, but with troughing stretching=20
    from the Midwest to the western Gulf. Convection is most likely to=20
    trigger first across the Carolinas and the elevated terrain of the=20
    Blue Ridge up through the central Appalachians. Mean column wind=20
    speeds of 20 kts out of the west should promote some propagation of
    storms, especially once a cold pool is established, but complex=20
    terrain and areas right along the frontal boundary could exhibit=20
    some training potential along with rainfall rates up to 2"/hr. The=20
    inherited Slight Risk was maintained and expanded a bit westward to
    encompass more of the sensitive Blue Ridge mountains of=20
    central/northern VA. 12z HREF guidance depicts 30-50% chances for=20
    3" totals within 6 hours this evening across central VA. This along
    with the available moisture content and nearby frontal boundary=20
    support the potential for scattered instances of flash flooding and
    the potential for localized considerable impacts in the sensitive=20
    terrain near the Blue Ridge as well as urban locations between=20
    southern MD and northeast NC. However, some guidance (including the
    12z HRRR and experimental 06z RRFS) are mostly void of excessive=20
    rainfall coverage, which does prompt some uncertainty during the D1
    period.


    ...Mid-Mississippi Valley and Lower Ohio Valley...
    2300 UTC Update -- Based on the latest observational and guidance
    trends, have nudged the Slight Risk area a bit farther east to
    include more of the TN and OH Valleys.=20

    Hurley

    Previous discussion...Isolated flash flooding is still possible=20
    across parts of central MO/IL underneath and near the low center,=20
    but coverage of heavy rain does not seem widespread enough to=20
    warrant a Slight Risk. Moisture and effective bulk shear will be=20
    plentiful across much of the Mid-Missippi Valley and lower Ohio=20
    Valley while ML CAPE will be sufficient for organized convection in
    a number of areas. PW values of 1.75-2.0" will near the 90th=20
    climatological percentile per the 00z ECENS. The risk percentage=20
    for AR is in decline as the heavy rain signal appears better=20
    elsewhere, but lowish flash flood guidance and the Ozarks should=20
    prove sufficient for widely scattered to scattered flash flood=20
    concerns, especially given the potential for storms to re-ignite=20
    late tonight under the influence of an increasing low-level jet.=20
    Flash flood guidance is many ares appears compromised by recent=20
    rainfall (during the past week). Overall, the expectation is for=20
    isolated to scattered instances of flash flooding and the greatest=20
    concern located within urban and poor drainage locations.


    ...Northwest Gulf Coast...
    Showers and thunderstorms are forecast to retrograde from southwest
    LA across sensitive areas of Southeast TX this morning within an
    area of low- level convergence and retreating/eroding instability.
    This occurring after extreme rainfall amounts (7"+) impacted
    south-central LA early this morning. Additional hourly rain
    amounts to 2.5" with local totals to 5" are probable along the
    northwest Gulf Coast due to sufficient effective bulk shear,
    moisture, and instability, which would be most problematic where it
    rained heavily on Thursday and within urban areas. 12z HREF
    probabilities for greater than 5" in 6 hrs are 15-20% and scattered
    throughout the region.


    ...Texas Panhandle and Caprock Region...
    Dryline convection this evening is expected along much of the High
    Plains, but also as far south as the Texas Panhandle and western
    Texas where 1-1.25" PWs remain. 3-hr FFGs in the region are below
    3" and have been somewhat wet as of the last month (100-200% of
    normal for some locations). A Marginal Risk was added given the
    potential for numerous thunderstorms, while progressing eastward
    steadily, could merge and lead to brief periods of training.

    ...Northern WI/Michigan U.P....
    Area of low pressure moving eastward through MN helps drive a
    risk for heavy rainfall within narrow bands from MN across
    northern WI Friday morning. Instability appears sufficient in spots
    (500+ J/kg of MU CAPE) for pockets of organized convection capable
    of heavy rainfall, but isentropic lift/low- to mid-level
    frontogenesis is expected to aid heavy rainfall production as well.
    Hourly amounts to 1.5" with local amounts to 3" are possible where
    cells train. The inherited Marginal Risk was shrunk based on radar
    and latest CAM trends.


    ...Northern Rockies/Western High Plains...
    The Marginal Risk across Montana maintained along the western
    interface of the deeper moisture and instability over much of the
    Plains on the leading edge of a quasi-stationary upper level trough.

    Snell/Roth


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR CENTRAL/EASTERN
    VIRGINIA & ACROSS PORTIONS OF EASTERN KANSAS/OKLAHOMA...


    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    Along a stationary front, another day of high moisture, sufficient
    instability and effective bulk shear team up for heavy rainfall in
    Virginia and specifically focus near southeast Virginia as the
    front slides south by the evening hours. Widespread light to
    locally moderate rainfall across the northern Mid-Atlantic should
    tighten the thermal gradient in the region and potentially provide
    a better focus for storms compared to Day 1. PWs are forecast to
    remain near 2" and around the 90th climatological percentile. CAMs
    depict widespread amounts of 2-4" possible with localized totals
    potentially exceeding 5" (12z HREF probs for greater than 5" are
    20-40%), with the greatest potential in southeast Virginia. Urban
    areas and places with increasing soil saturation due to the
    previous day of heavy rainfall would be most at risk for issues.

    ...Southern Plains, Southeast, and Tennessee/Ohio Valleys...
    A deep layer cyclone drops southeast from IL into KY with time.
    The system remains quite moist with sufficient effective bulk shear
    along and near its associated fronts with greater instability,
    particularly across portions of the Plains as mid-level capping is
    increasing due to a strengthening 500 hPa ridge across NM, though
    the cap is breakable especially near remnant MCVs from overnight
    convection ejecting from the High Plains D1. Because of this
    greater instability, a few pieces of guidance are quite wet
    somewhere in the neighborhood of OK and KS, especially the 12z NAM,
    00z CMC, and several CAMs showing maxima of 5-13". Hourly rain
    amounts to 2.5" appear likely in this environment. Cell training
    due to storms moving south- southeast down the stationary
    instability gradient would be problematic if it occurs within a
    long enough band over several hours. The inherited Slight Risk was
    maintained with only minor adjustments. Should guidance converge
    on wet solutions, further upgrades could occur.

    Closer to the deep layer cyclone churning over the Ohio Valley,
    slow moving convection and brief organized training is possible.
    A more cellular convective mode is likely near the cyclone over the
    Ohio Valley, where isolated flash flooding could occur. Along the
    southern flanking inflow band, mean wind becomes more westerly and
    parallel to developing convection across central and northern
    AL/MS. This is an area that could warrant an upgrade to a Slight
    Risk if more confidence arises in better convective organization
    conducive for scattered flash flooding. At the moment, more
    isolated and localized flooding is more probable.


    ...In and near the Iowa/Minnesota border...
    A warm advection pattern returns to the region, bringing
    precipitable water values up to 1.75" and sufficient effective bulk
    shear and instability for organized convection. After rainfall on
    Thursday and Friday, soils should be increasingly saturated/
    compromised at this point. However, the guidance spread on the
    heavy rain signal is quite large...best across southeast SD and
    southern MN. While increasing warmth at 700 hPa is seen across the
    central High Plains, any mid-level capping should be minimal.
    However, the broad reservoir of instability to the southwest could keep southward shifts in the guidance minimal between now and when the
    convection materializes on Saturday. Hourly amounts to 2" and
    local totals to 4" are possible, given the available ingredients
    and potential lingering MCV to move eastward into the region from
    D1. This could be from a combination of cell training and
    occasional mesocyclone formation. The degree of the flash flood
    threat would depend on whether or not urban centers received this
    heavy rainfall or if/where soils were sufficiently compromised over
    previous days within impacted areas.

    Snell/Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR MUCH OF VIRGINIA
    AND INTO PARTS OF THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic States and Central Appalachians...
    Another round of organized convection within a very moist
    environment with sufficient effective bulk shear and instability is
    expected near a stationary boundary. Like previous days, hourly
    rain amounts to 2.5" with local amounts to 5" are possible.
    However, by Sunday the influence of a strung-out upper low will
    near the region and provide better forcing for greater coverage in
    moderate to heavy rainfall. The previous Slight Risk was expanded
    westward in order to encompass more of WV and western VA to account
    for the heavy rain potential in sensitive terrain of the central
    Appalachians on the western slopes given predominantly west-
    southwesterly flow. Once again, flooding impacts will be
    exacerbated in urban centers and what should be increasingly
    saturated soils due to expected rainfall on Friday and Saturday.
    Outside the CAM range for this outlook, but most global guidance
    suggests at least 2-3" totals are likely to be common within the
    Slight Risk. Given the potential soil sensitivity in this region
    and the expected coverage of convection by Day 3, further upgrades
    may be necessary.


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Lower Mississippi Valley...
    A "ring of fire" type of setup appears to be in the offing for
    this region as ridging continues to build across NM, upper
    troughing remains stagnant across the Pacific Northwest, and the
    deep layer cyclone moves from KY towards WV. Temperatures at 700
    hPa continue to warm somewhat across portions of the Rockies and
    the central High Plains, strengthening the mid-level capping
    inversion and increasing the instability available/forward
    propagation odds for any organized convective complex that forms
    around the ridge's periphery. The region with the highest heavy
    rain potential appears to be from the southern Plains/Midwest
    southeastward near a possible Mesoscale Convective System. There is
    significant model spread on location, keeping the risk level as
    Marginal at this time. However, higher end potential exists for any
    convection that can train along the instability gradient from
    roughly eastern KS through AR, as seen in different ways on the
    global solutions and experimental RRFS which show local maxima in
    the 4-7" range. Should the guidance converge, an increased threat
    level could be prudent.

    Snell/Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9CIZbxxcfBNViRVrBDcg-SQIHlKLfh53ZuXjkpgG3Bgj= HDLuLls8hHf0vFKoV_T7G7H4hq1vSicT8RL0UlEO9w10gmc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9CIZbxxcfBNViRVrBDcg-SQIHlKLfh53ZuXjkpgG3Bgj= HDLuLls8hHf0vFKoV_T7G7H4hq1vSicT8RL0UlEOgMznHWE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9CIZbxxcfBNViRVrBDcg-SQIHlKLfh53ZuXjkpgG3Bgj= HDLuLls8hHf0vFKoV_T7G7H4hq1vSicT8RL0UlEOzlC5yLY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 14 00:16:43 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 140015
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    815 PM EDT Fri Jun 13 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    MID-SOUTH INTO THE TENNESSEE AND OHIO VALLEYS, CENTRAL
    APPALACHIANS INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC, AND THE NORTHWEST GULF COAST...

    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    2300 UTC Update -- Pulled the Slight and Marginal Risk areas a
    little farther west (from the Atlantic Coast) based on the latest
    observational trends along with recent HRRR/RRFS runs and the 18Z
    HREF exceedance probabilities.

    Hurley

    Previous Discussion...Stalled frontal boundary stretching across
    the Delmarva Peninsula towards the Upper Ohio Valley will combine
    with increasing atmospheric moisture content (1.5-2.0" PWs by this
    evening) to create efficient rainfall rates within thunderstorms.
    The southerly mid-level flow will be aided by an upper low
    currently analyzed over southern MO, but with troughing stretching
    from the Midwest to the western Gulf. Convection is most likely to
    trigger first across the Carolinas and the elevated terrain of the
    Blue Ridge up through the central Appalachians. Mean column wind
    speeds of 20 kts out of the west should promote some propagation of
    storms, especially once a cold pool is established, but complex
    terrain and areas right along the frontal boundary could exhibit
    some training potential along with rainfall rates up to 2"/hr. The
    inherited Slight Risk was maintained and expanded a bit westward to
    encompass more of the sensitive Blue Ridge mountains of
    central/northern VA. 12z HREF guidance depicts 30-50% chances for
    3" totals within 6 hours this evening across central VA. This along
    with the available moisture content and nearby frontal boundary
    support the potential for scattered instances of flash flooding and
    the potential for localized considerable impacts in the sensitive
    terrain near the Blue Ridge as well as urban locations between
    southern MD and northeast NC. However, some guidance (including the
    12z HRRR and experimental 06z RRFS) are mostly void of excessive
    rainfall coverage, which does prompt some uncertainty during the D1
    period.


    ...Mid-Mississippi Valley and Lower Ohio Valley...
    2300 UTC Update -- Based on the latest observational and guidance
    trends, have nudged the Slight Risk area a bit farther east to
    include more of the TN and OH Valleys.

    Hurley

    Previous discussion...Isolated flash flooding is still possible
    across parts of central MO/IL underneath and near the low center,
    but coverage of heavy rain does not seem widespread enough to
    warrant a Slight Risk. Moisture and effective bulk shear will be
    plentiful across much of the Mid-Missippi Valley and lower Ohio
    Valley while ML CAPE will be sufficient for organized convection in
    a number of areas. PW values of 1.75-2.0" will near the 90th
    climatological percentile per the 00z ECENS. The risk percentage
    for AR is in decline as the heavy rain signal appears better
    elsewhere, but lowish flash flood guidance and the Ozarks should
    prove sufficient for widely scattered to scattered flash flood
    concerns, especially given the potential for storms to re-ignite
    late tonight under the influence of an increasing low-level jet.
    Flash flood guidance is many ares appears compromised by recent
    rainfall (during the past week). Overall, the expectation is for
    isolated to scattered instances of flash flooding and the greatest
    concern located within urban and poor drainage locations.


    ...Northwest Gulf Coast...
    Showers and thunderstorms are forecast to retrograde from southwest
    LA across sensitive areas of Southeast TX this morning within an
    area of low- level convergence and retreating/eroding instability.
    This occurring after extreme rainfall amounts (7"+) impacted
    south-central LA early this morning. Additional hourly rain
    amounts to 2.5" with local totals to 5" are probable along the
    northwest Gulf Coast due to sufficient effective bulk shear,
    moisture, and instability, which would be most problematic where it
    rained heavily on Thursday and within urban areas. 12z HREF
    probabilities for greater than 5" in 6 hrs are 15-20% and scattered
    throughout the region.


    ...Texas Panhandle and Caprock Region...
    Dryline convection this evening is expected along much of the High
    Plains, but also as far south as the Texas Panhandle and western
    Texas where 1-1.25" PWs remain. 3-hr FFGs in the region are below
    3" and have been somewhat wet as of the last month (100-200% of
    normal for some locations). A Marginal Risk was added given the
    potential for numerous thunderstorms, while progressing eastward
    steadily, could merge and lead to brief periods of training.

    ...Northern WI/Michigan U.P....
    Area of low pressure moving eastward through MN helps drive a
    risk for heavy rainfall within narrow bands from MN across
    northern WI Friday morning. Instability appears sufficient in spots
    (500+ J/kg of MU CAPE) for pockets of organized convection capable
    of heavy rainfall, but isentropic lift/low- to mid-level
    frontogenesis is expected to aid heavy rainfall production as well.
    Hourly amounts to 1.5" with local amounts to 3" are possible where
    cells train. The inherited Marginal Risk was shrunk based on radar
    and latest CAM trends.


    ...Northern Rockies/Western High Plains...
    The Marginal Risk across Montana maintained along the western
    interface of the deeper moisture and instability over much of the
    Plains on the leading edge of a quasi-stationary upper level trough.

    Snell/Roth


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR CENTRAL/EASTERN
    VIRGINIA & ACROSS PORTIONS OF EASTERN KANSAS/OKLAHOMA...


    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    Along a stationary front, another day of high moisture, sufficient
    instability and effective bulk shear team up for heavy rainfall in
    Virginia and specifically focus near southeast Virginia as the
    front slides south by the evening hours. Widespread light to
    locally moderate rainfall across the northern Mid-Atlantic should
    tighten the thermal gradient in the region and potentially provide
    a better focus for storms compared to Day 1. PWs are forecast to
    remain near 2" and around the 90th climatological percentile. CAMs
    depict widespread amounts of 2-4" possible with localized totals
    potentially exceeding 5" (12z HREF probs for greater than 5" are
    20-40%), with the greatest potential in southeast Virginia. Urban
    areas and places with increasing soil saturation due to the
    previous day of heavy rainfall would be most at risk for issues.

    ...Southern Plains, Southeast, and Tennessee/Ohio Valleys...
    A deep layer cyclone drops southeast from IL into KY with time.
    The system remains quite moist with sufficient effective bulk shear
    along and near its associated fronts with greater instability,
    particularly across portions of the Plains as mid-level capping is
    increasing due to a strengthening 500 hPa ridge across NM, though
    the cap is breakable especially near remnant MCVs from overnight
    convection ejecting from the High Plains D1. Because of this
    greater instability, a few pieces of guidance are quite wet
    somewhere in the neighborhood of OK and KS, especially the 12z NAM,
    00z CMC, and several CAMs showing maxima of 5-13". Hourly rain
    amounts to 2.5" appear likely in this environment. Cell training
    due to storms moving south- southeast down the stationary
    instability gradient would be problematic if it occurs within a
    long enough band over several hours. The inherited Slight Risk was
    maintained with only minor adjustments. Should guidance converge
    on wet solutions, further upgrades could occur.

    Closer to the deep layer cyclone churning over the Ohio Valley,
    slow moving convection and brief organized training is possible.
    A more cellular convective mode is likely near the cyclone over the
    Ohio Valley, where isolated flash flooding could occur. Along the
    southern flanking inflow band, mean wind becomes more westerly and
    parallel to developing convection across central and northern
    AL/MS. This is an area that could warrant an upgrade to a Slight
    Risk if more confidence arises in better convective organization
    conducive for scattered flash flooding. At the moment, more
    isolated and localized flooding is more probable.


    ...In and near the Iowa/Minnesota border...
    A warm advection pattern returns to the region, bringing
    precipitable water values up to 1.75" and sufficient effective bulk
    shear and instability for organized convection. After rainfall on
    Thursday and Friday, soils should be increasingly saturated/
    compromised at this point. However, the guidance spread on the
    heavy rain signal is quite large...best across southeast SD and
    southern MN. While increasing warmth at 700 hPa is seen across the
    central High Plains, any mid-level capping should be minimal.
    However, the broad reservoir of instability to the southwest could keep southward shifts in the guidance minimal between now and when the
    convection materializes on Saturday. Hourly amounts to 2" and
    local totals to 4" are possible, given the available ingredients
    and potential lingering MCV to move eastward into the region from
    D1. This could be from a combination of cell training and
    occasional mesocyclone formation. The degree of the flash flood
    threat would depend on whether or not urban centers received this
    heavy rainfall or if/where soils were sufficiently compromised over
    previous days within impacted areas.

    Snell/Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR MUCH OF VIRGINIA
    AND INTO PARTS OF THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic States and Central Appalachians...
    Another round of organized convection within a very moist
    environment with sufficient effective bulk shear and instability is
    expected near a stationary boundary. Like previous days, hourly
    rain amounts to 2.5" with local amounts to 5" are possible.
    However, by Sunday the influence of a strung-out upper low will
    near the region and provide better forcing for greater coverage in
    moderate to heavy rainfall. The previous Slight Risk was expanded
    westward in order to encompass more of WV and western VA to account
    for the heavy rain potential in sensitive terrain of the central
    Appalachians on the western slopes given predominantly west-
    southwesterly flow. Once again, flooding impacts will be
    exacerbated in urban centers and what should be increasingly
    saturated soils due to expected rainfall on Friday and Saturday.
    Outside the CAM range for this outlook, but most global guidance
    suggests at least 2-3" totals are likely to be common within the
    Slight Risk. Given the potential soil sensitivity in this region
    and the expected coverage of convection by Day 3, further upgrades
    may be necessary.


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Lower Mississippi Valley...
    A "ring of fire" type of setup appears to be in the offing for
    this region as ridging continues to build across NM, upper
    troughing remains stagnant across the Pacific Northwest, and the
    deep layer cyclone moves from KY towards WV. Temperatures at 700
    hPa continue to warm somewhat across portions of the Rockies and
    the central High Plains, strengthening the mid-level capping
    inversion and increasing the instability available/forward
    propagation odds for any organized convective complex that forms
    around the ridge's periphery. The region with the highest heavy
    rain potential appears to be from the southern Plains/Midwest
    southeastward near a possible Mesoscale Convective System. There is
    significant model spread on location, keeping the risk level as
    Marginal at this time. However, higher end potential exists for any
    convection that can train along the instability gradient from
    roughly eastern KS through AR, as seen in different ways on the
    global solutions and experimental RRFS which show local maxima in
    the 4-7" range. Should the guidance converge, an increased threat
    level could be prudent.

    Snell/Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_9blx07M1UHsaqFBXtMH-EGXSyCKpUtz5y51nuFaEfb7= mOaLjKDsx-YosCc_cH9WPeYQrR4aWbPt_cgCtJ7WFgoklOU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_9blx07M1UHsaqFBXtMH-EGXSyCKpUtz5y51nuFaEfb7= mOaLjKDsx-YosCc_cH9WPeYQrR4aWbPt_cgCtJ7WEykY_UQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_9blx07M1UHsaqFBXtMH-EGXSyCKpUtz5y51nuFaEfb7= mOaLjKDsx-YosCc_cH9WPeYQrR4aWbPt_cgCtJ7W5iYJty4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 14 07:40:42 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 140738
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    338 AM EDT Sat Jun 14 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE MID ATLANTIC AND ALSO THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...


    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    An unsettled weather pattern continues across much of Virginia and
    extending into adjacent portions of eastern West Virginia and
    northeast North Carolina going into Saturday and Saturday night.
    Multiple rounds of slow moving showers and thunderstorms will
    develop generally along and ahead of a cold front that is gradually
    settling to the south across Virginia. This boundary is
    intercepting an anomalously moist airmass with PWs on the order of
    1.75 to 2 inches and mixed layer CAPE on the order of 1000 J/kg on
    average. The band of highest QPF is expected to be from the
    northern Shenandoah Valley to the Hampton Roads area of Virginia,
    with 2 to locally 4 inches of rainfall possible. Slow cell motions
    and efficient rainfall could result in some hourly rainfall rates
    approaching 2 inches per hour, especially where cell mergers occur.=20
    This could result in some instances of flooding, especially across=20
    urban locations and also areas that had heavy rainfall through the=20
    early morning hours Saturday.

    ...Southern Plains, Southeast, and Tennessee/Ohio Valleys...

    A lower tropospheric trough tracks southeastward across the Ohio
    Valley over the weekend. This will be traversing a moist
    environment with sufficient effective bulk shear along and near=20
    its associated fronts with greater instability. Slow moving=20
    convection and brief organized training is possible. A more=20
    cellular convective mode is likely near the low over the Ohio=20
    Valley, where isolated flash flooding could occur. Along the=20
    southern flanking inflow band, mean wind becomes more westerly and=20
    parallel to developing convection across central and northern=20
    Alabama and Mississippi.=20

    Farther west, cell training due to storms moving south or=20
    southeast down the stationary instability gradient across Kansas=20
    and Oklahoma could be problematic if it occurs for an extended time
    period, and some of the recent CAM guidance depicts this scenario,
    although there are still considerable mesoscale differences on=20
    placement and magnitude. However, there is high confidence that a
    mesoscale convective complex will develop with locally high
    rainfall rates. The inherited Slight Risk was maintained although=20
    it is a little larger than the previous issuance.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    A warm advection pattern returns to the region, bringing=20
    a return to more widespread organized convection, mainly during=20
    the 00Z-12Z time period Sunday. Heavy rainfall over this same=20
    region in recent days has resulted in saturated soils in many=20
    cases, and this will increase the vulnerability to flooding, even=20
    though the expected rainfall is not expected to be overly=20
    impressive with mainly 1 to locally 2 inch totals expected, and=20
    therefore a Marginal Risk area remains valid for this time period.

    ...Central Montana...

    A wave of low pressure developing along a frontal boundary should
    provide enough forcing to produce some scattered 1 inch rainfall
    totals across this region, mainly late Saturday afternoon into the
    evening as CAPE increases and dewpoints getting well into the 50s.
    Some of the storms that develop may produce high enough rainfall
    rates to result in a few instances of flooding.


    Hamrick


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR THE MID-ATLANTIC
    AND ALSO NEAR THE OZARKS...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic States and Central Appalachians...

    It remains the case that a corridor of enhanced moisture
    convergence will exist across the Mid-Atlantic region going into
    Sunday, and thus widespread rain for Father's Day. The frontal
    boundary makes a little more southward progress with the axis of
    highest instability expected to generally be south of the
    Interstate 64 corridor. Therefore, the main QPF axis is progged
    from eastern WV/SW Virginia to near the VA/NC border with
    widespread 1-3 inch totals within this band, and locally higher.
    The latest HREF probs of flash flood guidance exceedance are
    greatest Sunday afternoon/evening across portions of eastern WV and
    western VA where antecedent conditions will be quite saturated, and
    another area of exceedance across southeast VA. Depending on what
    evolves through Saturday night, if the axis of heaviest rainfall on
    Sunday is close to or over the previous day's event, a future
    Moderate Risk could be needed, but for now a Slight Risk remains
    the best approach.


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Mid-South...

    A building upper ridge situated over the southern Rockies will tend
    to result in northwest flow aloft across the northern Plains to the
    ArkLaTex region. Multiple convective complexes are likely to
    develop on the eastern periphery of this upper ridge, and
    convective development will depend on whether a low-mid level cap
    can be eroded, and this is more likely to happen across eastern=20
    portions of Kansas/Oklahoma/Texas. The latest model guidance is
    converging more on a concentrated area of enhanced rainfall across
    portions of southwestern Missouri and northwestern Arkansas and
    adjacent portions of Kansas and Oklahoma, where an organized MCS is
    more likely to develop. Therefore, a Slight Risk area has been
    introduced for this region.

    Hamrick


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

    ...A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IS VALID FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, MID-SOUTH, AND THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Mid-Atlantic region...

    Overall, an improvement compared to what is expected over the
    weekend, but there should still be enough moisture in the general
    vicinity of a stalled stationary boundary over southern Virginia
    and North Carolina to produce scattered storms with heavy rainfall.
    Although the magnitude of rainfall expected on Monday is not
    impressive, the very saturated ground by this time will be an
    aggravating factor in terms of flooding potential, and therefore a
    Marginal Risk area is valid from central West Virginia to the Outer
    Banks of North Carolina.

    ...Mid-South...

    The latest model guidance is honing in on a potential MCS that
    could develop across portions of eastern Arkansas into western
    Tennessee on Monday, and perhaps extending into portions of
    southern Missouri and western Kentucky where the potential exists
    for 1 to locally 2 inches of rainfall. A Marginal Risk area is
    valid here since much of this rain would likely happen over a two
    hour time period.

    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...

    A surface low over South Dakota with broad warm air advection ahead
    of it will fuel the development of additional scattered showers and
    storms on Monday. The model guidance remains varied in regards to=20
    placement of QPF maxima, so a broad Marginal Risk is valid.=20


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5xxAGOAKJL2PG14fHZjmqkyIdVerbKuUIzHIFzsy8HPj= 6ZOd2ZX-EXGpoFmYgxelIAjXrN8GavDUeqgzEFSrGGIYpm0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5xxAGOAKJL2PG14fHZjmqkyIdVerbKuUIzHIFzsy8HPj= 6ZOd2ZX-EXGpoFmYgxelIAjXrN8GavDUeqgzEFSrJypCWjA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5xxAGOAKJL2PG14fHZjmqkyIdVerbKuUIzHIFzsy8HPj= 6ZOd2ZX-EXGpoFmYgxelIAjXrN8GavDUeqgzEFSrfP-cixQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 14 15:40:30 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 141540
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1140 AM EDT Sat Jun 14 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MID ATLANTIC, SOUTHERN PLAINS, AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...


    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    16Z Update: The setup remains conducive for locally heavy rainfall
    across a good chunk of the Central Mid Atlantic today. Environment
    is sufficiently buoyant with the 12z KIAD profile indicating
    significant saturation from the surface to the tropopause. Sounding
    revealed a PWAT output of 2.01", putting it above the 90th
    percentile for the day and even above the climatological 30-day
    moving max (99th percentile) for the period. Quasi-stationary front
    will waver this morning and early afternoon before a slow
    advancement south through the Piedmont down into VA by later this
    afternoon and evening. Local MUCAPE forecasts between 1500-3000
    J/kg will be plentiful for maintaining a strong instability regime
    capable of enhancing any convective flare ups leading to heavy rain
    prospects within any cell that initiates.=20

    Biggest trend in the setup is a more robust convective depiction
    over the Laurels down through the Potomac area, including the WV
    Panhandle, Northern Neck of VA, DC metro, and NoVA. This aligns
    within the confines of the surface frontal progression, outlined=20
    decently in the theta_E field when looking at the latest CAMs. A
    quick 2-4" of rain with locally up to 4" are plausible in the=20
    above zone with a maxima of closer to 6" possible over Southeast VA
    where a stronger convergence pattern and potential training is=20
    forecast with an alignment of the mean wind along the front once it
    reaches a latitude south of the line from=20
    Harrisonburg/Fredericksburg/St. Mary's. Greatest threat for=20
    significant flooding will reside just south of that line putting=20
    more prone areas in Southern/Southeast VA under a threat for=20
    enhanced flash flood concerns.=20

    The main change was the adjustment of the SLGT risk further
    northwest to encompass the expected zone of greatest convective
    coverage with a high-end SLGT worded for the areas referenced above
    with greater inclusion of portions of NoVA.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..=20

    An unsettled weather pattern continues across much of Virginia and
    extending into adjacent portions of eastern West Virginia and
    northeast North Carolina going into Saturday and Saturday night.
    Multiple rounds of slow moving showers and thunderstorms will
    develop generally along and ahead of a cold front that is gradually
    settling to the south across Virginia. This boundary is
    intercepting an anomalously moist airmass with PWs on the order of
    1.75 to 2 inches and mixed layer CAPE on the order of 1000 J/kg on
    average. The band of highest QPF is expected to be from the
    northern Shenandoah Valley to the Hampton Roads area of Virginia,
    with 2 to locally 4-6" inches of rainfall possible. Slow cell=20
    motions and efficient rainfall could result in some hourly rainfall
    rates approaching 2 inches per hour, especially where cell mergers
    occur. This could result in some instances of flooding, especially
    across urban locations and also areas that had heavy rainfall=20
    through the early morning hours Saturday.

    Hamrick


    ...Southern Plains, Southeast, and Tennessee/Ohio Valleys...

    16Z Update: Our broad MCV over KS/OK is maintaining a signature of
    persistent rainfall with embedded convective clusters capable of a
    quick 1-2" of rain with some locally high amounts possible. This
    threat will continue for a few more hours before the remnant cold
    pools end up thwarting the maintenance of the convective regime
    and fizzling out to mere lingering showers as we move through the=20
    afternoon. The persistent circulation with the MCV will meander=20
    across the Plains with an redevelopment of convective activity=20
    after 00z as the nocturnal LLJ kicks back in and we see general
    destabilization aid in the process of reigniting the pattern over
    basically the same area. A one-two punch from this mornings
    activity and this evening will be enough to enhance some flash
    flood prospects within the overlapped zone across Southern KS into
    Northern and Northeast OK where 12z HREF blended mean QPF is
    signaling a broad area of 2-3" of rainfall with HREF neighborhood
    probs for >5" running between 20-35% across portions of Eastern OK.
    Considering the FFG's in place, this would prompt a better risk for
    flash flooding given the priming and then secondary development
    later this evening. The previous forecast for the SLGT was
    relatively maintained with some expansion to account for QPF trends
    within the latest CAMs and associated prob fields.=20

    SLGT risk was expanded through AR into Northern MS and the far
    southwest corner of TN to account for another zone of elevated impact
    later this afternoon and evening as convection fires along a=20
    lingering surface trough/quasi-stationary boundary on the=20
    southwestern flank of the departing trough situated to the north-
    northeast. Shortwave progression over the Plains will allow for=20
    enhanced diffluent flow across Northwest AR later in the period=20
    with convective development likely forming along the flanking=20
    surface trough/quasi-stationary boundary that bisects the state.=20
    Any storm within that region will exhibit slower storm motions with
    increasing likelihood of training overhead leading to local totals
    between 2-4" in any of the cells that develop. The area over
    Eastern AR into Northern MS will have the "benefit" of seeing two
    periods of rainfall with the morning MCS moving over the area with
    training already an issue in parts of the aforementioned area. This
    will deteriorate soil absorption capabilities, opening the door for
    potential flash flood concerns when the next round of convective
    materializes. The ongoing threat is also a concern and even extends
    further east into AL overnight with plenty of CAMs depicting heavy
    rainfall prospects over the region. The environment is more than
    capable of heavy rain across much of the Ohio Valley and Southeast,
    especially on the southwest and eastern flank of the slow-moving
    trough. Any cell will be capable of isolated flash flood concerns
    in those regions leading to a broad MRGL risk surrounding the SLGT
    risk located over the Plains into the Lower Mississippi Valley.=20

    Kleebauer


    ...Upper Midwest...

    16Z Update: No changes were necessary to the previous MRGL risk
    forecast as 12z guidance remains on track for the overall setup.
    Heaviest rainfall will likely form across Eastern SD through
    Southern MN and Northern IA with the neighborhood probability for=20
    2" of rainfall running between 30-60% within those bounds. Lower=20
    probs for >3" (<20%) are forecast meaning the projected maxima is=20
    likely to fall between 2-3" over the area, enough to warrant a=20
    maintenance of the MRGL risk previously forecast.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A warm advection pattern returns to the region, bringing
    a return to more widespread organized convection, mainly during
    the 00Z-12Z time period Sunday. Heavy rainfall over this same
    region in recent days has resulted in saturated soils in many
    cases, and this will increase the vulnerability to flooding, even
    though the expected rainfall is not expected to be overly
    impressive with mainly 1 to locally 2-3 inch totals expected, and
    therefore a Marginal Risk area remains valid for this time period.

    Hamrick


    ...Central Montana...

    16Z Update: Only change was a minor expansion to the east and
    northeast for the MRGL risk across MT. The primary synoptic and
    mesoscale setup is still on target. Low FFG's over the region
    outlined will allow for the threat of isolated flash flood concerns
    within the stronger cores that develop late-afternoon and evening.
    A quick 1-2" is anticipated in any stronger cells.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A wave of low pressure developing along a frontal boundary should
    provide enough forcing to produce some scattered 1 inch rainfall
    totals across this region, mainly late Saturday afternoon into the
    evening as CAPE increases and dewpoints getting well into the 50s.
    Some of the storms that develop may produce high enough rainfall
    rates to result in a few instances of flooding.

    Hamrick


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR THE MID-ATLANTIC
    AND ALSO NEAR THE OZARKS...

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic States and Central Appalachians...

    It remains the case that a corridor of enhanced moisture
    convergence will exist across the Mid-Atlantic region going into
    Sunday, and thus widespread rain for Father's Day. The frontal
    boundary makes a little more southward progress with the axis of
    highest instability expected to generally be south of the
    Interstate 64 corridor. Therefore, the main QPF axis is progged
    from eastern WV/SW Virginia to near the VA/NC border with
    widespread 1-3 inch totals within this band, and locally higher.
    The latest HREF probs of flash flood guidance exceedance are
    greatest Sunday afternoon/evening across portions of eastern WV and
    western VA where antecedent conditions will be quite saturated, and
    another area of exceedance across southeast VA. Depending on what
    evolves through Saturday night, if the axis of heaviest rainfall on
    Sunday is close to or over the previous day's event, a future
    Moderate Risk could be needed, but for now a Slight Risk remains
    the best approach.


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Mid-South...

    A building upper ridge situated over the southern Rockies will tend
    to result in northwest flow aloft across the northern Plains to the
    ArkLaTex region. Multiple convective complexes are likely to
    develop on the eastern periphery of this upper ridge, and
    convective development will depend on whether a low-mid level cap
    can be eroded, and this is more likely to happen across eastern
    portions of Kansas/Oklahoma/Texas. The latest model guidance is
    converging more on a concentrated area of enhanced rainfall across
    portions of southwestern Missouri and northwestern Arkansas and
    adjacent portions of Kansas and Oklahoma, where an organized MCS is
    more likely to develop. Therefore, a Slight Risk area has been
    introduced for this region.

    Hamrick


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

    ...A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IS VALID FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, MID-SOUTH, AND THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Mid-Atlantic region...

    Overall, an improvement compared to what is expected over the
    weekend, but there should still be enough moisture in the general
    vicinity of a stalled stationary boundary over southern Virginia
    and North Carolina to produce scattered storms with heavy rainfall.
    Although the magnitude of rainfall expected on Monday is not
    impressive, the very saturated ground by this time will be an
    aggravating factor in terms of flooding potential, and therefore a
    Marginal Risk area is valid from central West Virginia to the Outer
    Banks of North Carolina.

    ...Mid-South...

    The latest model guidance is honing in on a potential MCS that
    could develop across portions of eastern Arkansas into western
    Tennessee on Monday, and perhaps extending into portions of
    southern Missouri and western Kentucky where the potential exists
    for 1 to locally 2 inches of rainfall. A Marginal Risk area is
    valid here since much of this rain would likely happen over a two
    hour time period.

    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...

    A surface low over South Dakota with broad warm air advection ahead
    of it will fuel the development of additional scattered showers and
    storms on Monday. The model guidance remains varied in regards to
    placement of QPF maxima, so a broad Marginal Risk is valid.


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4CPqttMboj7V139Y38n4BfzEJipdr1OE9emNnd3bdk24= a0uZOC2gAAB-_N9HCUCK1N3RaA6VfCc1gOUA0wePp2tdYkU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4CPqttMboj7V139Y38n4BfzEJipdr1OE9emNnd3bdk24= a0uZOC2gAAB-_N9HCUCK1N3RaA6VfCc1gOUA0wePjOCMvhA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4CPqttMboj7V139Y38n4BfzEJipdr1OE9emNnd3bdk24= a0uZOC2gAAB-_N9HCUCK1N3RaA6VfCc1gOUA0wePXSwf-G4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 14 19:48:37 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 141948
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    348 PM EDT Sat Jun 14 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Jun 14 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MID ATLANTIC, SOUTHERN PLAINS, AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...


    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    16Z Update: The setup remains conducive for locally heavy rainfall
    across a good chunk of the Central Mid Atlantic today. Environment
    is sufficiently buoyant with the 12z KIAD profile indicating
    significant saturation from the surface to the tropopause. Sounding
    revealed a PWAT output of 2.01", putting it above the 90th
    percentile for the day and even above the climatological 30-day
    moving max (99th percentile) for the period. Quasi-stationary front
    will waver this morning and early afternoon before a slow
    advancement south through the Piedmont down into VA by later this
    afternoon and evening. Local MUCAPE forecasts between 1500-3000
    J/kg will be plentiful for maintaining a strong instability regime
    capable of enhancing any convective flare ups leading to heavy rain
    prospects within any cell that initiates.

    Biggest trend in the setup is a more robust convective depiction
    over the Laurels down through the Potomac area, including the WV
    Panhandle, Northern Neck of VA, DC metro, and NoVA. This aligns
    within the confines of the surface frontal progression, outlined
    decently in the theta_E field when looking at the latest CAMs. A
    quick 2-4" of rain with locally up to 4" are plausible in the
    above zone with a maxima of closer to 6" possible over Southeast VA
    where a stronger convergence pattern and potential training is
    forecast with an alignment of the mean wind along the front once it
    reaches a latitude south of the line from
    Harrisonburg/Fredericksburg/St. Mary's. Greatest threat for
    significant flooding will reside just south of that line putting
    more prone areas in Southern/Southeast VA under a threat for
    enhanced flash flood concerns.

    The main change was the adjustment of the SLGT risk further
    northwest to encompass the expected zone of greatest convective
    coverage with a high-end SLGT worded for the areas referenced above
    with greater inclusion of portions of NoVA.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    An unsettled weather pattern continues across much of Virginia and
    extending into adjacent portions of eastern West Virginia and
    northeast North Carolina going into Saturday and Saturday night.
    Multiple rounds of slow moving showers and thunderstorms will
    develop generally along and ahead of a cold front that is gradually
    settling to the south across Virginia. This boundary is
    intercepting an anomalously moist airmass with PWs on the order of
    1.75 to 2 inches and mixed layer CAPE on the order of 1000 J/kg on
    average. The band of highest QPF is expected to be from the
    northern Shenandoah Valley to the Hampton Roads area of Virginia,
    with 2 to locally 4-6" inches of rainfall possible. Slow cell
    motions and efficient rainfall could result in some hourly rainfall
    rates approaching 2 inches per hour, especially where cell mergers
    occur. This could result in some instances of flooding, especially
    across urban locations and also areas that had heavy rainfall
    through the early morning hours Saturday.

    Hamrick


    ...Southern Plains, Southeast, and Tennessee/Ohio Valleys...

    16Z Update: Our broad MCV over KS/OK is maintaining a signature of
    persistent rainfall with embedded convective clusters capable of a
    quick 1-2" of rain with some locally high amounts possible. This
    threat will continue for a few more hours before the remnant cold
    pools end up thwarting the maintenance of the convective regime
    and fizzling out to mere lingering showers as we move through the
    afternoon. The persistent circulation with the MCV will meander
    across the Plains with an redevelopment of convective activity
    after 00z as the nocturnal LLJ kicks back in and we see general
    destabilization aid in the process of reigniting the pattern over
    basically the same area. A one-two punch from this mornings
    activity and this evening will be enough to enhance some flash
    flood prospects within the overlapped zone across Southern KS into
    Northern and Northeast OK where 12z HREF blended mean QPF is
    signaling a broad area of 2-3" of rainfall with HREF neighborhood
    probs for >5" running between 20-35% across portions of Eastern OK.
    Considering the FFG's in place, this would prompt a better risk for
    flash flooding given the priming and then secondary development
    later this evening. The previous forecast for the SLGT was
    relatively maintained with some expansion to account for QPF trends
    within the latest CAMs and associated prob fields.

    SLGT risk was expanded through AR into Northern MS and the far
    southwest corner of TN to account for another zone of elevated impact
    later this afternoon and evening as convection fires along a
    lingering surface trough/quasi-stationary boundary on the
    southwestern flank of the departing trough situated to the north-
    northeast. Shortwave progression over the Plains will allow for
    enhanced diffluent flow across Northwest AR later in the period
    with convective development likely forming along the flanking
    surface trough/quasi-stationary boundary that bisects the state.
    Any storm within that region will exhibit slower storm motions with
    increasing likelihood of training overhead leading to local totals
    between 2-4" in any of the cells that develop. The area over
    Eastern AR into Northern MS will have the "benefit" of seeing two
    periods of rainfall with the morning MCS moving over the area with
    training already an issue in parts of the aforementioned area. This
    will deteriorate soil absorption capabilities, opening the door for
    potential flash flood concerns when the next round of convective
    materializes. The ongoing threat is also a concern and even extends
    further east into AL overnight with plenty of CAMs depicting heavy
    rainfall prospects over the region. The environment is more than
    capable of heavy rain across much of the Ohio Valley and Southeast,
    especially on the southwest and eastern flank of the slow-moving
    trough. Any cell will be capable of isolated flash flood concerns
    in those regions leading to a broad MRGL risk surrounding the SLGT
    risk located over the Plains into the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    Kleebauer


    ...Upper Midwest...

    16Z Update: No changes were necessary to the previous MRGL risk
    forecast as 12z guidance remains on track for the overall setup.
    Heaviest rainfall will likely form across Eastern SD through
    Southern MN and Northern IA with the neighborhood probability for
    2" of rainfall running between 30-60% within those bounds. Lower
    probs for >3" (<20%) are forecast meaning the projected maxima is
    likely to fall between 2-3" over the area, enough to warrant a
    maintenance of the MRGL risk previously forecast.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A warm advection pattern returns to the region, bringing
    a return to more widespread organized convection, mainly during
    the 00Z-12Z time period Sunday. Heavy rainfall over this same
    region in recent days has resulted in saturated soils in many
    cases, and this will increase the vulnerability to flooding, even
    though the expected rainfall is not expected to be overly
    impressive with mainly 1 to locally 2-3 inch totals expected, and
    therefore a Marginal Risk area remains valid for this time period.

    Hamrick


    ...Central Montana...

    16Z Update: Only change was a minor expansion to the east and
    northeast for the MRGL risk across MT. The primary synoptic and
    mesoscale setup is still on target. Low FFG's over the region
    outlined will allow for the threat of isolated flash flood concerns
    within the stronger cores that develop late-afternoon and evening.
    A quick 1-2" is anticipated in any stronger cells.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A wave of low pressure developing along a frontal boundary should
    provide enough forcing to produce some scattered 1 inch rainfall
    totals across this region, mainly late Saturday afternoon into the
    evening as CAPE increases and dewpoints getting well into the 50s.
    Some of the storms that develop may produce high enough rainfall
    rates to result in a few instances of flooding.

    Hamrick


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE=20
    MID ATLANTIC, SOUTHERN PLAINS AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...

    20Z Update: The previous SLGT risk remains favorable as the threat
    for flash flooding, some locally significant are forecast across
    portions of the Mid Atlantic and Central Appalachians Sunday. The
    area of focus will reside around the stationary front that will
    bisect the southern half of VA up through eastern WV, arcing back=20
    into Western PA as southwesterly flow remains steadfast west of the
    terrain in WV/PA through at least 18z. A corridor of elevated=20
    theta_E will remain situated over Western PA as far north as Butler
    county with a deep pool of moisture located along and south of the
    front. Shortwave trough that has slowly trudged eastward through=20
    the Central part of the CONUS will finally pick up forward speed=20
    and shift eastward through the Central Apps and Mid Atlantic by the
    afternoon hrs leading to increased large scale forcing over the=20 aforementioned area. General instability coupled with the ascent=20
    pattern will lead to favorable conditions for scattered to=20
    widespread convective activity with mean cell motions moving slowly
    east and southeast through the course of the afternoon and=20
    evening. A very robust signal within the 12z HREF neighborhood prob
    fields indicate a likelihood of >3" (60-90%) of rainfall in the=20
    strongest convective cores with a modest signal for >5" located
    over the Appalachian front in WV (20-40%) and across the VA
    Tidewater into the Richmond metro (40-60%). These signals are
    aligned with a locally significant threat for excessive rainfall,
    especially in these particular zones due to sensitivity concerns
    from either complex terrain (Appalachians) or urbanization factors
    (Southern VA and the Tidewater). Hourly rainfall rates between
    2-3"/hr are likely in the heaviest rainfall with instantaneous
    rates upwards of 5"/hr plausible across Southeast VA considering
    the available instability >1500 J/kg and PWATs approaching +2
    deviations within a well-positioned front that should enhance local
    convergence pattern.=20

    The SLGT risk inherited was maintained in the previous location,
    but was expanded to the northwest to include more of Northern WV,
    Western MD, and Western PA given the signals within the latest HREF
    and the anomalous environment in place with the front nearby. There
    is a potential for an upgrade across parts of Eastern WV into the
    Tidewater where the highest probability of >3" is located,
    overlapping with what will likely be already saturated grounds
    after the activity yesterday and later this evening. We will be
    monitoring the setup closely over the next 12-24 hrs.=20

    Kleebauer


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Mid-South...

    20Z Update: The multi-MCS threat remains firm within the latest=20 deterministic with agreement among the ensembles for a dual QPF
    maxima situated across both the Northern Plains/Upper Midwest, as
    well as portions of the Southern Plains into the Lower Mississippi
    Valley. The more robust signal for heavy rainfall is situated=20
    across Southeast KS down through Eastern OK into AR thanks to MCS=20 propagation into the area on the back-end of D1 into the D2 period.
    HREF blended mean QPF indicated an areal average between 1-2" with
    the CAMs individual outputs putting down as much as 2-4" with the
    morning complex across the areas above. Remnant MCV concerns will
    enhance a redevelopment phase of the regional convective threat
    over the Lower Mississippi Valley with some of the hi-res windows
    indicating another 2-4" local maxima occurring the second half of
    the forecast cycle. In this case, there would be sufficient totals
    stemming from likely back to back to back occurrences of heavy
    rainfall from D1 through D2 leading to likely flash flood concerns.
    In this case, there was enough of a signal to warrant an expansion
    of the SLGT to cover for the threat across OK and AR with the
    greatest threat likely over the western Ozarks down into Central
    AR.=20

    Convective complex over the Northern Plains will likely be more on
    the progressive side compared to its southern counter-part leading
    to a capped higher end potential. Still, some of the heavier rain
    forecast would overlap with areas that have been affected, or will
    be affected by previous convective episodes leading to saturated
    soils and a higher chance of localized impacts. The threat remains
    within the MRGL risk threshold considering the signals and relevant
    probs within the latest CAMs. A targeted upgrade is plausible if=20
    the signal becomes stronger in later updates.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..=20

    A building upper ridge situated over the southern Rockies will tend
    to result in northwest flow aloft across the northern Plains to the
    ArkLaTex region. Multiple convective complexes are likely to
    develop on the eastern periphery of this upper ridge, and
    convective development will depend on whether a low-mid level cap
    can be eroded, and this is more likely to happen across eastern
    portions of Kansas/Oklahoma/Texas. The latest model guidance is
    converging more on a concentrated area of enhanced rainfall across
    portions of southwestern Missouri and northwestern Arkansas and
    adjacent portions of Kansas and Oklahoma, where an organized MCS is
    more likely to develop. Therefore, a Slight Risk area has been
    introduced for this region.

    Hamrick


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

    ...A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IS VALID FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, MID-SOUTH, AND THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    20z Update: Consensus for locally heavy rainfall across portions of
    the Northern tier of the CONUS remains favorable across a broad
    area extending through the Dakotas, Nebraska, and the Upper Midwest
    on Monday. The good news in the setup is the current evolution
    would favor the heaviest rain across the Nebraska Sandhills, an
    area much less prone to flash flooding due to the soil composition
    which would necessitate extreme rainfall rates (>4"/hr) and has a=20
    history of limited flash flooding due to the very low runoff=20
    capabilities. So long as this consensus remains, it is unlikely an=20
    upgrade would be necessary for the region so will be monitoring=20
    closely as a northern or southern shift in the maxima would offer a
    chance for a targeted upgrade. Heavy rain threat over the Northern
    tier of ND and MN remains fairly isolated at this juncture and=20
    will take a more robust signal to induce an upgrade. These areas=20
    are typically harder to flood and already exhibit relatively high=20
    FFG's for the 1/3/6 hr indices, so the threat will likely be of the
    isolated variety, but will monitor the trends closely as we move
    into CAMs range.

    Across the Mid-Mississippi Valley, flash flood threat will likely=20
    be tied to yet another MCS moving across the area comprised of the
    Ozarks, Southeast MO into the western Ohio Valley. Some of these
    areas will have fairly compromised soils given the daily occurrence
    of heavy rain the periods prior, so will have to assess the
    expected forward propagation of any complex closely to see if an
    upgrade is warranted. Considering the trickiness of narrowing down
    specifics for these convectively driven complexes, decided to
    maintain general continuity for the MRGL risk, but expanded based
    on ensemble QPF depiction with a slightly more robust output
    compared to previous iterations.

    The front across the Mid Atlantic will sink further south and pivot
    away from the areas that will have received significant rainfall
    the periods prior. The area with greatest overall potential is
    along the Appalachian front in WV where the signal for another
    round of at least isolated thunderstorm activity could very well
    offer another flash flood concern. The threat is highest over NC
    where the frontal positioning would be aligned as such that some of
    the activity that develops on Monday could provide elements of
    training within a well favored environment for heavy rain
    prospects. Some of the deterministic is already pushing areal
    averages of 2-3" across Central and Eastern NC, a signal that is
    favorable to at least a MRGL threat of flash flooding over the
    urban corridor. Pending trends within CAMs and the positioning of
    the front, an upgrade is certainly plausible for both eastern WV
    down through the NC Piedmont and points east.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion(s)..


    ...Mid-Atlantic region...

    Overall, an improvement compared to what is expected over the
    weekend, but there should still be enough moisture in the general
    vicinity of a stalled stationary boundary over southern Virginia
    and North Carolina to produce scattered storms with heavy rainfall.
    Although the magnitude of rainfall expected on Monday is not
    impressive, the very saturated ground by this time will be an
    aggravating factor in terms of flooding potential, and therefore a
    Marginal Risk area is valid from central West Virginia to the Outer
    Banks of North Carolina.

    ...Mid-South...

    The latest model guidance is honing in on a potential MCS that
    could develop across portions of eastern Arkansas into western
    Tennessee on Monday, and perhaps extending into portions of
    southern Missouri and western Kentucky where the potential exists
    for 1 to locally 2 inches of rainfall. A Marginal Risk area is
    valid here since much of this rain would likely happen over a two
    hour time period.

    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...

    A surface low over South Dakota with broad warm air advection ahead
    of it will fuel the development of additional scattered showers and
    storms on Monday. The model guidance remains varied in regards to
    placement of QPF maxima, so a broad Marginal Risk is valid.

    Hamrick


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71l6R-5l4T0eft7UrEgF_06mIU0HyzgDqSg4mOjZCxUK= FGa8SORwXzo5lqiDLBXW1sNChdDZavxSp69_2AUEm4GMD_w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71l6R-5l4T0eft7UrEgF_06mIU0HyzgDqSg4mOjZCxUK= FGa8SORwXzo5lqiDLBXW1sNChdDZavxSp69_2AUEN4Maga0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!71l6R-5l4T0eft7UrEgF_06mIU0HyzgDqSg4mOjZCxUK= FGa8SORwXzo5lqiDLBXW1sNChdDZavxSp69_2AUE-pzJ2b8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 15 00:57:38 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 150057
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    857 PM EDT Sat Jun 14 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025

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

    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    Convection moving southeast along a stationary front will result=20
    in isolated to scattered flash flooding this evening across=20
    portions of northern and eastern VA. Given the location of the=20
    front and instability gradient it appears that the heaviest=20
    rainfall rates will remain in VA, and thus we were able to take DC
    and MD out of the Slight risk. High PWs and slow cell=20
    motions/mergers near the front will allow for high rainfall rates=20
    and isolated amounts exceeding 3" across portions of northern and=20
    eastern VA.

    ...Oklahoma...
    At least some flash flooding appears likely overnight into early=20
    Sunday across portions of OK. In the mid levels we have a well=20
    defined shortwave across KS, which will slowly drift southward into
    OK tonight. To the south of this feature increasing low level=20
    moisture transport/convergence will interact with a highly unstable
    airmass. Convection will expand in coverage by later this evening,
    and activity should initially be slow moving and exhibit=20
    backbuilding characteristics. This will allow for areas of=20
    excessive rainfall, with recent HRRR and RRFS runs depicting a=20
    swath of 3-5" of rainfall, and both the 18z HREF and REFS showing=20
    over a 40% chance of locally exceeding 5". By later tonight=20
    convection will grow upscale and likely develop a stronger cold=20
    pool resulting in a southward acceleration of convection. High=20
    rainfall rates could still result in a localized flash flood threat
    after this faster southward propagation occurs...but the coverage=20
    and magnitude of the threat should be lower by then. Thus the=20
    greater risk is this evening into tonight when convection should=20
    be slower moving and backbuilding...and do consider this a higher=20
    end Slight risk centered over central OK. Scattered flash flooding=20
    is probable, some of which could be locally significant.

    ...Upper Midwest...
    A Marginal risk was maintained across portions of far southeast SD
    into IA. Seeing a recent expansion of slow moving convection near=20
    a stationary front which could result in localized flash flooding=20
    through the evening hours.

    ...Central Montana...
    Convection over portions of central and eastern MT will continue
    to pose an isolated flash flood risk into the overnight hours.=20
    Recent HRRR runs are likely under doing rainfall amounts over this
    area. Recent RRFS runs may be overdone, but likely do have a=20
    better handle on the repeat nature of convection that should=20
    continue into tonight. Impressive CAPE/Shear profiles will=20
    continue to support convective clusters and supercells, and with=20
    PWs over 1", heavy rainfall rates will be likely. Localized=20
    rainfall upwards of 2-3" is possible through the overnight hours.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    MID ATLANTIC, SOUTHERN PLAINS AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...

    20Z Update: The previous SLGT risk remains favorable as the threat
    for flash flooding, some locally significant are forecast across
    portions of the Mid Atlantic and Central Appalachians Sunday. The
    area of focus will reside around the stationary front that will
    bisect the southern half of VA up through eastern WV, arcing back
    into Western PA as southwesterly flow remains steadfast west of the
    terrain in WV/PA through at least 18z. A corridor of elevated
    theta_E will remain situated over Western PA as far north as Butler
    county with a deep pool of moisture located along and south of the
    front. Shortwave trough that has slowly trudged eastward through
    the Central part of the CONUS will finally pick up forward speed
    and shift eastward through the Central Apps and Mid Atlantic by the
    afternoon hrs leading to increased large scale forcing over the
    aforementioned area. General instability coupled with the ascent
    pattern will lead to favorable conditions for scattered to
    widespread convective activity with mean cell motions moving slowly
    east and southeast through the course of the afternoon and
    evening. A very robust signal within the 12z HREF neighborhood prob
    fields indicate a likelihood of >3" (60-90%) of rainfall in the
    strongest convective cores with a modest signal for >5" located
    over the Appalachian front in WV (20-40%) and across the VA
    Tidewater into the Richmond metro (40-60%). These signals are
    aligned with a locally significant threat for excessive rainfall,
    especially in these particular zones due to sensitivity concerns
    from either complex terrain (Appalachians) or urbanization factors
    (Southern VA and the Tidewater). Hourly rainfall rates between
    2-3"/hr are likely in the heaviest rainfall with instantaneous
    rates upwards of 5"/hr plausible across Southeast VA considering
    the available instability >1500 J/kg and PWATs approaching +2
    deviations within a well-positioned front that should enhance local
    convergence pattern.

    The SLGT risk inherited was maintained in the previous location,
    but was expanded to the northwest to include more of Northern WV,
    Western MD, and Western PA given the signals within the latest HREF
    and the anomalous environment in place with the front nearby. There
    is a potential for an upgrade across parts of Eastern WV into the
    Tidewater where the highest probability of >3" is located,
    overlapping with what will likely be already saturated grounds
    after the activity yesterday and later this evening. We will be
    monitoring the setup closely over the next 12-24 hrs.

    Kleebauer


    ...Northern Plains into the Midwest and Mid-South...

    20Z Update: The multi-MCS threat remains firm within the latest
    deterministic with agreement among the ensembles for a dual QPF
    maxima situated across both the Northern Plains/Upper Midwest, as
    well as portions of the Southern Plains into the Lower Mississippi
    Valley. The more robust signal for heavy rainfall is situated
    across Southeast KS down through Eastern OK into AR thanks to MCS
    propagation into the area on the back-end of D1 into the D2 period.
    HREF blended mean QPF indicated an areal average between 1-2" with
    the CAMs individual outputs putting down as much as 2-4" with the
    morning complex across the areas above. Remnant MCV concerns will
    enhance a redevelopment phase of the regional convective threat
    over the Lower Mississippi Valley with some of the hi-res windows
    indicating another 2-4" local maxima occurring the second half of
    the forecast cycle. In this case, there would be sufficient totals
    stemming from likely back to back to back occurrences of heavy
    rainfall from D1 through D2 leading to likely flash flood concerns.
    In this case, there was enough of a signal to warrant an expansion
    of the SLGT to cover for the threat across OK and AR with the
    greatest threat likely over the western Ozarks down into Central
    AR.

    Convective complex over the Northern Plains will likely be more on
    the progressive side compared to its southern counter-part leading
    to a capped higher end potential. Still, some of the heavier rain
    forecast would overlap with areas that have been affected, or will
    be affected by previous convective episodes leading to saturated
    soils and a higher chance of localized impacts. The threat remains
    within the MRGL risk threshold considering the signals and relevant
    probs within the latest CAMs. A targeted upgrade is plausible if
    the signal becomes stronger in later updates.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A building upper ridge situated over the southern Rockies will tend
    to result in northwest flow aloft across the northern Plains to the
    ArkLaTex region. Multiple convective complexes are likely to
    develop on the eastern periphery of this upper ridge, and
    convective development will depend on whether a low-mid level cap
    can be eroded, and this is more likely to happen across eastern
    portions of Kansas/Oklahoma/Texas. The latest model guidance is
    converging more on a concentrated area of enhanced rainfall across
    portions of southwestern Missouri and northwestern Arkansas and
    adjacent portions of Kansas and Oklahoma, where an organized MCS is
    more likely to develop. Therefore, a Slight Risk area has been
    introduced for this region.

    Hamrick


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

    ...A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IS VALID FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, MID-SOUTH, AND THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    20z Update: Consensus for locally heavy rainfall across portions of
    the Northern tier of the CONUS remains favorable across a broad
    area extending through the Dakotas, Nebraska, and the Upper Midwest
    on Monday. The good news in the setup is the current evolution
    would favor the heaviest rain across the Nebraska Sandhills, an
    area much less prone to flash flooding due to the soil composition
    which would necessitate extreme rainfall rates (>4"/hr) and has a
    history of limited flash flooding due to the very low runoff
    capabilities. So long as this consensus remains, it is unlikely an
    upgrade would be necessary for the region so will be monitoring
    closely as a northern or southern shift in the maxima would offer a
    chance for a targeted upgrade. Heavy rain threat over the Northern
    tier of ND and MN remains fairly isolated at this juncture and
    will take a more robust signal to induce an upgrade. These areas
    are typically harder to flood and already exhibit relatively high
    FFG's for the 1/3/6 hr indices, so the threat will likely be of the
    isolated variety, but will monitor the trends closely as we move
    into CAMs range.

    Across the Mid-Mississippi Valley, flash flood threat will likely
    be tied to yet another MCS moving across the area comprised of the
    Ozarks, Southeast MO into the western Ohio Valley. Some of these
    areas will have fairly compromised soils given the daily occurrence
    of heavy rain the periods prior, so will have to assess the
    expected forward propagation of any complex closely to see if an
    upgrade is warranted. Considering the trickiness of narrowing down
    specifics for these convectively driven complexes, decided to
    maintain general continuity for the MRGL risk, but expanded based
    on ensemble QPF depiction with a slightly more robust output
    compared to previous iterations.

    The front across the Mid Atlantic will sink further south and pivot
    away from the areas that will have received significant rainfall
    the periods prior. The area with greatest overall potential is
    along the Appalachian front in WV where the signal for another
    round of at least isolated thunderstorm activity could very well
    offer another flash flood concern. The threat is highest over NC
    where the frontal positioning would be aligned as such that some of
    the activity that develops on Monday could provide elements of
    training within a well favored environment for heavy rain
    prospects. Some of the deterministic is already pushing areal
    averages of 2-3" across Central and Eastern NC, a signal that is
    favorable to at least a MRGL threat of flash flooding over the
    urban corridor. Pending trends within CAMs and the positioning of
    the front, an upgrade is certainly plausible for both eastern WV
    down through the NC Piedmont and points east.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion(s)..


    ...Mid-Atlantic region...

    Overall, an improvement compared to what is expected over the
    weekend, but there should still be enough moisture in the general
    vicinity of a stalled stationary boundary over southern Virginia
    and North Carolina to produce scattered storms with heavy rainfall.
    Although the magnitude of rainfall expected on Monday is not
    impressive, the very saturated ground by this time will be an
    aggravating factor in terms of flooding potential, and therefore a
    Marginal Risk area is valid from central West Virginia to the Outer
    Banks of North Carolina.

    ...Mid-South...

    The latest model guidance is honing in on a potential MCS that
    could develop across portions of eastern Arkansas into western
    Tennessee on Monday, and perhaps extending into portions of
    southern Missouri and western Kentucky where the potential exists
    for 1 to locally 2 inches of rainfall. A Marginal Risk area is
    valid here since much of this rain would likely happen over a two
    hour time period.

    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...

    A surface low over South Dakota with broad warm air advection ahead
    of it will fuel the development of additional scattered showers and
    storms on Monday. The model guidance remains varied in regards to
    placement of QPF maxima, so a broad Marginal Risk is valid.

