• Heavy Rain/Flooding FL

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wednesday, September 04, 2024 09:47:00
    AWUS01 KWNH 041108
    FFGMPD
    FLZ000-GAZ000-041707-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0973
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    708 AM EDT Wed Sep 04 2024

    Areas affected...northeastern Florida

    Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding possible

    Valid 041107Z - 041707Z

    Summary...A few rounds of locally heavy rainfall are expected in
    northeastern Florida near the Jacksonville Metro area. Isolated
    instances of flash flooding are possible through at least 17Z/1p
    EDT today.

    Discussion...Latest radar mosaic imagery depicts a band of
    convection extending from near Jacksonville, FL east-northeastward
    to open Gulf Stream waters near 31.3N, -79.6W. This band of
    convection was collocated with a surface front very near the
    region, with focused convergence, appreciable instability (1500
    J/kg MLCAPE), and high PW/moisture content (2.3 inch PW)
    supporting deep convection with appreciable rainfall rates.
    Steering flow aloft was weak, allowing cells to migrate slowly west/west-southwestward amid 20-kt easterly 850mb flow. This
    regime was promoting slow movement and training of cells into the
    Jacksonville Metro area, where MRMS and gauge estimates of 1-5
    inch rainfall totals have been noted in a few spots over the past
    12 hours.

    The ongoing regime is expected to continue most of the day today,
    with Gulf Stream convection migrating west-southwestward toward
    northeastern Florida. Given the rates and potential for
    persistence of rainfall/multiple rounds of cells, a few spots of
    3-5 inch rainfall totals cannot completely be ruled out through
    17Z. Some of this rainfall could occur over Jacksonville Metro
    and pose at least localized issues with excessive runoff/flash
    flooding.

    Cook

    ATTN...WFO...JAX...MLB...

    ATTN...RFC...SERFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 30858155 30618094 30128066 29728067 29358096
    29338181 29678273 30348265 30708214
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wednesday, October 09, 2024 19:48:00
    AWUS01 KWNH 092331
    FFGMPD
    FLZ000-100445-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 1100
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    730 PM EDT Wed Oct 09 2024

    Areas affected...north-central FL Peninsula

    Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding likely

    Valid 092328Z - 100445Z

    SUMMARY...An axis of extreme rainfall, stretching from the Tampa
    metropolitan region northeastward into the north-central FL
    Peninsula, is expected to result in major to locally catastrophic
    flash flooding with considerable threats to life and property.
    6-hr rainfall totals of at least 5-8 inches with hourly rainfall
    in the 2-3 in/hr range are expected.

    DISCUSSION...The 23Z update from NHC placed the center of
    Hurricane Milton 35 miles WSW of Sarasota, FL. Local radar imagery
    at 23Z from KTBW showed the heaviest rain located within what is
    effectively the northern eyewall which has pushed ashore and arced
    from Manatee into southern Hillsborough and much of Pinellas
    counties with MRMS and gauge data showing 1-2 in/hr rainfall
    rates. Portions of St. Petersburg to Bradenton have already picked
    up 5-8 inches of rain since midnight and flash flooding is
    ongoing. Farther east, an outer rain band had largely moved
    offshore of the eastern Peninsula but was arcing northwestward
    ashore just north of Cape Canaveral with 4-8 inches already
    reported across Brevard County.

    An axis of strong low level convergence tied to the northern
    eyewall, extending northeast from the center of Milton to Volusia
    County (just north of the forecast track of Milton) will support a
    prolonged period of high rainfall rates, 1-2 in/hr but locally in
    the 2 to 3+ in/hr range, with the axis training from WSW to ENE
    and slowly lifting north with time. Some locations could
    experience rainfall rates in excess of 1 in/hr for 2-4 hours,
    causing rapid rises of water above the surface as water will not
    have sufficient time to drain, especially across the mostly
    impervious surfaces of the St. Petersburg into the Tampa metro and
    possibly nearing Orlando later tonight. Additional rainfall of at
    least 5-8 inches is expected from St. Petersburg, northeastward
    into the central Peninsula where the WoFS has consistently painted
    high probabilities of exceeding 5 inches of rainfall. The 22Z WoFS
    cycle indicated 50 to 90 percent probabilities of 5+ inches and
    90th percentile (reasonable worse case scenario) values of 7-10
    inches. Major to locally catastrophic flash flooding is expected
    as a result of these high rainfall rates.

    Otto

    ATTN...WFO...JAX...MLB...TBW...

    ATTN...RFC...SERFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 29888111 29688103 28598054 28528063 28238143
    27798205 27438295 27898313 28898262 29318212
    29678163
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