• HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 4 18:49:22 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 041849
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    149 PM EST Wed Dec 4 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Dec 04 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 05 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent. Forecast thinking based on 12z mesoscale guidance remains unchanged as strengthening warm/moist advection atop a weak
    frontal wave results in 2-4 inch rainfall totals focused across
    east Texas and central Louisiana through early Thursday. However,
    dry antecedent conditions, and consequently high FFG thresholds
    suggest the threat of flash flooding, while non-zero, is less than
    5%.

    Asherman/Cook


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 05 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4a1XCT9ODTFuIFivB1-WiWNUUM41cXFjkAXFoS7XN4EV= giJG6sjs2vQ0boXTbo2AYrFSQbCo_zaP9gdQeNOD8abPiNQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4a1XCT9ODTFuIFivB1-WiWNUUM41cXFjkAXFoS7XN4EV= giJG6sjs2vQ0boXTbo2AYrFSQbCo_zaP9gdQeNODPpptC7M$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4a1XCT9ODTFuIFivB1-WiWNUUM41cXFjkAXFoS7XN4EV= giJG6sjs2vQ0boXTbo2AYrFSQbCo_zaP9gdQeNODPcKnSKc$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 5 00:52:44 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 050052
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    752 PM EST Wed Dec 4 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Dec 05 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 05 2024

    ...East Texas/Louisiana...

    There continues to be broad warm air/moist advection atop a weak=20
    frontal wave over southeast TX which is resulting in broken areas
    of moderate to locally heavy shower activity across portions of
    eastern TX and LA. An axis of MUCAPE values reaching into the 500
    to 1000 J/kg range is noted currently over eastern TX which will
    gradually edge over into areas of western and eventually south-
    central LA later tonight. This coupled with at least modest
    moisture convergence and sustained isentropic ascent may support=20
    some locally stronger elevated convective elements yielding some
    spotty 1"/hour rainfall rates. However, the lack of persistence of
    these rates and the disorganized character of the rainfall pattern
    overall should keep the additional rainfall totals rather modest
    with perhaps some localized 2 to 3 inch amounts overnight. While
    the threat for flash flooding is non-zero, based on the dry
    antecedent conditions and lack of a heavier rainfall signal, the
    probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less than
    5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 05 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8BVwGl4Ma1upwWyjbX_MvsjnCpwqeE1EwpofD2R0XAPU= 8oMfIiGcxHU0Fe3frbJL6qiRMXttP94AI6Z_ybUmPoSucuo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8BVwGl4Ma1upwWyjbX_MvsjnCpwqeE1EwpofD2R0XAPU= 8oMfIiGcxHU0Fe3frbJL6qiRMXttP94AI6Z_ybUmGcBf0XE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8BVwGl4Ma1upwWyjbX_MvsjnCpwqeE1EwpofD2R0XAPU= 8oMfIiGcxHU0Fe3frbJL6qiRMXttP94AI6Z_ybUm8b0M3Es$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 5 07:38:59 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 050738
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    238 AM EST Thu Dec 5 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 05 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Otto


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    EASTERN TEXAS...

    A low-level jet streaming Gulf moisture northward across eastern
    Texas will interact with a strong shortwave trough which will move northeastward out of New Mexico and into the central Plains. PWATs
    along the upper Texas coast are expected to increase to above 1.75
    inches by Saturday night. While shower and light rain activity is
    expected especially over western portions of the Marginal Risk area
    during the day Saturday, the heaviest rain will be on Saturday=20
    night due to the typical nocturnal strengthening of the LLJ.=20
    Instability will be the primary limiting factor as MUCAPE values=20
    struggle to even get above a couple hundred J/kg. Portions of the=20
    Marginal Risk area will get some rain Friday and Friday night, such
    that this much stronger second round may train over some areas=20
    that due to previous rain may have more saturated soils. Isolated=20
    flash flooding is possible, especially in urban and flood prone and
    low lying areas.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9WgHPZbzIDyrYedbvDUng30JYBhzUsaNXPpc3-xZm4pl= 4TNGSht6H7Lzy9YZvY9tDolHbV-uJ88IQ3vqZRk_E9U2dzU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9WgHPZbzIDyrYedbvDUng30JYBhzUsaNXPpc3-xZm4pl= 4TNGSht6H7Lzy9YZvY9tDolHbV-uJ88IQ3vqZRk_93rfB7U$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9WgHPZbzIDyrYedbvDUng30JYBhzUsaNXPpc3-xZm4pl= 4TNGSht6H7Lzy9YZvY9tDolHbV-uJ88IQ3vqZRk_CeeDhkw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 5 15:25:15 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 051525
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1025 AM EST Thu Dec 5 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 05 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    EASTERN TEXAS...

    A low-level jet streaming Gulf moisture northward across eastern
    Texas will interact with a strong shortwave trough which will move northeastward out of New Mexico and into the central Plains. PWATs
    along the upper Texas coast are expected to increase to above 1.75
    inches by Saturday night. While shower and light rain activity is
    expected especially over western portions of the Marginal Risk area
    during the day Saturday, the heaviest rain will be on Saturday
    night due to the typical nocturnal strengthening of the LLJ.
    Instability will be the primary limiting factor as MUCAPE values
    struggle to even get above a couple hundred J/kg. Portions of the
    Marginal Risk area will get some rain Friday and Friday night, such
    that this much stronger second round may train over some areas
    that due to previous rain may have more saturated soils. Isolated
    flash flooding is possible, especially in urban and flood prone and
    low lying areas.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7TdsgqMBcoWoaksORRv3pnmzbEVjXS9rQx7AZvCW5lFV= a-m8N09fosuJT0aIKHB3C9E9X0o5qeuuOl_tOPiKRrOGrWo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7TdsgqMBcoWoaksORRv3pnmzbEVjXS9rQx7AZvCW5lFV= a-m8N09fosuJT0aIKHB3C9E9X0o5qeuuOl_tOPiKque4w4c$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7TdsgqMBcoWoaksORRv3pnmzbEVjXS9rQx7AZvCW5lFV= a-m8N09fosuJT0aIKHB3C9E9X0o5qeuuOl_tOPiKjxEUpSY$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 5 19:29:19 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 051929
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    229 PM EST Thu Dec 5 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Dec 05 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL NEAR THE TEXAS/
    LOUISIANA BORDER...

    A low-level jet streaming Gulf moisture northward across eastern
    Texas will interact with a strong shortwave trough which will move northeastward out of New Mexico and into the central Plains. PWATs
    along the upper Texas coast are expected to increase to 1.5-1.75"
    and instability is forecast to be fairly coastal -- in many ways,
    similar to the heavy rain event from Wednesday/Wednesday night.=20
    The heaviest rain is forecast to be on Saturday night due to the=20
    typical nocturnal strengthening of the low-level jet. Soils have
    become a bit more saturated in this region due to the recent
    rainfall, and some rainfall is expected on Friday. Isolated flash=20
    flooding is possible, especially in areas of more saturated soils,
    urban areas, and flood prone/low lying areas. Some restriction was
    made to the western side of the Marginal Risk area where minimal
    rainfall occurred recently, and for the moment, rainfall volume for
    the Saturday/Saturday night does not appear significant.

    Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-XvpXugjrEoN_B26tO6ShvyLtHR-RY3M3p1bZG4I8mQ7= nqadScNtj4t1ReUYXy8SHfjF-NU7u7Vib_arNbyP0fOaxtE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-XvpXugjrEoN_B26tO6ShvyLtHR-RY3M3p1bZG4I8mQ7= nqadScNtj4t1ReUYXy8SHfjF-NU7u7Vib_arNbyPFIwonnk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-XvpXugjrEoN_B26tO6ShvyLtHR-RY3M3p1bZG4I8mQ7= nqadScNtj4t1ReUYXy8SHfjF-NU7u7Vib_arNbyPpO22DRA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 6 00:22:22 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 060022
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    722 PM EST Thu Dec 5 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL NEAR THE TEXAS/
    LOUISIANA BORDER...

    A low-level jet streaming Gulf moisture northward across eastern
    Texas will interact with a strong shortwave trough which will move northeastward out of New Mexico and into the central Plains. PWATs
    along the upper Texas coast are expected to increase to 1.5-1.75"
    and instability is forecast to be fairly coastal -- in many ways,
    similar to the heavy rain event from Wednesday/Wednesday night.
    The heaviest rain is forecast to be on Saturday night due to the
    typical nocturnal strengthening of the low-level jet. Soils have
    become a bit more saturated in this region due to the recent
    rainfall, and some rainfall is expected on Friday. Isolated flash
    flooding is possible, especially in areas of more saturated soils,
    urban areas, and flood prone/low lying areas. Some restriction was
    made to the western side of the Marginal Risk area where minimal
    rainfall occurred recently, and for the moment, rainfall volume for
    the Saturday/Saturday night time frame does not appear=20
    significant.

    Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ZcHtKYOWnIpUYYjGMHfAjt4el__rVU4on2C2XOw0Z1E= qyXjawyVgXiYmZFBeJJEFngla9amNyHYtv6IabgwKhL6y68$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ZcHtKYOWnIpUYYjGMHfAjt4el__rVU4on2C2XOw0Z1E= qyXjawyVgXiYmZFBeJJEFngla9amNyHYtv6IabgwKPqwb80$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6ZcHtKYOWnIpUYYjGMHfAjt4el__rVU4on2C2XOw0Z1E= qyXjawyVgXiYmZFBeJJEFngla9amNyHYtv6Iabgw1CppIX0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 6 08:17:51 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 060817
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    317 AM EST Fri Dec 6 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    A low-level jet streaming Gulf moisture northward across eastern
    Texas will interact with a strong shortwave trough which will move northeastward out of New Mexico and into the central Plains. PWATs
    along the Upper Texas coast are expected to increase to 1.5"+ and=20 instability should remain minimal (and mostly confined to the=20
    coast). The heaviest rain is forecast to be on Saturday night due=20
    to the typical nocturnal strengthening of the low-level jet. Soils=20
    have become a bit more saturated in this region due to the recent=20
    rainfall, and some rainfall is expected on Friday. Isolated flash=20
    flooding is possible, especially in areas of more saturated soils,=20
    urban areas, and flood prone/low lying areas.=20

    Churchill/Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    Continued moisture flux transport via a moderately strong low-
    level jet is expected to result in increasing coverage of flash=20
    flooding on Sunday, as the bulk of the forcing and jet dynamics=20
    via the aforementioned strong shortwave trough will not arrive
    until midday (along with maximized instability). Localized training
    is expected to result in 2-4" totals, suggesting a lower-end=20
    Slight Risk based on the probability spectrum (which ranges from
    15-40%). Given that most of the region is experiencing very dry=20
    antecedent soil conditions (10th percentile or lower for much of=20
    MS/AR/LA, per NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-100 cm soil moisture), any flooding
    should be relegated to flood-prone areas (with the greatest risk=20
    for any localized significant flash flooding over west-central LA,
    where antecedent soil conditions and streamflows are locally higher).


    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!45uQqaynKJtX2GZp8iqu6KwJDv95LEc0E1LmEi6xwJvP= Eh2hl8CaMeEGGVcRtZncct4uuP8PIi5lQ7oT3tz9wCCbDeU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!45uQqaynKJtX2GZp8iqu6KwJDv95LEc0E1LmEi6xwJvP= Eh2hl8CaMeEGGVcRtZncct4uuP8PIi5lQ7oT3tz9nVLypFo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!45uQqaynKJtX2GZp8iqu6KwJDv95LEc0E1LmEi6xwJvP= Eh2hl8CaMeEGGVcRtZncct4uuP8PIi5lQ7oT3tz9kN2s4ks$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 6 09:23:31 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 060923=20=20=20
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    423 AM EST Fri Dec 6 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    A low-level jet streaming Gulf moisture northward across eastern
    Texas will interact with a strong shortwave trough which will move northeastward out of New Mexico and into the central Plains. PWATs
    along the Upper Texas coast are expected to increase to 1.5"+ and
    instability should remain minimal (and mostly confined to the
    coast). The heaviest rain is forecast to be on Saturday night due
    to the typical nocturnal strengthening of the low-level jet. Soils
    have become a bit more saturated in this region due to the recent
    rainfall, and some rainfall is expected on Friday. Isolated flash
    flooding is possible, especially in areas of more saturated soils,
    urban areas, and flood prone/low lying areas.

    Churchill/Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    Continued moisture flux transport via a moderately strong low-
    level jet is expected to result in increasing coverage of flash
    flooding on Sunday, as the bulk of the forcing and jet dynamics
    via the aforementioned strong shortwave trough will not arrive
    until midday (along with maximized instability). Localized training
    is expected to result in 2-4" totals, suggesting a lower-end
    Slight Risk based on the probability spectrum (which ranges from
    15-40%). Given that most of the region is experiencing very dry
    antecedent soil conditions (10th percentile or lower for much of
    MS/AR/LA, per NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-100 cm soil moisture), any flooding
    should be relegated to flood-prone areas (with the greatest risk
    for any localized significant flash flooding over west-central LA,
    where antecedent soil conditions and streamflows are locally higher).


    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4buSaSXkBrhPhQzOyI4o_E9gA-B9Uey-yDaZKVOPfe7T= HwgLLTkeR4IVfhDBz64InUEaJM1lLztwJKTta6pK0dVss28$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4buSaSXkBrhPhQzOyI4o_E9gA-B9Uey-yDaZKVOPfe7T= HwgLLTkeR4IVfhDBz64InUEaJM1lLztwJKTta6pK8LYQpJA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4buSaSXkBrhPhQzOyI4o_E9gA-B9Uey-yDaZKVOPfe7T= HwgLLTkeR4IVfhDBz64InUEaJM1lLztwJKTta6pK0fZTHlw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 6 15:34:06 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 061533
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1033 AM EST Fri Dec 6 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    ...Far Deep South Texas...
    The slow sagging frontal zone is nearly flat west to east across
    the Northern Gulf of Mexico and a weak surface to boundary layer
    cyclone has developed along the upstream edge near the southern tip
    of Texas. Enhanced deep layer moisture resides along and north of
    the boundary across this section of the front with total PWat
    values ranging from 1.5-1.75". Warm sea surface and proximity to
    the front allow for some weak instability in proximity to that low
    with values of 750-1000 J/kg available along/offshore. So there
    will remain some solid potential for thunderstorm activity across
    far south Texas. However, the vast majority of guidance continues
    to suggest best overall convergence and strongest updrafts will
    remain offshore or at the near coast. It is possible some weakening
    showers or rouge thunderstorm may make an appearance onshore in
    proximity to the urban corridor of the lower Rio Grande Valley,
    making the risk for flash flooding non-zero, but not rising to high
    enough probability/coverage to reach 5% threshold for delineating=20
    a Marginal Risk at this time.=20

    Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    A low-level jet streaming Gulf moisture northward across eastern
    Texas will interact with a strong shortwave trough which will move northeastward out of New Mexico and into the central Plains. PWATs
    along the Upper Texas coast are expected to increase to 1.5"+ and
    instability should remain minimal (and mostly confined to the
    coast). The heaviest rain is forecast to be on Saturday night due
    to the typical nocturnal strengthening of the low-level jet. Soils
    have become a bit more saturated in this region due to the recent
    rainfall, and some rainfall is expected on Friday. Isolated flash
    flooding is possible, especially in areas of more saturated soils,
    urban areas, and flood prone/low lying areas.

    Churchill/Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    Continued moisture flux transport via a moderately strong low-
    level jet is expected to result in increasing coverage of flash
    flooding on Sunday, as the bulk of the forcing and jet dynamics
    via the aforementioned strong shortwave trough will not arrive
    until midday (along with maximized instability). Localized training
    is expected to result in 2-4" totals, suggesting a lower-end
    Slight Risk based on the probability spectrum (which ranges from
    15-40%). Given that most of the region is experiencing very dry
    antecedent soil conditions (10th percentile or lower for much of
    MS/AR/LA, per NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-100 cm soil moisture), any flooding
    should be relegated to flood-prone areas (with the greatest risk
    for any localized significant flash flooding over west-central LA,
    where antecedent soil conditions and streamflows are locally higher).


    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8lbEjgXFpgZkMjGb4eYNh-MmoqesbbL4IqCbpT-cQDzE= 0KQdvl_y23VbgH0drOg_a2pLm1jWdfyZor1U1WozNU8KVfU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8lbEjgXFpgZkMjGb4eYNh-MmoqesbbL4IqCbpT-cQDzE= 0KQdvl_y23VbgH0drOg_a2pLm1jWdfyZor1U1Wozkm7hxEU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8lbEjgXFpgZkMjGb4eYNh-MmoqesbbL4IqCbpT-cQDzE= 0KQdvl_y23VbgH0drOg_a2pLm1jWdfyZor1U1Woz6i2WgV0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 6 20:30:40 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 062030
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    330 PM EST Fri Dec 6 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    ...Far Deep South Texas...
    The slow sagging frontal zone is nearly flat west to east across
    the Northern Gulf of Mexico and a weak surface to boundary layer
    cyclone has developed along the upstream edge near the southern tip
    of Texas. Enhanced deep layer moisture resides along and north of
    the boundary across this section of the front with total PWat
    values ranging from 1.5-1.75". Warm sea surface and proximity to
    the front allow for some weak instability in proximity to that low
    with values of 750-1000 J/kg available along/offshore. So there
    will remain some solid potential for thunderstorm activity across
    far south Texas. However, the vast majority of guidance continues
    to suggest best overall convergence and strongest updrafts will
    remain offshore or at the near coast. It is possible some weakening
    showers or rouge thunderstorm may make an appearance onshore in
    proximity to the urban corridor of the lower Rio Grande Valley,
    making the risk for flash flooding non-zero, but not rising to high
    enough probability/coverage to reach 5% threshold for delineating
    a Marginal Risk at this time.

    Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    ...Middle to Upper TX Coast to the Southwest LA Coast...
    ...2030 UTC Update...
    Have removed the Marginal Risk area from the Day 2 ERO in this=20
    region. While still a non-zero threat, given the latest model=20
    trends (much lighter with the QPF, areal-average amounts less than=20
    1" with heavier QPF and more appreciable deep- layer instability=20
    remaining offshore), feel that ERO risk is below Marginal=20
    thresholds (40km neighborhood prob of FFG exceedance less than 5%.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...2030 UTC Update...
    Based on the relative fast timing with this system (peak low-mid
    level moisture transport/flux with weak, elevated instability
    within the anafrontal setup), per collaboration with the WFOs have
    dropped the Slight Risk in the Day 3 ERO for areas north of LCH=20
    and LIX CWAs. Farther north, drier antecedent conditions (near to=20
    below normal soil moisture percentiles) along with MUCAPE values
    under 500 J/Kg will inhibit the more intense short-term rainfall
    rates needed to fit the Slight Risk criteria. Therefore even with
    areas of 2-2.5" of rain expected over parts of eastern AR into
    northern MS, western TN, and northwest AL -- given the lack of
    instability the rainfall rates over these areas are expected to
    peak between 1.5-2.0" within a 6 hour period over isolated areas (FFGs
    in this region are currently ~ 3" in 6 hours). We did maintain the
    Slight Risk closer to the Gulf Coast, where more appreciable deep-
    layer instability and thus higher probability of more intense
    short-term rainfall rates are more probable.

    Hurley

    ...Previous discussion...
    Continued moisture flux transport via a moderately strong low-=20
    level jet is expected to result in increasing coverage of flash=20
    flooding on Sunday, as the bulk of the forcing and jet dynamics via
    the aforementioned strong shortwave trough will not arrive until=20
    midday (along with maximized instability). Localized training is=20
    expected to result in 2-4" totals, suggesting a lower-end Slight=20
    Risk based on the probability spectrum (which ranges from 15-40%).=20
    Given that most of the region is experiencing very dry antecedent=20
    soil conditions (10th percentile or lower for much of MS/AR/LA, per
    NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-100 cm soil moisture), any flooding should be=20
    relegated to flood-prone areas (with the greatest risk for any=20
    localized significant flash flooding over west-central LA, where=20
    antecedent soil conditions and streamflows are locally higher).


    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4Bi5qKWBk8zWsIJPKYM2LLJlNuioD988SdlNLaT30V3k= NikNHOfWHffadel-91VZeZzjryXaGE_qy2DNIoSGo5lBcjQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4Bi5qKWBk8zWsIJPKYM2LLJlNuioD988SdlNLaT30V3k= NikNHOfWHffadel-91VZeZzjryXaGE_qy2DNIoSGq8UrgRM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4Bi5qKWBk8zWsIJPKYM2LLJlNuioD988SdlNLaT30V3k= NikNHOfWHffadel-91VZeZzjryXaGE_qy2DNIoSGjeJnRe0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 6 20:37:32 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 062037
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    337 PM EST Fri Dec 6 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Dec 06 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    ...Far Deep South Texas...
    The slow sagging frontal zone is nearly flat west to east across
    the Northern Gulf of Mexico and a weak surface to boundary layer
    cyclone has developed along the upstream edge near the southern tip
    of Texas. Enhanced deep layer moisture resides along and north of
    the boundary across this section of the front with total PWat
    values ranging from 1.5-1.75". Warm sea surface and proximity to
    the front allow for some weak instability in proximity to that low
    with values of 750-1000 J/kg available along/offshore. So there
    will remain some solid potential for thunderstorm activity across
    far south Texas. However, the vast majority of guidance continues
    to suggest best overall convergence and strongest updrafts will
    remain offshore or at the near coast. It is possible some weakening
    showers or rouge thunderstorm may make an appearance onshore in
    proximity to the urban corridor of the lower Rio Grande Valley,
    making the risk for flash flooding non-zero, but not rising to high
    enough probability/coverage to reach 5% threshold for delineating
    a Marginal Risk at this time.

    Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    ...Middle to Upper TX Coast to the Southwest LA Coast...
    ...2030 UTC Update...
    Have removed the Marginal Risk area from the Day 2 ERO in this
    region. While still a non-zero threat, given the latest model
    trends (much lighter with the QPF, areal-average amounts less than
    1" with heavier QPF and more appreciable deep- layer instability
    remaining offshore), feel that ERO risk is below Marginal
    thresholds (40km neighborhood prob of FFG exceedance less than 5%.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...2030 UTC Update...
    Based on the relative fast timing with this system (peak low-mid
    level moisture transport/flux with weak, elevated instability
    within the anafrontal setup), per collaboration with the WFOs have
    dropped the Slight Risk in the Day 3 ERO for areas north of LCH
    and LIX CWAs. Farther north, drier antecedent conditions (near to
    below normal soil moisture percentiles) along with MUCAPE values
    under 500 J/Kg will inhibit the more intense short-term rainfall
    rates needed to fit the Slight Risk criteria. Therefore even with
    areas of 2-2.5" of rain expected over parts of eastern AR into
    northern MS, western TN, and northwest AL -- given the lack of
    instability the rainfall rates over these areas are expected to
    peak between 1.5-2.0" within a 6 hour period over isolated areas (FFGs
    in this region are currently ~ 3" in 6 hours).=20

    We did however maintain the Slight Risk closer to the Gulf Coast,=20
    where more appreciable deep-layer instability and thus higher=20
    probability of more intense short-term rainfall rates are more=20
    probable. Also, much of the Slight Risk area, particularly from=20
    Jasper TX east-northeast to Alexandria LA, have received heavy=20
    rainfall over recent days, and as a result the antecedent soil=20
    conditions and streamflows are a bit higher compared to areas=20
    farther north.

    Hurley

    ...Previous discussion...
    Continued moisture flux transport via a moderately strong low-
    level jet is expected to result in increasing coverage of flash
    flooding on Sunday, as the bulk of the forcing and jet dynamics via
    the aforementioned strong shortwave trough will not arrive until
    midday (along with maximized instability). Localized training is
    expected to result in 2-4" totals, suggesting a lower-end Slight
    Risk based on the probability spectrum (which ranges from 15-40%).
    Given that most of the region is experiencing very dry antecedent
    soil conditions (10th percentile or lower for much of MS/AR/LA, per
    NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-100 cm soil moisture), any flooding should be
    relegated to flood-prone areas (with the greatest risk for any
    localized significant flash flooding over west-central LA, where
    antecedent soil conditions and streamflows are locally higher).


    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_e6OKmycLb35-Y_VJdvIRu2uuWIVEjQQY1bZgXQ42GXS= 6yYHKQt7RCZN6Fge-Qj2nZIh7LTTKIcqnL3yieiRMLK7Pyw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_e6OKmycLb35-Y_VJdvIRu2uuWIVEjQQY1bZgXQ42GXS= 6yYHKQt7RCZN6Fge-Qj2nZIh7LTTKIcqnL3yieiRHVBTTp0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_e6OKmycLb35-Y_VJdvIRu2uuWIVEjQQY1bZgXQ42GXS= 6yYHKQt7RCZN6Fge-Qj2nZIh7LTTKIcqnL3yieiR_DBnkUQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 7 00:03:41 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 070003
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    703 PM EST Fri Dec 6 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    ...Far Deep South Texas...
    The slow sagging frontal zone is nearly flat west to east across
    the Northern Gulf of Mexico and a weak surface to boundary layer
    cyclone has developed along the upstream edge near the southern tip
    of Texas. Enhanced deep layer moisture resides along and north of
    the boundary across this section of the front with total PWat
    values ranging from 1.5-1.75". Warm sea surface and proximity to
    the front allow for some weak instability in proximity to that low
    with values of 750-1000 J/kg available along/offshore. So there
    will remain some solid potential for thunderstorm activity across
    far south Texas. However, the vast majority of guidance continues
    to suggest best overall convergence and strongest updrafts will
    remain offshore or at the near coast. It is possible some weakening
    showers or rouge thunderstorm may make an appearance onshore in
    proximity to the urban corridor of the lower Rio Grande Valley,
    making the risk for flash flooding non-zero, but not rising to high
    enough probability/coverage to reach 5% threshold for delineating
    a Marginal Risk at this time.

    Gallina


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    ...Middle to Upper TX Coast to the Southwest LA Coast...
    ...2030 UTC Update...
    Have removed the Marginal Risk area from the Day 2 ERO in this
    region. While still a non-zero threat, given the latest model
    trends (much lighter with the QPF, areal-average amounts less than
    1" with heavier QPF and more appreciable deep- layer instability
    remaining offshore), feel that ERO risk is below Marginal
    thresholds (40km neighborhood prob of FFG exceedance less than 5%.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...2030 UTC Update...
    Based on the relative fast timing with this system (peak low-mid
    level moisture transport/flux with weak, elevated instability
    within the anafrontal setup), per collaboration with the WFOs have
    dropped the Slight Risk in the Day 3 ERO for areas north of LCH
    and LIX CWAs. Farther north, drier antecedent conditions (near to
    below normal soil moisture percentiles) along with MUCAPE values
    under 500 J/Kg will inhibit the more intense short-term rainfall
    rates needed to fit the Slight Risk criteria. Therefore even with
    areas of 2-2.5" of rain expected over parts of eastern AR into
    northern MS, western TN, and northwest AL -- given the lack of
    instability the rainfall rates over these areas are expected to
    peak between 1.5-2.0" within a 6 hour period over isolated areas (FFGs
    in this region are currently ~ 3" in 6 hours).

    We did however maintain the Slight Risk closer to the Gulf Coast,
    where more appreciable deep-layer instability and thus higher
    probability of more intense short-term rainfall rates are more
    probable. Also, much of the Slight Risk area, particularly from
    Jasper TX east-northeast to Alexandria LA, have received heavy
    rainfall over recent days, and as a result the antecedent soil
    conditions and streamflows are a bit higher compared to areas
    farther north.

    Hurley

    ...Previous discussion...
    Continued moisture flux transport via a moderately strong low-
    level jet is expected to result in increasing coverage of flash
    flooding on Sunday, as the bulk of the forcing and jet dynamics via
    the aforementioned strong shortwave trough will not arrive until
    midday (along with maximized instability). Localized training is
    expected to result in 2-4" totals, suggesting a lower-end Slight
    Risk based on the probability spectrum (which ranges from 15-40%).
    Given that most of the region is experiencing very dry antecedent
    soil conditions (10th percentile or lower for much of MS/AR/LA, per
    NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-100 cm soil moisture), any flooding should be
    relegated to flood-prone areas (with the greatest risk for any
    localized significant flash flooding over west-central LA, where
    antecedent soil conditions and streamflows are locally higher).


    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-kFTpRlcptfkuiXRJXib9o-M31fSqfCKMZH-2ou5C-8N= tXjx_vFYlaB6CUhSBoGz6POEhqhf3SSg2bmj9q7-U2bcXfg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-kFTpRlcptfkuiXRJXib9o-M31fSqfCKMZH-2ou5C-8N= tXjx_vFYlaB6CUhSBoGz6POEhqhf3SSg2bmj9q7-qjxKtII$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-kFTpRlcptfkuiXRJXib9o-M31fSqfCKMZH-2ou5C-8N= tXjx_vFYlaB6CUhSBoGz6POEhqhf3SSg2bmj9q7-bgsqC74$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 7 08:20:25 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 070820
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    320 AM EST Sat Dec 7 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    The Slight Risk has been maintained along and near the central=20
    Gulf Coast for Sunday and Sunday night, confined to where more=20
    appreciable deep-layer instability exists to support a higher=20
    probability of more intense short-term rainfall rates (2"+/hr).
    Still, this is considered a lower-end Slight Risk (based on the
    wide 15-40% probability spectrum), suggesting widely scattered=20
    instances of flash flooding at best (given expected localized=20
    totals of 2-4" are near the corresponding 3-hr FFGs of 3-4").=20
    Also, much of the Slight Risk area, particularly from Jasper TX=20 east-northeast to Alexandria LA, have received heavy rainfall over
    recent days, and as a result the antecedent soil conditions and=20
    streamflows are a bit higher compared to areas farther north (where
    NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-100 cm soil moisture in the bottom 10th percentile
    for much of MS/AR/LA). In addition to drier antecedent conditions=20
    farther north and east across the Mid-South, very limited elevated
    instability (MU CAPE ~200 J/kg at best) should prevent rainfall=20
    rates from climbing too high (generally 1.5"/hr or less, driven by=20 impressive forcing via the shortwave and associated jet dynamics).=20
    This suggests that a Marginal Risk should suffice with any flash=20
    flooding being highly localized, despite areal average rainfall=20
    amounts near 2" (expected to be spread out over 6+ hours).

    Churchill/Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE=20
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    The shortwave trough responsible for heavy rainfall on Sunday over
    much of the Lower MS Valley looks to eject northeastward into the
    central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic on Monday, bringing largely=20
    beneficial rainfall (with totals generally under 1") to much of the
    Northeast. Farther south along the central Gulf Coast, there are=20
    hints of another (weaker) shortwave trough within the southern=20
    stream that may enhance heavy rainfall along a trailing cold front.
    Given the slowing of the front, the opportunity for training areas
    of heavy rainfall will be greater on Day 3, best depicted by the=20
    00z ECMWF and ECENS (depicting localized banded totals of 2-5" and=20 probabilities for 2" exceedance as high as 30%). This risk appears=20
    greatest from southeast LA to southern AL and the tip of the FL=20
    Panhandle, though the EC model system is the most extreme and=20
    farthest east of all the models. Maintained the inherited Slight=20
    Risk area with some adjustments, limiting the eastern extent a bit=20
    given the lack of agreement from the other models. Uncertainty is=20
    still relatively high, but subsequent outlooks should get a better=20
    handle on things as these details begin to enter the CAM period.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4Tiok_HHEVDtBCD0ARPNEIePbXrOt9rXa6K5qcGSORMD= WZR6i6seXFFbEXM8t3tfGl8xdso4DH5kl2K54IBjhqpkS5o$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4Tiok_HHEVDtBCD0ARPNEIePbXrOt9rXa6K5qcGSORMD= WZR6i6seXFFbEXM8t3tfGl8xdso4DH5kl2K54IBjusUbWkU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4Tiok_HHEVDtBCD0ARPNEIePbXrOt9rXa6K5qcGSORMD= WZR6i6seXFFbEXM8t3tfGl8xdso4DH5kl2K54IBjb60vDRg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 7 16:00:56 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 071600
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1100 AM EST Sat Dec 7 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    The Slight Risk has been maintained along and near the central=20
    Gulf Coast for Sunday and Sunday night, confined to where more=20
    appreciable deep-layer instability exists to support a higher=20
    probability of more intense short-term rainfall rates (2"+/hr).
    Still, this is considered a lower-end Slight Risk (based on the
    wide 15-40% probability spectrum), suggesting widely scattered=20
    instances of flash flooding at best (given expected localized=20
    totals of 2-4" are near the corresponding 3-hr FFGs of 3-4").=20
    Also, much of the Slight Risk area, particularly from Jasper TX=20 east-northeast to Alexandria LA, have received heavy rainfall over
    recent days, and as a result the antecedent soil conditions and=20
    streamflows are a bit higher compared to areas farther north (where
    NASA SPoRT-LIS 0-100 cm soil moisture in the bottom 10th percentile
    for much of MS/AR/LA). In addition to drier antecedent conditions=20
    farther north and east across the Mid-South, very limited elevated
    instability (MU CAPE ~200 J/kg at best) should prevent rainfall=20
    rates from climbing too high (generally 1.5"/hr or less, driven by=20 impressive forcing via the shortwave and associated jet dynamics).=20
    This suggests that a Marginal Risk should suffice with any flash=20
    flooding being highly localized, despite areal average rainfall=20
    amounts near 2" (expected to be spread out over 6+ hours).

    Churchill/Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE=20
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    The shortwave trough responsible for heavy rainfall on Sunday over
    much of the Lower MS Valley looks to eject northeastward into the
    central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic on Monday, bringing largely=20
    beneficial rainfall (with totals generally under 1") to much of the
    Northeast. Farther south along the central Gulf Coast, there are=20
    hints of another (weaker) shortwave trough within the southern=20
    stream that may enhance heavy rainfall along a trailing cold front.
    Given the slowing of the front, the opportunity for training areas
    of heavy rainfall will be greater on Day 3, best depicted by the=20
    00z ECMWF and ECENS (depicting localized banded totals of 2-5" and=20 probabilities for 2" exceedance as high as 30%). This risk appears=20
    greatest from southeast LA to southern AL and the tip of the FL=20
    Panhandle, though the EC model system is the most extreme and=20
    farthest east of all the models. Maintained the inherited Slight=20
    Risk area with some adjustments, limiting the eastern extent a bit=20
    given the lack of agreement from the other models. Uncertainty is=20
    still relatively high, but subsequent outlooks should get a better=20
    handle on things as these details begin to enter the CAM period.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5OTfN903_rIiBu66MYWNavEasf4R8ZCml8t1zESL0Wgi= 86L0g4mXyTRV3cTuoGX8OUSvhcLJbStWVnh6_pj1dZZr2Ng$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5OTfN903_rIiBu66MYWNavEasf4R8ZCml8t1zESL0Wgi= 86L0g4mXyTRV3cTuoGX8OUSvhcLJbStWVnh6_pj1MAgL8xM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5OTfN903_rIiBu66MYWNavEasf4R8ZCml8t1zESL0Wgi= 86L0g4mXyTRV3cTuoGX8OUSvhcLJbStWVnh6_pj1vYKg4KM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 7 20:15:35 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 072015
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    315 PM EST Sat Dec 7 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Dec 07 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...2030Z Update...

    In coordination with LCH/Lake Charles, LA and LIX/Slidell, LA
    forecast offices, the inherited Slight Risk was downgraded to a
    Marginal with this update.

    The latest run of both the global and hi-res guidance have brought
    the rainfall forecast down from previous forecasts. The heaviest=20
    rains for the period are now expected in the middle of the Marginal
    Risk area over northern Mississippi, where interaction with a=20
    front in that area will lead to greater forcing than areas further=20
    south along the Gulf Coast. Instability will be a major limiting=20
    factor in flooding potential area-wide by greatly limiting rainfall
    rates. MUCAPE values throughout the duration of the rainfall will=20
    struggle to get much above 300 J/kg, suggesting that nearly all of=20
    the rainfall will be stratiform. Where the front adds forcing,=20
    there could make local convective bursts embedded within the=20
    broader rainfall shield, but do not expect there to be many, if any
    instances of rates above an inch per hour.

    Hydrologically, most if not all of the soils in the are are at or
    below average for moisture. Low/dry creekbeds should easily handle
    most of the light to briefly moderate rainfall rates. Any isolated
    flooding will be in any urban areas, as well as other low-lying or
    flood prone areas.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN LOUISIANA AND COASTAL MISSISSIPPI...

    ...2030Z Update...

    In coordination with LIX/Slidell, LA forecast office, the inherited
    Slight was shrunk largely to the I-10 & I-12 corridors from Baton
    Rouge east to Biloxi. The flooding potential in this area appears
    greatest in urban and flood-prone areas, so most of the more rural
    areas of Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle were removed from the
    Slight. Further, there appears to be better agreement in the
    guidance that the heaviest rains and potential for training will be
    focused in the new Slight Risk area, with areas further east
    including Mobile and Pensacola largely missing out on heavy rains
    through 12Z Tuesday.=20

    As on Day 2/Sunday, instability remains a major limiting factor
    supporting most of the rainfall on Monday staying stratiform and
    light in intensity. Latest guidance keeps most of the low-level
    instability over the Gulf, with relatively little of it making it
    inland as we are in the climatological minimum for diurnal heating.=20
    The rain won't persist nearly long enough with mostly stratiform to
    raise big concerns for flooding. However, given the flooding=20
    history in the New Orleans area, think there still remains some=20
    potential for flooding in those urban and flood prone areas.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The shortwave trough responsible for heavy rainfall on Sunday over
    much of the Lower MS Valley looks to eject northeastward into the
    central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic on Monday, bringing largely
    beneficial rainfall (with totals generally under 1") to much of the
    Northeast. Farther south along the central Gulf Coast, there are
    hints of another (weaker) shortwave trough within the southern
    stream that may enhance heavy rainfall along a trailing cold front.
    Given the slowing of the front, the opportunity for training areas
    of heavy rainfall will be greater on Day 3, best depicted by the
    00z ECMWF and ECENS (depicting localized banded totals of 2-5" and probabilities for 2" exceedance as high as 30%). This risk appears
    greatest from southeast LA to southern AL and the tip of the FL
    Panhandle, though the EC model system is the most extreme and
    farthest east of all the models. Maintained the inherited Slight
    Risk area with some adjustments, limiting the eastern extent a bit
    given the lack of agreement from the other models. Uncertainty is
    still relatively high, but subsequent outlooks should get a better
    handle on things as these details begin to enter the CAM period.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_jYB8c7-uELhMI93IHOASRjEYl--CJQ7eOw9HUdGr8nh= inRqvLJk1BgaRdkT3y_USTsimLz1UMLDGuQB4gOrSjm_MXA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_jYB8c7-uELhMI93IHOASRjEYl--CJQ7eOw9HUdGr8nh= inRqvLJk1BgaRdkT3y_USTsimLz1UMLDGuQB4gOrS4PlG4A$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_jYB8c7-uELhMI93IHOASRjEYl--CJQ7eOw9HUdGr8nh= inRqvLJk1BgaRdkT3y_USTsimLz1UMLDGuQB4gOrP0ggEOg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 8 00:27:34 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 080027
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    727 PM EST Sat Dec 7 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...2030Z Update...

    In coordination with LCH/Lake Charles, LA and LIX/Slidell, LA
    forecast offices, the inherited Slight Risk was downgraded to a
    Marginal with this update.

    The latest run of both the global and hi-res guidance have brought
    the rainfall forecast down from previous forecasts. The heaviest
    rains for the period are now expected in the middle of the Marginal
    Risk area over northern Mississippi, where interaction with a
    front in that area will lead to greater forcing than areas further
    south along the Gulf Coast. Instability will be a major limiting
    factor in flooding potential area-wide by greatly limiting rainfall
    rates. MUCAPE values throughout the duration of the rainfall will
    struggle to get much above 300 J/kg, suggesting that nearly all of
    the rainfall will be stratiform. Where the front adds forcing,
    there could make local convective bursts embedded within the
    broader rainfall shield, but do not expect there to be many, if any
    instances of rates above an inch per hour.