    Hamrick


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4O9-09360acz4xiRDLkyWmgBBN1lSh1kXH6zmB1tkR8G= DGRu-olvh-5wLakSflTBTqT6agP_pYrxkFpnrn8FTwsqGsE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4O9-09360acz4xiRDLkyWmgBBN1lSh1kXH6zmB1tkR8G= DGRu-olvh-5wLakSflTBTqT6agP_pYrxkFpnrn8FFOqbv8o$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4O9-09360acz4xiRDLkyWmgBBN1lSh1kXH6zmB1tkR8G= DGRu-olvh-5wLakSflTBTqT6agP_pYrxkFpnrn8F3-1_2fo$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 15 07:10:18 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 150709
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    309 AM EDT Sun Jun 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA AND NORTHEAST NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...

    A back door cold front will continue to slow down its forward
    progress and idle across the Mid-Atlantic region through Father's
    Day. Moist southwesterly flow will intersect this boundary and
    result in enhanced moisture convergence and lift. A combination of
    ample instability on the order of 1000-2000 J/kg of mixed layer
    CAPE, PWs nearing 2 inches, and a strong frontal boundary will set
    the stage for additional heavy rain over grounds that are becoming
    much more saturated leading up to this. There are two main areas of
    increased concern, with the first being over eastern West Virginia
    where HREF probabilities of flash flood guidance exceedance are
    elevated due to antecedent conditions and the prospects of 1-2
    inches of additional rain on Sunday. Although this area still
    remains in a Slight Risk, there is the potential that an upgrade to
    Moderate Risk may be needed once the event starts to materialize
    midday Sunday, so this will continue to be closely monitored.

    The other area of concern is across the Tidewater region of
    southeast Virginia into adjacent portions of northeast North
    Carolina. The 00Z CAM guidance strongly supports swaths of enhanced
    QPF from just south of Richmond to the northern Outer Banks, and
    rainfall totals on the order of 2-3 inches, and locally higher, are
    expected. This would be falling on top of grounds that already had
    1-3 inches on Saturday near the U.S. Highway 460 corridor into
    Southside Hampton Roads, so that is an aggravating factor. All of
    this combined with higher HREF flash flood guidance probs resulted
    in areas south of the James River and north of the Albemarle Sound
    to now be in a Moderate Risk for this time period.


    ...Mid-South to the ArkLaTex...

    There remains a strong signal for one or more MCSs to develop in
    the latest deterministic guidance across Southeast KS and extending
    southward through much of Arkansas, owing to MCS propagation into=20
    the area Sunday morning before the official start of the period at
    12Z. The remnant MCV will enhance a redevelopment phase of the=20
    regional convective threat over much of Arkansas and into the
    ArkLaTex region with some of the CAM guidance showing another 2 to
    4 inches for this region, perhaps even higher in some cases where
    persistent convective training develops, and thus raise the
    potential for flash flood concerns. In this case, there was enough
    of a signal to warrant an expansion of the inherited Slight Risk
    southward to the ArkLaTex region.


    ...Upper Midwest...

    The expected convective complex over the Dakotas and moving into
    Iowa will likely be more on the progressive side compared to the
    MCS farther south across Arkansas. However, some of the heavier=20
    rain that is expected will likely happen over more saturated soils
    and therefore a higher chance of localized impacts. The 00Z CAM
    guidance suite has trended wetter, especially the 3km NAM, and the
    global guidance to include the GFS and the CMC also have a more
    concentrated QPF signal. Therefore, northwestern Iowa and portions
    of adjacent states are now in a Slight Risk area for this time
    period.

    Hamrick


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

    ...A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IS VALID FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, MID-SOUTH, AND THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Mid-Atlantic region...

    Overall, an improvement compared to what is expected over the
    weekend, but there should still be enough moisture in the general
    vicinity of a stalled stationary boundary over southern Virginia
    and North Carolina to produce scattered storms with heavy rainfall.
    There is a greater signal in the 00Z guidance for heavier QPF
    across central and southern North Carolina, but it does not appear
    to overlap much with the Day 1 QPF, so this will tend to mitigate
    the flooding potential. Although the magnitude of rainfall=20
    expected on Monday is not impressive, the very saturated ground by=20
    this time across West Virginia and western Virginia will be an=20
    aggravating factor in terms of flooding potential, and therefore a=20
    Marginal Risk area is valid from central West Virginia to the Outer
    Banks of North Carolina.

    ...Mid-South...

    The latest model guidance is honing in on a potential MCS that
    could develop across portions of eastern Arkansas into western
    Tennessee on Monday, and perhaps extending into portions of
    southern Missouri and western Kentucky where the potential exists
    for 1 to locally 2 inches of rainfall. A Marginal Risk area is
    valid here since much of this rain would likely happen over a two
    hour time period.

    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...

    Consensus for locally heavy rainfall across portions of the=20
    Northern tier of the CONUS remains favorable across a broad area=20
    extending through the Dakotas, Nebraska, and the Upper Midwest on=20
    Monday. It remains the case that some of the heavier rainfall is
    expected over the Sandhills of Nebraska where flash flood guidance
    is high, and therefore not rising to the level needed for a Marginal
    Risk in that area. Elsewhere, there remains a scattered heavy rain
    threat over the northern portions of the Upper Midwest at this=20
    time, and therefore a Marginal Risk remains valid there.=20

    Hamrick


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST STATES=E2=80=A6

    ...Midwest states...

    A well organized mid-upper level shortwave trough will eject=20
    eastward from the Rockies to the central Plains Tuesday afternoon=20
    into the early hours of Wednesday morning, and this will sustain=20
    the development of a surface low that will develop along a frontal=20
    boundary. Upper level dynamics will be favorable as the region will
    be place under the right entrance region of the main upper level=20
    jet, and incoming mid-level positive vorticity advection will=20
    further aid ascent. Precipitable water values in the warm sector of
    this surface low are expected to rise into the 1.75 to 2 inch=20
    range and an increasing southwesterly low level jet that will=20
    advect copious moisture into the system.=20

    Model guidance has trended a little to the south over the past few
    model cycles, with the greatest consensus for the heaviest QPF=20
    across the southern half of Iowa and over the northern third of=20
    Missouri, and extending to northeast Kansas and west- central=20
    Illinois. Most model solutions have a broad corridor of 1-2 inches=20
    with embedded 3-4 inch maxima within this region, with the majority
    of this happening within the 18Z Tuesday to 6Z Wednesday time=20
    period. The heavy rain that fell across portions of the Upper=20
    Midwest is generally north of where this expected rainfall will be,
    so grounds will not be saturated in most cases leading up to this=20
    event. The inherited Slight Risk from the previous Day 4 outlook=20
    will be maintained with a southward expansion to it, and a broader=20
    Marginal Risk extending across South Dakota and eastward to include
    the greater Chicago metro area.=20

    ...Appalachians...

    The stationary front that will be lingering across the Mid-Atlantic
    will start to slowly move back north as a warm front on Tuesday=20
    with anomalous PW values remaining in place. Scattered to numerous=20
    showers and storms, some of which will likely be slow moving, are=20
    forecast to develop during the afternoon and evening hours, mainly=20
    in the 18Z-00Z time period. Parts of the central Appalachians have=20
    been hammered with multiple heavy rainfall events and this has=20
    served to lower flash flood guidance values, and additional heavy=20
    rainfall in the Day 1 and Day 1 periods will only make the ground=20
    more saturated. Therefore, a Marginal Risk is valid from western=20
    North Carolina to western Pennsylvania.

    Hamrick


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9E6h6JlmOAY1k0rFyLi4ZjVaMP0AeAI08kHcQomCd7kR= U4OvpQBiDGsQP8X1CTlwMbaAzLTioFT8wO98SaPWDsSkMqE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9E6h6JlmOAY1k0rFyLi4ZjVaMP0AeAI08kHcQomCd7kR= U4OvpQBiDGsQP8X1CTlwMbaAzLTioFT8wO98SaPWjtB9PMM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9E6h6JlmOAY1k0rFyLi4ZjVaMP0AeAI08kHcQomCd7kR= U4OvpQBiDGsQP8X1CTlwMbaAzLTioFT8wO98SaPWRUVs_yk$=20


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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 15 15:42:14 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 151542
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1142 AM EDT Sun Jun 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA AND NORTHEAST NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...

    16Z Update: The previous MDT risk was maintained with some
    expansion to the northwest to reflect the latest prob fields
    highlighting a greater threat north of Richmond as convection fires
    and slides down the instability gradient aligned with the front.
    Biggest shift was the expansion of the SLGT a bit further north and
    northwest into Southeast OH and more of Western PA as area 1/3/6 hr
    FFG indices are incredibly low given the saturate grounds lingering
    from yesterdays convective impacts. Environment in place is
    conducive for locally enhanced rainfall rates with the stronger
    cores more apt to produce intra-hour rates closer to 3"/hr with an
    average 1-2"/hr intensity in any thunderstorm development. The area
    over Northern and Eastern WV is also under a greater threat for
    flash flooding today due to similar characteristics noted to the
    north. Complexity of the terrain adds more opportunity for locally
    significant flash flood concerns, something that has historical
    precedence in these areas encompassing the Central Appalachian's.
    In all, the setup remains on the higher end of the SLGT spectrum
    for much of VA into WV and Southwest PA with a targeted MDT down
    over Southern VA and the Tidewater due to the more robust PWAT
    and instability signatures within the confines of quasi-stationary
    front creating a greater threat for training convection.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A back door cold front will continue to slow down its forward
    progress and idle across the Mid-Atlantic region through Father's
    Day. Moist southwesterly flow will intersect this boundary and
    result in enhanced moisture convergence and lift. A combination of
    ample instability on the order of 1000-2000 J/kg of mixed layer
    CAPE, PWs nearing 2 inches, and a strong frontal boundary will set
    the stage for additional heavy rain over grounds that are becoming
    much more saturated leading up to this. There are two main areas of
    increased concern, with the first being over eastern West Virginia
    where HREF probabilities of flash flood guidance exceedance are
    elevated due to antecedent conditions and the prospects of 1-2
    inches of additional rain on Sunday. Although this area still
    remains in a Slight Risk, there is the potential that an upgrade to
    Moderate Risk may be needed once the event starts to materialize
    midday Sunday, so this will continue to be closely monitored.

    The other area of concern is across the Tidewater region of
    southeast Virginia into adjacent portions of northeast North
    Carolina. The 00Z CAM guidance strongly supports swaths of enhanced
    QPF from just south of Richmond to the northern Outer Banks, and
    rainfall totals on the order of 2-3 inches, and locally higher, are
    expected. This would be falling on top of grounds that already had
    1-3 inches on Saturday near the U.S. Highway 460 corridor into
    Southside Hampton Roads, so that is an aggravating factor. All of
    this combined with higher HREF flash flood guidance probs resulted
    in areas south of the James River and north of the Albemarle Sound
    to now be in a Moderate Risk for this time period.

    Hamrick


    ...Mid-South to the ArkLaTex...

    16Z Update: MCS currently migrating south across the Red River will
    continue propagating towards Southeast TX before fizzling out on
    approach once south of I-45. Current indications are a combination
    of differential heating causing destabilization over Southeast TX
    will initiate another round of pulse convection with the remnant
    cold pool of the MCS eventually interacting with storms already in
    the area. Some minor convergence signatures are popping up within
    CAMs, but the threat seems to be relatively minor compared to
    previous setups as the stable component behind the complex provides
    a cap on the activity pretty quickly once the interaction occurs.
    HREF probs are generally modest for >3" potential, but fall off a
    cliff to near 0% for >5", so the realistic maximum is somewhere
    between 3-5" with an areal average closer to 1-2" where convection
    does occur. The greater convergence signature is up closer to the
    Northwest Ozarks where satellite combos and even regional radar
    composite depict a broad MCV slowly drifting eastward with the mean
    flow leading to a small band of light/moderate rainfall in the
    northern quadrant of the circulation.=20

    The area to the southeast is the most prone to convective=20
    initiation and relatively impacts due to the proxy and persistent=20
    advection of moisture within the southeast and eastern flank of the
    meso-low. Visible satellite indicates a broad area of clearing=20
    which will likely enhance regional instability prospects given the=20
    "green light" for diurnal destabilization pattern. CAMs are in=20
    agreement on another round of heavy convection over the areas=20
    outlined within the zone of clearing leading to elevated=20
    neighborhood probs for >3" (50-70%) across Central and Northern AR=20
    into Southeast MO. The former area has been hit multiple times over
    the past 24-48 hrs leading to some priming of the soils so the=20
    threat for flash flooding is a bit higher compared to Southeast MO.
    Will need to monitor that region closely overnight to see how the=20
    convective pattern evolves, but the previous SLGT risk inherited=20
    was sufficient to warrant continuity as the setup has maintained=20
    similar posture within the 12z CAMs suite and ensemble. The threat
    over TX is still well within the MRGL threshold and given the cap
    on potential, the risk was not upgraded as the threat remains more
    localized with greatest potential in urbanized zones. Will monitor
    the MCS evolution closely as any changes in the near term could
    allow for a targeted upgrade, namely in the area along I-35.=20

    Kleebauer


    ...Upper Midwest...

    16Z Update: The signal for the SLGT is favorable on the threat as=20
    most CAMs remain aggressive for the evening complex anticipated to
    slide down the eastern flank of the theta_E ridge positioned over
    the Plains. HREF EAS and neighborhood prob fields still highlight
    that area of far Southeast SD, Northwest IA, and Southwest MN this
    evening with the greatest chance for locally 2-4" of rainfall.
    Considering the antecedent soil moisture being elevated after this
    mornings convective impacts, the foundation was laid for a targeted
    opportunity to see some localized flash flood prospects. This
    allowed for little to no change in the previous forecast as the
    threat is still on track.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    The expected convective complex over the Dakotas and moving into
    Iowa will likely be more on the progressive side compared to the
    MCS farther south across Arkansas. However, some of the heavier
    rain that is expected will likely happen over more saturated soils
    and therefore a higher chance of localized impacts. The 00Z CAM
    guidance suite has trended wetter, especially the 3km NAM, and the
    global guidance to include the GFS and the CMC also have a more
    concentrated QPF signal. Therefore, northwestern Iowa and portions
    of adjacent states are now in a Slight Risk area for this time
    period.

    Hamrick


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

    ...A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IS VALID FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MIDWEST, MID-SOUTH, AND THE MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...Mid-Atlantic region...

    Overall, an improvement compared to what is expected over the
    weekend, but there should still be enough moisture in the general
    vicinity of a stalled stationary boundary over southern Virginia
    and North Carolina to produce scattered storms with heavy rainfall.
    There is a greater signal in the 00Z guidance for heavier QPF
    across central and southern North Carolina, but it does not appear
    to overlap much with the Day 1 QPF, so this will tend to mitigate
    the flooding potential. Although the magnitude of rainfall
    expected on Monday is not impressive, the very saturated ground by
    this time across West Virginia and western Virginia will be an
    aggravating factor in terms of flooding potential, and therefore a
    Marginal Risk area is valid from central West Virginia to the Outer
    Banks of North Carolina.

    ...Mid-South...

    The latest model guidance is honing in on a potential MCS that
    could develop across portions of eastern Arkansas into western
    Tennessee on Monday, and perhaps extending into portions of
    southern Missouri and western Kentucky where the potential exists
    for 1 to locally 2 inches of rainfall. A Marginal Risk area is
    valid here since much of this rain would likely happen over a two
    hour time period.

    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...

    Consensus for locally heavy rainfall across portions of the
    Northern tier of the CONUS remains favorable across a broad area
    extending through the Dakotas, Nebraska, and the Upper Midwest on
    Monday. It remains the case that some of the heavier rainfall is
    expected over the Sandhills of Nebraska where flash flood guidance
    is high, and therefore not rising to the level needed for a Marginal
    Risk in that area. Elsewhere, there remains a scattered heavy rain
    threat over the northern portions of the Upper Midwest at this
    time, and therefore a Marginal Risk remains valid there.

    Hamrick


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST STATES=E2=80=A6

    ...Midwest states...

    A well organized mid-upper level shortwave trough will eject
    eastward from the Rockies to the central Plains Tuesday afternoon
    into the early hours of Wednesday morning, and this will sustain
    the development of a surface low that will develop along a frontal
    boundary. Upper level dynamics will be favorable as the region will
    be place under the right entrance region of the main upper level
    jet, and incoming mid-level positive vorticity advection will
    further aid ascent. Precipitable water values in the warm sector of
    this surface low are expected to rise into the 1.75 to 2 inch
    range and an increasing southwesterly low level jet that will
    advect copious moisture into the system.

    Model guidance has trended a little to the south over the past few
    model cycles, with the greatest consensus for the heaviest QPF
    across the southern half of Iowa and over the northern third of
    Missouri, and extending to northeast Kansas and west- central
    Illinois. Most model solutions have a broad corridor of 1-2 inches
    with embedded 3-4 inch maxima within this region, with the majority
    of this happening within the 18Z Tuesday to 6Z Wednesday time
    period. The heavy rain that fell across portions of the Upper
    Midwest is generally north of where this expected rainfall will be,
    so grounds will not be saturated in most cases leading up to this
    event. The inherited Slight Risk from the previous Day 4 outlook
    will be maintained with a southward expansion to it, and a broader
    Marginal Risk extending across South Dakota and eastward to include
    the greater Chicago metro area.

    ...Appalachians...

    The stationary front that will be lingering across the Mid-Atlantic
    will start to slowly move back north as a warm front on Tuesday
    with anomalous PW values remaining in place. Scattered to numerous
    showers and storms, some of which will likely be slow moving, are
    forecast to develop during the afternoon and evening hours, mainly
    in the 18Z-00Z time period. Parts of the central Appalachians have
    been hammered with multiple heavy rainfall events and this has
    served to lower flash flood guidance values, and additional heavy
    rainfall in the Day 1 and Day 1 periods will only make the ground
    more saturated. Therefore, a Marginal Risk is valid from western
    North Carolina to western Pennsylvania.

    Hamrick


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9yYc3d1wxxDxd35iLqHIYcE3SVUbZlFXtAyxZL8MkjKf= TYxbaLOlALozgRsBa045ygrfxBcYggDsKYfcE7G7-KAMxAw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9yYc3d1wxxDxd35iLqHIYcE3SVUbZlFXtAyxZL8MkjKf= TYxbaLOlALozgRsBa045ygrfxBcYggDsKYfcE7G7LxqSqKc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9yYc3d1wxxDxd35iLqHIYcE3SVUbZlFXtAyxZL8MkjKf= TYxbaLOlALozgRsBa045ygrfxBcYggDsKYfcE7G7BNM1PP0$=20


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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 15 19:51:47 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 151951
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    351 PM EDT Sun Jun 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Jun 15 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA AND NORTHEAST NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...

    16Z Update: The previous MDT risk was maintained with some
    expansion to the northwest to reflect the latest prob fields
    highlighting a greater threat north of Richmond as convection fires
    and slides down the instability gradient aligned with the front.
    Biggest shift was the expansion of the SLGT a bit further north and
    northwest into Southeast OH and more of Western PA as area 1/3/6 hr
    FFG indices are incredibly low given the saturate grounds lingering
    from yesterdays convective impacts. Environment in place is
    conducive for locally enhanced rainfall rates with the stronger
    cores more apt to produce intra-hour rates closer to 3"/hr with an
    average 1-2"/hr intensity in any thunderstorm development. The area
    over Northern and Eastern WV is also under a greater threat for
    flash flooding today due to similar characteristics noted to the
    north. Complexity of the terrain adds more opportunity for locally
    significant flash flood concerns, something that has historical
    precedence in these areas encompassing the Central Appalachian's.
    In all, the setup remains on the higher end of the SLGT spectrum
    for much of VA into WV and Southwest PA with a targeted MDT down
    over Southern VA and the Tidewater due to the more robust PWAT
    and instability signatures within the confines of quasi-stationary
    front creating a greater threat for training convection.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A back door cold front will continue to slow down its forward
    progress and idle across the Mid-Atlantic region through Father's
    Day. Moist southwesterly flow will intersect this boundary and
    result in enhanced moisture convergence and lift. A combination of
    ample instability on the order of 1000-2000 J/kg of mixed layer
    CAPE, PWs nearing 2 inches, and a strong frontal boundary will set
    the stage for additional heavy rain over grounds that are becoming
    much more saturated leading up to this. There are two main areas of
    increased concern, with the first being over eastern West Virginia
    where HREF probabilities of flash flood guidance exceedance are
    elevated due to antecedent conditions and the prospects of 1-2
    inches of additional rain on Sunday. Although this area still
    remains in a Slight Risk, there is the potential that an upgrade to
    Moderate Risk may be needed once the event starts to materialize
    midday Sunday, so this will continue to be closely monitored.

    The other area of concern is across the Tidewater region of
    southeast Virginia into adjacent portions of northeast North
    Carolina. The 00Z CAM guidance strongly supports swaths of enhanced
    QPF from just south of Richmond to the northern Outer Banks, and
    rainfall totals on the order of 2-3 inches, and locally higher, are
    expected. This would be falling on top of grounds that already had
    1-3 inches on Saturday near the U.S. Highway 460 corridor into
    Southside Hampton Roads, so that is an aggravating factor. All of
    this combined with higher HREF flash flood guidance probs resulted
    in areas south of the James River and north of the Albemarle Sound
    to now be in a Moderate Risk for this time period.

    Hamrick


    ...Mid-South to the ArkLaTex...

    16Z Update: MCS currently migrating south across the Red River will
    continue propagating towards Southeast TX before fizzling out on
    approach once south of I-45. Current indications are a combination
    of differential heating causing destabilization over Southeast TX
    will initiate another round of pulse convection with the remnant
    cold pool of the MCS eventually interacting with storms already in
    the area. Some minor convergence signatures are popping up within
    CAMs, but the threat seems to be relatively minor compared to
    previous setups as the stable component behind the complex provides
    a cap on the activity pretty quickly once the interaction occurs.
    HREF probs are generally modest for >3" potential, but fall off a
    cliff to near 0% for >5", so the realistic maximum is somewhere
    between 3-5" with an areal average closer to 1-2" where convection
    does occur. The greater convergence signature is up closer to the
    Northwest Ozarks where satellite combos and even regional radar
    composite depict a broad MCV slowly drifting eastward with the mean
    flow leading to a small band of light/moderate rainfall in the
    northern quadrant of the circulation.

    The area to the southeast is the most prone to convective
    initiation and relatively impacts due to the proxy and persistent
    advection of moisture within the southeast and eastern flank of the
    meso-low. Visible satellite indicates a broad area of clearing
    which will likely enhance regional instability prospects given the
    "green light" for diurnal destabilization pattern. CAMs are in
    agreement on another round of heavy convection over the areas
    outlined within the zone of clearing leading to elevated
    neighborhood probs for >3" (50-70%) across Central and Northern AR
    into Southeast MO. The former area has been hit multiple times over
    the past 24-48 hrs leading to some priming of the soils so the
    threat for flash flooding is a bit higher compared to Southeast MO.
    Will need to monitor that region closely overnight to see how the
    convective pattern evolves, but the previous SLGT risk inherited
    was sufficient to warrant continuity as the setup has maintained
    similar posture within the 12z CAMs suite and ensemble. The threat
    over TX is still well within the MRGL threshold and given the cap
    on potential, the risk was not upgraded as the threat remains more
    localized with greatest potential in urbanized zones. Will monitor
    the MCS evolution closely as any changes in the near term could
    allow for a targeted upgrade, namely in the area along I-35.

    Kleebauer


    ...Upper Midwest...

    16Z Update: The signal for the SLGT is favorable on the threat as
    most CAMs remain aggressive for the evening complex anticipated to
    slide down the eastern flank of the theta_E ridge positioned over
    the Plains. HREF EAS and neighborhood prob fields still highlight
    that area of far Southeast SD, Northwest IA, and Southwest MN this
    evening with the greatest chance for locally 2-4" of rainfall.
    Considering the antecedent soil moisture being elevated after this
    mornings convective impacts, the foundation was laid for a targeted
    opportunity to see some localized flash flood prospects. This
    allowed for little to no change in the previous forecast as the
    threat is still on track.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    The expected convective complex over the Dakotas and moving into
    Iowa will likely be more on the progressive side compared to the
    MCS farther south across Arkansas. However, some of the heavier
    rain that is expected will likely happen over more saturated soils
    and therefore a higher chance of localized impacts. The 00Z CAM
    guidance suite has trended wetter, especially the 3km NAM, and the
    global guidance to include the GFS and the CMC also have a more
    concentrated QPF signal. Therefore, northwestern Iowa and portions
    of adjacent states are now in a Slight Risk area for this time
    period.

    Hamrick


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE=20 MID-ATLANTIC, CENTRAL APPALACHIANS, AND OHIO VALLEY...

    ...Mid-Atlantic to Central Appalachians...

    20Z Update: Convective focus along a stalled quasi-stationary=20
    front will lead to another period of locally heavy rainfall with=20
    training potential existing over portions of North Carolina. The=20
    setup is just a continuation of a broad convective regime with a=20
    general alignment of stronger convection within the confines of a=20
    front that will lie from Western PA down through Northern and=20
    Eastern WV, Southwest VA, arcing back towards Eastern NC.=20
    Relatively buoyant environment and elevated PWATs running +1.5 to=20
    +2 deviations will be sufficient in producing local rainfall rates=20
    between 1-2"/hr across much of the above zones with the Eastern NC=20
    area more likely to see closer to 2-3"/hr in heavier cores as=20
    projected within the latest hourly rate probs via the 12z HREF.=20
    HREF blended mean QPF output is a general 0.5-1" in areal average=20
    across Southwest PA down through Northern and Eastern WV, but=20
    scattered deterministic signals of 2-3" are pretty common within=20
    the latest suite. A more robust 1.5-2" areal average is positioned=20
    from the NC Triangle across through Eastern NC with a general=20
    maxima between RAH to Hatteras. The eastern fringes of the heavier=20
    precip will be positioned over sandier soils leading to a naturally
    lower probability for flash flooding compared to inland areas of=20
    NC. Points north are a combination of low FFG's and complex terrain
    that will likely cause some problems with almost any heavier QPF=20
    core that materializes. Given the signatures above, and a forecast=20
    SLGT from the recent First Guess Fields in the interior Mid=20
    Atlantic, a SLGT risk upgrade was generated for the D2 forecast=20
    with a footprint extending from just east of RAH along I-40 and=20
    points northwest up through Southwest VA, Northern and Eastern WV,=20
    and Western PA.=20

    Kleebauer

    ...Ohio Valley...

    20Z Update: A persistent MCV will create an environment favorable=20
    for locally heavy rainfall across portions of the Mid-Mississippi=20
    Valley into the Ohio Valley. Area convergence under the general=20
    circulation from the remnant complex will create a zone of enhanced
    precip potential with most of the CAMs indicating the area from=20
    far Western KY through the Ohio River Basin encompassing=20
    IL/IN/KY/OH with the magnitude of heavier totals between 2-4". 12z
    HREF neighborhood probs for >3" is pretty high (40-70%) along that
    corridor of the Ohio River with the maximum depiction between that
    intersection of IL/IN/KY. This is the general location of the=20
    circulation when you assess the 500mb vorticity panels, so it makes
    sense synoptically that the threat would converge over the=20
    strongest mid-level ascent focus. FFG's are relatively modest=20
    overall, but with 1-2"/hr rate potential in any cell development,
    this would be sufficient to exceed the hourly FFG's currently, but
    the biggest signal comes from the 3hr FFG exceedance probability
    with the latest ensemble output showing 30-50% chances for several
    3hr increments between 12-00z tomorrow. A targeted upgrade to a
    SLGT risk is now in place over the aforementioned region for the
    threat of flash flooding under the guide of a remnant MCV/low-
    amplitude shortwave moving from the Mid-Mississippi Valley into=20
    the Western Ohio Valley.=20

    Kleebauer

    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...

    20Z Update: Little to no adjustment was necessary for the broad
    MRGL risk as the previous forecast remains steadfast in its
    presentation for locally heavy rainfall across the Upper Midwest
    into parts of the Northern Plains. The heaviest rain is still
    forecast to occur in the heart of the Sandhills of NE, an area that
    will likely be void of many flash flood concerns due to the soil
    composition and very high FFG's in place.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    Consensus for locally heavy rainfall across portions of the
    Northern tier of the CONUS remains favorable across a broad area
    extending through the Dakotas, Nebraska, and the Upper Midwest on
    Monday. It remains the case that some of the heavier rainfall is
    expected over the Sandhills of Nebraska where flash flood guidance
    is high, and therefore not rising to the level needed for a Marginal
    Risk in that area. Elsewhere, there remains a scattered heavy rain
    threat over the northern portions of the Upper Midwest at this
    time, and therefore a Marginal Risk remains valid there.

    Hamrick


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST, EASTERN OHIO VALLEY, AND CENTRAL APPALACHIANS=E2=80=A6

    ...Midwest...

    20Z Update: The previous forecast SLGT was general maintained with
    some expansion of the risk area to the southwest given the latest
    trends slowly shifting the threat more into Northwestern MO and
    far Northeast KS. The latest ML output is also leaning towards the
    southern end of the envelope when it comes to the heaviest QPF
    distribution, so it's plausible the shifts will continue to trend
    more into the I-70 corridor across KS/MO if this holds. For now,
    wherever the threat materializes, there will be heavy rain with=20
    totals likely between 3-5" in the hardest hit areas. Some training=20
    potential is plausible considering the upwind trajectory behind the
    vacating surface low as it cuts to the northeast. Will be=20
    monitoring closely for both the positioning of the risk, and a=20
    potential for a targeted upgrade if the magnitude of the precip=20
    forecast increases, or focuses over some of the larger urban=20
    corridors where flash flood potential is most likely. A higher end=20
    SLGT is certainly forecast at this juncture.=20

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A well organized mid-upper level shortwave trough will eject
    eastward from the Rockies to the central Plains Tuesday afternoon
    into the early hours of Wednesday morning, and this will sustain
    the development of a surface low that will develop along a frontal
    boundary. Upper level dynamics will be favorable as the region will
    be place under the right entrance region of the main upper level
    jet, and incoming mid-level positive vorticity advection will
    further aid ascent. Precipitable water values in the warm sector of
    this surface low are expected to rise into the 1.75 to 2 inch
    range and an increasing southwesterly low level jet that will
    advect copious moisture into the system.

    Model guidance has trended a little to the south over the past few
    model cycles, with the greatest consensus for the heaviest QPF
    across the southern half of Iowa and over the northern third of
    Missouri, and extending to northeast Kansas and west- central
    Illinois. Most model solutions have a broad corridor of 1-2 inches
    with embedded 3-4 inch maxima within this region, with the majority
    of this happening within the 18Z Tuesday to 6Z Wednesday time
    period. The heavy rain that fell across portions of the Upper
    Midwest is generally north of where this expected rainfall will be,
    so grounds will not be saturated in most cases leading up to this
    event. The inherited Slight Risk from the previous Day 4 outlook
    will be maintained with a southward expansion to it, and a broader
    Marginal Risk extending across South Dakota and eastward to include
    the greater Chicago metro area.

    Hamrick


    ...Ohio Valley and Central Appalachians...

    20Z Update: The threat for a broader impact flash flood threat is
    increasing as we move into Tuesday afternoon and evening before we
    finally end the incessant heavy rain pattern generated by scattered
    to widespread convection across parts of the Eastern Ohio Valley
    into Western PA and the adjacent Appalachians. The upper pattern
    will be a significant driver in the area precip coverage as we move
    into Tuesday with large scale forcing on the rise as we see an
    approach of a potent shortwave trough out of the Ohio Valley. Area
    moisture field will be running ~2 deviations above normal with
    forecast PWATs between 1.7-2" likely across much of Ohio, Eastern
    KY, WV, and the western half of PA. The combination of a stagnant
    elevated moisture regime and plentiful forcing will generate a
    period of scattered to widespread thunderstorm activity migrating
    across the above areas creating a heightened threat of flash
    flooding when you take into consideration the compromised soils
    from all the rainfall leading into the setup. The area of Northern
    WV, Western PA, and Eastern Ohio is by far the most sensitive in
    this pattern and the threat for heavy precip is as genuine as you=20
    can get, in a synoptic sense. Ensemble depictions of 1-1.5" areal
    average at a D3 lead is a testament to the threat and has a lot of
    support from the QPF distribution within the latest ML consensus.
    For now, a SLGT risk was introduced to encompass that corridor
    referenced above in the Ohio Valley up through Western PA. If this
    trend becomes more favorable in the QPF maxima exceeding 3" across
    some of those more compromised areas, a further targeted upgrade is
    plausible. This is a setup to monitor closely over the coming days.=20

    Kleebauer=20


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8JrXWQNoiM9VJVLsI8XQBwN9aJksK3iRV6fP5KI3TmJG= pVxNpYBs_OYU7gBzQ3fZpHzN_sELy1Rq0vQ67cPvnfxVwGE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8JrXWQNoiM9VJVLsI8XQBwN9aJksK3iRV6fP5KI3TmJG= pVxNpYBs_OYU7gBzQ3fZpHzN_sELy1Rq0vQ67cPvXCSkmto$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8JrXWQNoiM9VJVLsI8XQBwN9aJksK3iRV6fP5KI3TmJG= pVxNpYBs_OYU7gBzQ3fZpHzN_sELy1Rq0vQ67cPvyTxt5Qg$=20


    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105)
  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 15 22:10:56 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 152210
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    610 PM EDT Sun Jun 15 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 224Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025

    ...A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA AND NORTHEAST NORTH CAROLINA...

    22z Update: Main change was to add a Marginal risk to portions of
    southeast NM and southwest TX. High res guidance is under doing=20
    the extent and magnitude of convection over this area. Wind=20
    profiles support slow cell motions, which combined with the high=20
    instability and moisture in place, supports a continued isolated=20
    flash flood risk. See MPD #449 for more details.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...=20

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...

    16Z Update: The previous MDT risk was maintained with some
    expansion to the northwest to reflect the latest prob fields
    highlighting a greater threat north of Richmond as convection fires
    and slides down the instability gradient aligned with the front.
    Biggest shift was the expansion of the SLGT a bit further north and
    northwest into Southeast OH and more of Western PA as area 1/3/6 hr
    FFG indices are incredibly low given the saturate grounds lingering
    from yesterdays convective impacts. Environment in place is
    conducive for locally enhanced rainfall rates with the stronger
    cores more apt to produce intra-hour rates closer to 3"/hr with an
    average 1-2"/hr intensity in any thunderstorm development. The area
    over Northern and Eastern WV is also under a greater threat for
    flash flooding today due to similar characteristics noted to the
    north. Complexity of the terrain adds more opportunity for locally
    significant flash flood concerns, something that has historical
    precedence in these areas encompassing the Central Appalachian's.
    In all, the setup remains on the higher end of the SLGT spectrum
    for much of VA into WV and Southwest PA with a targeted MDT down
    over Southern VA and the Tidewater due to the more robust PWAT
    and instability signatures within the confines of quasi-stationary
    front creating a greater threat for training convection.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A back door cold front will continue to slow down its forward
    progress and idle across the Mid-Atlantic region through Father's
    Day. Moist southwesterly flow will intersect this boundary and
    result in enhanced moisture convergence and lift. A combination of
    ample instability on the order of 1000-2000 J/kg of mixed layer
    CAPE, PWs nearing 2 inches, and a strong frontal boundary will set
    the stage for additional heavy rain over grounds that are becoming
    much more saturated leading up to this. There are two main areas of
    increased concern, with the first being over eastern West Virginia
    where HREF probabilities of flash flood guidance exceedance are
    elevated due to antecedent conditions and the prospects of 1-2
    inches of additional rain on Sunday. Although this area still
    remains in a Slight Risk, there is the potential that an upgrade to
    Moderate Risk may be needed once the event starts to materialize
    midday Sunday, so this will continue to be closely monitored.

    The other area of concern is across the Tidewater region of
    southeast Virginia into adjacent portions of northeast North
    Carolina. The 00Z CAM guidance strongly supports swaths of enhanced
    QPF from just south of Richmond to the northern Outer Banks, and
    rainfall totals on the order of 2-3 inches, and locally higher, are
    expected. This would be falling on top of grounds that already had
    1-3 inches on Saturday near the U.S. Highway 460 corridor into
    Southside Hampton Roads, so that is an aggravating factor. All of
    this combined with higher HREF flash flood guidance probs resulted
    in areas south of the James River and north of the Albemarle Sound
    to now be in a Moderate Risk for this time period.

    Hamrick


    ...Mid-South to the ArkLaTex...

    16Z Update: MCS currently migrating south across the Red River will
    continue propagating towards Southeast TX before fizzling out on
    approach once south of I-45. Current indications are a combination
    of differential heating causing destabilization over Southeast TX
    will initiate another round of pulse convection with the remnant
    cold pool of the MCS eventually interacting with storms already in
    the area. Some minor convergence signatures are popping up within
    CAMs, but the threat seems to be relatively minor compared to
    previous setups as the stable component behind the complex provides
    a cap on the activity pretty quickly once the interaction occurs.
    HREF probs are generally modest for >3" potential, but fall off a
    cliff to near 0% for >5", so the realistic maximum is somewhere
    between 3-5" with an areal average closer to 1-2" where convection
    does occur. The greater convergence signature is up closer to the
    Northwest Ozarks where satellite combos and even regional radar
    composite depict a broad MCV slowly drifting eastward with the mean
    flow leading to a small band of light/moderate rainfall in the
    northern quadrant of the circulation.

    The area to the southeast is the most prone to convective
    initiation and relatively impacts due to the proxy and persistent
    advection of moisture within the southeast and eastern flank of the
    meso-low. Visible satellite indicates a broad area of clearing
    which will likely enhance regional instability prospects given the
    "green light" for diurnal destabilization pattern. CAMs are in
    agreement on another round of heavy convection over the areas
    outlined within the zone of clearing leading to elevated
    neighborhood probs for >3" (50-70%) across Central and Northern AR
    into Southeast MO. The former area has been hit multiple times over
    the past 24-48 hrs leading to some priming of the soils so the
    threat for flash flooding is a bit higher compared to Southeast MO.
    Will need to monitor that region closely overnight to see how the
    convective pattern evolves, but the previous SLGT risk inherited
    was sufficient to warrant continuity as the setup has maintained
    similar posture within the 12z CAMs suite and ensemble. The threat
    over TX is still well within the MRGL threshold and given the cap
    on potential, the risk was not upgraded as the threat remains more
    localized with greatest potential in urbanized zones. Will monitor
    the MCS evolution closely as any changes in the near term could
    allow for a targeted upgrade, namely in the area along I-35.

    Kleebauer


    ...Upper Midwest...

    16Z Update: The signal for the SLGT is favorable on the threat as
    most CAMs remain aggressive for the evening complex anticipated to
    slide down the eastern flank of the theta_E ridge positioned over
    the Plains. HREF EAS and neighborhood prob fields still highlight
    that area of far Southeast SD, Northwest IA, and Southwest MN this
    evening with the greatest chance for locally 2-4" of rainfall.
    Considering the antecedent soil moisture being elevated after this
    mornings convective impacts, the foundation was laid for a targeted
    opportunity to see some localized flash flood prospects. This
    allowed for little to no change in the previous forecast as the
    threat is still on track.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    The expected convective complex over the Dakotas and moving into
    Iowa will likely be more on the progressive side compared to the
    MCS farther south across Arkansas. However, some of the heavier
    rain that is expected will likely happen over more saturated soils
    and therefore a higher chance of localized impacts. The 00Z CAM
    guidance suite has trended wetter, especially the 3km NAM, and the
    global guidance to include the GFS and the CMC also have a more
    concentrated QPF signal. Therefore, northwestern Iowa and portions
    of adjacent states are now in a Slight Risk area for this time
    period.

    Hamrick


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    MID-ATLANTIC, CENTRAL APPALACHIANS, AND OHIO VALLEY...

    ...Mid-Atlantic to Central Appalachians...

    20Z Update: Convective focus along a stalled quasi-stationary
    front will lead to another period of locally heavy rainfall with
    training potential existing over portions of North Carolina. The
    setup is just a continuation of a broad convective regime with a
    general alignment of stronger convection within the confines of a
    front that will lie from Western PA down through Northern and
    Eastern WV, Southwest VA, arcing back towards Eastern NC.
    Relatively buoyant environment and elevated PWATs running +1.5 to
    +2 deviations will be sufficient in producing local rainfall rates
    between 1-2"/hr across much of the above zones with the Eastern NC
    area more likely to see closer to 2-3"/hr in heavier cores as
    projected within the latest hourly rate probs via the 12z HREF.
    HREF blended mean QPF output is a general 0.5-1" in areal average
    across Southwest PA down through Northern and Eastern WV, but
    scattered deterministic signals of 2-3" are pretty common within
    the latest suite. A more robust 1.5-2" areal average is positioned
    from the NC Triangle across through Eastern NC with a general
    maxima between RAH to Hatteras. The eastern fringes of the heavier
    precip will be positioned over sandier soils leading to a naturally
    lower probability for flash flooding compared to inland areas of
    NC. Points north are a combination of low FFG's and complex terrain
    that will likely cause some problems with almost any heavier QPF
    core that materializes. Given the signatures above, and a forecast
    SLGT from the recent First Guess Fields in the interior Mid
    Atlantic, a SLGT risk upgrade was generated for the D2 forecast
    with a footprint extending from just east of RAH along I-40 and
    points northwest up through Southwest VA, Northern and Eastern WV,
    and Western PA.

    Kleebauer

    ...Ohio Valley...

    20Z Update: A persistent MCV will create an environment favorable
    for locally heavy rainfall across portions of the Mid-Mississippi
    Valley into the Ohio Valley. Area convergence under the general
    circulation from the remnant complex will create a zone of enhanced
    precip potential with most of the CAMs indicating the area from
    far Western KY through the Ohio River Basin encompassing
    IL/IN/KY/OH with the magnitude of heavier totals between 2-4". 12z
    HREF neighborhood probs for >3" is pretty high (40-70%) along that
    corridor of the Ohio River with the maximum depiction between that
    intersection of IL/IN/KY. This is the general location of the
    circulation when you assess the 500mb vorticity panels, so it makes
    sense synoptically that the threat would converge over the
    strongest mid-level ascent focus. FFG's are relatively modest
    overall, but with 1-2"/hr rate potential in any cell development,
    this would be sufficient to exceed the hourly FFG's currently, but
    the biggest signal comes from the 3hr FFG exceedance probability
    with the latest ensemble output showing 30-50% chances for several
    3hr increments between 12-00z tomorrow. A targeted upgrade to a
    SLGT risk is now in place over the aforementioned region for the
    threat of flash flooding under the guide of a remnant MCV/low-
    amplitude shortwave moving from the Mid-Mississippi Valley into
    the Western Ohio Valley.

    Kleebauer

    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...

    20Z Update: Little to no adjustment was necessary for the broad
    MRGL risk as the previous forecast remains steadfast in its
    presentation for locally heavy rainfall across the Upper Midwest
    into parts of the Northern Plains. The heaviest rain is still
    forecast to occur in the heart of the Sandhills of NE, an area that
    will likely be void of many flash flood concerns due to the soil
    composition and very high FFG's in place.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    Consensus for locally heavy rainfall across portions of the
    Northern tier of the CONUS remains favorable across a broad area
    extending through the Dakotas, Nebraska, and the Upper Midwest on
    Monday. It remains the case that some of the heavier rainfall is
    expected over the Sandhills of Nebraska where flash flood guidance
    is high, and therefore not rising to the level needed for a Marginal
    Risk in that area. Elsewhere, there remains a scattered heavy rain
    threat over the northern portions of the Upper Midwest at this
    time, and therefore a Marginal Risk remains valid there.

    Hamrick


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST, EASTERN OHIO VALLEY, AND CENTRAL APPALACHIANS=E2=80=A6

    ...Midwest...

    20Z Update: The previous forecast SLGT was general maintained with
    some expansion of the risk area to the southwest given the latest
    trends slowly shifting the threat more into Northwestern MO and
    far Northeast KS. The latest ML output is also leaning towards the
    southern end of the envelope when it comes to the heaviest QPF
    distribution, so it's plausible the shifts will continue to trend
    more into the I-70 corridor across KS/MO if this holds. For now,
    wherever the threat materializes, there will be heavy rain with
    totals likely between 3-5" in the hardest hit areas. Some training
    potential is plausible considering the upwind trajectory behind the
    vacating surface low as it cuts to the northeast. Will be
    monitoring closely for both the positioning of the risk, and a
    potential for a targeted upgrade if the magnitude of the precip
    forecast increases, or focuses over some of the larger urban
    corridors where flash flood potential is most likely. A higher end
    SLGT is certainly forecast at this juncture.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A well organized mid-upper level shortwave trough will eject
    eastward from the Rockies to the central Plains Tuesday afternoon
    into the early hours of Wednesday morning, and this will sustain
    the development of a surface low that will develop along a frontal
    boundary. Upper level dynamics will be favorable as the region will
    be place under the right entrance region of the main upper level
    jet, and incoming mid-level positive vorticity advection will
    further aid ascent. Precipitable water values in the warm sector of
    this surface low are expected to rise into the 1.75 to 2 inch
    range and an increasing southwesterly low level jet that will
    advect copious moisture into the system.

    Model guidance has trended a little to the south over the past few
    model cycles, with the greatest consensus for the heaviest QPF
    across the southern half of Iowa and over the northern third of
    Missouri, and extending to northeast Kansas and west- central
    Illinois. Most model solutions have a broad corridor of 1-2 inches
    with embedded 3-4 inch maxima within this region, with the majority
    of this happening within the 18Z Tuesday to 6Z Wednesday time
    period. The heavy rain that fell across portions of the Upper
    Midwest is generally north of where this expected rainfall will be,
    so grounds will not be saturated in most cases leading up to this
    event. The inherited Slight Risk from the previous Day 4 outlook
    will be maintained with a southward expansion to it, and a broader
    Marginal Risk extending across South Dakota and eastward to include
    the greater Chicago metro area.

    Hamrick


    ...Ohio Valley and Central Appalachians...

    20Z Update: The threat for a broader impact flash flood threat is
    increasing as we move into Tuesday afternoon and evening before we
    finally end the incessant heavy rain pattern generated by scattered
    to widespread convection across parts of the Eastern Ohio Valley
    into Western PA and the adjacent Appalachians. The upper pattern
    will be a significant driver in the area precip coverage as we move
    into Tuesday with large scale forcing on the rise as we see an
    approach of a potent shortwave trough out of the Ohio Valley. Area
    moisture field will be running ~2 deviations above normal with
    forecast PWATs between 1.7-2" likely across much of Ohio, Eastern
    KY, WV, and the western half of PA. The combination of a stagnant
    elevated moisture regime and plentiful forcing will generate a
    period of scattered to widespread thunderstorm activity migrating
    across the above areas creating a heightened threat of flash
    flooding when you take into consideration the compromised soils
    from all the rainfall leading into the setup. The area of Northern
    WV, Western PA, and Eastern Ohio is by far the most sensitive in
    this pattern and the threat for heavy precip is as genuine as you
    can get, in a synoptic sense. Ensemble depictions of 1-1.5" areal
    average at a D3 lead is a testament to the threat and has a lot of
    support from the QPF distribution within the latest ML consensus.
    For now, a SLGT risk was introduced to encompass that corridor
    referenced above in the Ohio Valley up through Western PA. If this
    trend becomes more favorable in the QPF maxima exceeding 3" across
    some of those more compromised areas, a further targeted upgrade is
    plausible. This is a setup to monitor closely over the coming days.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-SRgWyYCJTpHGepzKAF_MhvmcTPS-CBtFXbSgifEugqo= QcAlEuqQUm3d8ZHaqNQQkkOw7iEdXF2lEcElZwSzov6inno$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-SRgWyYCJTpHGepzKAF_MhvmcTPS-CBtFXbSgifEugqo= QcAlEuqQUm3d8ZHaqNQQkkOw7iEdXF2lEcElZwSz_im52NU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-SRgWyYCJTpHGepzKAF_MhvmcTPS-CBtFXbSgifEugqo= QcAlEuqQUm3d8ZHaqNQQkkOw7iEdXF2lEcElZwSz3RzYlNg$=20


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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 16 00:55:13 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 160055
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    855 PM EDT Sun Jun 15 2025

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

    ...A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA AND NORTHEAST NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...Mid-Atlantic and Central Appalachians...
    The main flash flood risk this evening will be across portions of
    southeast VA into eastern NC. Recent HRRR runs indicate the=20
    highest rainfall magnitudes will be over eastern NC...and=20
    observational trends support that idea as well. Some additional
    rainfall totals over 3" appear likely, resulting in an isolated to
    scattered flash flood threat. A MDT risk was maintained across=20
    portions of southeast VA into northeast NC where a locally=20
    significant flash flood risk continues this evening. The highest=20
    additional rainfall magnitudes may very well end up near or just=20
    south of the MDT risk area over eastern NC...however higher FFG=20
    over this area precludes the need for an expansion of the MDT=20 risk...although do consider these areas to be within a higher end=20
    Slight risk.

    Elsewhere within the broad Slight risk covering much of WV and VA
    the flash flood risk is waning...however a localized threat likely
    continues given the saturated conditions and periodic areas of low
    topped convection developing near the slow moving low and mid=20
    level shortwave energy.

    ...Arkansas into Missouri...
    An uptick in the flash flood threat is likely this evening across
    central AR into southeast MO. Plenty of instability remains, and=20
    an uptick in the low level moisture transport this evening is=20
    resulting in more robust convective development. Not enough shear=20
    to really organize activity, and also not much of an upstream=20
    instability pool to work with. Thus would expect convection to=20
    erode instability fairly quickly as it tries to grow upscale. This
    would suggest an initial uptick in the flash flood risk this=20
    evening...with a gradual waning of activity as the night=20
    progresses. This should keep the threat at Slight risk=20
    levels...although with PWs over 2" rainfall rates will be high,=20
    and thus locally significant flash flood impacts can not be ruled=20
    out.

    ...Northern Plains...
    Slow moving convection near a remnant MCV will keep a localized
    flash flood risk ongoing over IA this evening. The more organized
    convection is expected over MT where the ongoing supercells are
    expected to grow upscale into an MCS and track eastward across MT
    and eventually into the Dakotas. The quick forward motion should
    limit the coverage and magnitude of the flash flood risk, although
    do note moderate to high probabilities of exceeding 1" in an hour=20
    as this activity tracks eastward (~60% in the HREF and 90% in the=20
    REFS). Even seeing a 20-40% chance in these high res ensembles of=20
    exceeding 2" in an hour rainfall. Thus despite the quick forward=20
    motion some FFG exceedance is likely tonight as the activity moves
    eastward. How this FFG exceedance translates to impacts is a bit=20
    less certain...and generally think flash flooding will remain=20
    isolated in nature. Thus we will just stick with a Marginal=20
    risk...but some localized significant impacts can not be ruled out=20
    if/where rainfall is able to exceed 2" in an hour.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

    ...A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXISTS FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    MID-ATLANTIC, CENTRAL APPALACHIANS, AND OHIO VALLEY...

    ...Mid-Atlantic to Central Appalachians...

    20Z Update: Convective focus along a stalled quasi-stationary
    front will lead to another period of locally heavy rainfall with
    training potential existing over portions of North Carolina. The
    setup is just a continuation of a broad convective regime with a
    general alignment of stronger convection within the confines of a
    front that will lie from Western PA down through Northern and
    Eastern WV, Southwest VA, arcing back towards Eastern NC.
    Relatively buoyant environment and elevated PWATs running +1.5 to
    +2 deviations will be sufficient in producing local rainfall rates
    between 1-2"/hr across much of the above zones with the Eastern NC
    area more likely to see closer to 2-3"/hr in heavier cores as
    projected within the latest hourly rate probs via the 12z HREF.
    HREF blended mean QPF output is a general 0.5-1" in areal average
    across Southwest PA down through Northern and Eastern WV, but
    scattered deterministic signals of 2-3" are pretty common within
    the latest suite. A more robust 1.5-2" areal average is positioned
    from the NC Triangle across through Eastern NC with a general
    maxima between RAH to Hatteras. The eastern fringes of the heavier
    precip will be positioned over sandier soils leading to a naturally
    lower probability for flash flooding compared to inland areas of
    NC. Points north are a combination of low FFG's and complex terrain
    that will likely cause some problems with almost any heavier QPF
    core that materializes. Given the signatures above, and a forecast
    SLGT from the recent First Guess Fields in the interior Mid
    Atlantic, a SLGT risk upgrade was generated for the D2 forecast
    with a footprint extending from just east of RAH along I-40 and
    points northwest up through Southwest VA, Northern and Eastern WV,
    and Western PA.

    Kleebauer

    ...Ohio Valley...

    20Z Update: A persistent MCV will create an environment favorable
    for locally heavy rainfall across portions of the Mid-Mississippi
    Valley into the Ohio Valley. Area convergence under the general
    circulation from the remnant complex will create a zone of enhanced
    precip potential with most of the CAMs indicating the area from
    far Western KY through the Ohio River Basin encompassing
    IL/IN/KY/OH with the magnitude of heavier totals between 2-4". 12z
    HREF neighborhood probs for >3" is pretty high (40-70%) along that
    corridor of the Ohio River with the maximum depiction between that
    intersection of IL/IN/KY. This is the general location of the
    circulation when you assess the 500mb vorticity panels, so it makes
    sense synoptically that the threat would converge over the
    strongest mid-level ascent focus. FFG's are relatively modest
    overall, but with 1-2"/hr rate potential in any cell development,
    this would be sufficient to exceed the hourly FFG's currently, but
    the biggest signal comes from the 3hr FFG exceedance probability
    with the latest ensemble output showing 30-50% chances for several
    3hr increments between 12-00z tomorrow. A targeted upgrade to a
    SLGT risk is now in place over the aforementioned region for the
    threat of flash flooding under the guide of a remnant MCV/low-
    amplitude shortwave moving from the Mid-Mississippi Valley into
    the Western Ohio Valley.

    Kleebauer

    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...

    20Z Update: Little to no adjustment was necessary for the broad
    MRGL risk as the previous forecast remains steadfast in its
    presentation for locally heavy rainfall across the Upper Midwest
    into parts of the Northern Plains. The heaviest rain is still
    forecast to occur in the heart of the Sandhills of NE, an area that
    will likely be void of many flash flood concerns due to the soil
    composition and very high FFG's in place.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    Consensus for locally heavy rainfall across portions of the
    Northern tier of the CONUS remains favorable across a broad area
    extending through the Dakotas, Nebraska, and the Upper Midwest on
    Monday. It remains the case that some of the heavier rainfall is
    expected over the Sandhills of Nebraska where flash flood guidance
    is high, and therefore not rising to the level needed for a Marginal
    Risk in that area. Elsewhere, there remains a scattered heavy rain
    threat over the northern portions of the Upper Midwest at this
    time, and therefore a Marginal Risk remains valid there.

    Hamrick


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST, EASTERN OHIO VALLEY, AND CENTRAL APPALACHIANS=E2=80=A6

    ...Midwest...

    20Z Update: The previous forecast SLGT was general maintained with
    some expansion of the risk area to the southwest given the latest
    trends slowly shifting the threat more into Northwestern MO and
    far Northeast KS. The latest ML output is also leaning towards the
    southern end of the envelope when it comes to the heaviest QPF
    distribution, so it's plausible the shifts will continue to trend
    more into the I-70 corridor across KS/MO if this holds. For now,
    wherever the threat materializes, there will be heavy rain with
    totals likely between 3-5" in the hardest hit areas. Some training
    potential is plausible considering the upwind trajectory behind the
    vacating surface low as it cuts to the northeast. Will be
    monitoring closely for both the positioning of the risk, and a
    potential for a targeted upgrade if the magnitude of the precip
    forecast increases, or focuses over some of the larger urban
    corridors where flash flood potential is most likely. A higher end
    SLGT is certainly forecast at this juncture.

    Kleebauer

    ..Previous Discussion..

    A well organized mid-upper level shortwave trough will eject
    eastward from the Rockies to the central Plains Tuesday afternoon
    into the early hours of Wednesday morning, and this will sustain
    the development of a surface low that will develop along a frontal
    boundary. Upper level dynamics will be favorable as the region will
    be place under the right entrance region of the main upper level
    jet, and incoming mid-level positive vorticity advection will
    further aid ascent. Precipitable water values in the warm sector of
    this surface low are expected to rise into the 1.75 to 2 inch
    range and an increasing southwesterly low level jet that will
    advect copious moisture into the system.

    Model guidance has trended a little to the south over the past few
    model cycles, with the greatest consensus for the heaviest QPF
    across the southern half of Iowa and over the northern third of
    Missouri, and extending to northeast Kansas and west- central
    Illinois. Most model solutions have a broad corridor of 1-2 inches
    with embedded 3-4 inch maxima within this region, with the majority
    of this happening within the 18Z Tuesday to 6Z Wednesday time
    period. The heavy rain that fell across portions of the Upper
    Midwest is generally north of where this expected rainfall will be,
    so grounds will not be saturated in most cases leading up to this
    event. The inherited Slight Risk from the previous Day 4 outlook
    will be maintained with a southward expansion to it, and a broader
    Marginal Risk extending across South Dakota and eastward to include
    the greater Chicago metro area.

    Hamrick


    ...Ohio Valley and Central Appalachians...

    20Z Update: The threat for a broader impact flash flood threat is
    increasing as we move into Tuesday afternoon and evening before we
    finally end the incessant heavy rain pattern generated by scattered
    to widespread convection across parts of the Eastern Ohio Valley
    into Western PA and the adjacent Appalachians. The upper pattern
    will be a significant driver in the area precip coverage as we move
    into Tuesday with large scale forcing on the rise as we see an
    approach of a potent shortwave trough out of the Ohio Valley. Area
    moisture field will be running ~2 deviations above normal with
    forecast PWATs between 1.7-2" likely across much of Ohio, Eastern
    KY, WV, and the western half of PA. The combination of a stagnant
    elevated moisture regime and plentiful forcing will generate a
    period of scattered to widespread thunderstorm activity migrating
    across the above areas creating a heightened threat of flash
    flooding when you take into consideration the compromised soils
    from all the rainfall leading into the setup. The area of Northern
    WV, Western PA, and Eastern Ohio is by far the most sensitive in
    this pattern and the threat for heavy precip is as genuine as you
    can get, in a synoptic sense. Ensemble depictions of 1-1.5" areal
    average at a D3 lead is a testament to the threat and has a lot of
    support from the QPF distribution within the latest ML consensus.
    For now, a SLGT risk was introduced to encompass that corridor
    referenced above in the Ohio Valley up through Western PA. If this
    trend becomes more favorable in the QPF maxima exceeding 3" across
    some of those more compromised areas, a further targeted upgrade is
    plausible. This is a setup to monitor closely over the coming days.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_1stvhKk6sbOGz5KVZgAZ8pL530juGaaFoAC8kmry9SZ= 598wbN4Gmv4fMP-Pj9xOLEAm1VOgYzJBQewAFMPTShFdhJE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_1stvhKk6sbOGz5KVZgAZ8pL530juGaaFoAC8kmry9SZ= 598wbN4Gmv4fMP-Pj9xOLEAm1VOgYzJBQewAFMPTca6UPGU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_1stvhKk6sbOGz5KVZgAZ8pL530juGaaFoAC8kmry9SZ= 598wbN4Gmv4fMP-Pj9xOLEAm1VOgYzJBQewAFMPTl8Ijk_4$=20


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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 16 07:59:35 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 160759
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    359 AM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

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

    ...Ohio Valley through the Mid-Atlantic...
    Broad warm sector south of a wavering front draped from the=20
    Central Plains through the Ohio Valley and into the Carolinas will=20
    fuel widespread thunderstorm activity today. As this front wavers=20
    across the region through today and tonight, shortwave impulses=20
    embedded within broad SW flow around a Bermuda-type ridge will lift
    across the area. These impulses, especially where they move atop=20
    the residual baroclinic zone accompanying the front, will serve as=20
    a focus for convective development leading to rounds of=20
    thunderstorms. Although, in general, shear will be modest=20
    suggesting primarily disorganized pulse-type thunderstorms which=20
    are also suggested by simulated reflectivity within CAMs, there may
    be two areas of focused thunderstorm development leading to a=20
    higher potential of excessive rainfall.

    The first will be in a stripe from the Bootheel of Missouri east=20
    into southern Ohio. Here, the front will linger through today while=20
    a potent vorticity maxima rotates overhead. The interaction of these=20
    two may cause low-pressure development to locally enhance ascent.=20 Thermodynamics across this region will be impressive, characterized=20
    by MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg coincident with a plume of PWs exceeding=20
    2 inches, more than 2 sigma above the climatological mean.=20
    Additionally, some modestly enhanced shear approaching 35 kts will=20
    lift northward to help organize thunderstorms, enhancing both the=20
    intensity and longevity of heavy rainfall. With rates progged by=20
    both the HREF and REFS likely exceeding 1"/hr (50-70% chance), and=20
    an increasing likelihood of at least short-term training as Corfidi=20
    vectors weaken to just 5 kts, this has the potential to produce=20
    locally 3-5 inches of rain which has a 30-50% chance of exceeding=20
    the 3-hr FFG.

    The other locally enhanced threat for excessive rainfall will again=20
    be along this wavering front, but farther east from SW Pennsylvania=20
    through North Carolina. Here, a stalled backdoor front will=20
    provide the impetus for thunderstorm development, especially during
    the aftn/eve when thermodynamics are most impressive. The high-res
    CAMs suggest the best threat for any organization will be across=20
    VA/NC this evening, likely in response to a convectively enhanced=20
    shortwave moving eastward and interacting with the front,=20
    potentially leading to an MCS or multiple clusters of thunderstorms
    moving across this area. With rainfall rates likely exceeding=20
    2"/hr and just 5 kt Corfidi vectors aligned anti-parallel to the=20
    mean westerly flow, training of cells is expected which results in
    HREF and REFS probabilities for 3" of rain exceeding 70%. This=20
    could produce excessive rainfall despite relatively higher FFG,=20
    especially in NC where MRMS 24-hr rainfall has been locally as much
    as 6 inches, creating more vulnerable soils. There was some=20
    coordination tonight with WFO MHX/RAH to discuss a possible=20
    upgrade to a MDT risk, but modest HREF/REFS ensembles and=20
    uncertainty in placement of the afternoon convection (which could=20
    be displaced south of ongoing activity due to convective adjustment
    of the front itself) prompted a delay in any upgrade at this time.
    However, an adjustment to the SLGT was made to focus the highest=20
    risk over the HREF 3" EAS probabilities and low-percentage 100-yr=20
    RI exceedances.

    Farther upstream across VA and back as far as PA, recent heavy=20
    rain has lowered FFG to just 1-2"/3hrs, so even less organized=20
    thunderstorms over these more sensitive soils will promote a flash=20
    flood risk.=20

    Displaced to the south from these more focused excessive rainfall=20
    risk regions, rounds of thunderstorms developing within robust=20 thermodynamics, especially during peak aftn/eve heating, will pose=20
    at least an isolated flash flood risk. This will be due to rainfall=20
    rates which have a 30-50% chance of exceeding 2"/hr, and could be=20
    slow moving to produce locally more than 3 inches of rain. Both REFS=20
    and HREF probabilities of exceedance are scattered across the=20
    region, suggesting the inherited MRGL risk is sufficient, and this=20
    was just cosmetically adjusted for new guidance.


    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...=20
    A messy mid-level pattern persists over the northern tier of the=20
    CONUS as dual troughs, one over the Pacific Coast and another=20
    lifting over the Great Lakes leaves pinched but zonal flow from the
    Rockies into the Upper Midwest. However, this pattern will evolve=20
    today as the primary trough digs into the Great Basin and sheds=20
    lobes of vorticity eastward within the progressive flow. Any of=20
    these impulses could become the impetus for thunderstorms,=20
    especially this evening and tonight as a cold front digs from the=20
    Northern Rockies into the Upper Midwest. The CAMs feature a variety
    of different MCS solutions tonight as the LLJ ramps up to 30-40=20
    kts over KS/OK, surging elevated PWs above 1.75 inches and=20
    increasing MUCAPE northward. Where this most efficiently impinges=20
    into the boundary, resultant convection will likely blossom through
    the convergence/isentropic ascent, and where this occurs beneath a
    vorticity maxima, MCS development will likely be the result.