    Hydrologically, most if not all of the soils in the are are at or
    below average for moisture. Low/dry creekbeds should easily handle
    most of the light to briefly moderate rainfall rates. Any isolated
    flooding will be in any urban areas, as well as other low-lying or
    flood prone areas.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN LOUISIANA AND COASTAL MISSISSIPPI...

    ...2030Z Update...

    In coordination with LIX/Slidell, LA forecast office, the inherited
    Slight was shrunk largely to the I-10 & I-12 corridors from Baton
    Rouge east to Biloxi. The flooding potential in this area appears
    greatest in urban and flood-prone areas, so most of the more rural
    areas of Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle were removed from the
    Slight. Further, there appears to be better agreement in the
    guidance that the heaviest rains and potential for training will be
    focused in the new Slight Risk area, with areas further east
    including Mobile and Pensacola largely missing out on heavy rains
    through 12Z Tuesday.

    As on Day 2/Sunday, instability remains a major limiting factor
    supporting most of the rainfall on Monday staying stratiform and
    light in intensity. Latest guidance keeps most of the low-level
    instability over the Gulf, with relatively little of it making it
    inland as we are in the climatological minimum for diurnal heating.
    The rain won't persist nearly long enough with mostly stratiform to
    raise big concerns for flooding. However, given the flooding
    history in the New Orleans area, think there still remains some
    potential for flooding in those urban and flood prone areas.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The shortwave trough responsible for heavy rainfall on Sunday over
    much of the Lower MS Valley looks to eject northeastward into the
    central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic on Monday, bringing largely
    beneficial rainfall (with totals generally under 1") to much of the
    Northeast. Farther south along the central Gulf Coast, there are
    hints of another (weaker) shortwave trough within the southern
    stream that may enhance heavy rainfall along a trailing cold front.
    Given the slowing of the front, the opportunity for training areas
    of heavy rainfall will be greater on Day 3, best depicted by the
    00z ECMWF and ECENS (depicting localized banded totals of 2-5" and probabilities for 2" exceedance as high as 30%). This risk appears
    greatest from southeast LA to southern AL and the tip of the FL
    Panhandle, though the EC model system is the most extreme and
    farthest east of all the models. Maintained the inherited Slight
    Risk area with some adjustments, limiting the eastern extent a bit
    given the lack of agreement from the other models. Uncertainty is
    still relatively high, but subsequent outlooks should get a better
    handle on things as these details begin to enter the CAM period.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4RIP_1ul2a4CCcr4xjFD6xRTmmc61YBJwt-OmtTlAcQi= hpaqKRCFDquWYECw-694cKS1zPQZzNAUtcWNcTt0vB9kLas$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4RIP_1ul2a4CCcr4xjFD6xRTmmc61YBJwt-OmtTlAcQi= hpaqKRCFDquWYECw-694cKS1zPQZzNAUtcWNcTt03MvKneY$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4RIP_1ul2a4CCcr4xjFD6xRTmmc61YBJwt-OmtTlAcQi= hpaqKRCFDquWYECw-694cKS1zPQZzNAUtcWNcTt03r04ZZg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 8 08:05:52 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 080805
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    305 AM EST Sun Dec 8 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    The inherited Marginal Risk area was maintained for this update,
    suggesting that any flash flooding should remain localized today,=20
    as rainfall rates will generally remain capped below 1"/hr (with
    lacking instability being the primary limiting factor). The=20
    heaviest rains for the period are expected in the middle of the=20
    Marginal Risk area over northern Mississippi, where an interaction
    with a front in that area will lead to greater forcing than areas=20
    farther south along the Gulf Coast. Where the front adds additional
    forcing, localized convective bursts may be embedded within the=20
    broader rainfall shield.=20

    Hydrologically, most if not all of the soils in the are are at or
    below average for moisture. Low/dry creek beds should easily=20
    handle most of the light to briefly moderate rainfall rates. Any=20
    isolated flooding will be in any urban areas, as well as other low-
    lying or more flood-prone areas.

    Churchill/Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN LOUISIANA AND COASTAL MISSISSIPPI...

    The shortwave trough responsible for heavy rainfall on Sunday over
    much of the Lower MS Valley looks to eject northeastward into the
    central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic on Monday, bringing largely
    beneficial rainfall (with totals generally well under 1") to much=20
    of the Northeast. Farther south along the central Gulf Coast, a=20
    weaker shortwave within the southern stream may locally enhance=20
    heavy rainfall along a trailing cold front. The inherited Slight
    Risk in this area was maintained, mainly from the I-10 & I-12=20
    corridors from Baton Rouge east to Biloxi, where the flooding=20
    potential appears greatest in urban and more flood-prone areas=20
    (given relatively dry antecedent conditions and streamflows normal=20
    to below normal). There is still some question as to how far east=20
    the heavy rainfall threat will extend (as the ECMWF and ECENS have=20
    been persistent outliers suggesting an eastward extension into the=20
    FL Panhandle and surrounding southeast AL and southwest GA), but=20
    the signal for localized totals of 2"+ are maximized near the=20
    Slight Risk (and confined to where instability and forcing are=20
    greatest).=20

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST AND CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    Large scale upper trough will be digging into the central US by
    Tuesday, setting the stage for more organized heavy rainfall into
    portions of the Southeast. Initially positively tilted, the trough
    looks to quickly take on a more neutral tilt over the course of=20
    the course of the day, as an associated 250 mb jet streak=20
    strengthens from ~110 kts to ~170 kts over 24 hours (with our area
    of interest for the Slight Risk located near the right-entrance
    region). As with prior days, instability once again looks to be the
    primary limiting factor, and this is particularly the case farther
    north into the Carolinas. While the GFS/GEFS depict 2-4" localized
    totals into northern GA and western SC, the ECMWF/ECENS largely=20
    limit this threat (for 2" and 3" exceedance) a bit farther south=20
    into central GA, southeast AL, and the FL Panhandle (where the=20
    inherited Slight Risk was maintained and adjusted a bit based on=20
    the new model data). Given relatively dry antecedent conditions and
    associated 3-6 hr FFGs generally ranging from 3.0-4.0", the Slight
    is on the lower-end of the 15-40% probability distribution,
    suggesting widely scattered instances of flooding (at best).=20

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-A7Ts50lWB_zW0c_u_W2ao8fIjVi3sUW4ClhYNyR8h4l= nYb-yPC3fjtYbFlLJf3vJr0_kOyChya3yAsDouWcvQl9ld8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-A7Ts50lWB_zW0c_u_W2ao8fIjVi3sUW4ClhYNyR8h4l= nYb-yPC3fjtYbFlLJf3vJr0_kOyChya3yAsDouWcPht3Gyc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-A7Ts50lWB_zW0c_u_W2ao8fIjVi3sUW4ClhYNyR8h4l= nYb-yPC3fjtYbFlLJf3vJr0_kOyChya3yAsDouWcrtKjWEk$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 8 15:39:24 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 081538
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1038 AM EST Sun Dec 8 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS...

    ...16Z Update...

    No changes were made to the previous Marginal Risk area, while the
    threat is certainly on the lower end of the Marginal Risk threat,
    previous days' rain in Louisiana and concern about training led to
    keeping the threat as is. Meanwhile the guidance is in good
    agreement that the heaviest rains will be focused over much of
    northern Mississippi, where conditions are much drier, but more
    rainfall could lead to isolated flash flooding. The previous=20
    discussion remains valid.

    Wegman=20

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The inherited Marginal Risk area was maintained for this update,
    suggesting that any flash flooding should remain localized today,
    as rainfall rates will generally remain capped below 1"/hr (with
    lacking instability being the primary limiting factor). The
    heaviest rains for the period are expected in the middle of the
    Marginal Risk area over northern Mississippi, where an interaction
    with a front in that area will lead to greater forcing than areas
    farther south along the Gulf Coast. Where the front adds additional
    forcing, localized convective bursts may be embedded within the
    broader rainfall shield.

    Hydrologically, most if not all of the soils in the are are at or
    below average for moisture. Low/dry creek beds should easily
    handle most of the light to briefly moderate rainfall rates. Any
    isolated flooding will be in any urban areas, as well as other low-
    lying or more flood-prone areas.

    Churchill/Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN LOUISIANA AND COASTAL MISSISSIPPI...

    The shortwave trough responsible for heavy rainfall on Sunday over
    much of the Lower MS Valley looks to eject northeastward into the
    central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic on Monday, bringing largely
    beneficial rainfall (with totals generally well under 1") to much
    of the Northeast. Farther south along the central Gulf Coast, a
    weaker shortwave within the southern stream may locally enhance
    heavy rainfall along a trailing cold front. The inherited Slight
    Risk in this area was maintained, mainly from the I-10 & I-12
    corridors from Baton Rouge east to Biloxi, where the flooding
    potential appears greatest in urban and more flood-prone areas
    (given relatively dry antecedent conditions and streamflows normal
    to below normal). There is still some question as to how far east
    the heavy rainfall threat will extend (as the ECMWF and ECENS have
    been persistent outliers suggesting an eastward extension into the
    FL Panhandle and surrounding southeast AL and southwest GA), but
    the signal for localized totals of 2"+ are maximized near the
    Slight Risk (and confined to where instability and forcing are
    greatest).

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST AND CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    Large scale upper trough will be digging into the central US by
    Tuesday, setting the stage for more organized heavy rainfall into
    portions of the Southeast. Initially positively tilted, the trough
    looks to quickly take on a more neutral tilt over the course of
    the course of the day, as an associated 250 mb jet streak
    strengthens from ~110 kts to ~170 kts over 24 hours (with our area
    of interest for the Slight Risk located near the right-entrance
    region). As with prior days, instability once again looks to be the
    primary limiting factor, and this is particularly the case farther
    north into the Carolinas. While the GFS/GEFS depict 2-4" localized
    totals into northern GA and western SC, the ECMWF/ECENS largely
    limit this threat (for 2" and 3" exceedance) a bit farther south
    into central GA, southeast AL, and the FL Panhandle (where the
    inherited Slight Risk was maintained and adjusted a bit based on
    the new model data). Given relatively dry antecedent conditions and
    associated 3-6 hr FFGs generally ranging from 3.0-4.0", the Slight
    is on the lower-end of the 15-40% probability distribution,
    suggesting widely scattered instances of flooding (at best).

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-c7w-f9kJIrVmm-qOEY4lW8FWXYk9gb4wMVMyeVupXkx= TeINDyTHyTDMxNFjUjNnz7bnGpwgO50mjdoOyRFsqLwIFyk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-c7w-f9kJIrVmm-qOEY4lW8FWXYk9gb4wMVMyeVupXkx= TeINDyTHyTDMxNFjUjNnz7bnGpwgO50mjdoOyRFstr-G73M$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-c7w-f9kJIrVmm-qOEY4lW8FWXYk9gb4wMVMyeVupXkx= TeINDyTHyTDMxNFjUjNnz7bnGpwgO50mjdoOyRFsFQmEpW0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 8 20:01:41 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 082001
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    301 PM EST Sun Dec 8 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Dec 08 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS...

    ...16Z Update...

    No changes were made to the previous Marginal Risk area, while the
    threat is certainly on the lower end of the Marginal Risk threat,
    previous days' rain in Louisiana and concern about training led to
    keeping the threat as is. Meanwhile the guidance is in good
    agreement that the heaviest rains will be focused over much of
    northern Mississippi, where conditions are much drier, but more
    rainfall could lead to isolated flash flooding. The previous
    discussion remains valid.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The inherited Marginal Risk area was maintained for this update,
    suggesting that any flash flooding should remain localized today,
    as rainfall rates will generally remain capped below 1"/hr (with
    lacking instability being the primary limiting factor). The
    heaviest rains for the period are expected in the middle of the
    Marginal Risk area over northern Mississippi, where an interaction
    with a front in that area will lead to greater forcing than areas
    farther south along the Gulf Coast. Where the front adds additional
    forcing, localized convective bursts may be embedded within the
    broader rainfall shield.

    Hydrologically, most if not all of the soils in the are are at or
    below average for moisture. Low/dry creek beds should easily
    handle most of the light to briefly moderate rainfall rates. Any
    isolated flooding will be in any urban areas, as well as other low-
    lying or more flood-prone areas.

    Churchill/Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...2030Z Update...

    In coordination with LIX/Slidell, LA forecast office, the inherited
    Slight Risk was expanded south to include the rest of the
    Mississippi Delta as well as the towns along Bayous Lafourche and
    Terrebonne. The focus for the heaviest rain on Monday is likely to
    include the New Orleans Metro and points south. The storms will
    track east-northeastward from Louisiana through the western Florida
    Panhandle. Since many of these areas are urban and therefore more
    prone to flooding, the potential for some convection, even if
    instability is limited, is still enough to forecast widely
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The surrounding Marginal
    Risk was left largely unchanged.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The shortwave trough responsible for heavy rainfall on Sunday over
    much of the Lower MS Valley looks to eject northeastward into the
    central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic on Monday, bringing largely
    beneficial rainfall (with totals generally well under 1") to much
    of the Northeast. Farther south along the central Gulf Coast, a
    weaker shortwave within the southern stream may locally enhance
    heavy rainfall along a trailing cold front. The inherited Slight
    Risk in this area was maintained, mainly from the I-10 & I-12
    corridors from Baton Rouge east to Biloxi, where the flooding
    potential appears greatest in urban and more flood-prone areas
    (given relatively dry antecedent conditions and streamflows normal
    to below normal). There is still some question as to how far east
    the heavy rainfall threat will extend (as the ECMWF and ECENS have
    been persistent outliers suggesting an eastward extension into the
    FL Panhandle and surrounding southeast AL and southwest GA), but
    the signal for localized totals of 2"+ are maximized near the
    Slight Risk (and confined to where instability and forcing are
    greatest).

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF
    THE SOUTHEAST FROM SOUTHEASTERN ALABAMA TO WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...2030Z Update...

    The Slight Risk area inherited from the previous forecast was
    nudged a bit to the north with this update to now include portions
    of northeastern Georgia, western South Carolina and southwestern
    North Carolina with this update. Meanwhile the Slight was removed
    out of the Florida Panhandle.

    A strong upper level trough and attendant cold front will swing
    eastward across the Southeast on Tuesday and especially Tuesday
    night. The greatest forcing with the front and southerly flow ahead
    of it will likely be focused into Georgia and the Carolinas...with
    less forcing further south along the Florida Panhandle. While
    convection will still be present along the Gulf Coast, it will
    become better organized as it moves inland into northern Georgia
    and the Carolinas, hence the expansion of the Slight Risk into
    those areas. Despite the long stretch of very dry weather into the
    Carolinas, 1-3 inches of rain in a short period of time could still
    cause flooding issues, particularly in urbanized areas and small
    creeks and streams which fill up quickly.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Large scale upper trough will be digging into the central US by
    Tuesday, setting the stage for more organized heavy rainfall into
    portions of the Southeast. Initially positively tilted, the trough
    looks to quickly take on a more neutral tilt over the course of
    the course of the day, as an associated 250 mb jet streak
    strengthens from ~110 kts to ~170 kts over 24 hours (with our area
    of interest for the Slight Risk located near the right-entrance
    region). As with prior days, instability once again looks to be the
    primary limiting factor, and this is particularly the case farther
    north into the Carolinas. While the GFS/GEFS depict 2-4" localized
    totals into northern GA and western SC, the ECMWF/ECENS largely
    limit this threat (for 2" and 3" exceedance) a bit farther south
    into central GA, southeast AL, and the FL Panhandle (where the
    inherited Slight Risk was maintained and adjusted a bit based on
    the new model data). Given relatively dry antecedent conditions and
    associated 3-6 hr FFGs generally ranging from 3.0-4.0", the Slight
    is on the lower-end of the 15-40% probability distribution,
    suggesting widely scattered instances of flooding (at best).

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!66MfwTuTZ_td1He3S-jfbZi_vgNc6bYe94anC4gFierG= 4-MdtnsjgaFjEgnOWKWB4QDbcJQGuDQ60HoxbuVrHOS4nRk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!66MfwTuTZ_td1He3S-jfbZi_vgNc6bYe94anC4gFierG= 4-MdtnsjgaFjEgnOWKWB4QDbcJQGuDQ60HoxbuVr8ixh5L4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!66MfwTuTZ_td1He3S-jfbZi_vgNc6bYe94anC4gFierG= 4-MdtnsjgaFjEgnOWKWB4QDbcJQGuDQ60HoxbuVreqty6G8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 9 00:50:35 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 090050
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    750 PM EST Sun Dec 8 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS...

    ...01Z Update...

    The inherited Marginal was trimmed on the western side where the
    rain has ended or will end soon. Elsewhere no changes were made.
    Rates have stayed below 1 inch per hour so far. Any flash flooding
    through Monday morning will be very isolated.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The inherited Marginal Risk area was maintained for this update,
    suggesting that any flash flooding should remain localized today,
    as rainfall rates will generally remain capped below 1"/hr (with
    lacking instability being the primary limiting factor). The
    heaviest rains for the period are expected in the middle of the
    Marginal Risk area over northern Mississippi, where an interaction
    with a front in that area will lead to greater forcing than areas
    farther south along the Gulf Coast. Where the front adds additional
    forcing, localized convective bursts may be embedded within the
    broader rainfall shield.

    Hydrologically, most if not all of the soils in the are are at or
    below average for moisture. Low/dry creek beds should easily
    handle most of the light to briefly moderate rainfall rates. Any
    isolated flooding will be in any urban areas, as well as other low-
    lying or more flood-prone areas.

    Churchill/Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...2030Z Update...

    In coordination with LIX/Slidell, LA forecast office, the inherited
    Slight Risk was expanded south to include the rest of the
    Mississippi Delta as well as the towns along Bayous Lafourche and
    Terrebonne. The focus for the heaviest rain on Monday is likely to
    include the New Orleans Metro and points south. The storms will
    track east-northeastward from Louisiana through the western Florida
    Panhandle. Since many of these areas are urban and therefore more
    prone to flooding, the potential for some convection, even if
    instability is limited, is still enough to forecast widely
    scattered instances of flash flooding. The surrounding Marginal
    Risk was left largely unchanged.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The shortwave trough responsible for heavy rainfall on Sunday over
    much of the Lower MS Valley looks to eject northeastward into the
    central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic on Monday, bringing largely
    beneficial rainfall (with totals generally well under 1") to much
    of the Northeast. Farther south along the central Gulf Coast, a
    weaker shortwave within the southern stream may locally enhance
    heavy rainfall along a trailing cold front. The inherited Slight
    Risk in this area was maintained, mainly from the I-10 & I-12
    corridors from Baton Rouge east to Biloxi, where the flooding
    potential appears greatest in urban and more flood-prone areas
    (given relatively dry antecedent conditions and streamflows normal
    to below normal). There is still some question as to how far east
    the heavy rainfall threat will extend (as the ECMWF and ECENS have
    been persistent outliers suggesting an eastward extension into the
    FL Panhandle and surrounding southeast AL and southwest GA), but
    the signal for localized totals of 2"+ are maximized near the
    Slight Risk (and confined to where instability and forcing are
    greatest).

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF
    THE SOUTHEAST FROM SOUTHEASTERN ALABAMA TO WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...2030Z Update...

    The Slight Risk area inherited from the previous forecast was
    nudged a bit to the north with this update to now include portions
    of northeastern Georgia, western South Carolina and southwestern
    North Carolina with this update. Meanwhile the Slight was removed
    out of the Florida Panhandle.

    A strong upper level trough and attendant cold front will swing
    eastward across the Southeast on Tuesday and especially Tuesday
    night. The greatest forcing with the front and southerly flow ahead
    of it will likely be focused into Georgia and the Carolinas...with
    less forcing further south along the Florida Panhandle. While
    convection will still be present along the Gulf Coast, it will
    become better organized as it moves inland into northern Georgia
    and the Carolinas, hence the expansion of the Slight Risk into
    those areas. Despite the long stretch of very dry weather into the
    Carolinas, 1-3 inches of rain in a short period of time could still
    cause flooding issues, particularly in urbanized areas and small
    creeks and streams which fill up quickly.

    Wegman

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Large scale upper trough will be digging into the central US by
    Tuesday, setting the stage for more organized heavy rainfall into
    portions of the Southeast. Initially positively tilted, the trough
    looks to quickly take on a more neutral tilt over the course of
    the course of the day, as an associated 250 mb jet streak
    strengthens from ~110 kts to ~170 kts over 24 hours (with our area
    of interest for the Slight Risk located near the right-entrance
    region). As with prior days, instability once again looks to be the
    primary limiting factor, and this is particularly the case farther
    north into the Carolinas. While the GFS/GEFS depict 2-4" localized
    totals into northern GA and western SC, the ECMWF/ECENS largely
    limit this threat (for 2" and 3" exceedance) a bit farther south
    into central GA, southeast AL, and the FL Panhandle (where the
    inherited Slight Risk was maintained and adjusted a bit based on
    the new model data). Given relatively dry antecedent conditions and
    associated 3-6 hr FFGs generally ranging from 3.0-4.0", the Slight
    is on the lower-end of the 15-40% probability distribution,
    suggesting widely scattered instances of flooding (at best).

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5SZlJqqpkConkVhBR8X9t_Kn5AWuq_Euj9KRTE_t9lSH= utH7tgQMm51umoaf9HLGwh4F0lyxb5sFwj8y3TPRXbgXvI8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5SZlJqqpkConkVhBR8X9t_Kn5AWuq_Euj9KRTE_t9lSH= utH7tgQMm51umoaf9HLGwh4F0lyxb5sFwj8y3TPRtL1mvsA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5SZlJqqpkConkVhBR8X9t_Kn5AWuq_Euj9KRTE_t9lSH= utH7tgQMm51umoaf9HLGwh4F0lyxb5sFwj8y3TPR2hNynDA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 9 07:59:15 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 090758
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    258 AM EST Mon Dec 9 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    Overall pattern evolution will continue to point to a benign
    instability axis (MUCAPE ~500-1000 J/kg) being confined closer to=20
    the Gulf with sufficient deep layer shear and moisture presence=20
    (PWATs b/w +1 to +2 deviations) allowing for a small area of
    convective development capable of locally enhanced rainfall rates
    for flash flood potential. Given the overall antecedent dry
    conditions prior, the prospects of flash flooding will likely be
    relegated to more urban settings along the Central Gulf coast,
    including places such as New Orleans, Biloxi, and Mobile. A few
    other Parishes within Southeastern LA also contain areas that
    experience a bit easier ability to flash flood given some of the
    above urbanization factors, so decided to maintain the previous
    SLGT risk inheritance with only some minor modifications made to
    the overall risk area.=20

    Latest 00z HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall are
    within the low-end 20-25% range with highest prospects likely=20
    between 1-2" when taking relevant CAMs into account. This is=20
    similar to the previous forecast prob fields from the 12z HREF=20
    iteration, and with coordination from the local WFOs along the Gulf
    Coast earlier for the SLGT risk, there was no need to deviate from
    what was proposed in the last update. Best chance will reside from
    training echoes on persistent west-southwest flow during the
    diurnal instability maximum, carrying into the evening before the
    setup decays prior to the next period of relevant convection for
    D2.=20

    Kleebauer=20


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM SOUTHEASTERN=20
    ALABAMA TO UPSTATE SOUTH CAROLINA...

    As the previous shortwave trough kicks to the northeast, a stronger
    mid-level trough will dig quickly out of the Rockies into the
    Southern Plains by Tuesday morning with sights downstream on areas
    east of the Mississippi. Increasing meridional flow ahead of the
    digging trough will aid in the advection of deep moisture poleward
    with the initial surge propagating north out of the Gulf through
    the Southeast by Tuesday afternoon, eventually spreading northward
    into the Southern and Central Mid Atlantic the second half of the
    period. The advection pattern will be sufficient in increasing
    regional mid-level instability as profile moisture saturates deeper
    into the profile across the areas above. PWAT anomalies on the=20
    order of 2-3 deviations above normal will be common over parts of=20
    GA spreading up through the neighboring Carolinas, eventually=20
    surging into the Central Mid Atlantic and Northeastern U.S by the
    end of the D2 cycle. This will prime several areas for heavy=20
    rainfall prospects as the final ingredients come to together for a=20
    locally enhanced precip pattern.=20

    The trough to the west will begin tilting more neutral with a
    strengthening upper jet positioning allowing for large scale ascent
    to increase in earnest as we move into Tuesday afternoon and
    beyond. The main trigger for a line of enhanced convection will
    form at the hands of a strong surface cold front that will shove
    eastward beneath an intensifying surface low that develops in
    conjunction to the favorable upper level evolution. Current
    deterministic sfc to 850mb wind field indicates a corridor of
    backed flow across much of GA into the Carolinas during Tuesday
    evening ahead of the cold front allowing for widespread rainfall to
    develop downstream of the approaching front. As the cold front
    swings eastward by late Tuesday night through early Wednesday, the
    peak rainfall rates will be occurring across the Carolina Piedmont
    down through Central GA, aligning with the cold front as it moves
    through the region. The eventual heavy rain footprint will spread=20 northeastward into the Southern Mid Atlantic with locally heavy=20
    rainfall impacting areas as far north as Virginia with some lighter
    precip making headway into areas further north. Places across
    Southwestern VA down to the I-40 corridor in NC will see anywhere
    from 1-2" of rainfall with locally higher further south through the
    zone. 2-3" with local totals to 4" will be plausible for the area
    extending from Southeastern AL through Central GA into Upstate SC,
    an area more prone to flash flood prospects thanks to the
    complexity of the local terrain.=20

    This signal has been prevalent over the past series of=20
    deterministic model outputs and is now firmly within the ensemble
    mean as bias corrected ENS now supports 2.5-3" through much of the
    area outlined above in the 2-3" forecast. The saving grace in this
    setup is the time of year allowing for lower surface based
    instability parameters and very dry antecedent conditions leading
    into the event. This allowed for a SLGT risk to be sufficient for
    the setup, a carry over from the previous forecast. The MRGL risk
    still extends into VA where the northern periphery of the heavy
    rainfall is expected.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    As the longwave pattern evolves further, the neutral-tilted trough
    from previous D2 time frame will enhance further with the mean
    trough taking on a more negative tilt allowing for enhanced surface
    low strengthening as the surface low progresses northward into New
    England and eventually Quebec. PWAT anomalies on the order of 2-3
    deviations above normal will quickly progress northward
    encompassing much of New England by Wednesday afternoon, even
    getting up towards +4 deviations as we move into Wednesday night
    over Northern New England from NH through ME. This pattern is
    textbook for a corridor of heavy rainfall to spread from the Mid
    Atlantic through all of the Northeast with the primary areas of
    interest location along and ahead of the cold front that will sweep
    eastward during the forecast period. Portions of Western NY state
    and Northern PA will eventually change to winter precipitation
    allowing for a decay in flash flood concerns, however areas
    downstream will be under a respectable deluge of rainfall prior to
    the rain threat ceasing in wake of the front.=20

    Totals of 1.5-2.5" of rain are forecast across much of Long Island
    up through Southern New England, eventually moving up through ME=20
    as we close out the forecast period. 1-2" is forecast for points=20
    further west, but those areas also have the added snow melt factors
    that will play into the flooding concerns as high dewpoints and=20
    heavy rain will promote rapid snow melt for places in the interior=20
    over VT/NH and the neighboring Berkshires in MA. The expectations=20
    are for some creeks and smaller streams to become problematic in=20
    the setup and could cause localized flood concerns during the peak=20
    of the heavy rainfall. The rivers across New England can thankfully
    take a decent surge of moisture after a very dry fall, so the=20
    prospects of significant flooding are very low at this point.=20

    The setup is still worthy of a large SLGT risk encompassing much=20
    of New England with the best threats likely over urbanized areas in
    LI and Southern New England and over those zones in the interior=20
    where rapid snow melt has historical precedence for localized=20
    flash flood concerns. A MRGL risk will encompass the SLGT risk=20
    across Northeast with an extension down into Central and Eastern NC
    as the early portion of the forecast period will still see=20
    moderate to heavy rainfall Wednesday morning before pulling=20
    northward.=20

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4UlR3QGIyWjsGrDJUGjC9wRUMHaCR99nTCcBiafG8TgG= y_rAzxRFAuruliMfCvg1AmxiPNEAYrV9V8jl8Qj08tCuxds$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4UlR3QGIyWjsGrDJUGjC9wRUMHaCR99nTCcBiafG8TgG= y_rAzxRFAuruliMfCvg1AmxiPNEAYrV9V8jl8Qj09auEq8c$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4UlR3QGIyWjsGrDJUGjC9wRUMHaCR99nTCcBiafG8TgG= y_rAzxRFAuruliMfCvg1AmxiPNEAYrV9V8jl8Qj0spHk65M$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 9 15:56:54 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 091556
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1056 AM EST Mon Dec 9 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    Current radar and surface observations indicate the ongoing=20
    forecast on track with southwest-east oriented bands of showers=20
    and storms impacting the central Gulf Coast with brief periods of=20
    training and hourly rainfall rates up to 2". Overall the pattern=20
    evolution will continue to point to a benign instability axis=20
    (MUCAPE ~500-1000 J/kg) being confined closer to the Gulf with=20
    sufficient deep layer shear and moisture presence (PWATs of=20
    1.5-2.0" and b/w +1 to +2 deviations) allowing for a small area of=20 convective development capable of locally enhanced rainfall rates=20
    for flash flood potential. Given the overall antecedent dry=20
    conditions prior, the prospects of flash flooding will likely be=20
    relegated to more urban settings along the Central Gulf coast,=20
    including places such as New Orleans, Biloxi, and Mobile. A few=20
    other Parishes within Southeastern LA also contain areas that=20
    experience a bit easier ability to flash flood given some of the=20
    above urbanization factors, so the previous SLGT risk was=20
    maintained with only some minor modifications made to the overall=20
    risk area.

    Latest 12z HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall are
    in the 20-40% range with highest prospects likely between 1-2"=20
    when taking relevant CAMs into account. With coordination from the
    local WFOs along the Gulf Coast earlier for the SLGT risk, there=20
    was no need to deviate much from what was proposed in the previous
    forecasts. Best chances will reside from training echoes on=20
    persistent west- southwest flow during the diurnal instability=20
    maximum, carrying into the evening before the setup decays prior to
    the next period of relevant convection for D2.

    Snell/Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM SOUTHEASTERN
    ALABAMA TO UPSTATE SOUTH CAROLINA...

    As the previous shortwave trough kicks to the northeast, a stronger
    mid-level trough will dig quickly out of the Rockies into the
    Southern Plains by Tuesday morning with sights downstream on areas
    east of the Mississippi. Increasing meridional flow ahead of the
    digging trough will aid in the advection of deep moisture poleward
    with the initial surge propagating north out of the Gulf through
    the Southeast by Tuesday afternoon, eventually spreading northward
    into the Southern and Central Mid Atlantic the second half of the
    period. The advection pattern will be sufficient in increasing
    regional mid-level instability as profile moisture saturates deeper
    into the profile across the areas above. PWAT anomalies on the
    order of 2-3 deviations above normal will be common over parts of
    GA spreading up through the neighboring Carolinas, eventually
    surging into the Central Mid Atlantic and Northeastern U.S by the
    end of the D2 cycle. This will prime several areas for heavy
    rainfall prospects as the final ingredients come to together for a
    locally enhanced precip pattern.

    The trough to the west will begin tilting more neutral with a
    strengthening upper jet positioning allowing for large scale ascent
    to increase in earnest as we move into Tuesday afternoon and
    beyond. The main trigger for a line of enhanced convection will
    form at the hands of a strong surface cold front that will shove
    eastward beneath an intensifying surface low that develops in
    conjunction to the favorable upper level evolution. Current
    deterministic sfc to 850mb wind field indicates a corridor of
    backed flow across much of GA into the Carolinas during Tuesday
    evening ahead of the cold front allowing for widespread rainfall to
    develop downstream of the approaching front. As the cold front
    swings eastward by late Tuesday night through early Wednesday, the
    peak rainfall rates will be occurring across the Carolina Piedmont
    down through Central GA, aligning with the cold front as it moves
    through the region. The eventual heavy rain footprint will spread
    northeastward into the Southern Mid Atlantic with locally heavy
    rainfall impacting areas as far north as Virginia with some lighter
    precip making headway into areas further north. Places across
    Southwestern VA down to the I-40 corridor in NC will see anywhere
    from 1-2" of rainfall with locally higher further south through the
    zone. 2-3" with local totals to 4" will be plausible for the area
    extending from Southeastern AL through Central GA into Upstate SC,
    an area more prone to flash flood prospects thanks to the
    complexity of the local terrain.

    This signal has been prevalent over the past series of
    deterministic model outputs and is now firmly within the ensemble
    mean as bias corrected ENS now supports 2.5-3" through much of the
    area outlined above in the 2-3" forecast. The saving grace in this
    setup is the time of year allowing for lower surface based
    instability parameters and very dry antecedent conditions leading
    into the event. This allowed for a SLGT risk to be sufficient for
    the setup, a carry over from the previous forecast. The MRGL risk
    still extends into VA where the northern periphery of the heavy
    rainfall is expected.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    As the longwave pattern evolves further, the neutral-tilted trough
    from previous D2 time frame will enhance further with the mean
    trough taking on a more negative tilt allowing for enhanced surface
    low strengthening as the surface low progresses northward into New
    England and eventually Quebec. PWAT anomalies on the order of 2-3
    deviations above normal will quickly progress northward
    encompassing much of New England by Wednesday afternoon, even
    getting up towards +4 deviations as we move into Wednesday night
    over Northern New England from NH through ME. This pattern is
    textbook for a corridor of heavy rainfall to spread from the Mid
    Atlantic through all of the Northeast with the primary areas of
    interest location along and ahead of the cold front that will sweep
    eastward during the forecast period. Portions of Western NY state
    and Northern PA will eventually change to winter precipitation
    allowing for a decay in flash flood concerns, however areas
    downstream will be under a respectable deluge of rainfall prior to
    the rain threat ceasing in wake of the front.

    Totals of 1.5-2.5" of rain are forecast across much of Long Island
    up through Southern New England, eventually moving up through ME
    as we close out the forecast period. 1-2" is forecast for points
    further west, but those areas also have the added snow melt factors
    that will play into the flooding concerns as high dewpoints and
    heavy rain will promote rapid snow melt for places in the interior
    over VT/NH and the neighboring Berkshires in MA. The expectations
    are for some creeks and smaller streams to become problematic in
    the setup and could cause localized flood concerns during the peak
    of the heavy rainfall. The rivers across New England can thankfully
    take a decent surge of moisture after a very dry fall, so the
    prospects of significant flooding are very low at this point.

    The setup is still worthy of a large SLGT risk encompassing much
    of New England with the best threats likely over urbanized areas in
    LI and Southern New England and over those zones in the interior
    where rapid snow melt has historical precedence for localized
    flash flood concerns. A MRGL risk will encompass the SLGT risk
    across Northeast with an extension down into Central and Eastern NC
    as the early portion of the forecast period will still see
    moderate to heavy rainfall Wednesday morning before pulling
    northward.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4CUhjTUNIaWBjvq76twcBuSvY740aMsvkzW5aAYQPKKB= S669LKH1pwMtDcPXMxVwAK8E1J_sZyz59tl-kWxOpaxaDDw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4CUhjTUNIaWBjvq76twcBuSvY740aMsvkzW5aAYQPKKB= S669LKH1pwMtDcPXMxVwAK8E1J_sZyz59tl-kWxOxDVGZos$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4CUhjTUNIaWBjvq76twcBuSvY740aMsvkzW5aAYQPKKB= S669LKH1pwMtDcPXMxVwAK8E1J_sZyz59tl-kWxOQz18k0w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 9 19:55:34 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 091955
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    255 PM EST Mon Dec 9 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Dec 09 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    Current radar and surface observations indicate the ongoing
    forecast on track with southwest-east oriented bands of showers
    and storms impacting the central Gulf Coast with brief periods of
    training and hourly rainfall rates up to 2". Overall the pattern
    evolution will continue to point to a benign instability axis
    (MUCAPE ~500-1000 J/kg) being confined closer to the Gulf with
    sufficient deep layer shear and moisture presence (PWATs of
    1.5-2.0" and b/w +1 to +2 deviations) allowing for a small area of
    convective development capable of locally enhanced rainfall rates
    for flash flood potential. Given the overall antecedent dry
    conditions prior, the prospects of flash flooding will likely be
    relegated to more urban settings along the Central Gulf coast,
    including places such as New Orleans, Biloxi, and Mobile. A few
    other Parishes within Southeastern LA also contain areas that
    experience a bit easier ability to flash flood given some of the
    above urbanization factors, so the previous SLGT risk was
    maintained with only some minor modifications made to the overall
    risk area.

    Latest 12z HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall are
    in the 20-40% range with highest prospects likely between 1-2"
    when taking relevant CAMs into account. With coordination from the
    local WFOs along the Gulf Coast earlier for the SLGT risk, there
    was no need to deviate much from what was proposed in the previous
    forecasts. Best chances will reside from training echoes on
    persistent west- southwest flow during the diurnal instability
    maximum, carrying into the evening before the setup decays prior to
    the next period of relevant convection for D2.

    Snell/Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM SOUTHEASTERN
    ALABAMA TO UPSTATE SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...1930 UTC Update...
    Minimal (cosmetic) changes made to the Day 2 ERO based on the
    latest guidance suite. Within the Slight Risk area, blend of
    operational guidance continues to show areal average totals between
    2-3 inches, with locally higher totals per the CAMs. Continues to
    look like a low-end Slight however (neighborhood exceedance
    probabilities closer to 15% vs. 40%), considering the lack of
    deep-layer instability which will limit the short-term rainfall
    rates.

    Hurley

    ...Previous Discussion...
    As the previous shortwave trough kicks to the northeast, a stronger
    mid-level trough will dig quickly out of the Rockies into the=20
    Southern Plains by Tuesday morning with sights downstream on areas=20
    east of the Mississippi. Increasing meridional flow ahead of the=20
    digging trough will aid in the advection of deep moisture poleward=20
    with the initial surge propagating north out of the Gulf through=20
    the Southeast by Tuesday afternoon, eventually spreading northward=20
    into the Southern and Central Mid Atlantic the second half of the=20
    period. The advection pattern will be sufficient in increasing=20
    regional mid-level instability as profile moisture saturates deeper
    into the profile across the areas above. PWAT anomalies on the=20
    order of 2-3 deviations above normal will be common over parts of=20
    GA spreading up through the neighboring Carolinas, eventually=20
    surging into the Central Mid Atlantic and Northeastern U.S by the=20
    end of the D2 cycle. This will prime several areas for heavy=20
    rainfall prospects as the final ingredients come to together for a=20
    locally enhanced precip pattern.

    The trough to the west will begin tilting more neutral with a
    strengthening upper jet positioning allowing for large scale ascent
    to increase in earnest as we move into Tuesday afternoon and
    beyond. The main trigger for a line of enhanced convection will
    form at the hands of a strong surface cold front that will shove
    eastward beneath an intensifying surface low that develops in
    conjunction to the favorable upper level evolution. Current
    deterministic sfc to 850mb wind field indicates a corridor of
    backed flow across much of GA into the Carolinas during Tuesday
    evening ahead of the cold front allowing for widespread rainfall to
    develop downstream of the approaching front. As the cold front
    swings eastward by late Tuesday night through early Wednesday, the
    peak rainfall rates will be occurring across the Carolina Piedmont
    down through Central GA, aligning with the cold front as it moves
    through the region. The eventual heavy rain footprint will spread
    northeastward into the Southern Mid Atlantic with locally heavy
    rainfall impacting areas as far north as Virginia with some lighter
    precip making headway into areas further north. Places across
    Southwestern VA down to the I-40 corridor in NC will see anywhere
    from 1-2" of rainfall with locally higher further south through the
    zone. 2-3" with local totals to 4" will be plausible for the area
    extending from Southeastern AL through Central GA into Upstate SC,
    an area more prone to flash flood prospects thanks to the
    complexity of the local terrain.