    With broad SW flow aloft helping to increasing column moisture from=20
    MT all the way into the Great Lakes, any of these clusters of=20
    thunderstorms which develop could produce an excessive rain risk.=20
    However, there is limited spatial agreement among the deterministic=20
    models as to which area will have the greatest focus. Additionally,=20
    mean 0-6km winds of 20-30 kts suggest storms will be fast moving,=20
    somewhat limiting the flash flood risk despite rain rates eclipsing=20
    1"/hr. For this reason, no upgrade from the MRGL risk is warranted
    with this update. However, a subtle locally higher risk may exist=20
    across NE/KS/IA tonight where the environment appears to support at
    least a subtly higher training potential due to Corfidi vectors=20
    angled more right of the mean wind and possibly regeneration=20
    occurring along the western tail of the front into more impressive=20 thermodynamics. However, exceedance probabilities remain modest, so
    for now the MRGL risk remains but a targeted upgrade may be needed
    with later issuances.

    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL PLAINS/MIDWEST...

    ...Central Appalachians...
    Broad SW mid-level flow downstream of an amplifying trough will
    produce another day of active convection across the eastern CONUS.
    As the SW flow amplifies, convectively charged shortwaves embedded
    within the amplifying flow will surge northeast, interacting with a
    residual front to produce a wave of low pressure lifting into the
    Great Lakes Tuesday evening. Downstream of this low, the front is
    likely to begin to lift northward as a warm front, aided by return
    low-level flow around a ridge off the Southeast coast. Together,
    these features will produce favorable thermodynamics and kinematics
    for heavy rain producing convection.

    Deep SW flow through much of the column from the Gulf Coast into
    the northern Mid-Atlantic states will produce an environment
    favorable to heavy rain producing thunderstorms in many areas. This
    is supported by NAEFS PW anomalies that reach above +2 sigma across
    most of the region, with locally enhanced PWs above the 99th
    percentile of the CFSR climatology arcing from VA into Upstate NY.
    With many of the available CAMs (where available temporally)
    suggesting widespread convective development in this environment,
    and HREF/REFS 1"/hr rainfall probabilities reaching 40-50%, at
    least an isolated excessive rainfall risk exists. However, the
    greatest potential appears to center from eastern OH through parts
    of PA/WV/VA where the warm front will focus more consolidated or
    organized convection thanks to a bubble of 35-45 kts of bulk shear,
    which when combined with Corfidi vectors collapsing to 5-10 kts,
    will result in a subtly enhanced repeating/training risk. This is
    also where FFG is most compromised due to recent heavy rain events
    (and more possible Monday) which led to the inherited SLGT risk
    just being modified for recent guidance.


    ...Central Plains and Midwest...=20
    Guidance has continued to trend a bit farther SW with convective=20
    /MCS/ activity that is expected to develop this evening across the=20
    Central Plains. Thunderstorms will likely develop across the High
    Plains this afternoon and then push east in response to
    accompanying shortwaves surging east within pinched but
    increasingly amplified flow. While multiple impulses are progged to
    eject into the Plains this evening, the amplifying shortwave across
    KS is likely to become the dominant feature, and its interaction
    with a surface cold front will help spawn low pressure lifting
    along the boundary. Exactly where this occurs is still somewhat
    uncertain as there is a lot of latitudinal spread among the
    available deterministic models, suggesting an ensemble based
    approach is best at this time range for such small features.
    However, there has been a noted SW trend in the models, so while
    exact placement is still uncertain, confidence is increasing that
    the greater excessive rain risk will be more across NE/KS than IA,
    which is additionally supported by the recent CSU First Guess
    fields, so the SLGT risk has been adjusted accordingly.

    As convection develops this aftn/eve, it will organize in response
    to 30-50 kts of bulk shear, aided by 40+ kts of an 850mb LLJ that=20
    will locally back in response to the developing low pressure. This=20
    will focus the strongest moisture confluence into eastern KS/NE=20
    where PWs may touch above 2 inches, leading to 850mb moisture flux
    of +2 to + 2 sigma, coincident with the draw of elevated=20
    instability surpassing 3000 J/kg. This environment will be
    extremely favorable for heavy rain, and although both the 00Z HREF
    and 06Z REFS forecast a high probability (>60%) for 1"/hr rates
    even by 00Z Wednesday, as the convection is just beginning to
    organize and intensify. As any clusters or MCS begin to dive SE
    into the moisture, enhanced training is likely and this will
    enhance the excessive rain risk, which was adjusted to cover the
    highest probabilities for 3" and the accompanying PMM.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE MID-
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY THROUGH THE GREAT LAKES...

    A potent shortwave trough will emerge from the High Plains early
    Wednesday and then rotate east/northeast, reaching the Western
    Great Lakes by the end of D3. This feature will remain amplified
    through its lifespan, interacting with a cold front across the
    Plains to drive low pressure development over Kansas late Tuesday
    into Wednesday. This low will then advect progressively northeast
    beneath the parent trough, helping to enhance ascent through the
    area. This lift will move into favorable thermodynamics for heavy
    rainfall, as PWs rise to above the 90th percentile according to
    NAEFS, coincident with a ribbon of MUCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg being=20
    drawn northward ahead of the front and low. This will support
    widespread showers and thunderstorms, with hourly rainfall
    exceeding 1 inch at times as storms move along the front. Storm
    motions are likely to remain progressive much of Wednesday as 0-6km
    mean winds are forecast to reach 30 kts, but repeating rounds are
    possible as these winds track parallel to the front. This will
    support stripes of heavy rainfall for which both the GEFS and ECENS probabilities suggest have a 5-10% of exceeding 3 inches in a few
    areas, resulting in a MRGL risk for excessive rainfall.




    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5qzq6_jZB2Sh1R8SqugiV4wFHNa3o36nOX70BQqd2dlr= sFsLfcPJnnDcJhzZviOH-UsIy9K5pRFdeOzew8_XWsqIjbk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5qzq6_jZB2Sh1R8SqugiV4wFHNa3o36nOX70BQqd2dlr= sFsLfcPJnnDcJhzZviOH-UsIy9K5pRFdeOzew8_XLamfWaw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5qzq6_jZB2Sh1R8SqugiV4wFHNa3o36nOX70BQqd2dlr= sFsLfcPJnnDcJhzZviOH-UsIy9K5pRFdeOzew8_XYH9Y0us$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 16 13:06:30 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 161306
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    906 AM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 130Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

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

    13Z Update...
    Expanded Marginal Risk down the rest of the TX coast.
    Ongoing activity south of Corpus Christi is pivoting on itself as
    an MCV at the southern extension of a mid-level trough along the=20
    TX Coast continues to shift south. Extreme moisture with PW of 2.3"
    over the Lower TX Coast should continue to allow rainfall rates to
    locally exceed 2"/hr. The heaviest rain should continue to be near
    the coast, so a Marginal Risk should suffice. Activity along the
    middle TX coast warranted expanding the existing Marginal Risk that
    ended near Houston instead of drawing a separate area.

    Jackson


    09Z issuance...

    ...Ohio Valley through the Mid-Atlantic...
    Broad warm sector south of a wavering front draped from the
    Central Plains through the Ohio Valley and into the Carolinas will
    fuel widespread thunderstorm activity today. As this front wavers
    across the region through today and tonight, shortwave impulses
    embedded within broad SW flow around a Bermuda-type ridge will lift
    across the area. These impulses, especially where they move atop
    the residual baroclinic zone accompanying the front, will serve as
    a focus for convective development leading to rounds of
    thunderstorms. Although, in general, shear will be modest
    suggesting primarily disorganized pulse-type thunderstorms which
    are also suggested by simulated reflectivity within CAMs, there may
    be two areas of focused thunderstorm development leading to a
    higher potential of excessive rainfall.

    The first will be in a stripe from the Bootheel of Missouri east
    into southern Ohio. Here, the front will linger through today while
    a potent vorticity maxima rotates overhead. The interaction of these
    two may cause low-pressure development to locally enhance ascent. Thermodynamics across this region will be impressive, characterized
    by MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg coincident with a plume of PWs exceeding
    2 inches, more than 2 sigma above the climatological mean.
    Additionally, some modestly enhanced shear approaching 35 kts will
    lift northward to help organize thunderstorms, enhancing both the
    intensity and longevity of heavy rainfall. With rates progged by
    both the HREF and REFS likely exceeding 1"/hr (50-70% chance), and
    an increasing likelihood of at least short-term training as Corfidi
    vectors weaken to just 5 kts, this has the potential to produce
    locally 3-5 inches of rain which has a 30-50% chance of exceeding
    the 3-hr FFG.

    The other locally enhanced threat for excessive rainfall will again
    be along this wavering front, but farther east from SW Pennsylvania
    through North Carolina. Here, a stalled backdoor front will
    provide the impetus for thunderstorm development, especially during
    the aftn/eve when thermodynamics are most impressive. The high-res
    CAMs suggest the best threat for any organization will be across
    VA/NC this evening, likely in response to a convectively enhanced
    shortwave moving eastward and interacting with the front,
    potentially leading to an MCS or multiple clusters of thunderstorms
    moving across this area. With rainfall rates likely exceeding
    2"/hr and just 5 kt Corfidi vectors aligned anti-parallel to the
    mean westerly flow, training of cells is expected which results in
    HREF and REFS probabilities for 3" of rain exceeding 70%. This
    could produce excessive rainfall despite relatively higher FFG,
    especially in NC where MRMS 24-hr rainfall has been locally as much
    as 6 inches, creating more vulnerable soils. There was some
    coordination tonight with WFO MHX/RAH to discuss a possible
    upgrade to a MDT risk, but modest HREF/REFS ensembles and
    uncertainty in placement of the afternoon convection (which could
    be displaced south of ongoing activity due to convective adjustment
    of the front itself) prompted a delay in any upgrade at this time.
    However, an adjustment to the SLGT was made to focus the highest
    risk over the HREF 3" EAS probabilities and low-percentage 100-yr
    RI exceedances.

    Farther upstream across VA and back as far as PA, recent heavy
    rain has lowered FFG to just 1-2"/3hrs, so even less organized
    thunderstorms over these more sensitive soils will promote a flash
    flood risk.

    Displaced to the south from these more focused excessive rainfall
    risk regions, rounds of thunderstorms developing within robust
    thermodynamics, especially during peak aftn/eve heating, will pose
    at least an isolated flash flood risk. This will be due to rainfall
    rates which have a 30-50% chance of exceeding 2"/hr, and could be
    slow moving to produce locally more than 3 inches of rain. Both REFS
    and HREF probabilities of exceedance are scattered across the
    region, suggesting the inherited MRGL risk is sufficient, and this
    was just cosmetically adjusted for new guidance.


    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...
    A messy mid-level pattern persists over the northern tier of the
    CONUS as dual troughs, one over the Pacific Coast and another
    lifting over the Great Lakes leaves pinched but zonal flow from the
    Rockies into the Upper Midwest. However, this pattern will evolve
    today as the primary trough digs into the Great Basin and sheds
    lobes of vorticity eastward within the progressive flow. Any of
    these impulses could become the impetus for thunderstorms,
    especially this evening and tonight as a cold front digs from the
    Northern Rockies into the Upper Midwest. The CAMs feature a variety
    of different MCS solutions tonight as the LLJ ramps up to 30-40
    kts over KS/OK, surging elevated PWs above 1.75 inches and
    increasing MUCAPE northward. Where this most efficiently impinges
    into the boundary, resultant convection will likely blossom through
    the convergence/isentropic ascent, and where this occurs beneath a
    vorticity maxima, MCS development will likely be the result.

    With broad SW flow aloft helping to increasing column moisture from
    MT all the way into the Great Lakes, any of these clusters of
    thunderstorms which develop could produce an excessive rain risk.
    However, there is limited spatial agreement among the deterministic
    models as to which area will have the greatest focus. Additionally,
    mean 0-6km winds of 20-30 kts suggest storms will be fast moving,
    somewhat limiting the flash flood risk despite rain rates eclipsing
    1"/hr. For this reason, no upgrade from the MRGL risk is warranted
    with this update. However, a subtle locally higher risk may exist
    across NE/KS/IA tonight where the environment appears to support at
    least a subtly higher training potential due to Corfidi vectors
    angled more right of the mean wind and possibly regeneration
    occurring along the western tail of the front into more impressive thermodynamics. However, exceedance probabilities remain modest, so
    for now the MRGL risk remains but a targeted upgrade may be needed
    with later issuances.

    Weiss


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL PLAINS/MIDWEST...

    ...Central Appalachians...
    Broad SW mid-level flow downstream of an amplifying trough will
    produce another day of active convection across the eastern CONUS.
    As the SW flow amplifies, convectively charged shortwaves embedded
    within the amplifying flow will surge northeast, interacting with a
    residual front to produce a wave of low pressure lifting into the
    Great Lakes Tuesday evening. Downstream of this low, the front is
    likely to begin to lift northward as a warm front, aided by return
    low-level flow around a ridge off the Southeast coast. Together,
    these features will produce favorable thermodynamics and kinematics
    for heavy rain producing convection.

    Deep SW flow through much of the column from the Gulf Coast into
    the northern Mid-Atlantic states will produce an environment
    favorable to heavy rain producing thunderstorms in many areas. This
    is supported by NAEFS PW anomalies that reach above +2 sigma across
    most of the region, with locally enhanced PWs above the 99th
    percentile of the CFSR climatology arcing from VA into Upstate NY.
    With many of the available CAMs (where available temporally)
    suggesting widespread convective development in this environment,
    and HREF/REFS 1"/hr rainfall probabilities reaching 40-50%, at
    least an isolated excessive rainfall risk exists. However, the
    greatest potential appears to center from eastern OH through parts
    of PA/WV/VA where the warm front will focus more consolidated or
    organized convection thanks to a bubble of 35-45 kts of bulk shear,
    which when combined with Corfidi vectors collapsing to 5-10 kts,
    will result in a subtly enhanced repeating/training risk. This is
    also where FFG is most compromised due to recent heavy rain events
    (and more possible Monday) which led to the inherited SLGT risk
    just being modified for recent guidance.


    ...Central Plains and Midwest...
    Guidance has continued to trend a bit farther SW with convective
    /MCS/ activity that is expected to develop this evening across the
    Central Plains. Thunderstorms will likely develop across the High
    Plains this afternoon and then push east in response to
    accompanying shortwaves surging east within pinched but
    increasingly amplified flow. While multiple impulses are progged to
    eject into the Plains this evening, the amplifying shortwave across
    KS is likely to become the dominant feature, and its interaction
    with a surface cold front will help spawn low pressure lifting
    along the boundary. Exactly where this occurs is still somewhat
    uncertain as there is a lot of latitudinal spread among the
    available deterministic models, suggesting an ensemble based
    approach is best at this time range for such small features.
    However, there has been a noted SW trend in the models, so while
    exact placement is still uncertain, confidence is increasing that
    the greater excessive rain risk will be more across NE/KS than IA,
    which is additionally supported by the recent CSU First Guess
    fields, so the SLGT risk has been adjusted accordingly.

    As convection develops this aftn/eve, it will organize in response
    to 30-50 kts of bulk shear, aided by 40+ kts of an 850mb LLJ that
    will locally back in response to the developing low pressure. This
    will focus the strongest moisture confluence into eastern KS/NE
    where PWs may touch above 2 inches, leading to 850mb moisture flux
    of +2 to + 2 sigma, coincident with the draw of elevated
    instability surpassing 3000 J/kg. This environment will be
    extremely favorable for heavy rain, and although both the 00Z HREF
    and 06Z REFS forecast a high probability (>60%) for 1"/hr rates
    even by 00Z Wednesday, as the convection is just beginning to
    organize and intensify. As any clusters or MCS begin to dive SE
    into the moisture, enhanced training is likely and this will
    enhance the excessive rain risk, which was adjusted to cover the
    highest probabilities for 3" and the accompanying PMM.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE MID-
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY THROUGH THE GREAT LAKES...

    A potent shortwave trough will emerge from the High Plains early
    Wednesday and then rotate east/northeast, reaching the Western
    Great Lakes by the end of D3. This feature will remain amplified
    through its lifespan, interacting with a cold front across the
    Plains to drive low pressure development over Kansas late Tuesday
    into Wednesday. This low will then advect progressively northeast
    beneath the parent trough, helping to enhance ascent through the
    area. This lift will move into favorable thermodynamics for heavy
    rainfall, as PWs rise to above the 90th percentile according to
    NAEFS, coincident with a ribbon of MUCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg being
    drawn northward ahead of the front and low. This will support
    widespread showers and thunderstorms, with hourly rainfall
    exceeding 1 inch at times as storms move along the front. Storm
    motions are likely to remain progressive much of Wednesday as 0-6km
    mean winds are forecast to reach 30 kts, but repeating rounds are
    possible as these winds track parallel to the front. This will
    support stripes of heavy rainfall for which both the GEFS and ECENS probabilities suggest have a 5-10% of exceeding 3 inches in a few
    areas, resulting in a MRGL risk for excessive rainfall.




    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4cNBWjR8XI8V2ZfMMmv3EuBC0DDbp9iJXjqsrBm4PvGd= 4sugW6DA5I4umxdEKQmRgfKSfgYp13QH3Aa0w902oB0BRr8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4cNBWjR8XI8V2ZfMMmv3EuBC0DDbp9iJXjqsrBm4PvGd= 4sugW6DA5I4umxdEKQmRgfKSfgYp13QH3Aa0w902lQ9zCAM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4cNBWjR8XI8V2ZfMMmv3EuBC0DDbp9iJXjqsrBm4PvGd= 4sugW6DA5I4umxdEKQmRgfKSfgYp13QH3Aa0w902vWO-Tzw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 16 15:51:42 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 161551
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1151 AM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

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

    16Z Update...

    ...Far South Texas...
    Separated Marginal Risk on TX coast to cut out the Middle Texas=20
    Coast and include more of the lower Rio Grande Valley. Ongoing=20
    activity south of Corpus Christi (detailed in MPD 457 which will be
    updated if the threat is notable for the lower RGV) is pivoting on
    itself as it shifts SSW. A downward trend is noted in the past=20
    hour. However, inflow and extreme moisture with PW of 2.3" over=20
    the Lower TX Coast would allow rainfall rates to locally exceed=20
    2"/hr.=20

    ...Ohio Valley through the Mid-Atlantic...
    16Z Update...
    Slight Risks are on track. Was able to trim the northern section=20
    of the Slight Risk near Pittsburgh given 12Z HREF consensus.

    09Z Discussion...
    Broad warm sector south of a wavering front draped from the=20
    Central Plains through the Ohio Valley and into the Carolinas will=20
    fuel widespread thunderstorm activity today. As this front wavers=20
    across the region through today and tonight, shortwave impulses=20
    embedded within broad SW flow around a Bermuda- type ridge will=20
    lift across the area. These impulses, especially where they move=20
    atop the residual baroclinic zone accompanying the front, will=20
    serve as a focus for convective development leading to rounds of=20 thunderstorms. Although, in general, shear will be modest=20
    suggesting primarily disorganized pulse-type thunderstorms which=20
    are also suggested by simulated reflectivity within CAMs, there may
    be two areas of focused thunderstorm development leading to a=20
    higher potential of excessive rainfall.

    The first will be in a stripe from the Bootheel of Missouri east
    into southern Ohio. Here, the front will linger through today while
    a potent vorticity maxima rotates overhead. The interaction of these
    two may cause low-pressure development to locally enhance ascent. Thermodynamics across this region will be impressive, characterized
    by MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg coincident with a plume of PWs exceeding
    2 inches, more than 2 sigma above the climatological mean.
    Additionally, some modestly enhanced shear approaching 35 kts will
    lift northward to help organize thunderstorms, enhancing both the
    intensity and longevity of heavy rainfall. With rates progged by
    both the HREF and REFS likely exceeding 1"/hr (50-70% chance), and
    an increasing likelihood of at least short-term training as Corfidi
    vectors weaken to just 5 kts, this has the potential to produce
    locally 3-5 inches of rain which has a 30-50% chance of exceeding
    the 3-hr FFG.

    The other locally enhanced threat for excessive rainfall will again
    be along this wavering front, but farther east from SW Pennsylvania
    through North Carolina. Here, a stalled backdoor front will
    provide the impetus for thunderstorm development, especially during
    the aftn/eve when thermodynamics are most impressive. The high-res
    CAMs suggest the best threat for any organization will be across
    VA/NC this evening, likely in response to a convectively enhanced
    shortwave moving eastward and interacting with the front,
    potentially leading to an MCS or multiple clusters of thunderstorms
    moving across this area. With rainfall rates likely exceeding
    2"/hr and just 5 kt Corfidi vectors aligned anti-parallel to the
    mean westerly flow, training of cells is expected which results in
    HREF and REFS probabilities for 3" of rain exceeding 70%. This
    could produce excessive rainfall despite relatively higher FFG,
    especially in NC where MRMS 24-hr rainfall has been locally as much
    as 6 inches, creating more vulnerable soils. There was some
    coordination tonight with WFO MHX/RAH to discuss a possible
    upgrade to a MDT risk, but modest HREF/REFS ensembles and
    uncertainty in placement of the afternoon convection (which could
    be displaced south of ongoing activity due to convective adjustment
    of the front itself) prompted a delay in any upgrade at this time.
    However, an adjustment to the SLGT was made to focus the highest
    risk over the HREF 3" EAS probabilities and low-percentage 100-yr
    RI exceedances.

    Farther upstream across VA and back as far as PA, recent heavy
    rain has lowered FFG to just 1-2"/3hrs, so even less organized
    thunderstorms over these more sensitive soils will promote a flash
    flood risk.

    Displaced to the south from these more focused excessive rainfall
    risk regions, rounds of thunderstorms developing within robust
    thermodynamics, especially during peak aftn/eve heating, will pose
    at least an isolated flash flood risk. This will be due to rainfall
    rates which have a 30-50% chance of exceeding 2"/hr, and could be
    slow moving to produce locally more than 3 inches of rain. Both REFS
    and HREF probabilities of exceedance are scattered across the
    region, suggesting the inherited MRGL risk is sufficient, and this
    was just cosmetically adjusted for new guidance.


    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...
    16Z Update...
    Adjustments to Marginal Risks with expansion in central WI given
    ongoing and upstream activity, and expansion over northeast WY and south-central KS given 12Z CAM consensus. Activity should be
    progressive enough in the stronger flow east of the trough axis=20
    over the northern Rockies to preclude targeted Slight Risks.


    09Z Discussion...
    A messy mid-level pattern persists over the northern tier of the=20
    CONUS as dual troughs, one over the Pacific Coast and another=20
    lifting over the Great Lakes leaves pinched but zonal flow from the
    Rockies into the Upper Midwest. However, this pattern will evolve=20
    today as the primary trough digs into the Great Basin and sheds=20
    lobes of vorticity eastward within the progressive flow. Any of=20
    these impulses could become the impetus for thunderstorms,=20
    especially this evening and tonight as a cold front digs from the=20
    Northern Rockies into the Upper Midwest. The CAMs feature a variety
    of different MCS solutions tonight as the LLJ ramps up to 30-40=20
    kts over KS/OK, surging elevated PWs above 1.75 inches and=20
    increasing MUCAPE northward. Where this most efficiently impinges=20
    into the boundary, resultant convection will likely blossom through
    the convergence/isentropic ascent, and where this occurs beneath a
    vorticity maxima, MCS development will likely be the result.

    With broad SW flow aloft helping to increasing column moisture from
    MT all the way into the Great Lakes, any of these clusters of
    thunderstorms which develop could produce an excessive rain risk.
    However, there is limited spatial agreement among the deterministic
    models as to which area will have the greatest focus. Additionally,
    mean 0-6km winds of 20-30 kts suggest storms will be fast moving,
    somewhat limiting the flash flood risk despite rain rates eclipsing
    1"/hr. For this reason, no upgrade from the MRGL risk is warranted
    with this update. However, a subtle locally higher risk may exist
    across NE/KS/IA tonight where the environment appears to support at
    least a subtly higher training potential due to Corfidi vectors
    angled more right of the mean wind and possibly regeneration
    occurring along the western tail of the front into more impressive thermodynamics. However, exceedance probabilities remain modest, so
    for now the MRGL risk remains but a targeted upgrade may be needed
    with later issuances.

    Weiss/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL PLAINS/MIDWEST...

    ...Central Appalachians...
    Broad SW mid-level flow downstream of an amplifying trough will
    produce another day of active convection across the eastern CONUS.
    As the SW flow amplifies, convectively charged shortwaves embedded
    within the amplifying flow will surge northeast, interacting with a
    residual front to produce a wave of low pressure lifting into the
    Great Lakes Tuesday evening. Downstream of this low, the front is
    likely to begin to lift northward as a warm front, aided by return
    low-level flow around a ridge off the Southeast coast. Together,
    these features will produce favorable thermodynamics and kinematics
    for heavy rain producing convection.

    Deep SW flow through much of the column from the Gulf Coast into
    the northern Mid-Atlantic states will produce an environment
    favorable to heavy rain producing thunderstorms in many areas. This
    is supported by NAEFS PW anomalies that reach above +2 sigma across
    most of the region, with locally enhanced PWs above the 99th
    percentile of the CFSR climatology arcing from VA into Upstate NY.
    With many of the available CAMs (where available temporally)
    suggesting widespread convective development in this environment,
    and HREF/REFS 1"/hr rainfall probabilities reaching 40-50%, at
    least an isolated excessive rainfall risk exists. However, the
    greatest potential appears to center from eastern OH through parts
    of PA/WV/VA where the warm front will focus more consolidated or
    organized convection thanks to a bubble of 35-45 kts of bulk shear,
    which when combined with Corfidi vectors collapsing to 5-10 kts,
    will result in a subtly enhanced repeating/training risk. This is
    also where FFG is most compromised due to recent heavy rain events
    (and more possible Monday) which led to the inherited SLGT risk
    just being modified for recent guidance.


    ...Central Plains and Midwest...
    Guidance has continued to trend a bit farther SW with convective
    /MCS/ activity that is expected to develop this evening across the
    Central Plains. Thunderstorms will likely develop across the High
    Plains this afternoon and then push east in response to
    accompanying shortwaves surging east within pinched but
    increasingly amplified flow. While multiple impulses are progged to
    eject into the Plains this evening, the amplifying shortwave across
    KS is likely to become the dominant feature, and its interaction
    with a surface cold front will help spawn low pressure lifting
    along the boundary. Exactly where this occurs is still somewhat
    uncertain as there is a lot of latitudinal spread among the
    available deterministic models, suggesting an ensemble based
    approach is best at this time range for such small features.
    However, there has been a noted SW trend in the models, so while
    exact placement is still uncertain, confidence is increasing that
    the greater excessive rain risk will be more across NE/KS than IA,
    which is additionally supported by the recent CSU First Guess
    fields, so the SLGT risk has been adjusted accordingly.

    As convection develops this aftn/eve, it will organize in response
    to 30-50 kts of bulk shear, aided by 40+ kts of an 850mb LLJ that
    will locally back in response to the developing low pressure. This
    will focus the strongest moisture confluence into eastern KS/NE
    where PWs may touch above 2 inches, leading to 850mb moisture flux
    of +2 to + 2 sigma, coincident with the draw of elevated
    instability surpassing 3000 J/kg. This environment will be
    extremely favorable for heavy rain, and although both the 00Z HREF
    and 06Z REFS forecast a high probability (>60%) for 1"/hr rates
    even by 00Z Wednesday, as the convection is just beginning to
    organize and intensify. As any clusters or MCS begin to dive SE
    into the moisture, enhanced training is likely and this will
    enhance the excessive rain risk, which was adjusted to cover the
    highest probabilities for 3" and the accompanying PMM.

    Weiss


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE MID-
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY THROUGH THE GREAT LAKES...

    A potent shortwave trough will emerge from the High Plains early
    Wednesday and then rotate east/northeast, reaching the Western
    Great Lakes by the end of D3. This feature will remain amplified
    through its lifespan, interacting with a cold front across the
    Plains to drive low pressure development over Kansas late Tuesday
    into Wednesday. This low will then advect progressively northeast
    beneath the parent trough, helping to enhance ascent through the
    area. This lift will move into favorable thermodynamics for heavy
    rainfall, as PWs rise to above the 90th percentile according to
    NAEFS, coincident with a ribbon of MUCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg being
    drawn northward ahead of the front and low. This will support
    widespread showers and thunderstorms, with hourly rainfall
    exceeding 1 inch at times as storms move along the front. Storm
    motions are likely to remain progressive much of Wednesday as 0-6km
    mean winds are forecast to reach 30 kts, but repeating rounds are
    possible as these winds track parallel to the front. This will
    support stripes of heavy rainfall for which both the GEFS and ECENS probabilities suggest have a 5-10% of exceeding 3 inches in a few
    areas, resulting in a MRGL risk for excessive rainfall.




    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8SG8L7kijVzaoB6oyJsUnDhjuAmuLMqgQSNhZY0_yzs6= puETl7M1J82nURZ8QZOeXm9I_1DAtzpWzrv4BvdFOuOtd0g$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8SG8L7kijVzaoB6oyJsUnDhjuAmuLMqgQSNhZY0_yzs6= puETl7M1J82nURZ8QZOeXm9I_1DAtzpWzrv4BvdF2Vg1Ri4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8SG8L7kijVzaoB6oyJsUnDhjuAmuLMqgQSNhZY0_yzs6= puETl7M1J82nURZ8QZOeXm9I_1DAtzpWzrv4BvdFXjUtffE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 16 20:28:03 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 162026
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    426 PM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 16 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

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

    16Z Update...

    ...Far South Texas...
    Separated Marginal Risk on TX coast to cut out the Middle Texas
    Coast and include more of the lower Rio Grande Valley. Ongoing
    activity south of Corpus Christi (detailed in MPD 457 which will be
    updated if the threat is notable for the lower RGV) is pivoting on
    itself as it shifts SSW. A downward trend is noted in the past
    hour. However, inflow and extreme moisture with PW of 2.3" over
    the Lower TX Coast would allow rainfall rates to locally exceed
    2"/hr.

    ...Ohio Valley through the Mid-Atlantic...
    16Z Update...
    Slight Risks are on track. Was able to trim the northern section
    of the Slight Risk near Pittsburgh given 12Z HREF consensus.

    09Z Discussion...
    Broad warm sector south of a wavering front draped from the
    Central Plains through the Ohio Valley and into the Carolinas will
    fuel widespread thunderstorm activity today. As this front wavers
    across the region through today and tonight, shortwave impulses
    embedded within broad SW flow around a Bermuda- type ridge will
    lift across the area. These impulses, especially where they move
    atop the residual baroclinic zone accompanying the front, will
    serve as a focus for convective development leading to rounds of
    thunderstorms. Although, in general, shear will be modest
    suggesting primarily disorganized pulse-type thunderstorms which
    are also suggested by simulated reflectivity within CAMs, there may
    be two areas of focused thunderstorm development leading to a
    higher potential of excessive rainfall.

    The first will be in a stripe from the Bootheel of Missouri east
    into southern Ohio. Here, the front will linger through today while
    a potent vorticity maxima rotates overhead. The interaction of these
    two may cause low-pressure development to locally enhance ascent. Thermodynamics across this region will be impressive, characterized
    by MUCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg coincident with a plume of PWs exceeding
    2 inches, more than 2 sigma above the climatological mean.
    Additionally, some modestly enhanced shear approaching 35 kts will
    lift northward to help organize thunderstorms, enhancing both the
    intensity and longevity of heavy rainfall. With rates progged by
    both the HREF and REFS likely exceeding 1"/hr (50-70% chance), and
    an increasing likelihood of at least short-term training as Corfidi
    vectors weaken to just 5 kts, this has the potential to produce
    locally 3-5 inches of rain which has a 30-50% chance of exceeding
    the 3-hr FFG.

    The other locally enhanced threat for excessive rainfall will again
    be along this wavering front, but farther east from SW Pennsylvania
    through North Carolina. Here, a stalled backdoor front will
    provide the impetus for thunderstorm development, especially during
    the aftn/eve when thermodynamics are most impressive. The high-res
    CAMs suggest the best threat for any organization will be across
    VA/NC this evening, likely in response to a convectively enhanced
    shortwave moving eastward and interacting with the front,
    potentially leading to an MCS or multiple clusters of thunderstorms
    moving across this area. With rainfall rates likely exceeding
    2"/hr and just 5 kt Corfidi vectors aligned anti-parallel to the
    mean westerly flow, training of cells is expected which results in
    HREF and REFS probabilities for 3" of rain exceeding 70%. This
    could produce excessive rainfall despite relatively higher FFG,
    especially in NC where MRMS 24-hr rainfall has been locally as much
    as 6 inches, creating more vulnerable soils. There was some
    coordination tonight with WFO MHX/RAH to discuss a possible
    upgrade to a MDT risk, but modest HREF/REFS ensembles and
    uncertainty in placement of the afternoon convection (which could
    be displaced south of ongoing activity due to convective adjustment
    of the front itself) prompted a delay in any upgrade at this time.
    However, an adjustment to the SLGT was made to focus the highest
    risk over the HREF 3" EAS probabilities and low-percentage 100-yr
    RI exceedances.

    Farther upstream across VA and back as far as PA, recent heavy
    rain has lowered FFG to just 1-2"/3hrs, so even less organized
    thunderstorms over these more sensitive soils will promote a flash
    flood risk.

    Displaced to the south from these more focused excessive rainfall
    risk regions, rounds of thunderstorms developing within robust
    thermodynamics, especially during peak aftn/eve heating, will pose
    at least an isolated flash flood risk. This will be due to rainfall
    rates which have a 30-50% chance of exceeding 2"/hr, and could be
    slow moving to produce locally more than 3 inches of rain. Both REFS
    and HREF probabilities of exceedance are scattered across the
    region, suggesting the inherited MRGL risk is sufficient, and this
    was just cosmetically adjusted for new guidance.


    ...Dakotas to the western Great Lakes...
    16Z Update...
    Adjustments to Marginal Risks with expansion in central WI given
    ongoing and upstream activity, and expansion over northeast WY and south-central KS given 12Z CAM consensus. Activity should be
    progressive enough in the stronger flow east of the trough axis
    over the northern Rockies to preclude targeted Slight Risks.

    09Z Discussion...
    A messy mid-level pattern persists over the northern tier of the
    CONUS as dual troughs, one over the Pacific Coast and another
    lifting over the Great Lakes leaves pinched but zonal flow from the
    Rockies into the Upper Midwest. However, this pattern will evolve
    today as the primary trough digs into the Great Basin and sheds
    lobes of vorticity eastward within the progressive flow. Any of
    these impulses could become the impetus for thunderstorms,
    especially this evening and tonight as a cold front digs from the
    Northern Rockies into the Upper Midwest. The CAMs feature a variety
    of different MCS solutions tonight as the LLJ ramps up to 30-40
    kts over KS/OK, surging elevated PWs above 1.75 inches and
    increasing MUCAPE northward. Where this most efficiently impinges
    into the boundary, resultant convection will likely blossom through
    the convergence/isentropic ascent, and where this occurs beneath a
    vorticity maxima, MCS development will likely be the result.

    With broad SW flow aloft helping to increasing column moisture from
    MT all the way into the Great Lakes, any of these clusters of
    thunderstorms which develop could produce an excessive rain risk.
    However, there is limited spatial agreement among the deterministic
    models as to which area will have the greatest focus. Additionally,
    mean 0-6km winds of 20-30 kts suggest storms will be fast moving,
    somewhat limiting the flash flood risk despite rain rates eclipsing
    1"/hr. For this reason, no upgrade from the MRGL risk is warranted
    with this update. However, a subtle locally higher risk may exist
    across NE/KS/IA tonight where the environment appears to support at
    least a subtly higher training potential due to Corfidi vectors
    angled more right of the mean wind and possibly regeneration
    occurring along the western tail of the front into more impressive thermodynamics. However, exceedance probabilities remain modest, so
    for now the MRGL risk remains but a targeted upgrade may be needed
    with later issuances.

    Weiss/Jackson


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL PLAINS/MIDWEST...

    ...Central Appalachians to the Central Gulf Coast...=20
    Broad SW mid-level flow downstream of an amplifying trough will=20
    produce another day of active convection across the east-central=20
    CONUS. As the SW flow amplifies, convectively charged shortwaves=20
    embedded within the amplifying flow will surge northeast,=20
    interacting with a residual front to produce a wave of low pressure
    lifting into the Great Lakes Tuesday evening. Downstream of this=20
    low, the front is likely to lift north as a warm front, aided by=20
    return low-level flow around a ridge off the Southeast coast.=20
    Together, these features will produce favorable thermodynamics and=20 kinematics for heavy rain producing convection.

    Deep SW flow through much of the column from the Gulf Coast into
    the northern Mid-Atlantic states will produce an environment
    favorable to heavy rain producing thunderstorms from Louisiana to
    Pennsylvania. Moisture will be high PW anomalies that reach above=20
    +2 sigma across this swath. Widespread convective development is
    supported in this environment 1"/hr rainfall likely. 12Z guidance
    (and now the 18Z HRRR) has keyed in on central Pennsylvania as
    having the greatest flash flood potential with a continued heavy
    rain signal down to eastern KY. This is where the warm front will=20
    focus more organized convection thanks to 35-45 kts of bulk shear,=20
    which when combined with Corfidi vectors collapsing to 5-10 kts,=20
    will result in a subtly enhanced repeating/training risk. This is=20
    also where FFG is most compromised due to recent heavy rain events=20
    (and more expected into this evening) which led to further
    expansion of the Slight Risk, particularly in central Pennsylvania
    where this can be considered a higher end Slight Risk. There is
    potential for a targeted Moderate Risk to be drawn when the
    confidence is there.

    ...Central Plains and Midwest...
    12Z consensus continues SW trend in the 24hr QPF max with central=20
    Kansas favored in the HREF mean. The HRRR, including now the 18Z=20
    HRRR is more favoring south-central Kansas. This is from both=20
    overnight activity tonight and the main event Tuesday night ahead=20
    of the wave pushing onto the central Plains. The Slight Risk is=20
    expanded across central Kansas to the Oklahoma border, as well as=20
    farther north in Nebraska where the comma head will set up ahead of
    the developing low. The threat of repeating heavy rain over
    portions of Kansas warrants the Slight Risk to be considered higher
    end with the potential for a moderate risk in subsequent issuances.


    Weiss/Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST, MID-SOUTH, GREAT LAKES, AND NORTHEAST URBAN CORRIDOR...

    ...Central States/Midwest...
    A potent shortwave trough shifts northeast from Kansas to Michigan
    on Wednesday. This feature will remain amplified through its=20
    lifespan, interacting with a cold front across the Plains to drive=20
    surface low pressure from northern Missouri Wednesday morning to
    Lake Huron by the evening and enhance ascent through the track.=20
    This lift will work with favorable thermodynamics for heavy=20
    rainfall, with 1.75 to 2" PW (+2 standard deviations above normal)=20
    and a ribbon of MUCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg. This will support=20
    widespread showers and thunderstorms, with hourly rainfall=20
    exceeding 1 inch at times as storms move along the front. Storm=20
    motions are likely to remain progressive much of Wednesday as 0-6km
    mean winds are forecast to reach 30 kts, but repeating rounds are=20
    possible as these winds track parallel to the front. This will=20
    support stripes of heavy rainfall both with the comma head of the
    upper low over Iowa/Wisconsin/Michigan, and in the warm sector over
    Arkansas, southern Illinois, Indiana into Ohio. The Marginal Risk
    was adjusted to depict a dry slot between these features.

    ...Northeast...
    Broad southwesterly flow east of a trough axis over the Midwest
    will pump Gulf-sourced moisture up the Eastern Seaboard. Global
    guidance continues to depict a 2" contour of PW from northern
    Virginia through southern New England which is around 2.5 standard
    deviations above normal. Strong flow should maintain movement to
    activity, but isolated heavy thunderstorms are forecast, so a
    Marginal Risk is raised for the Bos-Wash megalopolis.


    Weiss/Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_fNR2-CZ0CfuGOyFj6dAcW9eEUwUYvZ6hF0t3wfhA7sd= VBZsQT1Ffo5MqWZVdfsxojCqnebzwyFO9Rl1S_JFzl-BnD8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_fNR2-CZ0CfuGOyFj6dAcW9eEUwUYvZ6hF0t3wfhA7sd= VBZsQT1Ffo5MqWZVdfsxojCqnebzwyFO9Rl1S_JFAA3dRaE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_fNR2-CZ0CfuGOyFj6dAcW9eEUwUYvZ6hF0t3wfhA7sd= VBZsQT1Ffo5MqWZVdfsxojCqnebzwyFO9Rl1S_JFe6m384E$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 17 00:47:50 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 170047
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    847 PM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025

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

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Persistent convective pattern will remain over the region as
    smaller mid-level perturbations ripple out out of the
    Tennessee/Ohio Valley's helping to generate rounds of showers and
    storms as they migrate eastward. Antecedent conditions across
    NC up through Southwest VA, much of WV, into Western PA are
    incredibly moist with generally compromised soils over portions of
    Eastern NC and the Central Appalachians. The one positive this
    evening is the threat of heavy rainfall becomes less pronounced in
    terms of magnitude as we slowly lose the diurnal heat element that
    helps drive some of the stronger convective cores. In any case, the
    threat remains for pockets of heavy rain that could exacerbate
    already saturated grounds, preventing recovery. QPF maxima within
    latest CAMs is generally 2-3", but no real defined area of interest
    with a smattering of the heavier distribution. Highest probs are
    within Central NC but >5" probs drop off steadily meaning the
    threat is fairly capped ~3-4" with more likely 1-2" in convection.
    The previous SLGT was generally maintained.=20

    ...Ohio Valley...

    Our shortwave residing over the western Ohio Valley will aid in=20
    maintaining a general convective pattern overnight with=20
    thunderstorms pulsing up and down through areas surrounding the=20
    Ohio River Basin down to the KY/TN line. Locally heavy precip has=20
    already warranted a few flash flood warnings within KY and the=20
    threat is forecast to continue migrating to the northeast over the=20
    course of the overnight. Some areas could see a quick 2-4" of
    rainfall in any of the strongest cells with some relatively slower
    storm motions help enhance the threat for training within any
    multi-cell clusters. Some of the latest hourly CAMs are insistent
    on a threat of storms developing between Louisville and Cincinnati
    overnight with some locally heavy precip over a more urban
    corridor. Considering the trend, decided to pull the SLGT a bit
    more northeast to cover for the threat as any cells overnight will
    be capable of 1-2"/hr rates with multiple hours of impact. The
    previous SLGT risk was adjusted to reflect the radar and proposed
    forecast trends in the heaviest QPF alignment.=20

    ...Midwest and Plains...

    Multiple complexes will propagate through portions of the Central
    Plains and Upper Midwest this evening with the greatest potential
    for flash flooding likely residing over more urban centers within
    the span of the MRGL risk over the region. Faster forward motions
    will limit some of the threat in any given area, as well as some
    areas with higher FFG's the benefactor of the expected heavy
    precip. Flanking lines of complexes will be the areas of interest
    within any of the organized convective schemes and pending where
    they position themselves over the coverage area, a few flash flood
    warnings cannot be ruled out. The previous MRGL was relatively
    maintained, but trimmed back some of the northwest edge given radar
    trends with no further heavy rain threat overnight.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL PLAINS/MIDWEST...

    ...Central Appalachians to the Central Gulf Coast...
    Broad SW mid-level flow downstream of an amplifying trough will
    produce another day of active convection across the east-central
    CONUS. As the SW flow amplifies, convectively charged shortwaves
    embedded within the amplifying flow will surge northeast,
    interacting with a residual front to produce a wave of low pressure
    lifting into the Great Lakes Tuesday evening. Downstream of this
    low, the front is likely to lift north as a warm front, aided by
    return low-level flow around a ridge off the Southeast coast.
    Together, these features will produce favorable thermodynamics and
    kinematics for heavy rain producing convection.

    Deep SW flow through much of the column from the Gulf Coast into
    the northern Mid-Atlantic states will produce an environment
    favorable to heavy rain producing thunderstorms from Louisiana to
    Pennsylvania. Moisture will be high PW anomalies that reach above
    +2 sigma across this swath. Widespread convective development is
    supported in this environment 1"/hr rainfall likely. 12Z guidance
    (and now the 18Z HRRR) has keyed in on central Pennsylvania as
    having the greatest flash flood potential with a continued heavy
    rain signal down to eastern KY. This is where the warm front will
    focus more organized convection thanks to 35-45 kts of bulk shear,
    which when combined with Corfidi vectors collapsing to 5-10 kts,
    will result in a subtly enhanced repeating/training risk. This is
    also where FFG is most compromised due to recent heavy rain events
    (and more expected into this evening) which led to further
    expansion of the Slight Risk, particularly in central Pennsylvania
    where this can be considered a higher end Slight Risk. There is
    potential for a targeted Moderate Risk to be drawn when the
    confidence is there.

    ...Central Plains and Midwest...
    12Z consensus continues SW trend in the 24hr QPF max with central
    Kansas favored in the HREF mean. The HRRR, including now the 18Z
    HRRR is more favoring south-central Kansas. This is from both
    overnight activity tonight and the main event Tuesday night ahead
    of the wave pushing onto the central Plains. The Slight Risk is
    expanded across central Kansas to the Oklahoma border, as well as
    farther north in Nebraska where the comma head will set up ahead of
    the developing low. The threat of repeating heavy rain over
    portions of Kansas warrants the Slight Risk to be considered higher
    end with the potential for a moderate risk in subsequent issuances.


    Weiss/Jackson


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST, MID-SOUTH, GREAT LAKES, AND NORTHEAST URBAN CORRIDOR...

    ...Central States/Midwest...
    A potent shortwave trough shifts northeast from Kansas to Michigan
    on Wednesday. This feature will remain amplified through its
    lifespan, interacting with a cold front across the Plains to drive
    surface low pressure from northern Missouri Wednesday morning to
    Lake Huron by the evening and enhance ascent through the track.
    This lift will work with favorable thermodynamics for heavy
    rainfall, with 1.75 to 2" PW (+2 standard deviations above normal)
    and a ribbon of MUCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg. This will support
    widespread showers and thunderstorms, with hourly rainfall
    exceeding 1 inch at times as storms move along the front. Storm
    motions are likely to remain progressive much of Wednesday as 0-6km
    mean winds are forecast to reach 30 kts, but repeating rounds are
    possible as these winds track parallel to the front. This will
    support stripes of heavy rainfall both with the comma head of the
    upper low over Iowa/Wisconsin/Michigan, and in the warm sector over
    Arkansas, southern Illinois, Indiana into Ohio. The Marginal Risk
    was adjusted to depict a dry slot between these features.

    ...Northeast...
    Broad southwesterly flow east of a trough axis over the Midwest
    will pump Gulf-sourced moisture up the Eastern Seaboard. Global
    guidance continues to depict a 2" contour of PW from northern
    Virginia through southern New England which is around 2.5 standard
    deviations above normal. Strong flow should maintain movement to
    activity, but isolated heavy thunderstorms are forecast, so a
    Marginal Risk is raised for the Bos-Wash megalopolis.


    Weiss/Jackson


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8HFmCX0NAvEgk07KvoWjwCrkqLHLBUdkZY961KIQZXJ= i1ZptaK50sy46EiGVv6u3cUjRf8JSk1wf7-qSm8q8DqGLik$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8HFmCX0NAvEgk07KvoWjwCrkqLHLBUdkZY961KIQZXJ= i1ZptaK50sy46EiGVv6u3cUjRf8JSk1wf7-qSm8q9cNvii8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8HFmCX0NAvEgk07KvoWjwCrkqLHLBUdkZY961KIQZXJ= i1ZptaK50sy46EiGVv6u3cUjRf8JSk1wf7-qSm8qz21N6lY$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 17 08:06:36 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 170806
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    406 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central Appalachians...=20
    Extreme thermodynamics expanding across the eastern CONUS will=20
    produce an environment favorable for widespread convection with=20
    heavy rainfall on Tuesday.

    The synoptic pattern responsible for this environment is set up by a=20
    broad Bermuda-type ridge centered off the southeast Atlantic coast.=20
    This ridge will expand northwestward, while a trough digs=20
    concurrently across the Mississippi Valley. This evolution will=20
    result in pinched flow between the two, accelerating the 850-500mb=20
    flow northeast as return flow emerges more impressively from the=20
    Gulf. Within this flow, multiple mid-level impulses/shortwaves=20
    will lift progressively northeast, providing waves of enhanced=20
    ascent from the Central Gulf Coast through the Mid-Atlantic states. Additionally, the low-level flow surging northeast will reach=20
    20-30 kts at 850mb, lifting isentropically atop a wavering front=20
    anchored NW to SE across the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic. This=20
    will produce additionally enhanced ascent to increase convective=20
    potential in that area.

    The high-res CAMs are in good agreement in a ribbon of widespread=20 thunderstorms during peak aftn/eve heating from Louisiana into=20
    Upstate NY, but organization is expected to be minimal as 0-6km bulk=20
    shear is progged to just be around 20-25 kts, and storms should move=20 progressively to the northeast on 20-30 kts of mean wind. However,=20
    any storm will likely contain impressive rain rates as PWs, which=20
    are currently analyzed via the CIPS LPW percentiles to be above the=20
    90th percentile from sfc-500mb, may approach 2 inches as far north=20
    as PA and NY, which would be daily records at both OKX and PIT if=20
    reached. This near-record PW and deep warm cloud depths of 13000-
    14000 ft will support hourly rainfall that has a chance (20-40%) of=20 exceeding 2"/hr, with sub-hourly rain rates of 3-4"/hr possible.

    Despite a lack of organization, repeating rounds of thunderstorms=20
    with these intense rain rates could produce stripes of rainfall=20
    exceeding 3" (50-60%) and locally 5" (20-30%) with the greatest=20
    potential for the higher accumulations are suggested by both HREF=20
    and REFS guidance occurring over PA invof the front.=20

    With FFG extremely compromised in parts of the Mid-Atlantic, this=20
    has prompted an upgrade to a MDT risk for excessive rainfall.=20
    Elsewhere, a SLGT risk continues for portions of the Central=20
    Appalachians, with a MRGL risk extending all the way to the Gulf=20
    Coast where heavy rain is also expected, but in a less organized=20
    fashion and atop drier antecedent soils with more filtration=20
    capacity.

    ...Central Plains...=20
    Generally flattened/zonal flow across the western CONUS will=20
    amplify today as a potent shortwave dives out of the Rockies and=20
    amplifies sharply into the Plains this evening. 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=20
    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.

    In the presence of these impressive thermodynamics, both REFS and=20
    HREF hourly rainfall probabilities have increased to above 40% for=20
    2"/hr rates, and it is likely maximum sub-hourly rainfall rates will=20
    be at least double that. This is in response to increasing shear and=20
    the upscale growth of thunderstorms into clusters or an MCS, to=20
    provide locally enhanced lift through convergence/mergers. The high-
    res CAMs are in generally good agreement in this evolution after 00Z=20 tonight, although some latitudinal spread continues, likely in=20
    response to an MCS presently moving across NE/KS, which will=20
    somewhat impact the evolution 24-hrs from now in response to=20
    residual boundary placement. The greatest potential for the heaviest=20 rainfall tonight is forecast to be across eastern KS and into=20
    northeast OK where both the REFS and HREF probabilities indicate a=20
    40-70% and 20-40% chance of 3" and 5", respectively. This will occur=20
    atop pre-conditioned soils from antecedent rainfall, leading to FFG=20 exceedance probabilities above 50%. Despite some uncertainty in=20
    timing and placement, the excessive rainfall risk has been upgraded
    to MDT for portions of KS after coordination with the affected=20
    WFOs.

    Weiss

    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=20
    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.=20

    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=20
    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!8XJZjKZu-q5b_lN9Q4YerS6oZgfTihxYEgpYnFYEQkRW= ikfEkncTIaAANFu_A0j0gsXcaz6JnlP25xLybATDW5-FKAY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8XJZjKZu-q5b_lN9Q4YerS6oZgfTihxYEgpYnFYEQkRW= ikfEkncTIaAANFu_A0j0gsXcaz6JnlP25xLybATDL6kz2es$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8XJZjKZu-q5b_lN9Q4YerS6oZgfTihxYEgpYnFYEQkRW= ikfEkncTIaAANFu_A0j0gsXcaz6JnlP25xLybATDOfY0_7Y$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 17 08:47:58 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 170847
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    447 AM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...Central Appalachians...
    Extreme thermodynamics expanding across the eastern CONUS will
    produce an environment favorable for widespread convection with
    heavy rainfall on Tuesday.

    The synoptic pattern responsible for this environment is set up by a
    broad Bermuda-type ridge centered off the southeast Atlantic coast.
    This ridge will expand northwestward, while a trough digs
    concurrently across the Mississippi Valley. This evolution will
    result in pinched flow between the two, accelerating the 850-500mb
    flow northeast as return flow emerges more impressively from the
    Gulf. Within this flow, multiple mid-level impulses/shortwaves
    will lift progressively northeast, providing waves of enhanced
    ascent from the Central Gulf Coast through the Mid-Atlantic states. Additionally, the low-level flow surging northeast will reach
    20-30 kts at 850mb, lifting isentropically atop a wavering front
    anchored NW to SE across the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic. This
    will produce additionally enhanced ascent to increase convective
    potential in that area.

    The high-res CAMs are in good agreement in a ribbon of widespread
    thunderstorms during peak aftn/eve heating from Louisiana into
    Upstate NY, but organization is expected to be minimal as 0-6km bulk
    shear is progged to just be around 20-25 kts, and storms should move progressively to the northeast on 20-30 kts of mean wind. However,
    any storm will likely contain impressive rain rates as PWs, which
    are currently analyzed via the CIPS LPW percentiles to be above the
    90th percentile from sfc-500mb, may approach 2 inches as far north
    as PA and NY, which would be daily records at both OKX and PIT if
    reached. This near-record PW and deep warm cloud depths of 13000-
    14000 ft will support hourly rainfall that has a chance (20-40%) of
    exceeding 2"/hr, with sub-hourly rain rates of 3-4"/hr possible.

    Despite a lack of organization, repeating rounds of thunderstorms
    with these intense rain rates could produce stripes of rainfall
    exceeding 3" (50-60%) and locally 5" (20-30%) with the greatest
    potential for the higher accumulations are suggested by both HREF
    and REFS guidance occurring over PA invof the front.

    With FFG extremely compromised in parts of the Mid-Atlantic, this
    has prompted an upgrade to a MDT risk for excessive rainfall.
    Elsewhere, a SLGT risk continues for portions of the Central
    Appalachians, with a MRGL risk extending all the way to the Gulf
    Coast where heavy rain is also expected, but in a less organized
    fashion and atop drier antecedent soils with more filtration
    capacity.

    ...Central Plains...
    Generally flattened/zonal flow across the western CONUS will
    amplify today as a potent shortwave dives out of the Rockies and
    amplifies sharply into the Plains this evening. 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.

    In the presence of these impressive thermodynamics, both REFS and
    HREF hourly rainfall probabilities have increased to above 40% for
    2"/hr rates, and it is likely maximum sub-hourly rainfall rates will
    be at least double that. This is in response to increasing shear and
    the upscale growth of thunderstorms into clusters or an MCS, to
    provide locally enhanced lift through convergence/mergers. The high-
    res CAMs are in generally good agreement in this evolution after 00Z
    tonight, although some latitudinal spread continues, likely in
    response to an MCS presently moving across NE/KS, which will
    somewhat impact the evolution 24-hrs from now in response to
    residual boundary placement. The greatest potential for the heaviest
    rainfall tonight is forecast to be across eastern KS and into
    northeast OK where both the REFS and HREF probabilities indicate a
    40-70% and 20-40% chance of 3" and 5", respectively. This will occur
    atop pre-conditioned soils from antecedent rainfall, leading to FFG
    exceedance probabilities above 50%. Despite some uncertainty in
    timing and placement, the excessive rainfall risk has been upgraded
    to MDT for portions of KS after coordination with the affected
    WFOs.

    Weiss

    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!-vS5LGvkMNU8n9ePZWfrdlGwwAuisICB8K8qiJHWLV5l= ogW7Df-0rVqvIHe_NZlHJUD2JPdM81n-eYEb7ohpcKa8XzA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-vS5LGvkMNU8n9ePZWfrdlGwwAuisICB8K8qiJHWLV5l= ogW7Df-0rVqvIHe_NZlHJUD2JPdM81n-eYEb7ohpNhWddWY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-vS5LGvkMNU8n9ePZWfrdlGwwAuisICB8K8qiJHWLV5l= ogW7Df-0rVqvIHe_NZlHJUD2JPdM81n-eYEb7ohpHCs8tzs$=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

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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

    =3D =3D =3D
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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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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 20 15:58:23 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 201557
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1157 AM EDT Fri Jun 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Jun 20 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE=20
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...Northern Plains into Upper Midwest...
    Model guidance indicates a well-defined mid level shortwave will=20
    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
    probable (up to around 70% chance in the HREF neighborhood probs)=20
    and a localized flash flood risk is possible. A Marginal risk was=20
    expanded west into these areas.

    A Slight risk was maintained across portions of=20
    northern/northeastern MN into far northern WI. An impressive low=20
    level jet and moisture transport axis will quickly evolve this=20
    evening into the overnight hours. CAMs forecast a pool of extreme=20 instability on the order of 4000-5000 J/kg and PWs increasing=20
    towards 2". While the progressive MCS tracks east across ND, we=20
    should see some downstream development over eastern ND into=20
    northern MN on the nose of this intense low level jet and along the
    instability gradient. Some west-to-east training of this activity=20
    is possible ahead of the upstream MCS that will also eventually=20
    push across the area.

    The degree of training remains a bit unclear, but the 12Z CAMs=20
    show max rainfall through 12Z of 3-5". Given the instability and=20
    moisture in place, totals of this magnitude do seem plausible. Also
    some uncertainty on the axis of heaviest rainfall, which should=20
    end up pretty narrow. The better instability will be south, however
    a strong mid level cap will be advecting northward likely putting=20
    a limit on how far south organized convection will get. The current
    Slight risk area encompasses the highest HREF probabilities, and=20
    while a bit broader than what will probably happen, accounts for=20
    some latitudinal uncertainty. Overall think isolated to scattered=20
    flash flooding could evolve from this setup, especially if there is
    overlap with the heavy rainfall axis from a couple days ago over=20
    northeast MN.

    Just southeast of the southeastern side of the Marginal risk (into
    Lower Michigan), a few 12Z CAMs show an area of developing rain=20
    this evening/overnight along a boundary (with potentially heavier=20
    amounts >3"), but confidence in this scenario is quite low as some=20
    other CAMs are basically dry.

    ...Iowa...
    Ongoing convection has been persistent this morning over=20
    central/eastern Iowa, already producing 1-2"/hr rates and 2-3"=20
    total rainfall. Cloud tops have maintained their intensity but may=20
    be showing signs of warming. Will keep the Marginal Risk contour=20
    which will cover the next few hours until this area finally=20
    dissipates this afternoon.

    ...Northern Rockies...
    A strong mid-level low moving into the Pacific Northwest will=20
    focus impressive synoptic ascent over MT today into tonight. Even=20
    this morning, convection has blossomed over northwestern Montana=20
    which will expand some this afternoon. PWs near the climatological=20
    90th percentile supports some heavier rates/amounts. Instability is
    likely the main limiting factor for excessive rainfall, and the=20
    probability of exceeding 1" per hour rain is pretty low (10-40%)=20
    because of this. However do think we will get some weak=20
    instability, which combined with the impressive dynamics, should=20
    still allow for some embedded heavier convective cores with over=20
    0.5" per hour rain (which was estimated per MRMS around 15Z). Most=20
    areas will probably see closer to 1" of rain; however, localized=20
    amounts over 2" are supported by the high res models which could=20
    result in an isolated flash flood risk.

    Fracasso/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
    still have a west to east orientation to it allowing for some
    training. The 00z HREF indicates 1" per hour exceedance
    neighborhood probabilities upwards of 60%, and 2" exceedance around
    20%. HREF blended mean QPF is in the 2-3" range and these amounts
    seem plausible wherever the convective training axis is Saturday
    morning. Amounts higher than this will probable be hard to come by
    given the quick system movement, however even totals of this
    magnitude could result in a localized flash flood threat. Some
    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
    portions of NY during the day Saturday. The maintenance of the
    activity is unclear as it will be moving into a more stable
    airmass. Generally think convection will weaken as it moves into
    NY...however with daytime heating some increase in instability over
    central NY could support at least some additional convective
    development during the day.

    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
    a very strong axis of low level moisture transport over top steep
    mid level lapse rates. In fact we could very well have an
    impressive MCS diving into NY and northern New England later
    Saturday night. The specifics remain a bit unclear, but at least a
    localized flash flood risk seems probable even with a forward
    propagating system. Certainly a chance this setup keeps some
    backbuilding convection across the area, and possible we will
    eventually need a Slight risk. However, given the uncertainty
    regarding the details, think a Marginal risk will suffice for now.

    ...Northwest Montana...
    A Marginal risk was maintained across portions of northwest MT
    where rainfall will continue into Saturday. By this time this
    region will be within the comma head of the low, and looking at
    more stratiform rain with lower rates. Thus probably not really a
    flash flood risk by this point, but with storm total rainfall
    potentially into the 3-4" range, some possible flood impacts still
    justify a Marginal risk. Snow levels will drop towards 4000 feet
    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
    pattern features a near record to record ridge over the eastern
    U.S. and a well defined longwave trough over the west. Southerly
    flow in between these features will supply ample moisture to NM,
    with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea. Thus no
    surprise that forecast PWs are well over the 90th percentile, and
    possibly approaching near record levels for late June. The better
    forcing from the western trough should hold of until Monday and
    Tuesday (see the day 4 and 5 EROs), but by Sunday we should at
    least have enough moisture and instability around for isolated to
    scattered convective development. This appears to be a solid
    Marginal risk with localized flash flooding expected...and can not
    rule out eventually needing a Slight risk. Sometimes these first
    day of the event situations can overperform as the clean start can
    allow for more destabilization and greater convective coverage
    than expected. However with Monday and Tuesday currently expected
    to be the bigger days, will keep this day 3 as a Marginal for now
    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!9NMj_3FwoEwIUj_BvbuyUfCI1g0aQQY8E34S1SY30BI0= rJO5vAKXpBtyM6mxc9jONunMjpvDw8bieqclRQfVSA9K-hQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9NMj_3FwoEwIUj_BvbuyUfCI1g0aQQY8E34S1SY30BI0= rJO5vAKXpBtyM6mxc9jONunMjpvDw8bieqclRQfVWFxger4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9NMj_3FwoEwIUj_BvbuyUfCI1g0aQQY8E34S1SY30BI0= rJO5vAKXpBtyM6mxc9jONunMjpvDw8bieqclRQfV5Zox7Fo$=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 19:34:35 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 201932
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    332 PM EDT Fri Jun 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z 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
    afternoon into tonight, with a surface low moving from southern MT
    into the Dakotas. High res guidance show convection developing near
    the MT/ND border this afternoon to the north of a warm front. An
    increasing low level jet by evening likely supports upscale growth
    of this activity as it moves eastward across ND. This convection
    will likely be quick-moving; however, 1"+ per hour rainfall appears
    probable (up to around 70% chance in the HREF neighborhood probs)
    and a localized flash flood risk is possible. A Marginal risk was
    expanded west into these areas.

    A Slight risk was maintained across portions of
    northern/northeastern MN into far northern WI. An impressive low
    level jet and moisture transport axis will quickly evolve this
    evening into the overnight hours. CAMs forecast a pool of extreme
    instability on the order of 4000-5000 J/kg and PWs increasing
    towards 2". While the progressive MCS tracks east across ND, we
    should see some downstream development over eastern ND into
    northern MN on the nose of this intense low level jet and along the
    instability gradient. Some west-to-east training of this activity
    is possible ahead of the upstream MCS that will also eventually
    push across the area.

    The degree of training remains a bit unclear, but the 12Z CAMs
    show max rainfall through 12Z of 3-5". Given the instability and
    moisture in place, totals of this magnitude do seem plausible. Also
    some uncertainty on the axis of heaviest rainfall, which should
    end up pretty narrow. The better instability will be south, however
    a strong mid level cap will be advecting northward likely putting
    a limit on how far south organized convection will get. The current
    Slight risk area encompasses the highest HREF probabilities, and
    while a bit broader than what will probably happen, accounts for
    some latitudinal uncertainty. Overall think isolated to scattered
    flash flooding could evolve from this setup, especially if there is
    overlap with the heavy rainfall axis from a couple days ago over
    northeast MN.