    This signal has been prevalent over the past series of
    deterministic model outputs and is now firmly within the ensemble
    mean as bias corrected ENS now supports 2.5-3" through much of the
    area outlined above in the 2-3" forecast. The saving grace in this
    setup is the time of year allowing for lower surface based
    instability parameters and very dry antecedent conditions leading
    into the event. This allowed for a SLGT risk to be sufficient for
    the setup, a carry over from the previous forecast. The MRGL risk
    still extends into VA where the northern periphery of the heavy
    rainfall is expected.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    ...1930 UTC Update...
    Minimal changes made to the Day 3 ERO based on the latest guidance
    suite. One of the more notable tweaks was to extend the Marginal
    Risk a little farther s-sw to include more of the NC Piedmont and
    the Charlotte metro region. This is because the event (heavier
    rainfall) will be ongoing Wed morning in that area. TPW anomalies
    across New England during Day 3 peak between 4-4.5 standard deviations
    above normal per the NAEFS, where areal-average totals between 2-3"
    are still expected within the Slight Risk area. Once again, as with
    the Slight Risk area on Day 2, the main inhibitor for flash
    flooding will be the lack of elevated instability and thus cap on
    short-term rainfall rates.=20

    Hurley

    ...Previous Discussion...
    As the longwave pattern evolves further, the neutral-tilted trough
    from previous D2 time frame will enhance further with the mean=20
    trough taking on a more negative tilt allowing for enhanced surface
    low strengthening as the surface low progresses northward into New
    England and eventually Quebec. PWAT anomalies on the order of 2-3=20
    deviations above normal will quickly progress northward=20
    encompassing much of New England by Wednesday afternoon, even=20
    getting up towards +4 deviations as we move into Wednesday night=20
    over Northern New England from NH through ME. This pattern is=20
    textbook for a corridor of heavy rainfall to spread from the Mid=20
    Atlantic through all of the Northeast with the primary areas of=20
    interest location along and ahead of the cold front that will sweep
    eastward during the forecast period. Portions of Western NY state=20
    and Northern PA will eventually change to winter precipitation=20
    allowing for a decay in flash flood concerns, however areas=20
    downstream will be under a respectable deluge of rainfall prior to=20
    the rain threat ceasing in wake of the front.

    Totals of 1.5-2.5" of rain are forecast across much of Long Island
    up through Southern New England, eventually moving up through ME
    as we close out the forecast period. 1-2" is forecast for points
    further west, but those areas also have the added snow melt factors
    that will play into the flooding concerns as high dewpoints and
    heavy rain will promote rapid snow melt for places in the interior
    over VT/NH and the neighboring Berkshires in MA. The expectations
    are for some creeks and smaller streams to become problematic in
    the setup and could cause localized flood concerns during the peak
    of the heavy rainfall. The rivers across New England can thankfully
    take a decent surge of moisture after a very dry fall, so the
    prospects of significant flooding are very low at this point.

    The setup is still worthy of a large SLGT risk encompassing much
    of New England with the best threats likely over urbanized areas in
    LI and Southern New England and over those zones in the interior
    where rapid snow melt has historical precedence for localized
    flash flood concerns. A MRGL risk will encompass the SLGT risk
    across Northeast with an extension down into Central and Eastern NC
    as the early portion of the forecast period will still see
    moderate to heavy rainfall Wednesday morning before pulling
    northward.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5p4ZIKz1GdsVc9JBavSpwL6p9Cu5wM9ksJBBkdB2iBDr= PFEy4To3GNv9tTLjwx8o3Nb9MZSQAQ1FRtmUQN1rgdB-8hA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5p4ZIKz1GdsVc9JBavSpwL6p9Cu5wM9ksJBBkdB2iBDr= PFEy4To3GNv9tTLjwx8o3Nb9MZSQAQ1FRtmUQN1r3TR_tT0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5p4ZIKz1GdsVc9JBavSpwL6p9Cu5wM9ksJBBkdB2iBDr= PFEy4To3GNv9tTLjwx8o3Nb9MZSQAQ1FRtmUQN1rp4IniKA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 10 00:08:54 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 100008
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    708 PM EST Mon Dec 9 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...01z update...
    Overall trends have continued to reduce in coverage/intensity in
    the short-term but overall environment remains fairly
    similar/unchanged with respect to deep layer moisture and
    unidirectional flow. The main factor for additional potential=20
    flash flooding through the evening into overnight period will be=20
    embedded short-wave/upper-level jet streaks moving through the mid
    to upper-level southwesterly flow. GOES-E/W WV suite and GOES=20
    derived Atmospheric Motion Vectors (AMVs) suggest at least one more
    solid pulse of upper-level divergence to support broader ascent. In
    addition, it will aid to maintain, perhaps strengthen sfc to 850mb
    moisture flux/inflow aiding convergence for additional development
    as well as, potential for back-building of said thunderstorms.=20
    This will allow for short periods of training and localized 1-3"=20
    totals across LA into far S MS; where this could intersect with=20
    areas of recent heavy rain today with lowered FFG and may re-=20
    activate flooding conditions. As such, small adjustments were main
    to the Marginal and Slight Risk areas. (For additional short-term=20 mesoanalysis please refer to WPC MPD 1169).=20

    Gallina

    ----Prior Discussions----
    Current radar and surface observations indicate
    the ongoing forecast on track with southwest-east oriented bands=20
    of showers and storms impacting the central Gulf Coast with brief=20
    periods of training and hourly rainfall rates up to 2". Overall=20
    the pattern evolution will continue to point to a benign=20
    instability axis (MUCAPE ~500-1000 J/kg) being confined closer to=20
    the Gulf with sufficient deep layer shear and moisture presence=20
    (PWATs of 1.5-2.0" and b/w +1 to +2 deviations) allowing for a=20
    small area of convective development capable of locally enhanced=20
    rainfall rates for flash flood potential. Given the overall=20
    antecedent dry conditions prior, the prospects of flash flooding=20
    will likely be relegated to more urban settings along the Central=20
    Gulf coast, including places such as New Orleans, Biloxi, and=20
    Mobile. A few other Parishes within Southeastern LA also contain=20
    areas that experience a bit easier ability to flash flood given=20
    some of the above urbanization factors, so the previous SLGT risk=20
    was maintained with only some minor modifications made to the=20
    overall risk area.

    Latest 12z HREF neighborhood probabilities for >3" of rainfall are
    in the 20-40% range with highest prospects likely between 1-2"
    when taking relevant CAMs into account. With coordination from the
    local WFOs along the Gulf Coast earlier for the SLGT risk, there
    was no need to deviate much from what was proposed in the previous
    forecasts. Best chances will reside from training echoes on
    persistent west- southwest flow during the diurnal instability
    maximum, carrying into the evening before the setup decays prior to
    the next period of relevant convection for D2.

    Snell/Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM SOUTHEASTERN
    ALABAMA TO UPSTATE SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...1930 UTC Update...
    Minimal (cosmetic) changes made to the Day 2 ERO based on the
    latest guidance suite. Within the Slight Risk area, blend of
    operational guidance continues to show areal average totals between
    2-3 inches, with locally higher totals per the CAMs. Continues to
    look like a low-end Slight however (neighborhood exceedance
    probabilities closer to 15% vs. 40%), considering the lack of
    deep-layer instability which will limit the short-term rainfall
    rates.

    Hurley

    ...Previous Discussion...
    As the previous shortwave trough kicks to the northeast, a stronger
    mid-level trough will dig quickly out of the Rockies into the
    Southern Plains by Tuesday morning with sights downstream on areas
    east of the Mississippi. Increasing meridional flow ahead of the
    digging trough will aid in the advection of deep moisture poleward
    with the initial surge propagating north out of the Gulf through
    the Southeast by Tuesday afternoon, eventually spreading northward
    into the Southern and Central Mid Atlantic the second half of the
    period. The advection pattern will be sufficient in increasing
    regional mid-level instability as profile moisture saturates deeper
    into the profile across the areas above. PWAT anomalies on the
    order of 2-3 deviations above normal will be common over parts of
    GA spreading up through the neighboring Carolinas, eventually
    surging into the Central Mid Atlantic and Northeastern U.S by the
    end of the D2 cycle. This will prime several areas for heavy
    rainfall prospects as the final ingredients come to together for a
    locally enhanced precip pattern.

    The trough to the west will begin tilting more neutral with a
    strengthening upper jet positioning allowing for large scale ascent
    to increase in earnest as we move into Tuesday afternoon and
    beyond. The main trigger for a line of enhanced convection will
    form at the hands of a strong surface cold front that will shove
    eastward beneath an intensifying surface low that develops in
    conjunction to the favorable upper level evolution. Current
    deterministic sfc to 850mb wind field indicates a corridor of
    backed flow across much of GA into the Carolinas during Tuesday
    evening ahead of the cold front allowing for widespread rainfall to
    develop downstream of the approaching front. As the cold front
    swings eastward by late Tuesday night through early Wednesday, the
    peak rainfall rates will be occurring across the Carolina Piedmont
    down through Central GA, aligning with the cold front as it moves
    through the region. The eventual heavy rain footprint will spread
    northeastward into the Southern Mid Atlantic with locally heavy
    rainfall impacting areas as far north as Virginia with some lighter
    precip making headway into areas further north. Places across
    Southwestern VA down to the I-40 corridor in NC will see anywhere
    from 1-2" of rainfall with locally higher further south through the
    zone. 2-3" with local totals to 4" will be plausible for the area
    extending from Southeastern AL through Central GA into Upstate SC,
    an area more prone to flash flood prospects thanks to the
    complexity of the local terrain.

    This signal has been prevalent over the past series of
    deterministic model outputs and is now firmly within the ensemble
    mean as bias corrected ENS now supports 2.5-3" through much of the
    area outlined above in the 2-3" forecast. The saving grace in this
    setup is the time of year allowing for lower surface based
    instability parameters and very dry antecedent conditions leading
    into the event. This allowed for a SLGT risk to be sufficient for
    the setup, a carry over from the previous forecast. The MRGL risk
    still extends into VA where the northern periphery of the heavy
    rainfall is expected.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    ...1930 UTC Update...
    Minimal changes made to the Day 3 ERO based on the latest guidance
    suite. One of the more notable tweaks was to extend the Marginal
    Risk a little farther s-sw to include more of the NC Piedmont and
    the Charlotte metro region. This is because the event (heavier
    rainfall) will be ongoing Wed morning in that area. TPW anomalies
    across New England during Day 3 peak between 4-4.5 standard deviations
    above normal per the NAEFS, where areal-average totals between 2-3"
    are still expected within the Slight Risk area. Once again, as with
    the Slight Risk area on Day 2, the main inhibitor for flash
    flooding will be the lack of elevated instability and thus cap on
    short-term rainfall rates.

    Hurley

    ...Previous Discussion...
    As the longwave pattern evolves further, the neutral-tilted trough
    from previous D2 time frame will enhance further with the mean
    trough taking on a more negative tilt allowing for enhanced surface
    low strengthening as the surface low progresses northward into New
    England and eventually Quebec. PWAT anomalies on the order of 2-3
    deviations above normal will quickly progress northward
    encompassing much of New England by Wednesday afternoon, even
    getting up towards +4 deviations as we move into Wednesday night
    over Northern New England from NH through ME. This pattern is
    textbook for a corridor of heavy rainfall to spread from the Mid
    Atlantic through all of the Northeast with the primary areas of
    interest location along and ahead of the cold front that will sweep
    eastward during the forecast period. Portions of Western NY state
    and Northern PA will eventually change to winter precipitation
    allowing for a decay in flash flood concerns, however areas
    downstream will be under a respectable deluge of rainfall prior to
    the rain threat ceasing in wake of the front.

    Totals of 1.5-2.5" of rain are forecast across much of Long Island
    up through Southern New England, eventually moving up through ME
    as we close out the forecast period. 1-2" is forecast for points
    further west, but those areas also have the added snow melt factors
    that will play into the flooding concerns as high dewpoints and
    heavy rain will promote rapid snow melt for places in the interior
    over VT/NH and the neighboring Berkshires in MA. The expectations
    are for some creeks and smaller streams to become problematic in
    the setup and could cause localized flood concerns during the peak
    of the heavy rainfall. The rivers across New England can thankfully
    take a decent surge of moisture after a very dry fall, so the
    prospects of significant flooding are very low at this point.

    The setup is still worthy of a large SLGT risk encompassing much
    of New England with the best threats likely over urbanized areas in
    LI and Southern New England and over those zones in the interior
    where rapid snow melt has historical precedence for localized
    flash flood concerns. A MRGL risk will encompass the SLGT risk
    across Northeast with an extension down into Central and Eastern NC
    as the early portion of the forecast period will still see
    moderate to heavy rainfall Wednesday morning before pulling
    northward.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7GIOiK5MiwEg8nJ9pINt6GkHQkm7IIeUYHsRhVLXbXWv= 1PvL8KBfssW_65QiLfkUbGdybGZIxOSwI3TXpIvNRAy6XX8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7GIOiK5MiwEg8nJ9pINt6GkHQkm7IIeUYHsRhVLXbXWv= 1PvL8KBfssW_65QiLfkUbGdybGZIxOSwI3TXpIvNQqsJOFo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7GIOiK5MiwEg8nJ9pINt6GkHQkm7IIeUYHsRhVLXbXWv= 1PvL8KBfssW_65QiLfkUbGdybGZIxOSwI3TXpIvN9QfJBsc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 10 07:56:58 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 100756
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    256 AM EST Tue Dec 10 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL ALABAMA
    THROUGH PORTIONS OF THE WESTERN CAROLINAS...

    The overall synoptic pattern remains on track to deliver a swath of
    heavier rainfall to portions of the Southeast and Southern Mid
    Atlantic during the period. A strong mid- level trough is currently
    analyzed over the Four Corners region, digging quickly to the
    southeast with sights on the Southern Plains by later this morning.=20
    As the mean trough pivots across the Southern Plains near OK/TX,=20=20 increasing meridional flow ahead of the digging trough will aid in
    the advection of deep moisture poleward with the initial surge=20
    propagating north out of the Gulf through the Southeast by the=20=20
    afternoon, eventually spreading northward into the Southern and=20
    Central Mid Atlantic the second half of the period. The advection=20
    pattern will be sufficient in increasing regional mid- level=20
    instability as moisture saturates deeper into the profile across=20
    the areas above. PWAT anomalies on the order of 2-3 deviations=20
    above normal will be common over parts of GA spreading up through=20
    the neighboring Carolinas, eventually surging into the Central Mid=20
    Atlantic and Northeastern U.S by the end of the D1 cycle. This=20
    will prime several areas for heavy rainfall prospects as the final=20 ingredients come to together for a locally enhanced precip pattern.

    The trough to the west will begin tilting more neutral with a
    strengthening upper jet positioning allowing for large scale ascent
    to increase in earnest as we move into the afternoon hours and=20
    beyond. The main trigger for a line of enhanced convection will=20
    form at the hands of a strong surface cold front that will shove=20
    eastward beneath an intensifying surface low that develops in=20
    conjunction to the favorable upper level evolution. Current=20
    deterministic sfc to 850mb wind field indicates a corridor of=20
    backed flow across much of GA into the Carolinas during Tuesday=20
    evening ahead of the cold front allowing for widespread rainfall to
    develop downstream of the approaching front. As the cold front=20
    swings eastward by late Tuesday night through early Wednesday, the=20
    peak rainfall rates will be occurring across the Carolina Piedmont=20
    down through central GA into portions of east-central AL, aligning
    with the cold front as it moves through the region. The eventual=20
    heavy rain footprint will spread northeastward into the Southern=20
    Mid Atlantic with locally heavy rainfall impacting areas as far=20
    north as southwestern Virginia with some lighter precip making=20
    headway into areas further north.=20

    Recent 00z HREF output remains steadfast with the prospects of a
    widespread 1-3" of rainfall across a large chunk of the Southeast
    into the Highlands of the Western Carolinas with the northern
    extension of any maxima peeking into southwestern Virginia where
    some of the terrain will make use of the southeasterly upslope
    component to the wind field. Probability fields in both the
    neighborhood and EAS realm are pretty solid when it comes to the
    potential with the latter of which indicating a well-defined axis=20
    of 30-50% for at least 2", a signal prevalent historically for
    favored SLGT risks or higher for the current impact areas.
    Neighborhood probabilities are of course higher in percentile given
    how the prob field is calculated, however the most notable output
    is the very high 60-80% coverage for >3" and low-end probs of
    20-25% for up to 5" across the area southeast of Birmingham up
    through the Atlanta metro. This was a small shift northward in
    terms of the heaviest QPF axis from previous forecasts and align
    well with the latest ECMWF and GFS ML outputs, a testament to
    increasing agreement within the deterministic on where the heaviest
    rainfall will occur. The saving grace from this setup being a more
    prolific outcome is the lack of sufficient surface based
    instability that tends to add a greater convective element to the
    rainfall rates that shift the signal to a higher-end risk threat.
    Thankfully, that is not the case here, so the threat does remain a
    bit capped on the upper bound of potential.

    The previous SLGT risk was adjusted a bit further northwest across
    AL/GA to reflect the change within the axis of heaviest rainfall=20
    putting the Atlanta metro squarely within the SLGT risk forecast.=20
    The SLGT remains firmly in-place across Upstate SC with a general=20
    northward extension into the Appalachian front of southwestern NC
    as well as small eastward expansion into the Charlotte metro to
    atone for the higher QPF being signaled as of the latest 00z
    guidance (All in coordination with the local WFO in=20
    Greenville/Spartanburg). The MRGL risk remains generally in a=20
    similar place compared to previous forecast, but some minor=20
    adjustments to the northwest across AL and northward a bit further=20
    into western VA with the most notable inclusion of the Birmingham=20
    metro where the urban flash flood threat will lie right on the edge
    where guidance is depicting the heaviest rainfall.=20

    Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    The previous forecast remains largely unchanged as the synoptic
    regime anticipated for mid-week continues to trend favorable for
    heavy rainfall across much of the Northeast and Mid Atlantic. The=20
    neutral- tilted trough from previous D1 time frame will enhance=20
    further with the mean trough taking on a more negative tilt=20
    allowing for enhanced surface low strengthening as the surface low=20 progresses northward into New England and eventually Quebec. PWAT=20
    anomalies on the order of 2-3 deviations above normal will quickly=20
    progress northward encompassing much of New England by Wednesday=20
    afternoon, even getting up towards +4 to +5 deviations as we move=20
    into Wednesday night over Northern New England from NH through ME.=20
    This pattern is textbook for a corridor of heavy rainfall to spread
    from the Mid Atlantic through all of the Northeast with the=20
    primary areas of interest located along and ahead of the cold front
    that will sweep eastward during the forecast period. Portions of=20
    Western NY state and Northern PA will eventually change to winter=20 precipitation allowing for a decay in flash flood concerns, however
    areas downstream will be under a respectable deluge of rainfall=20
    prior to the rain threat ceasing in wake of the front.

    Totals of 2-3.5" of rain are forecast across much of Long Island=20
    up through Southern New England, eventually moving up through ME as
    we close out the forecast period. 1-2" with locally higher amounts=20
    are forecast for points further west, but those areas also have=20
    the added snow melt factors that will play into the flooding=20
    concerns as high dewpoints and heavy rain will promote rapid snow=20
    melt for places in the interior over VT/NH and the neighboring=20
    Berkshires in MA. The expectations are for some creeks and smaller=20
    streams to become problematic in the setup and could cause=20
    localized flood concerns during the peak of the heavy rainfall. The
    rivers across New England can thankfully take a decent surge of=20
    moisture after a very dry fall, so the prospects of significant=20
    flooding are lower than normal at this point.

    The previously inherited forecast was largely unchanged as the
    setup and subsequent forecast is still worthy of a large SLGT risk
    encompassing much of New England with the best threats likely over
    urbanized areas in LI and Southern New England and over those=20
    zones in the interior where rapid snow melt has historical=20
    precedence for localized flash flood concerns. A MRGL risk will=20
    encompass the SLGT risk across Northeast with an extension down=20
    into Central and Northeastern NC as the early portion of the=20
    forecast period will still see moderate to heavy rainfall Wednesday
    morning before pulling northward.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.=20

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7S5fGphiS3QezPr1KU0yMpAccyf4DGGKKWMoUK2BPBoH= V_vUTOJbRUjFzljWbAdmgg0i55ZD_xulKEtBtVZO1B1pxXA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7S5fGphiS3QezPr1KU0yMpAccyf4DGGKKWMoUK2BPBoH= V_vUTOJbRUjFzljWbAdmgg0i55ZD_xulKEtBtVZOtOAM464$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7S5fGphiS3QezPr1KU0yMpAccyf4DGGKKWMoUK2BPBoH= V_vUTOJbRUjFzljWbAdmgg0i55ZD_xulKEtBtVZOHeDvYJ8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 10 15:56:42 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 101556
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1056 AM EST Tue Dec 10 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM SOUTHEAST MS=20
    AND CENTRAL AL THROUGH PORTIONS OF THE WESTERN CAROLINAS...

    16z Update...
    Only minor changes made to the prior day 1 outlook was to extend
    the SLGT towards the southwest across more of southern AL and into
    far southeast MS based on radar trends and 12z CAMs. 12z HREF has
    modest probabilities (20-40%) for 6-hourly totals to exceed 3"=20
    (also the 6-hr FFG in the region) into the evening hours. Hourly=20
    rates across the entire Southeast and central Gulf Coast are not=20
    expected to be the concern with this system, but rather the=20
    training potential due to uniform southwesterly flow. See MPD #1172
    (valid through 2130z) for more information on the heavy rain=20
    potential from LA to GA. Otherwise, the previous discussion is=20
    still valid.

    Snell

    Previous Discussion...

    The overall synoptic pattern remains on track to deliver a swath of
    heavier rainfall to portions of the Southeast and Southern Mid
    Atlantic during the period. A strong mid- level trough is currently
    analyzed over the Four Corners region, digging quickly to the
    southeast with sights on the Southern Plains by later this morning.
    As the mean trough pivots across the Southern Plains near OK/TX,
    increasing meridional flow ahead of the digging trough will aid in
    the advection of deep moisture poleward with the initial surge
    propagating north out of the Gulf through the Southeast by the
    afternoon, eventually spreading northward into the Southern and
    Central Mid Atlantic the second half of the period. The advection
    pattern will be sufficient in increasing regional mid- level
    instability as moisture saturates deeper into the profile across
    the areas above. PWAT anomalies on the order of 2-3 deviations
    above normal will be common over parts of GA spreading up through
    the neighboring Carolinas, eventually surging into the Central Mid
    Atlantic and Northeastern U.S by the end of the D1 cycle. This
    will prime several areas for heavy rainfall prospects as the final
    ingredients come to together for a locally enhanced precip pattern.

    The trough to the west will begin tilting more neutral with a
    strengthening upper jet positioning allowing for large scale ascent
    to increase in earnest as we move into the afternoon hours and
    beyond. The main trigger for a line of enhanced convection will
    form at the hands of a strong surface cold front that will shove
    eastward beneath an intensifying surface low that develops in
    conjunction to the favorable upper level evolution. Current
    deterministic sfc to 850mb wind field indicates a corridor of
    backed flow across much of GA into the Carolinas during Tuesday
    evening ahead of the cold front allowing for widespread rainfall to
    develop downstream of the approaching front. As the cold front
    swings eastward by late Tuesday night through early Wednesday, the
    peak rainfall rates will be occurring across the Carolina Piedmont
    down through central GA into portions of east-central AL, aligning
    with the cold front as it moves through the region. The eventual
    heavy rain footprint will spread northeastward into the Southern
    Mid Atlantic with locally heavy rainfall impacting areas as far
    north as southwestern Virginia with some lighter precip making
    headway into areas further north.

    Recent 00z HREF output remains steadfast with the prospects of a
    widespread 1-3" of rainfall across a large chunk of the Southeast
    into the Highlands of the Western Carolinas with the northern
    extension of any maxima peeking into southwestern Virginia where
    some of the terrain will make use of the southeasterly upslope
    component to the wind field. Probability fields in both the
    neighborhood and EAS realm are pretty solid when it comes to the
    potential with the latter of which indicating a well-defined axis
    of 30-50% for at least 2", a signal prevalent historically for
    favored SLGT risks or higher for the current impact areas.
    Neighborhood probabilities are of course higher in percentile given
    how the prob field is calculated, however the most notable output
    is the very high 60-80% coverage for >3" and low-end probs of
    20-25% for up to 5" across the area southeast of Birmingham up
    through the Atlanta metro. This was a small shift northward in
    terms of the heaviest QPF axis from previous forecasts and align
    well with the latest ECMWF and GFS ML outputs, a testament to
    increasing agreement within the deterministic on where the heaviest
    rainfall will occur. The saving grace from this setup being a more
    prolific outcome is the lack of sufficient surface based
    instability that tends to add a greater convective element to the
    rainfall rates that shift the signal to a higher-end risk threat.
    Thankfully, that is not the case here, so the threat does remain a
    bit capped on the upper bound of potential.

    The previous SLGT risk was adjusted a bit further northwest across
    AL/GA to reflect the change within the axis of heaviest rainfall
    putting the Atlanta metro squarely within the SLGT risk forecast.
    The SLGT remains firmly in-place across Upstate SC with a general
    northward extension into the Appalachian front of southwestern NC
    as well as small eastward expansion into the Charlotte metro to
    atone for the higher QPF being signaled as of the latest 00z
    guidance (All in coordination with the local WFO in
    Greenville/Spartanburg). The MRGL risk remains generally in a
    similar place compared to previous forecast, but some minor
    adjustments to the northwest across AL and northward a bit further
    into western VA with the most notable inclusion of the Birmingham
    metro where the urban flash flood threat will lie right on the edge
    where guidance is depicting the heaviest rainfall.

    Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    The previous forecast remains largely unchanged as the synoptic
    regime anticipated for mid-week continues to trend favorable for
    heavy rainfall across much of the Northeast and Mid Atlantic. The
    neutral- tilted trough from previous D1 time frame will enhance
    further with the mean trough taking on a more negative tilt
    allowing for enhanced surface low strengthening as the surface low
    progresses northward into New England and eventually Quebec. PWAT
    anomalies on the order of 2-3 deviations above normal will quickly
    progress northward encompassing much of New England by Wednesday
    afternoon, even getting up towards +4 to +5 deviations as we move
    into Wednesday night over Northern New England from NH through ME.
    This pattern is textbook for a corridor of heavy rainfall to spread
    from the Mid Atlantic through all of the Northeast with the
    primary areas of interest located along and ahead of the cold front
    that will sweep eastward during the forecast period. Portions of
    Western NY state and Northern PA will eventually change to winter
    precipitation allowing for a decay in flash flood concerns, however
    areas downstream will be under a respectable deluge of rainfall
    prior to the rain threat ceasing in wake of the front.

    Totals of 2-3.5" of rain are forecast across much of Long Island
    up through Southern New England, eventually moving up through ME as
    we close out the forecast period. 1-2" with locally higher amounts
    are forecast for points further west, but those areas also have
    the added snow melt factors that will play into the flooding
    concerns as high dewpoints and heavy rain will promote rapid snow
    melt for places in the interior over VT/NH and the neighboring
    Berkshires in MA. The expectations are for some creeks and smaller
    streams to become problematic in the setup and could cause
    localized flood concerns during the peak of the heavy rainfall. The
    rivers across New England can thankfully take a decent surge of
    moisture after a very dry fall, so the prospects of significant
    flooding are lower than normal at this point.

    The previously inherited forecast was largely unchanged as the
    setup and subsequent forecast is still worthy of a large SLGT risk
    encompassing much of New England with the best threats likely over
    urbanized areas in LI and Southern New England and over those
    zones in the interior where rapid snow melt has historical
    precedence for localized flash flood concerns. A MRGL risk will
    encompass the SLGT risk across Northeast with an extension down
    into Central and Northeastern NC as the early portion of the
    forecast period will still see moderate to heavy rainfall Wednesday
    morning before pulling northward.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6TV0-sXcZjJbBVbZZYTFAY0aQ8s9R2CmvIBcUkwZ8MUz= Hz2k0Ck6Vlwdnw4c5p7qGvCTvnckRoi7BFm1YGxePsidlWk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6TV0-sXcZjJbBVbZZYTFAY0aQ8s9R2CmvIBcUkwZ8MUz= Hz2k0Ck6Vlwdnw4c5p7qGvCTvnckRoi7BFm1YGxeNQFxpcQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6TV0-sXcZjJbBVbZZYTFAY0aQ8s9R2CmvIBcUkwZ8MUz= Hz2k0Ck6Vlwdnw4c5p7qGvCTvnckRoi7BFm1YGxe8Lz1VZE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 10 20:10:23 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 102010
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    310 PM EST Tue Dec 10 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Dec 10 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM SOUTHEAST MS
    AND CENTRAL AL THROUGH PORTIONS OF THE WESTERN CAROLINAS...

    16z Update...
    Only minor changes made to the prior day 1 outlook was to extend
    the SLGT towards the southwest across more of southern AL and into
    far southeast MS based on radar trends and 12z CAMs. 12z HREF has
    modest probabilities (20-40%) for 6-hourly totals to exceed 3"
    (also the 6-hr FFG in the region) into the evening hours. Hourly
    rates across the entire Southeast and central Gulf Coast are not
    expected to be the concern with this system, but rather the
    training potential due to uniform southwesterly flow. See MPD #1172
    (valid through 2130z) for more information on the heavy rain
    potential from LA to GA. Otherwise, the previous discussion is
    still valid.

    Snell

    Previous Discussion...

    The overall synoptic pattern remains on track to deliver a swath of
    heavier rainfall to portions of the Southeast and Southern Mid
    Atlantic during the period. A strong mid- level trough is currently
    analyzed over the Four Corners region, digging quickly to the
    southeast with sights on the Southern Plains by later this morning.
    As the mean trough pivots across the Southern Plains near OK/TX,
    increasing meridional flow ahead of the digging trough will aid in
    the advection of deep moisture poleward with the initial surge
    propagating north out of the Gulf through the Southeast by the
    afternoon, eventually spreading northward into the Southern and
    Central Mid Atlantic the second half of the period. The advection
    pattern will be sufficient in increasing regional mid- level
    instability as moisture saturates deeper into the profile across
    the areas above. PWAT anomalies on the order of 2-3 deviations
    above normal will be common over parts of GA spreading up through
    the neighboring Carolinas, eventually surging into the Central Mid
    Atlantic and Northeastern U.S by the end of the D1 cycle. This
    will prime several areas for heavy rainfall prospects as the final
    ingredients come to together for a locally enhanced precip pattern.

    The trough to the west will begin tilting more neutral with a
    strengthening upper jet positioning allowing for large scale ascent
    to increase in earnest as we move into the afternoon hours and
    beyond. The main trigger for a line of enhanced convection will
    form at the hands of a strong surface cold front that will shove
    eastward beneath an intensifying surface low that develops in
    conjunction to the favorable upper level evolution. Current
    deterministic sfc to 850mb wind field indicates a corridor of
    backed flow across much of GA into the Carolinas during Tuesday
    evening ahead of the cold front allowing for widespread rainfall to
    develop downstream of the approaching front. As the cold front
    swings eastward by late Tuesday night through early Wednesday, the
    peak rainfall rates will be occurring across the Carolina Piedmont
    down through central GA into portions of east-central AL, aligning
    with the cold front as it moves through the region. The eventual
    heavy rain footprint will spread northeastward into the Southern
    Mid Atlantic with locally heavy rainfall impacting areas as far
    north as southwestern Virginia with some lighter precip making
    headway into areas further north.

    Recent 00z HREF output remains steadfast with the prospects of a
    widespread 1-3" of rainfall across a large chunk of the Southeast
    into the Highlands of the Western Carolinas with the northern
    extension of any maxima peeking into southwestern Virginia where
    some of the terrain will make use of the southeasterly upslope
    component to the wind field. Probability fields in both the
    neighborhood and EAS realm are pretty solid when it comes to the
    potential with the latter of which indicating a well-defined axis
    of 30-50% for at least 2", a signal prevalent historically for
    favored SLGT risks or higher for the current impact areas.
    Neighborhood probabilities are of course higher in percentile given
    how the prob field is calculated, however the most notable output
    is the very high 60-80% coverage for >3" and low-end probs of
    20-25% for up to 5" across the area southeast of Birmingham up
    through the Atlanta metro. This was a small shift northward in
    terms of the heaviest QPF axis from previous forecasts and align
    well with the latest ECMWF and GFS ML outputs, a testament to
    increasing agreement within the deterministic on where the heaviest
    rainfall will occur. The saving grace from this setup being a more
    prolific outcome is the lack of sufficient surface based
    instability that tends to add a greater convective element to the
    rainfall rates that shift the signal to a higher-end risk threat.
    Thankfully, that is not the case here, so the threat does remain a
    bit capped on the upper bound of potential.

    The previous SLGT risk was adjusted a bit further northwest across
    AL/GA to reflect the change within the axis of heaviest rainfall
    putting the Atlanta metro squarely within the SLGT risk forecast.
    The SLGT remains firmly in-place across Upstate SC with a general
    northward extension into the Appalachian front of southwestern NC
    as well as small eastward expansion into the Charlotte metro to
    atone for the higher QPF being signaled as of the latest 00z
    guidance (All in coordination with the local WFO in
    Greenville/Spartanburg). The MRGL risk remains generally in a
    similar place compared to previous forecast, but some minor
    adjustments to the northwest across AL and northward a bit further
    into western VA with the most notable inclusion of the Birmingham
    metro where the urban flash flood threat will lie right on the edge
    where guidance is depicting the heaviest rainfall.

    Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    20z Update: The below discussion still describes the situation
    well, and only minimal changes were made to the inherited
    ERO. Southern VT into central NH and ME will see the overlap of
    1-3" of rain and significant snow melt, likely leading to some
    flooding concerns. HREF supports hourly rainfall over this area=20
    approaching 0.5", which combined with the 0.25"-0.5" of hourly=20
    snow water equivalent melt shown in NOHRSC forecasts, could be=20
    enough to result in some areas of rapid onset flooding.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The previous forecast remains largely unchanged as the synoptic
    regime anticipated for mid-week continues to trend favorable for
    heavy rainfall across much of the Northeast and Mid Atlantic. The
    neutral- tilted trough from previous D1 time frame will enhance
    further with the mean trough taking on a more negative tilt
    allowing for enhanced surface low strengthening as the surface low
    progresses northward into New England and eventually Quebec. PWAT
    anomalies on the order of 2-3 deviations above normal will quickly
    progress northward encompassing much of New England by Wednesday
    afternoon, even getting up towards +4 to +5 deviations as we move
    into Wednesday night over Northern New England from NH through ME.
    This pattern is textbook for a corridor of heavy rainfall to spread
    from the Mid Atlantic through all of the Northeast with the
    primary areas of interest located along and ahead of the cold front
    that will sweep eastward during the forecast period. Portions of
    Western NY state and Northern PA will eventually change to winter
    precipitation allowing for a decay in flash flood concerns, however
    areas downstream will be under a respectable deluge of rainfall
    prior to the rain threat ceasing in wake of the front.

    Totals of 2-3.5" of rain are forecast across much of Long Island
    up through Southern New England, eventually moving up through ME as
    we close out the forecast period. 1-2" with locally higher amounts
    are forecast for points further west, but those areas also have
    the added snow melt factors that will play into the flooding
    concerns as high dewpoints and heavy rain will promote rapid snow
    melt for places in the interior over VT/NH and the neighboring
    Berkshires in MA. The expectations are for some creeks and smaller
    streams to become problematic in the setup and could cause
    localized flood concerns during the peak of the heavy rainfall. The
    rivers across New England can thankfully take a decent surge of
    moisture after a very dry fall, so the prospects of significant
    flooding are lower than normal at this point.

    The previously inherited forecast was largely unchanged as the
    setup and subsequent forecast is still worthy of a large SLGT risk
    encompassing much of New England with the best threats likely over
    urbanized areas in LI and Southern New England and over those
    zones in the interior where rapid snow melt has historical
    precedence for localized flash flood concerns. A MRGL risk will
    encompass the SLGT risk across Northeast with an extension down
    into Central and Northeastern NC as the early portion of the
    forecast period will still see moderate to heavy rainfall Wednesday
    morning before pulling northward.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6p28mFG3WiPHt3olx0Lh7xb1jeasq7pLsWRrResXA8Df= oSYfvp_O5i88gae76zTZm3Ra05VWmOuEQWe3s6Q5WNggy84$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6p28mFG3WiPHt3olx0Lh7xb1jeasq7pLsWRrResXA8Df= oSYfvp_O5i88gae76zTZm3Ra05VWmOuEQWe3s6Q5xa_72m0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6p28mFG3WiPHt3olx0Lh7xb1jeasq7pLsWRrResXA8Df= oSYfvp_O5i88gae76zTZm3Ra05VWmOuEQWe3s6Q5kIPSakg$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 11 00:41:35 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 110041
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    741 PM EST Tue Dec 10 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE=20
    WESTERN CAROLINAS...

    ...01Z Update...

    The Slight Risk area was trimmed to portions of the western
    Carolinas, while the southern end of the Marginal Risk area was
    trimmed from the west where the rain has ended and to the east
    where expected rainfall overnight is expected to be light enough to
    preclude any flooding concerns.

    The Slight Risk area was reduced to the western Carolinas this
    evening due to diminishing instability favoring mostly stratiform
    rainfall across the Southeast tonight. Isolated areas of heavy rain
    in the western Carolinas has made a few areas more flood prone,
    while topographic concerns can still result in flooding in the
    adjacent valleys. Thus, in coordination with GSP/Greer, SC forecast
    office the Slight Risk was maintained for this update.=20

    Wegman

    Previous Discussion...

    The overall synoptic pattern remains on track to deliver a swath of
    heavier rainfall to portions of the Southeast and Southern Mid
    Atlantic during the period. A strong mid- level trough is currently
    analyzed over the Four Corners region, digging quickly to the
    southeast with sights on the Southern Plains by later this morning.
    As the mean trough pivots across the Southern Plains near OK/TX,
    increasing meridional flow ahead of the digging trough will aid in
    the advection of deep moisture poleward with the initial surge
    propagating north out of the Gulf through the Southeast by the
    afternoon, eventually spreading northward into the Southern and
    Central Mid Atlantic the second half of the period. The advection
    pattern will be sufficient in increasing regional mid- level
    instability as moisture saturates deeper into the profile across
    the areas above. PWAT anomalies on the order of 2-3 deviations
    above normal will be common over parts of GA spreading up through
    the neighboring Carolinas, eventually surging into the Central Mid
    Atlantic and Northeastern U.S by the end of the D1 cycle. This
    will prime several areas for heavy rainfall prospects as the final
    ingredients come to together for a locally enhanced precip pattern.

    The trough to the west will begin tilting more neutral with a
    strengthening upper jet positioning allowing for large scale ascent
    to increase in earnest as we move into the afternoon hours and
    beyond. The main trigger for a line of enhanced convection will
    form at the hands of a strong surface cold front that will shove
    eastward beneath an intensifying surface low that develops in
    conjunction to the favorable upper level evolution. Current
    deterministic sfc to 850mb wind field indicates a corridor of
    backed flow across much of GA into the Carolinas during Tuesday
    evening ahead of the cold front allowing for widespread rainfall to
    develop downstream of the approaching front. As the cold front
    swings eastward by late Tuesday night through early Wednesday, the
    peak rainfall rates will be occurring across the Carolina Piedmont
    down through central GA into portions of east-central AL, aligning
    with the cold front as it moves through the region. The eventual
    heavy rain footprint will spread northeastward into the Southern
    Mid Atlantic with locally heavy rainfall impacting areas as far
    north as southwestern Virginia with some lighter precip making
    headway into areas further north.

    Recent 00z HREF output remains steadfast with the prospects of a
    widespread 1-3" of rainfall across a large chunk of the Southeast
    into the Highlands of the Western Carolinas with the northern
    extension of any maxima peeking into southwestern Virginia where
    some of the terrain will make use of the southeasterly upslope
    component to the wind field. Probability fields in both the
    neighborhood and EAS realm are pretty solid when it comes to the
    potential with the latter of which indicating a well-defined axis
    of 30-50% for at least 2", a signal prevalent historically for
    favored SLGT risks or higher for the current impact areas.
    Neighborhood probabilities are of course higher in percentile given
    how the prob field is calculated, however the most notable output
    is the very high 60-80% coverage for >3" and low-end probs of
    20-25% for up to 5" across the area southeast of Birmingham up
    through the Atlanta metro. This was a small shift northward in
    terms of the heaviest QPF axis from previous forecasts and align
    well with the latest ECMWF and GFS ML outputs, a testament to
    increasing agreement within the deterministic on where the heaviest
    rainfall will occur. The saving grace from this setup being a more
    prolific outcome is the lack of sufficient surface based
    instability that tends to add a greater convective element to the
    rainfall rates that shift the signal to a higher-end risk threat.
    Thankfully, that is not the case here, so the threat does remain a
    bit capped on the upper bound of potential.

    The previous SLGT risk was adjusted a bit further northwest across
    AL/GA to reflect the change within the axis of heaviest rainfall
    putting the Atlanta metro squarely within the SLGT risk forecast.
    The SLGT remains firmly in-place across Upstate SC with a general
    northward extension into the Appalachian front of southwestern NC
    as well as small eastward expansion into the Charlotte metro to
    atone for the higher QPF being signaled as of the latest 00z
    guidance (All in coordination with the local WFO in
    Greenville/Spartanburg). The MRGL risk remains generally in a
    similar place compared to previous forecast, but some minor
    adjustments to the northwest across AL and northward a bit further
    into western VA with the most notable inclusion of the Birmingham
    metro where the urban flash flood threat will lie right on the edge
    where guidance is depicting the heaviest rainfall.

    Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    20z Update: The below discussion still describes the situation
    well, and only minimal changes were made to the inherited
    ERO. Southern VT into central NH and ME will see the overlap of
    1-3" of rain and significant snow melt, likely leading to some
    flooding concerns. HREF supports hourly rainfall over this area
    approaching 0.5", which combined with the 0.25"-0.5" of hourly
    snow water equivalent melt shown in NOHRSC forecasts, could be
    enough to result in some areas of rapid onset flooding.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The previous forecast remains largely unchanged as the synoptic
    regime anticipated for mid-week continues to trend favorable for
    heavy rainfall across much of the Northeast and Mid Atlantic. The
    neutral- tilted trough from previous D1 time frame will enhance
    further with the mean trough taking on a more negative tilt
    allowing for enhanced surface low strengthening as the surface low
    progresses northward into New England and eventually Quebec. PWAT
    anomalies on the order of 2-3 deviations above normal will quickly
    progress northward encompassing much of New England by Wednesday
    afternoon, even getting up towards +4 to +5 deviations as we move
    into Wednesday night over Northern New England from NH through ME.
    This pattern is textbook for a corridor of heavy rainfall to spread
    from the Mid Atlantic through all of the Northeast with the
    primary areas of interest located along and ahead of the cold front
    that will sweep eastward during the forecast period. Portions of
    Western NY state and Northern PA will eventually change to winter
    precipitation allowing for a decay in flash flood concerns, however
    areas downstream will be under a respectable deluge of rainfall
    prior to the rain threat ceasing in wake of the front.

    Totals of 2-3.5" of rain are forecast across much of Long Island
    up through Southern New England, eventually moving up through ME as
    we close out the forecast period. 1-2" with locally higher amounts
    are forecast for points further west, but those areas also have
    the added snow melt factors that will play into the flooding
    concerns as high dewpoints and heavy rain will promote rapid snow
    melt for places in the interior over VT/NH and the neighboring
    Berkshires in MA. The expectations are for some creeks and smaller
    streams to become problematic in the setup and could cause
    localized flood concerns during the peak of the heavy rainfall. The
    rivers across New England can thankfully take a decent surge of
    moisture after a very dry fall, so the prospects of significant
    flooding are lower than normal at this point.

    The previously inherited forecast was largely unchanged as the
    setup and subsequent forecast is still worthy of a large SLGT risk
    encompassing much of New England with the best threats likely over
    urbanized areas in LI and Southern New England and over those
    zones in the interior where rapid snow melt has historical
    precedence for localized flash flood concerns. A MRGL risk will
    encompass the SLGT risk across Northeast with an extension down
    into Central and Northeastern NC as the early portion of the
    forecast period will still see moderate to heavy rainfall Wednesday
    morning before pulling northward.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-X8P93eWw1Bs3GgGcl-M71PMEVEzVvVJ1rHcpNB4ck4L= lI6Dyo9H5GVUCG2LVd2uZ9xNTAxaH96ngDyk-c9Y3fWLdb4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-X8P93eWw1Bs3GgGcl-M71PMEVEzVvVJ1rHcpNB4ck4L= lI6Dyo9H5GVUCG2LVd2uZ9xNTAxaH96ngDyk-c9YP9T7Fqg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-X8P93eWw1Bs3GgGcl-M71PMEVEzVvVJ1rHcpNB4ck4L= lI6Dyo9H5GVUCG2LVd2uZ9xNTAxaH96ngDyk-c9Y3k_8ENI$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 11 08:04:02 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 110803
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    303 AM EST Wed Dec 11 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    Potent longwave trough is currently aligned over the Mississippi
    Valley with a tilt closer to neutral as of the latest UA analysis.
    A vigorous 160kt speed max at 250mb was analyzed over the Ohio
    Valley on the leading side of the trough with sampled winds from
    the 00z KILN sounding indicating those 160kt winds are verified.
    This signals a very potent upper level evolution with an
    anticipated holding of strength the next few hrs before a further
    strengthening is anticipated later this morning and afternoon as
    the trough axis begins tilting more negative allowing for a jet
    buckling downstream as the speed max enters New England and
    Quebec. At the surface, multiple waves of low pressure are centered
    north to south from the eastern Great Lakes, down through the
    Southern Appalachians as they lie within the elongated cold front
    extending down from the northern low to the Central Gulf coast. The
    forecast is for these waves of low pressure to propagate northward
    during the next 3-6 hrs before the surface low over the lakes
    becomes the dominant SLP feature, strengthening rapidly as the
    trough buckles and the low pressure centered gets positioned firmly
    within the right entrance region of the very powerful jet over
    northeast North America.=20

    The evolution above will lead to a large swath of rainfall to
    encompass much of the area along and east of the Appalachian front
    with a trailing axis of convection situated over the southern half
    of the Carolinas down into FL as the precip aligns along and just
    ahead of the surface cold front. Frontal progression will lead to
    rainfall shifting eastward overtime, however the environment ahead
    of the front will be significantly enhanced with deep layer
    moisture advecting poleward well ahead of the mean trough. PWAT
    anomalies are already over +2 deviations across a good portion of
    the Northeast U.S down through the Southeast with anomalies
    expected to climb closer to +3/+4 deviations as me move into the
    late-morning afternoon hours over the Northern Mid Atlantic into
    New England. Assessment of local bufr soundings across Southern New
    England from Central LI up through CT/MA/NH/ME signal a deep, uni-
    directional wind field with modest theta_E advection occurring=20
    during the morning and afternoon time frame as the warm-conveyor=20
    points directly through the area with a well-defined warm front
    bisecting the area by 18z.=20

    The time frame between 18-00z will be the most significant time
    frame with regards to heavy rainfall potential across much of New
    England as the cold front begins racing eastward and the warm front
    tilts southwest to northeast from Western CT up through Southern
    ME. This alignment will become a focus of a strong, cold rain band
    that is textbook in these evolving inland synoptic pressure falls
    leading to a period where rainfall rates will be a solid 0.5-1"/hr
    extending within that convergence zone. The line will advance
    eastward eventually as the cold front approaches and kicks the
    convergence axis downstream leading to the heavy rain threat
    shifting more towards the coastal regions with sights on Eastern
    MA/NH/ME towards the 00-03z time frame. Backed flow off the
    Atlantic will aid in maintaining the convergent field along and
    ahead of the advancing front with heavy rains lingering until the
    front back finally pass through and the winds shift west to
    northwesterly ushering in colder air and stabilizing the mid-levels
    enough to limit the heavier precip. Prior to this occurring, a
    solid 2-3" with locally as high as 4" of rainfall are anticipated
    in the zone encompassing Central and Eastern LI, much of MA/NH and
    the western half of ME. Rapid snow melt will be a problem for=20
    areas located in the Northern Berkshires and Worcester Hills=20
    towards the MA/NH border extending northward as NOHRSC snow depth
    analysis pins a solid 2-4+" on the ground currently within those
    zones with over a foot in parts of NH/VT/Western ME. This will
    allow for potential small stream cresting and ice jam concerns in
    the interior that would exacerbate flood concerns during the
    heaviest of the precip time frame later this afternoon.=20

    An expanse of Flood Watches are positioned across much of the=20
    above areas, including all of VT as complex terrain and higher snow
    depths in the Green Mountains and surrounds leading to higher than
    normal flood potential, despite the heaviest rain footprint likely
    a bit further east. Considering the above variables and in
    coordination with local WFOs, the inherited SLGT risk was
    relatively unchanged with the only shift being an extension a bit
    further southwest into CT to cover for urban flood concerns within
    the axis of expected heavy rainfall during the cold frontal band
    being forecasted across much of the 00z CAMs suite. The MRGL risk
    still extends around the SLGT and further south into the Central
    Mid Atlantic and Carolinas with the primary concerns likely
    isolated urban flood potential, especially in the larger metro
    corridors like Raleigh, DC/Balt, and Philadelphia.=20

    Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWESTERN OREGON...

    Fairly robust disturbance over the Pacific will translate=20
    southeastward towards the North-Central CA coast by the end of the=20
    week with a persistent IVT pulse oriented southwest to northeast=20
    into the coastal plain over the course of the forecast period=20
    leading to waves of moderate precipitation to impact areas north of
    the Bay area. Current progs indicate precip totals on the order of
    2-4" with locally higher embedded within the coastal ranges=20
    spanning north of Santa Rosa. Current rates anticipated to be=20
    modest with upwards of 0.5-0.75"/hr at peak intensity lending to a=20
    lower end threat for flash flooding, however totals are significant
    enough to warrant a low-end threshold MRGL, mainly for the coastal
    urban areas of Northwest CA up through Southwestern OR where=20
    totals will be on the order of 2-4", especially into the windward areas
    of the Klamath Range. MRGL was generally maintained from previous
    forecast with only some minor modifications to align with the
    latest guidance.=20

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_R1LAZ0k8nxe_gRFMhKl5QN95_Gl_KcEJ_-b81yagPqK= OfLqUauJ5sfFLxHoHYyqdDEnjsvFKmZS4hFaSkAVH2W9CzY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_R1LAZ0k8nxe_gRFMhKl5QN95_Gl_KcEJ_-b81yagPqK= OfLqUauJ5sfFLxHoHYyqdDEnjsvFKmZS4hFaSkAVXzwA8J8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_R1LAZ0k8nxe_gRFMhKl5QN95_Gl_KcEJ_-b81yagPqK= OfLqUauJ5sfFLxHoHYyqdDEnjsvFKmZS4hFaSkAV8NUhnpw$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 11 15:41:11 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 111540
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1040 AM EST Wed Dec 11 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    ...1600 UTC Update...
    No changes made to the Day 1 ERO based on the latest (12Z) short-
    range guidance/trends, including the latest suite of HREF
    exceedance probabilities.

    Potent longwave trough will become more negatively tilted as it=20
    pivots into the Mid Atlantic-OH Valley-Great Lakes region later
    this evening. A vigorous 160kt speed max at 250mb was analyzed=20
    over the Ohio Valley on the leading side of the trough with sampled
    winds from the 00z KILN sounding indicating those 160kt winds are=20
    verified. This signals a very potent upper level evolution with an=20 anticipated holding of strength the next few hrs before a further=20 strengthening is anticipated later this morning and afternoon as=20
    the trough axis begins tilting more negative allowing for a jet=20
    buckling downstream as the speed max enters New England and Quebec.
    At the surface, multiple waves of low pressure are centered north=20
    to south from the eastern Great Lakes, down through the Southern=20 Appalachians as they lie within the elongated cold front extending=20
    down from the northern low to the Central Gulf coast. The forecast=20
    is for these waves of low pressure to propagate northward during=20
    the next 3-6 hrs before the surface low over the lakes becomes the=20
    dominant SLP feature, strengthening rapidly as the trough buckles=20
    and the low pressure centered gets positioned firmly within the=20
    right entrance region of the very powerful jet over northeast North
    America.

    The evolution above will lead to a large swath of rainfall to
    encompass much of the area along and east of the Appalachian front
    with a trailing axis of convection situated over the southern half
    of the Carolinas down into FL as the precip aligns along and just
    ahead of the surface cold front. Frontal progression will lead to
    rainfall shifting eastward overtime, however the environment ahead
    of the front will be significantly enhanced with deep layer
    moisture advecting poleward well ahead of the mean trough. PWAT
    anomalies are already over +2 deviations across a good portion of
    the Northeast U.S down through the Southeast with anomalies
    expected to climb closer to +3/+4 deviations as me move into the
    late-morning afternoon hours over the Northern Mid Atlantic into
    New England. Assessment of local bufr soundings across Southern New
    England from Central LI up through CT/MA/NH/ME signal a deep, uni-
    directional wind field with modest theta_E advection occurring
    during the morning and afternoon time frame as the warm-conveyor
    points directly through the area with a well-defined warm front
    bisecting the area by 18z.

    The time frame between 18-00z will be the most significant time
    frame with regards to heavy rainfall potential across much of New
    England as the cold front begins racing eastward and the warm front
    tilts southwest to northeast from Western CT up through Southern
    ME. This alignment will become a focus of a strong, cold rain band
    that is textbook in these evolving inland synoptic pressure falls
    leading to a period where rainfall rates will be a solid 0.5-1"/hr
    extending within that convergence zone. The line will advance
    eastward eventually as the cold front approaches and kicks the
    convergence axis downstream leading to the heavy rain threat
    shifting more towards the coastal regions with sights on Eastern
    MA/NH/ME towards the 00-03z time frame. Backed flow off the
    Atlantic will aid in maintaining the convergent field along and
    ahead of the advancing front with heavy rains lingering until the
    front back finally pass through and the winds shift west to
    northwesterly ushering in colder air and stabilizing the mid-levels
    enough to limit the heavier precip. Prior to this occurring, a
    solid 2-3" with locally as high as 4" of rainfall are anticipated
    in the zone encompassing Central and Eastern LI, much of MA/NH and
    the western half of ME. Rapid snow melt will be a problem for
    areas located in the Northern Berkshires and Worcester Hills
    towards the MA/NH border extending northward as NOHRSC snow depth
    analysis pins a solid 2-4+" on the ground currently within those
    zones with over a foot in parts of NH/VT/Western ME. This will
    allow for potential small stream cresting and ice jam concerns in
    the interior that would exacerbate flood concerns during the
    heaviest of the precip time frame later this afternoon.

    An expanse of Flood Watches are positioned across much of the
    above areas, including all of VT as complex terrain and higher snow
    depths in the Green Mountains and surrounds leading to higher than
    normal flood potential, despite the heaviest rain footprint likely
    a bit further east. Considering the above variables and in
    coordination with local WFOs, the inherited SLGT risk was
    relatively unchanged with the only shift being an extension a bit
    further southwest into CT to cover for urban flood concerns within
    the axis of expected heavy rainfall during the cold frontal band
    being forecasted across much of the 00z CAMs suite. The MRGL risk
    still extends around the SLGT and further south into the Central
    Mid Atlantic and Carolinas with the primary concerns likely
    isolated urban flood potential, especially in the larger metro
    corridors like Raleigh, DC/Balt, and Philadelphia.

    Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWESTERN OREGON...

    Fairly robust disturbance over the Pacific will translate
    southeastward towards the North-Central CA coast by the end of the
    week with a persistent IVT pulse oriented southwest to northeast
    into the coastal plain over the course of the forecast period
    leading to waves of moderate precipitation to impact areas north of
    the Bay area. Current progs indicate precip totals on the order of
    2-4" with locally higher embedded within the coastal ranges
    spanning north of Santa Rosa. Current rates anticipated to be
    modest with upwards of 0.5-0.75"/hr at peak intensity lending to a
    lower end threat for flash flooding, however totals are significant
    enough to warrant a low-end threshold MRGL, mainly for the coastal
    urban areas of Northwest CA up through Southwestern OR where
    totals will be on the order of 2-4", especially into the windward areas
    of the Klamath Range. MRGL was generally maintained from previous
    forecast with only some minor modifications to align with the
    latest guidance.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!76Hf2mOgWjmmZ8BaTYR4fVP6BTwE0ZVn9HgAjvbn-b8_= W8GmqGmzQi2zZotVQez3a49qtdMHHGYLV4Fdd_N6Nyirehk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!76Hf2mOgWjmmZ8BaTYR4fVP6BTwE0ZVn9HgAjvbn-b8_= W8GmqGmzQi2zZotVQez3a49qtdMHHGYLV4Fdd_N6BZZgYbc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!76Hf2mOgWjmmZ8BaTYR4fVP6BTwE0ZVn9HgAjvbn-b8_= W8GmqGmzQi2zZotVQez3a49qtdMHHGYLV4Fdd_N66hriT8o$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 11 19:51:40 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 111951
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    251 PM EST Wed Dec 11 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Dec 11 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM CENTRAL AND
    EASTERN LONG ISLAND UP THROUGH MUCH OF NEW ENGLAND...

    ...1600 UTC Update...
    No changes made to the Day 1 ERO based on the latest (12Z) short-
    range guidance/trends, including the latest suite of HREF
    exceedance probabilities.

    Potent longwave trough will become more negatively tilted as it
    pivots into the Mid Atlantic-OH Valley-Great Lakes region later
    this evening. A vigorous 160kt speed max at 250mb was analyzed
    over the Ohio Valley on the leading side of the trough with sampled
    winds from the 00z KILN sounding indicating those 160kt winds are
    verified. This signals a very potent upper level evolution with an
    anticipated holding of strength the next few hrs before a further
    strengthening is anticipated later this morning and afternoon as
    the trough axis begins tilting more negative allowing for a jet
    buckling downstream as the speed max enters New England and Quebec.
    At the surface, multiple waves of low pressure are centered north
    to south from the eastern Great Lakes, down through the Southern
    Appalachians as they lie within the elongated cold front extending
    down from the northern low to the Central Gulf coast. The forecast
    is for these waves of low pressure to propagate northward during
    the next 3-6 hrs before the surface low over the lakes becomes the
    dominant SLP feature, strengthening rapidly as the trough buckles
    and the low pressure centered gets positioned firmly within the
    right entrance region of the very powerful jet over northeast North
    America.

    The evolution above will lead to a large swath of rainfall to
    encompass much of the area along and east of the Appalachian front
    with a trailing axis of convection situated over the southern half
    of the Carolinas down into FL as the precip aligns along and just
    ahead of the surface cold front. Frontal progression will lead to
    rainfall shifting eastward overtime, however the environment ahead
    of the front will be significantly enhanced with deep layer
    moisture advecting poleward well ahead of the mean trough. PWAT
    anomalies are already over +2 deviations across a good portion of
    the Northeast U.S down through the Southeast with anomalies
    expected to climb closer to +3/+4 deviations as me move into the
    late-morning afternoon hours over the Northern Mid Atlantic into
    New England. Assessment of local bufr soundings across Southern New
    England from Central LI up through CT/MA/NH/ME signal a deep, uni-
    directional wind field with modest theta_E advection occurring
    during the morning and afternoon time frame as the warm-conveyor
    points directly through the area with a well-defined warm front
    bisecting the area by 18z.

    The time frame between 18-00z will be the most significant time
    frame with regards to heavy rainfall potential across much of New
    England as the cold front begins racing eastward and the warm front
    tilts southwest to northeast from Western CT up through Southern
    ME. This alignment will become a focus of a strong, cold rain band
    that is textbook in these evolving inland synoptic pressure falls
    leading to a period where rainfall rates will be a solid 0.5-1"/hr
    extending within that convergence zone. The line will advance
    eastward eventually as the cold front approaches and kicks the
    convergence axis downstream leading to the heavy rain threat
    shifting more towards the coastal regions with sights on Eastern
    MA/NH/ME towards the 00-03z time frame. Backed flow off the
    Atlantic will aid in maintaining the convergent field along and
    ahead of the advancing front with heavy rains lingering until the
    front back finally pass through and the winds shift west to
    northwesterly ushering in colder air and stabilizing the mid-levels
    enough to limit the heavier precip. Prior to this occurring, a
    solid 2-3" with locally as high as 4" of rainfall are anticipated
    in the zone encompassing Central and Eastern LI, much of MA/NH and
    the western half of ME. Rapid snow melt will be a problem for
    areas located in the Northern Berkshires and Worcester Hills
    towards the MA/NH border extending northward as NOHRSC snow depth
    analysis pins a solid 2-4+" on the ground currently within those
    zones with over a foot in parts of NH/VT/Western ME. This will
    allow for potential small stream cresting and ice jam concerns in
    the interior that would exacerbate flood concerns during the
    heaviest of the precip time frame later this afternoon.

    An expanse of Flood Watches are positioned across much of the
    above areas, including all of VT as complex terrain and higher snow
    depths in the Green Mountains and surrounds leading to higher than
    normal flood potential, despite the heaviest rain footprint likely
    a bit further east. Considering the above variables and in
    coordination with local WFOs, the inherited SLGT risk was
    relatively unchanged with the only shift being an extension a bit
    further southwest into CT to cover for urban flood concerns within
    the axis of expected heavy rainfall during the cold frontal band
    being forecasted across much of the 00z CAMs suite. The MRGL risk
    still extends around the SLGT and further south into the Central
    Mid Atlantic and Carolinas with the primary concerns likely
    isolated urban flood potential, especially in the larger metro
    corridors like Raleigh, DC/Balt, and Philadelphia.

    Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWESTERN OREGON...

    20z Update: Forecast still looks on track. The latest model
    guidance expands the higher QPF a bit further south across coastal
    northern CA, and thus the Marginal risk was expanded in this
    direction. Generally expecting 1-3" of rain over the Marginal risk
    area through 12z Sat, with localized amounts of 3-4" within the
    most orographically favored terrain within the south to=20
    southwesterly low level flow.=20

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion below...

    Fairly robust disturbance over the Pacific will translate
    southeastward towards the North-Central CA coast by the end of the
    week with a persistent IVT pulse oriented southwest to northeast
    into the coastal plain over the course of the forecast period
    leading to waves of moderate precipitation to impact areas north of
    the Bay area. Current progs indicate precip totals on the order of
    2-4" with locally higher embedded within the coastal ranges
    spanning north of Santa Rosa. Current rates anticipated to be
    modest with upwards of 0.5-0.75"/hr at peak intensity lending to a
    lower end threat for flash flooding, however totals are significant
    enough to warrant a low-end threshold MRGL, mainly for the coastal
    urban areas of Northwest CA up through Southwestern OR where
    totals will be on the order of 2-4", especially into the windward areas
    of the Klamath Range. MRGL was generally maintained from previous
    forecast with only some minor modifications to align with the
    latest guidance.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7QDTv0rpzIqVFeaGiAw2-PSB2POMQTdLk0_uLLr9Rnra= eAOS8RXpQFAbAZPSgIhnU489PWdf-ELDHQb6MphlGtsw7xU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7QDTv0rpzIqVFeaGiAw2-PSB2POMQTdLk0_uLLr9Rnra= eAOS8RXpQFAbAZPSgIhnU489PWdf-ELDHQb6Mphl9oKcwIw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7QDTv0rpzIqVFeaGiAw2-PSB2POMQTdLk0_uLLr9Rnra= eAOS8RXpQFAbAZPSgIhnU489PWdf-ELDHQb6MphlTX8Z7vc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 12 01:06:14 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 120106
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    806 PM EST Wed Dec 11 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN LONG=20
    ISLAND UP THROUGH NORTHERN MAINE...

    Primary adjustment for the 01Z update was to shift the western
    extent of the previous outlook areas further east across the
    Northeast and remove the Mid-Atlantic, which is now post-frontal.
    Deep moisture (PWs 1.25-1.5 inches) and strong ascent ahead of an=20 approaching, negatively-tilted shortwave will contine to support=20
    periods of the moderate to heavy rain across portions of Long=20
    Island and New England this evening into the overnight. This rain=20
    is expected to move east along with the advancing cold front=20
    overnight. However, some areas, especially from eastern Long Island
    northward through eastern New England into northern Maine, may see
    an additional 1-2 inches before the rain ends. Limited instability
    is expected to keep rates in check, however given the wet soil=20
    conditions throughout the region and snow melt across portions of=20
    northern New England, these amounts may cause localized runoff=20
    concerns.

    Pereira

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWESTERN OREGON...

    20z Update: Forecast still looks on track. The latest model
    guidance expands the higher QPF a bit further south across coastal
    northern CA, and thus the Marginal risk was expanded in this
    direction. Generally expecting 1-3" of rain over the Marginal risk
    area through 12z Sat, with localized amounts of 3-4" within the
    most orographically favored terrain within the south to
    southwesterly low level flow.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion below...

    Fairly robust disturbance over the Pacific will translate
    southeastward towards the North-Central CA coast by the end of the
    week with a persistent IVT pulse oriented southwest to northeast
    into the coastal plain over the course of the forecast period
    leading to waves of moderate precipitation to impact areas north of
    the Bay area. Current progs indicate precip totals on the order of
    2-4" with locally higher embedded within the coastal ranges
    spanning north of Santa Rosa. Current rates anticipated to be
    modest with upwards of 0.5-0.75"/hr at peak intensity lending to a
    lower end threat for flash flooding, however totals are significant
    enough to warrant a low-end threshold MRGL, mainly for the coastal
    urban areas of Northwest CA up through Southwestern OR where
    totals will be on the order of 2-4", especially into the windward areas
    of the Klamath Range. MRGL was generally maintained from previous
    forecast with only some minor modifications to align with the
    latest guidance.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_f1dHYJrtJ9b0h3z5nh_GPcEkWGAqK4YTFU4_sJ0cfFR= CfRs3A2CVNvGsXdlmrYdhh6vQ0ooblY1Mfx1sP0lwZM9e9o$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_f1dHYJrtJ9b0h3z5nh_GPcEkWGAqK4YTFU4_sJ0cfFR= CfRs3A2CVNvGsXdlmrYdhh6vQ0ooblY1Mfx1sP0lX1FiwSQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_f1dHYJrtJ9b0h3z5nh_GPcEkWGAqK4YTFU4_sJ0cfFR= CfRs3A2CVNvGsXdlmrYdhh6vQ0ooblY1Mfx1sP0lIuTYtY4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 12 08:06:00 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 120805
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    305 AM EST Thu Dec 12 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWESTERN OREGON...

    The overall forecast maintained a general continuity in the
    expected synoptic evolution of a weak atmospheric river transpiring
    across the Northwest CA coast, extending northward into Southwest
    OR. IVT signatures between 700-1000 kg/ms will advect into the
    coastal plain with some protrusion inland on the initial surge as
    the southwest to northeast alignment of the pulse relegates a
    majority of the moisture into the coast and adjacent coastal ranges
    that will garner the greatest QPF just given the upslope component
    of the wind field. A widespread 2-4" with local max of 5-5.5" is
    forecast over the period with the general maxima likely within the
    coastal King Range as is customary with IVT pulses exhibiting a
    southwestern angle of approach across Northern CA. Rainfall rates
    on the order of 0.25-0.5"/hr will be most common within these bands
    of precipitation, however a few instances of >0.5"/hr might be
    realized during the period between 00-12z Saturday when the primary
    surge is forecast amongst the 00z deterministic suite. This
    correlates well with the anticipated IVT maximum making headway
    into the coastal plain which could lead to localized flooding
    concerns in the expected zone(s) of impact. As of this juncture,
    the heaviest rainfall will lie north of Santa Rosa with the primary
    areas of interest likely positioned from the King Range up US101 to
    the southern half of the Siskiyou in southwestern OR. With this
    alignment, very little change was necessary from the previous MRGL
    risk issuance, thus the forecast was relatively unchanged as the
    MRGL risk was sufficient in consensus.=20

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA INTO THE CENTRAL SIERRA FOOTHILLS...

    Atmospheric River setup from the previous period will translate
    into D3 with a greater inland protrusion of the IVT pulse as the=20
    upper level trough and associated surface low pivot onshore with=20
    an expected wind shift that will mute heavier rain prospects along
    the coast and eventually inland as we move into the second half of
    the period. The threat is currently very marginal in nature within
    the confines of the inland topography with the eastern foothills=20
    of the Sierra's being the furthest east expanse of any heavy rain=20
    threat, but even that is bordering on the lower end of a risk=20
    threshold. This period is more of the transition point in the=20
    pattern as the event will see a general decay in total rainfall and
    overall rates as the system moves inland. There is a further south
    push of the IVT pulse in the early portions of Saturday with some=20
    modest dynamical element involved as the 500mb vorticity evolution=20
    does bring some significant forcing towards the North- Central CA=20
    coastal plain with impacts to places like Santa Rosa down into the=20
    Bay area. Thankfully the pattern is progressive, but a quick 1-2"=20
    is within the realm of possibility for a mainly urban zone which=20
    could bring about some localized flooding prospects before the=20
    disturbance moves inland and we get a quick end to the chances.=20

    A MRGL risk continues for a good portion of Northwest CA with the
    risk area now extending down into the Bay area compared to the
    previous D2 alignment. A MRGL risk is also located at the base of
    the Sierra foothills for locations below 5500ft.=20

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-xy0n91ipbhDfDnn5-0d9Hqcvj3zqzh7OCq9YLHHIhX9= 3epfu--OefS6xhQ1FY2AzF7i-vjmtX50m6yZYi6ttH2HoUA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-xy0n91ipbhDfDnn5-0d9Hqcvj3zqzh7OCq9YLHHIhX9= 3epfu--OefS6xhQ1FY2AzF7i-vjmtX50m6yZYi6thE_7tQA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-xy0n91ipbhDfDnn5-0d9Hqcvj3zqzh7OCq9YLHHIhX9= 3epfu--OefS6xhQ1FY2AzF7i-vjmtX50m6yZYi6t7EupZkE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 12 15:42:59 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 121542
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1042 AM EST Thu Dec 12 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hamrick

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWESTERN OREGON...

    The overall forecast maintained a general continuity in the
    expected synoptic evolution of a weak atmospheric river transpiring
    across the Northwest CA coast, extending northward into Southwest
    OR. IVT signatures between 700-1000 kg/ms will advect into the
    coastal plain with some protrusion inland on the initial surge as
    the southwest to northeast alignment of the pulse relegates a
    majority of the moisture into the coast and adjacent coastal ranges
    that will garner the greatest QPF just given the upslope component
    of the wind field. A widespread 2-4" with local max of 5-5.5" is
    forecast over the period with the general maxima likely within the
    coastal King Range as is customary with IVT pulses exhibiting a
    southwestern angle of approach across Northern CA. Rainfall rates
    on the order of 0.25-0.5"/hr will be most common within these bands
    of precipitation, however a few instances of >0.5"/hr might be
    realized during the period between 00-12z Saturday when the primary
    surge is forecast amongst the 00z deterministic suite. This
    correlates well with the anticipated IVT maximum making headway
    into the coastal plain which could lead to localized flooding
    concerns in the expected zone(s) of impact. As of this juncture,
    the heaviest rainfall will lie north of Santa Rosa with the primary
    areas of interest likely positioned from the King Range up US101 to
    the southern half of the Siskiyou in southwestern OR. With this
    alignment, very little change was necessary from the previous MRGL
    risk issuance, thus the forecast was relatively unchanged as the
    MRGL risk was sufficient in consensus.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA INTO THE CENTRAL SIERRA FOOTHILLS...

    Atmospheric River setup from the previous period will translate
    into D3 with a greater inland protrusion of the IVT pulse as the
    upper level trough and associated surface low pivot onshore with
    an expected wind shift that will mute heavier rain prospects along
    the coast and eventually inland as we move into the second half of
    the period. The threat is currently very marginal in nature within
    the confines of the inland topography with the eastern foothills
    of the Sierra's being the furthest east expanse of any heavy rain
    threat, but even that is bordering on the lower end of a risk
    threshold. This period is more of the transition point in the
    pattern as the event will see a general decay in total rainfall and
    overall rates as the system moves inland. There is a further south
    push of the IVT pulse in the early portions of Saturday with some
    modest dynamical element involved as the 500mb vorticity evolution
    does bring some significant forcing towards the North- Central CA
    coastal plain with impacts to places like Santa Rosa down into the
    Bay area. Thankfully the pattern is progressive, but a quick 1-2"
    is within the realm of possibility for a mainly urban zone which
    could bring about some localized flooding prospects before the
    disturbance moves inland and we get a quick end to the chances.

    A MRGL risk continues for a good portion of Northwest CA with the
    risk area now extending down into the Bay area compared to the
    previous D2 alignment. A MRGL risk is also located at the base of
    the Sierra foothills for locations below 5500ft.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8-sxUOLP1KfCUlSVrwJSzH26KH69DB5ZE3p5i7IsZzh5= obZxrrG31vn9h7hOteC_QyQPUieYctWfNRqxFjgGN3n46bA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8-sxUOLP1KfCUlSVrwJSzH26KH69DB5ZE3p5i7IsZzh5= obZxrrG31vn9h7hOteC_QyQPUieYctWfNRqxFjgGRR-f2QM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8-sxUOLP1KfCUlSVrwJSzH26KH69DB5ZE3p5i7IsZzh5= obZxrrG31vn9h7hOteC_QyQPUieYctWfNRqxFjgGtuFG4e4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 12 20:02:26 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 122002
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    302 PM EST Thu Dec 12 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Dec 12 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hamrick

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    20z Update: Upgraded to a Slight risk across portions of northwest
    CA with this update. Event total rainfall from Friday through=20
    Saturday morning is forecast to be 3-5" across the Slight risk=20
    area, with isolated amounts of 5-7" within the most favored=20
    southerly facing slopes. Rainfall rates should increase Friday as
    the core of IVT moves into the coast. By Friday night into=20
    Saturday morning the heavier rain will shift southward as a strong
    mid level shortwave approaches the region. This feature will act=20
    to increase large scale ascent, while also cooling the mid levels=20
    enough to allow for some weak instability to develop within the IVT
    axis. The 12z HREF neighborhood probabilities of rainfall=20
    exceeding 0.5" in an hour are over 50% across most of the Slight=20
    risk...both across the most favored upslope areas and also within a
    narrow southward shifting axis of stronger convergence. The=20
    forecast rainfall combined with these locally higher rates indicate
    some flooding is probable. Still not expecting this to be a high=20
    end event given the overall progressive nature of the system and
    IVT peaking just around 750 kg/ms, but some creek and stream=20
    flooding, along with a few landslides, are possible.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The overall forecast maintained a general continuity in the
    expected synoptic evolution of a weak atmospheric river transpiring
    across the Northwest CA coast, extending northward into Southwest
    OR. IVT signatures between 700-1000 kg/ms will advect into the
    coastal plain with some protrusion inland on the initial surge as
    the southwest to northeast alignment of the pulse relegates a
    majority of the moisture into the coast and adjacent coastal ranges
    that will garner the greatest QPF just given the upslope component
    of the wind field. A widespread 2-4" with local max of 5-5.5" is
    forecast over the period with the general maxima likely within the
    coastal King Range as is customary with IVT pulses exhibiting a
    southwestern angle of approach across Northern CA. Rainfall rates
    on the order of 0.25-0.5"/hr will be most common within these bands
    of precipitation, however a few instances of >0.5"/hr might be
    realized during the period between 00-12z Saturday when the primary
    surge is forecast amongst the 00z deterministic suite. This
    correlates well with the anticipated IVT maximum making headway
    into the coastal plain which could lead to localized flooding
    concerns in the expected zone(s) of impact. As of this juncture,
    the heaviest rainfall will lie north of Santa Rosa with the primary
    areas of interest likely positioned from the King Range up US101 to
    the southern half of the Siskiyou in southwestern OR. With this
    alignment, very little change was necessary from the previous MRGL
    risk issuance, thus the forecast was relatively unchanged as the
    MRGL risk was sufficient in consensus.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    20z Update: The atmospheric river described in the day 2=20
    discussion will continue to impact portions of northern CA=20
    Saturday morning. Thus the Slight risk was continued into this=20
    period as well. The strong mid level shortwave mentioned in the=20
    day 2 discussion will move onshore Saturday morning, with this=20
    resulting in some weak instability and also likely a temporary=20
    slowing of the IVT axis. These factors should result in some=20
    higher rainfall rates from 12z-18z Sat over the Slight risk area,=20
    with flooding of creeks, streams and low lying flood-prone areas=20
    possible, along with the continued risk of smaller landslides. The=20
    higher rates should quickly diminish as the shortwave moves east,=20
    with the risk of heavy rain over by 18z. Thus this Slight risk is=20
    really only for the first few hours of this day 3 period.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...=20

    Atmospheric River setup from the previous period will translate
    into D3 with a greater inland protrusion of the IVT pulse as the
    upper level trough and associated surface low pivot onshore with
    an expected wind shift that will mute heavier rain prospects along
    the coast and eventually inland as we move into the second half of
    the period. The threat is currently very marginal in nature within
    the confines of the inland topography with the eastern foothills
    of the Sierra's being the furthest east expanse of any heavy rain
    threat, but even that is bordering on the lower end of a risk
    threshold. This period is more of the transition point in the
    pattern as the event will see a general decay in total rainfall and
    overall rates as the system moves inland. There is a further south
    push of the IVT pulse in the early portions of Saturday with some
    modest dynamical element involved as the 500mb vorticity evolution
    does bring some significant forcing towards the North- Central CA
    coastal plain with impacts to places like Santa Rosa down into the
    Bay area. Thankfully the pattern is progressive, but a quick 1-2"
    is within the realm of possibility for a mainly urban zone which
    could bring about some localized flooding prospects before the
    disturbance moves inland and we get a quick end to the chances.

    A MRGL risk continues for a good portion of Northwest CA with the
    risk area now extending down into the Bay area compared to the
    previous D2 alignment. A MRGL risk is also located at the base of
    the Sierra foothills for locations below 5500ft.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8CWvFuPq6jOpnDCz1UNGPlQFUOId-6C_FfGF4kGrTZR4= PbzHFKV5n-sqwp0NptC6pVaKcbKik6AQeSuqiTsQyC7XIJs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8CWvFuPq6jOpnDCz1UNGPlQFUOId-6C_FfGF4kGrTZR4= PbzHFKV5n-sqwp0NptC6pVaKcbKik6AQeSuqiTsQiFKcrxw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8CWvFuPq6jOpnDCz1UNGPlQFUOId-6C_FfGF4kGrTZR4= PbzHFKV5n-sqwp0NptC6pVaKcbKik6AQeSuqiTsQWiZ6oKk$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 13 00:11:48 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 130011
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    711 PM EST Thu Dec 12 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    20z Update: Upgraded to a Slight risk across portions of northwest
    CA with this update. Event total rainfall from Friday through
    Saturday morning is forecast to be 3-5" across the Slight risk
    area, with isolated amounts of 5-7" within the most favored
    southerly facing slopes. Rainfall rates should increase Friday as
    the core of IVT moves into the coast. By Friday night into
    Saturday morning the heavier rain will shift southward as a strong
    mid level shortwave approaches the region. This feature will act
    to increase large scale ascent, while also cooling the mid levels
    enough to allow for some weak instability to develop within the IVT
    axis. The 12z HREF neighborhood probabilities of rainfall
    exceeding 0.5" in an hour are over 50% across most of the Slight
    risk...both across the most favored upslope areas and also within a
    narrow southward shifting axis of stronger convergence. The
    forecast rainfall combined with these locally higher rates indicate
    some flooding is probable. Still not expecting this to be a high
    end event given the overall progressive nature of the system and
    IVT peaking just around 750 kg/ms, but some creek and stream
    flooding, along with a few landslides, are possible.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The overall forecast maintained a general continuity in the
    expected synoptic evolution of a weak atmospheric river transpiring
    across the Northwest CA coast, extending northward into Southwest
    OR. IVT signatures between 700-1000 kg/ms will advect into the
    coastal plain with some protrusion inland on the initial surge as
    the southwest to northeast alignment of the pulse relegates a
    majority of the moisture into the coast and adjacent coastal ranges
    that will garner the greatest QPF just given the upslope component
    of the wind field. A widespread 2-4" with local max of 5-5.5" is
    forecast over the period with the general maxima likely within the
    coastal King Range as is customary with IVT pulses exhibiting a
    southwestern angle of approach across Northern CA. Rainfall rates
    on the order of 0.25-0.5"/hr will be most common within these bands
    of precipitation, however a few instances of >0.5"/hr might be
    realized during the period between 00-12z Saturday when the primary
    surge is forecast amongst the 00z deterministic suite. This
    correlates well with the anticipated IVT maximum making headway
    into the coastal plain which could lead to localized flooding
    concerns in the expected zone(s) of impact. As of this juncture,
    the heaviest rainfall will lie north of Santa Rosa with the primary
    areas of interest likely positioned from the King Range up US101 to
    the southern half of the Siskiyou in southwestern OR. With this
    alignment, very little change was necessary from the previous MRGL
    risk issuance, thus the forecast was relatively unchanged as the
    MRGL risk was sufficient in consensus.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    20z Update: The atmospheric river described in the day 2
    discussion will continue to impact portions of northern CA
    Saturday morning. Thus the Slight risk was continued into this
    period as well. The strong mid level shortwave mentioned in the
    day 2 discussion will move onshore Saturday morning, with this
    resulting in some weak instability and also likely a temporary
    slowing of the IVT axis. These factors should result in some
    higher rainfall rates from 12z-18z Sat over the Slight risk area,
    with flooding of creeks, streams and low lying flood-prone areas
    possible, along with the continued risk of smaller landslides. The
    higher rates should quickly diminish as the shortwave moves east,
    with the risk of heavy rain over by 18z. Thus this Slight risk is
    really only for the first few hours of this day 3 period.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Atmospheric River setup from the previous period will translate
    into D3 with a greater inland protrusion of the IVT pulse as the
    upper level trough and associated surface low pivot onshore with
    an expected wind shift that will mute heavier rain prospects along
    the coast and eventually inland as we move into the second half of
    the period. The threat is currently very marginal in nature within
    the confines of the inland topography with the eastern foothills
    of the Sierra's being the furthest east expanse of any heavy rain
    threat, but even that is bordering on the lower end of a risk
    threshold. This period is more of the transition point in the
    pattern as the event will see a general decay in total rainfall and
    overall rates as the system moves inland. There is a further south
    push of the IVT pulse in the early portions of Saturday with some
    modest dynamical element involved as the 500mb vorticity evolution
    does bring some significant forcing towards the North- Central CA
    coastal plain with impacts to places like Santa Rosa down into the
    Bay area. Thankfully the pattern is progressive, but a quick 1-2"
    is within the realm of possibility for a mainly urban zone which
    could bring about some localized flooding prospects before the
    disturbance moves inland and we get a quick end to the chances.