    Just southeast of the southeastern side of the Marginal risk (into
    Lower Michigan), a few 12Z CAMs show an area of developing rain
    this evening/overnight along a boundary (with potentially heavier
    amounts >3"), but confidence in this scenario is quite low as some
    other CAMs are basically dry.

    ...Iowa...
    Ongoing convection has been persistent this morning over
    central/eastern Iowa, already producing 1-2"/hr rates and 2-3"
    total rainfall. Cloud tops have maintained their intensity but may
    be showing signs of warming. Will keep the Marginal Risk contour
    which will cover the next few hours until this area finally
    dissipates this afternoon.

    ...Northern Rockies...
    A strong mid-level low moving into the Pacific Northwest will
    focus impressive synoptic ascent over MT today into tonight. Even
    this morning, convection has blossomed over northwestern Montana
    which will expand some this afternoon. PWs near the climatological
    90th percentile supports some heavier rates/amounts. Instability is
    likely the main limiting factor for excessive rainfall, and the
    probability of exceeding 1" per hour rain is pretty low (10-40%)
    because of this. However do think we will get some weak
    instability, which combined with the impressive dynamics, should
    still allow for some embedded heavier convective cores with over
    0.5" per hour rain (which was estimated per MRMS around 15Z). Most
    areas will probably see closer to 1" of rain; however, localized
    amounts over 2" are supported by the high res models which could
    result in an isolated flash flood risk.

    Fracasso/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=20
    THE NORTHERN GREAT LAKES, INTERIOR NORTHEAST, AND NORTHERN=20
    ROCKIES...

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Convection will likely be ongoing at 12z Sat across portions of=20
    northern MI into the UP. The overall convective complex should be=20 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 12z HREF indicates 1" per hour exceedance=20
    neighborhood probabilities of 20-50% and 2" exceedance around 10%=20
    (slight decrease from 00Z). HREF blended mean QPF came down a bit=20
    from 00Z, but could be underdone wherever the convective training=20
    axis aligns Saturday morning. Amounts higher than 2-3" will=20
    probably be hard to come by given the quick system movement,=20
    however even totals of this magnitude could result in a localized=20
    flash flood threat. Some latitudinal differences in the convective=20
    axis are noted, with both northern MI and the UP of MI potentially=20
    impacted. Maintained the Marginal risk given the uncertainty in=20
    placement astride the region.

    ...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.

    By Saturday night steeper lapse rates advect into the Northeast,=20
    resulting in what should be a pretty rapid increase in MUCAPE over=20
    western NY into northern New England. A well defined mid level=20
    shortwave and increasing low level moisture transport will probably
    kick off organized convective development over southern Canada by=20
    Saturday evening. This activity should track into portions of NY=20
    and northern New England overnight into early Sunday. It seems=20
    likely that this activity will have a better chance of persisting=20
    into NY and New England given what should be a very strong axis of=20
    low level moisture transport over top steep mid level lapse rates.=20
    In fact we could very well have an impressive MCS diving into NY=20
    and northern New England later Saturday night. The specifics remain
    a bit unclear, but at least a localized flash flood risk seems=20
    probable even with a forward propagating system. Certainly a chance
    this setup keeps some backbuilding convection across the area, and
    possible we will eventually need a Slight risk. However, given the
    uncertainty regarding the details, think a Marginal risk will=20
    suffice for now. 12Z CAMs still support this thinking with expected
    spread in specifics (track, intensity, amounts, etc.).

    ...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 by
    this time as well, so flood impacts will stay below that level.

    Fracasso/Chenard


    Day 3 Valid 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF EASTERN NEW MEXICO AND SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    Sunday is likely the beginning of what will be a multi-day period=20
    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 (which has been isolated the past=20
    couple of days). This appears to be a solid Marginal risk with=20
    localized flash flooding expected...and cannot rule out eventually=20
    needing a Slight risk depending on rainfall over the next two days=20
    and any trends in the guidance. Sometimes the first day of the=20
    event situations can overperform as the clean start can allow for=20
    more destabilization and greater convective coverage than expected.
    However with Monday and Tuesday currently expected to be the=20
    bigger days, will keep this day 3 as a Marginal for now and=20
    continue to monitor trends which are a bit inconsistent between the
    GFS and ECMWF suites of guidance.

    Fracasso/Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7E0LqT4ElWoR2chD9bI_e2_lOkfjpek2MfUQ0_DktVll= hsugIoRW7dNw-OVDyyQS3YksxBqbL9fCPk6i1Nkg7SLzs0I$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7E0LqT4ElWoR2chD9bI_e2_lOkfjpek2MfUQ0_DktVll= hsugIoRW7dNw-OVDyyQS3YksxBqbL9fCPk6i1Nkg2WprN0U$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7E0LqT4ElWoR2chD9bI_e2_lOkfjpek2MfUQ0_DktVll= hsugIoRW7dNw-OVDyyQS3YksxBqbL9fCPk6i1NkgBwsNRIU$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 21 00:57:46 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 210056
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    856 PM EDT Fri Jun 20 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Jun 21 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 21 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    01Z Update...
    With the convection now dissipated, the Marginal Risk area over
    Iowa was removed.=20

    Elsewhere, made minor adjustments based on current observation=20
    trends and recent hi-res guidance. A Slight Risk was maintained=20
    from the central North Dakota-Minnesota border through northern=20
    Minnesota into far northwestern Wisconsin. Recent runs of the HRRR=20
    and the HREF generally agree on an axis of moderate to heavy=20
    amounts across this area, with the 18Z HREF continuing to indicate=20
    1+ in/hr rainfall rates, producing localized accumulations over 2=20
    inches in this area.

    Pereira=20

    Previous Discussion...

    ...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
    afternoon into tonight, with a surface low moving from southern MT
    into the Dakotas. High res guidance show convection developing near
    the MT/ND border this afternoon to the north of a warm front. An
    increasing low level jet by evening likely supports upscale growth
    of this activity as it moves eastward across ND. This convection
    will likely be quick-moving; however, 1"+ per hour rainfall appears
    probable (up to around 70% chance in the HREF neighborhood probs)
    and a localized flash flood risk is possible. A Marginal risk was
    expanded west into these areas.

    A Slight risk was maintained across portions of northern/northeastern
    MN into far northern WI. An impressive low level jet and moisture=20
    transport axis will quickly evolve this evening into the overnight=20
    hours. CAMs forecast a pool of extreme instability on the order of=20
    4000-5000 J/kg and PWs increasing towards 2". While the progressive
    MCS tracks east across ND, we should see some downstream=20
    development over eastern ND into northern MN on the nose of this=20
    intense low level jet and along the instability gradient. Some=20
    west-to-east training of this activity is possible ahead of the=20
    upstream MCS that will also eventually push across the area.

    The degree of training remains a bit unclear, but the 12Z CAMs
    show max rainfall through 12Z of 3-5". Given the instability and
    moisture in place, totals of this magnitude do seem plausible. Also
    some uncertainty on the axis of heaviest rainfall, which should
    end up pretty narrow. The better instability will be south, however
    a strong mid level cap will be advecting northward likely putting
    a limit on how far south organized convection will get. The current
    Slight risk area encompasses the highest HREF probabilities, and
    while a bit broader than what will probably happen, accounts for
    some latitudinal uncertainty. Overall think isolated to scattered
    flash flooding could evolve from this setup, especially if there is
    overlap with the heavy rainfall axis from a couple days ago over
    northeast MN.

    Just southeast of the southeastern side of the Marginal risk (into
    Lower Michigan), a few 12Z CAMs show an area of developing rain
    this evening/overnight along a boundary (with potentially heavier
    amounts >3"), but confidence in this scenario is quite low as some
    other CAMs are basically dry.


    ...Northern Rockies...
    A strong mid-level low moving into the Pacific Northwest will
    focus impressive synoptic ascent over MT today into tonight. Even
    this morning, convection has blossomed over northwestern Montana
    which will expand some this afternoon. PWs near the climatological
    90th percentile supports some heavier rates/amounts. Instability is
    likely the main limiting factor for excessive rainfall, and the
    probability of exceeding 1" per hour rain is pretty low (10-40%)
    because of this. However do think we will get some weak
    instability, which combined with the impressive dynamics, should
    still allow for some embedded heavier convective cores with over
    0.5" per hour rain (which was estimated per MRMS around 15Z). Most
    areas will probably see closer to 1" of rain; however, localized
    amounts over 2" are supported by the high res models which could
    result in an isolated flash flood risk.

    Fracasso/Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 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
    still have a west-to-east orientation to it allowing for some
    training. The 12z HREF indicates 1" per hour exceedance
    neighborhood probabilities of 20-50% and 2" exceedance around 10%
    (slight decrease from 00Z). HREF blended mean QPF came down a bit
    from 00Z, but could be underdone wherever the convective training
    axis aligns Saturday morning. Amounts higher than 2-3" will
    probably be hard to come by given the quick system movement,
    however even totals of this magnitude could result in a localized
    flash flood threat. Some latitudinal differences in the convective
    axis are noted, with both northern MI and the UP of MI potentially
    impacted. Maintained the Marginal risk given the uncertainty in
    placement astride the region.

    ...New England...
    The aforementioned convection over MI will try to move into
    portions of NY during the day Saturday. The maintenance of the
    activity is unclear as it will be moving into a more stable
    airmass. Generally think convection will weaken as it moves into
    NY...however with daytime heating some increase in instability over
    central NY could support at least some additional convective
    development during the day.

    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 off 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 a very strong axis of
    low level moisture transport over top steep mid level lapse rates.
    In fact we could very well have an impressive MCS diving into NY
    and northern New England later Saturday night. The specifics remain
    a bit unclear, but at least a localized flash flood risk seems
    probable even with a forward propagating system. Certainly a chance
    this setup keeps some backbuilding convection across the area, and
    possible we will eventually need a Slight risk. However, given the
    uncertainty regarding the details, think a Marginal risk will
    suffice for now. 12Z CAMs still support this thinking with expected
    spread in specifics (track, intensity, amounts, etc.).

    ...Northwest Montana...
    A Marginal risk was maintained across portions of northwest MT
    where rainfall will continue into Saturday. By this time this
    region will be within the comma head of the low, and looking at
    more stratiform rain with lower rates. Thus probably not really a
    flash flood risk by this point, but with storm total rainfall
    potentially into the 3-4" range, some possible flood impacts still
    justify a Marginal risk. Snow levels will drop towards 4000 feet by
    this time as well, so flood impacts will stay below that level.

    Fracasso/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
    pattern features a near record to record ridge over the eastern
    U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the west. Southerly
    flow in between these features will supply ample moisture to NM,
    with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea. Thus no
    surprise that forecast PWs are well over the 90th percentile, and
    possibly approaching near record levels for late June. The better
    forcing from the western trough should hold of until Monday and
    Tuesday (see the day 4 and 5 EROs), but by Sunday we should at
    least have enough moisture and instability around for isolated to
    scattered convective development (which has been isolated the past
    couple of days). This appears to be a solid Marginal risk with
    localized flash flooding expected...and cannot rule out eventually
    needing a Slight risk depending on rainfall over the next two days
    and any trends in the guidance. Sometimes the first day of the
    event situations can overperform as the clean start can allow for
    more destabilization and greater convective coverage than expected.
    However with Monday and Tuesday currently expected to be the
    bigger days, will keep this day 3 as a Marginal for now and
    continue to monitor trends which are a bit inconsistent between the
    GFS and ECMWF suites of guidance.

    Fracasso/Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9zgOw0sQmbWJXOHhh8vIh-LvgwIAMscUcF-2l_QGdcxk= PLrOOtWw3MjsWDpOrRxKATbHjMEcwPQW7Mrv116MzZw44Yk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9zgOw0sQmbWJXOHhh8vIh-LvgwIAMscUcF-2l_QGdcxk= PLrOOtWw3MjsWDpOrRxKATbHjMEcwPQW7Mrv116MLZlDd4w$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9zgOw0sQmbWJXOHhh8vIh-LvgwIAMscUcF-2l_QGdcxk= PLrOOtWw3MjsWDpOrRxKATbHjMEcwPQW7Mrv116MA5z691M$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 21 08:29:39 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 210829
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    429 AM EDT Sat Jun 21 2025

    Day 1
    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 this morning across=20
    portions of the UP of MI. It still looks like the storm mode should
    be a progressive squall line, which would limit the duration of=20
    heavy rainfall and flash flood risk. However even the progressive=20
    convection will be capable of heavy rates, with a high likelihood=20
    of some 1"+ per hour totals, and a low chance of 2" per hour. Also=20
    can not rule out some brief backbuilding/training on the southwest=20
    flank of convection as it moves eastward. So while the flash flood=20
    risk should be relatively low, localized hydrologic issues can not=20
    be ruled out this morning. Convective and model trends suggest the=20
    better threat is over the UP of MI, and so we were able to cut=20
    back on the southern extent of the inherited risk area with this=20
    update.

    ...Northeast...=20
    Not expecting much convection during the day across the Northeast,
    however an uptick in activity is possible overnight into early=20
    Sunday. By tonight steeper lapse rates advect into the region,=20
    resulting in what should be a pretty rapid increase in MUCAPE over=20
    western NY into portions of VT and NH. The ongoing MCS over MN and=20
    MI should weaken as it approaches the Northeast this evening as=20
    instability will not have increased yet. However the parent mid=20
    level shortwave will remain upstream and expect an additional area=20
    of organized convection to develop with this over southern Canada.=20
    It is this next round that has a better chance of surviving into=20
    portions of NY/VT/NH by later tonight.

    The details of this remain unclear, but there should be enough
    instability and low level moisture transport/convergence to=20
    sustain some level of activity into the Northeast. Most indications
    from the 00z high res guidance is for a quick moving area of=20
    convection, and thus rainfall totals are not overly impressive.=20
    However given the ingredients in place there does seem to be some=20
    potential for an over performing area of convection with some brief backbuilding characteristics. The better chance of this would be=20
    along the instability gradient and southwest flank of=20
    activity...probably central/upstate NY and/or portions of VT/NH. A
    Marginal risk continues to suffice given the 00z suite of=20
    models...however will need to closely monitor observational and=20
    model trends through the day. Depending on how things evolve later
    tonight into early Sunday there is some chance for an embedded=20
    more focused flash flood risk within the broader Marginal, and can
    not rule out the eventual need for a Slight risk.

    ...Northwest Montana...
    A Marginal risk was maintained across portions of northwest MT
    where rainfall will continue into today. By this time this region=20
    will be within the comma head of the low, and looking at more=20
    stratiform rain with lower rates. Thus probably not really a flash=20
    flood risk by this point, but with an additional 1-3" of rain=20
    pushing storm total rainfall towards 4" in spots, some possible=20
    flood impacts still justify a Marginal risk. Snow levels will drop=20
    towards 4000 feet by this time as well, so flood impacts will stay=20
    below that level.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO AND SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    ...New Mexico and Texas...
    Sunday is likely the beginning of what will be a multi-day period=20
    of excessive rainfall potential over portions of west TX into NM.=20
    The mid/upper level pattern features a near record to record ridge=20
    over the eastern U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the=20
    west. Southerly flow in between these features will supply ample=20
    moisture to NM, with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea.
    The better forcing from the western trough will generally hold of=20
    until Monday and Tuesday (see the day 3 and 4 EROs), but by Sunday=20
    we should at least have enough moisture and instability around for=20
    scattered convective development. In fact PWs by Sunday should=20
    already be getting towards climatological max values for late June=20
    over portions of southwest TX and immediate adjacent areas of NM.=20
    And while the better forcing arrives Monday, do note broadly=20
    divergent flow at 250mb Sunday which could help sustain convection.

    Given these ingredients we went ahead and upgraded to a Slight risk
    for portions of southwest TX into Otero and Eddy counties in NM.
    Expecting enough convective development Sunday afternoon/evening,
    that combined with the near record PWs, suggests an isolated to
    scattered flash flood risk should evolve over these areas. A bit=20
    of uncertainty with how far north the Slight should extend into NM
    with some models supporting a farther north expansion. However the
    area currently highlighted shows the best overlap of the=20
    NAM/RRFS/ECMWF and likely has the higher probability of seeing=20
    flash flooding at the moment. The broad Marginal risk does still=20
    extend into much of the rest of eastern NM and covers the=20
    localized risk over those areas.

    ...Northern Minnesota...=20
    Went ahead and added a small Marginal risk over portions of=20
    northern MN with this update. The setup looks favorable for another
    round of organized convection Sunday afternoon and evening across=20
    this region. Strong shortwave energy ejecting into the northern=20
    Plains, a strengthening axis of low level moisture transport, and=20
    upwards of 4000 j/kg of MUCAPE will drive the convective threat.=20
    The combination of extreme instability, PWs well over the 90th=20
    percentile for late June, and a warm front focusing convection, all
    point to a heavy rainfall threat. Some uncertainty with the exact=20
    axis of convection, with some guidance focusing the bulk of=20
    convection farther north into Canada. However both GEFS and ECENS=20
    probs suggest some risk into northern MN, and the AIFS (which has a
    history of good convective qpf placement) also favors northern MN.
    Quite possible convection ends up blowing through quickly, so no=20
    need for anything more than a Marginal risk at this time. But will=20
    need to continue to monitor trends over the coming days.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO IOWA...

    ...Southwest...
    The overall pattern over the Southwest described in the day 2=20
    discussion will persist into the day 3 period. By day 3 forcing,=20
    moisture and instability should all be on the increase, and thus=20
    expect convective coverage and flash flood risk to be on the=20
    rise as well. The gradual approach of the west coast trough will=20
    bring the right entrance region of the upper jet closer, and=20
    continued moisture advection in between the trough and the east=20
    coast ridge will push PWs well above the climatological 90th=20
    percentile and towards late June max levels. Instability is a bit=20
    of a question as cloud cover debris from Sundays activity could=20
    play a role...however the model consensus is for increased=20
    instability compared to Sunday, with values averaging 1000-2000=20
    j/kg over much of eastern NM into far west TX. Not a ton of deep=20
    layer flow, so convection forming on/near terrain should slowly=20
    move off the terrain and allow for some cell merger activity. The=20
    expected convective coverage should eventually erode instability=20
    enough that activity trends down by overnight...but not before what
    should be a more widespread isolated/scattered flash flood risk=20
    over eastern NM and west TX where a Slight risk remains. The=20
    western edge of this risk area was adjusted eastward a tad, as=20
    model trends now support a slightly farther east axis.

    Some uncertainty on where any more focused risk could evolve, but=20
    the better model clustering is over southwest TX into southeast NM=20
    and consider the threat over this corridor a higher end Slight=20
    risk. This includes the sensitive Sacramento Mountain burn scar=20
    areas, where localized significant flash flood impacts are a=20
    possibility.

    ...Central Plains to MS Valley...
    A Slight risk remains from portions of central KS into southeast=20
    NE and much of central and northern IA where convection along a=20
    stationary front poses an isolated to scattered flash flood risk.=20
    Model guidance indicates convective development along/near this=20
    front Monday afternoon, with some persistence and/or upscale=20
    development possible Monday evening as low level moisture=20
    transport increases. Corfidi vectors over this area are divergent,
    indicating a favorable environment for slow moving/backbuilding=20
    convection near this front. PWs should be well over the 90th=20
    percentile for late June along this front, as the same plume of=20
    moisture over the Southwest will be in place here as well. Thus=20
    any training of convection will pose a flash flood risk.=20
    Maintenance of instability is probably the main question mark, as=20
    the pool of forecast instability is not overly impressive and=20
    neither is the magnitude of the low level jet...so the extent of=20
    convective persistence into the overnight is a bit unclear.=20
    Nonetheless, the unanimous model signal for organized convective=20 development, combined with the stationary front/convergence and=20
    high PWs supports at least an isolated to scattered flash flood=20
    potential. Thus the Slight risk was maintained. Overall models are=20
    in fairly good agreement with the favored convective axis, and thus
    not much change was needed to the inherited risk area.=20

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8cATMoABoP5c72zHzxfb87rvrniRe_0oItHeA01hod-G= 4SqI9xQ6TWdeigQBjt96L46V8uP6VgaT8u5-BOwsCCVKbnA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8cATMoABoP5c72zHzxfb87rvrniRe_0oItHeA01hod-G= 4SqI9xQ6TWdeigQBjt96L46V8uP6VgaT8u5-BOwso6dbhy8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8cATMoABoP5c72zHzxfb87rvrniRe_0oItHeA01hod-G= 4SqI9xQ6TWdeigQBjt96L46V8uP6VgaT8u5-BOwsaTAQi7s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 21 10:58:11 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 211057
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    657 AM EDT Sat Jun 21 2025

    Day 1
    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...

    11Z Update...
    Expanded Marginal Risk south to match and be ahead of ongoing
    activity in northern Wisconsin that has a training threat as it
    shifts east over the northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan this
    morning through midday.

    Jackson

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Convection will likely be ongoing at 12z this morning across
    portions of the UP of MI. It still looks like the storm mode should
    be a progressive squall line, which would limit the duration of
    heavy rainfall and flash flood risk. However even the progressive
    convection will be capable of heavy rates, with a high likelihood
    of some 1"+ per hour totals, and a low chance of 2" per hour. Also
    can not rule out some brief backbuilding/training on the southwest
    flank of convection as it moves eastward. So while the flash flood
    risk should be relatively low, localized hydrologic issues can not
    be ruled out this morning. Convective and model trends suggest the
    better threat is over the UP of MI, and so we were able to cut
    back on the southern extent of the inherited risk area with this
    update.

    ...Northeast...
    Not expecting much convection during the day across the Northeast,
    however an uptick in activity is possible overnight into early
    Sunday. By tonight steeper lapse rates advect into the region,
    resulting in what should be a pretty rapid increase in MUCAPE over
    western NY into portions of VT and NH. The ongoing MCS over MN and
    MI should weaken as it approaches the Northeast this evening as
    instability will not have increased yet. However the parent mid
    level shortwave will remain upstream and expect an additional area
    of organized convection to develop with this over southern Canada.
    It is this next round that has a better chance of surviving into
    portions of NY/VT/NH by later tonight.

    The details of this remain unclear, but there should be enough
    instability and low level moisture transport/convergence to
    sustain some level of activity into the Northeast. Most indications
    from the 00z high res guidance is for a quick moving area of
    convection, and thus rainfall totals are not overly impressive.
    However given the ingredients in place there does seem to be some
    potential for an over performing area of convection with some brief backbuilding characteristics. The better chance of this would be
    along the instability gradient and southwest flank of
    activity...probably central/upstate NY and/or portions of VT/NH. A
    Marginal risk continues to suffice given the 00z suite of
    models...however will need to closely monitor observational and
    model trends through the day. Depending on how things evolve later
    tonight into early Sunday there is some chance for an embedded
    more focused flash flood risk within the broader Marginal, and can
    not rule out the eventual need for a Slight risk.

    ...Northwest Montana...
    A Marginal risk was maintained across portions of northwest MT
    where rainfall will continue into today. By this time this region
    will be within the comma head of the low, and looking at more
    stratiform rain with lower rates. Thus probably not really a flash
    flood risk by this point, but with an additional 1-3" of rain
    pushing storm total rainfall towards 4" in spots, some possible
    flood impacts still justify a Marginal risk. Snow levels will drop
    towards 4000 feet by this time as well, so flood impacts will stay
    below that level.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO AND SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    ...New Mexico and Texas...
    Sunday is likely the beginning of what will be a multi-day period
    of excessive rainfall potential over portions of west TX into NM.
    The mid/upper level pattern features a near record to record ridge
    over the eastern U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the
    west. Southerly flow in between these features will supply ample
    moisture to NM, with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea.
    The better forcing from the western trough will generally hold of
    until Monday and Tuesday (see the day 3 and 4 EROs), but by Sunday
    we should at least have enough moisture and instability around for
    scattered convective development. In fact PWs by Sunday should
    already be getting towards climatological max values for late June
    over portions of southwest TX and immediate adjacent areas of NM.
    And while the better forcing arrives Monday, do note broadly
    divergent flow at 250mb Sunday which could help sustain convection.

    Given these ingredients we went ahead and upgraded to a Slight risk
    for portions of southwest TX into Otero and Eddy counties in NM.
    Expecting enough convective development Sunday afternoon/evening,
    that combined with the near record PWs, suggests an isolated to
    scattered flash flood risk should evolve over these areas. A bit
    of uncertainty with how far north the Slight should extend into NM
    with some models supporting a farther north expansion. However the
    area currently highlighted shows the best overlap of the
    NAM/RRFS/ECMWF and likely has the higher probability of seeing
    flash flooding at the moment. The broad Marginal risk does still
    extend into much of the rest of eastern NM and covers the
    localized risk over those areas.

    ...Northern Minnesota...
    Went ahead and added a small Marginal risk over portions of
    northern MN with this update. The setup looks favorable for another
    round of organized convection Sunday afternoon and evening across
    this region. Strong shortwave energy ejecting into the northern
    Plains, a strengthening axis of low level moisture transport, and
    upwards of 4000 j/kg of MUCAPE will drive the convective threat.
    The combination of extreme instability, PWs well over the 90th
    percentile for late June, and a warm front focusing convection, all
    point to a heavy rainfall threat. Some uncertainty with the exact
    axis of convection, with some guidance focusing the bulk of
    convection farther north into Canada. However both GEFS and ECENS
    probs suggest some risk into northern MN, and the AIFS (which has a
    history of good convective qpf placement) also favors northern MN.
    Quite possible convection ends up blowing through quickly, so no
    need for anything more than a Marginal risk at this time. But will
    need to continue to monitor trends over the coming days.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO IOWA...

    ...Southwest...
    The overall pattern over the Southwest described in the day 2
    discussion will persist into the day 3 period. By day 3 forcing,
    moisture and instability should all be on the increase, and thus
    expect convective coverage and flash flood risk to be on the
    rise as well. The gradual approach of the west coast trough will
    bring the right entrance region of the upper jet closer, and
    continued moisture advection in between the trough and the east
    coast ridge will push PWs well above the climatological 90th
    percentile and towards late June max levels. Instability is a bit
    of a question as cloud cover debris from Sundays activity could
    play a role...however the model consensus is for increased
    instability compared to Sunday, with values averaging 1000-2000
    j/kg over much of eastern NM into far west TX. Not a ton of deep
    layer flow, so convection forming on/near terrain should slowly
    move off the terrain and allow for some cell merger activity. The
    expected convective coverage should eventually erode instability
    enough that activity trends down by overnight...but not before what
    should be a more widespread isolated/scattered flash flood risk
    over eastern NM and west TX where a Slight risk remains. The
    western edge of this risk area was adjusted eastward a tad, as
    model trends now support a slightly farther east axis.

    Some uncertainty on where any more focused risk could evolve, but
    the better model clustering is over southwest TX into southeast NM
    and consider the threat over this corridor a higher end Slight
    risk. This includes the sensitive Sacramento Mountain burn scar
    areas, where localized significant flash flood impacts are a
    possibility.

    ...Central Plains to MS Valley...
    A Slight risk remains from portions of central KS into southeast
    NE and much of central and northern IA where convection along a
    stationary front poses an isolated to scattered flash flood risk.
    Model guidance indicates convective development along/near this
    front Monday afternoon, with some persistence and/or upscale
    development possible Monday evening as low level moisture
    transport increases. Corfidi vectors over this area are divergent,
    indicating a favorable environment for slow moving/backbuilding
    convection near this front. PWs should be well over the 90th
    percentile for late June along this front, as the same plume of
    moisture over the Southwest will be in place here as well. Thus
    any training of convection will pose a flash flood risk.
    Maintenance of instability is probably the main question mark, as
    the pool of forecast instability is not overly impressive and
    neither is the magnitude of the low level jet...so the extent of
    convective persistence into the overnight is a bit unclear.
    Nonetheless, the unanimous model signal for organized convective
    development, combined with the stationary front/convergence and
    high PWs supports at least an isolated to scattered flash flood
    potential. Thus the Slight risk was maintained. Overall models are
    in fairly good agreement with the favored convective axis, and thus
    not much change was needed to the inherited risk area.

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9D-_VODODw2BkuUS72zLokuFQr5iXfep3KIPR40ruuas= T-E38BVbg0-UOTF55oY6RfrO8ozDuzT9Us1xSxCYxiOiF14$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9D-_VODODw2BkuUS72zLokuFQr5iXfep3KIPR40ruuas= T-E38BVbg0-UOTF55oY6RfrO8ozDuzT9Us1xSxCYWf3Fbl4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9D-_VODODw2BkuUS72zLokuFQr5iXfep3KIPR40ruuas= T-E38BVbg0-UOTF55oY6RfrO8ozDuzT9Us1xSxCYezn1fek$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 21 15:48:54 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 211548
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1148 AM EDT Sat Jun 21 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z 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...

    16Z Update...
    On-going outlook still in pretty good shape following the 11Z
    update. Changes were few and made to fit trends seen in radar and
    satellite imagery. There was a slight westward expansion in the
    Marginal risk area given persistent signal for moisture flux
    convergence in the higher resolution guidance...including the most
    recent HREF/RRFS runs.

    Bann


    11Z Update...
    Expanded Marginal Risk south to match and be ahead of ongoing
    activity in northern Wisconsin that has a training threat as it
    shifts east over the northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan this
    morning through midday.

    Jackson

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Convection will likely be ongoing at 12z this morning across
    portions of the UP of MI. It still looks like the storm mode should
    be a progressive squall line, which would limit the duration of
    heavy rainfall and flash flood risk. However even the progressive
    convection will be capable of heavy rates, with a high likelihood
    of some 1"+ per hour totals, and a low chance of 2" per hour. Also
    can not rule out some brief backbuilding/training on the southwest
    flank of convection as it moves eastward. So while the flash flood
    risk should be relatively low, localized hydrologic issues can not
    be ruled out this morning. Convective and model trends suggest the
    better threat is over the UP of MI, and so we were able to cut
    back on the southern extent of the inherited risk area with this
    update.

    ...Northeast...
    Not expecting much convection during the day across the Northeast,
    however an uptick in activity is possible overnight into early
    Sunday. By tonight steeper lapse rates advect into the region,
    resulting in what should be a pretty rapid increase in MUCAPE over
    western NY into portions of VT and NH. The ongoing MCS over MN and
    MI should weaken as it approaches the Northeast this evening as
    instability will not have increased yet. However the parent mid
    level shortwave will remain upstream and expect an additional area
    of organized convection to develop with this over southern Canada.
    It is this next round that has a better chance of surviving into
    portions of NY/VT/NH by later tonight.

    The details of this remain unclear, but there should be enough
    instability and low level moisture transport/convergence to
    sustain some level of activity into the Northeast. Most indications
    from the 00z high res guidance is for a quick moving area of
    convection, and thus rainfall totals are not overly impressive.
    However given the ingredients in place there does seem to be some
    potential for an over performing area of convection with some brief backbuilding characteristics. The better chance of this would be
    along the instability gradient and southwest flank of
    activity...probably central/upstate NY and/or portions of VT/NH. A
    Marginal risk continues to suffice given the 00z suite of
    models...however will need to closely monitor observational and
    model trends through the day. Depending on how things evolve later
    tonight into early Sunday there is some chance for an embedded
    more focused flash flood risk within the broader Marginal, and can
    not rule out the eventual need for a Slight risk.

    ...Northwest Montana...
    A Marginal risk was maintained across portions of northwest MT
    where rainfall will continue into today. By this time this region
    will be within the comma head of the low, and looking at more
    stratiform rain with lower rates. Thus probably not really a flash
    flood risk by this point, but with an additional 1-3" of rain
    pushing storm total rainfall towards 4" in spots, some possible
    flood impacts still justify a Marginal risk. Snow levels will drop
    towards 4000 feet by this time as well, so flood impacts will stay
    below that level.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO AND SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    ...New Mexico and Texas...
    Sunday is likely the beginning of what will be a multi-day period
    of excessive rainfall potential over portions of west TX into NM.
    The mid/upper level pattern features a near record to record ridge
    over the eastern U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the
    west. Southerly flow in between these features will supply ample
    moisture to NM, with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea.
    The better forcing from the western trough will generally hold of
    until Monday and Tuesday (see the day 3 and 4 EROs), but by Sunday
    we should at least have enough moisture and instability around for
    scattered convective development. In fact PWs by Sunday should
    already be getting towards climatological max values for late June
    over portions of southwest TX and immediate adjacent areas of NM.
    And while the better forcing arrives Monday, do note broadly
    divergent flow at 250mb Sunday which could help sustain convection.

    Given these ingredients we went ahead and upgraded to a Slight risk
    for portions of southwest TX into Otero and Eddy counties in NM.
    Expecting enough convective development Sunday afternoon/evening,
    that combined with the near record PWs, suggests an isolated to
    scattered flash flood risk should evolve over these areas. A bit
    of uncertainty with how far north the Slight should extend into NM
    with some models supporting a farther north expansion. However the
    area currently highlighted shows the best overlap of the
    NAM/RRFS/ECMWF and likely has the higher probability of seeing
    flash flooding at the moment. The broad Marginal risk does still
    extend into much of the rest of eastern NM and covers the
    localized risk over those areas.

    ...Northern Minnesota...
    Went ahead and added a small Marginal risk over portions of
    northern MN with this update. The setup looks favorable for another
    round of organized convection Sunday afternoon and evening across
    this region. Strong shortwave energy ejecting into the northern
    Plains, a strengthening axis of low level moisture transport, and
    upwards of 4000 j/kg of MUCAPE will drive the convective threat.
    The combination of extreme instability, PWs well over the 90th
    percentile for late June, and a warm front focusing convection, all
    point to a heavy rainfall threat. Some uncertainty with the exact
    axis of convection, with some guidance focusing the bulk of
    convection farther north into Canada. However both GEFS and ECENS
    probs suggest some risk into northern MN, and the AIFS (which has a
    history of good convective qpf placement) also favors northern MN.
    Quite possible convection ends up blowing through quickly, so no
    need for anything more than a Marginal risk at this time. But will
    need to continue to monitor trends over the coming days.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO IOWA...

    ...Southwest...
    The overall pattern over the Southwest described in the day 2
    discussion will persist into the day 3 period. By day 3 forcing,
    moisture and instability should all be on the increase, and thus
    expect convective coverage and flash flood risk to be on the
    rise as well. The gradual approach of the west coast trough will
    bring the right entrance region of the upper jet closer, and
    continued moisture advection in between the trough and the east
    coast ridge will push PWs well above the climatological 90th
    percentile and towards late June max levels. Instability is a bit
    of a question as cloud cover debris from Sundays activity could
    play a role...however the model consensus is for increased
    instability compared to Sunday, with values averaging 1000-2000
    j/kg over much of eastern NM into far west TX. Not a ton of deep
    layer flow, so convection forming on/near terrain should slowly
    move off the terrain and allow for some cell merger activity. The
    expected convective coverage should eventually erode instability
    enough that activity trends down by overnight...but not before what
    should be a more widespread isolated/scattered flash flood risk
    over eastern NM and west TX where a Slight risk remains. The
    western edge of this risk area was adjusted eastward a tad, as
    model trends now support a slightly farther east axis.

    Some uncertainty on where any more focused risk could evolve, but
    the better model clustering is over southwest TX into southeast NM
    and consider the threat over this corridor a higher end Slight
    risk. This includes the sensitive Sacramento Mountain burn scar
    areas, where localized significant flash flood impacts are a
    possibility.

    ...Central Plains to MS Valley...
    A Slight risk remains from portions of central KS into southeast
    NE and much of central and northern IA where convection along a
    stationary front poses an isolated to scattered flash flood risk.
    Model guidance indicates convective development along/near this
    front Monday afternoon, with some persistence and/or upscale
    development possible Monday evening as low level moisture
    transport increases. Corfidi vectors over this area are divergent,
    indicating a favorable environment for slow moving/backbuilding
    convection near this front. PWs should be well over the 90th
    percentile for late June along this front, as the same plume of
    moisture over the Southwest will be in place here as well. Thus
    any training of convection will pose a flash flood risk.
    Maintenance of instability is probably the main question mark, as
    the pool of forecast instability is not overly impressive and
    neither is the magnitude of the low level jet...so the extent of
    convective persistence into the overnight is a bit unclear.
    Nonetheless, the unanimous model signal for organized convective
    development, combined with the stationary front/convergence and
    high PWs supports at least an isolated to scattered flash flood
    potential. Thus the Slight risk was maintained. Overall models are
    in fairly good agreement with the favored convective axis, and thus
    not much change was needed to the inherited risk area.

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5jlS3gg-gPhGv0ctQE7frgnZm8oNkwQsJlTwOPjaBAix= -FblMbFq0leDdjslxtvsW8Rbh8jx3v-O0LvFSOnuKdCzOpg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5jlS3gg-gPhGv0ctQE7frgnZm8oNkwQsJlTwOPjaBAix= -FblMbFq0leDdjslxtvsW8Rbh8jx3v-O0LvFSOnu8ciOoco$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5jlS3gg-gPhGv0ctQE7frgnZm8oNkwQsJlTwOPjaBAix= -FblMbFq0leDdjslxtvsW8Rbh8jx3v-O0LvFSOnuAkK2-OA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 21 20:30:30 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 212030
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    430 PM EDT Sat Jun 21 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z 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...

    16Z Update...
    On-going outlook still in pretty good shape following the 11Z
    update. Changes were few and made to fit trends seen in radar and
    satellite imagery. There was a slight westward expansion in the
    Marginal risk area given persistent signal for moisture flux
    convergence in the higher resolution guidance...including the most
    recent HREF/RRFS runs.

    Bann


    11Z Update...
    Expanded Marginal Risk south to match and be ahead of ongoing
    activity in northern Wisconsin that has a training threat as it
    shifts east over the northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan this
    morning through midday.

    Jackson

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Convection will likely be ongoing at 12z this morning across
    portions of the UP of MI. It still looks like the storm mode should
    be a progressive squall line, which would limit the duration of
    heavy rainfall and flash flood risk. However even the progressive
    convection will be capable of heavy rates, with a high likelihood
    of some 1"+ per hour totals, and a low chance of 2" per hour. Also
    can not rule out some brief backbuilding/training on the southwest
    flank of convection as it moves eastward. So while the flash flood
    risk should be relatively low, localized hydrologic issues can not
    be ruled out this morning. Convective and model trends suggest the
    better threat is over the UP of MI, and so we were able to cut
    back on the southern extent of the inherited risk area with this
    update.

    ...Northeast...
    Not expecting much convection during the day across the Northeast,
    however an uptick in activity is possible overnight into early
    Sunday. By tonight steeper lapse rates advect into the region,
    resulting in what should be a pretty rapid increase in MUCAPE over
    western NY into portions of VT and NH. The ongoing MCS over MN and
    MI should weaken as it approaches the Northeast this evening as
    instability will not have increased yet. However the parent mid
    level shortwave will remain upstream and expect an additional area
    of organized convection to develop with this over southern Canada.
    It is this next round that has a better chance of surviving into
    portions of NY/VT/NH by later tonight.

    The details of this remain unclear, but there should be enough
    instability and low level moisture transport/convergence to
    sustain some level of activity into the Northeast. Most indications
    from the 00z high res guidance is for a quick moving area of
    convection, and thus rainfall totals are not overly impressive.
    However given the ingredients in place there does seem to be some
    potential for an over performing area of convection with some brief backbuilding characteristics. The better chance of this would be
    along the instability gradient and southwest flank of
    activity...probably central/upstate NY and/or portions of VT/NH. A
    Marginal risk continues to suffice given the 00z suite of
    models...however will need to closely monitor observational and
    model trends through the day. Depending on how things evolve later
    tonight into early Sunday there is some chance for an embedded
    more focused flash flood risk within the broader Marginal, and can
    not rule out the eventual need for a Slight risk.

    ...Northwest Montana...
    A Marginal risk was maintained across portions of northwest MT
    where rainfall will continue into today. By this time this region
    will be within the comma head of the low, and looking at more
    stratiform rain with lower rates. Thus probably not really a flash
    flood risk by this point, but with an additional 1-3" of rain
    pushing storm total rainfall towards 4" in spots, some possible
    flood impacts still justify a Marginal risk. Snow levels will drop
    towards 4000 feet by this time as well, so flood impacts will stay
    below that level.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO AND SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Latest numerical guidance remained in good agreement with previous
    runs about the large-scale features and the associated increase in
    the risk of excessive rainfall beginning as early as Sunday. As a result...little change was needed to the Excessive Rainfall=20
    Outlook for Sunday.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...New Mexico and Texas...
    Sunday is likely the beginning of what will be a multi-day period
    of excessive rainfall potential over portions of west TX into NM.
    The mid/upper level pattern features a near record to record ridge
    over the eastern U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the
    west. Southerly flow in between these features will supply ample
    moisture to NM, with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea.
    The better forcing from the western trough will generally hold of
    until Monday and Tuesday (see the day 3 and 4 EROs), but by Sunday
    we should at least have enough moisture and instability around for
    scattered convective development. In fact PWs by Sunday should
    already be getting towards climatological max values for late June
    over portions of southwest TX and immediate adjacent areas of NM.
    And while the better forcing arrives Monday, do note broadly
    divergent flow at 250mb Sunday which could help sustain convection.

    Given these ingredients we went ahead and upgraded to a Slight risk
    for portions of southwest TX into Otero and Eddy counties in NM.
    Expecting enough convective development Sunday afternoon/evening,
    that combined with the near record PWs, suggests an isolated to
    scattered flash flood risk should evolve over these areas. A bit
    of uncertainty with how far north the Slight should extend into NM
    with some models supporting a farther north expansion. However the
    area currently highlighted shows the best overlap of the
    NAM/RRFS/ECMWF and likely has the higher probability of seeing
    flash flooding at the moment. The broad Marginal risk does still
    extend into much of the rest of eastern NM and covers the
    localized risk over those areas.

    ...Northern Minnesota...
    Went ahead and added a small Marginal risk over portions of
    northern MN with this update. The setup looks favorable for another
    round of organized convection Sunday afternoon and evening across
    this region. Strong shortwave energy ejecting into the northern
    Plains, a strengthening axis of low level moisture transport, and
    upwards of 4000 j/kg of MUCAPE will drive the convective threat.
    The combination of extreme instability, PWs well over the 90th
    percentile for late June, and a warm front focusing convection, all
    point to a heavy rainfall threat. Some uncertainty with the exact
    axis of convection, with some guidance focusing the bulk of
    convection farther north into Canada. However both GEFS and ECENS
    probs suggest some risk into northern MN, and the AIFS (which has a
    history of good convective qpf placement) also favors northern MN.
    Quite possible convection ends up blowing through quickly, so no
    need for anything more than a Marginal risk at this time. But will
    need to continue to monitor trends over the coming days.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO IOWA...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Latest numerical guidance remained in good agreement with previous
    runs about the large-scale features and the associated
    increasing areal coverage of moderate to heavy
    rainfall...especially in New Mexico and West Texas as well as=20
    across parts of the Missouri Valley on Monday/Monday night. As a=20 result...little change was needed to the previously issued Excessive
    Rainfall Outlook for Day 3.=20

    Bann

    ...Southwest...
    The overall pattern over the Southwest described in the day 2
    discussion will persist into the day 3 period. By day 3 forcing,
    moisture and instability should all be on the increase, and thus
    expect convective coverage and flash flood risk to be on the
    rise as well. The gradual approach of the west coast trough will
    bring the right entrance region of the upper jet closer, and
    continued moisture advection in between the trough and the east
    coast ridge will push PWs well above the climatological 90th
    percentile and towards late June max levels. Instability is a bit
    of a question as cloud cover debris from Sundays activity could
    play a role...however the model consensus is for increased
    instability compared to Sunday, with values averaging 1000-2000
    j/kg over much of eastern NM into far west TX. Not a ton of deep
    layer flow, so convection forming on/near terrain should slowly
    move off the terrain and allow for some cell merger activity. The
    expected convective coverage should eventually erode instability
    enough that activity trends down by overnight...but not before what
    should be a more widespread isolated/scattered flash flood risk
    over eastern NM and west TX where a Slight risk remains. The
    western edge of this risk area was adjusted eastward a tad, as
    model trends now support a slightly farther east axis.

    Some uncertainty on where any more focused risk could evolve, but
    the better model clustering is over southwest TX into southeast NM
    and consider the threat over this corridor a higher end Slight
    risk. This includes the sensitive Sacramento Mountain burn scar
    areas, where localized significant flash flood impacts are a
    possibility.

    ...Central Plains to MS Valley...
    A Slight risk remains from portions of central KS into southeast
    NE and much of central and northern IA where convection along a
    stationary front poses an isolated to scattered flash flood risk.
    Model guidance indicates convective development along/near this
    front Monday afternoon, with some persistence and/or upscale
    development possible Monday evening as low level moisture
    transport increases. Corfidi vectors over this area are divergent,
    indicating a favorable environment for slow moving/backbuilding
    convection near this front. PWs should be well over the 90th
    percentile for late June along this front, as the same plume of
    moisture over the Southwest will be in place here as well. Thus
    any training of convection will pose a flash flood risk.
    Maintenance of instability is probably the main question mark, as
    the pool of forecast instability is not overly impressive and
    neither is the magnitude of the low level jet...so the extent of
    convective persistence into the overnight is a bit unclear.
    Nonetheless, the unanimous model signal for organized convective
    development, combined with the stationary front/convergence and
    high PWs supports at least an isolated to scattered flash flood
    potential. Thus the Slight risk was maintained. Overall models are
    in fairly good agreement with the favored convective axis, and thus
    not much change was needed to the inherited risk area.

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5dCYd6jhbD_PVxdFQSJBfJ1-InKmFoZKp9dH1bo4Buec= OP2ofuFDdr2Ing1KtGD3Gcr0geaJOPbvge4R6DbxmsQUSHk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5dCYd6jhbD_PVxdFQSJBfJ1-InKmFoZKp9dH1bo4Buec= OP2ofuFDdr2Ing1KtGD3Gcr0geaJOPbvge4R6DbxILWMJV4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5dCYd6jhbD_PVxdFQSJBfJ1-InKmFoZKp9dH1bo4Buec= OP2ofuFDdr2Ing1KtGD3Gcr0geaJOPbvge4R6Dbx592QLy0$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 22 00:55:47 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 220055
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    855 PM EDT Sat Jun 21 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN GREAT LAKES AND THE INTERIOR NORTHEAST...

    01Z Update...
    With some minor adjustments, Marginal Risk areas were maintained
    over portions of northern Michigan, as well as northern New York
    and Vermont.

    Across northern Michigan, the latest HRRR has shown an uptick in=20
    amounts centered near the Tip of the Mitt and the eastern U.P.,=20
    where storms may develop and lift north from a slow-moving=20
    boundary. While the latest mesoanalysis shows plenty of moisture=20
    (PWs 1.8+ inches) and instability (MUCAPE 3000+ J/kg), it also=20
    shows a fair amount of CIN, which along with a capped environment,=20
    is likely to hinder any widespread development.

    Further to the east, the complex developing over southwestern=20 Ontario/southern Quebec is expected to move into northern New York
    and New England tonight. The latest guidance is not indicating
    widespread heavy amounts, however a period of training may
    contribute to some localized heavier totals (1-2 inches) and an=20
    isolated flash flood threat.

    Pereira

    Previous Discussion...
    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Convection will likely be ongoing at 12z this morning across
    portions of the UP of MI. It still looks like the storm mode should
    be a progressive squall line, which would limit the duration of
    heavy rainfall and flash flood risk. However even the progressive
    convection will be capable of heavy rates, with a high likelihood
    of some 1"+ per hour totals, and a low chance of 2" per hour. Also
    can not rule out some brief backbuilding/training on the southwest
    flank of convection as it moves eastward. So while the flash flood
    risk should be relatively low, localized hydrologic issues can not
    be ruled out this morning. Convective and model trends suggest the
    better threat is over the UP of MI, and so we were able to cut
    back on the southern extent of the inherited risk area with this
    update.

    ...Northeast...
    Not expecting much convection during the day across the Northeast,
    however an uptick in activity is possible overnight into early
    Sunday. By tonight steeper lapse rates advect into the region,
    resulting in what should be a pretty rapid increase in MUCAPE over
    western NY into portions of VT and NH. The ongoing MCS over MN and
    MI should weaken as it approaches the Northeast this evening as
    instability will not have increased yet. However the parent mid
    level shortwave will remain upstream and expect an additional area
    of organized convection to develop with this over southern Canada.
    It is this next round that has a better chance of surviving into
    portions of NY/VT/NH by later tonight.

    The details of this remain unclear, but there should be enough
    instability and low level moisture transport/convergence to
    sustain some level of activity into the Northeast. Most indications
    from the 00z high res guidance is for a quick moving area of
    convection, and thus rainfall totals are not overly impressive.
    However given the ingredients in place there does seem to be some
    potential for an over performing area of convection with some brief backbuilding characteristics. The better chance of this would be
    along the instability gradient and southwest flank of
    activity...probably central/upstate NY and/or portions of VT/NH. A
    Marginal risk continues to suffice given the 00z suite of
    models...however will need to closely monitor observational and
    model trends through the day. Depending on how things evolve later
    tonight into early Sunday there is some chance for an embedded
    more focused flash flood risk within the broader Marginal, and can
    not rule out the eventual need for a Slight risk.


    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO AND SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Latest numerical guidance remained in good agreement with previous
    runs about the large-scale features and the associated increase in
    the risk of excessive rainfall beginning as early as Sunday. As a result...little change was needed to the Excessive Rainfall
    Outlook for Sunday.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...New Mexico and Texas...
    Sunday is likely the beginning of what will be a multi-day period
    of excessive rainfall potential over portions of west TX into NM.
    The mid/upper level pattern features a near record to record ridge
    over the eastern U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the
    west. Southerly flow in between these features will supply ample
    moisture to NM, with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea.
    The better forcing from the western trough will generally hold of
    until Monday and Tuesday (see the day 3 and 4 EROs), but by Sunday
    we should at least have enough moisture and instability around for
    scattered convective development. In fact PWs by Sunday should
    already be getting towards climatological max values for late June
    over portions of southwest TX and immediate adjacent areas of NM.
    And while the better forcing arrives Monday, do note broadly
    divergent flow at 250mb Sunday which could help sustain convection.

    Given these ingredients we went ahead and upgraded to a Slight risk
    for portions of southwest TX into Otero and Eddy counties in NM.
    Expecting enough convective development Sunday afternoon/evening,
    that combined with the near record PWs, suggests an isolated to
    scattered flash flood risk should evolve over these areas. A bit
    of uncertainty with how far north the Slight should extend into NM
    with some models supporting a farther north expansion. However the
    area currently highlighted shows the best overlap of the
    NAM/RRFS/ECMWF and likely has the higher probability of seeing
    flash flooding at the moment. The broad Marginal risk does still
    extend into much of the rest of eastern NM and covers the
    localized risk over those areas.

    ...Northern Minnesota...
    Went ahead and added a small Marginal risk over portions of
    northern MN with this update. The setup looks favorable for another
    round of organized convection Sunday afternoon and evening across
    this region. Strong shortwave energy ejecting into the northern
    Plains, a strengthening axis of low level moisture transport, and
    upwards of 4000 j/kg of MUCAPE will drive the convective threat.
    The combination of extreme instability, PWs well over the 90th
    percentile for late June, and a warm front focusing convection, all
    point to a heavy rainfall threat. Some uncertainty with the exact
    axis of convection, with some guidance focusing the bulk of
    convection farther north into Canada. However both GEFS and ECENS
    probs suggest some risk into northern MN, and the AIFS (which has a
    history of good convective qpf placement) also favors northern MN.
    Quite possible convection ends up blowing through quickly, so no
    need for anything more than a Marginal risk at this time. But will
    need to continue to monitor trends over the coming days.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO IOWA...

    2030Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Latest numerical guidance remained in good agreement with previous
    runs about the large-scale features and the associated
    increasing areal coverage of moderate to heavy
    rainfall...especially in New Mexico and West Texas as well as
    across parts of the Missouri Valley on Monday/Monday night. As a result...little change was needed to the previously issued Excessive
    Rainfall Outlook for Day 3.

    Bann

    ...Southwest...
    The overall pattern over the Southwest described in the day 2
    discussion will persist into the day 3 period. By day 3 forcing,
    moisture and instability should all be on the increase, and thus
    expect convective coverage and flash flood risk to be on the
    rise as well. The gradual approach of the west coast trough will
    bring the right entrance region of the upper jet closer, and
    continued moisture advection in between the trough and the east
    coast ridge will push PWs well above the climatological 90th
    percentile and towards late June max levels. Instability is a bit
    of a question as cloud cover debris from Sundays activity could
    play a role...however the model consensus is for increased
    instability compared to Sunday, with values averaging 1000-2000
    j/kg over much of eastern NM into far west TX. Not a ton of deep
    layer flow, so convection forming on/near terrain should slowly
    move off the terrain and allow for some cell merger activity. The
    expected convective coverage should eventually erode instability
    enough that activity trends down by overnight...but not before what
    should be a more widespread isolated/scattered flash flood risk
    over eastern NM and west TX where a Slight risk remains. The
    western edge of this risk area was adjusted eastward a tad, as
    model trends now support a slightly farther east axis.

    Some uncertainty on where any more focused risk could evolve, but
    the better model clustering is over southwest TX into southeast NM
    and consider the threat over this corridor a higher end Slight
    risk. This includes the sensitive Sacramento Mountain burn scar
    areas, where localized significant flash flood impacts are a
    possibility.

    ...Central Plains to MS Valley...
    A Slight risk remains from portions of central KS into southeast
    NE and much of central and northern IA where convection along a
    stationary front poses an isolated to scattered flash flood risk.
    Model guidance indicates convective development along/near this
    front Monday afternoon, with some persistence and/or upscale
    development possible Monday evening as low level moisture
    transport increases. Corfidi vectors over this area are divergent,
    indicating a favorable environment for slow moving/backbuilding
    convection near this front. PWs should be well over the 90th
    percentile for late June along this front, as the same plume of
    moisture over the Southwest will be in place here as well. Thus
    any training of convection will pose a flash flood risk.
    Maintenance of instability is probably the main question mark, as
    the pool of forecast instability is not overly impressive and
    neither is the magnitude of the low level jet...so the extent of
    convective persistence into the overnight is a bit unclear.
    Nonetheless, the unanimous model signal for organized convective
    development, combined with the stationary front/convergence and
    high PWs supports at least an isolated to scattered flash flood
    potential. Thus the Slight risk was maintained. Overall models are
    in fairly good agreement with the favored convective axis, and thus
    not much change was needed to the inherited risk area.

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4njBh9AvHXOXuYK4eEQ6rvxk0GuHvEf3aGHFZqpjy9IF= -ErFLg1LGgzWzF06Iqxp777s9ioe3vbfJDfqYXQ_E4nneGk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4njBh9AvHXOXuYK4eEQ6rvxk0GuHvEf3aGHFZqpjy9IF= -ErFLg1LGgzWzF06Iqxp777s9ioe3vbfJDfqYXQ_PwjE99s$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4njBh9AvHXOXuYK4eEQ6rvxk0GuHvEf3aGHFZqpjy9IF= -ErFLg1LGgzWzF06Iqxp777s9ioe3vbfJDfqYXQ_oynhrCs$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 22 08:30:54 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 220830
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    430 AM EDT Sun Jun 22 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO AND SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    ...New Mexico and Texas...
    Today is the beginning of what will be a multi-day period of=20
    excessive rainfall potential over portions of west TX into NM. The=20
    mid/upper level pattern features a near record to record ridge over
    the eastern U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the west.
    Southerly flow in between these features will supply ample=20
    moisture to NM, with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea.
    The better forcing from the western trough will generally hold of=20
    until Monday and Tuesday (see the day 2 and 3 EROs), but today will
    still have enough moisture and instability around for scattered=20
    convective development. In fact PWs should already be getting=20
    towards climatological max values for late June over portions of=20
    southwest TX and immediate adjacent areas of NM. And while the=20
    better forcing arrives Monday, do note broadly divergent flow at=20
    250mb Sunday which could help sustain convection.

    The greatest convective coverage is expected to be across portions
    of southwest TX, where this is considered a higher end Slight=20
    risk. Deep layer mean flow is weak, suggesting slow cell motions=20
    today. Convection forming on/near terrain will slowly move off the
    terrain, with outflows likely allowing for some cell merger=20
    activity. Given this will be occurring within a very high PW=20
    airmass, scattered areas of flash flooding appear likely. Both the
    00z HREF and REFS indicate a high likelihood of rainfall locally=20
    exceeding 3", with at least some potential of isolated amounts over
    5". A Marginal risk extends across much of eastern NM into=20
    adjacent area of west TX, where storm coverage should be less...but
    slow moving cells will still be capable of producing localized=20
    flash flood concerns.

    ...Eastern Dakotas into Minnesota...
    The setup looks favorable for another round of organized=20
    convection this afternoon and evening across the region. Strong=20
    shortwave energy ejecting into the northern Plains, a strengthening
    axis of low level moisture transport, and upwards of 4000 j/kg of=20
    MUCAPE will drive the convective threat. The combination of extreme instability, PWs well over the 90th percentile for late June, and=20
    a warm front focusing convection, all point to a heavy rainfall=20
    threat. Main uncertainty is the longevity of higher rainfall rates
    and the exact axis of convection. Cells will generally be moving=20
    along quick enough to preclude much of a flash flood threat,=20
    however some training along the warm front over far northern MN is=20
    possible. Activity may actually get going this morning, with some=20
    additional development by this afternoon. Also seeing a growing=20
    signal for convective development by this evening over southeast SD
    as convergence increases along the cold front. This activity=20
    should move northeast along the axis of the front across MN=20
    tonight. While this activity should be quick moving, heavy=20
    rainfall rates could still pose an isolated flash flood risk.

    ...Northeast...
    An area of organized convection is diving southeast across=20
    portions of NY as of 08z this morning. The evolution of this
    activity after 12z this morning remains a bit unclear, however=20
    some backbuilding/training potential may persist on the=20
    west/southwest flank of convection. While the motion of the=20
    complex should continue off to the southeast with the deep layer=20
    mean flow, upwind propagation vectors are off the southwest, a=20
    favorable sign for backbuilding. There will be plenty of upstream=20 instability advecting in to sustain convection...however low level
    convergence should be on the decrease after 12z, and continued=20
    warm advection aloft will increase capping. Thus the degree of=20
    maintenance beyond 12z remains a question...but seeing enough of a
    threat for at least some backbuilding/training to justify a=20
    Marginal risk in the new day 1 ERO. PWs are certainly high enough
    to support at least a localized flash flood risk with any
    convection that is able to train/backbuild this morning.

    Chenard

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO IOWA...

    ...Southwest...
    The overall pattern over the Southwest described in the day 1
    discussion will persist into the day 2 period. By Monday forcing,=20
    moisture, and instability should all be on the increase across NM,
    and thus expect convective coverage and flash flood risk to be on=20
    the rise as well. The gradual approach of the west coast trough=20
    will bring the right entrance region of the upper jet closer, and=20
    continued moisture advection in between the trough and the east=20
    coast ridge will push PWs well above the climatological 90th=20
    percentile and towards late June record levels. Instability is a=20
    bit of a question as cloud cover debris from Sundays activity could
    play a role...however the model consensus is averaging 1000-2000=20
    j/kg over much of eastern NM into far west TX. Not a ton of deep=20
    layer flow, so convection forming on/near terrain should slowly=20
    move off the terrain and allow for some cell merger activity. The=20
    expected convective coverage should eventually erode instability=20
    enough that activity trends down by overnight...but not before what
    should be a more widespread scattered flash flood risk over=20
    eastern NM and west TX where a Slight risk remains.

    Far southeast NM into southwest TX looks to be a focus for more
    organized slow moving convection, with the 00z RRFS, GEM Reg and=20
    ECMWF all focusing higher totals over this area. In fact the RRFS=20
    and Gem Reg indicate localized amounts over 3" are likely, with a=20
    few spots over 5" possible. Another area of focus will be the=20
    sensitive burn scar areas of the Sacramento Mountains. High res=20
    guidance indicates a likelihood of strong convective development=20
    over the terrain here Monday afternoon, with high rainfall rates=20
    leading to what could be a locally significant flash flood risk.

    ...Central Plains to MS Valley...
    A Slight risk remains from portions of central KS into southeast
    NE and much of central and northern IA where convection along a
    stationary front poses an isolated to scattered flash flood risk.
    Model guidance indicates convective development along/near this
    front Monday afternoon, with some persistence and/or upscale
    development possible Monday evening as low level moisture
    transport increases. Corfidi vectors over this area are divergent,
    indicating a favorable environment for slow moving/backbuilding
    convection near this front. PWs should be well over the 90th
    percentile for late June along this front, as the same plume of
    moisture over the Southwest will be in place here as well. Thus
    any training of convection will pose a flash flood risk.
    Maintenance of instability is probably the main question mark, as
    the pool of forecast instability is not overly impressive and
    neither is the magnitude of the low level jet...so the extent of
    convective persistence into the overnight is a bit unclear. However
    do note some upward trend in instability, so while this convection
    should eventually erode the instability and weaken, we should=20
    still be able to realize several hours of possible training=20
    convection.

    The highest probabilities of excessive rainfall are likely across
    portions of north central KS into far southeast NE and far=20
    southwest IA. It is here along the southwest flank of the=20
    convection where we should have the strongest uptick in convergence
    Monday evening, and also the better upstream instability pool. As=20
    mentioned above, upwind propagation vectors are favorable for=20
    backbuilding and training along this axis. Do consider this a=20
    higher end Slight risk over this corridor, as the high PWs combined
    with training convection supports a scattered flash flood risk. In
    fact FFG exceedance may support MDT risk probs (40%), but given=20
    dry antecedent soil conditions and the narrow nature of the=20
    expected rainfall axis..will keep the risk at a higher end Slight=20
    level for now.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...New Mexico...
    Very similar setup as was described in the day 2 discussion
    continues into Tuesday. The moisture axis will shift a bit farther
    west by Tuesday, and with the upper trough getting closer large
    scale forcing will be slightly stronger. So should be another day
    of widespread convection over NM, with deterministic and ensemble
    guidance suggesting this will be the day of highest areal averaged
    rainfall. Flash flooding over this part of the country is heavily=20
    driven by rainfall rates...and whenever you see a widespread heavy=20
    QPF signal such as this you do wonder about the degree of=20
    instability that will be present. We have seen before where these=20
    more widespread rainfall days end up under performing flash flood=20
    wise, as cloud cover limits instability and keeps rainfall rates=20
    lower. So while that is something to keep in mind...all other=20
    factors suggest Tuesday will be a day with scattered to numerous=20
    instances of flash flooding over NM. It seems more likely that the=20
    modest westward shift and increase in the moisture axis/forcing=20
    will support areas or organized heavy rainfall rates.=20

    Central NM seems most likely to see more numerous impacts and thus
    a MDT risk was maintained across this area. Some of this MDT risk=20
    area will also have likely seen heavy rainfall Monday, thus=20
    hydrologic conditions over some of this area will likely be more=20
    sensitive by Tuesday, adding to the flash flood risk. This MDT=20
    risk area includes the sensitive burn scar areas of the Sacramento=20 Mountains. While much of NM will see a flash flood risk Tuesday,=20
    the MDT risk area has the greatest risk of seeing more numerous=20
    and higher end impacts. Some rainfall totals over 3" appear=20
    probable, and would again not be surprised to see totals locally=20
    exceed 5" where convection persists the longest.