    A MRGL risk continues for a good portion of Northwest CA with the
    risk area now extending down into the Bay area compared to the
    previous D2 alignment. A MRGL risk is also located at the base of
    the Sierra foothills for locations below 5500ft.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7BOu_NBb7LacvtO76ILGsizezEwK5amsLgti264fkYbb= QyDhD0-QHXLMLecs7n2EIbv5dq2rASZz-d8AOnqGdZ_Ddaw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7BOu_NBb7LacvtO76ILGsizezEwK5amsLgti264fkYbb= QyDhD0-QHXLMLecs7n2EIbv5dq2rASZz-d8AOnqGyxjJaZw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7BOu_NBb7LacvtO76ILGsizezEwK5amsLgti264fkYbb= QyDhD0-QHXLMLecs7n2EIbv5dq2rASZz-d8AOnqGIzNKZok$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 13 08:26:29 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 130826
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    326 AM EST Fri Dec 13 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    Maintained the Slight Risk area over portions of northwest
    California with only minor adjustments needed based on latest
    deterministic and ensemble guidance. Rainfall should be growing in
    both areal coverage and intensity today as a plume of moisture is=20
    directed from the eastern North Pacific into northwest California.=20
    Event total rainfall amounts through early Saturday morning are=20
    still forecast to be in the 3 to 5 inch range across the Slight=20
    Risk area. By late tonight/early Saturday morning the heavier rain=20
    will shift southward as a strong mid level shortwave approaches the
    region. This feature will act to increase large scale ascent,=20
    while also cooling the mid levels enough to allow for some weak=20
    instability to develop within the IVT axis. The 13/00Z HREF=20
    neighborhood probabilities of rainfall exceeding 0.5" in an hour=20
    are over 50% across most of the Slight risk...both across the most=20
    favored upslope areas and also within a narrow southward shifting=20
    axis of stronger convergence. This does not appear to be a high end
    event given the progressive nature of the system...although some=20
    creek and stream flooding and a few mudslides will be possible.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    Rainfall associated with an atmospheric river will be on-going as
    the Day 2 period begins at 14/12Z...with the plume of deepest
    moisture continuing to be directed in to parts of northwest
    California although the axis of heaviest rainfall rates/amount will
    be gradually be easing eastward in time with the main shortwave
    while being shunted southward ahead of the surface cold front.=20
    southward with time. The higher rates should quickly diminish with=20
    the departure of the shortwave moves...with the risk of heavy rain=20
    over by 18z. Thus this Slight risk is really only for the first few
    hours of this day 2 period.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.|

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7IdCEm74clTAeQnghVN4sXN0_JjFZ8A5CDhW3MnbzWgt= 3a8_Crxca1dPi9VLi8ceDB0H_TW1cs2H-HkduTM-YUJ1ji0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7IdCEm74clTAeQnghVN4sXN0_JjFZ8A5CDhW3MnbzWgt= 3a8_Crxca1dPi9VLi8ceDB0H_TW1cs2H-HkduTM-_v6wZr0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7IdCEm74clTAeQnghVN4sXN0_JjFZ8A5CDhW3MnbzWgt= 3a8_Crxca1dPi9VLi8ceDB0H_TW1cs2H-HkduTM-N0jdCsU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 13 15:36:01 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 131535
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1035 AM EST Fri Dec 13 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    ...16Z Update...

    The inherited Slight Risk along the Coastal Range of Northern=20
    California remains on track with just a few minor adjustments to=20
    the threat areas based on incoming 12Z CAMs. Guidance has continued
    to trend slightly more amplified with the approaching upper-level=20
    shortwave trough tonight. NAEFS shows the IVT will exceed 750=20
    kg/m/s upon approach, topping the 99th climatological percentile=20
    near Eureka, CA for 00Z Saturday then southward into Sonoma and=20
    Napa counties by 06Z tonight. The HREF suggests low-chance=20
    neighborhood probabilities (10-30%) for localized amounts=20
    surpassing 8" through 12Z Saturday. In addition, the ECMWF EFI=20
    sports a >0.8 signal for significant QPF vs climatology for early-=20
    mid December from the Coastal Range north of the Bay Area to the=20 Shasta/northern Sierra Nevada. The EFI signal indicates there is=20
    the potential for an extreme event, but note it does not account=20
    for other non-meteorological factors. Of note, this AR is likely=20
    to be fairly progressive and soils have recovered some over the=20
    past two weeks. For these reasons, the Slight Risk was maintained=20
    for this forecast cycle as this should reduce the areal extent of=20
    the flash flood threat. That said, some localized considerable=20
    impacts cannot be ruled out, especially in areas where excessive=20
    rainfall amounts above 8" potentially come to fruition tonight and
    into early Saturday morning.=20

    Mullinax


    --Previous Discussion--

    Maintained the Slight Risk area over portions of northwest
    California with only minor adjustments needed based on latest
    deterministic and ensemble guidance. Rainfall should be growing in
    both areal coverage and intensity today as a plume of moisture is
    directed from the eastern North Pacific into northwest California.
    Event total rainfall amounts through early Saturday morning are
    still forecast to be in the 3 to 5 inch range across the Slight
    Risk area. By late tonight/early Saturday morning the heavier rain
    will shift southward as a strong mid level shortwave approaches the
    region. This feature will act to increase large scale ascent,
    while also cooling the mid levels enough to allow for some weak
    instability to develop within the IVT axis. The 13/00Z HREF
    neighborhood probabilities of rainfall exceeding 0.5" in an hour
    are over 50% across most of the Slight risk...both across the most
    favored upslope areas and also within a narrow southward shifting
    axis of stronger convergence. This does not appear to be a high end
    event given the progressive nature of the system...although some
    creek and stream flooding and a few mudslides will be possible.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    Rainfall associated with an atmospheric river will be on-going as
    the Day 2 period begins at 14/12Z...with the plume of deepest
    moisture continuing to be directed in to parts of northwest
    California although the axis of heaviest rainfall rates/amount will
    be gradually be easing eastward in time with the main shortwave
    while being shunted southward ahead of the surface cold front.
    southward with time. The higher rates should quickly diminish with
    the departure of the shortwave moves...with the risk of heavy rain
    over by 18z. Thus this Slight risk is really only for the first few
    hours of this day 2 period.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.|

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9joQ_vH6egz019m2c9p6OZZEKO4TqMleMXyrtkGXJ6Zw= PC6Qc398VA4aqoeehmJ0X4REX3tZqjGadnK-j7KxtdW_zCY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9joQ_vH6egz019m2c9p6OZZEKO4TqMleMXyrtkGXJ6Zw= PC6Qc398VA4aqoeehmJ0X4REX3tZqjGadnK-j7KxHTLIXP4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9joQ_vH6egz019m2c9p6OZZEKO4TqMleMXyrtkGXJ6Zw= PC6Qc398VA4aqoeehmJ0X4REX3tZqjGadnK-j7KxoeOdrIY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 13 20:07:28 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 132007
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    307 PM EST Fri Dec 13 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Dec 13 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    ...16Z Update...

    The inherited Slight Risk along the Coastal Range of Northern
    California remains on track with just a few minor adjustments to
    the threat areas based on incoming 12Z CAMs. Guidance has continued
    to trend slightly more amplified with the approaching upper-level
    shortwave trough tonight. NAEFS shows the IVT will exceed 750
    kg/m/s upon approach, topping the 99th climatological percentile
    near Eureka, CA for 00Z Saturday then southward into Sonoma and
    Napa counties by 06Z tonight. The HREF suggests low-chance
    neighborhood probabilities (10-30%) for localized amounts
    surpassing 8" through 12Z Saturday. In addition, the ECMWF EFI
    sports a >0.8 signal for significant QPF vs climatology for early-
    mid December from the Coastal Range north of the Bay Area to the Shasta/northern Sierra Nevada. The EFI signal indicates there is
    the potential for an extreme event, but note it does not account
    for other non-meteorological factors. Of note, this AR is likely
    to be fairly progressive and soils have recovered some over the
    past two weeks. For these reasons, the Slight Risk was maintained
    for this forecast cycle as this should reduce the areal extent of
    the flash flood threat. That said, some localized considerable
    impacts cannot be ruled out, especially in areas where excessive
    rainfall amounts above 8" potentially come to fruition tonight and
    into early Saturday morning.

    Mullinax


    --Previous Discussion--

    Maintained the Slight Risk area over portions of northwest
    California with only minor adjustments needed based on latest
    deterministic and ensemble guidance. Rainfall should be growing in
    both areal coverage and intensity today as a plume of moisture is
    directed from the eastern North Pacific into northwest California.
    Event total rainfall amounts through early Saturday morning are
    still forecast to be in the 3 to 5 inch range across the Slight
    Risk area. By late tonight/early Saturday morning the heavier rain
    will shift southward as a strong mid level shortwave approaches the
    region. This feature will act to increase large scale ascent,
    while also cooling the mid levels enough to allow for some weak
    instability to develop within the IVT axis. The 13/00Z HREF
    neighborhood probabilities of rainfall exceeding 0.5" in an hour
    are over 50% across most of the Slight risk...both across the most
    favored upslope areas and also within a narrow southward shifting
    axis of stronger convergence. This does not appear to be a high end
    event given the progressive nature of the system...although some
    creek and stream flooding and a few mudslides will be possible.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    COASTAL CALIFORNIA FROM SANTA ROSA INTO SAN FRANCISCO AND SAN JOSE...

    20z Update: Main change was to shift the Slight risk a bit
    southward along the coast into the San Francisco to Oakland to San
    Jose urban corridor. Concerned about a 1-3 hour window of high
    rainfall rate potential right around 12z as a strong mid level=20
    shortwave moves ashore resulting in steeper lapse rates and some=20
    weak instability. HREF probabilities show an almost 100% chance of
    0.5"/hr rainfall, with ~30-40% chance of 1"/hr...and the GFS and=20
    ECMWF also have a narrow band of heavier rainfall. Even though=20
    event total rain may only be 1-3" over these areas, much of that=20
    should fall in a just a couple hours...so thinking urban flood=20
    impacts are becoming increasingly likely. HREF probabilities of=20
    exceeding 3 hr FFG (which is 1-1.5") are as high as 40-60% over=20
    this area.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Rainfall associated with an atmospheric river will be on-going as
    the Day 2 period begins at 14/12Z...with the plume of deepest
    moisture continuing to be directed in to parts of northwest
    California although the axis of heaviest rainfall rates/amount will
    be gradually be easing eastward in time with the main shortwave
    while being shunted southward ahead of the surface cold front.
    southward with time. The higher rates should quickly diminish with
    the departure of the shortwave moves...with the risk of heavy rain
    over by 18z. Thus this Slight risk is really only for the first few
    hours of this day 2 period.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.|

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9dEXjPpf1-dK9bcDViyER1b77EvhqkwN-YuhYJZn8RA5= tdsrxPBIpQ60KVceOb_m4cTIkybnnLOkYVX4cimC2m-1W7w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9dEXjPpf1-dK9bcDViyER1b77EvhqkwN-YuhYJZn8RA5= tdsrxPBIpQ60KVceOb_m4cTIkybnnLOkYVX4cimCYVieo3E$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9dEXjPpf1-dK9bcDViyER1b77EvhqkwN-YuhYJZn8RA5= tdsrxPBIpQ60KVceOb_m4cTIkybnnLOkYVX4cimCXRxdwc0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 14 00:56:44 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 140055
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    755 PM EST Fri Dec 13 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    ...01Z Update...

    The inherited Slight Risk along the Coastal Range of Northern
    California remains on track with just a few minor adjustments to
    the threat areas based on incoming 18Z CAMs. Based on the latest=20
    guidance trends, and per collaboration with the Day 2 ERO=20
    forecaster, have pulled the southern edge of the Marginal and=20
    Slight Risk areas a little farther south and into the northern=20
    portion of the Bay area. This accounts for the uptick in 0.5-1.0"/hr
    rainfall rate probabilities per the 18Z HREF. Still expecting the
    heaviest rainfall to occur between 11-16Z across the Bay area, with
    the latest (18Z) HREF probabilities of 3-hourly QPF exceeding the
    current 3-hourly FFGs between 40-70+ percent from 12-15Z.

    Hurley

    ...16Z Update...

    Guidance has continued to trend slightly more amplified=20
    with the approaching upper-level shortwave trough tonight. NAEFS=20
    shows the IVT will exceed 750 kg/m/s upon approach, topping the=20
    99th climatological percentile near Eureka, CA for 00Z Saturday=20
    then southward into Sonoma and Napa counties by 06Z tonight. The=20
    HREF suggests low- chance neighborhood probabilities (10-30%) for=20
    localized amounts surpassing 8" through 12Z Saturday. In addition,=20
    the ECMWF EFI sports a >0.8 signal for significant QPF vs=20
    climatology for early- mid December from the Coastal Range north of
    the Bay Area to the Shasta/northern Sierra Nevada. The EFI signal=20
    indicates there is the potential for an extreme event, but note it=20
    does not account for other non-meteorological factors. Of note,=20
    this AR is likely to be fairly progressive and soils have recovered
    some over the past two weeks. For these reasons, the Slight Risk=20
    was maintained for this forecast cycle as this should reduce the=20
    areal extent of the flash flood threat. That said, some localized=20 considerable impacts cannot be ruled out, especially in areas where
    excessive rainfall amounts above 8" potentially come to fruition=20
    tonight and into early Saturday morning.

    Mullinax


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    COASTAL CALIFORNIA FROM SANTA ROSA INTO SAN FRANCISCO AND SAN JOSE...

    20z Update: Main change was to shift the Slight risk a bit
    southward along the coast into the San Francisco to Oakland to San
    Jose urban corridor. Concerned about a 1-3 hour window of high
    rainfall rate potential right around 12z as a strong mid level
    shortwave moves ashore resulting in steeper lapse rates and some
    weak instability. HREF probabilities show an almost 100% chance of
    0.5"/hr rainfall, with ~30-40% chance of 1"/hr...and the GFS and
    ECMWF also have a narrow band of heavier rainfall. Even though
    event total rain may only be 1-3" over these areas, much of that
    should fall in a just a couple hours...so thinking urban flood
    impacts are becoming increasingly likely. HREF probabilities of
    exceeding 3 hr FFG (which is 1-1.5") are as high as 40-60% over
    this area.

    Chenard

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Rainfall associated with an atmospheric river will be on-going as
    the Day 2 period begins at 14/12Z...with the plume of deepest
    moisture continuing to be directed in to parts of northwest
    California although the axis of heaviest rainfall rates/amount will
    be gradually be easing eastward in time with the main shortwave
    while being shunted southward ahead of the surface cold front.
    southward with time. The higher rates should quickly diminish with
    the departure of the shortwave moves...with the risk of heavy rain
    over by 18z. Thus this Slight risk is really only for the first few
    hours of this day 2 period.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.|

    Chenard


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ibnZh4vOOEcGd2UUvHPwzOYAziJBJ2__wRpSZJxmGQF= rIX6nFjnRyLo1PoyfPq04dZAp4Gg-0cQXjkJBu0Pi8kEU60$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ibnZh4vOOEcGd2UUvHPwzOYAziJBJ2__wRpSZJxmGQF= rIX6nFjnRyLo1PoyfPq04dZAp4Gg-0cQXjkJBu0PCIbOqqk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ibnZh4vOOEcGd2UUvHPwzOYAziJBJ2__wRpSZJxmGQF= rIX6nFjnRyLo1PoyfPq04dZAp4Gg-0cQXjkJBu0PH8-kYQE$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 14 08:29:44 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 140829
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    329 AM EST Sat Dec 14 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF=20
    COASTAL CALIFORNIA FROM SANTA ROSA INTO SAN Francisco AND SAN=20
    JOSE|...

    Even though a much of the areal coverage of moderate to locally
    heavy rainfall associated with an atmospheric river has already
    moved on shore...maintained the Slight risk area mainly along the
    coast from Santa Rosa southward into San Francisco and San Jose
    given an expected up-tick in rainfall rates as a compact shortwave
    trough approaches from the west. Short term guidance from the
    convective allowing mesoscale guidance shows several hundred Joules
    per kilogram of CAPE moving into that portion of California
    immediately ahead of the shortwave impulse. The 14/00Z HREF
    maintained a nearly 100 pct chance of half-inch per hour rainfall
    rates and nearly 40 percent chance of 1 inch per hour rates over
    and near the San Francisco Bay area during the early- to mid-
    morning hours. The combination of the rainfall rates and the
    urbanization of the area still points to an elevated risk of flood
    impacts. The overall impacts should be limited by the fairly short
    duration of heaviest rainfall...which looks to taper off quickly in
    the 15Z to 18Z period.

    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5Hiz-WqlN8YexFVeOw6WTLG50WLjXhtJJw027PqUsADk= G3yfpaqYkFC8GumjUlhMnmVzRhiaERHJzjFRRq5pT9hFGoU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5Hiz-WqlN8YexFVeOw6WTLG50WLjXhtJJw027PqUsADk= G3yfpaqYkFC8GumjUlhMnmVzRhiaERHJzjFRRq5p9fX8hSI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5Hiz-WqlN8YexFVeOw6WTLG50WLjXhtJJw027PqUsADk= G3yfpaqYkFC8GumjUlhMnmVzRhiaERHJzjFRRq5p7PKikMQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 14 15:57:25 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 141557
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1057 AM EST Sat Dec 14 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS=20
    OF CENTRAL AND NORTHERN CALIFORNIA...

    Rainfall intensity is on the decrease across California as the
    shortwave moves inland and both PW and IVT decline. Thus we were
    able to drop the risk level to Marginal with this update. Still
    could see some isolated rainfall totals exceeding 0.5" in an hour
    as the core of the compact shortwave moves inland, but any of=20
    these heavier showers should be transient in nature. Thus any flood
    impacts driven by additional rainfall should stay localized. The=20
    threat of seeing over 0.5" an hour decreases even further after=20
    18z, and so we may be able to drop the Marginal risk by this=20
    afternoon.

    Chenard

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8QZ5jnlvlEBIPybaKT4d9QWPdFLC1iTeVLGUgPGh2Fj= Ss7OhGOQFim8BftKl5u_h1989p9YmpHVsdc-VWH5K7btZTE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8QZ5jnlvlEBIPybaKT4d9QWPdFLC1iTeVLGUgPGh2Fj= Ss7OhGOQFim8BftKl5u_h1989p9YmpHVsdc-VWH5NnVckvs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-8QZ5jnlvlEBIPybaKT4d9QWPdFLC1iTeVLGUgPGh2Fj= Ss7OhGOQFim8BftKl5u_h1989p9YmpHVsdc-VWH5whIi3GM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 14 19:19:07 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 141918
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    218 PM EST Sat Dec 14 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Dec 14 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF CENTRAL AND NORTHERN CALIFORNIA...

    Rainfall intensity is on the decrease across California as the
    shortwave moves inland and both PW and IVT decline. Thus we were
    able to drop the risk level to Marginal with this update. Still
    could see some isolated rainfall totals exceeding 0.5" in an hour
    as the core of the compact shortwave moves inland, but any of
    these heavier showers should be transient in nature. Thus any flood
    impacts driven by additional rainfall should stay localized. The
    threat of seeing over 0.5" an hour decreases even further after
    18z, and so we may be able to drop the Marginal risk by this
    afternoon.

    Chenard

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Tate

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Tate


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9bd0WWghMkCIBDSiD_Pk-lW4S_kwPvSHtq-sZYfiSmyq= IcWWjyfPma1DWlIn3-qWSbbN7ImeFz2jK-P6HLnZEriqSQA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9bd0WWghMkCIBDSiD_Pk-lW4S_kwPvSHtq-sZYfiSmyq= IcWWjyfPma1DWlIn3-qWSbbN7ImeFz2jK-P6HLnZdEqkeE8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9bd0WWghMkCIBDSiD_Pk-lW4S_kwPvSHtq-sZYfiSmyq= IcWWjyfPma1DWlIn3-qWSbbN7ImeFz2jK-P6HLnZqKFi15c$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 15 00:57:37 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 150045
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    745 PM EST Sat Dec 14 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Tate

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Tate


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7RzsEAOGvKGQbLyvW1uYCrou098HF1020e7uXmrCHO0X= LP-B0votNFr4_ZLZ32NOHLEAJzFezsfEUDpuhIYs6pjfolY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7RzsEAOGvKGQbLyvW1uYCrou098HF1020e7uXmrCHO0X= LP-B0votNFr4_ZLZ32NOHLEAJzFezsfEUDpuhIYsx8bVloE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7RzsEAOGvKGQbLyvW1uYCrou098HF1020e7uXmrCHO0X= LP-B0votNFr4_ZLZ32NOHLEAJzFezsfEUDpuhIYsOuZaY-Y$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 15 08:28:43 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 150828
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    328 AM EST Sun Dec 15 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ae0ayMwpJHTZGWw2DIXdA0WU56mf13xalkLta_4mRAv= FD0rPJtJyqWAekOe7mIITKMUcnAjtT2eZr_0H_1UCrLy0tg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ae0ayMwpJHTZGWw2DIXdA0WU56mf13xalkLta_4mRAv= FD0rPJtJyqWAekOe7mIITKMUcnAjtT2eZr_0H_1UWV_Mkdo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9ae0ayMwpJHTZGWw2DIXdA0WU56mf13xalkLta_4mRAv= FD0rPJtJyqWAekOe7mIITKMUcnAjtT2eZr_0H_1UFVcXBN4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 15 15:22:05 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 151521
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1021 AM EST Sun Dec 15 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill/Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-RqSLjXVDpEgI5Ixiq8UDRp1g0VdeJ0Oh9Fnl8qFGmmZ= 3onuqMD8otZf2j1O-3tVd5Nax8d6L3WkunF9TnVlweNM6nI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-RqSLjXVDpEgI5Ixiq8UDRp1g0VdeJ0Oh9Fnl8qFGmmZ= 3onuqMD8otZf2j1O-3tVd5Nax8d6L3WkunF9TnVl-KKHewQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-RqSLjXVDpEgI5Ixiq8UDRp1g0VdeJ0Oh9Fnl8qFGmmZ= 3onuqMD8otZf2j1O-3tVd5Nax8d6L3WkunF9TnVlTZHEe18$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 15 19:55:04 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 151954
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    254 PM EST Sun Dec 15 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Dec 15 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4nnhMYmow0u7xikEApsH28wGY_f5IT00VHuo6Mb7gIH2= iS9c2xXkw2KrydcMtxOR5SUOLvRTUvfkfp-AZv23gFuRvy4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4nnhMYmow0u7xikEApsH28wGY_f5IT00VHuo6Mb7gIH2= iS9c2xXkw2KrydcMtxOR5SUOLvRTUvfkfp-AZv23ASGLhfs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4nnhMYmow0u7xikEApsH28wGY_f5IT00VHuo6Mb7gIH2= iS9c2xXkw2KrydcMtxOR5SUOLvRTUvfkfp-AZv23odAbmiw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 15 22:50:36 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 152250
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    550 PM EST Sun Dec 15 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8PwOe1Urjcx1i0RjGU1eDaA5bqkChybvZiBrFWM7j8Dh= piEyeSP8SBY9bzDh5iBVccWxMmzKTZfBt0MpFLfkwlLY7PU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8PwOe1Urjcx1i0RjGU1eDaA5bqkChybvZiBrFWM7j8Dh= piEyeSP8SBY9bzDh5iBVccWxMmzKTZfBt0MpFLfkqol_oCE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8PwOe1Urjcx1i0RjGU1eDaA5bqkChybvZiBrFWM7j8Dh= piEyeSP8SBY9bzDh5iBVccWxMmzKTZfBt0MpFLfkPOv0P9w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 16 07:41:10 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 160741
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    241 AM EST Mon Dec 16 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9Bcct6rOvTokoJ42PQIgNv4l2kOyYcU69sw9430Iluv3= EIQAQ92ShILgsDnC6tHollmLHlca6mCjglTBqBLQG6ZAVCg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9Bcct6rOvTokoJ42PQIgNv4l2kOyYcU69sw9430Iluv3= EIQAQ92ShILgsDnC6tHollmLHlca6mCjglTBqBLQZmkcamg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9Bcct6rOvTokoJ42PQIgNv4l2kOyYcU69sw9430Iluv3= EIQAQ92ShILgsDnC6tHollmLHlca6mCjglTBqBLQY5Kdpi8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 16 15:53:21 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 161552
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1052 AM EST Mon Dec 16 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill/Oravec

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7CkYJ6tIYDzysLuq9V840uZWPT115NDbkZLxJDQeWQOu= Lx5uYA1chkJujWTQLcoTBeSQYvj6kUwbhYmGEZIIxPMZILU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7CkYJ6tIYDzysLuq9V840uZWPT115NDbkZLxJDQeWQOu= Lx5uYA1chkJujWTQLcoTBeSQYvj6kUwbhYmGEZIIj5QcosA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7CkYJ6tIYDzysLuq9V840uZWPT115NDbkZLxJDQeWQOu= Lx5uYA1chkJujWTQLcoTBeSQYvj6kUwbhYmGEZIIQR7qGv4$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 16 18:58:33 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 161858
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    158 PM EST Mon Dec 16 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Dec 16 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4iRgDTm4D5OfRG9Vt_NitZ4aEM8Xu2dL784Hp9dfBzoj= 6kvhGYQ-yptj4tkuNNJEiwEoMNws_I3KGxpoEZfO9-NgEI4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4iRgDTm4D5OfRG9Vt_NitZ4aEM8Xu2dL784Hp9dfBzoj= 6kvhGYQ-yptj4tkuNNJEiwEoMNws_I3KGxpoEZfO3tv2l3o$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4iRgDTm4D5OfRG9Vt_NitZ4aEM8Xu2dL784Hp9dfBzoj= 6kvhGYQ-yptj4tkuNNJEiwEoMNws_I3KGxpoEZfOOEt5mGU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 16 22:49:05 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 162248
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    548 PM EST Mon Dec 16 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9fknH3ra9fILYDUt3klH51hIPTnCppvaBqixXII1bx7v= w73XMliF0Rh5nakJwkBdIpNf0RQb4NYg-Mvf24H9x3fiOdI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9fknH3ra9fILYDUt3klH51hIPTnCppvaBqixXII1bx7v= w73XMliF0Rh5nakJwkBdIpNf0RQb4NYg-Mvf24H9ZRPNgjc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9fknH3ra9fILYDUt3klH51hIPTnCppvaBqixXII1bx7v= w73XMliF0Rh5nakJwkBdIpNf0RQb4NYg-Mvf24H9WKD4KIM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 17 07:51:54 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 170751
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    251 AM EST Tue Dec 17 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PORTIONS OF
    THE EAST CENTRAL TO SOUTHEAST COAST OF FLORIDA...

    Model consensus is for increasingly active showers late Tuesday=20
    afternoon into Tuesday night/early Wednesday along the east central
    to southeast coast of Florida. Low level easterly to southeasterly
    flow in an axis of PW values 1.5 to 2+ standard deviations above=20
    the mean expected to persist into the east central to southeast=20
    Florida coast, with models showing an axis of defined boundary=20
    layer convergence in this low level inflow axis parallel to the=20
    east central to southeast coast. There will be potential for very=20
    slow moving cells along the coastal regions, supporting locally=20
    very heavy rainfall amounts and an urban flash flood threat. HREF=20 neighborhood probabilities are high (50-90%) for 3"+ amounts from=20
    Cape Canaveral, south to Miami, while the 5"+ neighborhood=20
    probabilities are high (60-90%) from near West Palm Beach, south to
    Miami. The best hi res overlap, evident in the greatest EAS=20
    probabilities for 2"+ amounts, is from near West Palm, south to=20
    just north of Miami.=20

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4jjWgDMSJmHWJCMzuXA6keymQfOVmYlnqQVn_N9cklbV= JqS2hL3p6yJEKCODXQfltCTas8mllKOFrcrCT-aBGhqwHfQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4jjWgDMSJmHWJCMzuXA6keymQfOVmYlnqQVn_N9cklbV= JqS2hL3p6yJEKCODXQfltCTas8mllKOFrcrCT-aBf-wCvgg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4jjWgDMSJmHWJCMzuXA6keymQfOVmYlnqQVn_N9cklbV= JqS2hL3p6yJEKCODXQfltCTas8mllKOFrcrCT-aB4SmeHl0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 17 16:00:23 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 171600
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1100 AM EST Tue Dec 17 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PORTIONS OF
    THE EAST CENTRAL TO SOUTHEAST COAST OF FLORIDA...

    ...16Z update...

    12Z soundings from MFL and KEY showed PW values of 1.5 and 1.7=20
    inches, respectively, or near the 90th percentile for mid-
    December. Low level easterly flow is expected to support
    showers/thunderstorms moving inland during the day today with an
    increasing threat for slow moving/stalled cells late today and
    overnight along an expected coastal/near-coastal convergence axis.=20

    925-850 mb winds of 15 to 20+ kt are forecast by the latest
    guidance with a shift toward more of a southeasterly direction
    later tonight. The 12Z HREF indicated neighborhood probabilites=20
    for 5 inches in 24 hours (ending 12Z Wednesday) of 50-60 percent
    and while these probablities have come down and are largely driven
    by the more bullish 12Z NAM_nest and ARW2, a low end threat for=20
    localized flash flooding will remain through 12Z Wednesday for the=20
    eastern and southeastern FL Peninsula.=20

    Otto

    ...previous discussion follows...


    Model consensus is for increasingly active showers late Tuesday=20
    afternoon into Tuesday night/early Wednesday along the east central
    to southeast coast of Florida. Low level easterly to southeasterly
    flow in an axis of PW values 1.5 to 2+ standard deviations above=20
    the mean expected to persist into the east central to southeast=20
    Florida coast, with models showing an axis of defined boundary=20
    layer convergence in this low level inflow axis parallel to the=20
    east central to southeast coast. There will be potential for very=20
    slow moving cells along the coastal regions, supporting locally=20
    very heavy rainfall amounts and an urban flash flood threat. HREF=20 neighborhood probabilities are high (50-90%) for 3"+ amounts from=20
    Cape Canaveral, south to Miami, while the 5"+ neighborhood=20
    probabilities are high (60-90%) from near West Palm Beach, south to
    Miami. The best hi res overlap, evident in the greatest EAS=20
    probabilities for 2"+ amounts, is from near West Palm, south to=20
    just north of Miami.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Oravec


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Oravec


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!49BE_CbALdvdEn84h2xVkzoTVoqIoe2OP5VB5afrMUnq= s5G8ac0tKrZNiJ4BftTjoDJCVJFRt0D0VFiKRXAoC2qOClA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!49BE_CbALdvdEn84h2xVkzoTVoqIoe2OP5VB5afrMUnq= s5G8ac0tKrZNiJ4BftTjoDJCVJFRt0D0VFiKRXAo7fx9ya8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!49BE_CbALdvdEn84h2xVkzoTVoqIoe2OP5VB5afrMUnq= s5G8ac0tKrZNiJ4BftTjoDJCVJFRt0D0VFiKRXAoaqgMoh0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 17 20:01:02 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 172000
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    300 PM EST Tue Dec 17 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Dec 17 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PORTIONS OF
    THE EAST CENTRAL TO SOUTHEAST COAST OF FLORIDA...

    ...16Z update...

    12Z soundings from MFL and KEY showed PW values of 1.5 and 1.7
    inches, respectively, or near the 90th percentile for mid-
    December. Low level easterly flow is expected to support
    showers/thunderstorms moving inland during the day today with an
    increasing threat for slow moving/stalled cells late today and
    overnight along an expected coastal/near-coastal convergence axis.

    925-850 mb winds of 15 to 20+ kt are forecast by the latest
    guidance with a shift toward more of a southeasterly direction
    later tonight. The 12Z HREF indicated neighborhood probabilities
    for 5 inches in 24 hours (ending 12Z Wednesday) of 50-60 percent
    and while these probabilities have come down and are largely=20
    driven by the more bullish 12Z NAM_nest and ARW2, a low end threat=20
    for localized flash flooding will remain through 12Z Wednesday for=20
    the eastern and southeastern FL Peninsula.

    Otto

    ...previous discussion follows...


    Model consensus is for increasingly active showers late Tuesday
    afternoon into Tuesday night/early Wednesday along the east central
    to southeast coast of Florida. Low level easterly to southeasterly
    flow in an axis of PW values 1.5 to 2+ standard deviations above
    the mean expected to persist into the east central to southeast
    Florida coast, with models showing an axis of defined boundary
    layer convergence in this low level inflow axis parallel to the
    east central to southeast coast. There will be potential for very
    slow moving cells along the coastal regions, supporting locally
    very heavy rainfall amounts and an urban flash flood threat. HREF
    neighborhood probabilities are high (50-90%) for 3"+ amounts from
    Cape Canaveral, south to Miami, while the 5"+ neighborhood
    probabilities are high (60-90%) from near West Palm Beach, south to
    Miami. The best hi res overlap, evident in the greatest EAS
    probabilities for 2"+ amounts, is from near West Palm, south to
    just north of Miami.

    Oravec


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PARTS OF
    THE MID-SOUTH AND LOWER OHIO VALLEY ALONG WITH THE SOUTHEAST=20
    FLORIDA COAST...

    ...TN into southern KY...
    Have included a targeted Marginal Risk in the updated Day 2 ERO
    across parts of western-central TN (especially northern portions)
    into southern KY, which would include the Nashville metro area.
    Amplifying upper trough to the west will allow for a more curved
    upper level jet streak on the lee side of the trough -- which will
    enhance the upper divergence and low-level moisture transport/flux
    into the outlook area. The latest (12Z) HREF show more elevated
    probabilities of 1"/hr rainfall rates between 12-18Z. In addition,
    especially when considering recent heavy rainfall over the past=20
    24+ hours (1-2 inches over parts of nw TN and sw KY), the latest 1
    and 3 FFG values have come down while 0-40km soil moisture
    percentiles per NASA SPoRT have climbed to 60-80% for most areas.
    As such, the HREF neighborhood probabilities of 3 hourly QPF=20
    exceeding 3 hour FFG peaks between 25-40% between 12-15Z Wed, when
    in that short 3-hour window most areas should see additional=20
    rainfall of 1-1.5" while some (isolated) locations receive closer=20
    to 2+ inches.


    ...Southeast FL...
    Basically carrying over the Marginal Risk area from Day 1 into the
    Day 2 period, as much of the 12Z high-res CAMs show lingering
    convective clusters along the se FL coast (mainly south of Vero
    Beach). Continued favorable (onshore) low-level moisture
    flux/convergence and sufficient deep-layer instability on Wed will
    maintain elevated short-term rainfall rates, likely 1-2+ in/hr at
    times during the day 2 period per the HREF probabilities. The 12Z=20
    HREF meanwhile also indicates 50-70% 40km neighborhood=20
    probabilities of at least 5 inches of additional rain during Day 2
    (12Z Wed-12Z Thu), with 30-50% probs of 8+ inches. The NAM-CONUS=20
    Nest, ARW1, and 12Z HRRR in particular are leading to these high=20
    HREF probabilities.=20

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!99ChtqScNzFHFt1Sx9hi6HGttWsZb6Y3RkAhHODBf4BK= pdTtu8mLOa6H8YwUEV07SWB1lJstCx9wuldJSg7GODxh8XI$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!99ChtqScNzFHFt1Sx9hi6HGttWsZb6Y3RkAhHODBf4BK= pdTtu8mLOa6H8YwUEV07SWB1lJstCx9wuldJSg7G19Fvcv0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!99ChtqScNzFHFt1Sx9hi6HGttWsZb6Y3RkAhHODBf4BK= pdTtu8mLOa6H8YwUEV07SWB1lJstCx9wuldJSg7GIIpOF0M$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 18 00:12:29 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 180012
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    712 PM EST Tue Dec 17 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PORTIONS OF
    THE EAST CENTRAL TO SOUTHEAST COAST OF FLORIDA...

    ..01Z Update..

    The current synoptic pattern will yield similar convective output
    across the eastern FL Peninsula with low-level convergence against
    the coast due to prevailing easterlies within a corridor of above
    normal PWATs and modest low instability present. Radar and
    satellite composite indicate a focal point of frictional
    convergence along the coast near Vero Beach with a cell cluster
    anchored right against the coastline. Recent observations signal a
    local max of just over 2" within the last few hours with moderate
    to bordering heavy rain likely to continue until the cell finally
    dissipates. Recent trends within hi-res deterministic indicate
    isolated pockets of these types of events occurring from Coco Beach down through Fort Lauderdale into the early morning hours thanks to the
    unwavering easterly wind field helping to enact primed coastal=20
    convergence when boundaries advecting off the nearby waters are=20
    present.=20

    Latest HREF neighborhood probability fields signal modest
    30-50% chance of >5" across portions of FL with the max probs=20
    located between Port St. Lucie down to Fort Lauderdale. Even with=20
    that alignment, it's very plausible that just a slight north/south=20 displacement of the highest probs would indicate locally=20
    appreciable rainfall worthy of flooding in any of the coastal urban
    areas of eastern FL. Considering the current radar depiction and=20 collaboration with the local offices, decided to maintain general
    continuity with a small extension northward given the radar trends
    near Viera/Coco Beach.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PARTS OF
    THE MID-SOUTH AND LOWER OHIO VALLEY ALONG WITH THE SOUTHEAST
    FLORIDA COAST...

    ...TN into southern KY...
    Have included a targeted Marginal Risk in the updated Day 2 ERO
    across parts of western-central TN (especially northern portions)
    into southern KY, which would include the Nashville metro area.
    Amplifying upper trough to the west will allow for a more curved
    upper level jet streak on the lee side of the trough -- which will
    enhance the upper divergence and low-level moisture transport/flux
    into the outlook area. The latest (12Z) HREF show more elevated
    probabilities of 1"/hr rainfall rates between 12-18Z. In addition,
    especially when considering recent heavy rainfall over the past
    24+ hours (1-2 inches over parts of nw TN and sw KY), the latest 1
    and 3 FFG values have come down while 0-40km soil moisture
    percentiles per NASA SPoRT have climbed to 60-80% for most areas.
    As such, the HREF neighborhood probabilities of 3 hourly QPF
    exceeding 3 hour FFG peaks between 25-40% between 12-15Z Wed, when
    in that short 3-hour window most areas should see additional
    rainfall of 1-1.5" while some (isolated) locations receive closer
    to 2+ inches.


    ...Southeast FL...
    Basically carrying over the Marginal Risk area from Day 1 into the
    Day 2 period, as much of the 12Z high-res CAMs show lingering
    convective clusters along the se FL coast (mainly south of Vero
    Beach). Continued favorable (onshore) low-level moisture
    flux/convergence and sufficient deep-layer instability on Wed will
    maintain elevated short-term rainfall rates, likely 1-2+ in/hr at
    times during the day 2 period per the HREF probabilities. The 12Z
    HREF meanwhile also indicates 50-70% 40km neighborhood
    probabilities of at least 5 inches of additional rain during Day 2
    (12Z Wed-12Z Thu), with 30-50% probs of 8+ inches. The NAM-CONUS
    Nest, ARW1, and 12Z HRRR in particular are leading to these high
    HREF probabilities.

    Hurley


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_NgqMpb88PXqjkJx9n9dNWlUDnQVs0ew7DBQVtyMs5iF= 1ZE6xYclFrbYeLc06se9k3VEm8cdOCpAW7vZ5xsnoF18qkQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_NgqMpb88PXqjkJx9n9dNWlUDnQVs0ew7DBQVtyMs5iF= 1ZE6xYclFrbYeLc06se9k3VEm8cdOCpAW7vZ5xsnXKMlbx8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_NgqMpb88PXqjkJx9n9dNWlUDnQVs0ew7DBQVtyMs5iF= 1ZE6xYclFrbYeLc06se9k3VEm8cdOCpAW7vZ5xsn5tU4hBI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 18 08:23:39 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 180823
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    323 AM EST Wed Dec 18 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PARTS OF THE=20
    OHIO AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS ALONG WITH THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA COAST...

    ...Parts of the Mid-South to Lower Ohio Valley...=20
    Maintained the Marginal Risk area across parts of western and central
    Tennessee into southern Kentucky as models still advertise an=20
    upper-level trough amplifying to the west which allows for a more=20
    curved upper level jet streak on the lee side of the trough. That=20 configuration may result in some enhanced rainfall rates...an idea=20
    supported by the 18/00Z HREF neighborhood probabilities showing=20
    potential for rainfall rates exceeding an inch per hour between=20
    12-18Z today (mainly in Tennessee). With rainfall blossoming to=20
    the west of the outlook area in the pre-dawn hours this morning=20
    helping to prime the soils a bit more and a general slowing of the=20
    eastward progression across the Tennessee Valley compared with=20
    earlier forecasts...opted to extend the Marginal risk area a bit=20
    farther westward than previously indicated. The HREF probability of
    exceeding flash flood guidance remained low but did reflect=20
    somewhat higher probabilities west of the same guidance from the=20
    17/12Z and 17/18Z runs. The decision to expand westward slightly=20
    was also driven by the observed rainfall during the past day or two
    over parts of northwest Tennessee and southwest Kentucky which has
    resulted in the latest 1-hour and 3- hour flash flood guidance=20
    coming down and the 0-40km soil moisture percentiles per NASA SPoRT
    have climbed to 60-80% for most areas.=20

    ...Southeast FL...=20
    Post frontal easterly low level flow off the Atlantic will linger=20
    allowing for a possible repeat of convective clusters over and=20
    near the southeast Florida coastline today. The 00Z runs of the=20
    high-res CAMs continued to show onshore low-level moisture=20
    flux/convergence and sufficient deep-layer instability to support=20
    localized downpours. The 18/00Z HREF supports rates of 2+ inch per=20
    hour peaking around 10 percent during the afternoon with and a=20
    50-70 percent 40km neighborhood probabilities of at least 5 inches=20
    of additional rain and 30-50 percent probabilities of 8+ inches.=20
    Given that these numbers are comparable with the 17/12Z and 17/18Z=20
    runs of the HREF...saw little reason to make too many changes other
    than nudges to the boundary of the previously issued Marginal risk
    area.=20


    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_VGHg43JVbddWsGyChhnr8-fx97u_pymZDz3gX1SY7Kd= dlOcg__DFsi6EXZOzhmDQhXigylvL1PrE30Ftfyc_-3_3qM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_VGHg43JVbddWsGyChhnr8-fx97u_pymZDz3gX1SY7Kd= dlOcg__DFsi6EXZOzhmDQhXigylvL1PrE30Ftfycs51r0AU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_VGHg43JVbddWsGyChhnr8-fx97u_pymZDz3gX1SY7Kd= dlOcg__DFsi6EXZOzhmDQhXigylvL1PrE30FtfycVJoHKhQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 18 16:00:49 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 181600
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1100 AM EST Wed Dec 18 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PARTS OF THE
    OHIO AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS ALONG WITH THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA COAST...


    ...16Z update...

    ...Southeast FL...
    Weak 0-6 km AGL and LFC-EL mean layer winds (both ~5 kt on the 12Z
    MFL sounding, but slightly stronger flow to north) will continue to
    support the potential of slow moving showers/thunderstorms during
    the day today. While the earlier cell near FLL has weakened since
    this morning, a low-end threat for mainly urban flooding will
    linger into peak heating. A convectively enhanced mid-level trough
    just east of the FL Peninsula is expected to continue weakening=20
    with an eastward translation today. Low level flow has become more=20
    southerly and while the bulk of convection today is expected to=20
    remain offshore, an isolated chance for a slow moving cell later
    this afternoon will be possible with daytime heating within the
    anomalous moisture over southeastern FL. Will keep the Marginal
    Risk, though the threat appears to be diminished compared to
    earlier today.

    ...Parts of the Mid-South to Lower Ohio Valley...
    Opted to remove the Marginal Risk for this portion of the country
    with this update. A SW to NE axis of locally heavy rain extended=20
    from southeastern KY through middle TN and northwestern AL at=20
    1545Z, moving off toward the east. There has been brief training=20
    within this line with MRMS- estimated rainfall rates near 1 in/hr,
    but overall, the line has been progressive with some possible=20
    minor flooding earlier this morning along the western KY/TN border.
    As a surface low over KY tracks northeastward today, the front and
    associated precipitation axis will advance steadily off toward the
    east with some weakening due in part to a lack of=20
    moisture/instability downstream. Additional spotty rainfall of 1=20
    to 1.5 inches will be possible on a localized basis.

    Otto

    ...previous discussion follows...


    ...Parts of the Mid-South to Lower Ohio Valley...
    Maintained the Marginal Risk area across parts of western and central
    Tennessee into southern Kentucky as models still advertise an
    upper-level trough amplifying to the west which allows for a more
    curved upper level jet streak on the lee side of the trough. That
    configuration may result in some enhanced rainfall rates...an idea
    supported by the 18/00Z HREF neighborhood probabilities showing
    potential for rainfall rates exceeding an inch per hour between
    12-18Z today (mainly in Tennessee). With rainfall blossoming to
    the west of the outlook area in the pre-dawn hours this morning
    helping to prime the soils a bit more and a general slowing of the
    eastward progression across the Tennessee Valley compared with
    earlier forecasts...opted to extend the Marginal risk area a bit
    farther westward than previously indicated. The HREF probability of
    exceeding flash flood guidance remained low but did reflect
    somewhat higher probabilities west of the same guidance from the
    17/12Z and 17/18Z runs. The decision to expand westward slightly
    was also driven by the observed rainfall during the past day or two
    over parts of northwest Tennessee and southwest Kentucky which has
    resulted in the latest 1-hour and 3- hour flash flood guidance
    coming down and the 0-40km soil moisture percentiles per NASA SPoRT
    have climbed to 60-80% for most areas.

    ...Southeast FL...
    Post frontal easterly low level flow off the Atlantic will linger
    allowing for a possible repeat of convective clusters over and
    near the southeast Florida coastline today. The 00Z runs of the
    high-res CAMs continued to show onshore low-level moisture
    flux/convergence and sufficient deep-layer instability to support
    localized downpours. The 18/00Z HREF supports rates of 2+ inch per
    hour peaking around 10 percent during the afternoon with and a
    50-70 percent 40km neighborhood probabilities of at least 5 inches
    of additional rain and 30-50 percent probabilities of 8+ inches.
    Given that these numbers are comparable with the 17/12Z and 17/18Z
    runs of the HREF...saw little reason to make too many changes other
    than nudges to the boundary of the previously issued Marginal risk
    area.


    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4IMnT7g2skWYqSIJM-hDdlj5SqgMjFuz2E-dkoJCMSc6= 13K6zwjdEjf0FL6iPuWAs3cuQEXd8q1ZnmOo1xowkjieblc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4IMnT7g2skWYqSIJM-hDdlj5SqgMjFuz2E-dkoJCMSc6= 13K6zwjdEjf0FL6iPuWAs3cuQEXd8q1ZnmOo1xowrCiJrIk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4IMnT7g2skWYqSIJM-hDdlj5SqgMjFuz2E-dkoJCMSc6= 13K6zwjdEjf0FL6iPuWAs3cuQEXd8q1ZnmOo1xowZkp4a3s$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 18 18:04:19 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 181802
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    102 PM EST Wed Dec 18 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA COAST...


    ...16Z update...

    ...Southeast FL...
    Weak 0-6 km AGL and LFC-EL mean layer winds (both ~5 kt on the 12Z
    MFL sounding, but slightly stronger flow to north) will continue to
    support the potential of slow moving showers/thunderstorms during
    the day today. While the earlier cell near FLL has weakened since
    this morning, a low-end threat for mainly urban flooding will
    linger into peak heating. A convectively enhanced mid-level trough
    just east of the FL Peninsula is expected to continue weakening
    with an eastward translation today. Low level flow has become more
    southerly and while the bulk of convection today is expected to
    remain offshore, an isolated chance for a slow moving cell later
    this afternoon will be possible with daytime heating within the
    anomalous moisture over southeastern FL. Will keep the Marginal
    Risk, though the threat appears to be diminished compared to
    earlier today.

    ...Parts of the Mid-South to Lower Ohio Valley...
    Opted to remove the Marginal Risk for this portion of the country
    with this update. A SW to NE axis of locally heavy rain extended
    from southeastern KY through middle TN and northwestern AL at
    1545Z, moving off toward the east. There has been brief training
    within this line with MRMS- estimated rainfall rates near 1 in/hr,
    but overall, the line has been progressive with some possible
    minor flooding earlier this morning along the western KY/TN border.
    As a surface low over KY tracks northeastward today, the front and
    associated precipitation axis will advance steadily off toward the
    east with some weakening due in part to a lack of
    moisture/instability downstream. Additional spotty rainfall of 1
    to 1.5 inches will be possible on a localized basis.

    Otto

    ...previous discussion follows...


    ...Parts of the Mid-South to Lower Ohio Valley...
    Maintained the Marginal Risk area across parts of western and central
    Tennessee into southern Kentucky as models still advertise an
    upper-level trough amplifying to the west which allows for a more
    curved upper level jet streak on the lee side of the trough. That
    configuration may result in some enhanced rainfall rates...an idea
    supported by the 18/00Z HREF neighborhood probabilities showing
    potential for rainfall rates exceeding an inch per hour between
    12-18Z today (mainly in Tennessee). With rainfall blossoming to
    the west of the outlook area in the pre-dawn hours this morning
    helping to prime the soils a bit more and a general slowing of the
    eastward progression across the Tennessee Valley compared with
    earlier forecasts...opted to extend the Marginal risk area a bit
    farther westward than previously indicated. The HREF probability of
    exceeding flash flood guidance remained low but did reflect
    somewhat higher probabilities west of the same guidance from the
    17/12Z and 17/18Z runs. The decision to expand westward slightly
    was also driven by the observed rainfall during the past day or two
    over parts of northwest Tennessee and southwest Kentucky which has
    resulted in the latest 1-hour and 3- hour flash flood guidance
    coming down and the 0-40km soil moisture percentiles per NASA SPoRT
    have climbed to 60-80% for most areas.

    ...Southeast FL...
    Post frontal easterly low level flow off the Atlantic will linger
    allowing for a possible repeat of convective clusters over and
    near the southeast Florida coastline today. The 00Z runs of the
    high-res CAMs continued to show onshore low-level moisture
    flux/convergence and sufficient deep-layer instability to support
    localized downpours. The 18/00Z HREF supports rates of 2+ inch per
    hour peaking around 10 percent during the afternoon with and a
    50-70 percent 40km neighborhood probabilities of at least 5 inches
    of additional rain and 30-50 percent probabilities of 8+ inches.
    Given that these numbers are comparable with the 17/12Z and 17/18Z
    runs of the HREF...saw little reason to make too many changes other
    than nudges to the boundary of the previously issued Marginal risk
    area.


    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira

    Day 3 Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8qLE2-tgaYwERYC22ahlNvLPGQOim2lXfMvCfFneHIYI= MTL6DonBP7rukNOYoFHaT9qxStZ09PCaqinxOIe-PRxHgyk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8qLE2-tgaYwERYC22ahlNvLPGQOim2lXfMvCfFneHIYI= MTL6DonBP7rukNOYoFHaT9qxStZ09PCaqinxOIe-C-61Mhk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8qLE2-tgaYwERYC22ahlNvLPGQOim2lXfMvCfFneHIYI= MTL6DonBP7rukNOYoFHaT9qxStZ09PCaqinxOIe-Ia-nxc8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 18 18:34:25 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 181833
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    133 PM EST Wed Dec 18 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Dec 18 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ALONG PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST FLORIDA COAST...


    ...16Z update...

    ...Southeast FL...
    Weak 0-6 km AGL and LFC-EL mean layer winds (both ~5 kt on the 12Z
    MFL sounding, but slightly stronger flow to north) will continue to
    support the potential of slow moving showers/thunderstorms during
    the day today. While the earlier cell near FLL has weakened since
    this morning, a low-end threat for mainly urban flooding will
    linger into peak heating. A convectively enhanced mid-level trough
    just east of the FL Peninsula is expected to continue weakening
    with an eastward translation today. Low level flow has become more
    southerly and while the bulk of convection today is expected to
    remain offshore, an isolated chance for a slow moving cell later
    this afternoon will be possible with daytime heating within the
    anomalous moisture over southeastern FL. Will keep the Marginal
    Risk, though the threat appears to be diminished compared to
    earlier today.

    ...Parts of the Mid-South to Lower Ohio Valley...
    Opted to remove the Marginal Risk for this portion of the country
    with this update. A SW to NE axis of locally heavy rain extended
    from southeastern KY through middle TN and northwestern AL at
    1545Z, moving off toward the east. There has been brief training
    within this line with MRMS- estimated rainfall rates near 1 in/hr,
    but overall, the line has been progressive with some possible
    minor flooding earlier this morning along the western KY/TN border.
    As a surface low over KY tracks northeastward today, the front and
    associated precipitation axis will advance steadily off toward the
    east with some weakening due in part to a lack of
    moisture/instability downstream. Additional spotty rainfall of 1
    to 1.5 inches will be possible on a localized basis.

    Otto

    ...previous discussion follows...


    ...Parts of the Mid-South to Lower Ohio Valley...
    Maintained the Marginal Risk area across parts of western and central
    Tennessee into southern Kentucky as models still advertise an
    upper-level trough amplifying to the west which allows for a more
    curved upper level jet streak on the lee side of the trough. That
    configuration may result in some enhanced rainfall rates...an idea
    supported by the 18/00Z HREF neighborhood probabilities showing
    potential for rainfall rates exceeding an inch per hour between
    12-18Z today (mainly in Tennessee). With rainfall blossoming to
    the west of the outlook area in the pre-dawn hours this morning
    helping to prime the soils a bit more and a general slowing of the
    eastward progression across the Tennessee Valley compared with
    earlier forecasts...opted to extend the Marginal risk area a bit
    farther westward than previously indicated. The HREF probability of
    exceeding flash flood guidance remained low but did reflect
    somewhat higher probabilities west of the same guidance from the
    17/12Z and 17/18Z runs. The decision to expand westward slightly
    was also driven by the observed rainfall during the past day or two
    over parts of northwest Tennessee and southwest Kentucky which has
    resulted in the latest 1-hour and 3- hour flash flood guidance
    coming down and the 0-40km soil moisture percentiles per NASA SPoRT
    have climbed to 60-80% for most areas.

    ...Southeast FL...
    Post frontal easterly low level flow off the Atlantic will linger
    allowing for a possible repeat of convective clusters over and
    near the southeast Florida coastline today. The 00Z runs of the
    high-res CAMs continued to show onshore low-level moisture
    flux/convergence and sufficient deep-layer instability to support
    localized downpours. The 18/00Z HREF supports rates of 2+ inch per
    hour peaking around 10 percent during the afternoon with and a
    50-70 percent 40km neighborhood probabilities of at least 5 inches
    of additional rain and 30-50 percent probabilities of 8+ inches.
    Given that these numbers are comparable with the 17/12Z and 17/18Z
    runs of the HREF...saw little reason to make too many changes other
    than nudges to the boundary of the previously issued Marginal risk
    area.


    Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4C6yTDkEgICe-EzpGca1bokb_YzYuLZFHfrp3PGg863E= Br1cUO7TRBM28PMdsx_lKpe001xUIv_1ncDahZAioS4CdQQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4C6yTDkEgICe-EzpGca1bokb_YzYuLZFHfrp3PGg863E= Br1cUO7TRBM28PMdsx_lKpe001xUIv_1ncDahZAiGiSdVWQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4C6yTDkEgICe-EzpGca1bokb_YzYuLZFHfrp3PGg863E= Br1cUO7TRBM28PMdsx_lKpe001xUIv_1ncDahZAiW-1w4lI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 19 00:37:12 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 190036
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    736 PM EST Wed Dec 18 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!40Ikz-pMwHxSCiCDofV1mhJFPFdPN2x3t9NLOMdAVGVm= DoNazgNQ_ybzqWqO-RcbTiMbYQD-RIt2yi6jIsBP7t8orGA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!40Ikz-pMwHxSCiCDofV1mhJFPFdPN2x3t9NLOMdAVGVm= DoNazgNQ_ybzqWqO-RcbTiMbYQD-RIt2yi6jIsBPSsuCud4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!40Ikz-pMwHxSCiCDofV1mhJFPFdPN2x3t9NLOMdAVGVm= DoNazgNQ_ybzqWqO-RcbTiMbYQD-RIt2yi6jIsBPoiN_mGA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 19 07:47:32 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 190747
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    247 AM EST Thu Dec 19 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!64s3lFc2xfkxegBS5BsDq4bUUHmtk1MKozISMfxjR2Jn= ivpkkg924-uCZLIL0Tm7OUaeXGS25ShKk_dRX-7ZNsc3Emw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!64s3lFc2xfkxegBS5BsDq4bUUHmtk1MKozISMfxjR2Jn= ivpkkg924-uCZLIL0Tm7OUaeXGS25ShKk_dRX-7ZnGdj9z8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!64s3lFc2xfkxegBS5BsDq4bUUHmtk1MKozISMfxjR2Jn= ivpkkg924-uCZLIL0Tm7OUaeXGS25ShKk_dRX-7Ztr9kiPw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 19 15:06:43 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 191506
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1006 AM EST Thu Dec 19 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!84LcNEVUxsPQNtgSBd5pAhBsBYiiwjyB6EkvKouTGl1X= jhz3A9_F-y0Mxn5sKcRYgZWi29CsuTjWksvkDo3i0gBufX0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!84LcNEVUxsPQNtgSBd5pAhBsBYiiwjyB6EkvKouTGl1X= jhz3A9_F-y0Mxn5sKcRYgZWi29CsuTjWksvkDo3iVpStCkM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!84LcNEVUxsPQNtgSBd5pAhBsBYiiwjyB6EkvKouTGl1X= jhz3A9_F-y0Mxn5sKcRYgZWi29CsuTjWksvkDo3idsheoQk$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 19 18:40:27 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 191840
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    140 PM EST Thu Dec 19 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Dec 19 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5EXL6Xl2-lJgka3frkgn6fqJi2p3Vc30kA9tupR3eVQo= Th6I0hJznvixgMvofP3_YkJhHjRRsqMvYD3qv5O5HsoJF_w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5EXL6Xl2-lJgka3frkgn6fqJi2p3Vc30kA9tupR3eVQo= Th6I0hJznvixgMvofP3_YkJhHjRRsqMvYD3qv5O5o5tMqGE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5EXL6Xl2-lJgka3frkgn6fqJi2p3Vc30kA9tupR3eVQo= Th6I0hJznvixgMvofP3_YkJhHjRRsqMvYD3qv5O5mHixPF0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 20 00:45:46 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 200045
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    745 PM EST Thu Dec 19 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_DHijDzzKd7sEIpgl2Pz9mXmE7zN_jb_L_UdwMiK_cMo= QIOKlDGSFjL9u989e5kYJNPf0SGPbKPwVty2RzfefztivKU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_DHijDzzKd7sEIpgl2Pz9mXmE7zN_jb_L_UdwMiK_cMo= QIOKlDGSFjL9u989e5kYJNPf0SGPbKPwVty2RzfeMdIVo60$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_DHijDzzKd7sEIpgl2Pz9mXmE7zN_jb_L_UdwMiK_cMo= QIOKlDGSFjL9u989e5kYJNPf0SGPbKPwVty2RzfeIZwVOro$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 20 08:21:36 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 200820
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    320 AM EST Fri Dec 20 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_ImL79D2pkNgga2A4Yrv_pwo1AM7SvUOU5vN8OPzL73i= MmzOfEQINous6qriH2YzTzMsQDu_pI-zrbq1J5zK0KeAebY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_ImL79D2pkNgga2A4Yrv_pwo1AM7SvUOU5vN8OPzL73i= MmzOfEQINous6qriH2YzTzMsQDu_pI-zrbq1J5zKiI5_Pjk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_ImL79D2pkNgga2A4Yrv_pwo1AM7SvUOU5vN8OPzL73i= MmzOfEQINous6qriH2YzTzMsQDu_pI-zrbq1J5zK1VYWEpk$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 20 15:28:35 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 201528
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1028 AM EST Fri Dec 20 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-4ARPO7u_lSDUYSQLE8I0arUZo6JMjViTvCuRTSUPS7e= VZLlawkVPp5mhNMeifgzVNM-oqifF0rOK5yJ1E8lna0bBCs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-4ARPO7u_lSDUYSQLE8I0arUZo6JMjViTvCuRTSUPS7e= VZLlawkVPp5mhNMeifgzVNM-oqifF0rOK5yJ1E8l4hkMN9Q$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-4ARPO7u_lSDUYSQLE8I0arUZo6JMjViTvCuRTSUPS7e= VZLlawkVPp5mhNMeifgzVNM-oqifF0rOK5yJ1E8lv6NP_is$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 20 18:51:09 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 201850
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    150 PM EST Fri Dec 20 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Fri Dec 20 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!79XTX5OE2HGy5oH53fscs5uJvyf4UIwyj4ZtQNXkaVFO= cpG9cHLhG7j6R6Adlq1krsu7hL4tsK_Ep3bjBHXvQjojMgU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!79XTX5OE2HGy5oH53fscs5uJvyf4UIwyj4ZtQNXkaVFO= cpG9cHLhG7j6R6Adlq1krsu7hL4tsK_Ep3bjBHXvhVqbNgs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!79XTX5OE2HGy5oH53fscs5uJvyf4UIwyj4ZtQNXkaVFO= cpG9cHLhG7j6R6Adlq1krsu7hL4tsK_Ep3bjBHXvOaxvabg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 21 00:19:50 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 210019
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    719 PM EST Fri Dec 20 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4mMcxcOWHcpsVLiJFZV2VonRzW0eSkr6UWh6w03_Y6Vu= bdjw44Bj-ruiIwwCzh1mXcM7nCLyIYX-P1XXcT1aj2EmSbY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4mMcxcOWHcpsVLiJFZV2VonRzW0eSkr6UWh6w03_Y6Vu= bdjw44Bj-ruiIwwCzh1mXcM7nCLyIYX-P1XXcT1avxAx2vw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4mMcxcOWHcpsVLiJFZV2VonRzW0eSkr6UWh6w03_Y6Vu= bdjw44Bj-ruiIwwCzh1mXcM7nCLyIYX-P1XXcT1a13-8MtY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 21 07:56:55 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 210756
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    256 AM EST Sat Dec 21 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    The next, more prominent atmospheric river is forecast to impact
    the NorCal coast into southwestern OR by the end of the D2 into D3
    time frame with a better aligned IVT pulse anticipated for areas
    that saw significant rainfall totals over the past 7-10 days. The
    heaviest rain will be confined to the immediate coast with a
    southwest to northeast oriented moisture flux expected leading to
    upslope flow a bit orthogonal to the coastal terrain extending from
    the King Range up through the Siskiyou in southwest OR. Current
    forecasted totals within the ensemble suite are between 2-4" with
    some deterministic output between 4-5" at max. This is generally
    within the confines of a low-end MRGL risk threshold when assessing
    historical precedence for these types of events. The main
    difference between this event and the previous was the primary
    hydrometeor will come in the form of rainfall, even inland as lower
    heights will be confined offshore and a flood of warmer air in the
    boundary layer will protrude inland. Only the highest elevations of
    the Northern Sierra and Mount Shasta will have a higher threat for
    winter ptypes, so this points some of the more sensitive areas of
    northern CA into play where burn scar remnants are located.=20

    The inherited MRGL from the D4 was relatively maintained for the
    areas outlined in CA, but the prospects for flash flooding were
    pretty low given the QPF signature for locations north of
    southwestern OR, so decided to pull back the northern extension
    along the OR coast. The MRGL extends inland to include those more
    sensitive areas within the complex terrain, even extending to the
    foothills of the Northern Sierra where heavier precip will make its
    way by the end of the forecast cycle and likely carrying beyond to
    the D4 period.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9UfnIvOQU63Sy7VY7NkvY2IKPiKW7mthm93bBKJomU9N= TPUE6NhsieTKIuH4iW25ktEx2G8Nm4JwOTQWPSiv5zsbv_A$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9UfnIvOQU63Sy7VY7NkvY2IKPiKW7mthm93bBKJomU9N= TPUE6NhsieTKIuH4iW25ktEx2G8Nm4JwOTQWPSivRVF8HFg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9UfnIvOQU63Sy7VY7NkvY2IKPiKW7mthm93bBKJomU9N= TPUE6NhsieTKIuH4iW25ktEx2G8Nm4JwOTQWPSivZpX_5ug$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 21 15:33:27 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 211532
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1032 AM EST Sat Dec 21 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    The next, more prominent atmospheric river is forecast to impact
    the NorCal coast into southwestern OR by the end of the D2 into D3
    time frame with a better aligned IVT pulse anticipated for areas
    that saw significant rainfall totals over the past 7-10 days. The
    heaviest rain will be confined to the immediate coast with a
    southwest to northeast oriented moisture flux expected leading to
    upslope flow a bit orthogonal to the coastal terrain extending from
    the King Range up through the Siskiyou in southwest OR. Current
    forecasted totals within the ensemble suite are between 2-4" with
    some deterministic output between 4-5" at max. This is generally
    within the confines of a low-end MRGL risk threshold when assessing
    historical precedence for these types of events. The main
    difference between this event and the previous was the primary
    hydrometeor will come in the form of rainfall, even inland as lower
    heights will be confined offshore and a flood of warmer air in the
    boundary layer will protrude inland. Only the highest elevations of
    the Northern Sierra and Mount Shasta will have a higher threat for
    winter ptypes, so this points some of the more sensitive areas of
    northern CA into play where burn scar remnants are located.

    The inherited MRGL from the D4 was relatively maintained for the
    areas outlined in CA, but the prospects for flash flooding were
    pretty low given the QPF signature for locations north of
    southwestern OR, so decided to pull back the northern extension
    along the OR coast. The MRGL extends inland to include those more
    sensitive areas within the complex terrain, even extending to the
    foothills of the Northern Sierra where heavier precip will make its
    way by the end of the forecast cycle and likely carrying beyond to
    the D4 period.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7onr85-4ukjaa2bW6z_GiiTwHpnuWqQSPajx1O11jff-= Cdi75pvPDbO9y0bSf8Rvmlmln3j6bwW2l_w935Zluyy3z_k$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7onr85-4ukjaa2bW6z_GiiTwHpnuWqQSPajx1O11jff-= Cdi75pvPDbO9y0bSf8Rvmlmln3j6bwW2l_w935Zla5z0GHI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7onr85-4ukjaa2bW6z_GiiTwHpnuWqQSPajx1O11jff-= Cdi75pvPDbO9y0bSf8Rvmlmln3j6bwW2l_w935ZlwWeYkTQ$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 21 19:05:23 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 211905
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    205 PM EST Sat Dec 21 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sat Dec 21 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    Update...
    No significant changes were made for the daytime update, just minor
    adjustments based on the 12Z guidance.

    Previous Discussion...=20
    The next, more prominent atmospheric river is forecast to impact=20
    the NorCal coast into southwestern OR by the end of the D2 into D3=20
    time frame with a better aligned IVT pulse anticipated for areas=20
    that saw significant rainfall totals over the past 7-10 days. The=20
    heaviest rain will be confined to the immediate coast with a=20
    southwest to northeast oriented moisture flux expected leading to=20
    upslope flow a bit orthogonal to the coastal terrain extending from
    the King Range up through the Siskiyou in southwest OR. Current=20
    forecasted totals within the ensemble suite are between 2-4" with=20
    some deterministic output between 4-5" at max. This is generally=20
    within the confines of a low-end MRGL risk threshold when assessing
    historical precedence for these types of events. The main=20
    difference between this event and the previous was the primary=20
    hydrometeor will come in the form of rainfall, even inland as lower
    heights will be confined offshore and a flood of warmer air in the
    boundary layer will protrude inland. Only the highest elevations=20
    of the Northern Sierra and Mount Shasta will have a higher threat=20
    for winter ptypes, so this points some of the more sensitive areas=20
    of northern CA into play where burn scar remnants are located.

    The inherited MRGL from the D4 was relatively maintained for the
    areas outlined in CA, but the prospects for flash flooding were
    pretty low given the QPF signature for locations north of
    southwestern OR, so decided to pull back the northern extension
    along the OR coast. The MRGL extends inland to include those more
    sensitive areas within the complex terrain, even extending to the
    foothills of the Northern Sierra where heavier precip will make its
    way by the end of the forecast cycle and likely carrying beyond to
    the D4 period.

    Pereira/Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5jV3oVaAuurC2ucGz4VvNlOr6bmponQjbeXzva59HlUZ= U8JrLkYnFyEjU3mkX0FrDEHvshTFecpHQUo8K2Jm7hMWe-I$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5jV3oVaAuurC2ucGz4VvNlOr6bmponQjbeXzva59HlUZ= U8JrLkYnFyEjU3mkX0FrDEHvshTFecpHQUo8K2Jm7BGzJt0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5jV3oVaAuurC2ucGz4VvNlOr6bmponQjbeXzva59HlUZ= U8JrLkYnFyEjU3mkX0FrDEHvshTFecpHQUo8K2Jm05qZZoU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 22 00:27:29 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 220026
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    726 PM EST Sat Dec 21 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    Update...
    No significant changes were made for the daytime update, just minor
    adjustments based on the 12Z guidance.

    Previous Discussion...
    The next, more prominent atmospheric river is forecast to impact
    the NorCal coast into southwestern OR by the end of the D2 into D3
    time frame with a better aligned IVT pulse anticipated for areas
    that saw significant rainfall totals over the past 7-10 days. The
    heaviest rain will be confined to the immediate coast with a
    southwest to northeast oriented moisture flux expected leading to
    upslope flow a bit orthogonal to the coastal terrain extending from
    the King Range up through the Siskiyou in southwest OR. Current
    forecasted totals within the ensemble suite are between 2-4" with
    some deterministic output between 4-5" at max. This is generally
    within the confines of a low-end MRGL risk threshold when assessing
    historical precedence for these types of events. The main
    difference between this event and the previous was the primary
    hydrometeor will come in the form of rainfall, even inland as lower
    heights will be confined offshore and a flood of warmer air in the
    boundary layer will protrude inland. Only the highest elevations
    of the Northern Sierra and Mount Shasta will have a higher threat
    for winter ptypes, so this points some of the more sensitive areas
    of northern CA into play where burn scar remnants are located.

    The inherited MRGL from the D4 was relatively maintained for the
    areas outlined in CA, but the prospects for flash flooding were
    pretty low given the QPF signature for locations north of
    southwestern OR, so decided to pull back the northern extension
    along the OR coast. The MRGL extends inland to include those more
    sensitive areas within the complex terrain, even extending to the
    foothills of the Northern Sierra where heavier precip will make its
    way by the end of the forecast cycle and likely carrying beyond to
    the D4 period.

    Pereira/Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7s5df_HsLYyZzd5tUKRshx48G6s3q7JapsSFcAxb-6iX= YkBVPvhtG2LdZsY8gE0ZVwtSbNUeOrULK8uT460Ys1fsHMM$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7s5df_HsLYyZzd5tUKRshx48G6s3q7JapsSFcAxb-6iX= YkBVPvhtG2LdZsY8gE0ZVwtSbNUeOrULK8uT460YMIy_BHw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7s5df_HsLYyZzd5tUKRshx48G6s3q7JapsSFcAxb-6iX= YkBVPvhtG2LdZsY8gE0ZVwtSbNUeOrULK8uT460YZjQo5gc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 22 07:59:27 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 220759
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    259 AM EST Sun Dec 22 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    There is a non-zero opportunity for isolated flash flood concerns=20
    across portions of the eastern FL coastline, mainly along the Space
    Coast near Coco Beach up to Cape Canaveral and Titusville. A=20
    developing surface trough off the coast will nose into the=20
    coastline later this evening with flow turning more perpendicular=20
    to the coast allowing for increased frictional convergence in a=20
    small zone within the trough. HREF neighborhood probabilities are=20
    hovering around 20-30% at peak for >3" in any spot within the area=20
    above, very much on the lower end of any flash flood threshold, and
    mainly below the current FFG indices for 1/3/6 hr time frames.=20
    More robust deterministic has closer to 4.5-5" over a short period=20
    of time the back end of the forecast period, but most of the CAMs=20
    maintain the heaviest precip offshore. The prospects are very low,=20
    but wanted to make mention that threat is non-zero.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    Consensus continues to grow for a quick hitting weak to borderline
    moderate atmospheric river aimed at southwestern OR down into
    northern CA by late Monday into Tuesday morning. Recent ensemble=20
    depictions are in agreement on an IVT pulse centered over the=20
    northern CA coast, protruding inland through the end of the period
    with warm air advecting well into the boundary layer and above=20
    yielding a majority rainfall signal across even some of the higher=20
    terrain inland. NAEFS output for PWAT anomalies indicates a tongue=20
    of 2-3 deviations above normal moisture plume being ushered in on=20
    deep layer southwest flow thanks to a shortwave trough undercutting
    a broad upper level cyclone located off the PAC Northwest coast.=20
    This look is fairly textbook for a period of prevailing=20
    southwesterly flow running orthogonal to some of the adjacent=20
    coastal ranges that are situated from southwest OR down through=20
    northern CA. The zones most impacted will lie at the foothills of=20
    Mount Shasta and the northern Sierra Nevada for the inland portion,
    as well as the King and Siskiyou Ranges that align from OR down=20
    through northwestern CA. Rainfall totals on the order of 3-5" with=20
    locally higher in the highest elevations of the above ranges are=20
    forecast during the time frame beginning 21z Monday through 12z=20
    Tuesday with some carryover into D3 before the main shortwave moves
    inland. 2-4" will be common within the coastal plain with locally
    higher in areas south of Eureka. Localized flooding prospects are
    higher than normal given the stronger IVT pulse being depicted,
    also impacting areas that saw decent rainfall as of a week to 10
    days prior. The saving grace is the time frame is not very long in
    terms of impact, so that helps limit a greater flash flood threat.=20

    The previously inherited forecast was generally maintained outside
    some fine tuning across the Sierra Foothills and the northern
    periphery of the MRGL risk into OR.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    SIERRA FOOTHILLS AND EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ..Sierra Foothills..

    Atmospheric river from previous period will bleed into the D3 time
    frame with the primary shortwave trough quickly propagating inland
    with increased forcing upon arrival into the Northern and Central
    Sierra, less so for areas back into the coast due to negative
    vorticity advection. Locally enhanced rainfall will be plausible
    the initial portion of the period with the heaviest likely aligned
    along those Foothill regions of the Northern Sierra, mainly within
    elevations below 8000ft, although snow levels will fall below
    7000ft towards the end of the more significant precipitation time
    frame Tuesday morning. Additional totals of 1-3" are possible
    within a 6-10 hour window prior to the precip ending leading to a
    low-end potential for flash flood concerns just outside the
    Valley that extends from Redding down to Sacramento. Higher runoff
    capabilities due to terrain orientation and soil moisture anomalies
    running closer to normal will present some potential for flood
    concerns despite this being an event that doesn't maintain a more
    prolonged precipitation signature. Considering limited deviation
    from run-to-run amongst guidance with considerable agreement in
    timing and magnitude of precipitation, continuity from the previous
    forecast was maintained with very little in the way of adjustment
    in the inherited MRGL risk across the Sierra Foothills.=20

    ..Arklatex and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    Surface ridge to the northeast will slowly drift further to the
    northeast allowing for a more broad return flow regime to affect
    areas across the Western Gulf into the Lower Mississippi Valley.
    Southerly flow will advect a bit more unstable air northward with
    areal theta_E averages on the increase when assessing the ensemble
    means and initial D3 cluster analysis with heavy weight towards the
    GEFS and ECENS output. Aloft, a shortwave will dig southeast with=20
    enhanced mid-level energy accompanying aiding in better regional=20
    forcing as we work into Tuesday afternoon and evening. This will=20
    help setup a period of convective initiation across Eastern TX and=20
    points north with the primary axis of heaviest precip likely=20
    aligned southwest to northeast across the Arklatex down into the=20
    eastern Hill Country located east of I-35. Weak jet coupling will=20
    help with the expansion of the precip field across the above areas=20
    with those embedded convective signatures likely situated along and
    ahead of an advancing cold front as surface cyclogenesis in-of the
    Red River will become a focus for activity in question. Locally=20
    heavy rainfall will be forecast within those stronger convective=20
    cores, however the PWAT anomalies and available surface based=20
    instability will be modest, at best with regards to the setup. This
    will likely lead to more spotty instances of >3" of total precip=20
    in any one location with the best areas of interest mentioned=20
    above.

    The previous MRGL risk was maintained, but did trim some of the
    eastern flank of the risk area as probabilities off the blend are
    pretty meager and agree with the current ML output basing best
    chances to the northwest of where the risk area was drawn. A small
    extension to the southwest was done out of prospects for the=20
    traditional southwestern bias in heavier QPF within these types of=20
    setups. This was featured within a few of the regional=20
    deterministic and works well with the proposed elevated SBCAPE=20
    anticipated in that area.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_0fphDIykpDUynPK6Vnxo-rFDzxXWQsCVqDt9075bN-q= FtG7VZc58DLNKi5_zQei8iI-bJZi8yziTnO8UeEn6ocreVc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_0fphDIykpDUynPK6Vnxo-rFDzxXWQsCVqDt9075bN-q= FtG7VZc58DLNKi5_zQei8iI-bJZi8yziTnO8UeEngcc0uPc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_0fphDIykpDUynPK6Vnxo-rFDzxXWQsCVqDt9075bN-q= FtG7VZc58DLNKi5_zQei8iI-bJZi8yziTnO8UeEn9tjC5ek$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 22 15:37:06 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 221536
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1036 AM EST Sun Dec 22 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    Consensus continues to grow for a quick hitting weak to borderline
    moderate atmospheric river aimed at southwestern OR down into
    northern CA by late Monday into Tuesday morning. Recent ensemble
    depictions are in agreement on an IVT pulse centered over the
    northern CA coast, protruding inland through the end of the period
    with warm air advecting well into the boundary layer and above
    yielding a majority rainfall signal across even some of the higher
    terrain inland. NAEFS output for PWAT anomalies indicates a tongue
    of 2-3 deviations above normal moisture plume being ushered in on
    deep layer southwest flow thanks to a shortwave trough undercutting
    a broad upper level cyclone located off the PAC Northwest coast.
    This look is fairly textbook for a period of prevailing
    southwesterly flow running orthogonal to some of the adjacent
    coastal ranges that are situated from southwest OR down through
    northern CA. The zones most impacted will lie at the foothills of
    Mount Shasta and the northern Sierra Nevada for the inland portion,
    as well as the King and Siskiyou Ranges that align from OR down
    through northwestern CA. Rainfall totals on the order of 3-5" with
    locally higher in the highest elevations of the above ranges are
    forecast during the time frame beginning 21z Monday through 12z
    Tuesday with some carryover into D3 before the main shortwave moves
    inland. 2-4" will be common within the coastal plain with locally
    higher in areas south of Eureka. Localized flooding prospects are
    higher than normal given the stronger IVT pulse being depicted,
    also impacting areas that saw decent rainfall as of a week to 10
    days prior. The saving grace is the time frame is not very long in
    terms of impact, so that helps limit a greater flash flood threat.