    ...NE/SD/IA and vicinity...
    A broad Slight risk was maintained across portions of NE/SD east
    into IA, southern MN and southern WI. Some convection will likely=20
    be ongoing across this area Tuesday morning, although would
    generally expect this to be of a weakening nature. By afternoon we
    should see additional development both the near the stationary=20
    front and over the High Plains. Convective details by this lead=20
    time become murky, and thus confidence on the details remain low.=20
    The ingredients (high PWs, instability, stationary front) will=20
    remain favorable for an area of excessive rainfall...and rainfall=20
    on preceding days may make hydrologic conditions more sensitive=20
    over portions of this area by this time. Ensemble probabilities and
    recent runs of the AIFS highlight northeast NE into northern IA as
    having the greatest heavy rainfall risk, and thus this portion of=20
    the Slight risk is considered higher end. This is where the best=20
    chance of scattered flash flooding seems to exist, especially if=20
    this additional rain overlaps any areas of heavy rainfall from=20
    Monday.=20

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!52T3whymwsS7XLJplAH293sbzKvpDump-cIt2-7zEJEd= MUC82DJlstjD00IUevfbu_xrtAf4pVgRGWkr_-s-9UUASWI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!52T3whymwsS7XLJplAH293sbzKvpDump-cIt2-7zEJEd= MUC82DJlstjD00IUevfbu_xrtAf4pVgRGWkr_-s-3B6Mmm8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!52T3whymwsS7XLJplAH293sbzKvpDump-cIt2-7zEJEd= MUC82DJlstjD00IUevfbu_xrtAf4pVgRGWkr_-s-RhtEd58$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 22 15:59:39 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 221559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Sun Jun 22 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO/SOUTHWEST TEXAS AND PARTS OF
    PENNSYLVANIA/SOUTHERN NEW YORK...

    16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    New Mexico and Texas...
    12Z upper air showed precipitable water values in excess of 2
    inches continued to be drawn northward into West Texas...on par
    with the 2 to 3 standardized anomaly precipitable water forecast
    from the overnight numerical guidance. With the large scale forcing
    largely in place...there were few changes needed here.

    Northeast...
    Introduced a Slight Risk in the area of instability ahead of
    on-going convection building west/southwestward towards northeast
    Pennsylvania and west-central New York. Based on cooling cloud top
    temperatures and resumption of 1 inch per hour rainfall being
    reported in Susquehanna county...combined with low 1-hour flash=20
    flood guidance in the area...felt a Slight Risk area was warranted=20
    despite some lingering questions as to how far west the activity=20
    will develop,=20

    Further details available in Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion=20
    0492 from the WPC Metwatch desk.


    The Dakotas/Nebraska to Minnesota...
    Made a few adjustments to the northern portion of the Marginal Risk
    area given convective behavior earlier this morning...while a
    southward expansion into northern Nebraska was based largely on a
    consistent signal for convective development during the afternoon
    farther south and west than indicated by the 00Z/06Z numerical guidance.
    This area of convection looks to be progressive...but locally=20
    intense rates are possible given the precipitable water values=20
    which exceed 1.75 inches by early evening.

    Bann


    ...New Mexico and Texas...
    Today is the beginning of what will be a multi-day period of
    excessive rainfall potential over portions of west TX into NM. The
    mid/upper level pattern features a near record to record ridge over
    the eastern U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the west.
    Southerly flow in between these features will supply ample
    moisture to NM, with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea.
    The better forcing from the western trough will generally hold of
    until Monday and Tuesday (see the day 2 and 3 EROs), but today will
    still have enough moisture and instability around for scattered
    convective development. In fact PWs should already be getting
    towards climatological max values for late June over portions of
    southwest TX and immediate adjacent areas of NM. And while the
    better forcing arrives Monday, do note broadly divergent flow at
    250mb Sunday which could help sustain convection.

    The greatest convective coverage is expected to be across portions
    of southwest TX, where this is considered a higher end Slight
    risk. Deep layer mean flow is weak, suggesting slow cell motions
    today. Convection forming on/near terrain will slowly move off the
    terrain, with outflows likely allowing for some cell merger
    activity. Given this will be occurring within a very high PW
    airmass, scattered areas of flash flooding appear likely. Both the
    00z HREF and REFS indicate a high likelihood of rainfall locally
    exceeding 3", with at least some potential of isolated amounts=20
    over 5". A Marginal risk extends across much of eastern NM into=20
    adjacent area of west TX, where storm coverage should be less...but
    slow moving cells will still be capable of producing localized=20
    flash flood concerns.

    ...Eastern Dakotas into Minnesota...
    The setup looks favorable for another round of organized
    convection this afternoon and evening across the region. Strong
    shortwave energy ejecting into the northern Plains, a strengthening
    axis of low level moisture transport, and upwards of 4000 j/kg of
    MUCAPE will drive the convective threat. The combination of extreme instability, PWs well over the 90th percentile for late June, and
    a warm front focusing convection, all point to a heavy rainfall
    threat. Main uncertainty is the longevity of higher rainfall rates
    and the exact axis of convection. Cells will generally be moving
    along quick enough to preclude much of a flash flood threat,
    however some training along the warm front over far northern MN is
    possible. Activity may actually get going this morning, with some
    additional development by this afternoon. Also seeing a growing
    signal for convective development by this evening over southeast SD
    as convergence increases along the cold front. This activity
    should move northeast along the axis of the front across MN
    tonight. While this activity should be quick moving, heavy
    rainfall rates could still pose an isolated flash flood risk.

    ...Northeast...
    An area of organized convection is diving southeast across
    portions of NY as of 08z this morning. The evolution of this
    activity after 12z this morning remains a bit unclear, however
    some backbuilding/training potential may persist on the
    west/southwest flank of convection. While the motion of the
    complex should continue off to the southeast with the deep layer
    mean flow, upwind propagation vectors are off the southwest, a
    favorable sign for backbuilding. There will be plenty of upstream
    instability advecting in to sustain convection...however low level
    convergence should be on the decrease after 12z, and continued
    warm advection aloft will increase capping. Thus the degree of
    maintenance beyond 12z remains a question...but seeing enough of a
    threat for at least some backbuilding/training to justify a
    Marginal risk in the new day 1 ERO. PWs are certainly high enough
    to support at least a localized flash flood risk with any
    convection that is able to train/backbuild this morning.

    Chenard

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO IOWA...

    ...Southwest...
    The overall pattern over the Southwest described in the day 1
    discussion will persist into the day 2 period. By Monday forcing,
    moisture, and instability should all be on the increase across NM,
    and thus expect convective coverage and flash flood risk to be on
    the rise as well. The gradual approach of the west coast trough
    will bring the right entrance region of the upper jet closer, and
    continued moisture advection in between the trough and the east
    coast ridge will push PWs well above the climatological 90th
    percentile and towards late June record levels. Instability is a
    bit of a question as cloud cover debris from Sundays activity could
    play a role...however the model consensus is averaging 1000-2000
    j/kg over much of eastern NM into far west TX. Not a ton of deep
    layer flow, so convection forming on/near terrain should slowly
    move off the terrain and allow for some cell merger activity. The
    expected convective coverage should eventually erode instability
    enough that activity trends down by overnight...but not before what
    should be a more widespread scattered flash flood risk over
    eastern NM and west TX where a Slight risk remains.

    Far southeast NM into southwest TX looks to be a focus for more
    organized slow moving convection, with the 00z RRFS, GEM Reg and
    ECMWF all focusing higher totals over this area. In fact the RRFS
    and Gem Reg indicate localized amounts over 3" are likely, with a
    few spots over 5" possible. Another area of focus will be the
    sensitive burn scar areas of the Sacramento Mountains. High res
    guidance indicates a likelihood of strong convective development
    over the terrain here Monday afternoon, with high rainfall rates
    leading to what could be a locally significant flash flood risk.

    ...Central Plains to MS Valley...
    A Slight risk remains from portions of central KS into southeast
    NE and much of central and northern IA where convection along a
    stationary front poses an isolated to scattered flash flood risk.
    Model guidance indicates convective development along/near this
    front Monday afternoon, with some persistence and/or upscale
    development possible Monday evening as low level moisture
    transport increases. Corfidi vectors over this area are divergent,
    indicating a favorable environment for slow moving/backbuilding
    convection near this front. PWs should be well over the 90th
    percentile for late June along this front, as the same plume of
    moisture over the Southwest will be in place here as well. Thus
    any training of convection will pose a flash flood risk.
    Maintenance of instability is probably the main question mark, as
    the pool of forecast instability is not overly impressive and
    neither is the magnitude of the low level jet...so the extent of
    convective persistence into the overnight is a bit unclear. However
    do note some upward trend in instability, so while this convection
    should eventually erode the instability and weaken, we should
    still be able to realize several hours of possible training
    convection.

    The highest probabilities of excessive rainfall are likely across
    portions of north central KS into far southeast NE and far
    southwest IA. It is here along the southwest flank of the
    convection where we should have the strongest uptick in convergence
    Monday evening, and also the better upstream instability pool. As
    mentioned above, upwind propagation vectors are favorable for
    backbuilding and training along this axis. Do consider this a
    higher end Slight risk over this corridor, as the high PWs combined
    with training convection supports a scattered flash flood risk. In
    fact FFG exceedance may support MDT risk probs (40%), but given
    dry antecedent soil conditions and the narrow nature of the
    expected rainfall axis..will keep the risk at a higher end Slight
    level for now.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...New Mexico...
    Very similar setup as was described in the day 2 discussion
    continues into Tuesday. The moisture axis will shift a bit farther
    west by Tuesday, and with the upper trough getting closer large
    scale forcing will be slightly stronger. So should be another day
    of widespread convection over NM, with deterministic and ensemble
    guidance suggesting this will be the day of highest areal averaged
    rainfall. Flash flooding over this part of the country is heavily
    driven by rainfall rates...and whenever you see a widespread heavy
    QPF signal such as this you do wonder about the degree of
    instability that will be present. We have seen before where these
    more widespread rainfall days end up under performing flash flood
    wise, as cloud cover limits instability and keeps rainfall rates
    lower. So while that is something to keep in mind...all other
    factors suggest Tuesday will be a day with scattered to numerous
    instances of flash flooding over NM. It seems more likely that the
    modest westward shift and increase in the moisture axis/forcing
    will support areas or organized heavy rainfall rates.

    Central NM seems most likely to see more numerous impacts and thus
    a MDT risk was maintained across this area. Some of this MDT risk
    area will also have likely seen heavy rainfall Monday, thus
    hydrologic conditions over some of this area will likely be more
    sensitive by Tuesday, adding to the flash flood risk. This MDT
    risk area includes the sensitive burn scar areas of the Sacramento
    Mountains. While much of NM will see a flash flood risk Tuesday,
    the MDT risk area has the greatest risk of seeing more numerous
    and higher end impacts. Some rainfall totals over 3" appear
    probable, and would again not be surprised to see totals locally
    exceed 5" where convection persists the longest.

    ...NE/SD/IA and vicinity...
    A broad Slight risk was maintained across portions of NE/SD east
    into IA, southern MN and southern WI. Some convection will likely
    be ongoing across this area Tuesday morning, although would
    generally expect this to be of a weakening nature. By afternoon we
    should see additional development both the near the stationary
    front and over the High Plains. Convective details by this lead
    time become murky, and thus confidence on the details remain low.
    The ingredients (high PWs, instability, stationary front) will
    remain favorable for an area of excessive rainfall...and rainfall
    on preceding days may make hydrologic conditions more sensitive
    over portions of this area by this time. Ensemble probabilities and
    recent runs of the AIFS highlight northeast NE into northern IA as
    having the greatest heavy rainfall risk, and thus this portion of
    the Slight risk is considered higher end. This is where the best
    chance of scattered flash flooding seems to exist, especially if
    this additional rain overlaps any areas of heavy rainfall from
    Monday.

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!46_QsZ26BcnyfdpeAJAt0tMIntGDr4bjw2u6vtP_9rA2= iGqQ2J_IqRSgJX6p5yWm3XGElnLpnlYs9FfS1MrS7qd8TXM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!46_QsZ26BcnyfdpeAJAt0tMIntGDr4bjw2u6vtP_9rA2= iGqQ2J_IqRSgJX6p5yWm3XGElnLpnlYs9FfS1MrSU1I7Bgg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!46_QsZ26BcnyfdpeAJAt0tMIntGDr4bjw2u6vtP_9rA2= iGqQ2J_IqRSgJX6p5yWm3XGElnLpnlYs9FfS1MrSOdjwwdk$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jun 22 20:23:20 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 222023
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    423 PM EDT Sun Jun 22 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Jun 22 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO/SOUTHWEST TEXAS AND PARTS OF
    PENNSYLVANIA/SOUTHERN NEW YORK...

    16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    New Mexico and Texas...
    12Z upper air showed precipitable water values in excess of 2
    inches continued to be drawn northward into West Texas...on par
    with the 2 to 3 standardized anomaly precipitable water forecast
    from the overnight numerical guidance. With the large scale forcing
    largely in place...there were few changes needed here.

    Northeast...
    Introduced a Slight Risk in the area of instability ahead of
    on-going convection building west/southwestward towards northeast
    Pennsylvania and west-central New York. Based on cooling cloud top
    temperatures and resumption of 1 inch per hour rainfall being
    reported in Susquehanna county...combined with low 1-hour flash
    flood guidance in the area...felt a Slight Risk area was warranted
    despite some lingering questions as to how far west the activity
    will develop,

    Further details available in Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion
    0492 from the WPC Metwatch desk.


    The Dakotas/Nebraska to Minnesota...
    Made a few adjustments to the northern portion of the Marginal Risk
    area given convective behavior earlier this morning...while a
    southward expansion into northern Nebraska was based largely on a
    consistent signal for convective development during the afternoon
    farther south and west than indicated by the 00Z/06Z numerical guidance.
    This area of convection looks to be progressive...but locally
    intense rates are possible given the precipitable water values
    which exceed 1.75 inches by early evening.

    Bann


    ...New Mexico and Texas...
    Today is the beginning of what will be a multi-day period of
    excessive rainfall potential over portions of west TX into NM. The
    mid/upper level pattern features a near record to record ridge over
    the eastern U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the west.
    Southerly flow in between these features will supply ample
    moisture to NM, with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea.
    The better forcing from the western trough will generally hold of
    until Monday and Tuesday (see the day 2 and 3 EROs), but today will
    still have enough moisture and instability around for scattered
    convective development. In fact PWs should already be getting
    towards climatological max values for late June over portions of
    southwest TX and immediate adjacent areas of NM. And while the
    better forcing arrives Monday, do note broadly divergent flow at
    250mb Sunday which could help sustain convection.

    The greatest convective coverage is expected to be across portions
    of southwest TX, where this is considered a higher end Slight
    risk. Deep layer mean flow is weak, suggesting slow cell motions
    today. Convection forming on/near terrain will slowly move off the
    terrain, with outflows likely allowing for some cell merger
    activity. Given this will be occurring within a very high PW
    airmass, scattered areas of flash flooding appear likely. Both the
    00z HREF and REFS indicate a high likelihood of rainfall locally
    exceeding 3", with at least some potential of isolated amounts
    over 5". A Marginal risk extends across much of eastern NM into
    adjacent area of west TX, where storm coverage should be less...but
    slow moving cells will still be capable of producing localized
    flash flood concerns.

    ...Eastern Dakotas into Minnesota...
    The setup looks favorable for another round of organized
    convection this afternoon and evening across the region. Strong
    shortwave energy ejecting into the northern Plains, a strengthening
    axis of low level moisture transport, and upwards of 4000 j/kg of
    MUCAPE will drive the convective threat. The combination of extreme instability, PWs well over the 90th percentile for late June, and
    a warm front focusing convection, all point to a heavy rainfall
    threat. Main uncertainty is the longevity of higher rainfall rates
    and the exact axis of convection. Cells will generally be moving
    along quick enough to preclude much of a flash flood threat,
    however some training along the warm front over far northern MN is
    possible. Activity may actually get going this morning, with some
    additional development by this afternoon. Also seeing a growing
    signal for convective development by this evening over southeast SD
    as convergence increases along the cold front. This activity
    should move northeast along the axis of the front across MN
    tonight. While this activity should be quick moving, heavy
    rainfall rates could still pose an isolated flash flood risk.

    ...Northeast...
    An area of organized convection is diving southeast across
    portions of NY as of 08z this morning. The evolution of this
    activity after 12z this morning remains a bit unclear, however
    some backbuilding/training potential may persist on the
    west/southwest flank of convection. While the motion of the
    complex should continue off to the southeast with the deep layer
    mean flow, upwind propagation vectors are off the southwest, a
    favorable sign for backbuilding. There will be plenty of upstream
    instability advecting in to sustain convection...however low level
    convergence should be on the decrease after 12z, and continued
    warm advection aloft will increase capping. Thus the degree of
    maintenance beyond 12z remains a question...but seeing enough of a
    threat for at least some backbuilding/training to justify a
    Marginal risk in the new day 1 ERO. PWs are certainly high enough
    to support at least a localized flash flood risk with any
    convection that is able to train/backbuild this morning.

    Chenard

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO IOWA...

    20Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Few changes needed to the on-going ERO/ERD. The large-scale=20
    forcing is pretty well established...with the uncertainty being
    driven by placement of the smaller-scale details such as shortwave
    troughs or minor perturbations. The probabilities associated with=20
    the ERO still covers the big-picture well and accounts for the=20
    uncertainty.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...Southwest...
    The overall pattern over the Southwest described in the day 1
    discussion will persist into the day 2 period. By Monday forcing,
    moisture, and instability should all be on the increase across NM,
    and thus expect convective coverage and flash flood risk to be on
    the rise as well. The gradual approach of the west coast trough
    will bring the right entrance region of the upper jet closer, and
    continued moisture advection in between the trough and the east
    coast ridge will push PWs well above the climatological 90th
    percentile and towards late June record levels. Instability is a
    bit of a question as cloud cover debris from Sundays activity could
    play a role...however the model consensus is averaging 1000-2000
    j/kg over much of eastern NM into far west TX. Not a ton of deep
    layer flow, so convection forming on/near terrain should slowly
    move off the terrain and allow for some cell merger activity. The
    expected convective coverage should eventually erode instability
    enough that activity trends down by overnight...but not before what
    should be a more widespread scattered flash flood risk over
    eastern NM and west TX where a Slight risk remains.

    Far southeast NM into southwest TX looks to be a focus for more
    organized slow moving convection, with the 00z RRFS, GEM Reg and
    ECMWF all focusing higher totals over this area. In fact the RRFS
    and Gem Reg indicate localized amounts over 3" are likely, with a
    few spots over 5" possible. Another area of focus will be the
    sensitive burn scar areas of the Sacramento Mountains. High res
    guidance indicates a likelihood of strong convective development
    over the terrain here Monday afternoon, with high rainfall rates
    leading to what could be a locally significant flash flood risk.

    ...Central Plains to MS Valley...
    A Slight risk remains from portions of central KS into southeast
    NE and much of central and northern IA where convection along a
    stationary front poses an isolated to scattered flash flood risk.
    Model guidance indicates convective development along/near this
    front Monday afternoon, with some persistence and/or upscale
    development possible Monday evening as low level moisture
    transport increases. Corfidi vectors over this area are divergent,
    indicating a favorable environment for slow moving/backbuilding
    convection near this front. PWs should be well over the 90th
    percentile for late June along this front, as the same plume of
    moisture over the Southwest will be in place here as well. Thus
    any training of convection will pose a flash flood risk.
    Maintenance of instability is probably the main question mark, as
    the pool of forecast instability is not overly impressive and
    neither is the magnitude of the low level jet...so the extent of
    convective persistence into the overnight is a bit unclear. However
    do note some upward trend in instability, so while this convection
    should eventually erode the instability and weaken, we should
    still be able to realize several hours of possible training
    convection.

    The highest probabilities of excessive rainfall are likely across
    portions of north central KS into far southeast NE and far
    southwest IA. It is here along the southwest flank of the
    convection where we should have the strongest uptick in convergence
    Monday evening, and also the better upstream instability pool. As
    mentioned above, upwind propagation vectors are favorable for
    backbuilding and training along this axis. Do consider this a
    higher end Slight risk over this corridor, as the high PWs combined
    with training convection supports a scattered flash flood risk. In
    fact FFG exceedance may support MDT risk probs (40%), but given
    dry antecedent soil conditions and the narrow nature of the
    expected rainfall axis..will keep the risk at a higher end Slight
    level for now.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    20Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Few changes needed to the on-going Day 3 ERO/ERD. This still
    appears to be the bigger day in terms of areal coverage of
    convection and associated rainfall/rainfall impacts...although
    questions lingered about how much instability can generate if the widespread/deep moisture results in increased cloud cover. The
    placement of the storms and heavy rainfall on the periphery of a=20
    broad upper high appears to still be favored.


    Bann

    ...New Mexico...
    Very similar setup as was described in the day 2 discussion
    continues into Tuesday. The moisture axis will shift a bit farther
    west by Tuesday, and with the upper trough getting closer large
    scale forcing will be slightly stronger. So should be another day
    of widespread convection over NM, with deterministic and ensemble
    guidance suggesting this will be the day of highest areal averaged
    rainfall. Flash flooding over this part of the country is heavily
    driven by rainfall rates...and whenever you see a widespread heavy
    QPF signal such as this you do wonder about the degree of
    instability that will be present. We have seen before where these
    more widespread rainfall days end up under performing flash flood
    wise, as cloud cover limits instability and keeps rainfall rates
    lower. So while that is something to keep in mind...all other
    factors suggest Tuesday will be a day with scattered to numerous
    instances of flash flooding over NM. It seems more likely that the
    modest westward shift and increase in the moisture axis/forcing
    will support areas or organized heavy rainfall rates.

    Central NM seems most likely to see more numerous impacts and thus
    a MDT risk was maintained across this area. Some of this MDT risk
    area will also have likely seen heavy rainfall Monday, thus
    hydrologic conditions over some of this area will likely be more
    sensitive by Tuesday, adding to the flash flood risk. This MDT
    risk area includes the sensitive burn scar areas of the Sacramento
    Mountains. While much of NM will see a flash flood risk Tuesday,
    the MDT risk area has the greatest risk of seeing more numerous
    and higher end impacts. Some rainfall totals over 3" appear
    probable, and would again not be surprised to see totals locally
    exceed 5" where convection persists the longest.

    ...NE/SD/IA and vicinity...
    A broad Slight risk was maintained across portions of NE/SD east
    into IA, southern MN and southern WI. Some convection will likely
    be ongoing across this area Tuesday morning, although would
    generally expect this to be of a weakening nature. By afternoon we
    should see additional development both the near the stationary
    front and over the High Plains. Convective details by this lead
    time become murky, and thus confidence on the details remain low.
    The ingredients (high PWs, instability, stationary front) will
    remain favorable for an area of excessive rainfall...and rainfall
    on preceding days may make hydrologic conditions more sensitive
    over portions of this area by this time. Ensemble probabilities and
    recent runs of the AIFS highlight northeast NE into northern IA as
    having the greatest heavy rainfall risk, and thus this portion of
    the Slight risk is considered higher end. This is where the best
    chance of scattered flash flooding seems to exist, especially if
    this additional rain overlaps any areas of heavy rainfall from
    Monday.

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_tyA1PI1oiAwTij1J0KSYWh_V2gvVBc6q0bqGpIPHFJ7= L5q3fjey3Lvrg-xUAFIGo80qg4rlQjHjQTTXuV6D2TQluYY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_tyA1PI1oiAwTij1J0KSYWh_V2gvVBc6q0bqGpIPHFJ7= L5q3fjey3Lvrg-xUAFIGo80qg4rlQjHjQTTXuV6DBQKgLzA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_tyA1PI1oiAwTij1J0KSYWh_V2gvVBc6q0bqGpIPHFJ7= L5q3fjey3Lvrg-xUAFIGo80qg4rlQjHjQTTXuV6DIHAMe6I$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 23 00:51:36 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 230050
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    850 PM EDT Sun Jun 22 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS...

    01Z Update...
    Although an isolated storm cannot be ruled out, the environment
    will continue to remain unfavorable for widespread storm
    redevelopment overnight across the Northeast. Therefore, the=20
    Marginal and Slight Risk areas were removed from region.

    Elsewhere, based on current observation trends and recent hi-res
    guidance, minor adjustments were made to the previous outlook
    areas over the central U.S. Recent runs of the HRRR and the 18Z=20
    HREF continue to show a notable signal for heavy amounts and=20
    potential flash flooding centered over West Texas to the New Mexico
    border, with the heaviest amounts centered from the western Big=20
    Bend Region into the Davis Mountains. HREF neighborhood=20
    probabilities indicate that localized amounts over 2 inches are=20
    likely in this area.

    Pereira

    16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion...
    New Mexico and Texas...=20
    12Z upper air showed precipitable water values in excess of 2=20
    inches continued to be drawn northward into West Texas...on par=20
    with the 2 to 3 standardized anomaly precipitable water forecast=20
    from the overnight numerical guidance. With the large scale forcing
    largely in place...there were few changes needed here.

    The Dakotas/Nebraska to Minnesota...
    Made a few adjustments to the northern portion of the Marginal Risk
    area given convective behavior earlier this morning...while a
    southward expansion into northern Nebraska was based largely on a
    consistent signal for convective development during the afternoon
    farther south and west than indicated by the 00Z/06Z numerical guidance.
    This area of convection looks to be progressive...but locally
    intense rates are possible given the precipitable water values
    which exceed 1.75 inches by early evening.

    Bann


    ...New Mexico and Texas...
    Today is the beginning of what will be a multi-day period of
    excessive rainfall potential over portions of west TX into NM. The
    mid/upper level pattern features a near record to record ridge over
    the eastern U.S. and a well-defined longwave trough over the west.
    Southerly flow in between these features will supply ample
    moisture to NM, with a connection all the way to the Caribbean Sea.
    The better forcing from the western trough will generally hold of
    until Monday and Tuesday (see the day 2 and 3 EROs), but today will
    still have enough moisture and instability around for scattered
    convective development. In fact PWs should already be getting
    towards climatological max values for late June over portions of
    southwest TX and immediate adjacent areas of NM. And while the
    better forcing arrives Monday, do note broadly divergent flow at
    250mb Sunday which could help sustain convection.

    The greatest convective coverage is expected to be across portions
    of southwest TX, where this is considered a higher end Slight
    risk. Deep layer mean flow is weak, suggesting slow cell motions
    today. Convection forming on/near terrain will slowly move off the
    terrain, with outflows likely allowing for some cell merger
    activity. Given this will be occurring within a very high PW
    airmass, scattered areas of flash flooding appear likely. Both the
    00z HREF and REFS indicate a high likelihood of rainfall locally
    exceeding 3", with at least some potential of isolated amounts
    over 5". A Marginal risk extends across much of eastern NM into
    adjacent area of west TX, where storm coverage should be less...but
    slow moving cells will still be capable of producing localized
    flash flood concerns.

    ...Eastern Dakotas into Minnesota...
    The setup looks favorable for another round of organized
    convection this afternoon and evening across the region. Strong
    shortwave energy ejecting into the northern Plains, a strengthening
    axis of low level moisture transport, and upwards of 4000 j/kg of
    MUCAPE will drive the convective threat. The combination of extreme instability, PWs well over the 90th percentile for late June, and
    a warm front focusing convection, all point to a heavy rainfall
    threat. Main uncertainty is the longevity of higher rainfall rates
    and the exact axis of convection. Cells will generally be moving
    along quick enough to preclude much of a flash flood threat,
    however some training along the warm front over far northern MN is
    possible. Activity may actually get going this morning, with some
    additional development by this afternoon. Also seeing a growing
    signal for convective development by this evening over southeast SD
    as convergence increases along the cold front. This activity
    should move northeast along the axis of the front across MN
    tonight. While this activity should be quick moving, heavy
    rainfall rates could still pose an isolated flash flood risk.

    Chenard

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO IOWA...

    20Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Few changes needed to the on-going ERO/ERD. The large-scale
    forcing is pretty well established...with the uncertainty being
    driven by placement of the smaller-scale details such as shortwave
    troughs or minor perturbations. The probabilities associated with
    the ERO still covers the big-picture well and accounts for the
    uncertainty.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...Southwest...
    The overall pattern over the Southwest described in the day 1
    discussion will persist into the day 2 period. By Monday forcing,
    moisture, and instability should all be on the increase across NM,
    and thus expect convective coverage and flash flood risk to be on
    the rise as well. The gradual approach of the west coast trough
    will bring the right entrance region of the upper jet closer, and
    continued moisture advection in between the trough and the east
    coast ridge will push PWs well above the climatological 90th
    percentile and towards late June record levels. Instability is a
    bit of a question as cloud cover debris from Sundays activity could
    play a role...however the model consensus is averaging 1000-2000
    j/kg over much of eastern NM into far west TX. Not a ton of deep
    layer flow, so convection forming on/near terrain should slowly
    move off the terrain and allow for some cell merger activity. The
    expected convective coverage should eventually erode instability
    enough that activity trends down by overnight...but not before what
    should be a more widespread scattered flash flood risk over
    eastern NM and west TX where a Slight risk remains.

    Far southeast NM into southwest TX looks to be a focus for more
    organized slow moving convection, with the 00z RRFS, GEM Reg and
    ECMWF all focusing higher totals over this area. In fact the RRFS
    and Gem Reg indicate localized amounts over 3" are likely, with a
    few spots over 5" possible. Another area of focus will be the
    sensitive burn scar areas of the Sacramento Mountains. High res
    guidance indicates a likelihood of strong convective development
    over the terrain here Monday afternoon, with high rainfall rates
    leading to what could be a locally significant flash flood risk.

    ...Central Plains to MS Valley...
    A Slight risk remains from portions of central KS into southeast
    NE and much of central and northern IA where convection along a
    stationary front poses an isolated to scattered flash flood risk.
    Model guidance indicates convective development along/near this
    front Monday afternoon, with some persistence and/or upscale
    development possible Monday evening as low level moisture
    transport increases. Corfidi vectors over this area are divergent,
    indicating a favorable environment for slow moving/backbuilding
    convection near this front. PWs should be well over the 90th
    percentile for late June along this front, as the same plume of
    moisture over the Southwest will be in place here as well. Thus
    any training of convection will pose a flash flood risk.
    Maintenance of instability is probably the main question mark, as
    the pool of forecast instability is not overly impressive and
    neither is the magnitude of the low level jet...so the extent of
    convective persistence into the overnight is a bit unclear. However
    do note some upward trend in instability, so while this convection
    should eventually erode the instability and weaken, we should
    still be able to realize several hours of possible training
    convection.

    The highest probabilities of excessive rainfall are likely across
    portions of north central KS into far southeast NE and far
    southwest IA. It is here along the southwest flank of the
    convection where we should have the strongest uptick in convergence
    Monday evening, and also the better upstream instability pool. As
    mentioned above, upwind propagation vectors are favorable for
    backbuilding and training along this axis. Do consider this a
    higher end Slight risk over this corridor, as the high PWs combined
    with training convection supports a scattered flash flood risk. In
    fact FFG exceedance may support MDT risk probs (40%), but given
    dry antecedent soil conditions and the narrow nature of the
    expected rainfall axis..will keep the risk at a higher end Slight
    level for now.

    Chenard

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    20Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Few changes needed to the on-going Day 3 ERO/ERD. This still
    appears to be the bigger day in terms of areal coverage of
    convection and associated rainfall/rainfall impacts...although
    questions lingered about how much instability can generate if the widespread/deep moisture results in increased cloud cover. The
    placement of the storms and heavy rainfall on the periphery of a
    broad upper high appears to still be favored.


    Bann

    ...New Mexico...
    Very similar setup as was described in the day 2 discussion
    continues into Tuesday. The moisture axis will shift a bit farther
    west by Tuesday, and with the upper trough getting closer large
    scale forcing will be slightly stronger. So should be another day
    of widespread convection over NM, with deterministic and ensemble
    guidance suggesting this will be the day of highest areal averaged
    rainfall. Flash flooding over this part of the country is heavily
    driven by rainfall rates...and whenever you see a widespread heavy
    QPF signal such as this you do wonder about the degree of
    instability that will be present. We have seen before where these
    more widespread rainfall days end up under performing flash flood
    wise, as cloud cover limits instability and keeps rainfall rates
    lower. So while that is something to keep in mind...all other
    factors suggest Tuesday will be a day with scattered to numerous
    instances of flash flooding over NM. It seems more likely that the
    modest westward shift and increase in the moisture axis/forcing
    will support areas or organized heavy rainfall rates.

    Central NM seems most likely to see more numerous impacts and thus
    a MDT risk was maintained across this area. Some of this MDT risk
    area will also have likely seen heavy rainfall Monday, thus
    hydrologic conditions over some of this area will likely be more
    sensitive by Tuesday, adding to the flash flood risk. This MDT
    risk area includes the sensitive burn scar areas of the Sacramento
    Mountains. While much of NM will see a flash flood risk Tuesday,
    the MDT risk area has the greatest risk of seeing more numerous
    and higher end impacts. Some rainfall totals over 3" appear
    probable, and would again not be surprised to see totals locally
    exceed 5" where convection persists the longest.

    ...NE/SD/IA and vicinity...
    A broad Slight risk was maintained across portions of NE/SD east
    into IA, southern MN and southern WI. Some convection will likely
    be ongoing across this area Tuesday morning, although would
    generally expect this to be of a weakening nature. By afternoon we
    should see additional development both the near the stationary
    front and over the High Plains. Convective details by this lead
    time become murky, and thus confidence on the details remain low.
    The ingredients (high PWs, instability, stationary front) will
    remain favorable for an area of excessive rainfall...and rainfall
    on preceding days may make hydrologic conditions more sensitive
    over portions of this area by this time. Ensemble probabilities and
    recent runs of the AIFS highlight northeast NE into northern IA as
    having the greatest heavy rainfall risk, and thus this portion of
    the Slight risk is considered higher end. This is where the best
    chance of scattered flash flooding seems to exist, especially if
    this additional rain overlaps any areas of heavy rainfall from
    Monday.

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-WWJZQASxQh72gHlBKHDiml8-9HZfHZeO2VlV4EnfTS6= PPq8g61lGiryqE0EnvJQSxQR91_AUzbbKhrEGYTzexnz5c4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-WWJZQASxQh72gHlBKHDiml8-9HZfHZeO2VlV4EnfTS6= PPq8g61lGiryqE0EnvJQSxQR91_AUzbbKhrEGYTz8okv2iU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-WWJZQASxQh72gHlBKHDiml8-9HZfHZeO2VlV4EnfTS6= PPq8g61lGiryqE0EnvJQSxQR91_AUzbbKhrEGYTzC5mhAII$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 23 08:04:15 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 230804
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    404 AM EDT Mon Jun 23 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO SOUTHWEST WISCONSIN...

    ...New Mexico into West Texas...

    A general pattern of persistence will maintain a relevant posture
    for scattered to widespread convective impacts across Southwestern
    TX up through the eastern half of NM with the highest potential
    impacts aligned within the terrain. Ample moisture advection
    provided by prevailing southerly-oriented flow within the sfc-500mb
    layer will correlate with an environment capable of locally heavy
    rainfall within any cell maturation across the above areas. The
    proxy of the deep layer moisture and RER jet dynamics from the mean
    trough situated to the west will create an accumulated risk of
    showers and storms propagating over the same areas leading to
    increasingly compromised soils, or even interacting with the
    already prevalent burn scars situated over the Sacramento Mtns.
    Storm motions will likely be fairly weak as noted by the forecast
    Corfidi vectors residing between 5-15kts on average within the
    confines of the entire Southwest TX and Southeast NM domains. This
    will allow for modest training concerns that will ultimately cause
    problems if they fall within any of the urban centers along the
    Upper Trans Pecos out into the complex topography located in the
    region. The best chance for flash flooding will likely be within
    those burn scar locations where hydrophobic soils are still a
    problem and can promote a formidable runoff regime that could cause
    significant problems locally if a heavy cell forms overhead. Areas
    within the Pecos river are also notorious for flash flooding
    capabilities due to the limited drainage structures prevalent
    within town limits. Considering the HREF neighborhood probs for >2"
    are running between 50-90% over a large area extending from the
    Davis Mtns up through the Eastern NM Caprock, the previous SLGT
    risk was upheld with wording of a higher end SLGT considering the
    environment in place.=20

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    The Central Plains through the Midwest continues to lie within the
    northern and northwest periphery of a broad ridge extension
    centered over the Mid Atlantic. The proxy of the ridge has allowed
    for a persistent south to southwesterly mean flow within the=20
    column leading to steady moisture advection within the boundary=20
    layer up to around 500mb. Current PWATs from 00z RAOB analysis
    across the Plains and Mississippi Valley denote moisture anomalies
    that are approaching +2 deviations, something that has also been
    reflected in the last several days of NAEFS anomalies within the=20
    ensemble suite. The relevant moisture pooling across the zone=20
    extending from KS up into the Midwest will lead to a formidable=20
    widespread convective initiation scheme that will develop due to=20
    increased convergence along and ahead of a slow-moving cold front=20
    nosing down through the Northern Plains. The interaction of the=20
    cold front with a very buoyant environment (MUCAPE 2500-4000 J/kg)=20
    located across the Central Plains up into the Upper Mississippi=20
    Valley will create a broad axis of heavy convection with the
    heaviest precip likely correlated with the 2+" PWAT domain located
    from North-Central KS and points northeast into IA.=20

    There's a general consensus within the latest CAMs suite of=20
    significant totals between 2-4" forecast located within the=20
    aforementioned zone, including some deterministic output and lower=20 neighborhood prob correlation for some places exceeding 5". The=20
    prospects for those types of totals stems from not only the=20
    favorable deep moist convective pattern, but also the mean layer=20
    flow and surface convergence regime along the front creating a=20
    favorable environment for back-building convection and training=20
    cell prospects. This is fairly well-documented when assessing=20
    forecast Corfidi Vectors continuing this divergent storm motion=20
    setup within the upshear and downshear calculations given the
    forecast wind field(s). A strong RER jet dynamic will only aid in=20
    a blossoming QPF field and maintenance as the mean flow takes the=20
    convective pattern off to the northeast. This pattern will carry=20
    through Monday evening into early Tuesday morning with some=20
    weakening of the convective field anticipated due to loss of=20
    diurnal destabilization. In any case, this setup is capable of=20
    widespread 1-2" totals with the hardest hit locations likely seeing
    2-4" with locally higher as noted in the latest CAMs. The saving=20
    grace, at least initially for D1, are the drier soils centered over
    the Central Plains into parts of Southeast NE and Southwest IA=20
    leading to higher FFG indices that will need some priming in order=20
    to likely reflect a more significant flash flood response.=20

    The change from the previous forecast was an adjustment to the
    south with the overall SLGT risk as guidance reflects a bit of a
    faster frontal progression than anticipated. This places a higher
    risk a bit south over Northeast KS to points northeast. The threat
    for locally heavy rainfall is also forecast across Southwest KS
    with cells ejecting out of the High Plains of CO/NM, but CAMs are
    less defined due to the lack of a boundary layer focus
    comparatively. The MRGL exists in at particular area, but if CAMs
    come into agreement on a local max centered near or southwest of
    DDC, then the SLGT risk may be extended further to the southwest to
    account for the prospect.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...New Mexico...

    Upper level pattern will be in a short transitory phase, but one
    that will ultimately lead to a threat of prolonged heavy rainfall
    from training convection across much of the terrain in Southern and
    Central NM. The massive ridge to the east will flex further as we
    head into Tuesday with the higher heights on the western fringes
    pushing back west beyond the eastern portions NM. A steady north-
    south progression within the mid and upper levels will send
    numerous smaller shortwave perturbations poleward with anticipated
    motions into the Sacramento's, eventually north into the Sangre de
    Cristos by the late-afternoon and evening period on Tuesday.
    Moisture remaining parked over the region coupled with the focused
    ascent and narrow upslope proxy within the Sacramento Mtns. will
    lead to a corridor of heavy convection remaining situated in-of
    the terrain. There's a growing consensus within all deterministic
    that local topographic effects within this pattern will yield some
    significant rainfall potential over areas that are prone to flash
    flooding, especially with the burn scars still present near Ruidoso
    creating higher runoff capabilities. 00z HREF depicted between 2-3"
    of rainfall in just the 12-hr period between 12-00z on Tue/Wed with
    precip continuing at the end of the run. Ensemble mean forecast
    within the NWP suite was up around 3" for multiple locations with a
    large areal coverage of at least 2" within the mean output. These
    are generally signals that favor not only flash flooding prospects,
    but widespread flash flood concerns with more significant impacts
    possible.=20

    The signal for heavy rainfall continues all the way up into the
    Sangre de Cristos where the afternoon and evening time frames call
    for widespread heavy thunderstorm activity aligned with the ridges
    of the southern Rockies. These areas also have burn scar prevalence
    that could exacerbate flash flood risks as runoff capabilities are=20 maximized. Considering the anticipated threat bleeding further=20
    north within the guidance this evening, the previous MDT risk was=20
    expanded northward to encompass those areas within the Sangre de=20
    Cristos and neighboring valleys. The threat for a targeted higher=20
    risk over the Sacramento's is plausible if this signal remains for=20
    another forecast cycle or two. As of now, it is deemed closer to a=20
    high-end MDT risk with the area across the northern Sacramento's=20
    the most susceptible to significant impact potential.=20

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    The pattern across the Plains and Midwest that will bring heavy
    rainfall to those areas Monday night into Tuesday morning will
    bleed over into the D2 period with ongoing precip likely across
    Northeast KS into adjacent areas of NE/MO/IA. Flash flooding
    concerns will be ongoing at this time and recent CAMs output is
    signaling more rainfall through at least 18z will continue to
    plague those same areas. 00z HREF neighborhood probs over the 12hr
    period between 12-00z Tue/Wed denote a 40-60% chance of exceeding
    2" over areas that will have already seen significant (2-4+")
    rainfall the period prior. Rates ~1"/hr are modest within the hi-
    res ensemble probability fields as well, a testament to the
    persistence in the heavy convective setup in place. There will
    finally be less of a concern late in the afternoon as the frontal
    progression migrates north the second half of the period, so the
    threat will likely be more focused in that area the first half of
    the forecast. Still, this is enough for a continued SLGT risk with
    higher end risk potential given the period overlap.

    The setup the following evening becomes trickier as the entire
    evolution comes down to the handling of the mid-level energy riding
    northeast out of the Southern Plains into the Central Plains and
    Upper Midwest after nightfall. Surface front from the prior period
    will eventually hit a roadblock on its southern progression and
    flip back to a warm front as it migrates back to the north under
    the guide of a potent LLJ generation across the Plains. The
    interaction between the front and the energy will create a
    secondary convective enhancement that will impact areas further
    north than the previous 36 hrs. The lack of overlap may inhibit
    significant impacts, however the training threat within the
    confines of the boundary may be enough to warrant some higher risk
    of flash flooding. The setup is depicted by guidance in the 00-12z
    period Wednesday, but position of the heaviest precip is seemingly
    all over the place. The threat is certainly there for 2-4" with
    locally higher, but specifics still remain sort of muddled. The
    SLGT risk prior was adjusted to reflect the ensemble mean QPF
    distribution with a heavy precip footprint still located over far
    Southeast SD into Southern MN for the period. How far north the
    front migrates and handling of the shortwave ejection will
    determine exactly where the heaviest precip will occur. Right now,
    anywhere within the SLGT risk is fair game, so it's a time frame to
    monitor closely.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    ...New Mexico...

    Unlike the prior periods, the D3 is finally the downward trend to
    the incessant nature of scattered to numerous thunderstorms that
    will plague the state, especially across the Sacramento's and
    Sangre de Cristos. Despite the lower coverage anticipated,
    scattered thunderstorms are still plausible in the afternoon as
    ample heating during prime destabilization window (16-21z) will
    yield another threat of thunderstorms across the terrain and
    adjacent valleys. Current signals are nowhere near as robust as the
    D1/D2 time frames, but with potentially significant impacts prior,
    there's a greater threat of truly compromised FFG's leading in=20
    allowing for the bar to be very low for flash flooding. As of now,
    the ensemble mean is still highlighting the Sacramento's up into
    the I-40 corridor as the main areas of concern. A SLGT risk was
    maintained and expanded a bit to encompass the zones of greatest
    risk for flash flooding. A targeted higher risk is not out of the
    question for the Sacramento's, but will assess in later forecasts
    as we monitor how everything evolves leading into the D3.=20

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Unlike the prior period where there is some uncertainty in the
    handling of shortwave energy and frontal positioning, there's a=20
    pretty good consensus brewing on the pattern converging in-of the=20
    Upper Midwest with sights on MN into Western WI as the evolution in
    D2 carries over into D3. Mean QPF output via ensembles is running
    between 2-4" for an areal average with the maxima positioned across
    Southern MN back into adjacent areas of SD/NE to the southwest. Not
    one, but two waves of convection will encroach the area with some
    spots potentially seeing some significant rainfall (>2") in both
    waves which will likely lead to scattered, bordering widespread
    flash flood prospects due to the compounding rainfall forecast. NBM
    90th percentile QPF is well over 2" across much of the
    aforementioned region with some higher totals even extending back
    through NE. As of now, it's still a bit early for the higher risks
    due to some uncertainty the day prior which could shift the
    forecast a bit in either direction (north or south). For now,
    maintained a higher end SLGT across a large portion of the Upper
    Midwest with the eastern extension pushing all the way out into
    Northern WI. A targeted higher risk is certainly in the cards if
    this signal remains and consensus grows on the evolution of the
    synoptic details.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7-sPCDH6hGKliypjJfYOcZB1HdnV5W9jo-_sI7eyuvVF= dVG11Shz0YZDD8xb24iuzWhwQUf1-8JSZHEITubuREKYTI0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7-sPCDH6hGKliypjJfYOcZB1HdnV5W9jo-_sI7eyuvVF= dVG11Shz0YZDD8xb24iuzWhwQUf1-8JSZHEITubu5CqYK8k$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7-sPCDH6hGKliypjJfYOcZB1HdnV5W9jo-_sI7eyuvVF= dVG11Shz0YZDD8xb24iuzWhwQUf1-8JSZHEITubu7XfN2ao$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 23 15:58:41 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 231555
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1155 AM EDT Mon Jun 23 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO SOUTHERN=20
    WISCONSIN...

    16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Based on the 06Z neighborhood probabilities...and a quick look at
    the probabilities from the 12Z run...extended the Slight Risk area
    a bit to the east to cover more of southern Wisconsin. In the=20
    broader picture...the risk of excessive rainfall exists on the=20
    periphery of a broad upper level ridge from New Mexico and West=20 Texas...across the Central Plains into the Upper Midwest given the=20 persistent deep-layer advection and embedded shortwave energy. The=20
    12Z HREF probabilities aligned well with the previously issued=20
    Excessive Rainfall Outlook and only minor adjustments were needed.

    Bann=20


    ...New Mexico into West Texas...

    A general pattern of persistence will maintain a relevant posture
    for scattered to widespread convective impacts across Southwestern
    TX up through the eastern half of NM with the highest potential
    impacts aligned within the terrain. Ample moisture advection
    provided by prevailing southerly-oriented flow within the sfc-500mb
    layer will correlate with an environment capable of locally heavy
    rainfall within any cell maturation across the above areas. The
    proxy of the deep layer moisture and RER jet dynamics from the mean
    trough situated to the west will create an accumulated risk of
    showers and storms propagating over the same areas leading to
    increasingly compromised soils, or even interacting with the
    already prevalent burn scars situated over the Sacramento Mtns.
    Storm motions will likely be fairly weak as noted by the forecast
    Corfidi vectors residing between 5-15kts on average within the
    confines of the entire Southwest TX and Southeast NM domains. This
    will allow for modest training concerns that will ultimately cause
    problems if they fall within any of the urban centers along the
    Upper Trans Pecos out into the complex topography located in the
    region. The best chance for flash flooding will likely be within
    those burn scar locations where hydrophobic soils are still a
    problem and can promote a formidable runoff regime that could cause
    significant problems locally if a heavy cell forms overhead. Areas
    within the Pecos river are also notorious for flash flooding
    capabilities due to the limited drainage structures prevalent
    within town limits. Considering the HREF neighborhood probs for >2"
    are running between 50-90% over a large area extending from the
    Davis Mtns up through the Eastern NM Caprock, the previous SLGT
    risk was upheld with wording of a higher end SLGT considering the
    environment in place.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    The Central Plains through the Midwest continues to lie within the
    northern and northwest periphery of a broad ridge extension
    centered over the Mid Atlantic. The proxy of the ridge has allowed
    for a persistent south to southwesterly mean flow within the
    column leading to steady moisture advection within the boundary
    layer up to around 500mb. Current PWATs from 00z RAOB analysis
    across the Plains and Mississippi Valley denote moisture anomalies
    that are approaching +2 deviations, something that has also been
    reflected in the last several days of NAEFS anomalies within the
    ensemble suite. The relevant moisture pooling across the zone
    extending from KS up into the Midwest will lead to a formidable
    widespread convective initiation scheme that will develop due to
    increased convergence along and ahead of a slow-moving cold front
    nosing down through the Northern Plains. The interaction of the
    cold front with a very buoyant environment (MUCAPE 2500-4000 J/kg)
    located across the Central Plains up into the Upper Mississippi
    Valley will create a broad axis of heavy convection with the
    heaviest precip likely correlated with the 2+" PWAT domain located
    from North-Central KS and points northeast into IA.

    There's a general consensus within the latest CAMs suite of
    significant totals between 2-4" forecast located within the
    aforementioned zone, including some deterministic output and lower
    neighborhood prob correlation for some places exceeding 5". The
    prospects for those types of totals stems from not only the
    favorable deep moist convective pattern, but also the mean layer
    flow and surface convergence regime along the front creating a
    favorable environment for back-building convection and training
    cell prospects. This is fairly well-documented when assessing
    forecast Corfidi Vectors continuing this divergent storm motion
    setup within the upshear and downshear calculations given the
    forecast wind field(s). A strong RER jet dynamic will only aid in
    a blossoming QPF field and maintenance as the mean flow takes the
    convective pattern off to the northeast. This pattern will carry
    through Monday evening into early Tuesday morning with some
    weakening of the convective field anticipated due to loss of
    diurnal destabilization. In any case, this setup is capable of
    widespread 1-2" totals with the hardest hit locations likely seeing
    2-4" with locally higher as noted in the latest CAMs. The saving
    grace, at least initially for D1, are the drier soils centered over
    the Central Plains into parts of Southeast NE and Southwest IA
    leading to higher FFG indices that will need some priming in order
    to likely reflect a more significant flash flood response.

    The change from the previous forecast was an adjustment to the
    south with the overall SLGT risk as guidance reflects a bit of a
    faster frontal progression than anticipated. This places a higher
    risk a bit south over Northeast KS to points northeast. The threat
    for locally heavy rainfall is also forecast across Southwest KS
    with cells ejecting out of the High Plains of CO/NM, but CAMs are
    less defined due to the lack of a boundary layer focus
    comparatively. The MRGL exists in at particular area, but if CAMs
    come into agreement on a local max centered near or southwest of
    DDC, then the SLGT risk may be extended further to the southwest to
    account for the prospect.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...New Mexico...

    Upper level pattern will be in a short transitory phase, but one
    that will ultimately lead to a threat of prolonged heavy rainfall
    from training convection across much of the terrain in Southern and
    Central NM. The massive ridge to the east will flex further as we
    head into Tuesday with the higher heights on the western fringes
    pushing back west beyond the eastern portions NM. A steady north-
    south progression within the mid and upper levels will send
    numerous smaller shortwave perturbations poleward with anticipated
    motions into the Sacramento's, eventually north into the Sangre de
    Cristos by the late-afternoon and evening period on Tuesday.
    Moisture remaining parked over the region coupled with the focused
    ascent and narrow upslope proxy within the Sacramento Mtns. will
    lead to a corridor of heavy convection remaining situated in-of
    the terrain. There's a growing consensus within all deterministic
    that local topographic effects within this pattern will yield some
    significant rainfall potential over areas that are prone to flash
    flooding, especially with the burn scars still present near Ruidoso
    creating higher runoff capabilities. 00z HREF depicted between 2-3"
    of rainfall in just the 12-hr period between 12-00z on Tue/Wed with
    precip continuing at the end of the run. Ensemble mean forecast
    within the NWP suite was up around 3" for multiple locations with a
    large areal coverage of at least 2" within the mean output. These
    are generally signals that favor not only flash flooding prospects,
    but widespread flash flood concerns with more significant impacts
    possible.

    The signal for heavy rainfall continues all the way up into the
    Sangre de Cristos where the afternoon and evening time frames call
    for widespread heavy thunderstorm activity aligned with the ridges
    of the southern Rockies. These areas also have burn scar prevalence
    that could exacerbate flash flood risks as runoff capabilities are
    maximized. Considering the anticipated threat bleeding further
    north within the guidance this evening, the previous MDT risk was
    expanded northward to encompass those areas within the Sangre de
    Cristos and neighboring valleys. The threat for a targeted higher
    risk over the Sacramento's is plausible if this signal remains for
    another forecast cycle or two. As of now, it is deemed closer to a
    high-end MDT risk with the area across the northern Sacramento's
    the most susceptible to significant impact potential.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    The pattern across the Plains and Midwest that will bring heavy
    rainfall to those areas Monday night into Tuesday morning will
    bleed over into the D2 period with ongoing precip likely across
    Northeast KS into adjacent areas of NE/MO/IA. Flash flooding
    concerns will be ongoing at this time and recent CAMs output is
    signaling more rainfall through at least 18z will continue to
    plague those same areas. 00z HREF neighborhood probs over the 12hr
    period between 12-00z Tue/Wed denote a 40-60% chance of exceeding
    2" over areas that will have already seen significant (2-4+")
    rainfall the period prior. Rates ~1"/hr are modest within the hi-
    res ensemble probability fields as well, a testament to the
    persistence in the heavy convective setup in place. There will
    finally be less of a concern late in the afternoon as the frontal
    progression migrates north the second half of the period, so the
    threat will likely be more focused in that area the first half of
    the forecast. Still, this is enough for a continued SLGT risk with
    higher end risk potential given the period overlap.

    The setup the following evening becomes trickier as the entire
    evolution comes down to the handling of the mid-level energy riding
    northeast out of the Southern Plains into the Central Plains and
    Upper Midwest after nightfall. Surface front from the prior period
    will eventually hit a roadblock on its southern progression and
    flip back to a warm front as it migrates back to the north under
    the guide of a potent LLJ generation across the Plains. The
    interaction between the front and the energy will create a
    secondary convective enhancement that will impact areas further
    north than the previous 36 hrs. The lack of overlap may inhibit
    significant impacts, however the training threat within the
    confines of the boundary may be enough to warrant some higher risk
    of flash flooding. The setup is depicted by guidance in the 00-12z
    period Wednesday, but position of the heaviest precip is seemingly
    all over the place. The threat is certainly there for 2-4" with
    locally higher, but specifics still remain sort of muddled. The
    SLGT risk prior was adjusted to reflect the ensemble mean QPF
    distribution with a heavy precip footprint still located over far
    Southeast SD into Southern MN for the period. How far north the
    front migrates and handling of the shortwave ejection will
    determine exactly where the heaviest precip will occur. Right now,
    anywhere within the SLGT risk is fair game, so it's a time frame to
    monitor closely.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    ...New Mexico...

    Unlike the prior periods, the D3 is finally the downward trend to
    the incessant nature of scattered to numerous thunderstorms that
    will plague the state, especially across the Sacramento's and
    Sangre de Cristos. Despite the lower coverage anticipated,
    scattered thunderstorms are still plausible in the afternoon as
    ample heating during prime destabilization window (16-21z) will
    yield another threat of thunderstorms across the terrain and
    adjacent valleys. Current signals are nowhere near as robust as the
    D1/D2 time frames, but with potentially significant impacts prior,
    there's a greater threat of truly compromised FFG's leading in
    allowing for the bar to be very low for flash flooding. As of now,
    the ensemble mean is still highlighting the Sacramento's up into
    the I-40 corridor as the main areas of concern. A SLGT risk was
    maintained and expanded a bit to encompass the zones of greatest
    risk for flash flooding. A targeted higher risk is not out of the
    question for the Sacramento's, but will assess in later forecasts
    as we monitor how everything evolves leading into the D3.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Unlike the prior period where there is some uncertainty in the
    handling of shortwave energy and frontal positioning, there's a
    pretty good consensus brewing on the pattern converging in-of the
    Upper Midwest with sights on MN into Western WI as the evolution in
    D2 carries over into D3. Mean QPF output via ensembles is running
    between 2-4" for an areal average with the maxima positioned across
    Southern MN back into adjacent areas of SD/NE to the southwest. Not
    one, but two waves of convection will encroach the area with some
    spots potentially seeing some significant rainfall (>2") in both
    waves which will likely lead to scattered, bordering widespread
    flash flood prospects due to the compounding rainfall forecast. NBM
    90th percentile QPF is well over 2" across much of the
    aforementioned region with some higher totals even extending back
    through NE. As of now, it's still a bit early for the higher risks
    due to some uncertainty the day prior which could shift the
    forecast a bit in either direction (north or south). For now,
    maintained a higher end SLGT across a large portion of the Upper
    Midwest with the eastern extension pushing all the way out into
    Northern WI. A targeted higher risk is certainly in the cards if
    this signal remains and consensus grows on the evolution of the
    synoptic details.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6JDWsoDq-nw6xZhT08bInUtdTgQ54EjEt4NwY5wN7IXN= K1CvSe3imFDCi1GbGliq-ClWmRa3Kn7CMCMBRz_UZiOkh6w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6JDWsoDq-nw6xZhT08bInUtdTgQ54EjEt4NwY5wN7IXN= K1CvSe3imFDCi1GbGliq-ClWmRa3Kn7CMCMBRz_UrApAAvQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6JDWsoDq-nw6xZhT08bInUtdTgQ54EjEt4NwY5wN7IXN= K1CvSe3imFDCi1GbGliq-ClWmRa3Kn7CMCMBRz_UFcyG5e8$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jun 23 20:28:02 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 232026
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    426 PM EDT Mon Jun 23 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Jun 23 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO SOUTHERN
    WISCONSIN...

    16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Based on the 06Z neighborhood probabilities...and a quick look at
    the probabilities from the 12Z run...extended the Slight Risk area
    a bit to the east to cover more of southern Wisconsin. In the
    broader picture...the risk of excessive rainfall exists on the
    periphery of a broad upper level ridge from New Mexico and West
    Texas...across the Central Plains into the Upper Midwest given the
    persistent deep-layer advection and embedded shortwave energy. The
    12Z HREF probabilities aligned well with the previously issued
    Excessive Rainfall Outlook and only minor adjustments were needed.

    Bann


    ...New Mexico into West Texas...

    A general pattern of persistence will maintain a relevant posture
    for scattered to widespread convective impacts across Southwestern
    TX up through the eastern half of NM with the highest potential
    impacts aligned within the terrain. Ample moisture advection
    provided by prevailing southerly-oriented flow within the sfc-500mb
    layer will correlate with an environment capable of locally heavy
    rainfall within any cell maturation across the above areas. The
    proxy of the deep layer moisture and RER jet dynamics from the mean
    trough situated to the west will create an accumulated risk of
    showers and storms propagating over the same areas leading to
    increasingly compromised soils, or even interacting with the
    already prevalent burn scars situated over the Sacramento Mtns.
    Storm motions will likely be fairly weak as noted by the forecast
    Corfidi vectors residing between 5-15kts on average within the
    confines of the entire Southwest TX and Southeast NM domains. This
    will allow for modest training concerns that will ultimately cause
    problems if they fall within any of the urban centers along the
    Upper Trans Pecos out into the complex topography located in the
    region. The best chance for flash flooding will likely be within
    those burn scar locations where hydrophobic soils are still a
    problem and can promote a formidable runoff regime that could cause
    significant problems locally if a heavy cell forms overhead. Areas
    within the Pecos river are also notorious for flash flooding
    capabilities due to the limited drainage structures prevalent
    within town limits. Considering the HREF neighborhood probs for >2"
    are running between 50-90% over a large area extending from the
    Davis Mtns up through the Eastern NM Caprock, the previous SLGT
    risk was upheld with wording of a higher end SLGT considering the
    environment in place.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    The Central Plains through the Midwest continues to lie within the
    northern and northwest periphery of a broad ridge extension
    centered over the Mid Atlantic. The proxy of the ridge has allowed
    for a persistent south to southwesterly mean flow within the
    column leading to steady moisture advection within the boundary
    layer up to around 500mb. Current PWATs from 00z RAOB analysis
    across the Plains and Mississippi Valley denote moisture anomalies
    that are approaching +2 deviations, something that has also been
    reflected in the last several days of NAEFS anomalies within the
    ensemble suite. The relevant moisture pooling across the zone
    extending from KS up into the Midwest will lead to a formidable
    widespread convective initiation scheme that will develop due to
    increased convergence along and ahead of a slow-moving cold front
    nosing down through the Northern Plains. The interaction of the
    cold front with a very buoyant environment (MUCAPE 2500-4000 J/kg)
    located across the Central Plains up into the Upper Mississippi
    Valley will create a broad axis of heavy convection with the
    heaviest precip likely correlated with the 2+" PWAT domain located
    from North-Central KS and points northeast into IA.

    There's a general consensus within the latest CAMs suite of
    significant totals between 2-4" forecast located within the
    aforementioned zone, including some deterministic output and lower
    neighborhood prob correlation for some places exceeding 5". The
    prospects for those types of totals stems from not only the
    favorable deep moist convective pattern, but also the mean layer
    flow and surface convergence regime along the front creating a
    favorable environment for back-building convection and training
    cell prospects. This is fairly well-documented when assessing
    forecast Corfidi Vectors continuing this divergent storm motion
    setup within the upshear and downshear calculations given the
    forecast wind field(s). A strong RER jet dynamic will only aid in
    a blossoming QPF field and maintenance as the mean flow takes the
    convective pattern off to the northeast. This pattern will carry
    through Monday evening into early Tuesday morning with some
    weakening of the convective field anticipated due to loss of
    diurnal destabilization. In any case, this setup is capable of
    widespread 1-2" totals with the hardest hit locations likely seeing
    2-4" with locally higher as noted in the latest CAMs. The saving
    grace, at least initially for D1, are the drier soils centered over
    the Central Plains into parts of Southeast NE and Southwest IA
    leading to higher FFG indices that will need some priming in order
    to likely reflect a more significant flash flood response.

    The change from the previous forecast was an adjustment to the
    south with the overall SLGT risk as guidance reflects a bit of a
    faster frontal progression than anticipated. This places a higher
    risk a bit south over Northeast KS to points northeast. The threat
    for locally heavy rainfall is also forecast across Southwest KS
    with cells ejecting out of the High Plains of CO/NM, but CAMs are
    less defined due to the lack of a boundary layer focus
    comparatively. The MRGL exists in at particular area, but if CAMs
    come into agreement on a local max centered near or southwest of
    DDC, then the SLGT risk may be extended further to the southwest to
    account for the prospect.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    20Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    The periphery of the strong upper ridge/upper high will continue to
    be the focus for heavy to excessive rainfall from New Mexico into
    the Central/Northern Plains...with particular concern remaining
    over New Mexico given the magnitude and the persistence of the
    moisture transport into the region and the increasing upper=20
    support from the right entrance region of an upper level jet that=20
    can work in tandem with the complex terrain. HREF neighborhood=20
    probabilities for 24-hour QPF exceeding 10 yr ARI remained robust=20
    enough in New Mexico...and in roughly the same placement as the 06Z
    HREF guidance...that the main changes to the previously issued ERO
    were mostly across the upper Midwest where models showed a a=20
    southward and westward shift in QPF placement.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...New Mexico...

    Upper level pattern will be in a short transitory phase, but one
    that will ultimately lead to a threat of prolonged heavy rainfall
    from training convection across much of the terrain in Southern and
    Central NM. The massive ridge to the east will flex further as we
    head into Tuesday with the higher heights on the western fringes
    pushing back west beyond the eastern portions NM. A steady north-
    south progression within the mid and upper levels will send
    numerous smaller shortwave perturbations poleward with anticipated
    motions into the Sacramento's, eventually north into the Sangre de
    Cristos by the late-afternoon and evening period on Tuesday.
    Moisture remaining parked over the region coupled with the focused
    ascent and narrow upslope proxy within the Sacramento Mtns. will
    lead to a corridor of heavy convection remaining situated in-of
    the terrain. There's a growing consensus within all deterministic
    that local topographic effects within this pattern will yield some
    significant rainfall potential over areas that are prone to flash
    flooding, especially with the burn scars still present near Ruidoso
    creating higher runoff capabilities. 00z HREF depicted between 2-3"
    of rainfall in just the 12-hr period between 12-00z on Tue/Wed with
    precip continuing at the end of the run. Ensemble mean forecast
    within the NWP suite was up around 3" for multiple locations with a
    large areal coverage of at least 2" within the mean output. These
    are generally signals that favor not only flash flooding prospects,
    but widespread flash flood concerns with more significant impacts
    possible.