    The previously inherited forecast was generally maintained outside
    some fine tuning across the Sierra Foothills and the northern
    periphery of the MRGL risk into OR.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    SIERRA FOOTHILLS AND EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ..Sierra Foothills..

    Atmospheric river from previous period will bleed into the D3 time
    frame with the primary shortwave trough quickly propagating inland
    with increased forcing upon arrival into the Northern and Central
    Sierra, less so for areas back into the coast due to negative
    vorticity advection. Locally enhanced rainfall will be plausible
    the initial portion of the period with the heaviest likely aligned
    along those Foothill regions of the Northern Sierra, mainly within
    elevations below 8000ft, although snow levels will fall below
    7000ft towards the end of the more significant precipitation time
    frame Tuesday morning. Additional totals of 1-3" are possible
    within a 6-10 hour window prior to the precip ending leading to a
    low-end potential for flash flood concerns just outside the
    Valley that extends from Redding down to Sacramento. Higher runoff
    capabilities due to terrain orientation and soil moisture anomalies
    running closer to normal will present some potential for flood
    concerns despite this being an event that doesn't maintain a more
    prolonged precipitation signature. Considering limited deviation
    from run-to-run amongst guidance with considerable agreement in
    timing and magnitude of precipitation, continuity from the previous
    forecast was maintained with very little in the way of adjustment
    in the inherited MRGL risk across the Sierra Foothills.

    ..Arklatex and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    Surface ridge to the northeast will slowly drift further to the
    northeast allowing for a more broad return flow regime to affect
    areas across the Western Gulf into the Lower Mississippi Valley.
    Southerly flow will advect a bit more unstable air northward with
    areal theta_E averages on the increase when assessing the ensemble
    means and initial D3 cluster analysis with heavy weight towards the
    GEFS and ECENS output. Aloft, a shortwave will dig southeast with
    enhanced mid-level energy accompanying aiding in better regional
    forcing as we work into Tuesday afternoon and evening. This will
    help setup a period of convective initiation across Eastern TX and
    points north with the primary axis of heaviest precip likely
    aligned southwest to northeast across the Arklatex down into the
    eastern Hill Country located east of I-35. Weak jet coupling will
    help with the expansion of the precip field across the above areas
    with those embedded convective signatures likely situated along and
    ahead of an advancing cold front as surface cyclogenesis in-of the
    Red River will become a focus for activity in question. Locally
    heavy rainfall will be forecast within those stronger convective
    cores, however the PWAT anomalies and available surface based
    instability will be modest, at best with regards to the setup. This
    will likely lead to more spotty instances of >3" of total precip
    in any one location with the best areas of interest mentioned
    above.

    The previous MRGL risk was maintained, but did trim some of the
    eastern flank of the risk area as probabilities off the blend are
    pretty meager and agree with the current ML output basing best
    chances to the northwest of where the risk area was drawn. A small
    extension to the southwest was done out of prospects for the
    traditional southwestern bias in heavier QPF within these types of
    setups. This was featured within a few of the regional
    deterministic and works well with the proposed elevated SBCAPE
    anticipated in that area.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4MYDHSkYHeE5lR2MtgzgtzTBVKM3-2VwE1WHDTlP_rcB= RqXFeF1eEAvNTiDFtOIuRSrWDBM-FmFCrC3COUjrgpLeWD0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4MYDHSkYHeE5lR2MtgzgtzTBVKM3-2VwE1WHDTlP_rcB= RqXFeF1eEAvNTiDFtOIuRSrWDBM-FmFCrC3COUjrQVMFCxQ$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4MYDHSkYHeE5lR2MtgzgtzTBVKM3-2VwE1WHDTlP_rcB= RqXFeF1eEAvNTiDFtOIuRSrWDBM-FmFCrC3COUjrdzjA0wM$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 22 19:26:35 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 221925
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    225 PM EST Sun Dec 22 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Dec 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    Update...

    The 12Z guidance did not suggest any significant changes were
    required, therefore made only minor adjustments to the previous
    outlook area.

    Previous Discussion...=20

    Consensus continues to grow for a quick hitting weak to borderline
    moderate atmospheric river aimed at southwestern OR down into=20
    northern CA by late Monday into Tuesday morning. Recent ensemble=20
    depictions are in agreement on an IVT pulse centered over the=20
    northern CA coast, protruding inland through the end of the period=20
    with warm air advecting well into the boundary layer and above=20
    yielding a majority rainfall signal across even some of the higher=20
    terrain inland. NAEFS output for PWAT anomalies indicates a tongue=20
    of 2-3 deviations above normal moisture plume being ushered in on=20
    deep layer southwest flow thanks to a shortwave trough undercutting
    a broad upper level cyclone located off the PAC Northwest coast.=20
    This look is fairly textbook for a period of prevailing=20
    southwesterly flow running orthogonal to some of the adjacent=20
    coastal ranges that are situated from southwest OR down through=20
    northern CA. The zones most impacted will lie at the foothills of=20
    Mount Shasta and the northern Sierra Nevada for the inland portion,
    as well as the King and Siskiyou Ranges that align from OR down=20
    through northwestern CA. Rainfall totals on the order of 3-5" with=20
    locally higher in the highest elevations of the above ranges are=20
    forecast during the time frame beginning 21z Monday through 12z=20
    Tuesday with some carryover into D3 before the main shortwave moves
    inland. 2-4" will be common within the coastal plain with locally=20
    higher in areas south of Eureka. Localized flooding prospects are=20
    higher than normal given the stronger IVT pulse being depicted,=20
    also impacting areas that saw decent rainfall as of a week to 10=20
    days prior. The saving grace is the time frame is not very long in=20
    terms of impact, so that helps limit a greater flash flood threat.

    The previously inherited forecast was generally maintained outside
    some fine tuning across the Sierra Foothills and the northern
    periphery of the MRGL risk into OR.

    Pereira/Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    SIERRA FOOTHILLS AND EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...


    Update...

    The 12Z guidance did not suggest any significant changes were
    required, therefore made only minor adjustments to the previous
    outlook areas.

    Previous Discussion...

    ..Sierra Foothills..=20

    Atmospheric river from previous period will=20
    bleed into the D3 time frame with the primary shortwave trough=20
    quickly propagating inland with increased forcing upon arrival into
    the Northern and Central Sierra, less so for areas back into the=20
    coast due to negative vorticity advection. Locally enhanced=20
    rainfall will be plausible the initial portion of the period with=20
    the heaviest likely aligned along those Foothill regions of the=20
    Northern Sierra, mainly within elevations below 8000ft, although=20
    snow levels will fall below 7000ft towards the end of the more=20
    significant precipitation time frame Tuesday morning. Additional=20
    totals of 1-3" are possible within a 6-10 hour window prior to the=20
    precip ending leading to a low-end potential for flash flood=20
    concerns just outside the Valley that extends from Redding down to=20 Sacramento. Higher runoff capabilities due to terrain orientation=20
    and soil moisture anomalies running closer to normal will present=20
    some potential for flood concerns despite this being an event that=20
    doesn't maintain a more prolonged precipitation signature.=20
    Considering limited deviation from run-to-run amongst guidance with considerable agreement in timing and magnitude of precipitation,=20
    continuity from the previous forecast was maintained with very=20
    little in the way of adjustment in the inherited MRGL risk across=20
    the Sierra Foothills.

    ..Arklatex and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    Surface ridge to the northeast will slowly drift further to the=20
    northeast allowing for a more broad return flow regime to affect=20
    areas across the Western Gulf into the Lower Mississippi Valley.=20
    Southerly flow will advect a bit more unstable air northward with=20
    areal theta_E averages on the increase when assessing the ensemble=20
    means and initial D3 cluster analysis with heavy weight towards the
    GEFS and ECENS output. Aloft, a shortwave will dig southeast with=20
    enhanced mid-level energy accompanying aiding in better regional=20
    forcing as we work into Tuesday afternoon and evening. This will=20
    help setup a period of convective initiation across Eastern TX and=20
    points north with the primary axis of heaviest precip likely=20
    aligned southwest to northeast across the Arklatex down into the=20
    eastern Hill Country located east of I-35. Weak jet coupling will=20
    help with the expansion of the precip field across the above areas=20
    with those embedded convective signatures likely situated along and
    ahead of an advancing cold front as surface cyclogenesis in-of the
    Red River will become a focus for activity in question. Locally=20
    heavy rainfall will be forecast within those stronger convective=20
    cores, however the PWAT anomalies and available surface based=20
    instability will be modest, at best with regards to the setup. This
    will likely lead to more spotty instances of >3" of total precip=20
    in any one location with the best areas of interest mentioned=20
    above.

    The previous MRGL risk was maintained, but did trim some of the
    eastern flank of the risk area as probabilities off the blend are
    pretty meager and agree with the current ML output basing best
    chances to the northwest of where the risk area was drawn. A small
    extension to the southwest was done out of prospects for the
    traditional southwestern bias in heavier QPF within these types of
    setups. This was featured within a few of the regional
    deterministic and works well with the proposed elevated SBCAPE
    anticipated in that area.

    Pereira/Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5FQlJVg_I36GZ2WGfcXPOzJoIoUBmfiAcBzFZ1__32Un= nDffQ27dlVjrkK22XTJWiWBxjEQLZS7fnqhbDnQajaF1kWk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5FQlJVg_I36GZ2WGfcXPOzJoIoUBmfiAcBzFZ1__32Un= nDffQ27dlVjrkK22XTJWiWBxjEQLZS7fnqhbDnQafodm2xE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5FQlJVg_I36GZ2WGfcXPOzJoIoUBmfiAcBzFZ1__32Un= nDffQ27dlVjrkK22XTJWiWBxjEQLZS7fnqhbDnQaoXU2PYc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 23 00:34:37 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 230034
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    734 PM EST Sun Dec 22 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    Update...

    The 12Z guidance did not suggest any significant changes were
    required, therefore made only minor adjustments to the previous
    outlook area.

    Previous Discussion...

    Consensus continues to grow for a quick hitting weak to borderline
    moderate atmospheric river aimed at southwestern OR down into
    northern CA by late Monday into Tuesday morning. Recent ensemble
    depictions are in agreement on an IVT pulse centered over the
    northern CA coast, protruding inland through the end of the period
    with warm air advecting well into the boundary layer and above
    yielding a majority rainfall signal across even some of the higher
    terrain inland. NAEFS output for PWAT anomalies indicates a tongue
    of 2-3 deviations above normal moisture plume being ushered in on
    deep layer southwest flow thanks to a shortwave trough undercutting
    a broad upper level cyclone located off the PAC Northwest coast.
    This look is fairly textbook for a period of prevailing
    southwesterly flow running orthogonal to some of the adjacent
    coastal ranges that are situated from southwest OR down through
    northern CA. The zones most impacted will lie at the foothills of
    Mount Shasta and the northern Sierra Nevada for the inland portion,
    as well as the King and Siskiyou Ranges that align from OR down
    through northwestern CA. Rainfall totals on the order of 3-5" with
    locally higher in the highest elevations of the above ranges are
    forecast during the time frame beginning 21z Monday through 12z
    Tuesday with some carryover into D3 before the main shortwave moves
    inland. 2-4" will be common within the coastal plain with locally
    higher in areas south of Eureka. Localized flooding prospects are
    higher than normal given the stronger IVT pulse being depicted,
    also impacting areas that saw decent rainfall as of a week to 10
    days prior. The saving grace is the time frame is not very long in
    terms of impact, so that helps limit a greater flash flood threat.

    The previously inherited forecast was generally maintained outside
    some fine tuning across the Sierra Foothills and the northern
    periphery of the MRGL risk into OR.

    Pereira/Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    SIERRA FOOTHILLS AND EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...


    Update...

    The 12Z guidance did not suggest any significant changes were
    required, therefore made only minor adjustments to the previous
    outlook areas.

    Previous Discussion...

    ..Sierra Foothills..

    Atmospheric river from previous period will
    bleed into the D3 time frame with the primary shortwave trough
    quickly propagating inland with increased forcing upon arrival into
    the Northern and Central Sierra, less so for areas back into the
    coast due to negative vorticity advection. Locally enhanced
    rainfall will be plausible the initial portion of the period with
    the heaviest likely aligned along those Foothill regions of the
    Northern Sierra, mainly within elevations below 8000ft, although
    snow levels will fall below 7000ft towards the end of the more
    significant precipitation time frame Tuesday morning. Additional
    totals of 1-3" are possible within a 6-10 hour window prior to the
    precip ending leading to a low-end potential for flash flood
    concerns just outside the Valley that extends from Redding down to
    Sacramento. Higher runoff capabilities due to terrain orientation
    and soil moisture anomalies running closer to normal will present
    some potential for flood concerns despite this being an event that
    doesn't maintain a more prolonged precipitation signature.
    Considering limited deviation from run-to-run amongst guidance with considerable agreement in timing and magnitude of precipitation,
    continuity from the previous forecast was maintained with very
    little in the way of adjustment in the inherited MRGL risk across
    the Sierra Foothills.

    ..Arklatex and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    Surface ridge to the northeast will slowly drift further to the
    northeast allowing for a more broad return flow regime to affect
    areas across the Western Gulf into the Lower Mississippi Valley.
    Southerly flow will advect a bit more unstable air northward with
    areal theta_E averages on the increase when assessing the ensemble
    means and initial D3 cluster analysis with heavy weight towards the
    GEFS and ECENS output. Aloft, a shortwave will dig southeast with
    enhanced mid-level energy accompanying aiding in better regional
    forcing as we work into Tuesday afternoon and evening. This will
    help setup a period of convective initiation across Eastern TX and
    points north with the primary axis of heaviest precip likely
    aligned southwest to northeast across the Arklatex down into the
    eastern Hill Country located east of I-35. Weak jet coupling will
    help with the expansion of the precip field across the above areas
    with those embedded convective signatures likely situated along and
    ahead of an advancing cold front as surface cyclogenesis in-of the
    Red River will become a focus for activity in question. Locally
    heavy rainfall will be forecast within those stronger convective
    cores, however the PWAT anomalies and available surface based
    instability will be modest, at best with regards to the setup. This
    will likely lead to more spotty instances of >3" of total precip
    in any one location with the best areas of interest mentioned
    above.

    The previous MRGL risk was maintained, but did trim some of the
    eastern flank of the risk area as probabilities off the blend are
    pretty meager and agree with the current ML output basing best
    chances to the northwest of where the risk area was drawn. A small
    extension to the southwest was done out of prospects for the
    traditional southwestern bias in heavier QPF within these types of
    setups. This was featured within a few of the regional
    deterministic and works well with the proposed elevated SBCAPE
    anticipated in that area.

    Pereira/Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8Fm0lGkOI-dpKhNvGXEXkqAMjyrknnqwBzvsL9Bj8R3W= 4jFH7KH4i0sqdgjkMNbiUGEAu7iDOqFkJM3MKHEzEbCnleA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8Fm0lGkOI-dpKhNvGXEXkqAMjyrknnqwBzvsL9Bj8R3W= 4jFH7KH4i0sqdgjkMNbiUGEAu7iDOqFkJM3MKHEzcQRNbM0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8Fm0lGkOI-dpKhNvGXEXkqAMjyrknnqwBzvsL9Bj8R3W= 4jFH7KH4i0sqdgjkMNbiUGEAu7iDOqFkJM3MKHEz132Yep0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 23 07:58:51 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 230758
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    258 AM EST Mon Dec 23 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    The next atmospheric river will make headway into southwest OR and
    northwest CA coastal plain with a protrusion of elevated IVT inland
    as we work the back end of the period. Consistency among all major deterministic, both global and hi-res indicate a widespread area of
    2-4" with locally as high as 5.5" in-of the impacted areas, mainly
    north of Santa Rosa up into southwest OR. Latest HREF probs for >3"
    are very high (80+%) across areas like the King and Siskiyou Ranges
    along with the Foothills of Mount Shasta. Despite the elevation, a
    strong warm nose with this event will send snow levels spiking
    upwards with the base pushing close to 8000ft MSL for the
    rain/snow delineation point. This will create a better heavy
    rain threat even away from the coast with areas inland also
    maintaining a threat for localized flash flood concerns, especially
    as we move into early Tuesday morning. The heaviest rainfall will
    likely be within those coastal ranges which are some of the harder
    areas to flood, so that will help limit the extensive flash flood
    prospects we see with some events. The progressive nature of the AR
    regime will also aid in the anticipated impacts, however the threat
    is still within the low to medium end of the MRGL risk threshold
    leading to a continuance of the MRGL from the previous forecast
    issuance. The area(s) with the greatest potential are those that
    are still dealing with burn scar aftermath with very sensitive
    runoff capabilities. Those are included within the MRGL risk,
    especially across northern CA.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    SIERRA FOOTHILLS AND EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ..Sierra Foothills..

    Atmospheric river from previous period will bleed into the D2 time
    frame with the primary shortwave trough quickly propagating inland
    with increased forcing upon arrival into the Northern and Central=20
    Sierra, less so for areas back into the coast due to negative=20
    vorticity advection. Locally enhanced rainfall will be plausible=20
    the initial portion of the period with the heaviest likely aligned=20
    along those Foothill regions of the Northern Sierra, mainly within=20 elevations below 8000ft, although snow levels will fall below=20
    7000ft towards the end of the more significant precipitation time=20
    frame late Tuesday morning. Additional totals of 1-2" are possible
    within a 6-10 hour window prior to the precip ending leading to a=20
    low-end potential for flash flood concerns just outside the Valley=20
    that extends from Redding down to Sacramento. Higher runoff=20
    capabilities due to terrain orientation and soil moisture anomalies
    running closer to normal will present some potential for flood=20
    concerns despite this being an event that doesn't maintain a more=20
    prolonged precipitation signature.=20

    The previously inherited MRGL risk was generally maintained,
    however some of the risk area was cut out due to provide a gradient
    between the Sierra locations that will trend to more winter
    precipitation and the areas that will remain liquid through much
    of, if not the entire duration of the event.=20

    ..Arklatex and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    Surface ridge over the eastern CONUS will slowly drift further to=20
    the northeast allowing for a more broad return flow regime to=20
    affect areas across the Western Gulf into the Lower Mississippi=20
    Valley. A steady flux of higher theta_E's will begin moving
    northward out of the Western Gulf, carrying as far north as the Red
    River before stabilizing as we reach into OK. Aloft, a digging=20
    mid- level shortwave will exit the Central Rockies with sights on=20
    the Southern Plains leading to enhanced left exit region dynamics=20
    and surface cyclogenesis in-of the Red River Valley with a cold=20
    front extending from the base into TX and a small warm front=20
    lifting northward around the Arklatex. The classic mid-latitude=20
    cyclogenesis will create a sector of modest destabilization with=20
    the primary axis aligned from southwest to northeast across east TX
    up through the Arklatex, eventually extending northward into AR=20
    and southern MO. The current indications are the best organized=20
    convective schemes will be situated around the small warm sector=20
    along and ahead of the approaching cold front with relative=20
    buoyancy and increasing upstream shear allowing for scattered=20
    convection to develop late Tuesday afternoon through the evening.=20

    As of this time, the deep layer moisture pattern is still
    relatively meager compared to some of the more impactful events
    that occur in this area of the country, however there is enough
    instability and PWAT anomalies creeping between 1-1.5 deviations
    above normal to constitute some isolated flash flood concerns,
    mainly within those stronger cores. SPC D2 risk includes a targeted
    Marginal Risk for severe weather, overlapping the inherited MRGL
    risk ERO for the period. Areal rainfall averages will be between
    0.5-1" across east TX and 0.75-1.5" across AR, but there is a
    growing consensus among the CAMs to have scattered instances of a
    quick 2-3" of rainfall within the best convective environment
    during the pattern evolution with a 5-10% risk of >3" within the
    tail end of the 00z HREF neighborhood probs. This threat is likely
    still within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold, but the
    convective premise was enough to maintain general continuity from
    the previous issuance.=20

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 26 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR COASTAL
    WASHINGTON AND OREGON...

    Another atmospheric river surging off the Pacific will make an
    appearance into the Pacific Northwest by Wednesday afternoon
    through the end of the D3 cycle. Model guidance is keen on a surge
    of moisture represented by fairly elevated IVT signatures on the
    order of 600-800 kg/ms within the global ensemble blend. There is
    some discrepancy between one of the main deterministic (GFS) and
    the other global members carrying more of a 25th percentile outcome
    in total precip due to a less robust IVT pulse comparatively. When
    assessing the ensemble means from the GEFS compared to the
    deterministic, the ensemble sways more in favor the scenario of
    greater magnitudes into the IVT channel leading to a more=20
    pronounced atmospheric river regime. This trend leaned more into=20
    maintaining continuity in the inherited MRGL risk across the PAC=20
    NW, although a few changes were made in the proposal.=20

    The first change was to scale back on the eastern extension of the
    MRGL risk due to considerably less deep layer moisture advecting
    inland at this juncture for the D3 time frame. FFG indices are
    still pretty high all the way towards the windward side of the
    Cascades, so the prospects for FFG exceedance were pretty low and
    generally fall below the 5% threshold criteria. The second change
    was to cut out the higher elevations in the Olympic Peninsula due
    to the primary ptype trending towards snow with more emphasis on
    rainfall closer to the coast and below 4000ft MSL. The risk area
    still encompasses the lower elevations surrounding the Olympics and
    channels into the Olympic National Forest on the southern flank of
    the Peninsula. Anticipate totals of 2-4" with locally as high as 5"
    in the risk area extending from coastal southwest OR up through the
    Olympic coast of WA.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7D7SiGEK3KvWDaG3mseu-C0MroEhnTIotQ-CLtOEgRry= AVU2hJj4Ls2o54i83oi5aOeggKdIysh7zwGNtLWxdJ9VRRE$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7D7SiGEK3KvWDaG3mseu-C0MroEhnTIotQ-CLtOEgRry= AVU2hJj4Ls2o54i83oi5aOeggKdIysh7zwGNtLWxU1ezVHc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7D7SiGEK3KvWDaG3mseu-C0MroEhnTIotQ-CLtOEgRry= AVU2hJj4Ls2o54i83oi5aOeggKdIysh7zwGNtLWxHhsmrgo$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 23 15:43:19 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 231542
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1042 AM EST Mon Dec 23 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    ...16z update...
    Small adjustments to the Marginal Risk were made, mainly on the
    northern and eastern fringes. A slightly slower and northward shift
    in the 12z Hi-Res CAM guidance led to these adjustments, but the
    main principles, driving factors remain solid for overall placement
    and level of risk.

    Gallina


    The next atmospheric river will make headway into southwest OR and
    northwest CA coastal plain with a protrusion of elevated IVT inland
    as we work the back end of the period. Consistency among all major deterministic, both global and hi-res indicate a widespread area of
    2-4" with locally as high as 5.5" in-of the impacted areas, mainly
    north of Santa Rosa up into southwest OR. Latest HREF probs for >3"
    are very high (80+%) across areas like the King and Siskiyou Ranges
    along with the Foothills of Mount Shasta. Despite the elevation, a
    strong warm nose with this event will send snow levels spiking
    upwards with the base pushing close to 8000ft MSL for the
    rain/snow delineation point. This will create a better heavy
    rain threat even away from the coast with areas inland also
    maintaining a threat for localized flash flood concerns, especially
    as we move into early Tuesday morning. The heaviest rainfall will
    likely be within those coastal ranges which are some of the harder
    areas to flood, so that will help limit the extensive flash flood
    prospects we see with some events. The progressive nature of the AR
    regime will also aid in the anticipated impacts, however the threat
    is still within the low to medium end of the MRGL risk threshold
    leading to a continuance of the MRGL from the previous forecast
    issuance. The area(s) with the greatest potential are those that
    are still dealing with burn scar aftermath with very sensitive
    runoff capabilities. Those are included within the MRGL risk,
    especially across northern CA.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    SIERRA FOOTHILLS AND EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ..Sierra Foothills..

    Atmospheric river from previous period will bleed into the D2 time
    frame with the primary shortwave trough quickly propagating inland
    with increased forcing upon arrival into the Northern and Central
    Sierra, less so for areas back into the coast due to negative
    vorticity advection. Locally enhanced rainfall will be plausible
    the initial portion of the period with the heaviest likely aligned
    along those Foothill regions of the Northern Sierra, mainly within
    elevations below 8000ft, although snow levels will fall below
    7000ft towards the end of the more significant precipitation time
    frame late Tuesday morning. Additional totals of 1-2" are possible
    within a 6-10 hour window prior to the precip ending leading to a
    low-end potential for flash flood concerns just outside the Valley
    that extends from Redding down to Sacramento. Higher runoff
    capabilities due to terrain orientation and soil moisture anomalies
    running closer to normal will present some potential for flood
    concerns despite this being an event that doesn't maintain a more
    prolonged precipitation signature.

    The previously inherited MRGL risk was generally maintained,
    however some of the risk area was cut out due to provide a gradient
    between the Sierra locations that will trend to more winter
    precipitation and the areas that will remain liquid through much
    of, if not the entire duration of the event.

    ..Arklatex and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    Surface ridge over the eastern CONUS will slowly drift further to
    the northeast allowing for a more broad return flow regime to
    affect areas across the Western Gulf into the Lower Mississippi
    Valley. A steady flux of higher theta_E's will begin moving
    northward out of the Western Gulf, carrying as far north as the Red
    River before stabilizing as we reach into OK. Aloft, a digging
    mid- level shortwave will exit the Central Rockies with sights on
    the Southern Plains leading to enhanced left exit region dynamics
    and surface cyclogenesis in-of the Red River Valley with a cold
    front extending from the base into TX and a small warm front
    lifting northward around the Arklatex. The classic mid-latitude
    cyclogenesis will create a sector of modest destabilization with
    the primary axis aligned from southwest to northeast across east TX
    up through the Arklatex, eventually extending northward into AR
    and southern MO. The current indications are the best organized
    convective schemes will be situated around the small warm sector
    along and ahead of the approaching cold front with relative
    buoyancy and increasing upstream shear allowing for scattered
    convection to develop late Tuesday afternoon through the evening.

    As of this time, the deep layer moisture pattern is still
    relatively meager compared to some of the more impactful events
    that occur in this area of the country, however there is enough
    instability and PWAT anomalies creeping between 1-1.5 deviations
    above normal to constitute some isolated flash flood concerns,
    mainly within those stronger cores. SPC D2 risk includes a targeted
    Marginal Risk for severe weather, overlapping the inherited MRGL
    risk ERO for the period. Areal rainfall averages will be between
    0.5-1" across east TX and 0.75-1.5" across AR, but there is a
    growing consensus among the CAMs to have scattered instances of a
    quick 2-3" of rainfall within the best convective environment
    during the pattern evolution with a 5-10% risk of >3" within the
    tail end of the 00z HREF neighborhood probs. This threat is likely
    still within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold, but the
    convective premise was enough to maintain general continuity from
    the previous issuance.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 26 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR COASTAL
    WASHINGTON AND OREGON...

    Another atmospheric river surging off the Pacific will make an
    appearance into the Pacific Northwest by Wednesday afternoon
    through the end of the D3 cycle. Model guidance is keen on a surge
    of moisture represented by fairly elevated IVT signatures on the
    order of 600-800 kg/ms within the global ensemble blend. There is
    some discrepancy between one of the main deterministic (GFS) and
    the other global members carrying more of a 25th percentile outcome
    in total precip due to a less robust IVT pulse comparatively. When
    assessing the ensemble means from the GEFS compared to the
    deterministic, the ensemble sways more in favor the scenario of
    greater magnitudes into the IVT channel leading to a more
    pronounced atmospheric river regime. This trend leaned more into
    maintaining continuity in the inherited MRGL risk across the PAC
    NW, although a few changes were made in the proposal.

    The first change was to scale back on the eastern extension of the
    MRGL risk due to considerably less deep layer moisture advecting
    inland at this juncture for the D3 time frame. FFG indices are
    still pretty high all the way towards the windward side of the
    Cascades, so the prospects for FFG exceedance were pretty low and
    generally fall below the 5% threshold criteria. The second change
    was to cut out the higher elevations in the Olympic Peninsula due
    to the primary ptype trending towards snow with more emphasis on
    rainfall closer to the coast and below 4000ft MSL. The risk area
    still encompasses the lower elevations surrounding the Olympics and
    channels into the Olympic National Forest on the southern flank of
    the Peninsula. Anticipate totals of 2-4" with locally as high as 5"
    in the risk area extending from coastal southwest OR up through the
    Olympic coast of WA.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-0HvwdzoP8GOxHkcJT22Pg1vlajqpWNr7W7qRDzpJwEJ= CCn-XsASNpwRh_agEsNQsSg_P22bVDZopn_ARCybhZfWc98$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-0HvwdzoP8GOxHkcJT22Pg1vlajqpWNr7W7qRDzpJwEJ= CCn-XsASNpwRh_agEsNQsSg_P22bVDZopn_ARCybvJ69m1o$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-0HvwdzoP8GOxHkcJT22Pg1vlajqpWNr7W7qRDzpJwEJ= CCn-XsASNpwRh_agEsNQsSg_P22bVDZopn_ARCybrtdlRpw$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 23 19:54:15 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 231953
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    253 PM EST Mon Dec 23 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Dec 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    ...16Z update...

    Small adjustments to the Marginal Risk were made, mainly on the=20
    northern and eastern fringes. A slightly slower and northward shift
    in the 12z Hi-Res CAM guidance led to these adjustments, but the=20
    main principles, driving factors remain solid for overall placement
    and level of risk.

    Gallina

    Previous discussion...

    The next atmospheric river will make headway into southwest OR and
    northwest CA coastal plain with a protrusion of elevated IVT inland
    as we work the back end of the period. Consistency among all major deterministic, both global and hi-res indicate a widespread area of
    2-4" with locally as high as 5.5" in-of the impacted areas, mainly
    north of Santa Rosa up into southwest OR. Latest HREF probs for >3"
    are very high (80+%) across areas like the King and Siskiyou Ranges
    along with the Foothills of Mount Shasta. Despite the elevation, a
    strong warm nose with this event will send snow levels spiking
    upwards with the base pushing close to 8000ft MSL for the
    rain/snow delineation point. This will create a better heavy
    rain threat even away from the coast with areas inland also
    maintaining a threat for localized flash flood concerns, especially
    as we move into early Tuesday morning. The heaviest rainfall will
    likely be within those coastal ranges which are some of the harder
    areas to flood, so that will help limit the extensive flash flood
    prospects we see with some events. The progressive nature of the AR
    regime will also aid in the anticipated impacts, however the threat
    is still within the low to medium end of the MRGL risk threshold
    leading to a continuance of the MRGL from the previous forecast
    issuance. The area(s) with the greatest potential are those that
    are still dealing with burn scar aftermath with very sensitive
    runoff capabilities. Those are included within the MRGL risk,
    especially across northern CA.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    AND CENTRAL SIERRA NEVADA FOOTHILLS AND FROM EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...2030Z Update...

    Some modest adjustments were made to the Marginal Risk area across
    the Sierra Nevada foothills based on the new HREF FFG exceedance
    probabilities which suggest a tad more potential a little farther
    south into the central Sierra Nevada foothills for some runoff
    concerns. The 12Z CAMs do suggest some potential for broken
    convection with 0.50"+/hour rainfall rates impacting the eastern
    portions of the Central Valley and into the adjacent terrain.

    Otherwise, essentially no changes were made to the Marginal Risk
    area over portions of eastern TX and into the Lower MS Valley
    given good continuity with the QPF in the 12Z guidance.

    Orrison

    Previous discussion...

    ..Sierra Nevada Foothills..

    Atmospheric river from previous period will bleed into the D2 time
    frame with the primary shortwave trough quickly propagating inland
    with increased forcing upon arrival into the Northern and Central
    Sierra, less so for areas back into the coast due to negative
    vorticity advection. Locally enhanced rainfall will be plausible
    the initial portion of the period with the heaviest likely aligned
    along those Foothill regions of the Northern Sierra, mainly within
    elevations below 8000ft, although snow levels will fall below
    7000ft towards the end of the more significant precipitation time
    frame late Tuesday morning. Additional totals of 1-2" are possible
    within a 6-10 hour window prior to the precip ending leading to a
    low-end potential for flash flood concerns just outside the Valley
    that extends from Redding down to Sacramento. Higher runoff
    capabilities due to terrain orientation and soil moisture anomalies
    running closer to normal will present some potential for flood
    concerns despite this being an event that doesn't maintain a more
    prolonged precipitation signature.

    The previously inherited MRGL risk was generally maintained,
    however some of the risk area was cut out due to provide a gradient
    between the Sierra locations that will trend to more winter
    precipitation and the areas that will remain liquid through much
    of, if not the entire duration of the event.

    ..Arklatex and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    Surface ridge over the eastern CONUS will slowly drift further to
    the northeast allowing for a more broad return flow regime to
    affect areas across the Western Gulf into the Lower Mississippi
    Valley. A steady flux of higher theta_E's will begin moving
    northward out of the Western Gulf, carrying as far north as the Red
    River before stabilizing as we reach into OK. Aloft, a digging
    mid- level shortwave will exit the Central Rockies with sights on
    the Southern Plains leading to enhanced left exit region dynamics
    and surface cyclogenesis in-of the Red River Valley with a cold
    front extending from the base into TX and a small warm front
    lifting northward around the Arklatex. The classic mid-latitude
    cyclogenesis will create a sector of modest destabilization with
    the primary axis aligned from southwest to northeast across east TX
    up through the Arklatex, eventually extending northward into AR
    and southern MO. The current indications are the best organized
    convective schemes will be situated around the small warm sector
    along and ahead of the approaching cold front with relative
    buoyancy and increasing upstream shear allowing for scattered
    convection to develop late Tuesday afternoon through the evening.

    As of this time, the deep layer moisture pattern is still
    relatively meager compared to some of the more impactful events
    that occur in this area of the country, however there is enough
    instability and PWAT anomalies creeping between 1-1.5 deviations
    above normal to constitute some isolated flash flood concerns,
    mainly within those stronger cores. SPC D2 risk includes a targeted
    Marginal Risk for severe weather, overlapping the inherited MRGL
    risk ERO for the period. Areal rainfall averages will be between
    0.5-1" across east TX and 0.75-1.5" across AR, but there is a
    growing consensus among the CAMs to have scattered instances of a
    quick 2-3" of rainfall within the best convective environment
    during the pattern evolution with a 5-10% risk of >3" within the
    tail end of the 00z HREF neighborhood probs. This threat is likely
    still within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold, but the
    convective premise was enough to maintain general continuity from
    the previous issuance.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 26 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR COASTAL
    WASHINGTON AND OREGON...

    ...2030Z...

    Some minor expansion of the Marginal Risk was accommodated across
    the Olympic Peninsula to account for heavier rains impacting
    western WA and relative to where the snow levels are forecast to
    be in the Olympics. There is very little change to the larger scale
    synoptic setup as there will be arrival of a new atmospheric river
    across the region for this period.

    Orrison

    Previous discussion...

    Another atmospheric river surging off the Pacific will make an
    appearance into the Pacific Northwest by Wednesday afternoon
    through the end of the D3 cycle. Model guidance is keen on a surge
    of moisture represented by fairly elevated IVT signatures on the
    order of 600-800 kg/ms within the global ensemble blend. There is
    some discrepancy between one of the main deterministic (GFS) and
    the other global members carrying more of a 25th percentile outcome
    in total precip due to a less robust IVT pulse comparatively. When
    assessing the ensemble means from the GEFS compared to the
    deterministic, the ensemble sways more in favor the scenario of
    greater magnitudes into the IVT channel leading to a more
    pronounced atmospheric river regime. This trend leaned more into
    maintaining continuity in the inherited MRGL risk across the PAC
    NW, although a few changes were made in the proposal.

    The first change was to scale back on the eastern extension of the
    MRGL risk due to considerably less deep layer moisture advecting
    inland at this juncture for the D3 time frame. FFG indices are
    still pretty high all the way towards the windward side of the
    Cascades, so the prospects for FFG exceedance were pretty low and
    generally fall below the 5% threshold criteria. The second change
    was to cut out the higher elevations in the Olympic Peninsula due
    to the primary ptype trending towards snow with more emphasis on
    rainfall closer to the coast and below 4000ft MSL. The risk area
    still encompasses the lower elevations surrounding the Olympics and
    channels into the Olympic National Forest on the southern flank of
    the Peninsula. Anticipate totals of 2-4" with locally as high as 5"
    in the risk area extending from coastal southwest OR up through the
    Olympic coast of WA.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-7E56p5sJS_5a5OErcHvgtwOBf66D_jn_CNOh7RKBqEA= ykpaPQapXpi7Ch4NRBk6cN1xys5nlRba639iE_FAiPqKd7E$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-7E56p5sJS_5a5OErcHvgtwOBf66D_jn_CNOh7RKBqEA= ykpaPQapXpi7Ch4NRBk6cN1xys5nlRba639iE_FAv1szFig$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-7E56p5sJS_5a5OErcHvgtwOBf66D_jn_CNOh7RKBqEA= ykpaPQapXpi7Ch4NRBk6cN1xys5nlRba639iE_FADyN3rIc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 24 01:02:44 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 240102
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    802 PM EST Mon Dec 23 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST OREGON...

    An atmospheric river will move into northern CA and southwest OR
    tonight into early Tuesday. This is a fairly progressive system,
    which will limit the magnitude of rainfall totals and flood risk.
    However this is a dynamic system with a strong upper jet and deep
    mid level trough moving inland. These features will help enhance=20
    ascent and also allow for some weak instability along the front=20
    supporting low topped convective elements locally enhancing=20
    rainfall rates. The 18z HREF neighborhood probabilities of=20
    exceeding 0.5" in an hour increase and expand in coverage ~05z=20
    across southwest OR and northwest CA and peak in the 60-90% range=20
    from 06z-12z, with the higher probabilities shifting southward=20
    with time. There are even some 1" an hour probabilities showing up=20
    in the 18z HREF, peaking ~40% in the King Ranges between 06z and=20
    08z. The 22z and 23z run of the HRRR also shows peak hourly rain=20
    ~0.75-1" along a narrow band from the King Range into far=20
    southwest OR between ~05z and 08z. These rates decrease some as the
    low topped convective line moves inland away from the slightly=20
    higher instability just offshore, but both HREF probabilities and=20
    recent HRRR runs still support localized rainfall exceeding 0.5"=20
    in an hour inland. Despite the progressive nature of this system,=20
    the potential for these aforementioned higher rates does introduce=20
    some risk of rock and land slides long with minor flooding of=20
    urban and other flood prone areas. Antecedent rainfall has resulted
    in above average soil saturation and near to above average=20
    streamflows, making the flood risk a bit higher than it otherwise=20
    would be for such an event.

    Guidance also suggests we may see anther uptick in rainfall rates=20
    around 12z over the northern Sacramento Valley and adjacent=20
    foothills. A combination of enhanced low level convergence driven=20
    by stronger southerly flow up the valley, and slightly higher=20
    instability values over the valley by this time, supports this=20
    uptick in rainfall rates potentially towards 1" in an hour. These=20
    higher rates will likely be fast moving by this time, and so the=20
    heaviest rain at any one location should not last more than an=20
    hour or so. This will help limit impacts, although rates could be=20
    high enough to still result in some flood impacts. There is a=20
    chance rainfall rates between 0.5" and 1" in an hour could move=20
    over the Park burn scar around 12z. This will need to be monitored=20
    closely, as rainfall rates of this magnitude could result in debris
    flows.=20

    Chenard


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    AND CENTRAL SIERRA NEVADA FOOTHILLS AND FROM EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...2030Z Update...