    The signal for heavy rainfall continues all the way up into the
    Sangre de Cristos where the afternoon and evening time frames call
    for widespread heavy thunderstorm activity aligned with the ridges
    of the southern Rockies. These areas also have burn scar prevalence
    that could exacerbate flash flood risks as runoff capabilities are
    maximized. Considering the anticipated threat bleeding further
    north within the guidance this evening, the previous MDT risk was
    expanded northward to encompass those areas within the Sangre de
    Cristos and neighboring valleys. The threat for a targeted higher
    risk over the Sacramento's is plausible if this signal remains for
    another forecast cycle or two. As of now, it is deemed closer to a
    high-end MDT risk with the area across the northern Sacramento's
    the most susceptible to significant impact potential.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    The pattern across the Plains and Midwest that will bring heavy
    rainfall to those areas Monday night into Tuesday morning will
    bleed over into the D2 period with ongoing precip likely across
    Northeast KS into adjacent areas of NE/MO/IA. Flash flooding
    concerns will be ongoing at this time and recent CAMs output is
    signaling more rainfall through at least 18z will continue to
    plague those same areas. 00z HREF neighborhood probs over the 12hr
    period between 12-00z Tue/Wed denote a 40-60% chance of exceeding
    2" over areas that will have already seen significant (2-4+")
    rainfall the period prior. Rates ~1"/hr are modest within the hi-
    res ensemble probability fields as well, a testament to the
    persistence in the heavy convective setup in place. There will
    finally be less of a concern late in the afternoon as the frontal
    progression migrates north the second half of the period, so the
    threat will likely be more focused in that area the first half of
    the forecast. Still, this is enough for a continued SLGT risk with
    higher end risk potential given the period overlap.

    The setup the following evening becomes trickier as the entire
    evolution comes down to the handling of the mid-level energy riding
    northeast out of the Southern Plains into the Central Plains and
    Upper Midwest after nightfall. Surface front from the prior period
    will eventually hit a roadblock on its southern progression and
    flip back to a warm front as it migrates back to the north under
    the guide of a potent LLJ generation across the Plains. The
    interaction between the front and the energy will create a
    secondary convective enhancement that will impact areas further
    north than the previous 36 hrs. The lack of overlap may inhibit
    significant impacts, however the training threat within the
    confines of the boundary may be enough to warrant some higher risk
    of flash flooding. The setup is depicted by guidance in the 00-12z
    period Wednesday, but position of the heaviest precip is seemingly
    all over the place. The threat is certainly there for 2-4" with
    locally higher, but specifics still remain sort of muddled. The
    SLGT risk prior was adjusted to reflect the ensemble mean QPF
    distribution with a heavy precip footprint still located over far
    Southeast SD into Southern MN for the period. How far north the
    front migrates and handling of the shortwave ejection will
    determine exactly where the heaviest precip will occur. Right now,
    anywhere within the SLGT risk is fair game, so it's a time frame to
    monitor closely.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    20Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Guidance still showed a downward trend in the threat of excessive
    rainfall across the country as increasing westerly flow across the
    northern tier of states helps to disrupt flow around the upper
    ridge anchored over the Southeast US. Even so...there is still=20
    enough of a threat to warrant a high- end Slight across parts of=20
    Minnesota and Iowa and a continuation of a Slight Risk across=20
    portions of New Mexico.=20

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...New Mexico...

    Unlike the prior periods, the D3 is finally the downward trend to
    the incessant nature of scattered to numerous thunderstorms that
    will plague the state, especially across the Sacramento's and
    Sangre de Cristos. Despite the lower coverage anticipated,
    scattered thunderstorms are still plausible in the afternoon as
    ample heating during prime destabilization window (16-21z) will
    yield another threat of thunderstorms across the terrain and
    adjacent valleys. Current signals are nowhere near as robust as the
    D1/D2 time frames, but with potentially significant impacts prior,
    there's a greater threat of truly compromised FFG's leading in
    allowing for the bar to be very low for flash flooding. As of now,
    the ensemble mean is still highlighting the Sacramento's up into
    the I-40 corridor as the main areas of concern. A SLGT risk was
    maintained and expanded a bit to encompass the zones of greatest
    risk for flash flooding. A targeted higher risk is not out of the
    question for the Sacramento's, but will assess in later forecasts
    as we monitor how everything evolves leading into the D3.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Unlike the prior period where there is some uncertainty in the
    handling of shortwave energy and frontal positioning, there's a
    pretty good consensus brewing on the pattern converging in-of the
    Upper Midwest with sights on MN into Western WI as the evolution in
    D2 carries over into D3. Mean QPF output via ensembles is running
    between 2-4" for an areal average with the maxima positioned across
    Southern MN back into adjacent areas of SD/NE to the southwest. Not
    one, but two waves of convection will encroach the area with some
    spots potentially seeing some significant rainfall (>2") in both
    waves which will likely lead to scattered, bordering widespread
    flash flood prospects due to the compounding rainfall forecast. NBM
    90th percentile QPF is well over 2" across much of the
    aforementioned region with some higher totals even extending back
    through NE. As of now, it's still a bit early for the higher risks
    due to some uncertainty the day prior which could shift the
    forecast a bit in either direction (north or south). For now,
    maintained a higher end SLGT across a large portion of the Upper
    Midwest with the eastern extension pushing all the way out into
    Northern WI. A targeted higher risk is certainly in the cards if
    this signal remains and consensus grows on the evolution of the
    synoptic details.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_DND92HhaV1S1HNjHsIMnpoLmuwdWxSJxb-k6Lkao9o0= _5zGzemX6LkwsnupUMAriE2nIfbpcAUpnqqZAr0xjvLSmzc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_DND92HhaV1S1HNjHsIMnpoLmuwdWxSJxb-k6Lkao9o0= _5zGzemX6LkwsnupUMAriE2nIfbpcAUpnqqZAr0xvg-nvok$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_DND92HhaV1S1HNjHsIMnpoLmuwdWxSJxb-k6Lkao9o0= _5zGzemX6LkwsnupUMAriE2nIfbpcAUpnqqZAr0xTuTzu80$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 24 00:57:29 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 240056
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    856 PM EDT Mon Jun 23 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS, AND FROM KANSAS INTO SOUTHERN
    WISCONSIN...

    01Z Update...
    Based on current observation trends, as well as recent hi-res
    guidance, removed much of the Marginal Risk area previously
    covering the central High Plains, and brought the northern edge of
    the Marginal Risk further south across the central Plains into the
    Upper Midwest. Made mostly minor adjustments to the Slight Risk=20
    areas, where the potential for heavy rain and flash flooding is=20
    expected to continue through the evening into the overnight. Recent
    runs of the HRRR and the 18Z HREF indicate the greatest threat for
    widespread heavy amounts extends from northeastern Kansas, through
    northwestern Missouri, into southern Iowa. Training storms are=20
    expected to continue, with the 18Z HREF showing high neighborhood=20 probabilities (greater than 80 percent) for accumulations over 2=20
    inches, and greater than 50 percent for accumulations exceeding 3=20
    inches in this area.

    Pereira

    16Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update... Based on the 06Z=20
    neighborhood probabilities...and a quick look at the probabilities=20
    from the 12Z run...extended the Slight Risk area a bit to the east=20
    to cover more of southern Wisconsin. In the broader picture...the=20
    risk of excessive rainfall exists on the periphery of a broad upper
    level ridge from New Mexico and West Texas...across the Central=20
    Plains into the Upper Midwest given the persistent deep-layer=20
    advection and embedded shortwave energy. The 12Z HREF probabilities
    aligned well with the previously issued Excessive Rainfall Outlook
    and only minor adjustments were needed.

    Bann


    ...New Mexico into West Texas...

    A general pattern of persistence will maintain a relevant posture
    for scattered to widespread convective impacts across Southwestern
    TX up through the eastern half of NM with the highest potential
    impacts aligned within the terrain. Ample moisture advection
    provided by prevailing southerly-oriented flow within the sfc-500mb
    layer will correlate with an environment capable of locally heavy
    rainfall within any cell maturation across the above areas. The
    proxy of the deep layer moisture and RER jet dynamics from the mean
    trough situated to the west will create an accumulated risk of
    showers and storms propagating over the same areas leading to
    increasingly compromised soils, or even interacting with the
    already prevalent burn scars situated over the Sacramento Mtns.
    Storm motions will likely be fairly weak as noted by the forecast
    Corfidi vectors residing between 5-15kts on average within the
    confines of the entire Southwest TX and Southeast NM domains. This
    will allow for modest training concerns that will ultimately cause
    problems if they fall within any of the urban centers along the
    Upper Trans Pecos out into the complex topography located in the
    region. The best chance for flash flooding will likely be within
    those burn scar locations where hydrophobic soils are still a
    problem and can promote a formidable runoff regime that could cause
    significant problems locally if a heavy cell forms overhead. Areas
    within the Pecos river are also notorious for flash flooding
    capabilities due to the limited drainage structures prevalent
    within town limits. Considering the HREF neighborhood probs for >2"
    are running between 50-90% over a large area extending from the
    Davis Mtns up through the Eastern NM Caprock, the previous SLGT
    risk was upheld with wording of a higher end SLGT considering the
    environment in place.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    The Central Plains through the Midwest continues to lie within the
    northern and northwest periphery of a broad ridge extension
    centered over the Mid Atlantic. The proxy of the ridge has allowed
    for a persistent south to southwesterly mean flow within the
    column leading to steady moisture advection within the boundary
    layer up to around 500mb. Current PWATs from 00z RAOB analysis
    across the Plains and Mississippi Valley denote moisture anomalies
    that are approaching +2 deviations, something that has also been
    reflected in the last several days of NAEFS anomalies within the
    ensemble suite. The relevant moisture pooling across the zone
    extending from KS up into the Midwest will lead to a formidable
    widespread convective initiation scheme that will develop due to
    increased convergence along and ahead of a slow-moving cold front
    nosing down through the Northern Plains. The interaction of the
    cold front with a very buoyant environment (MUCAPE 2500-4000 J/kg)
    located across the Central Plains up into the Upper Mississippi
    Valley will create a broad axis of heavy convection with the
    heaviest precip likely correlated with the 2+" PWAT domain located
    from North-Central KS and points northeast into IA.

    There's a general consensus within the latest CAMs suite of
    significant totals between 2-4" forecast located within the
    aforementioned zone, including some deterministic output and lower
    neighborhood prob correlation for some places exceeding 5". The
    prospects for those types of totals stems from not only the
    favorable deep moist convective pattern, but also the mean layer
    flow and surface convergence regime along the front creating a
    favorable environment for back-building convection and training
    cell prospects. This is fairly well-documented when assessing
    forecast Corfidi Vectors continuing this divergent storm motion
    setup within the upshear and downshear calculations given the
    forecast wind field(s). A strong RER jet dynamic will only aid in
    a blossoming QPF field and maintenance as the mean flow takes the
    convective pattern off to the northeast. This pattern will carry
    through Monday evening into early Tuesday morning with some
    weakening of the convective field anticipated due to loss of
    diurnal destabilization. In any case, this setup is capable of
    widespread 1-2" totals with the hardest hit locations likely seeing
    2-4" with locally higher as noted in the latest CAMs. The saving
    grace, at least initially for D1, are the drier soils centered over
    the Central Plains into parts of Southeast NE and Southwest IA
    leading to higher FFG indices that will need some priming in order
    to likely reflect a more significant flash flood response.

    The change from the previous forecast was an adjustment to the
    south with the overall SLGT risk as guidance reflects a bit of a
    faster frontal progression than anticipated. This places a higher
    risk a bit south over Northeast KS to points northeast. The threat
    for locally heavy rainfall is also forecast across Southwest KS
    with cells ejecting out of the High Plains of CO/NM, but CAMs are
    less defined due to the lack of a boundary layer focus
    comparatively. The MRGL exists in at particular area, but if CAMs
    come into agreement on a local max centered near or southwest of
    DDC, then the SLGT risk may be extended further to the southwest to
    account for the prospect.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    20Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    The periphery of the strong upper ridge/upper high will continue to
    be the focus for heavy to excessive rainfall from New Mexico into
    the Central/Northern Plains...with particular concern remaining
    over New Mexico given the magnitude and the persistence of the
    moisture transport into the region and the increasing upper
    support from the right entrance region of an upper level jet that
    can work in tandem with the complex terrain. HREF neighborhood
    probabilities for 24-hour QPF exceeding 10 yr ARI remained robust
    enough in New Mexico...and in roughly the same placement as the 06Z
    HREF guidance...that the main changes to the previously issued ERO
    were mostly across the upper Midwest where models showed a a
    southward and westward shift in QPF placement.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...New Mexico...

    Upper level pattern will be in a short transitory phase, but one
    that will ultimately lead to a threat of prolonged heavy rainfall
    from training convection across much of the terrain in Southern and
    Central NM. The massive ridge to the east will flex further as we
    head into Tuesday with the higher heights on the western fringes
    pushing back west beyond the eastern portions NM. A steady north-
    south progression within the mid and upper levels will send
    numerous smaller shortwave perturbations poleward with anticipated
    motions into the Sacramento's, eventually north into the Sangre de
    Cristos by the late-afternoon and evening period on Tuesday.
    Moisture remaining parked over the region coupled with the focused
    ascent and narrow upslope proxy within the Sacramento Mtns. will
    lead to a corridor of heavy convection remaining situated in-of
    the terrain. There's a growing consensus within all deterministic
    that local topographic effects within this pattern will yield some
    significant rainfall potential over areas that are prone to flash
    flooding, especially with the burn scars still present near Ruidoso
    creating higher runoff capabilities. 00z HREF depicted between 2-3"
    of rainfall in just the 12-hr period between 12-00z on Tue/Wed with
    precip continuing at the end of the run. Ensemble mean forecast
    within the NWP suite was up around 3" for multiple locations with a
    large areal coverage of at least 2" within the mean output. These
    are generally signals that favor not only flash flooding prospects,
    but widespread flash flood concerns with more significant impacts
    possible.

    The signal for heavy rainfall continues all the way up into the
    Sangre de Cristos where the afternoon and evening time frames call
    for widespread heavy thunderstorm activity aligned with the ridges
    of the southern Rockies. These areas also have burn scar prevalence
    that could exacerbate flash flood risks as runoff capabilities are
    maximized. Considering the anticipated threat bleeding further
    north within the guidance this evening, the previous MDT risk was
    expanded northward to encompass those areas within the Sangre de
    Cristos and neighboring valleys. The threat for a targeted higher
    risk over the Sacramento's is plausible if this signal remains for
    another forecast cycle or two. As of now, it is deemed closer to a
    high-end MDT risk with the area across the northern Sacramento's
    the most susceptible to significant impact potential.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    The pattern across the Plains and Midwest that will bring heavy
    rainfall to those areas Monday night into Tuesday morning will
    bleed over into the D2 period with ongoing precip likely across
    Northeast KS into adjacent areas of NE/MO/IA. Flash flooding
    concerns will be ongoing at this time and recent CAMs output is
    signaling more rainfall through at least 18z will continue to
    plague those same areas. 00z HREF neighborhood probs over the 12hr
    period between 12-00z Tue/Wed denote a 40-60% chance of exceeding
    2" over areas that will have already seen significant (2-4+")
    rainfall the period prior. Rates ~1"/hr are modest within the hi-
    res ensemble probability fields as well, a testament to the
    persistence in the heavy convective setup in place. There will
    finally be less of a concern late in the afternoon as the frontal
    progression migrates north the second half of the period, so the
    threat will likely be more focused in that area the first half of
    the forecast. Still, this is enough for a continued SLGT risk with
    higher end risk potential given the period overlap.

    The setup the following evening becomes trickier as the entire
    evolution comes down to the handling of the mid-level energy riding
    northeast out of the Southern Plains into the Central Plains and
    Upper Midwest after nightfall. Surface front from the prior period
    will eventually hit a roadblock on its southern progression and
    flip back to a warm front as it migrates back to the north under
    the guide of a potent LLJ generation across the Plains. The
    interaction between the front and the energy will create a
    secondary convective enhancement that will impact areas further
    north than the previous 36 hrs. The lack of overlap may inhibit
    significant impacts, however the training threat within the
    confines of the boundary may be enough to warrant some higher risk
    of flash flooding. The setup is depicted by guidance in the 00-12z
    period Wednesday, but position of the heaviest precip is seemingly
    all over the place. The threat is certainly there for 2-4" with
    locally higher, but specifics still remain sort of muddled. The
    SLGT risk prior was adjusted to reflect the ensemble mean QPF
    distribution with a heavy precip footprint still located over far
    Southeast SD into Southern MN for the period. How far north the
    front migrates and handling of the shortwave ejection will
    determine exactly where the heaviest precip will occur. Right now,
    anywhere within the SLGT risk is fair game, so it's a time frame to
    monitor closely.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    20Z Excessive Rainfall Discussion Update...
    Guidance still showed a downward trend in the threat of excessive
    rainfall across the country as increasing westerly flow across the
    northern tier of states helps to disrupt flow around the upper
    ridge anchored over the Southeast US. Even so...there is still
    enough of a threat to warrant a high- end Slight across parts of
    Minnesota and Iowa and a continuation of a Slight Risk across
    portions of New Mexico.

    Bann

    Previous Excessive Rainfall Discussion...

    ...New Mexico...

    Unlike the prior periods, the D3 is finally the downward trend to
    the incessant nature of scattered to numerous thunderstorms that
    will plague the state, especially across the Sacramento's and
    Sangre de Cristos. Despite the lower coverage anticipated,
    scattered thunderstorms are still plausible in the afternoon as
    ample heating during prime destabilization window (16-21z) will
    yield another threat of thunderstorms across the terrain and
    adjacent valleys. Current signals are nowhere near as robust as the
    D1/D2 time frames, but with potentially significant impacts prior,
    there's a greater threat of truly compromised FFG's leading in
    allowing for the bar to be very low for flash flooding. As of now,
    the ensemble mean is still highlighting the Sacramento's up into
    the I-40 corridor as the main areas of concern. A SLGT risk was
    maintained and expanded a bit to encompass the zones of greatest
    risk for flash flooding. A targeted higher risk is not out of the
    question for the Sacramento's, but will assess in later forecasts
    as we monitor how everything evolves leading into the D3.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Unlike the prior period where there is some uncertainty in the
    handling of shortwave energy and frontal positioning, there's a
    pretty good consensus brewing on the pattern converging in-of the
    Upper Midwest with sights on MN into Western WI as the evolution in
    D2 carries over into D3. Mean QPF output via ensembles is running
    between 2-4" for an areal average with the maxima positioned across
    Southern MN back into adjacent areas of SD/NE to the southwest. Not
    one, but two waves of convection will encroach the area with some
    spots potentially seeing some significant rainfall (>2") in both
    waves which will likely lead to scattered, bordering widespread
    flash flood prospects due to the compounding rainfall forecast. NBM
    90th percentile QPF is well over 2" across much of the
    aforementioned region with some higher totals even extending back
    through NE. As of now, it's still a bit early for the higher risks
    due to some uncertainty the day prior which could shift the
    forecast a bit in either direction (north or south). For now,
    maintained a higher end SLGT across a large portion of the Upper
    Midwest with the eastern extension pushing all the way out into
    Northern WI. A targeted higher risk is certainly in the cards if
    this signal remains and consensus grows on the evolution of the
    synoptic details.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5bHnbvtdKtIpDgrZzTMpC6EwEy5qi15dOSgjNrzRpth3= PHVqxvFBHTrvntYWrp4YBhuGqt3cFhxVOc2jCTXeWz2SWhY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5bHnbvtdKtIpDgrZzTMpC6EwEy5qi15dOSgjNrzRpth3= PHVqxvFBHTrvntYWrp4YBhuGqt3cFhxVOc2jCTXeGC2IqGA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5bHnbvtdKtIpDgrZzTMpC6EwEy5qi15dOSgjNrzRpth3= PHVqxvFBHTrvntYWrp4YBhuGqt3cFhxVOc2jCTXewS_00YY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 24 08:10:10 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 240808
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    408 AM EDT Tue Jun 24 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...New Mexico...

    A massive 597dm ridge centered over the Ohio Valley and Mid
    Atlantic will flex further as we head into Tuesday with the higher
    heights on the western fringes pushing back west beyond the=20
    eastern portions NM. A steady north- south progression within the=20
    mid and upper levels will send numerous smaller shortwave=20
    perturbations poleward with anticipated motions into the=20
    Sacramento's, eventually north into the Sangre de Cristos by the=20 late-afternoon and evening period today. Anomalous moisture ranking
    in the 99th percentile via NAEFS and ECENS Climatological
    percentiles will remain parked over the region the next 24-36 hrs=20
    and will couple with the focused ascent and narrow upslope proxy=20
    within the Sacramento Mtns. This will translate to a corridor of=20
    heavy convection remaining situated in- of the terrain beginning=20
    late this morning and carrying through peak diurnal instability.=20
    Consensus within all deterministic and relevant ensembles agree=20
    that local topographic effects within this pattern will yield some=20 significant rainfall potential over areas that are prone to flash=20
    flooding, especially with the burn scars still present near Ruidoso
    creating higher runoff capabilities. 00z HREF neighborhood
    probabilities were elevated for the >3" (60-80%) and >5" (30-60%)
    prospects within the Sacramento's for the period. The biggest
    difference is the increased probs for those similar thresholds for
    areas west of the Sacramento's, encroaching on places northeast of
    the Bootheel into Southern NM.=20

    The difference the past 24 hrs. has been the expected influence of
    the approaching trough out west providing a reinforcement of the=20
    trailing upper jet with the amplitude of the pattern creating more=20
    room further west for large scale ascent, and moisture advection=20
    back into the western half of NM, even sneaking into Southeast AZ.=20
    The entire evolution will likely spur scattered to widespread=20
    thunderstorm activity over the aforementioned regions with cold=20
    pool mergers from storms likely to produce some upscale growth in=20
    the evening as the convergence of cold pools will act to spawn more
    multi-cell modes. A lot of the deterministic now has locally 2-4"=20
    across places like the San Mateo Mtns. and adjacent deserts=20
    stemming from the convective clusters propagating eastward over the
    second half of the forecast cycle. These areas are prone to any=20
    type of heavy rainfall, and given the highly anomalous environment,
    1-2"/hr rates are certainly in the cards. This threat will linger
    through the overnight time frame before finally settling closer to
    Wednesday AM.=20=20

    Further north, the signal for heavy rainfall continues into the=20
    Sangre de Cristos where the afternoon and evening time frames call=20
    for widespread heavy thunderstorm activity aligned with the ridges=20
    of the southern Rockies. These areas also have burn scar prevalence
    that could exacerbate flash flood risks as runoff capabilities are
    maximized. 24hr 100yr ARI exceedance probabilities are highest
    across Central and Southern NM, but a small axis of >20% probs
    remains parked over the Sangre de Cristos north of Santa Fe. 10yr
    ARI exceedance probs are between 60-80% for the same area (90+%
    over the Sacramento's), so the threat is within the upper echelon
    of the prob fields leading to a higher chance of significant
    impacts over the complex terrain and remnant burn scars.=20

    The previous MDT risk was expanded westward to include those areas
    that could see locally as much as 2-4" in any storm impacts this
    afternoon and evening lasting into early Wednesday. A high-end MDT
    is forecast for the Sacramento and Sangre de Cristo Mtns. in NM.
    High end SLGT risk is forecast for El Paso proper and surrounding
    suburbs. There's a chance the threat for El Paso trends more
    impactful, so be sure to check in with the latest updates in the
    next forecast package for a potential upgrade over the urban
    center.=20

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Current radar/sat composite shows an extensive line of convection
    extending from southwest to northeast out of KS to as far north as
    Central WI. The setup for the convective pattern lies within the
    northern periphery of a ridge and along a quasi-stationary front
    bisecting the areas above. Smaller shortwaves rounding the western
    flank of the ridge will continue riding over top the front=20
    creating focused areas of showers and thunderstorms through the=20
    first 6hrs of the period with some areas over far Northeast KS into
    Northwest MO and Southern IA seeing a continuation of locally=20
    heavy rainfall bleeding into the new D1. This area is the focus=20
    initially for flash flood impacts with saturated grounds likely to=20
    struggle to withstand the initial batch of storms that push=20
    through. Thankfully, there will be a small "break" in the=20
    persistence of the convective pattern moving into the late-morning
    and afternoon, but still some scattered shower/storm development=20
    will be forecast during the prime destabilization period, so the=20
    threat for isolated flash flooding will carry through the daytime.=20

    By the evening, the focus of the convective pattern shifts back
    west and southwest with an ejection of a potent shortwave out of
    the Southern High Plains and Front Range of the Rockies. With ample
    instability presence across the Central Plains into the Midwest
    along the quasi-stationary front, a second convective onslaught is
    forecast to materialize likely beginning between 20-00z, carrying
    east and northeast through the remainder of the forecast. At the
    same juncture, a strong 700-900 kg/ms IVT pulse will be advecting=20 northeastward into the Central Plains and Midwest during the time=20
    frame of interest (00-12z Wednesday), so the heavy rain threat with
    2-3"/hr rates will certainly have potential for basically anywhere
    in the Central Plains/Midwest domain. There's a growing consensus=20
    on the area positioned over Southern SD, much of NE, and parts of=20
    KS being the initial beneficiary of the convective development=20
    which could lead to scattered flash flood prospects within a 6hr=20
    window upon initiation. As we move into the evening, nocturnal LLJ=20
    will spawn in-of the High Plains arcing northeast into parts of the
    Midwest allowing the stationary front to begin lifting north in=20
    the form of a warm front. The mean layer flow will begin to orient=20
    more parallel to the front itself creating an environment capable=20
    for cells to mature and begin training over areas within proxy to=20
    the boundary. Guidance has been subject to bouncing around on=20
    exactly where this may occur, but 00z CAMs have come into a=20
    reasonable agreement on an axis extending over Eastern NE,=20
    including the Omaha metro, through Western IA. This is correlated=20
    with the higher neighborhood probs for >2" (50-70%) aligned over=20
    the area with the >3" signal pretty respectable (40-60%) over the=20
    same area. The highest probs and overlap of heavy precip within the
    CAMs is surprisingly directly over Omaha and surrounding areas.=20
    This depicting likely stems from the nose of the LLJ being forecast
    to right over the general vicinity, a synoptic representation that
    typically denotes a greater likelihood of where the heavier precip
    could occur. It will be something to monitor in the next=20
    succession of CAMs output, but with such a solid signal, was=20
    inclined to mention as a higher end SLGT will be forecast within=20
    that Eastern NE through Western IA region.=20

    Further north, a complex of storms will originate over Southern SD
    from another shortwave progression moving through the Northern
    Plains. This area could see the benefit of cell mergers somewhere
    in the proxy of Southeast SD into Southwest MN as depicted within
    multiple deterministic. Considering this area levying higher FFG's
    compared to areas further south, the threat for significant flash
    flooding is lower, but still generally within the SLGT risk
    threshold considering the airmass in place. The SLGT risk is
    positioned as far back as Northeast CO into Southern NE and as far
    east as Northern IL and Southern WI thanks to multiple periods of
    heavy convection impacting the region.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    ...New Mexico...

    Despite a smaller areal coverage anticipated for convection across
    New Mexico for Wednesday, scattered thunderstorms will still=20
    cause problems during afternoon initiation as ample heating during
    the prime destabilization window (16-21z) will yield another=20
    threat of heavy rainfall across the terrain and adjacent valleys in
    Central and Southern NM. Current signals are nowhere near as=20
    robust as the D1 time frame, but with forecasted significant=20
    impacts the period prior, there's a greater threat of truly=20
    compromised FFG's leading in, allowing for the bar to be very low=20
    for flash flooding over areas that will see significant rainfall in
    the areas referenced above. Hi-res ensemble blended mean QPF is now
    solidly within the 1-2" range with locally higher totals across the Sacramento's. Areal average 0.5-1" of rainfall is forecast over
    much of South-Central NM and over the Sangre de Cristos with totals
    potentially up to 2" in stronger convective cores. The overlap with
    the previous period allows for at least a SLGT risk with a higher
    end SLGT progged over the Sacramento's where convective initiation
    is likely. A targeted upgrade is plausible within the two main
    mountain areas in the state, especially when you factor in the
    antecedent conditions for the period in question. If CAMs come in
    more robust, or impacts during the D1 are severe enough to fully
    compromise soils to where any convective threat could be deemed
    significant.=20

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Convective pattern across the Plains and Midwest at the end of the
    D1 will translate northward into the Upper Mississippi Valley with
    organized convection over NE/IA and SD/MN converging along the
    propagating warm front leading to a swath of heavy rainfall across
    much of the Southern 1/3rd of MN. All guidance is in agreement on a
    pretty significant QPF shield moving through the area encompassing
    Southern MN up through Northwest WI with some back-building
    potential along the front as it migrates north and begins to slow
    its momentum. Areal average of 1-2" with locally up to 4" totals=20
    are forecast across that portion of the Upper Midwest, reflected=20
    well within the NBM 90th percentile QPF signature, as well as=20
    within the 12-00z time frame covered by the end of the 00z HREF=20
    blended mean. This is just round 1 of what will be yet another
    secondary convective initiation come Wednesday evening when another
    strong shortwave and attendant IVT pulse comes pushing back over
    Eastern NE, Western IA and points north. Additional heavy rainfall
    will intersect many areas that will have seen significant totals
    earlier in the period and the second half of the D1. The
    compounding impacts will lead to scattered to widespread flash
    flood instances as FFG's will be notably lower comparatively to=20
    the before the previous rounds. Ensemble bias corrected mean is now
    between 3-4" over a large area encompassing Southern MN into=20
    Northwest WI with 2-3" positioned just to the southwest of MN. EC=20
    AIFS output is in agreement with the positioning of the QPF maxima=20 anticipated, something that has not been the case over the past few
    days, so we seem to be moving into a greater consensus. As a=20
    result, there is a large high-end SLGT risk positioned from=20
    Northeast NE up through MN into the western portion of WI. An=20
    upgrade within anywhere in that zone is plausible in the coming=20
    updates as multi-day impacts could spur some locally significant=20
    flash flood prospects.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST AND NORTHERN GREAT LAKES...

    ...Midwest...

    The final shortwave in the progression bleeding over from the
    previous D2 time frame will continue pushing northeast before
    finally vacating the Upper Midwest later on Thursday. Heavy rain
    threat will continue over parts of MN and WI before eventually
    impacting the Western U.P. of Michigan before its departure.
    Instability across the region will be significantly lower than
    previous days with the warm front becoming stationary prior to
    reaching the southern shores of Lake Superior. The threat for flash
    flooding is most notably in the first 6-12 hr window of the
    forecast with a sharp decline in the threat afterwards as the
    pattern shifts with the ridge expected to be breaking down. 1-2"
    with locally higher amounts will allow for flash flooding in any
    area from IA up through MN/WI, especially in places where
    significant rainfall has occurred in prior periods. A broad SLGT
    risk remains in place over the Northern Great Lakes and Upper
    Midwest with the biggest change being the extension down through
    Central IA as trailing thunderstorms are forecast within the
    frontal orientation Thursday afternoon and evening.=20

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given expected wet antecedent conditions following
    previous multi-day convective impact. Coverage and magnitude will
    be lower than previous periods, but still enough of a threat and
    coverage to warrant a MRGL continuation.=20

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Disturbance rounding the northern periphery of our massive ridge
    will ultimately slide down through the Mid Atlantic during the
    mid to late-afternoon hrs. on Thursday. The combination of strong
    diurnal destabilization during the daytime and prominent moisture
    lingering over the area will create a very buoyant environment
    capable of strong thunderstorm genesis anywhere from NY state down
    through the Central Mid Atlantic including; MD/PA/DE/Northern WV
    and VA. Current projection of QPF is fairly isolated in the heavier
    convective outputs with some deterministic depicting totals as=20
    high as 2-3" in spots. Initial assessment of the setup leads
    towards a low end MRGL risk for now, but will assess how models
    handle the shortwave disturbance and proposed ascent pattern within
    a fairly unstable environment over the next few days.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4IsHKYg0WeZ9VTXnVXn-d1Eu4LzT3wmDqS5JTvsfsWJ5= cHu3012V6nguYBBAk9PSnLNippXpUuv9--ubloCw68Ugj3M$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4IsHKYg0WeZ9VTXnVXn-d1Eu4LzT3wmDqS5JTvsfsWJ5= cHu3012V6nguYBBAk9PSnLNippXpUuv9--ubloCwGTirRnI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4IsHKYg0WeZ9VTXnVXn-d1Eu4LzT3wmDqS5JTvsfsWJ5= cHu3012V6nguYBBAk9PSnLNippXpUuv9--ubloCwIXg5h3w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 24 16:00:02 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 241559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Tue Jun 24 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...16Z Update...
    Subtle changes overall compared to the overnight forecast. Numerous
    instances of flash flooding -- some of which will be significant --
    are expected over Central/Southern New Mexico and far West Texas=20
    today. The main adjustments included a southward extension of the=20
    Moderate Risk area to encompass El Paso based upon 12z sounding=20
    data featuring PWATs around the daily max value, and 24 HR HREF=20
    neighborhood probabilities of 2-3" around 40-60%.

    Asherman

    ...New Mexico...

    A massive 597dm ridge centered over the Ohio Valley and Mid=20
    Atlantic will flex further as we head into Tuesday with the higher=20
    heights on the western fringes pushing back west beyond the eastern
    portions NM. A steady north- south progression within the mid and=20
    upper levels will send numerous smaller shortwave perturbations=20
    poleward with anticipated motions into the Sacramento's, eventually
    north into the Sangre de Cristos by the late-afternoon and evening
    period today. Anomalous moisture ranking in the 99th percentile=20
    via NAEFS and ECENS Climatological percentiles will remain parked=20
    over the region the next 24-36 hrs and will couple with the focused
    ascent and narrow upslope proxy within the Sacramento Mtns. This=20
    will translate to a corridor of heavy convection remaining situated
    in- of the terrain beginning late this morning and carrying=20
    through peak diurnal instability. Consensus within all=20
    deterministic and relevant ensembles agree that local topographic=20
    effects within this pattern will yield some significant rainfall=20
    potential over areas that are prone to flash flooding, especially=20
    with the burn scars still present near Ruidoso creating higher=20
    runoff capabilities. 00z HREF neighborhood probabilities were=20
    elevated for the >3" (60-80%) and >5" (30-60%) prospects within the Sacramento's for the period. The biggest difference is the=20
    increased probs for those similar thresholds for areas west of the=20 Sacramento's, encroaching on places northeast of the Bootheel into=20
    Southern NM.

    The difference the past 24 hrs. has been the expected influence of
    the approaching trough out west providing a reinforcement of the
    trailing upper jet with the amplitude of the pattern creating more
    room further west for large scale ascent, and moisture advection
    back into the western half of NM, even sneaking into Southeast AZ.
    The entire evolution will likely spur scattered to widespread
    thunderstorm activity over the aforementioned regions with cold
    pool mergers from storms likely to produce some upscale growth in
    the evening as the convergence of cold pools will act to spawn more
    multi-cell modes. A lot of the deterministic now has locally 2-4"
    across places like the San Mateo Mtns. and adjacent deserts
    stemming from the convective clusters propagating eastward over the
    second half of the forecast cycle. These areas are prone to any
    type of heavy rainfall, and given the highly anomalous environment,
    1-2"/hr rates are certainly in the cards. This threat will linger
    through the overnight time frame before finally settling closer to
    Wednesday AM.

    Further north, the signal for heavy rainfall continues into the
    Sangre de Cristos where the afternoon and evening time frames call
    for widespread heavy thunderstorm activity aligned with the ridges
    of the southern Rockies. These areas also have burn scar prevalence
    that could exacerbate flash flood risks as runoff capabilities are
    maximized. 24hr 100yr ARI exceedance probabilities are highest
    across Central and Southern NM, but a small axis of >20% probs
    remains parked over the Sangre de Cristos north of Santa Fe. 10yr
    ARI exceedance probs are between 60-80% for the same area (90+%
    over the Sacramento's), so the threat is within the upper echelon
    of the prob fields leading to a higher chance of significant
    impacts over the complex terrain and remnant burn scars.

    The previous MDT risk was expanded westward to include those areas
    that could see locally as much as 2-4" in any storm impacts this
    afternoon and evening lasting into early Wednesday. A high-end MDT
    is forecast for the Sacramento and Sangre de Cristo Mtns. in NM.
    High end SLGT risk is forecast for El Paso proper and surrounding
    suburbs. There's a chance the threat for El Paso trends more
    impactful, so be sure to check in with the latest updates in the
    next forecast package for a potential upgrade over the urban
    center.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Current radar/sat composite shows an extensive line of convection
    extending from southwest to northeast out of KS to as far north as
    Central WI. The setup for the convective pattern lies within the
    northern periphery of a ridge and along a quasi-stationary front
    bisecting the areas above. Smaller shortwaves rounding the western
    flank of the ridge will continue riding over top the front
    creating focused areas of showers and thunderstorms through the
    first 6hrs of the period with some areas over far Northeast KS into
    Northwest MO and Southern IA seeing a continuation of locally
    heavy rainfall bleeding into the new D1. This area is the focus
    initially for flash flood impacts with saturated grounds likely to
    struggle to withstand the initial batch of storms that push
    through. Thankfully, there will be a small "break" in the
    persistence of the convective pattern moving into the late-morning
    and afternoon, but still some scattered shower/storm development
    will be forecast during the prime destabilization period, so the
    threat for isolated flash flooding will carry through the daytime.

    By the evening, the focus of the convective pattern shifts back
    west and southwest with an ejection of a potent shortwave out of
    the Southern High Plains and Front Range of the Rockies. With ample
    instability presence across the Central Plains into the Midwest
    along the quasi-stationary front, a second convective onslaught is
    forecast to materialize likely beginning between 20-00z, carrying
    east and northeast through the remainder of the forecast. At the
    same juncture, a strong 700-900 kg/ms IVT pulse will be advecting
    northeastward into the Central Plains and Midwest during the time
    frame of interest (00-12z Wednesday), so the heavy rain threat with
    2-3"/hr rates will certainly have potential for basically anywhere
    in the Central Plains/Midwest domain. There's a growing consensus
    on the area positioned over Southern SD, much of NE, and parts of
    KS being the initial beneficiary of the convective development
    which could lead to scattered flash flood prospects within a 6hr
    window upon initiation. As we move into the evening, nocturnal LLJ
    will spawn in-of the High Plains arcing northeast into parts of the
    Midwest allowing the stationary front to begin lifting north in
    the form of a warm front. The mean layer flow will begin to orient
    more parallel to the front itself creating an environment capable
    for cells to mature and begin training over areas within proxy to
    the boundary. Guidance has been subject to bouncing around on
    exactly where this may occur, but 00z CAMs have come into a
    reasonable agreement on an axis extending over Eastern NE,
    including the Omaha metro, through Western IA. This is correlated
    with the higher neighborhood probs for >2" (50-70%) aligned over
    the area with the >3" signal pretty respectable (40-60%) over the
    same area. The highest probs and overlap of heavy precip within the
    CAMs is surprisingly directly over Omaha and surrounding areas.
    This depicting likely stems from the nose of the LLJ being forecast
    to right over the general vicinity, a synoptic representation that
    typically denotes a greater likelihood of where the heavier precip
    could occur. It will be something to monitor in the next
    succession of CAMs output, but with such a solid signal, was
    inclined to mention as a higher end SLGT will be forecast within
    that Eastern NE through Western IA region.

    Further north, a complex of storms will originate over Southern SD
    from another shortwave progression moving through the Northern
    Plains. This area could see the benefit of cell mergers somewhere
    in the proxy of Southeast SD into Southwest MN as depicted within
    multiple deterministic. Considering this area levying higher FFG's
    compared to areas further south, the threat for significant flash
    flooding is lower, but still generally within the SLGT risk
    threshold considering the airmass in place. The SLGT risk is
    positioned as far back as Northeast CO into Southern NE and as far
    east as Northern IL and Southern WI thanks to multiple periods of
    heavy convection impacting the region.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    ...New Mexico...

    Despite a smaller areal coverage anticipated for convection across
    New Mexico for Wednesday, scattered thunderstorms will still
    cause problems during afternoon initiation as ample heating during
    the prime destabilization window (16-21z) will yield another
    threat of heavy rainfall across the terrain and adjacent valleys in
    Central and Southern NM. Current signals are nowhere near as
    robust as the D1 time frame, but with forecasted significant
    impacts the period prior, there's a greater threat of truly
    compromised FFG's leading in, allowing for the bar to be very low
    for flash flooding over areas that will see significant rainfall in
    the areas referenced above. Hi-res ensemble blended mean QPF is now
    solidly within the 1-2" range with locally higher totals across the Sacramento's. Areal average 0.5-1" of rainfall is forecast over
    much of South-Central NM and over the Sangre de Cristos with totals
    potentially up to 2" in stronger convective cores. The overlap with
    the previous period allows for at least a SLGT risk with a higher
    end SLGT progged over the Sacramento's where convective initiation
    is likely. A targeted upgrade is plausible within the two main
    mountain areas in the state, especially when you factor in the
    antecedent conditions for the period in question. If CAMs come in
    more robust, or impacts during the D1 are severe enough to fully
    compromise soils to where any convective threat could be deemed
    significant.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Convective pattern across the Plains and Midwest at the end of the
    D1 will translate northward into the Upper Mississippi Valley with
    organized convection over NE/IA and SD/MN converging along the
    propagating warm front leading to a swath of heavy rainfall across
    much of the Southern 1/3rd of MN. All guidance is in agreement on a
    pretty significant QPF shield moving through the area encompassing
    Southern MN up through Northwest WI with some back-building
    potential along the front as it migrates north and begins to slow
    its momentum. Areal average of 1-2" with locally up to 4" totals
    are forecast across that portion of the Upper Midwest, reflected
    well within the NBM 90th percentile QPF signature, as well as
    within the 12-00z time frame covered by the end of the 00z HREF
    blended mean. This is just round 1 of what will be yet another
    secondary convective initiation come Wednesday evening when another
    strong shortwave and attendant IVT pulse comes pushing back over
    Eastern NE, Western IA and points north. Additional heavy rainfall
    will intersect many areas that will have seen significant totals
    earlier in the period and the second half of the D1. The
    compounding impacts will lead to scattered to widespread flash
    flood instances as FFG's will be notably lower comparatively to
    the before the previous rounds. Ensemble bias corrected mean is now
    between 3-4" over a large area encompassing Southern MN into
    Northwest WI with 2-3" positioned just to the southwest of MN. EC
    AIFS output is in agreement with the positioning of the QPF maxima
    anticipated, something that has not been the case over the past few
    days, so we seem to be moving into a greater consensus. As a
    result, there is a large high-end SLGT risk positioned from
    Northeast NE up through MN into the western portion of WI. An
    upgrade within anywhere in that zone is plausible in the coming
    updates as multi-day impacts could spur some locally significant
    flash flood prospects.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST AND NORTHERN GREAT LAKES...

    ...Midwest...

    The final shortwave in the progression bleeding over from the
    previous D2 time frame will continue pushing northeast before
    finally vacating the Upper Midwest later on Thursday. Heavy rain
    threat will continue over parts of MN and WI before eventually
    impacting the Western U.P. of Michigan before its departure.
    Instability across the region will be significantly lower than
    previous days with the warm front becoming stationary prior to
    reaching the southern shores of Lake Superior. The threat for flash
    flooding is most notably in the first 6-12 hr window of the
    forecast with a sharp decline in the threat afterwards as the
    pattern shifts with the ridge expected to be breaking down. 1-2"
    with locally higher amounts will allow for flash flooding in any
    area from IA up through MN/WI, especially in places where
    significant rainfall has occurred in prior periods. A broad SLGT
    risk remains in place over the Northern Great Lakes and Upper
    Midwest with the biggest change being the extension down through
    Central IA as trailing thunderstorms are forecast within the
    frontal orientation Thursday afternoon and evening.

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given expected wet antecedent conditions following
    previous multi-day convective impact. Coverage and magnitude will
    be lower than previous periods, but still enough of a threat and
    coverage to warrant a MRGL continuation.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Disturbance rounding the northern periphery of our massive ridge
    will ultimately slide down through the Mid Atlantic during the
    mid to late-afternoon hrs. on Thursday. The combination of strong
    diurnal destabilization during the daytime and prominent moisture
    lingering over the area will create a very buoyant environment
    capable of strong thunderstorm genesis anywhere from NY state down
    through the Central Mid Atlantic including; MD/PA/DE/Northern WV
    and VA. Current projection of QPF is fairly isolated in the heavier
    convective outputs with some deterministic depicting totals as
    high as 2-3" in spots. Initial assessment of the setup leads
    towards a low end MRGL risk for now, but will assess how models
    handle the shortwave disturbance and proposed ascent pattern within
    a fairly unstable environment over the next few days.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9zxmL5HMmDccAzyf6ZG9vo147MKi4WDqPWcl6dcFZoXC= g8lgITj2ejav4oJk3hIDxFIRectQ9C2m-tFjsfYNrvdj0_Y$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9zxmL5HMmDccAzyf6ZG9vo147MKi4WDqPWcl6dcFZoXC= g8lgITj2ejav4oJk3hIDxFIRectQ9C2m-tFjsfYNSJca3b4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9zxmL5HMmDccAzyf6ZG9vo147MKi4WDqPWcl6dcFZoXC= g8lgITj2ejav4oJk3hIDxFIRectQ9C2m-tFjsfYN_n4F6HM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jun 24 20:48:49 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 242048
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    448 PM EDT Tue Jun 24 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Jun 24 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO...

    ...16Z Update...
    Subtle changes overall compared to the overnight forecast. Numerous
    instances of flash flooding -- some of which will be significant --
    are expected over Central/Southern New Mexico and far West Texas
    today. The main adjustments included a southward extension of the
    Moderate Risk area to encompass El Paso based upon 12z sounding
    data featuring PWATs around the daily max value, and 24 HR HREF
    neighborhood probabilities of 2-3" around 40-60%.

    Asherman

    ...New Mexico...

    A massive 597dm ridge centered over the Ohio Valley and Mid
    Atlantic will flex further as we head into Tuesday with the higher
    heights on the western fringes pushing back west beyond the eastern
    portions NM. A steady north- south progression within the mid and
    upper levels will send numerous smaller shortwave perturbations
    poleward with anticipated motions into the Sacramento's, eventually
    north into the Sangre de Cristos by the late-afternoon and evening
    period today. Anomalous moisture ranking in the 99th percentile
    via NAEFS and ECENS Climatological percentiles will remain parked
    over the region the next 24-36 hrs and will couple with the focused
    ascent and narrow upslope proxy within the Sacramento Mtns. This
    will translate to a corridor of heavy convection remaining situated
    in- of the terrain beginning late this morning and carrying
    through peak diurnal instability. Consensus within all
    deterministic and relevant ensembles agree that local topographic
    effects within this pattern will yield some significant rainfall
    potential over areas that are prone to flash flooding, especially
    with the burn scars still present near Ruidoso creating higher
    runoff capabilities. 00z HREF neighborhood probabilities were
    elevated for the >3" (60-80%) and >5" (30-60%) prospects within the Sacramento's for the period. The biggest difference is the
    increased probs for those similar thresholds for areas west of the Sacramento's, encroaching on places northeast of the Bootheel into
    Southern NM.

    The difference the past 24 hrs. has been the expected influence of
    the approaching trough out west providing a reinforcement of the
    trailing upper jet with the amplitude of the pattern creating more
    room further west for large scale ascent, and moisture advection
    back into the western half of NM, even sneaking into Southeast AZ.
    The entire evolution will likely spur scattered to widespread
    thunderstorm activity over the aforementioned regions with cold
    pool mergers from storms likely to produce some upscale growth in
    the evening as the convergence of cold pools will act to spawn more
    multi-cell modes. A lot of the deterministic now has locally 2-4"
    across places like the San Mateo Mtns. and adjacent deserts
    stemming from the convective clusters propagating eastward over the
    second half of the forecast cycle. These areas are prone to any
    type of heavy rainfall, and given the highly anomalous environment,
    1-2"/hr rates are certainly in the cards. This threat will linger
    through the overnight time frame before finally settling closer to
    Wednesday AM.

    Further north, the signal for heavy rainfall continues into the
    Sangre de Cristos where the afternoon and evening time frames call
    for widespread heavy thunderstorm activity aligned with the ridges
    of the southern Rockies. These areas also have burn scar prevalence
    that could exacerbate flash flood risks as runoff capabilities are
    maximized. 24hr 100yr ARI exceedance probabilities are highest
    across Central and Southern NM, but a small axis of >20% probs
    remains parked over the Sangre de Cristos north of Santa Fe. 10yr
    ARI exceedance probs are between 60-80% for the same area (90+%
    over the Sacramento's), so the threat is within the upper echelon
    of the prob fields leading to a higher chance of significant
    impacts over the complex terrain and remnant burn scars.

    The previous MDT risk was expanded westward to include those areas
    that could see locally as much as 2-4" in any storm impacts this
    afternoon and evening lasting into early Wednesday. A high-end MDT
    is forecast for the Sacramento and Sangre de Cristo Mtns. in NM.
    High end SLGT risk is forecast for El Paso proper and surrounding
    suburbs. There's a chance the threat for El Paso trends more
    impactful, so be sure to check in with the latest updates in the
    next forecast package for a potential upgrade over the urban
    center.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Current radar/sat composite shows an extensive line of convection
    extending from southwest to northeast out of KS to as far north as
    Central WI. The setup for the convective pattern lies within the
    northern periphery of a ridge and along a quasi-stationary front
    bisecting the areas above. Smaller shortwaves rounding the western
    flank of the ridge will continue riding over top the front
    creating focused areas of showers and thunderstorms through the
    first 6hrs of the period with some areas over far Northeast KS into
    Northwest MO and Southern IA seeing a continuation of locally
    heavy rainfall bleeding into the new D1. This area is the focus
    initially for flash flood impacts with saturated grounds likely to
    struggle to withstand the initial batch of storms that push
    through. Thankfully, there will be a small "break" in the
    persistence of the convective pattern moving into the late-morning
    and afternoon, but still some scattered shower/storm development
    will be forecast during the prime destabilization period, so the
    threat for isolated flash flooding will carry through the daytime.

    By the evening, the focus of the convective pattern shifts back
    west and southwest with an ejection of a potent shortwave out of
    the Southern High Plains and Front Range of the Rockies. With ample
    instability presence across the Central Plains into the Midwest
    along the quasi-stationary front, a second convective onslaught is
    forecast to materialize likely beginning between 20-00z, carrying
    east and northeast through the remainder of the forecast. At the
    same juncture, a strong 700-900 kg/ms IVT pulse will be advecting
    northeastward into the Central Plains and Midwest during the time
    frame of interest (00-12z Wednesday), so the heavy rain threat with
    2-3"/hr rates will certainly have potential for basically anywhere
    in the Central Plains/Midwest domain. There's a growing consensus
    on the area positioned over Southern SD, much of NE, and parts of
    KS being the initial beneficiary of the convective development
    which could lead to scattered flash flood prospects within a 6hr
    window upon initiation. As we move into the evening, nocturnal LLJ
    will spawn in-of the High Plains arcing northeast into parts of the
    Midwest allowing the stationary front to begin lifting north in
    the form of a warm front. The mean layer flow will begin to orient
    more parallel to the front itself creating an environment capable
    for cells to mature and begin training over areas within proxy to
    the boundary. Guidance has been subject to bouncing around on
    exactly where this may occur, but 00z CAMs have come into a
    reasonable agreement on an axis extending over Eastern NE,
    including the Omaha metro, through Western IA. This is correlated
    with the higher neighborhood probs for >2" (50-70%) aligned over
    the area with the >3" signal pretty respectable (40-60%) over the
    same area. The highest probs and overlap of heavy precip within the
    CAMs is surprisingly directly over Omaha and surrounding areas.
    This depicting likely stems from the nose of the LLJ being forecast
    to right over the general vicinity, a synoptic representation that
    typically denotes a greater likelihood of where the heavier precip
    could occur. It will be something to monitor in the next
    succession of CAMs output, but with such a solid signal, was
    inclined to mention as a higher end SLGT will be forecast within
    that Eastern NE through Western IA region.

    Further north, a complex of storms will originate over Southern SD
    from another shortwave progression moving through the Northern
    Plains. This area could see the benefit of cell mergers somewhere
    in the proxy of Southeast SD into Southwest MN as depicted within
    multiple deterministic. Considering this area levying higher FFG's
    compared to areas further south, the threat for significant flash
    flooding is lower, but still generally within the SLGT risk
    threshold considering the airmass in place. The SLGT risk is
    positioned as far back as Northeast CO into Southern NE and as far
    east as Northern IL and Southern WI thanks to multiple periods of
    heavy convection impacting the region.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    ...2030Z Update...
    Following a similar trend to the Day 1 update, the main adjustment
    to New Mexico and Texas includes a Southward extension of the
    Slight Risk area to the International Border based on HREF and REFS
    EAS probabilities of 1-2". Coverage of rainfall is still expected=20
    to diminish compared to yesterday, although additional siginificant
    flash flooding is possible in light of ongoing activity. Depending
    on overlap of rainfall, a Moderate Risk is still on the table for=20
    furture updates.=20

    In the Upper-Midwest, the Slight Risk was expanded northeastward=20
    based on a consensus amongst the HREF and REFS suite. Neighborhood probabilities suggests rainfall amounts of 3-5" are possible as=20 thunderstorms develop and train along an east-west oriented front=20
    amid highly anomalous precipitable water values around 2" (in the=20
    99th percentile per the NAEFS). As this moist plume advects
    eastward, diurnal heating along the front should spur scattered
    thunderstorm development across the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic.
    While weak wind profiles should limit overall storm organization
    compared to further west, brief very heavy rainfall rates could=20
    drive isolated flash flooding issues atop saturated soils in the=20
    region and sensitive urban areas.

    A Marginal Risk was also introduced over the eastern Gulf Coast as
    a retrograding upper-low begins to slow down over the region.
    Activity should remain fairly disorganized beneath this feature,
    although isolated flash flooding is possible with saturated soils
    in the region.

    Asherman

    ...Previous Disussion...

    ...New Mexico...

    Despite a smaller areal coverage anticipated for convection across
    New Mexico for Wednesday, scattered thunderstorms will still
    cause problems during afternoon initiation as ample heating during
    the prime destabilization window (16-21z) will yield another
    threat of heavy rainfall across the terrain and adjacent valleys in
    Central and Southern NM. Current signals are nowhere near as
    robust as the D1 time frame, but with forecasted significant
    impacts the period prior, there's a greater threat of truly
    compromised FFG's leading in, allowing for the bar to be very low
    for flash flooding over areas that will see significant rainfall in
    the areas referenced above. Hi-res ensemble blended mean QPF is now
    solidly within the 1-2" range with locally higher totals across the Sacramento's. Areal average 0.5-1" of rainfall is forecast over
    much of South-Central NM and over the Sangre de Cristos with totals
    potentially up to 2" in stronger convective cores. The overlap with
    the previous period allows for at least a SLGT risk with a higher
    end SLGT progged over the Sacramento's where convective initiation
    is likely. A targeted upgrade is plausible within the two main
    mountain areas in the state, especially when you factor in the
    antecedent conditions for the period in question. If CAMs come in
    more robust, or impacts during the D1 are severe enough to fully
    compromise soils to where any convective threat could be deemed
    significant.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Convective pattern across the Plains and Midwest at the end of the
    D1 will translate northward into the Upper Mississippi Valley with
    organized convection over NE/IA and SD/MN converging along the
    propagating warm front leading to a swath of heavy rainfall across
    much of the Southern 1/3rd of MN. All guidance is in agreement on a
    pretty significant QPF shield moving through the area encompassing
    Southern MN up through Northwest WI with some back-building
    potential along the front as it migrates north and begins to slow
    its momentum. Areal average of 1-2" with locally up to 4" totals
    are forecast across that portion of the Upper Midwest, reflected
    well within the NBM 90th percentile QPF signature, as well as
    within the 12-00z time frame covered by the end of the 00z HREF
    blended mean. This is just round 1 of what will be yet another
    secondary convective initiation come Wednesday evening when another
    strong shortwave and attendant IVT pulse comes pushing back over
    Eastern NE, Western IA and points north. Additional heavy rainfall
    will intersect many areas that will have seen significant totals
    earlier in the period and the second half of the D1. The
    compounding impacts will lead to scattered to widespread flash
    flood instances as FFG's will be notably lower comparatively to
    the before the previous rounds. Ensemble bias corrected mean is now
    between 3-4" over a large area encompassing Southern MN into
    Northwest WI with 2-3" positioned just to the southwest of MN. EC
    AIFS output is in agreement with the positioning of the QPF maxima
    anticipated, something that has not been the case over the past few
    days, so we seem to be moving into a greater consensus. As a
    result, there is a large high-end SLGT risk positioned from
    Northeast NE up through MN into the western portion of WI. An
    upgrade within anywhere in that zone is plausible in the coming
    updates as multi-day impacts could spur some locally significant
    flash flood prospects.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST AND NORTHERN GREAT LAKES...

    ...2030 Update...
    A Marginal Risk was also added over parts of the eastern Gulf Coast
    as the aforementioned upper-low lingers overhead and overlaps with
    rainfall from the day before. Otherwise, generally minor
    adjustments overall to the overnight thinking. Could see the need
    for targeted upgrades in the Midwest and Northeast/Mid-Atlantic
    depending on overlap from Day 2, so stay tuned as high-resolution
    guidance comes into range in subsequent updates.

    Asherman

    ...Midwest...

    The final shortwave in the progression bleeding over from the
    previous D2 time frame will continue pushing northeast before
    finally vacating the Upper Midwest later on Thursday. Heavy rain
    threat will continue over parts of MN and WI before eventually
    impacting the Western U.P. of Michigan before its departure.
    Instability across the region will be significantly lower than
    previous days with the warm front becoming stationary prior to
    reaching the southern shores of Lake Superior. The threat for flash
    flooding is most notably in the first 6-12 hr window of the
    forecast with a sharp decline in the threat afterwards as the
    pattern shifts with the ridge expected to be breaking down. 1-2"
    with locally higher amounts will allow for flash flooding in any
    area from IA up through MN/WI, especially in places where
    significant rainfall has occurred in prior periods. A broad SLGT
    risk remains in place over the Northern Great Lakes and Upper
    Midwest with the biggest change being the extension down through
    Central IA as trailing thunderstorms are forecast within the
    frontal orientation Thursday afternoon and evening.

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given expected wet antecedent conditions following
    previous multi-day convective impact. Coverage and magnitude will
    be lower than previous periods, but still enough of a threat and
    coverage to warrant a MRGL continuation.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Disturbance rounding the northern periphery of our massive ridge
    will ultimately slide down through the Mid Atlantic during the
    mid to late-afternoon hrs. on Thursday. The combination of strong
    diurnal destabilization during the daytime and prominent moisture
    lingering over the area will create a very buoyant environment
    capable of strong thunderstorm genesis anywhere from NY state down
    through the Central Mid Atlantic including; MD/PA/DE/Northern WV
    and VA. Current projection of QPF is fairly isolated in the heavier
    convective outputs with some deterministic depicting totals as
    high as 2-3" in spots. Initial assessment of the setup leads
    towards a low end MRGL risk for now, but will assess how models
    handle the shortwave disturbance and proposed ascent pattern within
    a fairly unstable environment over the next few days.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_IX1Uvmlzp0DEYYVmggrnNi0VwWcBSPCkViiIkDsn0c0= atl6xrhkRdp5mrKBUpPqUkUBC88nJoX8Zm4d8iKdd6bkGS0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_IX1Uvmlzp0DEYYVmggrnNi0VwWcBSPCkViiIkDsn0c0= atl6xrhkRdp5mrKBUpPqUkUBC88nJoX8Zm4d8iKdcdChz90$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_IX1Uvmlzp0DEYYVmggrnNi0VwWcBSPCkViiIkDsn0c0= atl6xrhkRdp5mrKBUpPqUkUBC88nJoX8Zm4d8iKdif2ktEg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 25 00:54:47 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 250054
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    854 PM EDT Tue Jun 24 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO...


    ...New Mexico...
    A strong warm core ridge centered over the Ohio Valley and Mid-=20
    Atlantic with its western extent pushing back west beyond the=20
    eastern portions NM. A steady south-north progression within the=20
    mid and upper levels will send numerous smaller shortwave=20
    perturbations through NM. Anomalous moisture ranking in the 99th=20
    percentile via NAEFS and ECENS Climatological percentiles will=20
    remain parked over the region. Morning activity left some southern
    areas out of the mix today, but the 18z HREF probabilities of 0.5"+
    suggest that this region remains a threat overnight, possibly from
    convection moving in from the west. Local topographic effects=20
    within this pattern will yield some significant rainfall potential=20
    over areas that are prone to flash flooding, especially with the=20
    burn scars still present near Ruidoso creating higher runoff=20 capabilities.=20

    The difference the past 24 hrs. has been the expected influence of
    the approaching trough out west providing a reinforcement of the
    trailing upper jet with the amplitude of the pattern creating more
    room further west for large scale ascent, and moisture advection
    back into the western half of NM, even sneaking into Southeast AZ.
    The entire evolution has spurred scattered to widespread=20
    thunderstorm activity over the aforementioned regions with cold=20
    pool mergers from storms likely to produce some upscale growth in=20
    the evening as the convergence of cold pools will act to spawn more
    multi-cell modes. The flash flood threat will linger through the=20
    overnight time frame before finally settling down closer to=20
    Wednesday AM.

    The various risk levels were barely nudged as recent radar
    reflectivity trends and 18z HREF probabilities of heavy rainfall at
    various threshold indicate that local 2-4" totals remain possible=20
    into early Wednesday.


    ...Central Plains to Midwest...
    Thunderstorms are most numerous near the NE/CO border and northwest
    MO at this time as a shortwave enhances activity. A ring of fire=20
    type of convective pattern remains from NM through portions of the=20
    High Plains into the Central Plains and Midwest towards the Great=20
    Lakes around the northwest periphery of the warm core ridge.=20
    Activity is along and near a quasi- stationary front bisecting the=20
    areas above. Areas of northeast KS, southwest IA, and northwest MO=20
    are the main focus for flash flood concerns with saturated grounds.=20 Thunderstorms are likely to carry east and northeast into=20
    Wednesday morning towards the Great Lakes.=20

    A strong 700-900 kg/ms IVT pulse is advecting northeastward into=20
    the Central Plains and Midwest, so the heavy rain threat with=20
    2-3"/hr rates will certainly have potential for basically anywhere=20
    in the Central Plains/Midwest domain. Recent trends suggest that=20
    convection moving across southern NE would be a concern over the=20
    next several hours. The nocturnal LLJ allows the stationary front=20
    to begin lifting north in the form of a warm front tonight, in=20
    theory. The mean layer flow orients more parallel to the front=20
    creating an environment capable for cells to mature and begin=20
    training over areas within proxy to the boundary.

    Roth/Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    ...2030Z Update...
    Following a similar trend to the Day 1 update, the main adjustment
    to New Mexico and Texas includes a Southward extension of the
    Slight Risk area to the International Border based on HREF and REFS
    EAS probabilities of 1-2". Coverage of rainfall is still expected
    to diminish compared to yesterday, although additional significant
    flash flooding is possible in light of ongoing activity. Depending=20
    on overlap of rainfall, a Moderate Risk is still on the table for=20
    future updates.

    In the Upper-Midwest, the Slight Risk was expanded northeastward
    based on a consensus amongst the HREF and REFS suite. Neighborhood probabilities suggests rainfall amounts of 3-5" are possible as
    thunderstorms develop and train along an east-west oriented front
    amid highly anomalous precipitable water values around 2" (in the
    99th percentile per the NAEFS). As this moist plume advects
    eastward, diurnal heating along the front should spur scattered
    thunderstorm development across the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic.
    While weak wind profiles should limit overall storm organization
    compared to further west, brief very heavy rainfall rates could
    drive isolated flash flooding issues atop saturated soils in the
    region and sensitive urban areas.

    A Marginal Risk was also introduced over the eastern Gulf Coast as
    a retrograding upper-low begins to slow down over the region.
    Activity should remain fairly disorganized beneath this feature,
    although isolated flash flooding is possible with saturated soils
    in the region.

    Asherman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...New Mexico...

    Despite a smaller areal coverage anticipated for convection across
    New Mexico for Wednesday, scattered thunderstorms will still
    cause problems during afternoon initiation as ample heating during
    the prime destabilization window (16-21z) will yield another
    threat of heavy rainfall across the terrain and adjacent valleys in
    Central and Southern NM. Current signals are nowhere near as
    robust as the D1 time frame, but with forecasted significant
    impacts the period prior, there's a greater threat of truly
    compromised FFG's leading in, allowing for the bar to be very low
    for flash flooding over areas that will see significant rainfall in
    the areas referenced above. Hi-res ensemble blended mean QPF is now
    solidly within the 1-2" range with locally higher totals across the Sacramento's. Areal average 0.5-1" of rainfall is forecast over
    much of South-Central NM and over the Sangre de Cristos with totals
    potentially up to 2" in stronger convective cores. The overlap with
    the previous period allows for at least a SLGT risk with a higher
    end SLGT progged over the Sacramento's where convective initiation
    is likely. A targeted upgrade is plausible within the two main
    mountain areas in the state, especially when you factor in the
    antecedent conditions for the period in question. If CAMs come in
    more robust, or impacts during the D1 are severe enough to fully
    compromise soils to where any convective threat could be deemed
    significant.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Convective pattern across the Plains and Midwest at the end of the
    D1 will translate northward into the Upper Mississippi Valley with
    organized convection over NE/IA and SD/MN converging along the
    propagating warm front leading to a swath of heavy rainfall across
    much of the Southern 1/3rd of MN. All guidance is in agreement on a
    pretty significant QPF shield moving through the area encompassing
    Southern MN up through Northwest WI with some back-building
    potential along the front as it migrates north and begins to slow
    its momentum. Areal average of 1-2" with locally up to 4" totals
    are forecast across that portion of the Upper Midwest, reflected
    well within the NBM 90th percentile QPF signature, as well as
    within the 12-00z time frame covered by the end of the 00z HREF
    blended mean. This is just round 1 of what will be yet another
    secondary convective initiation come Wednesday evening when another
    strong shortwave and attendant IVT pulse comes pushing back over
    Eastern NE, Western IA and points north. Additional heavy rainfall
    will intersect many areas that will have seen significant totals
    earlier in the period and the second half of the D1. The
    compounding impacts will lead to scattered to widespread flash
    flood instances as FFG's will be notably lower comparatively to
    the before the previous rounds. Ensemble bias corrected mean is now
    between 3-4" over a large area encompassing Southern MN into
    Northwest WI with 2-3" positioned just to the southwest of MN. EC
    AIFS output is in agreement with the positioning of the QPF maxima
    anticipated, something that has not been the case over the past few
    days, so we seem to be moving into a greater consensus. As a
    result, there is a large high-end SLGT risk positioned from
    Northeast NE up through MN into the western portion of WI. An
    upgrade within anywhere in that zone is plausible in the coming
    updates as multi-day impacts could spur some locally significant
    flash flood prospects.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE MIDWEST AND NORTHERN GREAT LAKES...

    ...2030 Update...
    A Marginal Risk was also added over parts of the eastern Gulf Coast
    as the aforementioned upper-low lingers overhead and overlaps with
    rainfall from the day before. Otherwise, generally minor
    adjustments overall to the overnight thinking. Could see the need
    for targeted upgrades in the Midwest and Northeast/Mid-Atlantic
    depending on overlap from Day 2, so stay tuned as high-resolution
    guidance comes into range in subsequent updates.

    Asherman

    ...Midwest...

    The final shortwave in the progression bleeding over from the
    previous D2 time frame will continue pushing northeast before
    finally vacating the Upper Midwest later on Thursday. Heavy rain
    threat will continue over parts of MN and WI before eventually
    impacting the Western U.P. of Michigan before its departure.
    Instability across the region will be significantly lower than
    previous days with the warm front becoming stationary prior to
    reaching the southern shores of Lake Superior. The threat for flash
    flooding is most notably in the first 6-12 hr window of the
    forecast with a sharp decline in the threat afterwards as the
    pattern shifts with the ridge expected to be breaking down. 1-2"
    with locally higher amounts will allow for flash flooding in any
    area from IA up through MN/WI, especially in places where
    significant rainfall has occurred in prior periods. A broad SLGT
    risk remains in place over the Northern Great Lakes and Upper
    Midwest with the biggest change being the extension down through
    Central IA as trailing thunderstorms are forecast within the
    frontal orientation Thursday afternoon and evening.

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given expected wet antecedent conditions following
    previous multi-day convective impact. Coverage and magnitude will
    be lower than previous periods, but still enough of a threat and
    coverage to warrant a MRGL continuation.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Disturbance rounding the northern periphery of our massive ridge
    will ultimately slide down through the Mid Atlantic during the
    mid to late-afternoon hrs. on Thursday. The combination of strong
    diurnal destabilization during the daytime and prominent moisture
    lingering over the area will create a very buoyant environment
    capable of strong thunderstorm genesis anywhere from NY state down
    through the Central Mid Atlantic including; MD/PA/DE/Northern WV
    and VA. Current projection of QPF is fairly isolated in the heavier
    convective outputs with some deterministic depicting totals as
    high as 2-3" in spots. Initial assessment of the setup leads
    towards a low end MRGL risk for now, but will assess how models
    handle the shortwave disturbance and proposed ascent pattern within
    a fairly unstable environment over the next few days.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7EYm7wSn1BfYrdh2Rvf7BKs9IYsYqewy0n8kpVhUtbzq= Pb0fyqP7kSO0Wz8fcNJJolo0DPBytr4KX_UM5js0B7EMSD0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7EYm7wSn1BfYrdh2Rvf7BKs9IYsYqewy0n8kpVhUtbzq= Pb0fyqP7kSO0Wz8fcNJJolo0DPBytr4KX_UM5js0QBOIj8s$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7EYm7wSn1BfYrdh2Rvf7BKs9IYsYqewy0n8kpVhUtbzq= Pb0fyqP7kSO0Wz8fcNJJolo0DPBytr4KX_UM5js0qrM2bYQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 25 07:47:29 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 250747
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    347 AM EDT Wed Jun 25 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    ...New Mexico...

    Despite a bit less areal coverage anticipated for convection=20
    across New Mexico for Wednesday, scattered thunderstorms will still
    cause problems after daytime initiation as ample heating during=20
    the prime destabilization window (16-21z) will yield another threat
    of heavy rainfall across the terrain and adjacent valleys across=20
    NM. Main jet to the north will lift out of the area allowing for
    less of a large scale ascent pattern that could maximize any
    convective pattern over the region. Remnant elevated moisture
    (PWATs) running between 1-2 standard deviations above normal on=20
    the western flank of our ridge will still be located across the
    state leaving an environment capable of heavy rainfall in any
    convective cores that develop. Impacts the previous period were
    felt over a large portion of the state leading to generally lower
    FFG's bisecting much of the area expected to see a chance for
    convection today. Latest HREF neighborhood probs for >3" are
    running pretty high (50-70%) across places like El Paso and points
    north within part of the Sacramento's, an area we have highlighted
    the past several days. Modest probs (20-40%) for >3" extend all=20
    the way up into the Sangre de Cristos with some smaller relative
    mins mixed into the areal coverage. This is more a testament to the valley/terrain components littered over the state, so not all areas
    will see impactful rainfall with this convective evolution.=20

    The signal is sufficient enough to warrant a broad SLGT risk
    within the state extending down through far West TX given the
    current CAMs interpretation of scattered heavy convection likely to
    impact portions of El Paso and Hudspeth counties through part of
    the period. Some strong cells could even develop across the NM
    Caprock as inferred by a few hi-res deterministic, likely due to
    the favorable instability tongue positioned over the eastern side
    of the state behind a vacating surface trough. High end SLGT risk
    is favored for areas across Southern NM up through Central portion
    of the state with the favored areas likely including the
    Sacramento's, Sangre de Cristos, and areas within and surrounding=20
    El Paso.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Convective pattern across the Plains and Midwest at the end of the
    D1 will translate northward into the Upper Mississippi Valley with
    organized convection over NE/IA and SD/MN converging along the
    propagating warm front leading to a swath of heavy rainfall across
    much of the Southern 1/3rd of MN into Western WI. Beginning to see
    the CAMs come into better agreement on the anticipated convective
    evolution with a dual QPF maxima most likely situated over the area
    between Aberdeen, SD to Minneapolis with a consensus on the
    heaviest precip along and south of I-94 in MN with a bullseye
    generally overhead or very close to Minneapolis proper. The second
    maxima is positioned across Northeast NE into Northern IA to the
    southern reaches of the MN border where a multi-round convective
    impact forecast is being depicted in guidance as the initial round
    in the morning will give way to a short break before redevelopment
    occurs back along the frontal positioning bisecting the area. A
    strong IVT pulse currently aligned from KS up through Eastern NE
    has helped push PWATs closer to the 99th percentile around Omaha
    this evening with the 00z RAOB out of KOAX depicting a PWAT of
    1.94", putting this just below the daily climatological max for the
    day (25/00z) and well above the 90th percentile for not just the
    period, but even for the sites general historical record. This same
    airmass is what's progged to advect northeast into MN and Western
    WI by the time we reach tomorrow afternoon, a signal that would
    prime any convective impacts to likely provide some prolific heavy
    rain cores in stronger cells impacting the region. With the proxy
    of the front and the environment in place, there's ample evidence
    that some areas across the Midwest will see between 3-6" with the
    5-6" range within reason as inferred by modest >5" neighborhood=20
    probs (20-35%) in the latest HREF output. This same signal is=20
    situated over the two defined maxima in guidance with the >3"
    signal between 50-80% for both areas.

    Considering all of the above factors and relatively good agreement
    within the 00z guidance this evening, the previous SLGT risk was
    maintained and leans towards a higher end risk with some prospects
    of a targeted upgrade in any of those outlined forecast maxima by
    the next update. Widespread significant impacts are not
    anticipated at this time, but locally considerable flash flooding
    is plausible in the setup. SLGT risk extends into the Western Great
    Lakes on the eastern flank and down into Southern NE on the
    southwest flank of the risk with potentially for widely scattered
    flash flood prospects as convection impacts both areas during the
    period.=20

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    The northern fringe of our powerful ridge centered over the Ohio
    Valley and Mid Atlantic will begin breaking down through the course
    of Wednesday with an increase in PWATs likely to advect over the
    area as moisture finally, "rounds the bend" over the Great Lakes
    and pushes into the Northeast CONUS. Mean flow will shift more
    northwesterly by the time we reach the afternoon hrs with a
    significantly buoyant environment in place and generally less
    capping as our ridge weakens. A few small mid-level perturbations
    analyzed over the Great Lakes currently will sweep southeastward
    into PA by morning and eventually cross over the region by peak
    diurnal maximum. The combination of a very buoyant environment=20
    with focused ascent will lead to scattered thunderstorm development
    across much of PA, Northern WV, and into the Central Mid Atlantic=20
    domain with sights on Southern NJ/MD/Northern VA. MUCAPE between=20
    2500-4000 J/kg across the Central Mid Atlantic and a maxima near=20
    5000 J/kg out in the Central Appalachians will be plentiful to help
    boost convective magnitude as cells develop and mature on their=20
    way to the southeast. Cell motion will thankfully be somewhat=20
    progressive leading to a low prospect for training. However, PWATs=20
    running ~2 deviations above normal (1.8-2.1") across much of the=20
    region will certainly benefit heavy rain prospects with hourly=20
    rates likely to settle between 1-2"/hr in any given location with=20
    some stronger cores possibly hitting upwards of 2-3"/hr on average=20
    with higher intra-hour rates. A MRGL risk remains in effect for=20
    much of the Mid Atlantic with the northern periphery of the risk=20
    area as far north as NY state with the southern edge down into=20
    Central VA.=20

    ...Southeast...

    A migrating TUTT cell off the coast of FL will continue to
    propagate westward and provide favorable ascent within the proxy of
    the Southeastern CONUS. Unstable airmass and large scale ascent
    will aid in scattered thunderstorms developing all across the South
    with the highest threat of heavy rainfall centered over Southern NC
    down through Central SC into Southern GA where instability (>3000
    J/kg of SBCAPE) is forecast to be highest. Heavy rainfall of
    2-3"/hr is anticipated in some of the stronger convective cores
    leading to isolated flash flood prospects in any urbanized
    settings. Given the more focused ascent pattern provided by the
    advancing TUTT, the threat sneaks into the lower end of the MRGL
    risk threshold, so a broad MRGL was positioned over much of the
    Southeast to cover the threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS, MIDWEST AND NORTHERN GREAT LAKES...

    ...Central Plains into Great Lakes...

    The final shortwave in the progression bleeding over from the
    previous D1 time frame will continue pushing northeast before=20
    finally vacating the Upper Midwest later on Thursday. Heavy rain=20
    threat will continue over parts of MN and WI before eventually=20
    impacting the Western U.P. of Michigan before its departure.=20
    Instability across the region will be significantly lower than=20
    previous days with the warm front becoming stationary prior to=20
    reaching the southern shores of Lake Superior. The threat for flash
    flooding is most notably in the first 6-12 hr window of the=20
    forecast with a sharp decline in the threat afterwards as the=20
    pattern shifts with the ridge expected to be breaking down. 1-2"=20
    with locally higher amounts (upwards of 4") will allow for flash=20
    flooding in any area from IA up through MN/WI, especially in places
    where significant rainfall has occurred in prior periods. A=20
    secondary maxima is forecast across portions of the Central Plains=20
    down around KS/Northwest MO as a surface low over the Northern=20
    Plains migrates eastward and drags a cold front across the Plains=20
    and adjacent Midwestern areas. Guidance has been keying on a=20
    secondary QPF maxima located within that corridor as thunderstorms=20
    form along a defined instability axis with mid-level ascent=20
    availability from a trailing shortwave over the region and some=20
    marginal convergence ahead of the cold front to the north and=20
    northwest. Locally 2-4" are possible in this region, an area that=20
    has had the benefit of multiple heavy rain instances the past=20
    48hrs. A broad SLGT risk remains in place over the Northern Great=20
    Lakes and Upper Midwest, now extending back into parts of the=20
    Central Plains to cover for the additional threat trailing the=20
    surface reflection.=20

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given wet antecedent conditions following previous multi-
    day convective impact in prior periods. Coverage and intensity of
    convection will be less than previous days as we lose the benefit
    of the RER jet dynamics that have assisted in the recent days.
    Still, remnant elevated moisture and sufficient buoyancy within=20
    the confines of far West TX up through Southern and Eastern NM will
    maintain a posture of diurnally driven thunderstorms with locally=20
    heavy rainfall across the above areas. Heaviest thunderstorms will=20
    be capable of 1-2" with the peak QPF max probably closer to 3" as=20
    noted by modest HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" with a=20
    decline to 0% for >5". The previous MRGL risk was maintained and=20
    expanded to encompass areas that will be at highest risk for flash=20
    flooding due to the antecedent conditions and potential=20
    thunderstorm activity.=20

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Disturbance rounding the northern periphery of our massive ridge
    will ultimately slide down through the Mid Atlantic during the
    mid to late-afternoon hrs. on Thursday. The combination of strong
    diurnal destabilization during the daytime and prominent moisture
    lingering over the area will create a very buoyant environment
    capable of strong thunderstorm genesis anywhere from NY state down
    through the Central Mid Atlantic including; MD/PA/DE/Northern WV
    and VA. The key to this setup compared to the D1 period will be a
    targeted focus within the confines of cold front pressing southward
    out of the Northern Mid Atlantic Thursday afternoon and evening.
    High pressure over Northern New England into Quebec will act as a
    forcing mechanism to propel the front with a wedged signature
    occurring east of the Appalachian front. Concern is for
    thunderstorm genesis along the boundary, but a setup conducive for
    eventual back-building along the front as it migrates into Northern
    VA and will hit a wall in its progression. Guidance has increased
    area maximum within the QPF output with some local spots seeing
    2-4" over portions of the Central Mid Atlantic, mainly south of the=20
    PA Turnpike down into the Northern Shenandoah and points east,=20
    including the DC/Balt metro. These heavier returns will be more=20
    isolated in coverage, but could still provide locally significant=20
    impacts if over the wrong area. For now, have maintained the MRGL=20
    risk, but a targeted SLGT risk could be added over parts of the=20
    region if the signal becomes more concrete on where the heaviest=20
    precip will align.=20

    ...Southeast...

    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms over much of the
    Southeastern CONUS will yield some heavy rainfall prospects during
    the day Thursday with a decay in coverage once we lose diurnal
    heating. The main areas of interest will lie along the terrain
    in the Southern Appalachians and along the Gulf coast where the
    remnants of a migrating TUTT cell will maintain a focal point for
    heavy convective prospects during the period. Best threat for any
    flash flooding will be tied to the complex topography and urban
    settings where runoff capabilities are highest. Relatively modest=20
    HREF probs for >3" (20-35%) during the 12-00z time frame on D2 are
    littered over the Southeast leading to a broad MRGL risk to cover
    for all the local threats. The risk lies within the lower end of
    the threshold and some adjustments are possible pending CAMs
    conjecture.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...Northern New England...

    A strong shortwave originating from the Midwest the period prior is
    forecast to cross through the Great Lakes and continue migrating=20
    into Southeastern Canada as we enter D3. A surface low will be moving east-northeast through the Lakes into neighboring Ontario Province
    by Friday afternoon which will aid in regional ascent and a
    strengthening low level convergence regime tied evolving synoptic
    pattern across Canada and the Northeastern U.S. Assessment of the
    theta_E field signals a sharp northern gradient within the
    instability regime as surface ridging downstream and warm frontal
    approach on the lead side of the low will create quite a thermal
    gradient across Ontario/Southern Quebec, extending into Northern
    New England. This will lay the foundation for an anticipated
    development of an MCS upstream over Ontario in conjunction to the
    shortwave arrival and aided large scale ascent within the tail end
    of a jet streak exiting over Quebec into ME. The progression of
    the MCS will be important to discern as the complex will likely
    spur a threat of heavy rainfall, and certainly some prospects of
    back-building along the flanking side of the disturbance within the
    thermal gradient outlined. Models are right on the edge in a
    majority of cases for significant rains to impact NY North Country
    over into Northern VT as they will be closest the complex on its
    progression, and lie right along that thermal gradient in place.
    Ensemble bias correction this evening is extremely bullish in its
    presentation, a lot likely owed to an aggressive 00z GFS output,
    but even other guidance is relatively close with some impressive
    totals located along and just north of the border. ECMWF AIFS ML
    guidance is right within the median outcome with the heaviest
    centered right at the International border with the heaviest precip
    just to the north. Given some of the sensitivities in the area over
    Northern VT into North Country, and in coordination with the local
    Burlington WFO, a small SLGT risk has been added over the
    aforementioned area to cover for the threat. If trends for the
    heavier precip end up shifting north, a removal is possible, but
    considering the potential, the higher risk was added to aid
    messaging and correlate with the latest ensemble means.=20

    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the North-Central tier of the CONUS
    will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flood prospects. The best threat will be
    over Northern ND into the Red River area where some urbanized zones
    will have a greater threat for flash flooding. A quick 1-3" is
    likely anywhere over Central ND into Northwest MN. This threat is
    within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold and will be
    monitored closely to see if the risk is warranted, or needs any
    expansion.=20

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    TX into NM will allow for isolated flash flood concerns over areas
    that will have seen several days of heavy convective impacts with
    compromised FFG's. Local 1-2" is possible in the period with the
    highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down through the
    Guadalupe Mtns. and adjacent valleys. A MRGL risk was maintained to
    cover for the threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5ofEFKWYopj0Oj5oaAjaLpJRzAEu1lGDltjGXigOQ6J0= jjl2xdHSMNVvKQPlbo8W5l4ctPHD8D4pZmQGrAyFCPzeiO8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5ofEFKWYopj0Oj5oaAjaLpJRzAEu1lGDltjGXigOQ6J0= jjl2xdHSMNVvKQPlbo8W5l4ctPHD8D4pZmQGrAyF6VriKDw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5ofEFKWYopj0Oj5oaAjaLpJRzAEu1lGDltjGXigOQ6J0= jjl2xdHSMNVvKQPlbo8W5l4ctPHD8D4pZmQGrAyFf4jRTT0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 25 16:00:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 251559
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1159 AM EDT Wed Jun 25 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    ...16Z Update...

    Only minor areal modifications were made to better focus the=20
    inherited Slight Risk areas based on the latest 12Z guidance, with=20
    the prior forecast remaining ontrack overall. This included a=20
    westward shift of the Slight Risk over the Upper Midwest where the=20
    greater risk looks to be closer to the Upper Mississippi Valley=20
    rather than eastward towards the Great Lakes. Still expect that the
    higher-end threat within the Slight Risk exists in a corridor from
    the central Missouri Valley northeastward towards the greater=20
    Minneapolis area, where the greatest chance for rainfall totals of=20
    3-4", locally 5-6", exists and may lead to more widespread=20
    instances of flash flooding. For New Mexico/west Texas, the latest=20
    guidance indicates that the more focused, higher-end threat within=20
    the Slight Risk has concentrated southward over south-central New=20
    Mexico (including the Sacramento Mountains and Ruidoso burn scar)=20
    as well as western Texas from greater El Paso eastward through the=20
    Guadalupe mountains. This covers the region with the greatest=20
    potential for rainfall totals upwards of 2", locally 3".=20

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...New Mexico...

    Despite a bit less areal coverage anticipated for convection
    across New Mexico for Wednesday, scattered thunderstorms will still
    cause problems after daytime initiation as ample heating during
    the prime destabilization window (16-21z) will yield another threat
    of heavy rainfall across the terrain and adjacent valleys across
    NM. Main jet to the north will lift out of the area allowing for
    less of a large scale ascent pattern that could maximize any
    convective pattern over the region. Remnant elevated moisture
    (PWATs) running between 1-2 standard deviations above normal on
    the western flank of our ridge will still be located across the
    state leaving an environment capable of heavy rainfall in any
    convective cores that develop. Impacts the previous period were
    felt over a large portion of the state leading to generally lower
    FFG's bisecting much of the area expected to see a chance for
    convection today. Latest HREF neighborhood probs for >3" are
    running pretty high (50-70%) across places like El Paso and points
    north within part of the Sacramento's, an area we have highlighted
    the past several days. Modest probs (20-40%) for >3" extend all
    the way up into the Sangre de Cristos with some smaller relative
    mins mixed into the areal coverage. This is more a testament to the valley/terrain components littered over the state, so not all areas
    will see impactful rainfall with this convective evolution.

    The signal is sufficient enough to warrant a broad SLGT risk
    within the state extending down through far West TX given the
    current CAMs interpretation of scattered heavy convection likely to
    impact portions of El Paso and Hudspeth counties through part of
    the period. Some strong cells could even develop across the NM
    Caprock as inferred by a few hi-res deterministic, likely due to
    the favorable instability tongue positioned over the eastern side
    of the state behind a vacating surface trough. High end SLGT risk
    is favored for areas across Southern NM up through Central portion
    of the state with the favored areas likely including the
    Sacramento's, Sangre de Cristos, and areas within and surrounding
    El Paso.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Convective pattern across the Plains and Midwest at the end of the
    D1 will translate northward into the Upper Mississippi Valley with
    organized convection over NE/IA and SD/MN converging along the
    propagating warm front leading to a swath of heavy rainfall across
    much of the Southern 1/3rd of MN into Western WI. Beginning to see
    the CAMs come into better agreement on the anticipated convective
    evolution with a dual QPF maxima most likely situated over the area
    between Aberdeen, SD to Minneapolis with a consensus on the
    heaviest precip along and south of I-94 in MN with a bullseye
    generally overhead or very close to Minneapolis proper. The second
    maxima is positioned across Northeast NE into Northern IA to the
    southern reaches of the MN border where a multi-round convective
    impact forecast is being depicted in guidance as the initial round
    in the morning will give way to a short break before redevelopment
    occurs back along the frontal positioning bisecting the area. A
    strong IVT pulse currently aligned from KS up through Eastern NE
    has helped push PWATs closer to the 99th percentile around Omaha
    this evening with the 00z RAOB out of KOAX depicting a PWAT of
    1.94", putting this just below the daily climatological max for the
    day (25/00z) and well above the 90th percentile for not just the
    period, but even for the sites general historical record. This same
    airmass is what's progged to advect northeast into MN and Western
    WI by the time we reach tomorrow afternoon, a signal that would
    prime any convective impacts to likely provide some prolific heavy
    rain cores in stronger cells impacting the region. With the proxy
    of the front and the environment in place, there's ample evidence
    that some areas across the Midwest will see between 3-6" with the
    5-6" range within reason as inferred by modest >5" neighborhood
    probs (20-35%) in the latest HREF output. This same signal is
    situated over the two defined maxima in guidance with the >3"
    signal between 50-80% for both areas.

    Considering all of the above factors and relatively good agreement
    within the 00z guidance this evening, the previous SLGT risk was
    maintained and leans towards a higher end risk with some prospects
    of a targeted upgrade in any of those outlined forecast maxima by
    the next update. Widespread significant impacts are not
    anticipated at this time, but locally considerable flash flooding
    is plausible in the setup. SLGT risk extends into the Western Great
    Lakes on the eastern flank and down into Southern NE on the
    southwest flank of the risk with potentially for widely scattered
    flash flood prospects as convection impacts both areas during the
    period.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    The northern fringe of our powerful ridge centered over the Ohio
    Valley and Mid Atlantic will begin breaking down through the course
    of Wednesday with an increase in PWATs likely to advect over the
    area as moisture finally, "rounds the bend" over the Great Lakes
    and pushes into the Northeast CONUS. Mean flow will shift more
    northwesterly by the time we reach the afternoon hrs with a
    significantly buoyant environment in place and generally less
    capping as our ridge weakens. A few small mid-level perturbations
    analyzed over the Great Lakes currently will sweep southeastward
    into PA by morning and eventually cross over the region by peak
    diurnal maximum. The combination of a very buoyant environment
    with focused ascent will lead to scattered thunderstorm development
    across much of PA, Northern WV, and into the Central Mid Atlantic
    domain with sights on Southern NJ/MD/Northern VA. MUCAPE between
    2500-4000 J/kg across the Central Mid Atlantic and a maxima near
    5000 J/kg out in the Central Appalachians will be plentiful to help
    boost convective magnitude as cells develop and mature on their
    way to the southeast. Cell motion will thankfully be somewhat
    progressive leading to a low prospect for training. However, PWATs
    running ~2 deviations above normal (1.8-2.1") across much of the
    region will certainly benefit heavy rain prospects with hourly
    rates likely to settle between 1-2"/hr in any given location with
    some stronger cores possibly hitting upwards of 2-3"/hr on average
    with higher intra-hour rates. A MRGL risk remains in effect for
    much of the Mid Atlantic with the northern periphery of the risk
    area as far north as NY state with the southern edge down into
    Central VA.

    ...Southeast...

    A migrating TUTT cell off the coast of FL will continue to
    propagate westward and provide favorable ascent within the proxy of
    the Southeastern CONUS. Unstable airmass and large scale ascent
    will aid in scattered thunderstorms developing all across the South
    with the highest threat of heavy rainfall centered over Southern NC
    down through Central SC into Southern GA where instability (>3000
    J/kg of SBCAPE) is forecast to be highest. Heavy rainfall of
    2-3"/hr is anticipated in some of the stronger convective cores
    leading to isolated flash flood prospects in any urbanized
    settings. Given the more focused ascent pattern provided by the
    advancing TUTT, the threat sneaks into the lower end of the MRGL
    risk threshold, so a broad MRGL was positioned over much of the
    Southeast to cover the threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS, MIDWEST AND NORTHERN GREAT LAKES...

    ...Central Plains into Great Lakes...

    The final shortwave in the progression bleeding over from the
    previous D1 time frame will continue pushing northeast before
    finally vacating the Upper Midwest later on Thursday. Heavy rain
    threat will continue over parts of MN and WI before eventually
    impacting the Western U.P. of Michigan before its departure.
    Instability across the region will be significantly lower than
    previous days with the warm front becoming stationary prior to
    reaching the southern shores of Lake Superior. The threat for flash
    flooding is most notably in the first 6-12 hr window of the
    forecast with a sharp decline in the threat afterwards as the
    pattern shifts with the ridge expected to be breaking down. 1-2"
    with locally higher amounts (upwards of 4") will allow for flash
    flooding in any area from IA up through MN/WI, especially in places
    where significant rainfall has occurred in prior periods. A
    secondary maxima is forecast across portions of the Central Plains
    down around KS/Northwest MO as a surface low over the Northern
    Plains migrates eastward and drags a cold front across the Plains
    and adjacent Midwestern areas. Guidance has been keying on a
    secondary QPF maxima located within that corridor as thunderstorms
    form along a defined instability axis with mid-level ascent
    availability from a trailing shortwave over the region and some
    marginal convergence ahead of the cold front to the north and
    northwest. Locally 2-4" are possible in this region, an area that
    has had the benefit of multiple heavy rain instances the past
    48hrs. A broad SLGT risk remains in place over the Northern Great
    Lakes and Upper Midwest, now extending back into parts of the
    Central Plains to cover for the additional threat trailing the
    surface reflection.

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given wet antecedent conditions following previous multi-
    day convective impact in prior periods. Coverage and intensity of
    convection will be less than previous days as we lose the benefit
    of the RER jet dynamics that have assisted in the recent days.
    Still, remnant elevated moisture and sufficient buoyancy within
    the confines of far West TX up through Southern and Eastern NM will
    maintain a posture of diurnally driven thunderstorms with locally
    heavy rainfall across the above areas. Heaviest thunderstorms will
    be capable of 1-2" with the peak QPF max probably closer to 3" as
    noted by modest HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" with a
    decline to 0% for >5". The previous MRGL risk was maintained and
    expanded to encompass areas that will be at highest risk for flash
    flooding due to the antecedent conditions and potential
    thunderstorm activity.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Disturbance rounding the northern periphery of our massive ridge
    will ultimately slide down through the Mid Atlantic during the
    mid to late-afternoon hrs. on Thursday. The combination of strong
    diurnal destabilization during the daytime and prominent moisture
    lingering over the area will create a very buoyant environment
    capable of strong thunderstorm genesis anywhere from NY state down
    through the Central Mid Atlantic including; MD/PA/DE/Northern WV
    and VA. The key to this setup compared to the D1 period will be a
    targeted focus within the confines of cold front pressing southward
    out of the Northern Mid Atlantic Thursday afternoon and evening.
    High pressure over Northern New England into Quebec will act as a
    forcing mechanism to propel the front with a wedged signature
    occurring east of the Appalachian front. Concern is for
    thunderstorm genesis along the boundary, but a setup conducive for
    eventual back-building along the front as it migrates into Northern
    VA and will hit a wall in its progression. Guidance has increased
    area maximum within the QPF output with some local spots seeing
    2-4" over portions of the Central Mid Atlantic, mainly south of the
    PA Turnpike down into the Northern Shenandoah and points east,
    including the DC/Balt metro. These heavier returns will be more
    isolated in coverage, but could still provide locally significant
    impacts if over the wrong area. For now, have maintained the MRGL
    risk, but a targeted SLGT risk could be added over parts of the
    region if the signal becomes more concrete on where the heaviest
    precip will align.

    ...Southeast...

    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms over much of the
    Southeastern CONUS will yield some heavy rainfall prospects during
    the day Thursday with a decay in coverage once we lose diurnal
    heating. The main areas of interest will lie along the terrain
    in the Southern Appalachians and along the Gulf coast where the
    remnants of a migrating TUTT cell will maintain a focal point for
    heavy convective prospects during the period. Best threat for any
    flash flooding will be tied to the complex topography and urban
    settings where runoff capabilities are highest. Relatively modest
    HREF probs for >3" (20-35%) during the 12-00z time frame on D2 are
    littered over the Southeast leading to a broad MRGL risk to cover
    for all the local threats. The risk lies within the lower end of
    the threshold and some adjustments are possible pending CAMs
    conjecture.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...Northern New England...

    A strong shortwave originating from the Midwest the period prior is
    forecast to cross through the Great Lakes and continue migrating
    into Southeastern Canada as we enter D3. A surface low will be moving east-northeast through the Lakes into neighboring Ontario Province
    by Friday afternoon which will aid in regional ascent and a
    strengthening low level convergence regime tied evolving synoptic
    pattern across Canada and the Northeastern U.S. Assessment of the
    theta_E field signals a sharp northern gradient within the
    instability regime as surface ridging downstream and warm frontal
    approach on the lead side of the low will create quite a thermal
    gradient across Ontario/Southern Quebec, extending into Northern
    New England. This will lay the foundation for an anticipated
    development of an MCS upstream over Ontario in conjunction to the
    shortwave arrival and aided large scale ascent within the tail end
    of a jet streak exiting over Quebec into ME. The progression of
    the MCS will be important to discern as the complex will likely
    spur a threat of heavy rainfall, and certainly some prospects of
    back-building along the flanking side of the disturbance within the
    thermal gradient outlined. Models are right on the edge in a
    majority of cases for significant rains to impact NY North Country
    over into Northern VT as they will be closest the complex on its
    progression, and lie right along that thermal gradient in place.
    Ensemble bias correction this evening is extremely bullish in its
    presentation, a lot likely owed to an aggressive 00z GFS output,
    but even other guidance is relatively close with some impressive
    totals located along and just north of the border. ECMWF AIFS ML
    guidance is right within the median outcome with the heaviest
    centered right at the International border with the heaviest precip
    just to the north. Given some of the sensitivities in the area over
    Northern VT into North Country, and in coordination with the local
    Burlington WFO, a small SLGT risk has been added over the
    aforementioned area to cover for the threat. If trends for the
    heavier precip end up shifting north, a removal is possible, but
    considering the potential, the higher risk was added to aid
    messaging and correlate with the latest ensemble means.

    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the North-Central tier of the CONUS
    will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flood prospects. The best threat will be
    over Northern ND into the Red River area where some urbanized zones
    will have a greater threat for flash flooding. A quick 1-3" is
    likely anywhere over Central ND into Northwest MN. This threat is
    within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold and will be
    monitored closely to see if the risk is warranted, or needs any
    expansion.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    TX into NM will allow for isolated flash flood concerns over areas
    that will have seen several days of heavy convective impacts with
    compromised FFG's. Local 1-2" is possible in the period with the
    highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down through the
    Guadalupe Mtns. and adjacent valleys. A MRGL risk was maintained to
    cover for the threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9taZ5EAUreXnXpQnW-4SJU6AAekNav7GImddWpeFzIVY= xF_IB5TWYQFg9mQ0a43_qwJg5KRGyLK8jNN47PVwOUc4QEc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9taZ5EAUreXnXpQnW-4SJU6AAekNav7GImddWpeFzIVY= xF_IB5TWYQFg9mQ0a43_qwJg5KRGyLK8jNN47PVwMm_tkA4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9taZ5EAUreXnXpQnW-4SJU6AAekNav7GImddWpeFzIVY= xF_IB5TWYQFg9mQ0a43_qwJg5KRGyLK8jNN47PVwc7OeE2A$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 25 20:22:42 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 252022
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    422 PM EDT Wed Jun 25 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jun 25 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS AND MIDWEST...

    ...16Z Update...

    Only minor areal modifications were made to better focus the
    inherited Slight Risk areas based on the latest 12Z guidance, with
    the prior forecast remaining ontrack overall. This included a
    westward shift of the Slight Risk over the Upper Midwest where the
    greater risk looks to be closer to the Upper Mississippi Valley
    rather than eastward towards the Great Lakes. Still expect that the
    higher-end threat within the Slight Risk exists in a corridor from
    the central Missouri Valley northeastward towards the greater
    Minneapolis area, where the greatest chance for rainfall totals of
    3-4", locally 5-6", exists and may lead to more widespread
    instances of flash flooding. For New Mexico/west Texas, the latest
    guidance indicates that the more focused, higher-end threat within
    the Slight Risk has concentrated southward over south-central New
    Mexico (including the Sacramento Mountains and Ruidoso burn scar)
    as well as western Texas from greater El Paso eastward through the
    Guadalupe mountains. This covers the region with the greatest
    potential for rainfall totals upwards of 2", locally 3".

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...New Mexico...

    Despite a bit less areal coverage anticipated for convection
    across New Mexico for Wednesday, scattered thunderstorms will still
    cause problems after daytime initiation as ample heating during
    the prime destabilization window (16-21z) will yield another threat
    of heavy rainfall across the terrain and adjacent valleys across
    NM. Main jet to the north will lift out of the area allowing for
    less of a large scale ascent pattern that could maximize any
    convective pattern over the region. Remnant elevated moisture
    (PWATs) running between 1-2 standard deviations above normal on
    the western flank of our ridge will still be located across the
    state leaving an environment capable of heavy rainfall in any
    convective cores that develop. Impacts the previous period were
    felt over a large portion of the state leading to generally lower
    FFG's bisecting much of the area expected to see a chance for
    convection today. Latest HREF neighborhood probs for >3" are
    running pretty high (50-70%) across places like El Paso and points
    north within part of the Sacramento's, an area we have highlighted
    the past several days. Modest probs (20-40%) for >3" extend all
    the way up into the Sangre de Cristos with some smaller relative
    mins mixed into the areal coverage. This is more a testament to the valley/terrain components littered over the state, so not all areas
    will see impactful rainfall with this convective evolution.

    The signal is sufficient enough to warrant a broad SLGT risk
    within the state extending down through far West TX given the
    current CAMs interpretation of scattered heavy convection likely to
    impact portions of El Paso and Hudspeth counties through part of
    the period. Some strong cells could even develop across the NM
    Caprock as inferred by a few hi-res deterministic, likely due to
    the favorable instability tongue positioned over the eastern side
    of the state behind a vacating surface trough. High end SLGT risk
    is favored for areas across Southern NM up through Central portion
    of the state with the favored areas likely including the
    Sacramento's, Sangre de Cristos, and areas within and surrounding
    El Paso.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Convective pattern across the Plains and Midwest at the end of the
    D1 will translate northward into the Upper Mississippi Valley with
    organized convection over NE/IA and SD/MN converging along the
    propagating warm front leading to a swath of heavy rainfall across
    much of the Southern 1/3rd of MN into Western WI. Beginning to see
    the CAMs come into better agreement on the anticipated convective
    evolution with a dual QPF maxima most likely situated over the area
    between Aberdeen, SD to Minneapolis with a consensus on the
    heaviest precip along and south of I-94 in MN with a bullseye
    generally overhead or very close to Minneapolis proper. The second
    maxima is positioned across Northeast NE into Northern IA to the
    southern reaches of the MN border where a multi-round convective
    impact forecast is being depicted in guidance as the initial round
    in the morning will give way to a short break before redevelopment
    occurs back along the frontal positioning bisecting the area. A
    strong IVT pulse currently aligned from KS up through Eastern NE
    has helped push PWATs closer to the 99th percentile around Omaha
    this evening with the 00z RAOB out of KOAX depicting a PWAT of
    1.94", putting this just below the daily climatological max for the
    day (25/00z) and well above the 90th percentile for not just the
    period, but even for the sites general historical record. This same
    airmass is what's progged to advect northeast into MN and Western
    WI by the time we reach tomorrow afternoon, a signal that would
    prime any convective impacts to likely provide some prolific heavy
    rain cores in stronger cells impacting the region. With the proxy
    of the front and the environment in place, there's ample evidence
    that some areas across the Midwest will see between 3-6" with the
    5-6" range within reason as inferred by modest >5" neighborhood
    probs (20-35%) in the latest HREF output. This same signal is
    situated over the two defined maxima in guidance with the >3"
    signal between 50-80% for both areas.

    Considering all of the above factors and relatively good agreement
    within the 00z guidance this evening, the previous SLGT risk was
    maintained and leans towards a higher end risk with some prospects
    of a targeted upgrade in any of those outlined forecast maxima by
    the next update. Widespread significant impacts are not
    anticipated at this time, but locally considerable flash flooding
    is plausible in the setup. SLGT risk extends into the Western Great
    Lakes on the eastern flank and down into Southern NE on the
    southwest flank of the risk with potentially for widely scattered
    flash flood prospects as convection impacts both areas during the
    period.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    The northern fringe of our powerful ridge centered over the Ohio
    Valley and Mid Atlantic will begin breaking down through the course
    of Wednesday with an increase in PWATs likely to advect over the
    area as moisture finally, "rounds the bend" over the Great Lakes
    and pushes into the Northeast CONUS. Mean flow will shift more
    northwesterly by the time we reach the afternoon hrs with a
    significantly buoyant environment in place and generally less
    capping as our ridge weakens. A few small mid-level perturbations
    analyzed over the Great Lakes currently will sweep southeastward
    into PA by morning and eventually cross over the region by peak
    diurnal maximum. The combination of a very buoyant environment
    with focused ascent will lead to scattered thunderstorm development
    across much of PA, Northern WV, and into the Central Mid Atlantic
    domain with sights on Southern NJ/MD/Northern VA. MUCAPE between
    2500-4000 J/kg across the Central Mid Atlantic and a maxima near
    5000 J/kg out in the Central Appalachians will be plentiful to help
    boost convective magnitude as cells develop and mature on their
    way to the southeast. Cell motion will thankfully be somewhat
    progressive leading to a low prospect for training. However, PWATs
    running ~2 deviations above normal (1.8-2.1") across much of the
    region will certainly benefit heavy rain prospects with hourly
    rates likely to settle between 1-2"/hr in any given location with
    some stronger cores possibly hitting upwards of 2-3"/hr on average
    with higher intra-hour rates. A MRGL risk remains in effect for
    much of the Mid Atlantic with the northern periphery of the risk
    area as far north as NY state with the southern edge down into
    Central VA.

    ...Southeast...

    A migrating TUTT cell off the coast of FL will continue to
    propagate westward and provide favorable ascent within the proxy of
    the Southeastern CONUS. Unstable airmass and large scale ascent
    will aid in scattered thunderstorms developing all across the South
    with the highest threat of heavy rainfall centered over Southern NC
    down through Central SC into Southern GA where instability (>3000
    J/kg of SBCAPE) is forecast to be highest. Heavy rainfall of
    2-3"/hr is anticipated in some of the stronger convective cores
    leading to isolated flash flood prospects in any urbanized
    settings. Given the more focused ascent pattern provided by the
    advancing TUTT, the threat sneaks into the lower end of the MRGL
    risk threshold, so a broad MRGL was positioned over much of the
    Southeast to cover the threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS, MIDWEST AND NORTHERN GREAT LAKES...


    ...2030Z Update...

    Minimal areal adjustments were made to the Slight Risk previously=20
    introduced stretching from the Central Plains northeastward into=20
    the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes. Newly available hi-res guidance=20
    through the period matches the depicted area quite well with the=20
    only changes being a reduction of coverage across portions of=20
    Minnesota as storm coverage has tightened in vicinity of the warm=20
    front, and a small southwest extension across south-central Kansas=20
    with trailing convection along the instability axis. Locally heavy=20
    rainfall totals of 2-4" remain plausible, though some of the=20
    guidance tends to favor one or the other dual QPF maxima noted in=20
    the prior discussion, and future runs may help either shift and/or=20
    better focus the most notable potential threat area. The other area
    of note is through the central Mid-Atlantic where the approach of=20
    a 'backdoor' cold front may help to focus convection better than=20
    during the day 1 (Wednesday) period as slow-moving storms develop=20
    both ahead of the front with daytime heating as well as along the=20 approaching front. However, newly available hi-res guidance/QPF=20
    indicate storms will remain widely scattered enough for now that=20
    the flash flood threat should still be isolated.=20

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...


    ...Central Plains into Great Lakes...

    The final shortwave in the progression bleeding over from the
    previous D1 time frame will continue pushing northeast before
    finally vacating the Upper Midwest later on Thursday. Heavy rain
    threat will continue over parts of MN and WI before eventually
    impacting the Western U.P. of Michigan before its departure.
    Instability across the region will be significantly lower than
    previous days with the warm front becoming stationary prior to
    reaching the southern shores of Lake Superior. The threat for flash
    flooding is most notably in the first 6-12 hr window of the
    forecast with a sharp decline in the threat afterwards as the
    pattern shifts with the ridge expected to be breaking down. 1-2"
    with locally higher amounts (upwards of 4") will allow for flash
    flooding in any area from IA up through MN/WI, especially in places
    where significant rainfall has occurred in prior periods. A
    secondary maxima is forecast across portions of the Central Plains
    down around KS/Northwest MO as a surface low over the Northern
    Plains migrates eastward and drags a cold front across the Plains
    and adjacent Midwestern areas. Guidance has been keying on a
    secondary QPF maxima located within that corridor as thunderstorms
    form along a defined instability axis with mid-level ascent
    availability from a trailing shortwave over the region and some
    marginal convergence ahead of the cold front to the north and
    northwest. Locally 2-4" are possible in this region, an area that
    has had the benefit of multiple heavy rain instances the past
    48hrs. A broad SLGT risk remains in place over the Northern Great
    Lakes and Upper Midwest, now extending back into parts of the
    Central Plains to cover for the additional threat trailing the
    surface reflection.

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given wet antecedent conditions following previous multi-
    day convective impact in prior periods. Coverage and intensity of
    convection will be less than previous days as we lose the benefit
    of the RER jet dynamics that have assisted in the recent days.
    Still, remnant elevated moisture and sufficient buoyancy within
    the confines of far West TX up through Southern and Eastern NM will
    maintain a posture of diurnally driven thunderstorms with locally
    heavy rainfall across the above areas. Heaviest thunderstorms will
    be capable of 1-2" with the peak QPF max probably closer to 3" as
    noted by modest HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" with a
    decline to 0% for >5". The previous MRGL risk was maintained and
    expanded to encompass areas that will be at highest risk for flash
    flooding due to the antecedent conditions and potential
    thunderstorm activity.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Disturbance rounding the northern periphery of our massive ridge
    will ultimately slide down through the Mid Atlantic during the
    mid to late-afternoon hrs. on Thursday. The combination of strong
    diurnal destabilization during the daytime and prominent moisture
    lingering over the area will create a very buoyant environment
    capable of strong thunderstorm genesis anywhere from NY state down
    through the Central Mid Atlantic including; MD/PA/DE/Northern WV
    and VA. The key to this setup compared to the D1 period will be a
    targeted focus within the confines of cold front pressing southward
    out of the Northern Mid Atlantic Thursday afternoon and evening.
    High pressure over Northern New England into Quebec will act as a
    forcing mechanism to propel the front with a wedged signature
    occurring east of the Appalachian front. Concern is for
    thunderstorm genesis along the boundary, but a setup conducive for
    eventual back-building along the front as it migrates into Northern
    VA and will hit a wall in its progression. Guidance has increased
    area maximum within the QPF output with some local spots seeing
    2-4" over portions of the Central Mid Atlantic, mainly south of the
    PA Turnpike down into the Northern Shenandoah and points east,
    including the DC/Balt metro. These heavier returns will be more
    isolated in coverage, but could still provide locally significant
    impacts if over the wrong area. For now, have maintained the MRGL
    risk, but a targeted SLGT risk could be added over parts of the
    region if the signal becomes more concrete on where the heaviest
    precip will align.

    ...Southeast...

    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms over much of the
    Southeastern CONUS will yield some heavy rainfall prospects during
    the day Thursday with a decay in coverage once we lose diurnal
    heating. The main areas of interest will lie along the terrain
    in the Southern Appalachians and along the Gulf coast where the
    remnants of a migrating TUTT cell will maintain a focal point for
    heavy convective prospects during the period. Best threat for any
    flash flooding will be tied to the complex topography and urban
    settings where runoff capabilities are highest. Relatively modest
    HREF probs for >3" (20-35%) during the 12-00z time frame on D2 are
    littered over the Southeast leading to a broad MRGL risk to cover
    for all the local threats. The risk lies within the lower end of
    the threshold and some adjustments are possible pending CAMs
    conjecture.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...2030Z Update...

    The forecast for a focused corridor of heavy rainfall associated=20
    with an MCS and trailing convection crossing from southeastern=20
    Canada into portions of Update New York/northern New England=20
    remains on track. While there are expectedly some variances on the=20
    possible MCS path which add some east-west uncertainty, all=20
    guidance is still in good agreement that the track will clip areas=20
    south of the international border bringing an attendant flash flood
    threat. Deterministic guidance indicates the potential of rainfall
    totals between 2-4", with ensemble probabilities of 2"+ between=20
    25-35%. A modest eastward adjustment of the Slight Risk area was=20
    added based on these latest ensemble probabilities. Elsewhere,=20
    prior forecast has remained consistent.=20

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern New England...

    A strong shortwave originating from the Midwest the period prior is
    forecast to cross through the Great Lakes and continue migrating
    into Southeastern Canada as we enter D3. A surface low will be moving east-northeast through the Lakes into neighboring Ontario Province
    by Friday afternoon which will aid in regional ascent and a
    strengthening low level convergence regime tied evolving synoptic
    pattern across Canada and the Northeastern U.S. Assessment of the
    theta_E field signals a sharp northern gradient within the
    instability regime as surface ridging downstream and warm frontal
    approach on the lead side of the low will create quite a thermal
    gradient across Ontario/Southern Quebec, extending into Northern
    New England. This will lay the foundation for an anticipated
    development of an MCS upstream over Ontario in conjunction to the
    shortwave arrival and aided large scale ascent within the tail end
    of a jet streak exiting over Quebec into ME. The progression of
    the MCS will be important to discern as the complex will likely
    spur a threat of heavy rainfall, and certainly some prospects of
    back-building along the flanking side of the disturbance within the
    thermal gradient outlined. Models are right on the edge in a
    majority of cases for significant rains to impact NY North Country
    over into Northern VT as they will be closest the complex on its
    progression, and lie right along that thermal gradient in place.
    Ensemble bias correction this evening is extremely bullish in its
    presentation, a lot likely owed to an aggressive 00z GFS output,
    but even other guidance is relatively close with some impressive
    totals located along and just north of the border. ECMWF AIFS ML
    guidance is right within the median outcome with the heaviest
    centered right at the International border with the heaviest precip
    just to the north. Given some of the sensitivities in the area over
    Northern VT into North Country, and in coordination with the local
    Burlington WFO, a small SLGT risk has been added over the
    aforementioned area to cover for the threat. If trends for the
    heavier precip end up shifting north, a removal is possible, but
    considering the potential, the higher risk was added to aid
    messaging and correlate with the latest ensemble means.

    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the North-Central tier of the CONUS
    will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flood prospects. The best threat will be
    over Northern ND into the Red River area where some urbanized zones
    will have a greater threat for flash flooding. A quick 1-3" is
    likely anywhere over Central ND into Northwest MN. This threat is
    within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold and will be
    monitored closely to see if the risk is warranted, or needs any
    expansion.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    TX into NM will allow for isolated flash flood concerns over areas
    that will have seen several days of heavy convective impacts with
    compromised FFG's. Local 1-2" is possible in the period with the
    highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down through the
    Guadalupe Mtns. and adjacent valleys. A MRGL risk was maintained to
    cover for the threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5bm9UFxeuXcRZGDGZdOT3wByZ80SwBP2O5ryyToT3hNh= IbJSxlann4zDBmKS8R0AqdnbNRl23Be3C7U7hfzWWHJ9kRE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5bm9UFxeuXcRZGDGZdOT3wByZ80SwBP2O5ryyToT3hNh= IbJSxlann4zDBmKS8R0AqdnbNRl23Be3C7U7hfzWyRTy7Ms$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5bm9UFxeuXcRZGDGZdOT3wByZ80SwBP2O5ryyToT3hNh= IbJSxlann4zDBmKS8R0AqdnbNRl23Be3C7U7hfzWsyqOeCs$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 26 00:58:39 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 260057
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    857 PM EDT Wed Jun 25 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NEW MEXICO, CENTRAL PLAINS, AND MIDWEST...

    ...01Z Update...

    With much of the Marginal Risk areas largely driven by diurnal
    heating, the areas were shrunken down noticeably in the East and=20
    in on the northern flank of the Marginal Risk area in the Upper=20
    Midwest. The Slight Risk in the Upper Midwest was also trimmed back
    on the northern flank as the best instability and forcing now lies
    from central Nebraska on east across the Missouri River and into=20
    eastern Iowa. The Slight Risk there was adjusted to account for new
    18Z HREF probabilistic guidance, but the meteorological rationale=20
    for supporting the Slight Risk into tonight remains on track. ECMWF
    SATs for 06Z tonight show a ribbon of >99.5 climatological=20
    percentile PWATs from the central NE/KS border that extends east=20
    through southern MN and central WI. The Slight Risk area is also=20
    likely to have as much as 1,000 J/kg of MUCAPE at its disposal=20
    as a steadfast 30-40kt LLJ runs parallel to a nearby surface=20
    trough. The Slight Risk was maintained in southern NM and far=20
    western TX given the lingering thunderstorm activity will last a=20
    little longer than the storms in the East. Lingering instability=20
    and anomalous moisture may keep storms deeper into the evening=20
    hours as a result.

    ---Previous Discussion---

    ...16Z Update...

    Only minor areal modifications were made to better focus the
    inherited Slight Risk areas based on the latest 12Z guidance, with
    the prior forecast remaining ontrack overall. This included a
    westward shift of the Slight Risk over the Upper Midwest where the
    greater risk looks to be closer to the Upper Mississippi Valley
    rather than eastward towards the Great Lakes. Still expect that the
    higher-end threat within the Slight Risk exists in a corridor from
    the central Missouri Valley northeastward towards the greater
    Minneapolis area, where the greatest chance for rainfall totals of
    3-4", locally 5-6", exists and may lead to more widespread
    instances of flash flooding. For New Mexico/west Texas, the latest
    guidance indicates that the more focused, higher-end threat within
    the Slight Risk has concentrated southward over south-central New
    Mexico (including the Sacramento Mountains and Ruidoso burn scar)
    as well as western Texas from greater El Paso eastward through the
    Guadalupe mountains. This covers the region with the greatest
    potential for rainfall totals upwards of 2", locally 3".

    Putnam

    ---Overnight Discussion---

    ...New Mexico...

    Despite a bit less areal coverage anticipated for convection
    across New Mexico for Wednesday, scattered thunderstorms will still
    cause problems after daytime initiation as ample heating during
    the prime destabilization window (16-21z) will yield another threat
    of heavy rainfall across the terrain and adjacent valleys across
    NM. Main jet to the north will lift out of the area allowing for
    less of a large scale ascent pattern that could maximize any
    convective pattern over the region. Remnant elevated moisture
    (PWATs) running between 1-2 standard deviations above normal on
    the western flank of our ridge will still be located across the
    state leaving an environment capable of heavy rainfall in any
    convective cores that develop. Impacts the previous period were
    felt over a large portion of the state leading to generally lower
    FFG's bisecting much of the area expected to see a chance for
    convection today. Latest HREF neighborhood probs for >3" are
    running pretty high (50-70%) across places like El Paso and points
    north within part of the Sacramento's, an area we have highlighted
    the past several days. Modest probs (20-40%) for >3" extend all
    the way up into the Sangre de Cristos with some smaller relative
    mins mixed into the areal coverage. This is more a testament to the valley/terrain components littered over the state, so not all areas
    will see impactful rainfall with this convective evolution.

    The signal is sufficient enough to warrant a broad SLGT risk
    within the state extending down through far West TX given the
    current CAMs interpretation of scattered heavy convection likely to
    impact portions of El Paso and Hudspeth counties through part of
    the period. Some strong cells could even develop across the NM
    Caprock as inferred by a few hi-res deterministic, likely due to
    the favorable instability tongue positioned over the eastern side
    of the state behind a vacating surface trough. High end SLGT risk
    is favored for areas across Southern NM up through Central portion
    of the state with the favored areas likely including the
    Sacramento's, Sangre de Cristos, and areas within and surrounding
    El Paso.

    ...Central Plains to Midwest...

    Convective pattern across the Plains and Midwest at the end of the
    D1 will translate northward into the Upper Mississippi Valley with
    organized convection over NE/IA and SD/MN converging along the
    propagating warm front leading to a swath of heavy rainfall across
    much of the Southern 1/3rd of MN into Western WI. Beginning to see
    the CAMs come into better agreement on the anticipated convective
    evolution with a dual QPF maxima most likely situated over the area
    between Aberdeen, SD to Minneapolis with a consensus on the
    heaviest precip along and south of I-94 in MN with a bullseye
    generally overhead or very close to Minneapolis proper. The second
    maxima is positioned across Northeast NE into Northern IA to the
    southern reaches of the MN border where a multi-round convective
    impact forecast is being depicted in guidance as the initial round
    in the morning will give way to a short break before redevelopment
    occurs back along the frontal positioning bisecting the area. A
    strong IVT pulse currently aligned from KS up through Eastern NE
    has helped push PWATs closer to the 99th percentile around Omaha
    this evening with the 00z RAOB out of KOAX depicting a PWAT of
    1.94", putting this just below the daily climatological max for the
    day (25/00z) and well above the 90th percentile for not just the
    period, but even for the sites general historical record. This same
    airmass is what's progged to advect northeast into MN and Western
    WI by the time we reach tomorrow afternoon, a signal that would
    prime any convective impacts to likely provide some prolific heavy
    rain cores in stronger cells impacting the region. With the proxy
    of the front and the environment in place, there's ample evidence
    that some areas across the Midwest will see between 3-6" with the
    5-6" range within reason as inferred by modest >5" neighborhood
    probs (20-35%) in the latest HREF output. This same signal is
    situated over the two defined maxima in guidance with the >3"
    signal between 50-80% for both areas.

    Considering all of the above factors and relatively good agreement
    within the 00z guidance this evening, the previous SLGT risk was
    maintained and leans towards a higher end risk with some prospects
    of a targeted upgrade in any of those outlined forecast maxima by
    the next update. Widespread significant impacts are not
    anticipated at this time, but locally considerable flash flooding
    is plausible in the setup. SLGT risk extends into the Western Great
    Lakes on the eastern flank and down into Southern NE on the
    southwest flank of the risk with potentially for widely scattered
    flash flood prospects as convection impacts both areas during the
    period.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    The northern fringe of our powerful ridge centered over the Ohio
    Valley and Mid Atlantic will begin breaking down through the course
    of Wednesday with an increase in PWATs likely to advect over the
    area as moisture finally, "rounds the bend" over the Great Lakes
    and pushes into the Northeast CONUS. Mean flow will shift more
    northwesterly by the time we reach the afternoon hrs with a
    significantly buoyant environment in place and generally less
    capping as our ridge weakens. A few small mid-level perturbations
    analyzed over the Great Lakes currently will sweep southeastward
    into PA by morning and eventually cross over the region by peak
    diurnal maximum. The combination of a very buoyant environment
    with focused ascent will lead to scattered thunderstorm development
    across much of PA, Northern WV, and into the Central Mid Atlantic
    domain with sights on Southern NJ/MD/Northern VA. MUCAPE between
    2500-4000 J/kg across the Central Mid Atlantic and a maxima near
    5000 J/kg out in the Central Appalachians will be plentiful to help
    boost convective magnitude as cells develop and mature on their
    way to the southeast. Cell motion will thankfully be somewhat
    progressive leading to a low prospect for training. However, PWATs
    running ~2 deviations above normal (1.8-2.1") across much of the
    region will certainly benefit heavy rain prospects with hourly
    rates likely to settle between 1-2"/hr in any given location with
    some stronger cores possibly hitting upwards of 2-3"/hr on average
    with higher intra-hour rates. A MRGL risk remains in effect for
    much of the Mid Atlantic with the northern periphery of the risk
    area as far north as NY state with the southern edge down into
    Central VA.

    ...Southeast...

    A migrating TUTT cell off the coast of FL will continue to
    propagate westward and provide favorable ascent within the proxy of
    the Southeastern CONUS. Unstable airmass and large scale ascent
    will aid in scattered thunderstorms developing all across the South
    with the highest threat of heavy rainfall centered over Southern NC
    down through Central SC into Southern GA where instability (>3000
    J/kg of SBCAPE) is forecast to be highest. Heavy rainfall of
    2-3"/hr is anticipated in some of the stronger convective cores
    leading to isolated flash flood prospects in any urbanized
    settings. Given the more focused ascent pattern provided by the
    advancing TUTT, the threat sneaks into the lower end of the MRGL
    risk threshold, so a broad MRGL was positioned over much of the
    Southeast to cover the threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS, MIDWEST AND NORTHERN GREAT LAKES...


    ...2030Z Update...

    Minimal areal adjustments were made to the Slight Risk previously
    introduced stretching from the Central Plains northeastward into
    the Upper Midwest/Great Lakes. Newly available hi-res guidance
    through the period matches the depicted area quite well with the
    only changes being a reduction of coverage across portions of
    Minnesota as storm coverage has tightened in vicinity of the warm
    front, and a small southwest extension across south-central Kansas
    with trailing convection along the instability axis. Locally heavy
    rainfall totals of 2-4" remain plausible, though some of the
    guidance tends to favor one or the other dual QPF maxima noted in
    the prior discussion, and future runs may help either shift and/or
    better focus the most notable potential threat area. The other area
    of note is through the central Mid-Atlantic where the approach of
    a 'backdoor' cold front may help to focus convection better than
    during the day 1 (Wednesday) period as slow-moving storms develop
    both ahead of the front with daytime heating as well as along the
    approaching front. However, newly available hi-res guidance/QPF
    indicate storms will remain widely scattered enough for now that
    the flash flood threat should still be isolated.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...


    ...Central Plains into Great Lakes...

    The final shortwave in the progression bleeding over from the
    previous D1 time frame will continue pushing northeast before
    finally vacating the Upper Midwest later on Thursday. Heavy rain
    threat will continue over parts of MN and WI before eventually
    impacting the Western U.P. of Michigan before its departure.
    Instability across the region will be significantly lower than
    previous days with the warm front becoming stationary prior to
    reaching the southern shores of Lake Superior. The threat for flash
    flooding is most notably in the first 6-12 hr window of the
    forecast with a sharp decline in the threat afterwards as the
    pattern shifts with the ridge expected to be breaking down. 1-2"
    with locally higher amounts (upwards of 4") will allow for flash
    flooding in any area from IA up through MN/WI, especially in places
    where significant rainfall has occurred in prior periods. A
    secondary maxima is forecast across portions of the Central Plains
    down around KS/Northwest MO as a surface low over the Northern
    Plains migrates eastward and drags a cold front across the Plains
    and adjacent Midwestern areas. Guidance has been keying on a
    secondary QPF maxima located within that corridor as thunderstorms
    form along a defined instability axis with mid-level ascent
    availability from a trailing shortwave over the region and some
    marginal convergence ahead of the cold front to the north and
    northwest. Locally 2-4" are possible in this region, an area that
    has had the benefit of multiple heavy rain instances the past
    48hrs. A broad SLGT risk remains in place over the Northern Great
    Lakes and Upper Midwest, now extending back into parts of the
    Central Plains to cover for the additional threat trailing the
    surface reflection.

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given wet antecedent conditions following previous multi-
    day convective impact in prior periods. Coverage and intensity of
    convection will be less than previous days as we lose the benefit
    of the RER jet dynamics that have assisted in the recent days.
    Still, remnant elevated moisture and sufficient buoyancy within
    the confines of far West TX up through Southern and Eastern NM will
    maintain a posture of diurnally driven thunderstorms with locally
    heavy rainfall across the above areas. Heaviest thunderstorms will
    be capable of 1-2" with the peak QPF max probably closer to 3" as
    noted by modest HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" with a
    decline to 0% for >5". The previous MRGL risk was maintained and
    expanded to encompass areas that will be at highest risk for flash
    flooding due to the antecedent conditions and potential
    thunderstorm activity.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Disturbance rounding the northern periphery of our massive ridge
    will ultimately slide down through the Mid Atlantic during the
    mid to late-afternoon hrs. on Thursday. The combination of strong
    diurnal destabilization during the daytime and prominent moisture
    lingering over the area will create a very buoyant environment
    capable of strong thunderstorm genesis anywhere from NY state down
    through the Central Mid Atlantic including; MD/PA/DE/Northern WV
    and VA. The key to this setup compared to the D1 period will be a
    targeted focus within the confines of cold front pressing southward
    out of the Northern Mid Atlantic Thursday afternoon and evening.
    High pressure over Northern New England into Quebec will act as a
    forcing mechanism to propel the front with a wedged signature
    occurring east of the Appalachian front. Concern is for
    thunderstorm genesis along the boundary, but a setup conducive for
    eventual back-building along the front as it migrates into Northern
    VA and will hit a wall in its progression. Guidance has increased
    area maximum within the QPF output with some local spots seeing
    2-4" over portions of the Central Mid Atlantic, mainly south of the
    PA Turnpike down into the Northern Shenandoah and points east,
    including the DC/Balt metro. These heavier returns will be more
    isolated in coverage, but could still provide locally significant
    impacts if over the wrong area. For now, have maintained the MRGL
    risk, but a targeted SLGT risk could be added over parts of the
    region if the signal becomes more concrete on where the heaviest
    precip will align.

    ...Southeast...

    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms over much of the
    Southeastern CONUS will yield some heavy rainfall prospects during
    the day Thursday with a decay in coverage once we lose diurnal
    heating. The main areas of interest will lie along the terrain
    in the Southern Appalachians and along the Gulf coast where the
    remnants of a migrating TUTT cell will maintain a focal point for
    heavy convective prospects during the period. Best threat for any
    flash flooding will be tied to the complex topography and urban
    settings where runoff capabilities are highest. Relatively modest
    HREF probs for >3" (20-35%) during the 12-00z time frame on D2 are
    littered over the Southeast leading to a broad MRGL risk to cover
    for all the local threats. The risk lies within the lower end of
    the threshold and some adjustments are possible pending CAMs
    conjecture.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...2030Z Update...

    The forecast for a focused corridor of heavy rainfall associated
    with an MCS and trailing convection crossing from southeastern
    Canada into portions of Update New York/northern New England
    remains on track. While there are expectedly some variances on the
    possible MCS path which add some east-west uncertainty, all
    guidance is still in good agreement that the track will clip areas
    south of the international border bringing an attendant flash flood
    threat. Deterministic guidance indicates the potential of rainfall
    totals between 2-4", with ensemble probabilities of 2"+ between
    25-35%. A modest eastward adjustment of the Slight Risk area was
    added based on these latest ensemble probabilities. Elsewhere,
    prior forecast has remained consistent.

    Putnam

    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern New England...

    A strong shortwave originating from the Midwest the period prior is
    forecast to cross through the Great Lakes and continue migrating
    into Southeastern Canada as we enter D3. A surface low will be moving east-northeast through the Lakes into neighboring Ontario Province
    by Friday afternoon which will aid in regional ascent and a
    strengthening low level convergence regime tied evolving synoptic
    pattern across Canada and the Northeastern U.S. Assessment of the
    theta_E field signals a sharp northern gradient within the
    instability regime as surface ridging downstream and warm frontal
    approach on the lead side of the low will create quite a thermal
    gradient across Ontario/Southern Quebec, extending into Northern
    New England. This will lay the foundation for an anticipated
    development of an MCS upstream over Ontario in conjunction to the
    shortwave arrival and aided large scale ascent within the tail end
    of a jet streak exiting over Quebec into ME. The progression of
    the MCS will be important to discern as the complex will likely
    spur a threat of heavy rainfall, and certainly some prospects of
    back-building along the flanking side of the disturbance within the
    thermal gradient outlined. Models are right on the edge in a
    majority of cases for significant rains to impact NY North Country
    over into Northern VT as they will be closest the complex on its
    progression, and lie right along that thermal gradient in place.
    Ensemble bias correction this evening is extremely bullish in its
    presentation, a lot likely owed to an aggressive 00z GFS output,
    but even other guidance is relatively close with some impressive
    totals located along and just north of the border. ECMWF AIFS ML
    guidance is right within the median outcome with the heaviest
    centered right at the International border with the heaviest precip
    just to the north. Given some of the sensitivities in the area over
    Northern VT into North Country, and in coordination with the local
    Burlington WFO, a small SLGT risk has been added over the
    aforementioned area to cover for the threat. If trends for the
    heavier precip end up shifting north, a removal is possible, but
    considering the potential, the higher risk was added to aid
    messaging and correlate with the latest ensemble means.

    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the North-Central tier of the CONUS
    will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flood prospects. The best threat will be
    over Northern ND into the Red River area where some urbanized zones
    will have a greater threat for flash flooding. A quick 1-3" is
    likely anywhere over Central ND into Northwest MN. This threat is
    within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold and will be
    monitored closely to see if the risk is warranted, or needs any
    expansion.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    TX into NM will allow for isolated flash flood concerns over areas
    that will have seen several days of heavy convective impacts with
    compromised FFG's. Local 1-2" is possible in the period with the
    highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down through the
    Guadalupe Mtns. and adjacent valleys. A MRGL risk was maintained to
    cover for the threat.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!94NpJ_Tk0TqhtI7WAOFqFqN7NgIIGu5Nj6zoyzDQRwEx= btswOVwc9XldaP-f2uPMiU9mJV0eHOoMejUGrOUh1Lk0J9c$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!94NpJ_Tk0TqhtI7WAOFqFqN7NgIIGu5Nj6zoyzDQRwEx= btswOVwc9XldaP-f2uPMiU9mJV0eHOoMejUGrOUh4me5-ZE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!94NpJ_Tk0TqhtI7WAOFqFqN7NgIIGu5Nj6zoyzDQRwEx= btswOVwc9XldaP-f2uPMiU9mJV0eHOoMejUGrOUhwyX1cHU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 26 08:28:11 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 260827
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    427 AM EDT Thu Jun 26 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PARTS OF=20
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, AND UPPER GREAT LAKES, ALONG=20
    WITH NORTHERN PORTIONS OF THE MID ATLANTIC...

    ...Central Plains into the Upper Great Lakes...

    Upper shortwave trough across the Northern Plains early Thu will
    pivot eastward across the Upper MS Valley and Upper Great Lakes
    region later Thu and Thu night. Enhancing the deep-layer forcing
    will be the curved 90kt upper level jet streak that will be=20
    skirting the U.S.-Canadian border. Ahead of the upper shortwave=20 trough/surface front -- 850-700 mb moisture flux anomalies are=20
    noteworthy (1.5-2.0 standard deviations above normal), as is the=20
    0-6km bulk shear values (35-45+ kts). This will likely support more
    widespread, organized convective line segments later this=20
    afternoon/evening and into the overnight across the elongated=20
    Slight Risk area. Compared to yesterday's Day 2 ERO, based on the=20
    latest guidance trends we did nudge the Slight slightly farther=20
    east across northwest MO and southeast IA. The 00Z CAMs show 24hr=20
    max QPF generally in the 3-5" range within the Slight Risk area,=20
    which is supported by the HREF and RRFS 24hr QPF probabilities.=20
    Multiple CAMs (including the 00Z RRFS) show isolated totals=20
    exceeding 5" across eastern KS.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Most of the CAMs show more widespread slow-moving convective=20
    clusters within a newly-hoisted Slight area, initiating along the=20
    lee-side trough and quasi-stationary, backdoor front. Relatively light (generally 20kt or less) deep-layer shear would suggest pulse-=20
    type durations for the heaviest rains, but nevertheless both the=20
    HREF and RRFS do show pockets of elevated probabilities with >2"/hr
    rainfall rates by mid-late afternoon into Thu evening. This given=20
    the favorable thermodynamic profile (1.75-2.00" PWs and max CAPEs=20
    2000-3000 J/Kg, the likelihood of slow cell motions with the
    potential for repetitive convection along these boundaries would
    support a low-end Slight Risk, despite the lack of strong synoptic/
    kinematic support.

    ...Parts of the Lower MS Valley, TN Valley, and Southeast...

    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms over much of the
    south-central to southeastern CONUS will yield some heavy rainfall
    prospects during the day Thursday with a decay in coverage once we
    lose diurnal heating. The main areas of interest will lie along=20
    the terrain in the Southern Appalachians and along the Gulf coast=20
    where the remnants of a migrating TUTT cell will maintain a focal=20
    point for heavy convective prospects during the period. Best threat
    for any flash flooding will be tied to the complex topography and=20
    urban settings where runoff capabilities are highest. Relatively=20
    modest HREF probs for >3" (40-60%) were noted across portions of
    MS/LA and especially along the west coast of the FL Peninsula. For
    now the risk appears to be a 'high end' Marginal, i.e. mainly an
    isolated flash flood risk, largely due to the pulse/short-fused
    nature of the more intense rainfall rates and relatively high FFG
    values.=20

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given wet antecedent conditions following previous multi-
    day convective impact in prior periods. Coverage and intensity of
    convection will be less than previous days as we lose the benefit
    of the RER jet dynamics that have assisted in the recent days.
    Still, remnant elevated moisture and sufficient buoyancy within
    the confines of far West TX up through Southern and Eastern NM will
    maintain a posture of diurnally driven thunderstorms with locally
    heavy rainfall across the above areas. Heaviest thunderstorms will
    be capable of 1-2" with the peak QPF max probably closer to 3" as
    noted by modest HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" with a
    decline to 0% for >5". The previous MRGL risk was maintained.=20

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...Northern NY-New England...

    The forecast for a focused corridor of heavy rainfall associated
    with an MCS and trailing convection crossing from southeastern
    Canada into portions of Update New York/northern New England
    remains on track. While there are expectedly some variances on the
    possible MCS path which add some east-west uncertainty, all
    guidance is still in good agreement that the track will clip areas
    south of the international border bringing an attendant flash flood
    threat. Deterministic guidance indicates the potential of rainfall
    totals between 1-3", with ensemble probabilities of 2"+ between=20
    15-25%. A small eastward adjustment of the Slight Risk area was=20
    added based on these latest ensemble probabilities. Elsewhere,=20
    prior forecast has remained consistent.

    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the North-Central tier of the CONUS
    will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flood prospects. The best threat will be
    over Northern ND into the Red River area where some urbanized zones
    will have a greater threat for flash flooding. A quick 1-3+" is
    likely anywhere over Central ND into Northwest MN. This threat is
    within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold and will be
    monitored closely to see if the risk is warranted, or needs any
    expansion.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    TX into NM will allow for isolated flash flood concerns over areas
    that will have seen several days of heavy convective impacts with
    compromised FFG's. Local 1-2" is possible in the period with the
    highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down through the
    Guadalupe Mtns. and adjacent valleys. A MRGL risk was maintained to
    cover for the threat.


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST, THE NORTHEAST, AND
    SOUTH-CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...=20

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    Next approaching upper shortwave trough, with a 90kt upper level
    jet streak on the lee side, will generate a compact area of fairly
    robust, transient deep-layer forcing over the outlook area later in
    the period (especially Sat night). MUCAPEs are expected to soar
    within the warm sector prior to the surface cold frontal passage --
    i.e. aoa 4,000 J/Kg per the GFS. This along with PWs getting near
    1.75" will lead to more organized, widespread convection by
    Saturday night as the activity likely grows upscale with the
    increasing pre-frontal low-level inflow (30-40kts at 850 mb). The
    00Z guidance indicates significant latitudinal spread in the
    heavier QPF, and as a result, have maintained the Marginal Risk
    from yesterday's Day 4 ERO. However, the potential for an upgrade
    to Slight is certainly plausible given the kinematic and
    thermodynamic profile, especially after 00Z Sun when the Corfidi
    Vectors decrease to 10kt or less (thereby enhancing the risk for
    cell training).

    ...Northeast...

    Upper shortwave trough pushes across the Northeast by late Sat,
    then off the coast Sun morning. The bulk of the rainfall will fall
    during the first half of the period (during the day Sat),
    coinciding with the most favorable pre-frontal deep-layer
    instability and moisture (PWs 1.75-2.00+ inches). The 00Z guidance
    shows considerable spread with the heaviest QPF, though are fairly
    similar with the max totals (1.5-3.0"). Given the spread in the
    model QPFs, along with the progression of the front and fairly=20
    quick diminishment in instability after 00Z Sun, for now will
    maintain the Marginal Risk.

    ...New Mexico...

    Maintained a targeted Marginal Risk area over/near the Sacramento
    Mtns, particularly the burn scar areas from the 2024 fires (Blue 2,
    South Fork, and Salt burn scars). QPF trends (coverage, intensity)
    are similar to Day 2, with the moist S-SE low-level upslope flow
    likely resulting in a concentrated area of heavier rainfall across
    the Sacramento Mtns and eastern foothills. The flash flood
    potential is expected to remain isolated/localized.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4yNY3jE25Pwj9CTEBZPB9dy3HesWJrjXwJZRAYxHr5m9= 8RZfTAUaRHMOFphPlc1rZ9vvvJfiIKz4dN_EmSlf6FhZDdM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4yNY3jE25Pwj9CTEBZPB9dy3HesWJrjXwJZRAYxHr5m9= 8RZfTAUaRHMOFphPlc1rZ9vvvJfiIKz4dN_EmSlfP4MWaAM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4yNY3jE25Pwj9CTEBZPB9dy3HesWJrjXwJZRAYxHr5m9= 8RZfTAUaRHMOFphPlc1rZ9vvvJfiIKz4dN_EmSlfMw4sCj0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 26 08:49:47 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 260849
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    449 AM EDT Thu Jun 26 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, AND UPPER GREAT LAKES, ALONG
    WITH NORTHERN PORTIONS OF THE MID ATLANTIC...

    ...Central Plains into the Upper Great Lakes...

    Upper shortwave trough across the Northern Plains early Thu will
    pivot eastward across the Upper MS Valley and Upper Great Lakes
    region later Thu and Thu night. Enhancing the deep-layer forcing
    will be the curved 90kt upper level jet streak that will be
    skirting the U.S.-Canadian border. Ahead of the upper shortwave
    trough/surface front -- 850-700 mb moisture flux anomalies are
    noteworthy (1.5-2.0 standard deviations above normal), as is the
    0-6km bulk shear values (35-45+ kts). This will likely support more
    widespread, organized convective line segments later this
    afternoon/evening and into the overnight across the elongated
    Slight Risk area. Compared to yesterday's Day 2 ERO, based on the
    latest guidance trends we did nudge the Slight slightly farther
    east across northwest MO and southeast IA. The 00Z CAMs show 24hr
    max QPF generally in the 3-5" range within the Slight Risk area,
    which is supported by the HREF and RRFS 24hr QPF probabilities.
    Multiple CAMs (including the 00Z RRFS) show isolated totals
    exceeding 5" across eastern KS.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Most of the CAMs show more widespread slow-moving convective
    clusters within a newly-hoisted Slight area, initiating along the
    lee-side trough and quasi-stationary, backdoor front. Relatively light (generally 20kt or less) deep-layer shear would suggest pulse-
    type durations for the heaviest rains, but nevertheless both the
    HREF and RRFS do show pockets of elevated probabilities with >2"/hr
    rainfall rates by mid-late afternoon into Thu evening. Therefore=20
    given the favorable thermodynamic profile (1.75-2.00" PWs and max=20
    CAPEs 2000-3000 J/Kg), the likelihood of slow cell motions with the
    potential for repetitive convection along these boundaries would=20
    support a low-end Slight Risk across the northern Mid Atlantic
    (northern VA into eastern MD and Eastern PA), despite the lack of=20
    strong synoptic/ kinematic support.

    ...Parts of the Lower MS Valley, TN Valley, and Southeast...

    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms over much of the
    south-central to southeastern CONUS will yield some heavy rainfall
    prospects during the day Thursday with a decay in coverage once we
    lose diurnal heating. The main areas of interest will lie along
    the terrain in the Southern Appalachians and along the Gulf coast
    where the remnants of a migrating TUTT cell will maintain a focal
    point for heavy convective prospects during the period. Best threat
    for any flash flooding will be tied to the complex topography and
    urban settings where runoff capabilities are highest. Relatively
    modest HREF probs for >3" (40-60%) were noted across portions of
    MS/LA and especially along the west coast of the FL Peninsula. For
    now the risk appears to be a 'high end' Marginal, i.e. mainly an
    isolated flash flood risk, largely due to the pulse/short-fused
    nature of the more intense rainfall rates and relatively high FFG
    values.

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given wet antecedent conditions following previous multi-
    day convective impact in prior periods. Coverage and intensity of
    convection will be less than previous days as we lose the benefit
    of the RER jet dynamics that have assisted in the recent days.
    Still, remnant elevated moisture and sufficient buoyancy within
    the confines of far West TX up through Southern and Eastern NM will
    maintain a posture of diurnally driven thunderstorms with locally
    heavy rainfall across the above areas. Heaviest thunderstorms will
    be capable of 1-2" with the peak QPF max probably closer to 3" as
    noted by modest HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" with a
    decline to 0% for >5". The previous MRGL risk was maintained.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...Northern NY-New England...

    The forecast for a focused corridor of heavy rainfall associated
    with an MCS and trailing convection crossing from southeastern
    Canada into portions of Update New York/northern New England
    remains on track. While there are expectedly some variances on the
    possible MCS path which add some east-west uncertainty, all
    guidance is still in good agreement that the track will clip areas
    south of the international border bringing an attendant flash flood
    threat. Deterministic guidance indicates the potential of rainfall
    totals between 1-3", with ensemble probabilities of 2"+ between
    15-25%. A small eastward adjustment of the Slight Risk area was
    added based on these latest ensemble probabilities. Elsewhere,
    prior forecast has remained consistent.

    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the North-Central tier of the CONUS
    will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flood prospects. The best threat will be
    over Northern ND into the Red River area where some urbanized zones
    will have a greater threat for flash flooding. A quick 1-3+" is
    likely anywhere over Central ND into Northwest MN. This threat is
    within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold and will be
    monitored closely to see if the risk is warranted, or needs any
    expansion.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    TX into NM will allow for isolated flash flood concerns over areas
    that will have seen several days of heavy convective impacts with
    compromised FFG's. Local 1-2" is possible in the period with the
    highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down through the
    Guadalupe Mtns. and adjacent valleys. A MRGL risk was maintained to
    cover for the threat.


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST, THE NORTHEAST, AND
    SOUTH-CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    Next approaching upper shortwave trough, with a 90kt upper level
    jet streak on the lee side, will generate a compact area of fairly
    robust, transient deep-layer forcing over the outlook area later in
    the period (especially Sat night). MUCAPEs are expected to soar
    within the warm sector prior to the surface cold frontal passage --
    i.e. aoa 4,000 J/Kg per the GFS. This along with PWs getting near
    1.75" will lead to more organized, widespread convection by
    Saturday night as the activity likely grows upscale with the
    increasing pre-frontal low-level inflow (30-40kts at 850 mb). The
    00Z guidance indicates significant latitudinal spread in the
    heavier QPF, and as a result, have maintained the Marginal Risk
    from yesterday's Day 4 ERO. However, the potential for an upgrade
    to Slight is certainly plausible given the kinematic and
    thermodynamic profile, especially after 00Z Sun when the Corfidi
    Vectors decrease to 10kt or less (thereby enhancing the risk for
    cell training).

    ...Northeast...

    Upper shortwave trough pushes across the Northeast by late Sat,
    then off the coast Sun morning. The bulk of the rainfall will fall
    during the first half of the period (during the day Sat),
    coinciding with the most favorable pre-frontal deep-layer
    instability and moisture (PWs 1.75-2.00+ inches). The 00Z guidance
    shows considerable spread with the heaviest QPF, though are fairly
    similar with the max totals (1.5-3.0"). Given the spread in the
    model QPFs, along with the progression of the front and fairly
    quick diminishment in instability after 00Z Sun, for now will
    maintain the Marginal Risk.

    ...New Mexico...

    Maintained a targeted Marginal Risk area over/near the Sacramento
    Mtns, particularly the burn scar areas from the 2024 fires (Blue 2,
    South Fork, and Salt burn scars). QPF trends (coverage, intensity)
    are similar to Day 2, with the moist S-SE low-level upslope flow
    likely resulting in a concentrated area of heavier rainfall across
    the Sacramento Mtns and eastern foothills. The flash flood
    potential is expected to remain isolated/localized.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9wAJinZoHLLfvW4cM8Xh9SDTkMYDvSOA6xu8Ej6_iTU5= lABOeXO3ng6ikcvPEuzFSsor-RwF9cKAcv6zPAbx13NwOiU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9wAJinZoHLLfvW4cM8Xh9SDTkMYDvSOA6xu8Ej6_iTU5= lABOeXO3ng6ikcvPEuzFSsor-RwF9cKAcv6zPAbxb6Nffcw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9wAJinZoHLLfvW4cM8Xh9SDTkMYDvSOA6xu8Ej6_iTU5= lABOeXO3ng6ikcvPEuzFSsor-RwF9cKAcv6zPAbxp_3dvY0$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 26 15:57:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 261556
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1156 AM EDT Thu Jun 26 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, AND UPPER GREAT LAKES, ALONG
    WITH NORTHERN PORTIONS OF THE MID ATLANTIC...

    ...Central Plains into the Upper Great Lakes...

    16Z update... The western bounds of the Marginal Risk area was
    expanded westward to now include more of eastern Nebraska. Cells
    are observed firing up near the heavy rain axis from yesterday and
    are expected to persist for a few more hours. The latest CAM
    guidance show a fairly progressive line tracking through the region
    with rain rates of 1 to 3 inches/hour with maximum 24-hour=20
    accumulations of 3 to 5 inches. Elsewhere the Marginal and Slight
    Risk areas were maintained with no adjustments.

    Campbell

    Upper shortwave trough across the Northern Plains early Thu will
    pivot eastward across the Upper MS Valley and Upper Great Lakes
    region later Thu and Thu night. Enhancing the deep-layer forcing
    will be the curved 90kt upper level jet streak that will be
    skirting the U.S.-Canadian border. Ahead of the upper shortwave
    trough/surface front -- 850-700 mb moisture flux anomalies are
    noteworthy (1.5-2.0 standard deviations above normal), as is the
    0-6km bulk shear values (35-45+ kts). This will likely support more
    widespread, organized convective line segments later this
    afternoon/evening and into the overnight across the elongated
    Slight Risk area. Compared to yesterday's Day 2 ERO, based on the
    latest guidance trends we did nudge the Slight slightly farther
    east across northwest MO and southeast IA. The 00Z CAMs show 24hr
    max QPF generally in the 3-5" range within the Slight Risk area,
    which is supported by the HREF and RRFS 24hr QPF probabilities.
    Multiple CAMs (including the 00Z RRFS) show isolated totals
    exceeding 5" across eastern KS.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Most of the CAMs show more widespread slow-moving convective
    clusters within a newly-hoisted Slight area, initiating along the
    lee-side trough and quasi-stationary, backdoor front. Relatively light (generally 20kt or less) deep-layer shear would suggest pulse-
    type durations for the heaviest rains, but nevertheless both the
    HREF and RRFS do show pockets of elevated probabilities with >2"/hr
    rainfall rates by mid-late afternoon into Thu evening. Therefore
    given the favorable thermodynamic profile (1.75-2.00" PWs and max
    CAPEs 2000-3000 J/Kg), the likelihood of slow cell motions with the
    potential for repetitive convection along these boundaries would
    support a low-end Slight Risk across the northern Mid Atlantic
    (northern VA into eastern MD and Eastern PA), despite the lack of
    strong synoptic/ kinematic support.

    ...Parts of the Lower MS Valley, TN Valley, and Southeast...

    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms over much of the
    south-central to southeastern CONUS will yield some heavy rainfall
    prospects during the day Thursday with a decay in coverage once we
    lose diurnal heating. The main areas of interest will lie along
    the terrain in the Southern Appalachians and along the Gulf coast
    where the remnants of a migrating TUTT cell will maintain a focal
    point for heavy convective prospects during the period. Best threat
    for any flash flooding will be tied to the complex topography and
    urban settings where runoff capabilities are highest. Relatively
    modest HREF probs for >3" (40-60%) were noted across portions of
    MS/LA and especially along the west coast of the FL Peninsula. For
    now the risk appears to be a 'high end' Marginal, i.e. mainly an
    isolated flash flood risk, largely due to the pulse/short-fused
    nature of the more intense rainfall rates and relatively high FFG
    values.

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given wet antecedent conditions following previous multi-
    day convective impact in prior periods. Coverage and intensity of
    convection will be less than previous days as we lose the benefit
    of the RER jet dynamics that have assisted in the recent days.
    Still, remnant elevated moisture and sufficient buoyancy within
    the confines of far West TX up through Southern and Eastern NM will
    maintain a posture of diurnally driven thunderstorms with locally
    heavy rainfall across the above areas. Heaviest thunderstorms will
    be capable of 1-2" with the peak QPF max probably closer to 3" as
    noted by modest HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" with a
    decline to 0% for >5". The previous MRGL risk was maintained.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...Northern NY-New England...

    The forecast for a focused corridor of heavy rainfall associated
    with an MCS and trailing convection crossing from southeastern
    Canada into portions of Update New York/northern New England
    remains on track. While there are expectedly some variances on the
    possible MCS path which add some east-west uncertainty, all
    guidance is still in good agreement that the track will clip areas
    south of the international border bringing an attendant flash flood
    threat. Deterministic guidance indicates the potential of rainfall
    totals between 1-3", with ensemble probabilities of 2"+ between
    15-25%. A small eastward adjustment of the Slight Risk area was
    added based on these latest ensemble probabilities. Elsewhere,
    prior forecast has remained consistent.

    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the North-Central tier of the CONUS
    will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flood prospects. The best threat will be
    over Northern ND into the Red River area where some urbanized zones
    will have a greater threat for flash flooding. A quick 1-3+" is
    likely anywhere over Central ND into Northwest MN. This threat is
    within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold and will be
    monitored closely to see if the risk is warranted, or needs any
    expansion.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    TX into NM will allow for isolated flash flood concerns over areas
    that will have seen several days of heavy convective impacts with
    compromised FFG's. Local 1-2" is possible in the period with the
    highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down through the
    Guadalupe Mtns. and adjacent valleys. A MRGL risk was maintained to
    cover for the threat.


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST, THE NORTHEAST, AND
    SOUTH-CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    Next approaching upper shortwave trough, with a 90kt upper level
    jet streak on the lee side, will generate a compact area of fairly
    robust, transient deep-layer forcing over the outlook area later in
    the period (especially Sat night). MUCAPEs are expected to soar
    within the warm sector prior to the surface cold frontal passage --
    i.e. aoa 4,000 J/Kg per the GFS. This along with PWs getting near
    1.75" will lead to more organized, widespread convection by
    Saturday night as the activity likely grows upscale with the
    increasing pre-frontal low-level inflow (30-40kts at 850 mb). The
    00Z guidance indicates significant latitudinal spread in the
    heavier QPF, and as a result, have maintained the Marginal Risk
    from yesterday's Day 4 ERO. However, the potential for an upgrade
    to Slight is certainly plausible given the kinematic and
    thermodynamic profile, especially after 00Z Sun when the Corfidi
    Vectors decrease to 10kt or less (thereby enhancing the risk for
    cell training).

    ...Northeast...

    Upper shortwave trough pushes across the Northeast by late Sat,
    then off the coast Sun morning. The bulk of the rainfall will fall
    during the first half of the period (during the day Sat),
    coinciding with the most favorable pre-frontal deep-layer
    instability and moisture (PWs 1.75-2.00+ inches). The 00Z guidance
    shows considerable spread with the heaviest QPF, though are fairly
    similar with the max totals (1.5-3.0"). Given the spread in the
    model QPFs, along with the progression of the front and fairly
    quick diminishment in instability after 00Z Sun, for now will
    maintain the Marginal Risk.

    ...New Mexico...

    Maintained a targeted Marginal Risk area over/near the Sacramento
    Mtns, particularly the burn scar areas from the 2024 fires (Blue 2,
    South Fork, and Salt burn scars). QPF trends (coverage, intensity)
    are similar to Day 2, with the moist S-SE low-level upslope flow
    likely resulting in a concentrated area of heavier rainfall across
    the Sacramento Mtns and eastern foothills. The flash flood
    potential is expected to remain isolated/localized.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!64UhPvAL77LE53bBvE4XWdAP3TECAOTdafRXkMzfMPTQ= bJQKamHsE9hhpnWDXu6w2xmrSG4s7w3SZq0PVK3iqDDrc20$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!64UhPvAL77LE53bBvE4XWdAP3TECAOTdafRXkMzfMPTQ= bJQKamHsE9hhpnWDXu6w2xmrSG4s7w3SZq0PVK3iOPhjkgM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!64UhPvAL77LE53bBvE4XWdAP3TECAOTdafRXkMzfMPTQ= bJQKamHsE9hhpnWDXu6w2xmrSG4s7w3SZq0PVK3ioVmZw1M$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 26 20:18:39 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 262018
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    418 PM EDT Thu Jun 26 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Jun 26 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS, UPPER MIDWEST, AND UPPER GREAT LAKES, ALONG
    WITH NORTHERN PORTIONS OF THE MID ATLANTIC...

    ...Central Plains into the Upper Great Lakes...

    16Z update... The western bounds of the Marginal Risk area was
    expanded westward to now include more of eastern Nebraska. Cells
    are observed firing up near the heavy rain axis from yesterday and
    are expected to persist for a few more hours. The latest CAM
    guidance show a fairly progressive line tracking through the region
    with rain rates of 1 to 3 inches/hour with maximum 24-hour
    accumulations of 3 to 5 inches. Elsewhere the Marginal and Slight
    Risk areas were maintained with no adjustments.

    Campbell

    Upper shortwave trough across the Northern Plains early Thu will
    pivot eastward across the Upper MS Valley and Upper Great Lakes
    region later Thu and Thu night. Enhancing the deep-layer forcing
    will be the curved 90kt upper level jet streak that will be
    skirting the U.S.-Canadian border. Ahead of the upper shortwave
    trough/surface front -- 850-700 mb moisture flux anomalies are
    noteworthy (1.5-2.0 standard deviations above normal), as is the
    0-6km bulk shear values (35-45+ kts). This will likely support more
    widespread, organized convective line segments later this
    afternoon/evening and into the overnight across the elongated
    Slight Risk area. Compared to yesterday's Day 2 ERO, based on the
    latest guidance trends we did nudge the Slight slightly farther
    east across northwest MO and southeast IA. The 00Z CAMs show 24hr
    max QPF generally in the 3-5" range within the Slight Risk area,
    which is supported by the HREF and RRFS 24hr QPF probabilities.
    Multiple CAMs (including the 00Z RRFS) show isolated totals
    exceeding 5" across eastern KS.

    ...Mid Atlantic...

    Most of the CAMs show more widespread slow-moving convective
    clusters within a newly-hoisted Slight area, initiating along the
    lee-side trough and quasi-stationary, backdoor front. Relatively light (generally 20kt or less) deep-layer shear would suggest pulse-
    type durations for the heaviest rains, but nevertheless both the
    HREF and RRFS do show pockets of elevated probabilities with >2"/hr
    rainfall rates by mid-late afternoon into Thu evening. Therefore
    given the favorable thermodynamic profile (1.75-2.00" PWs and max
    CAPEs 2000-3000 J/Kg), the likelihood of slow cell motions with the
    potential for repetitive convection along these boundaries would
    support a low-end Slight Risk across the northern Mid Atlantic
    (northern VA into eastern MD and Eastern PA), despite the lack of
    strong synoptic/ kinematic support.

    ...Parts of the Lower MS Valley, TN Valley, and Southeast...

    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms over much of the
    south-central to southeastern CONUS will yield some heavy rainfall
    prospects during the day Thursday with a decay in coverage once we
    lose diurnal heating. The main areas of interest will lie along
    the terrain in the Southern Appalachians and along the Gulf coast
    where the remnants of a migrating TUTT cell will maintain a focal
    point for heavy convective prospects during the period. Best threat
    for any flash flooding will be tied to the complex topography and
    urban settings where runoff capabilities are highest. Relatively
    modest HREF probs for >3" (40-60%) were noted across portions of
    MS/LA and especially along the west coast of the FL Peninsula. For
    now the risk appears to be a 'high end' Marginal, i.e. mainly an
    isolated flash flood risk, largely due to the pulse/short-fused
    nature of the more intense rainfall rates and relatively high FFG
    values.

    ...New Mexico...

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Sacramento's and
    adjacent desert will maintain at least some threat for flash
    flooding given wet antecedent conditions following previous multi-
    day convective impact in prior periods. Coverage and intensity of
    convection will be less than previous days as we lose the benefit
    of the RER jet dynamics that have assisted in the recent days.
    Still, remnant elevated moisture and sufficient buoyancy within
    the confines of far West TX up through Southern and Eastern NM will
    maintain a posture of diurnally driven thunderstorms with locally
    heavy rainfall across the above areas. Heaviest thunderstorms will
    be capable of 1-2" with the peak QPF max probably closer to 3" as
    noted by modest HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" with a
    decline to 0% for >5". The previous MRGL risk was maintained.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...Northern NY-New England...

    21Z update... the latest guidance maintains the scenario described
    below with similiar QPF amounts, particularly from northeast New
    York to northern Vermont, therefore the Marginal and Slight Risk
    areas were maintained as is.

    Campbell

    The forecast for a focused corridor of heavy rainfall associated
    with an MCS and trailing convection crossing from southeastern
    Canada into portions of Update New York/northern New England
    remains on track. While there are expectedly some variances on the
    possible MCS path which add some east-west uncertainty, all
    guidance is still in good agreement that the track will clip areas
    south of the international border bringing an attendant flash flood
    threat. Deterministic guidance indicates the potential of rainfall
    totals between 1-3", with ensemble probabilities of 2"+ between
    15-25%. A small eastward adjustment of the Slight Risk area was
    added based on these latest ensemble probabilities. Elsewhere,
    prior forecast has remained consistent.

    ...Northern Plains...

    21Z update... The progressive nature of the expected shortwave will
    help limit the severity of any local flooding that arises. The
    Marginal Risk currently in place remains without any changes at
    this time.

    Campbell

    A quick moving shortwave across the North-Central tier of the CONUS
    will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flood prospects. The best threat will be
    over Northern ND into the Red River area where some urbanized zones
    will have a greater threat for flash flooding. A quick 1-3+" is
    likely anywhere over Central ND into Northwest MN. This threat is
    within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold and will be
    monitored closely to see if the risk is warranted, or needs any
    expansion.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    21Z update... The threat for localized heavy rainfall remains
    spotty across the area given the pattern. The Marginal Risk area
    continues to highlight the locations that may have local flash
    flooding during this period.

    Campbell

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    TX into NM will allow for isolated flash flood concerns over areas
    that will have seen several days of heavy convective impacts with
    compromised FFG's. Local 1-2" is possible in the period with the
    highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down through the
    Guadalupe Mtns. and adjacent valleys. A MRGL risk was maintained to
    cover for the threat.


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST, THE NORTHEAST, AND
    SOUTH-CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    21Z update... The latest guidance continues to signal the highest
    QPF amounts to be over central Minnesota into western/northern
    Wisconsin with areal averages of 1 to 3 inches with locally higher
    amounts still possible. The environment looks to remain favorable
    for repeating cells, thus maintaining an elevated threat for
    localized flash flooding.

    Campbell

    Next approaching upper shortwave trough, with a 90kt upper level
    jet streak on the lee side, will generate a compact area of fairly
    robust, transient deep-layer forcing over the outlook area later in
    the period (especially Sat night). MUCAPEs are expected to soar
    within the warm sector prior to the surface cold frontal passage --
    i.e. aoa 4,000 J/Kg per the GFS. This along with PWs getting near
    1.75" will lead to more organized, widespread convection by
    Saturday night as the activity likely grows upscale with the
    increasing pre-frontal low-level inflow (30-40kts at 850 mb). The
    00Z guidance indicates significant latitudinal spread in the
    heavier QPF, and as a result, have maintained the Marginal Risk
    from yesterday's Day 4 ERO. However, the potential for an upgrade
    to Slight is certainly plausible given the kinematic and
    thermodynamic profile, especially after 00Z Sun when the Corfidi
    Vectors decrease to 10kt or less (thereby enhancing the risk for
    cell training).

    ...Northeast...

    21Z update... There is an increasing potential for heavy rainfall
    to develop across western Pennslyvania and surrounding areas as=20
    the frontal boundary sags southward and taps into the pooled PW=20
    values of 1.5-2". The latest model guidance are showing local=20
    maximums upwards of 2 inches possible and the ERO first guess=20
    supports expanding the Marginal Risk from eastern Pennsylvania=20
    further west into eastern Ohio, West Virginia and western Maryland.

    Campbell

    Upper shortwave trough pushes across the Northeast by late Sat,=20
    then off the coast Sun morning. The bulk of the rainfall will fall=20
    during the first half of the period (during the day Sat),=20
    coinciding with the most favorable pre-frontal deep-layer=20
    instability and moisture (PWs 1.75-2.00+ inches). The 00Z guidance=20
    shows considerable spread with the heaviest QPF, though are fairly=20
    similar with the max totals (1.5-3.0"). Given the spread in the=20
    model QPFs, along with the progression of the front and fairly=20
    quick diminishment in instability after 00Z Sun, for now will=20
    maintain the Marginal Risk.

    ...New Mexico...

    21Z update... No changes were made to the Marginal Risk area.

    Campbell

    Maintained a targeted Marginal Risk area over/near the Sacramento=20
    Mtns, particularly the burn scar areas from the 2024 fires (Blue 2,
    South Fork, and Salt burn scars). QPF trends (coverage, intensity)
    are similar to Day 2, with the moist S-SE low-level upslope flow=20
    likely resulting in a concentrated area of heavier rainfall across=20
    the Sacramento Mtns and eastern foothills. The flash flood=20
    potential is expected to remain isolated/localized.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5hGnIOwi7dNZjqNz9aUpDb7GKb7GWFF0kcjJOvTuEgRd= H8kJ7nAf5JH0Ztro_p4j1iM6pKhArkwMqUa1lecS9Km6Ni8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5hGnIOwi7dNZjqNz9aUpDb7GKb7GWFF0kcjJOvTuEgRd= H8kJ7nAf5JH0Ztro_p4j1iM6pKhArkwMqUa1lecStSdxjTY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5hGnIOwi7dNZjqNz9aUpDb7GKb7GWFF0kcjJOvTuEgRd= H8kJ7nAf5JH0Ztro_p4j1iM6pKhArkwMqUa1lecSNOtrnaY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 27 00:49:46 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 270049
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    849 PM EDT Thu Jun 26 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS, MIDWEST, & GREAT LAKES...

    An upper level trough will pivot eastward across the Upper MS=20
    Valley and Upper Great Lakes region Thursday night into early
    Friday. Enhancing the deep-layer forcing will be the curved 90kt=20
    upper level jet streak that will be skirting the U.S.-Canadian=20
    border. Ahead of the upper shortwave trough/surface front --=20
    850-700 mb moisture flux anomalies are noteworthy (1.5-2.0 standard
    deviations above normal), as is the 0-6km bulk shear values=20
    (35-45+ kts). This will likely continue to support more widespread,
    organized convective line segments into the overnight across the=20
    elongated Slight Risk area, with embedded mesocyclones possible.=20
    When compared to continuity, cleared the former western portions of
    the risk areas based on radar reflectivity trends and 18z HREF=20
    output.


    ...Mid Atlantic & Upper Ohio Valley...=20
    Relatively light (generally 20kt or less) deep-layer shear with=20
    a near upper level high overhead between a retrograding TUTT cell
    in the Southeast and Westerlies to the north has caused a Florida-
    like situation to unfold today, with outflow boundaries moving in
    from many directions of the compass, which has caused CIN to set in
    across much of the region. The most interesting aspect has been a
    synoptically enhanced sea breeze, a possible cold front that=20
    cleared portions of the Eastern Shore this afternoon and evening=20
    and has led to patches of stratus in its wake over portions of NJ=20
    & DE. The 18z HREF has significantly overforecast early evening=20
    convection in the DC area in the hours leading up to this=20
    discussion's issuance. With convective coverage becoming more=20
    isolated due to the broad CIN development, dropped the risk in the=20
    region to Marginal. The 18z HREF indicates that the threat of heavy
    rainfall on an isolated basis should end by midnight, holding on=20
    the longest across portions southern PA, the Virginias, and near=20
    the shores of Chesapeake Bay.


    ...New Mexico...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the Southern High Plains
    and the Texas Big Bend should maintain at least some threat for=20
    flash flooding given wet antecedent conditions following a wet=20
    multi-day convective period. Remaining elevated moisture and=20
    sufficient buoyancy will maintain the diurnally driven=20
    thunderstorms through roughly 05z, based on the 18z HREF output.=20
    Heaviest thunderstorms will be capable of 1-2" with the peak QPF=20
    max probably closer to 3". The previous MRGL risk was maintained,
    but trimmed on its western side per radar trends and the 18z HREF
    output.

    Roth/Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...Northern NY-New England...

    21Z update... the latest guidance maintains the scenario described
    below with similar QPF amounts, particularly from northeast New=20
    York to northern Vermont, therefore the Marginal and Slight Risk=20
    areas were maintained as is.

    Campbell

    The forecast for a focused corridor of heavy rainfall associated
    with an MCS and trailing convection crossing from southeastern
    Canada into portions of Update New York/northern New England
    remains on track. While there are expectedly some variances on the
    possible MCS path which add some east-west uncertainty, all
    guidance is still in good agreement that the track will clip areas
    south of the international border bringing an attendant flash flood
    threat. Deterministic guidance indicates the potential of rainfall
    totals between 1-3", with ensemble probabilities of 2"+ between
    15-25%. A small eastward adjustment of the Slight Risk area was
    added based on these latest ensemble probabilities. Elsewhere,
    prior forecast has remained consistent.

    ...Northern Plains...

    21Z update... The progressive nature of the expected shortwave will
    help limit the severity of any local flooding that arises. The
    Marginal Risk currently in place remains without any changes at
    this time.

    Campbell

    A quick moving shortwave across the North-Central tier of the CONUS
    will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall and flash flood prospects. The best threat will be
    over Northern ND into the Red River area where some urbanized zones
    will have a greater threat for flash flooding. A quick 1-3+" is
    likely anywhere over Central ND into Northwest MN. This threat is
    within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold and will be
    monitored closely to see if the risk is warranted, or needs any
    expansion.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    21Z update... The threat for localized heavy rainfall remains
    spotty across the area given the pattern. The Marginal Risk area
    continues to highlight the locations that may have local flash
    flooding during this period.

    Campbell

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    TX into NM will allow for isolated flash flood concerns over areas
    that will have seen several days of heavy convective impacts with
    compromised FFG's. Local 1-2" is possible in the period with the
    highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down through the
    Guadalupe Mtns. and adjacent valleys. A MRGL risk was maintained to
    cover for the threat.


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST, THE NORTHEAST, AND
    SOUTH-CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    21Z update... The latest guidance continues to signal the highest
    QPF amounts to be over central Minnesota into western/northern
    Wisconsin with areal averages of 1 to 3 inches with locally higher
    amounts still possible. The environment looks to remain favorable
    for repeating cells, thus maintaining an elevated threat for
    localized flash flooding.

    Campbell

    Next approaching upper shortwave trough, with a 90kt upper level
    jet streak on the lee side, will generate a compact area of fairly
    robust, transient deep-layer forcing over the outlook area later in
    the period (especially Sat night). MUCAPEs are expected to soar
    within the warm sector prior to the surface cold frontal passage --
    i.e. aoa 4,000 J/Kg per the GFS. This along with PWs getting near
    1.75" will lead to more organized, widespread convection by
    Saturday night as the activity likely grows upscale with the
    increasing pre-frontal low-level inflow (30-40kts at 850 mb). The
    00Z guidance indicates significant latitudinal spread in the
    heavier QPF, and as a result, have maintained the Marginal Risk
    from yesterday's Day 4 ERO. However, the potential for an upgrade
    to Slight is certainly plausible given the kinematic and
    thermodynamic profile, especially after 00Z Sun when the Corfidi
    Vectors decrease to 10kt or less (thereby enhancing the risk for
    cell training).

    ...Northeast...

    21Z update... There is an increasing potential for heavy rainfall
    to develop across western Pennsylvania and surrounding areas as
    the frontal boundary sags southward and taps into the pooled PW
    values of 1.5-2". The latest model guidance are showing local
    maximums upwards of 2 inches possible and the ERO first guess
    supports expanding the Marginal Risk from eastern Pennsylvania
    further west into eastern Ohio, West Virginia and western Maryland.

    Campbell

    Upper shortwave trough pushes across the Northeast by late Sat,
    then off the coast Sun morning. The bulk of the rainfall will fall
    during the first half of the period (during the day Sat),
    coinciding with the most favorable pre-frontal deep-layer
    instability and moisture (PWs 1.75-2.00+ inches). The 00Z guidance
    shows considerable spread with the heaviest QPF, though are fairly
    similar with the max totals (1.5-3.0"). Given the spread in the
    model QPFs, along with the progression of the front and fairly
    quick diminishment in instability after 00Z Sun, for now will
    maintain the Marginal Risk.

    ...New Mexico...

    21Z update... No changes were made to the Marginal Risk area.

    Campbell

    Maintained a targeted Marginal Risk area over/near the Sacramento
    Mtns, particularly the burn scar areas from the 2024 fires (Blue 2,
    South Fork, and Salt burn scars). QPF trends (coverage, intensity)
    are similar to Day 2, with the moist S-SE low-level upslope flow
    likely resulting in a concentrated area of heavier rainfall across
    the Sacramento Mtns and eastern foothills. The flash flood
    potential is expected to remain isolated/localized.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6BKAZzJ368AWHYuruuCGKuI3ZdH4XPh2dqqvVvy_7tqG= F7irjNEG5P0TZVuXbH0CK8Cy9om0Eaj2kpmi4rD5otEkBWU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6BKAZzJ368AWHYuruuCGKuI3ZdH4XPh2dqqvVvy_7tqG= F7irjNEG5P0TZVuXbH0CK8Cy9om0Eaj2kpmi4rD5ecBhPcA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6BKAZzJ368AWHYuruuCGKuI3ZdH4XPh2dqqvVvy_7tqG= F7irjNEG5P0TZVuXbH0CK8Cy9om0Eaj2kpmi4rD51MsDtwo$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 27 08:29:38 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 270829
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    429 AM EDT Fri Jun 27 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND NEIGHBORING MID ATLANTIC...

    ...Northern NY-New England...

    The suite of 00Z operational models and ensemble runs continued a=20
    trend started during the day on Thursday of shifting the focus for=20
    heavy rainfall to remain north of the international border. Even=20
    though there are some variances on the possible MCS path which=20
    could still result in an MCS clipping the northern portion of New
    York and New England...it should fall in a region where Flash Flood
    Guidance is higher than adjacent areas so the Slight Risk was
    removed and the Marginal Risk area was removed from the upper
    Hudson Valley and southward.=20

    At the same time...introduced a Slight risk area over portions of
    the central Appalachians where model signals have been growing for
    enhanced rainfall amounts near the terrain. With a westward
    propagating cold front encountering the terrain... the higher
    amounts suggested by the latest HRRR runs seems reasonable and was
    placed near the axis of heaviest rainfall from the WPC
    deterministic QPF.


    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the northern and central tier of=20
    the CONUS will lead to scattered thunderstorm activity capable of=20
    locally heavy rainfall. Prospects for flash flooding seem to be=20
    limited given the progressive nature of the shortwave trough which=20
    should help focus the convection. A quick 1-3+" is likely anywhere=20
    over parts of the eastern Dakotas and across central Minnesota.=20
    This threat remained within the lower end of the MRGL risk=20
    threshold and will be monitored closely.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    Texas into New Mexico again over an area that will have seen=20
    several days of heavy convective impacts with compromised Flash=20
    Flood Guidance. Local 1- to 2-inch amounts are possible in the=20
    period with the highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down=20
    through the Guadalupe Mountains and adjacent valleys. A Marginal=20
    risk was maintained to cover for the threat.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST, THE NORTHEAST, AND SOUTH-
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    Next approaching upper shortwave trough, with a 90kt upper level=20
    jet streak on the lee side, will generate a compact area of fairly=20
    robust, transient deep-layer forcing over the outlook area mainly=20
    Saturday night. later in the period (especially Sat night). MUCAPEs
    are expected to soar within the warm sector prior to the surface=20
    cold frontal passage. Given precipitable water values getting near=20
    1.75 inches...storms which form the unstable airmass will be=20
    capable of producing rainfall rates in excess of 1 inch per hour=20
    and areal average rainfall amounts of 1 to 3 inches...especially=20
    once low- level inflow accelerates to between 30 kts and 40kts at=20
    850 mb ahead of the approaching front.

    ...Northeast...

    There continues to be an increasing concern for heavy to
    potentially excessive rainfall to develop across western=20
    Pennsylvania and surrounding areas as the frontal boundary sags=20
    southward and taps into the pooled PW values of 1.5-2". The latest=20
    model guidance are showing local maximums upwards of 2 inches=20
    possible and the ERO first guess supports expanding the Marginal=20
    Risk from eastern Pennsylvania further west into eastern Ohio, West
    Virginia and western Maryland.

    ...New Mexico...

    Maintained a targeted Marginal Risk area over/near the Sacramento=20
    Mtns, particularly in vicinity of burn scars. QPF trends=20
    (coverage, intensity) are similar to Day 1, with the moist south to
    southeast low-level upslope flow likely resulting in a=20
    concentrated area of heavier rainfall across the Sacramento Mtns=20
    and eastern foothills. The flash flood potential is expected to=20
    remain isolated/localized.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 30 2025

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

    There is a Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall over portions of the
    central United States between the western Great Lakes and the
    Southern Rockies. Any showers or thunderstorms which form along or
    ahead of the front may be able to produce rainfall rates high
    enough to result in flash flooding. Away from the upper
    trough...mechanisms to help focus convection becomes less defined=20
    in an atmosphere characterized by precipitable water values in=20
    excess of 1.5 inches over all but the plains near the Central and=20
    Southern Rockies to in excess of 2 inches east of the Mississippi.=20
    Ensemble guidance depicted isolated to widely scattered rainfall=20
    amounts of 1 to 3 inches but little coherence in placement between=20
    the ensemble runs. Opted to highlight a broad but generally=20
    unfocused Marginal risk area .

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_vTWP9wGSqflxANjq2y8UWn4nqKFWf_xV5H2VS-3kvVp= 0OzNBFirJTXkOvkktIrCRmHp9KH8pBEL6o3HBJIokS3Z1ig$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_vTWP9wGSqflxANjq2y8UWn4nqKFWf_xV5H2VS-3kvVp= 0OzNBFirJTXkOvkktIrCRmHp9KH8pBEL6o3HBJIoHny4Az0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_vTWP9wGSqflxANjq2y8UWn4nqKFWf_xV5H2VS-3kvVp= 0OzNBFirJTXkOvkktIrCRmHp9KH8pBEL6o3HBJIo97KWvAA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 27 15:55:23 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 271555
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1155 AM EDT Fri Jun 27 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...Central Appalachians...

    A more focused thunderstorm/heavy rainfall threat is expected=20
    through the central Appalachians today as very moist flow interacts
    with the terrain ahead of a 'back-door' cold front passing through
    the Mid-Atlantic that will become quasi-stationary throughout the=20
    day. Of particular concern is the prospect suggested by some of the
    12Z hi-res guidance (HRRR and HREF) that initial storms over parts
    of western Maryland/West Virgina Panhandle/northwestern Virginia=20
    will cluster/organize and move slowly southward along the=20
    instability gradient ahead of the stalling front. Updated 12Z HREF=20 probabilities are between 40-60% for rainfall of 3"+, with a=20
    focused area of 20-30% of 5"+ across the West Virginia Panhandle.=20
    Efficient rainfall rates of 1-2.5" per hour can be expected given=20
    PWATs upwards of 2" per 12Z PBZ sounding. Much of this region=20
    remains more sensitive to additional rainfall not only due to the=20
    typical terrain impacts but a number of recent heavy rainfall=20
    events keeping FFGs low, with scattered to potentially numerous=20
    instances of flash flooding possible.=20

    ...Northern NY-New England...

    The suite of 12Z operational models and ensemble runs continues a=20
    trend started during the day on Thursday of shifting the focus for=20
    heavy rainfall to remain north of the international border. Even=20
    though there are some variances on the possible MCS path which=20
    could still result in an MCS clipping the northern portion of New=20
    York and New England...it should fall in a region where Flash Flood
    Guidance is higher than adjacent areas so the Slight Risk was=20
    removed and the Marginal Risk area was removed from the upper=20
    Hudson Valley and southward.

    ...Southern Plains into the Mississippi Valley and Southeast...

    Another typical Summer day of scattered thunderstorms is expected=20
    broadly from the Southeast through the Mississippi Valley and west=20
    along a surface trough through the southern Plains given seasonable
    instability with daytime heating and a passing upper- wave. Pulse-
    type thunderstorms will have the ability to produce quick efficient
    bursts of heavy rainfall (1-3") and the risk for some mostly=20
    isolated urban flooding, especially where any storms=20
    develop/congeal along residual outflows.=20

    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the northern and central tier of=20
    the CONUS will lead to thunderstorm activity capable of locally=20
    heavy rainfall, especially if convection can grow upscale into a=20
    more organized MCS as indicated by some of the 12Z hi-res model=20
    guidance. However, prospects for flash flooding still seem to be=20
    limited given the progressive nature of the shortwave=20
    trough/possible MCS. A quick 1-3+" is likely anywhere over parts of
    the eastern Dakotas and across central Minnesota.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    Texas into New Mexico again over an area that will have seen=20
    several days of heavy convective impacts with compromised Flash=20
    Flood Guidance. Local 1- to 2-inch amounts are possible in the=20
    period with the highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down=20
    through the Guadalupe Mountains and adjacent valleys. A Marginal=20
    risk was maintained to cover for the threat.

    Putnam/Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST, THE NORTHEAST, AND SOUTH-
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    Next approaching upper shortwave trough, with a 90kt upper level
    jet streak on the lee side, will generate a compact area of fairly
    robust, transient deep-layer forcing over the outlook area mainly
    Saturday night. later in the period (especially Sat night). MUCAPEs
    are expected to soar within the warm sector prior to the surface
    cold frontal passage. Given precipitable water values getting near
    1.75 inches...storms which form the unstable airmass will be
    capable of producing rainfall rates in excess of 1 inch per hour
    and areal average rainfall amounts of 1 to 3 inches...especially
    once low- level inflow accelerates to between 30 kts and 40kts at
    850 mb ahead of the approaching front.

    ...Northeast...

    There continues to be an increasing concern for heavy to
    potentially excessive rainfall to develop across western
    Pennsylvania and surrounding areas as the frontal boundary sags
    southward and taps into the pooled PW values of 1.5-2". The latest
    model guidance are showing local maximums upwards of 2 inches
    possible and the ERO first guess supports expanding the Marginal
    Risk from eastern Pennsylvania further west into eastern Ohio, West
    Virginia and western Maryland.

    ...New Mexico...

    Maintained a targeted Marginal Risk area over/near the Sacramento
    Mtns, particularly in vicinity of burn scars. QPF trends
    (coverage, intensity) are similar to Day 1, with the moist south to
    southeast low-level upslope flow likely resulting in a
    concentrated area of heavier rainfall across the Sacramento Mtns
    and eastern foothills. The flash flood potential is expected to
    remain isolated/localized.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 30 2025

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

    There is a Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall over portions of the
    central United States between the western Great Lakes and the
    Southern Rockies. Any showers or thunderstorms which form along or
    ahead of the front may be able to produce rainfall rates high
    enough to result in flash flooding. Away from the upper
    trough...mechanisms to help focus convection becomes less defined
    in an atmosphere characterized by precipitable water values in
    excess of 1.5 inches over all but the plains near the Central and
    Southern Rockies to in excess of 2 inches east of the Mississippi.
    Ensemble guidance depicted isolated to widely scattered rainfall
    amounts of 1 to 3 inches but little coherence in placement between
    the ensemble runs. Opted to highlight a broad but generally
    unfocused Marginal risk area .

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6_ApaL5lYdUKKXpNvyoerWIcnRAKxnQ6GzRs_7XL3h9C= lzDQpoG97RnPzFis3g5kuYLTQXRz5AfqbC0YxIBygCGuNtk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6_ApaL5lYdUKKXpNvyoerWIcnRAKxnQ6GzRs_7XL3h9C= lzDQpoG97RnPzFis3g5kuYLTQXRz5AfqbC0YxIByAvIpTVo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6_ApaL5lYdUKKXpNvyoerWIcnRAKxnQ6GzRs_7XL3h9C= lzDQpoG97RnPzFis3g5kuYLTQXRz5AfqbC0YxIBytrgzURU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 27 19:29:15 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 271927
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    327 PM EDT Fri Jun 27 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Jun 27 2025 - 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025

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

    ...Central Appalachians...

    A more focused thunderstorm/heavy rainfall threat is expected
    through the central Appalachians today as very moist flow interacts
    with the terrain ahead of a 'back-door' cold front passing through
    the Mid-Atlantic that will become quasi-stationary throughout the
    day. Of particular concern is the prospect suggested by some of the
    12Z hi-res guidance (HRRR and HREF) that initial storms over parts
    of western Maryland/West Virgina Panhandle/northwestern Virginia
    will cluster/organize and move slowly southward along the
    instability gradient ahead of the stalling front. Updated 12Z HREF probabilities are between 40-60% for rainfall of 3"+, with a
    focused area of 20-30% of 5"+ across the West Virginia Panhandle.
    Efficient rainfall rates of 1-2.5" per hour can be expected given
    PWATs upwards of 2" per 12Z PBZ sounding. Much of this region
    remains more sensitive to additional rainfall not only due to the
    typical terrain impacts but a number of recent heavy rainfall
    events keeping FFGs low, with scattered to potentially numerous
    instances of flash flooding possible.

    ...Northern NY-New England...

    The suite of 12Z operational models and ensemble runs continues a
    trend started during the day on Thursday of shifting the focus for
    heavy rainfall to remain north of the international border. Even
    though there are some variances on the possible MCS path which
    could still result in an MCS clipping the northern portion of New
    York and New England...it should fall in a region where Flash Flood
    Guidance is higher than adjacent areas so the Slight Risk was
    removed and the Marginal Risk area was removed from the upper
    Hudson Valley and southward.

    ...Southern Plains into the Mississippi Valley and Southeast...

    Another typical Summer day of scattered thunderstorms is expected
    broadly from the Southeast through the Mississippi Valley and west
    along a surface trough through the southern Plains given seasonable
    instability with daytime heating and a passing upper- wave. Pulse-
    type thunderstorms will have the ability to produce quick efficient
    bursts of heavy rainfall (1-3") and the risk for some mostly
    isolated urban flooding, especially where any storms
    develop/congeal along residual outflows.

    ...Northern Plains...

    A quick moving shortwave across the northern and central tier of
    the CONUS will lead to thunderstorm activity capable of locally
    heavy rainfall, especially if convection can grow upscale into a
    more organized MCS as indicated by some of the 12Z hi-res model
    guidance. However, prospects for flash flooding still seem to be
    limited given the progressive nature of the shortwave
    trough/possible MCS. A quick 1-3+" is likely anywhere over parts of
    the eastern Dakotas and across central Minnesota.

    ...West Texas into New Mexico...

    Continued threat of widely scattered thunderstorms across far West
    Texas into New Mexico again over an area that will have seen
    several days of heavy convective impacts with compromised Flash
    Flood Guidance. Local 1- to 2-inch amounts are possible in the
    period with the highest threat likely over the Sacramento's down
    through the Guadalupe Mountains and adjacent valleys. A Marginal
    risk was maintained to cover for the threat.

    Putnam/Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST, THE NORTHEAST, AND SOUTH-
    CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest...

    Next approaching upper shortwave trough, with a 90kt upper level=20
    jet streak on the lee side, will generate a compact area of fairly=20
    robust, transient deep-layer forcing over the outlook area into=20
    Saturday night. MUCAPEs are expected to soar within the warm sector
    prior to the surface cold frontal passage. Given precipitable=20
    water values getting near 1.75 inches...storms which form within=20
    the unstable airmass will be capable of producing rainfall rates in
    excess of 1 inch per hour and areal average rainfall amounts of 1=20
    to 3 inches...especially once low- level inflow accelerates to=20
    between 30 kts and 40kts at 850 mb ahead of the approaching front=20
    with the potential for upscale/organized growth into one or more=20
    MCSs. The storm/mesoscale nature of the threat leads to uncertainty
    of a more focused corridor of higher risk, but a Slight Risk may=20
    be necessary particularly over the Upper Mississippi Valley if=20
    trends remain consistent in the guidance.=20

    ...Northeast...

    There continues to be an increasing concern for heavy to=20
    potentially excessive rainfall to develop across western=20
    Pennsylvania and surrounding areas as the frontal boundary sags=20
    southward and taps into the pooled PW values of 1.5-2". The latest=20
    model guidance are showing local maximums upwards of 2 inches=20
    possible and the ERO first guess supports expanding the Marginal=20
    Risk from eastern Pennsylvania further west into eastern Ohio, West
    Virginia and western Maryland. Further north, widespread=20
    convective activity across southeastern Canada north of the warm=20
    front looks to move into portions of northern New England. While=20
    guidance indicates the potential for 1-2" of rainfall totals across
    the region, the less robust convection on the northern side of the
    front should keep any flooding issues isolated.=20

    ...Southeast to the Mississippi Valley and adjacent southern=20
    Plains...

    Similar to day 1, scattered pulse thunderstorms are expected=20
    across a broad warm sector as seasonable instability develops with=20
    daytime heating from the Southeast west through the Mississippi=20
    Valley and into the adjacent southern Plains. High precipitable=20
    water values (~2", 2 standard deviations above the mean) will once=20
    again lead to highly efficient rain rates of 1-2" per hour,=20
    possibly as high as 3" per hour, which is more than enough to lead=20
    to isolated flash flooding concerns despite the generally limited=20 thunderstorm duration.=20

    ...New Mexico...

    Yet another day of thunderstorms is expected across portions of=20
    southern New Mexico and west Texas with locally heavy rainfall=20
    (1-2") possible. QPF trends (coverage, intensity) are more isolated
    compared to day 1 with the moist south to southeast low-level=20
    upslope flow likely resulting in more localized areas of heavier=20
    rainfall focused across the Sacramento and Guadalupe Mtns south=20
    through the Trans-Pecos. The flash flood potential is expected to=20
    remain isolated.

    Putnam/Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025 - 12Z Mon Jun 30 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL EXTENDING OVER=20
    PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL UNITED STATES...

    There is a Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall over portions of=20
    the central United States from the western Great Lakes south=20
    through the Mississippi Valley and west into the central/southern=20
    Plains and southern Rockies. Showers and thunderstorms are expected
    both along and well-ahead of a cold front and trailing surface=20 trough/dryline as an upper-level trough approaches from the west.=20
    Mechanisms to help focus convection becomes less defined ahead of=20
    the front but deterministic guidance indicates widely scattered=20
    rainfall totals of 1-3" are possible in an atmosphere characterized
    by precipitable water values in excess of 1.5 inches over all but=20
    the plains near the Central and Southern Rockies to in excess of 2=20
    inches east of the Mississippi. Surface waves along the front may=20
    help to focus/organize convection and lead to a more concentrated=20
    threat. This is supported by localized maxima in the ensemble=20 means/probabilities in the central Plains/Missouri Valley to the=20
    Upper Mississippi Valley region, but with low confidence in exact=20
    location at this point. Therefore, a broad Marginal Risk has been=20
    maintained for now.=20

    Putnam/Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_OcpklmbKp4bvgwOz8z14gY748kjhwb4AyRsVFtpntuX= ZV_SCDDlNQplgNHfGvWipKKiYVW3oy0bgjgd65W8zCFVZh8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_OcpklmbKp4bvgwOz8z14gY748kjhwb4AyRsVFtpntuX= ZV_SCDDlNQplgNHfGvWipKKiYVW3oy0bgjgd65W8VN2EMIw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_OcpklmbKp4bvgwOz8z14gY748kjhwb4AyRsVFtpntuX= ZV_SCDDlNQplgNHfGvWipKKiYVW3oy0bgjgd65W8dmj346s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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