    Some modest adjustments were made to the Marginal Risk area across
    the Sierra Nevada foothills based on the new HREF FFG exceedance
    probabilities which suggest a tad more potential a little farther
    south into the central Sierra Nevada foothills for some runoff
    concerns. The 12Z CAMs do suggest some potential for broken
    convection with 0.50"+/hour rainfall rates impacting the eastern
    portions of the Central Valley and into the adjacent terrain.

    Otherwise, essentially no changes were made to the Marginal Risk
    area over portions of eastern TX and into the Lower MS Valley
    given good continuity with the QPF in the 12Z guidance.

    Orrison

    Previous discussion...

    ..Sierra Nevada Foothills..

    Atmospheric river from previous period will bleed into the D2 time
    frame with the primary shortwave trough quickly propagating inland
    with increased forcing upon arrival into the Northern and Central
    Sierra, less so for areas back into the coast due to negative
    vorticity advection. Locally enhanced rainfall will be plausible
    the initial portion of the period with the heaviest likely aligned
    along those Foothill regions of the Northern Sierra, mainly within
    elevations below 8000ft, although snow levels will fall below
    7000ft towards the end of the more significant precipitation time
    frame late Tuesday morning. Additional totals of 1-2" are possible
    within a 6-10 hour window prior to the precip ending leading to a
    low-end potential for flash flood concerns just outside the Valley
    that extends from Redding down to Sacramento. Higher runoff
    capabilities due to terrain orientation and soil moisture anomalies
    running closer to normal will present some potential for flood
    concerns despite this being an event that doesn't maintain a more
    prolonged precipitation signature.

    The previously inherited MRGL risk was generally maintained,
    however some of the risk area was cut out due to provide a gradient
    between the Sierra locations that will trend to more winter
    precipitation and the areas that will remain liquid through much
    of, if not the entire duration of the event.

    ..Arklatex and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    Surface ridge over the eastern CONUS will slowly drift further to
    the northeast allowing for a more broad return flow regime to
    affect areas across the Western Gulf into the Lower Mississippi
    Valley. A steady flux of higher theta_E's will begin moving
    northward out of the Western Gulf, carrying as far north as the Red
    River before stabilizing as we reach into OK. Aloft, a digging
    mid- level shortwave will exit the Central Rockies with sights on
    the Southern Plains leading to enhanced left exit region dynamics
    and surface cyclogenesis in-of the Red River Valley with a cold
    front extending from the base into TX and a small warm front
    lifting northward around the Arklatex. The classic mid-latitude
    cyclogenesis will create a sector of modest destabilization with
    the primary axis aligned from southwest to northeast across east TX
    up through the Arklatex, eventually extending northward into AR
    and southern MO. The current indications are the best organized
    convective schemes will be situated around the small warm sector
    along and ahead of the approaching cold front with relative
    buoyancy and increasing upstream shear allowing for scattered
    convection to develop late Tuesday afternoon through the evening.

    As of this time, the deep layer moisture pattern is still
    relatively meager compared to some of the more impactful events
    that occur in this area of the country, however there is enough
    instability and PWAT anomalies creeping between 1-1.5 deviations
    above normal to constitute some isolated flash flood concerns,
    mainly within those stronger cores. SPC D2 risk includes a targeted
    Marginal Risk for severe weather, overlapping the inherited MRGL
    risk ERO for the period. Areal rainfall averages will be between
    0.5-1" across east TX and 0.75-1.5" across AR, but there is a
    growing consensus among the CAMs to have scattered instances of a
    quick 2-3" of rainfall within the best convective environment
    during the pattern evolution with a 5-10% risk of >3" within the
    tail end of the 00z HREF neighborhood probs. This threat is likely
    still within the lower end of the MRGL risk threshold, but the
    convective premise was enough to maintain general continuity from
    the previous issuance.

    Kleebauer

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 26 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR COASTAL
    WASHINGTON AND OREGON...

    ...2030Z...

    Some minor expansion of the Marginal Risk was accommodated across
    the Olympic Peninsula to account for heavier rains impacting
    western WA and relative to where the snow levels are forecast to
    be in the Olympics. There is very little change to the larger scale
    synoptic setup as there will be arrival of a new atmospheric river
    across the region for this period.

    Orrison

    Previous discussion...

    Another atmospheric river surging off the Pacific will make an
    appearance into the Pacific Northwest by Wednesday afternoon
    through the end of the D3 cycle. Model guidance is keen on a surge
    of moisture represented by fairly elevated IVT signatures on the
    order of 600-800 kg/ms within the global ensemble blend. There is
    some discrepancy between one of the main deterministic (GFS) and
    the other global members carrying more of a 25th percentile outcome
    in total precip due to a less robust IVT pulse comparatively. When
    assessing the ensemble means from the GEFS compared to the
    deterministic, the ensemble sways more in favor the scenario of
    greater magnitudes into the IVT channel leading to a more
    pronounced atmospheric river regime. This trend leaned more into
    maintaining continuity in the inherited MRGL risk across the PAC
    NW, although a few changes were made in the proposal.

    The first change was to scale back on the eastern extension of the
    MRGL risk due to considerably less deep layer moisture advecting
    inland at this juncture for the D3 time frame. FFG indices are
    still pretty high all the way towards the windward side of the
    Cascades, so the prospects for FFG exceedance were pretty low and
    generally fall below the 5% threshold criteria. The second change
    was to cut out the higher elevations in the Olympic Peninsula due
    to the primary ptype trending towards snow with more emphasis on
    rainfall closer to the coast and below 4000ft MSL. The risk area
    still encompasses the lower elevations surrounding the Olympics and
    channels into the Olympic National Forest on the southern flank of
    the Peninsula. Anticipate totals of 2-4" with locally as high as 5"
    in the risk area extending from coastal southwest OR up through the
    Olympic coast of WA.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5BBGX8nvo5IX2VjmvdZSTbRvyapcyx-VJ9sUluzr24pg= vR3n23-Sb2fmxrKM8YTU_tod9iWhULkoNIy_wa-PCE0CvA0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5BBGX8nvo5IX2VjmvdZSTbRvyapcyx-VJ9sUluzr24pg= vR3n23-Sb2fmxrKM8YTU_tod9iWhULkoNIy_wa-PApdidFw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5BBGX8nvo5IX2VjmvdZSTbRvyapcyx-VJ9sUluzr24pg= vR3n23-Sb2fmxrKM8YTU_tod9iWhULkoNIy_wa-P58MKS08$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 24 07:52:19 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 240752
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    252 AM EST Tue Dec 24 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    AND CENTRAL SIERRA NEVADA FOOTHILLS AND ACROSS EAST TEXAS INTO THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ..Sierra Nevada Foothills..

    Current atmospheric river will progress inland during the overnight
    and morning hours with the primary shortwave trough axis moving
    through CA by late-morning through at least the early evening
    before precip potential wanes. The recent forecasts for a skinny
    axis of MRGL risk potential remains steadfast with the best forcing
    likely to cause some low-end flash flood prospects in-of the
    Foothills of the northern Sierra down through the adjacent hills of
    the central Sierra and central Valley. Latest HREF blended mean QPF
    has come up a bit across the central CA areas, likely attributed to
    a more favorable mid-level ascent pattern as the shortwave trough
    pivots inland and the height falls allow for a period of elevated
    instability across the areas downstream of the greatest forcing.
    PWAT anomalies running up to +2 deviations also coincide with a
    better prospect for locally heavy rainfall as this matches the
    general expectation for places already in the previous MRGL further
    north. Neighborhood probabilities for >2" of rainfall are very high
    (70-90+%) for areas along and north of US50 that are below the
    expected snow level of <5500ft MSL. These same probabilities are
    not as high further south, however they are now upwards of 25% for
    the same >2" threshold and are well above 70% for >1", a precip
    amount more conducive for flooding in the central Valley when
    assessing the current FFG intervals. Rainfall rates will likely max
    out at 0.5-0.75"/hr at peak, but that is right on the cusp of many
    locations within that hourly FFG index.=20

    Considering the current forecast probability fields and the trends
    within the upper level evolution, have decided to expand the
    previous MRGL risk further south along the central Sierra Foothills
    with some adjustments on the northern periphery of the MRGL to
    encompass an area that may still hang on to heavy rainfall in first
    few hours of the period.=20

    ..East Texas and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    The recent trend for heavy rainfall across east TX through portions
    of the Lower Mississippi Valley have grown on the current=20
    succession of runs with the 00z hi-res ensemble and noted=20
    ensemble bias- correction output really enhancing the areal average
    QPF for the D1 time frame. A lot of this is likely due to the short
    range guidance catching on to the anticipated positive mid-level
    shortwave evolution entering the plains with better theta_E
    advection out ahead of the increasingly favorable ascent as the
    return flow pattern aids in fueling a more readily available
    environment conducive for scattered to widespread convection.
    Latest HREF average for MUCAPE across east TX through the Arklatex
    has shot up over 1500 J/kg with the upper quartile for CAPE now
    hovering closer to 2000 J/kg, a testament to a much more favorable
    instability pattern that correlates with heavier convective
    premise. As a result of the expected surface evolution with an
    advancing cold front east and southeast through the primed
    environment ahead of the advancing trough, increased boundary layer
    convergence along with mid-level ascent will ultimately generate a
    period of more organized multi-cell convective clusters with cold
    pool mergers likely forming towards sunset and beyond as we
    initiate a modest LLJ development.=20

    HREF neighborhood probabilities are now as high as 60% for >3"=20
    across a large area extending from northern Houston up towards the=20
    I-20 corridor near Tyler with lower probabilities (20-25%) for=20
    amounts that could exceed 5" in the same general area. The saving=20
    grace for this setup is the convective development and advancement=20
    will be on the progressive side, so the threat for extensive=20
    training is very likely. This is still within reason for isolated=20
    flash flood concerns, especially considering the heaviest precip=20
    will likely only last a few hours at best, and the totals being=20
    reflected are very much signaling rates >2"/hr in the stronger=20
    cores.=20

    The previous MRGL risk was relatively unchanged, however it was
    extended a bit further south and west given the latest CAMs output
    indicating some stronger cells developing upstream under the=20
    advancing shortwave, as well as on the southern flank of the cold=20
    front as it moves to the southeast. Storms will likely hold=20
    together as they approach the TX Gulf coast, so the risk area does=20
    cover for the main urban areas downstream of the frontal=20
    progression, including the greater Houston area and surrounding=20
    suburbs.=20

    Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 26 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR COASTAL
    WASHINGTON AND OREGON...

    There has been little change in the forecasted evolution of the
    next atmospheric river (AR) surging off the Pacific and into the=20
    PAC NW by Wednesday afternoon. Model guidance is keen on a surge of
    moisture represented by fairly elevated IVT signatures on the=20
    order of 600-800 kg/ms within the current global ensemble blend and
    12z NAEFS. A steady stream of moisture will advect onshore of the=20
    Pacific Northwest with the current progression indicating a wave of
    heavier precipitation entering coastal WA/OR by Wednesday=20
    afternoon and continuing through Thursday morning. The latest NBM=20
    mean QPF is pretty substantial for the areas between the central OR
    coast up into the Olympic Peninsula with the latter being the=20
    beneficiary of the expected QPF max thanks to added orographic=20
    enhancement from the Olympic terrain just inland of the coastal=20
    plain. Totals of 2-4" along the coast will be common over the span=20
    of 12-18 hrs with 3-5" likely occurring across the Olympic=20
    Mountains and adjacent Olympic National Forest where soil moisture=20
    anomalies are hovering ~80% leading into the event. The forecasted=20
    precip is causing some forecast rises in rivers within the local=20
    watersheds of the areas anticipating the heaviest rainfall,=20
    especially within the Skokomish basin south of the Olympics. The=20
    elevated stream flows and heavy rain will enhance local flash flood
    prospects for anywhere in proxy to those watersheds, so the threat
    is a bit higher than normal compared to what is usually forecast=20
    for an AR of this strength.=20

    The coastal OR area will be more prone to urban flooding,
    especially for places like Astoria that are within the secondary
    maxima of the ensemble QPF for the incoming event. The previous
    forecast was generally maintained, but did trim a small area across
    the Olympics that will likely maintain wintry precipitation during
    the entire period leading to a mitigated flash flood threat and
    more of a snow load/heavy snow concern.=20

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 26 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 27 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST AND ACROSS EAST TEXAS THROUGH THE LOWER=20
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ..Pacific Northwest..

    Secondary IVT pulse will occur on Thursday during the prolonged AR
    event creating a flash flood potential extending into the D3 time
    frame. The multi-day precipitation forecast is upwards of 3-6"
    with locally higher for many areas extending from the Olympics down
    through coastal OR with the highest centered over northwest WA and
    some of the coastal ranges in OR. The second pulse will actually
    protrude inland further creating a risk for flash flooding inland
    compared to the previous period, so the MRGL risk is more
    pronounced in areal coverage compared to D2. The AR will eventually
    slide southward with more emphasis placed on southwest OR into
    northern CA leading to more heavy precip over likely saturated
    soils. This lead to the MRGL risk extending further south,
    encompassing areas that will be at risk for back-to-back events
    within the last 72 hours.=20

    ..East Texas and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    A repeat of the D1 setup is progged for east TX extending into the
    Lower Mississippi Valley as a shortwave disturbance will make
    headway into the Southern Plains with favorable ascent aloft
    coupled with surface cyclogenesis and an increasingly=20
    destabilizing environment ahead of the trough. This setup does have
    a bit more vigor within the 500mb evolution as the ensemble output
    has a better defined closed height field with neutral to negative=20
    tilt within the mean trough. This will likely lead to another=20
    period of convection with heavy precipitation cores in-of a tongue
    of enhanced theta_E's that will position over eastern TX into the
    Arklatex. As of this time, the QPF output via ensembles is
    generally within the 1-1.5" range, but is lacking the data input
    from regional hi-res guidance and relevant CAMs. If the current
    500mb evolution being forecast goes as planned, expectation is for
    a general crescendo of QPF in future model output.=20

    Considering the threat expected in the D1, it is very plausible=20
    that there could be a higher risk area (SLGT) embedded over a=20
    broader MRGL risk forecast. As of now, the forecast inherited was=20
    only changed to capture the areal QPF average >0.75" which extended
    the western flank of the risk a bit further west compared to=20
    previous issuance.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-4Nfgux9JS5Al0WAyc3aOO-0Qjq2KC9-H9GuOWMS3Ys2= KuWLjO59Vdr8l8XHcWECxte17IN7Ps-RFNvlLw09rmYius0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-4Nfgux9JS5Al0WAyc3aOO-0Qjq2KC9-H9GuOWMS3Ys2= KuWLjO59Vdr8l8XHcWECxte17IN7Ps-RFNvlLw09PZYl46E$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-4Nfgux9JS5Al0WAyc3aOO-0Qjq2KC9-H9GuOWMS3Ys2= KuWLjO59Vdr8l8XHcWECxte17IN7Ps-RFNvlLw09zhoeoZM$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 24 15:39:19 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 241538
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1038 AM EST Tue Dec 24 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 24 2024 - 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE NORTHERN
    AND CENTRAL SIERRA NEVADA FOOTHILLS AND ACROSS EAST TEXAS INTO THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ..Sierra Nevada Foothills..

    ...16z update...
    The cold front has started to make its stronger eastward push
    through central California effected decoupling the moisture plume
    with depth; but also upstream severing of the connection with the
    sub-tropics had already begun earlier today, per CIRA LPW suite.=20
    Rates of .25-.5"/hr and totals of up to 1.25" still are in the=20
    range of naturally lower FFG in steeper lower slopes that increased
    runoff and widely scattered above average stream flows and=20
    isolated flooding concerns remain in the current Marginal Risk=20
    placement. Please refer to MPD 1184 for additional details.

    Gallina

    ---Prior Discussion---
    Current atmospheric river will progress=20
    inland during the overnight and morning hours with the primary=20
    shortwave trough axis moving through CA by late-morning through at
    least the early evening before precip potential wanes. The recent
    forecasts for a skinny axis of MRGL risk potential remains=20
    steadfast with the best forcing likely to cause some low-end flash
    flood prospects in-of the Foothills of the northern Sierra down=20
    through the adjacent hills of the central Sierra and central=20
    Valley. Latest HREF blended mean QPF has come up a bit across the=20
    central CA areas, likely attributed to a more favorable mid-level=20
    ascent pattern as the shortwave trough pivots inland and the=20
    height falls allow for a period of elevated instability across the
    areas downstream of the greatest forcing. PWAT anomalies running=20
    up to +2 deviations also coincide with a better prospect for=20
    locally heavy rainfall as this matches the general expectation for
    places already in the previous MRGL further north. Neighborhood=20
    probabilities for >2" of rainfall are very high (70-90+%) for=20
    areas along and north of US50 that are below the expected snow=20
    level of <5500ft MSL. These same probabilities are not as high=20
    further south, however they are now upwards of 25% for the same=20
    2" threshold and are well above 70% for >1", a precip amount more
    conducive for flooding in the central Valley when assessing the=20
    current FFG intervals. Rainfall rates will likely max out at=20
    0.5-0.75"/hr at peak, but that is right on the cusp of many=20
    locations within that hourly FFG index.

    Considering the current forecast probability fields and the trends
    within the upper level evolution, have decided to expand the
    previous MRGL risk further south along the central Sierra Foothills
    with some adjustments on the northern periphery of the MRGL to
    encompass an area that may still hang on to heavy rainfall in first
    few hours of the period.

    Kleebauer

    ..East Texas/Southeast Oklahoma/Arkansas...

    ...16z update...
    GOES-E WV suite depicts subtle mid-level shortwave shed out of E OK=20
    from main digging upstream larger scale trough over Southern High
    Plains is aiding short-term veered/confluent low level flow across
    the Red River Valley into Northern Texas with lingering deeper
    layer moisture pool and increasing instability well upstream. As
    such, convection has developed along the frontal zone. Downstream
    thickness ridging has allowed for veered propagation vectors to
    align with the unidirectional flow in the near term to allow for
    favorable orientation of convection for some training/repeating
    given the upstream potential for back-building/redevelopment as
    DPVA strengthens southerly flow across central TX.=20

    Eventually, increasing theta-E, moisture flux from the Gulf will
    increase instability and low level flow to increase convective
    vigor toward mid-day. Rates over 2"/hr are probable, but cold pools
    and backed propagation vectors will reduce residency of any given
    storm. Average to slightly below average soil saturation may result
    in widely scattered enhanced run-off conditions and isolated flash
    flooding remains possible and on the scale of a Marginal Risk at
    this time.=20=20=20

    Later this evening into early overnight, LLJ off the Gulf will
    strengthen further with increasing convection along an effective
    sea breeze/FGEN line lifting northward. These cells/southerly flow
    ill intersect with approaching convective line/outflow boundary=20
    from northern convection. This may allow for a short (1-3hr) window
    for southward delay of cell motions and increased rainfall=20
    production across the northern Coastal Plain of Southeast Texas.=20
    12z Hi-Res CAMs show hints of pockets of 5"+ totals possible. The=20
    potential for enhanced rainfall rates/totals in the 03-09z period=20
    across southeast Texas has potential for locally significant totals
    that would result in localized flash flooding, perhaps even as far
    south as the northern exurbs of Houston. However, there remains=20
    limited convergence of signals with large gaps between those heavy=20
    rainfall pockets to confidently place a Slight Risk of Excessive=20
    Rainfall at this time, especially given storm scale interactions=20
    required for these totals to unfold, and relatively dry soil=20
    conditions. As such, will watch observational and rapid refresh=20
    guidance closely for need of upgrade at 01z.=20

    Gallina

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Dec 25 2024 - 12Z Thu Dec 26 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR COASTAL
    WASHINGTON AND OREGON...

    There has been little change in the forecasted evolution of the
    next atmospheric river (AR) surging off the Pacific and into the
    PAC NW by Wednesday afternoon. Model guidance is keen on a surge of
    moisture represented by fairly elevated IVT signatures on the
    order of 600-800 kg/ms within the current global ensemble blend and
    12z NAEFS. A steady stream of moisture will advect onshore of the
    Pacific Northwest with the current progression indicating a wave of
    heavier precipitation entering coastal WA/OR by Wednesday
    afternoon and continuing through Thursday morning. The latest NBM
    mean QPF is pretty substantial for the areas between the central OR
    coast up into the Olympic Peninsula with the latter being the
    beneficiary of the expected QPF max thanks to added orographic
    enhancement from the Olympic terrain just inland of the coastal
    plain. Totals of 2-4" along the coast will be common over the span
    of 12-18 hrs with 3-5" likely occurring across the Olympic
    Mountains and adjacent Olympic National Forest where soil moisture
    anomalies are hovering ~80% leading into the event. The forecasted
    precip is causing some forecast rises in rivers within the local
    watersheds of the areas anticipating the heaviest rainfall,
    especially within the Skokomish basin south of the Olympics. The
    elevated stream flows and heavy rain will enhance local flash flood
    prospects for anywhere in proxy to those watersheds, so the threat
    is a bit higher than normal compared to what is usually forecast
    for an AR of this strength.

    The coastal OR area will be more prone to urban flooding,
    especially for places like Astoria that are within the secondary
    maxima of the ensemble QPF for the incoming event. The previous
    forecast was generally maintained, but did trim a small area across
    the Olympics that will likely maintain wintry precipitation during
    the entire period leading to a mitigated flash flood threat and
    more of a snow load/heavy snow concern.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Dec 26 2024 - 12Z Fri Dec 27 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST AND ACROSS EAST TEXAS THROUGH THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ..Pacific Northwest..

    Secondary IVT pulse will occur on Thursday during the prolonged AR
    event creating a flash flood potential extending into the D3 time
    frame. The multi-day precipitation forecast is upwards of 3-6"
    with locally higher for many areas extending from the Olympics down
    through coastal OR with the highest centered over northwest WA and
    some of the coastal ranges in OR. The second pulse will actually
    protrude inland further creating a risk for flash flooding inland
    compared to the previous period, so the MRGL risk is more
    pronounced in areal coverage compared to D2. The AR will eventually
    slide southward with more emphasis placed on southwest OR into
    northern CA leading to more heavy precip over likely saturated
    soils. This lead to the MRGL risk extending further south,
    encompassing areas that will be at risk for back-to-back events
    within the last 72 hours.

    ..East Texas and Lower Mississippi Valley..

    A repeat of the D1 setup is progged for east TX extending into the
    Lower Mississippi Valley as a shortwave disturbance will make
    headway into the Southern Plains with favorable ascent aloft
    coupled with surface cyclogenesis and an increasingly
    destabilizing environment ahead of the trough. This setup does have
    a bit more vigor within the 500mb evolution as the ensemble output
    has a better defined closed height field with neutral to negative
    tilt within the mean trough. This will likely lead to another
    period of convection with heavy precipitation cores in-of a tongue
    of enhanced theta_E's that will position over eastern TX into the
    Arklatex. As of this time, the QPF output via ensembles is
    generally within the 1-1.5" range, but is lacking the data input
    from regional hi-res guidance and relevant CAMs. If the current
    500mb evolution being forecast goes as planned, expectation is for
    a general crescendo of QPF in future model output.

    Considering the threat expected in the D1, it is very plausible
    that there could be a higher risk area (SLGT) embedded over a
    broader MRGL risk forecast. As of now, the forecast inherited was
    only changed to capture the areal QPF average >0.75" which extended
    the western flank of the risk a bit further west compared to
    previous issuance.

    Kleebauer


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8t5olIuvO4uX5r5uws-9mCbmGIGWBbKVAIgxs0CmjGM8= b--sxUhjVNglnWp_xj-SKNoUDPwgHBdoN4GBWT9R8-gdUVQ$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8t5olIuvO4uX5r5uws-9mCbmGIGWBbKVAIgxs0CmjGM8= b--sxUhjVNglnWp_xj-SKNoUDPwgHBdoN4GBWT9RTWbG0AE$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8t5olIuvO4uX5r5uws-9mCbmGIGWBbKVAIgxs0CmjGM8= b--sxUhjVNglnWp_xj-SKNoUDPwgHBdoN4GBWT9RLC5LHDg$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 29 16:00:48 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 291600
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1100 AM EST Sun Dec 29 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Dec 29 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 30 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA ALONG THE FOOTHILLS OF THE NORTHERN SIERRA=20
    NEVADA...

    16Z Update...

    The Slight Risk of Excessive Rainfall was removed along the CA/OR
    coastline as rainfall rates lower following the passage of the
    atmospheric river, with the forecast on track across northwest CA
    and the Sierra. A few embedded showers and persistent onshore flow
    maintain the Marginal Risk through the remainder of the day.

    Elsewhere, see MPD #1205 regarding the short term heavy rainfall
    threat across the Florida Keys. The Marginal Risk was dropped
    across the Mid-Atlantic given current radar trends and CAM
    forecasts for the line of showers/storms to remain progressive in
    nature. Brief training is possible across coastal SC this
    afternoon, but high FFG should limit the threat.

    Snell

    Previous discussion...

    ...Western Oregon and Northern California...

    The tail end of a fairly strong atmospheric river will be impacting
    especially southwest OR and northern CA this morning as a shortwave
    trough and associated wave of low pressure advances into the
    Pacific Northwest with a trailing cold front extending well to the
    south and gradually moving inland across northern CA. IVT
    magnitudes along and just ahead of the cold front will be on the
    order of 750 to 1000 kg/m/s across the northwest CA coastal ranges
    including Del Norte and Humboldt Counties. Lesser magnitudes will
    be advancing inland with the front into the Shasta/Siskiyou ranges
    and the northern Sierra Nevada. The IVT values should come down by
    18Z, but sufficient levels of onshore flow, convergence along the
    trailing front, and orographic ascent over the terrain should favor
    areas of heavy rain lingering well into the 18Z to 00Z time frame
    across the foothills of the northern Sierra Nevada. The 00Z HREF
    guidance favors 0.50"+/hour rainfall rates at least occasionally
    impacting these areas, and the threat of heavy rain will also
    envelope the Bay Area where the coastal ranges here may also see
    some occasionally enhanced rainfall at least briefly with rates
    exceeding a 0.50"/hour before the front clears the area. For the
    period, some additional 2 to 3 inch rainfall amounts will be
    possible locally across the coastal ranges of southwest OR and
    northwest CA, and also separately in the foothills of the northern
    Sierra Nevada by tonight. A Slight Risk of excessive rainfall has
    depicted across these areas, and is an introduction in the case of
    the northern Sierra Nevada foothills. Wet antecedent conditions
    along with high streamflow will encourage there being at least a
    small stream and urban flooding threat, and there may be a low-end
    flash flood threat involving the more sensitive burn scar locations
    where these heavier rains persist. Please consult MPD #1204 for
    more details concerning the near-term heavy rainfall/flooding
    concerns across the region.

    ...Central/Southern Appalachians into the Southeast...

    An early-morning QLCS will be crossing through the eastern Gulf
    Coast region and the broader interior of the Southeast as a strong
    southerly low-level jet of 40 to 60 kts drives enhanced moisture
    transport along with a nose of favorable instability just ahead of
    an advancing cold front. This will be occurring as a surface low
    and associated mid to upper-level trough rides northeastward up
    into the Great Lakes region. The QLCS activity should at least clip
    portions of the southern Appalachians and then advance across the
    Piedmont of the Southeast and eventually the coastal plain. Some
    of the more urbanized locations that see this QLCS passage may see
    a quick 1 to 1.5 inches of rain in less than an hour, and this may
    result in some urban runoff problems with a highly isolated threat
    of flash flooding. In general, some of the moist flow into the central
    and southern Appalachians this morning should favor at least some
    locally heavy rainfall totals that may reach upwards of a couple
    inches before the cold front clears the region. A Marginal Risk of
    excessive rainfall has been depicted across all of these areas.

    ...South Florida and the Keys...

    The latest GOES-E IR satellite imagery shows a cluster of very
    heavy showers and thunderstorms over the southeast Gulf of Mexico
    in association with a low-level warm front that is attempting to
    advance northeastward toward the southern FL Peninsula. The
    convection has been focusing in close proximity to a well-defined
    instability gradient and there has been some well-organized
    convective cells with some mesocyclone characteristics evolving
    northwest of the lower FL Keys over the last few hours as seen in
    the Key West radar. Deep moisture and elevated instability has
    already been favoring very high rainfall rates, but the challenge
    for today will be whether or not any of this organized convection
    can advance bodily inland across South FL. The 00Z HREF model
    consensus, 00Z NSSL MPAS guidance, and 06Z HRRR suggests Collier
    and Monroe Counties will see heavy rainfall this morning as this
    warm front pushes eastward at least toward the coast while also
    lifting up through the FL Keys. It is possible that Miami-Dade
    County could get into at least some peripheral bands of showers and thunderstorms as well, some of which will be capable of producing
    heavy rainfall rates of 1 to 2 inches/hour. This would certainly
    introduce concerns for some urban flash flooding. Given the
    mesoscale nature of this setup, there is a concern for locally very
    heavy rainfall totals (possibly 5+ inches over parts of Collier
    and Monroe Counties and portions of the Keys). Given the level of
    uncertainty with the coverage and the amounts, a Marginal Risk will
    be depicted for the time being, but it would not be a stretch that
    a targeted upgrade to a Slight Risk will be needed this morning to
    address the threat for at least some areal flooding and
    potentially urban flash flooding.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 30 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8gDTLp9JuPffiA-KTIVBvKhqiAgK6irVzTXSkydkKTpu= LRFjumDK_-sKE_hq5FLk8dc_V_xPsv9Tte-snkEB42Yypqc$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8gDTLp9JuPffiA-KTIVBvKhqiAgK6irVzTXSkydkKTpu= LRFjumDK_-sKE_hq5FLk8dc_V_xPsv9Tte-snkEBiUn7mK0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8gDTLp9JuPffiA-KTIVBvKhqiAgK6irVzTXSkydkKTpu= LRFjumDK_-sKE_hq5FLk8dc_V_xPsv9Tte-snkEBQliagLs$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 29 19:31:02 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 291930
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    230 PM EST Sun Dec 29 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Sun Dec 29 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 30 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PARTS OF
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA ALONG THE FOOTHILLS OF THE NORTHERN SIERRA
    NEVADA...

    16Z Update...

    The Slight Risk of Excessive Rainfall was removed along the CA/OR
    coastline as rainfall rates lower following the passage of the
    atmospheric river, with the forecast on track across northwest CA
    and the Sierra. A few embedded showers and persistent onshore flow
    maintain the Marginal Risk through the remainder of the day.

    Elsewhere, see MPD #1205 regarding the short term heavy rainfall
    threat across the Florida Keys. The Marginal Risk was dropped
    across the Mid-Atlantic given current radar trends and CAM
    forecasts for the line of showers/storms to remain progressive in
    nature. Brief training is possible across coastal SC this
    afternoon, but high FFG should limit the threat.

    Snell

    Previous discussion...

    ...Western Oregon and Northern California...

    The tail end of a fairly strong atmospheric river will be impacting
    especially southwest OR and northern CA this morning as a shortwave
    trough and associated wave of low pressure advances into the
    Pacific Northwest with a trailing cold front extending well to the
    south and gradually moving inland across northern CA. IVT
    magnitudes along and just ahead of the cold front will be on the
    order of 750 to 1000 kg/m/s across the northwest CA coastal ranges
    including Del Norte and Humboldt Counties. Lesser magnitudes will
    be advancing inland with the front into the Shasta/Siskiyou ranges
    and the northern Sierra Nevada. The IVT values should come down by
    18Z, but sufficient levels of onshore flow, convergence along the
    trailing front, and orographic ascent over the terrain should favor
    areas of heavy rain lingering well into the 18Z to 00Z time frame
    across the foothills of the northern Sierra Nevada. The 00Z HREF
    guidance favors 0.50"+/hour rainfall rates at least occasionally
    impacting these areas, and the threat of heavy rain will also
    envelope the Bay Area where the coastal ranges here may also see
    some occasionally enhanced rainfall at least briefly with rates
    exceeding a 0.50"/hour before the front clears the area. For the
    period, some additional 2 to 3 inch rainfall amounts will be
    possible locally across the coastal ranges of southwest OR and
    northwest CA, and also separately in the foothills of the northern
    Sierra Nevada by tonight. A Slight Risk of excessive rainfall has
    depicted across these areas, and is an introduction in the case of
    the northern Sierra Nevada foothills. Wet antecedent conditions
    along with high streamflow will encourage there being at least a
    small stream and urban flooding threat, and there may be a low-end
    flash flood threat involving the more sensitive burn scar locations
    where these heavier rains persist. Please consult MPD #1204 for
    more details concerning the near-term heavy rainfall/flooding
    concerns across the region.

    ...Central/Southern Appalachians into the Southeast...

    An early-morning QLCS will be crossing through the eastern Gulf
    Coast region and the broader interior of the Southeast as a strong
    southerly low-level jet of 40 to 60 kts drives enhanced moisture
    transport along with a nose of favorable instability just ahead of
    an advancing cold front. This will be occurring as a surface low
    and associated mid to upper-level trough rides northeastward up
    into the Great Lakes region. The QLCS activity should at least clip
    portions of the southern Appalachians and then advance across the
    Piedmont of the Southeast and eventually the coastal plain. Some
    of the more urbanized locations that see this QLCS passage may see
    a quick 1 to 1.5 inches of rain in less than an hour, and this may
    result in some urban runoff problems with a highly isolated threat
    of flash flooding. In general, some of the moist flow into the central
    and southern Appalachians this morning should favor at least some
    locally heavy rainfall totals that may reach upwards of a couple
    inches before the cold front clears the region. A Marginal Risk of
    excessive rainfall has been depicted across all of these areas.

    ...South Florida and the Keys...

    The latest GOES-E IR satellite imagery shows a cluster of very
    heavy showers and thunderstorms over the southeast Gulf of Mexico
    in association with a low-level warm front that is attempting to
    advance northeastward toward the southern FL Peninsula. The
    convection has been focusing in close proximity to a well-defined
    instability gradient and there has been some well-organized
    convective cells with some mesocyclone characteristics evolving
    northwest of the lower FL Keys over the last few hours as seen in
    the Key West radar. Deep moisture and elevated instability has
    already been favoring very high rainfall rates, but the challenge
    for today will be whether or not any of this organized convection
    can advance bodily inland across South FL. The 00Z HREF model
    consensus, 00Z NSSL MPAS guidance, and 06Z HRRR suggests Collier
    and Monroe Counties will see heavy rainfall this morning as this
    warm front pushes eastward at least toward the coast while also
    lifting up through the FL Keys. It is possible that Miami-Dade
    County could get into at least some peripheral bands of showers and thunderstorms as well, some of which will be capable of producing
    heavy rainfall rates of 1 to 2 inches/hour. This would certainly
    introduce concerns for some urban flash flooding. Given the
    mesoscale nature of this setup, there is a concern for locally very
    heavy rainfall totals (possibly 5+ inches over parts of Collier
    and Monroe Counties and portions of the Keys). Given the level of
    uncertainty with the coverage and the amounts, a Marginal Risk will
    be depicted for the time being, but it would not be a stretch that
    a targeted upgrade to a Slight Risk will be needed this morning to
    address the threat for at least some areal flooding and
    potentially urban flash flooding.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 30 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8W_7tcRMv83Wke-9ecAjqg1TPXRaCBunO6lZ7rvZbPda= 7RSWC11jaOzhvJvP0oFYgQ6J-qRu2Ki2H8jAGSiVQjP34Rk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8W_7tcRMv83Wke-9ecAjqg1TPXRaCBunO6lZ7rvZbPda= 7RSWC11jaOzhvJvP0oFYgQ6J-qRu2Ki2H8jAGSiVAYUbjJI$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8W_7tcRMv83Wke-9ecAjqg1TPXRaCBunO6lZ7rvZbPda= 7RSWC11jaOzhvJvP0oFYgQ6J-qRu2Ki2H8jAGSiVIcfRfEU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 29 23:52:42 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 292352
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    652 PM EST Sun Dec 29 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Mon Dec 30 2024 - 12Z Mon Dec 30 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Hurley


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 30 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5O97X9BUpdybKDs030pVOLB_uTkJQt0G4E_moHD2Cf-r= 70W24wQImd5RNfT8HpBmoIsjfxmzjVnsc55Udl2dTfgEEYU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5O97X9BUpdybKDs030pVOLB_uTkJQt0G4E_moHD2Cf-r= 70W24wQImd5RNfT8HpBmoIsjfxmzjVnsc55Udl2dcNJ5wlM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5O97X9BUpdybKDs030pVOLB_uTkJQt0G4E_moHD2Cf-r= 70W24wQImd5RNfT8HpBmoIsjfxmzjVnsc55Udl2dNprhCUs$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 30 07:30:54 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 300730
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    230 AM EST Mon Dec 30 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Mon Dec 30 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6s1DAJEV9pz4Q17Q5xUZxDiIk7PH1J9BLsyBGKRe6OsE= YLoxPTRzXE7QxgBndXLOYR8dSt32IldWJwM-3DWfidUCXsU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6s1DAJEV9pz4Q17Q5xUZxDiIk7PH1J9BLsyBGKRe6OsE= YLoxPTRzXE7QxgBndXLOYR8dSt32IldWJwM-3DWfts0Amrs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!6s1DAJEV9pz4Q17Q5xUZxDiIk7PH1J9BLsyBGKRe6OsE= YLoxPTRzXE7QxgBndXLOYR8dSt32IldWJwM-3DWfsg3K-aU$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 30 15:36:06 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 301535
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1035 AM EST Mon Dec 30 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Dec 30 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill/Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_zL2DSL5KnvhO3po-qdKFjZdPQDqB7ddzHB5XAbe5ces= aLtNPf3TmmAXRDTh97kQIsPzCV-g-Rpqh6sNCutd1_kEIPA$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_zL2DSL5KnvhO3po-qdKFjZdPQDqB7ddzHB5XAbe5ces= aLtNPf3TmmAXRDTh97kQIsPzCV-g-Rpqh6sNCutdygJ78k8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_zL2DSL5KnvhO3po-qdKFjZdPQDqB7ddzHB5XAbe5ces= aLtNPf3TmmAXRDTh97kQIsPzCV-g-Rpqh6sNCutdeX5qcDI$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 30 20:05:59 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 302001
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    301 PM EST Mon Dec 30 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Mon Dec 30 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill/Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill/Orrison


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill/Orrison


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_3eJsO_Yx8nYuWq37WoSpe9oto7OG1lB_6g4AfmwUS4B= MZnMKTw4FUPyiPmIpiGwEzoUqxpmJQZkRPHK-xqKHfhCE_w$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_3eJsO_Yx8nYuWq37WoSpe9oto7OG1lB_6g4AfmwUS4B= MZnMKTw4FUPyiPmIpiGwEzoUqxpmJQZkRPHK-xqKsTRzsAo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_3eJsO_Yx8nYuWq37WoSpe9oto7OG1lB_6g4AfmwUS4B= MZnMKTw4FUPyiPmIpiGwEzoUqxpmJQZkRPHK-xqKHvne1Z0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 31 00:30:39 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 310030
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    730 PM EST Mon Dec 30 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Pereira


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill/Orrison


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Churchill/Orrison


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Ejuyrgz0a4dO7la0RQBsv_gV5Ap2bMyZ7YxbF8CRbX9= tHwZG1GDCgeN2jYSB-lQJHjLOP_ojFHRFoy4Vtff9ryyQu8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Ejuyrgz0a4dO7la0RQBsv_gV5Ap2bMyZ7YxbF8CRbX9= tHwZG1GDCgeN2jYSB-lQJHjLOP_ojFHRFoy4VtffE_Uh4bA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-Ejuyrgz0a4dO7la0RQBsv_gV5Ap2bMyZ7YxbF8CRbX9= tHwZG1GDCgeN2jYSB-lQJHjLOP_ojFHRFoy4VtffdAaASz8$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 31 08:03:11 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 310802
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    302 AM EST Tue Dec 31 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHWEST
    OREGON AND NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    A strong front associated with a compact low will approach and move
    into the Pacific coast of Oregon and California late Thursday=20
    night. IVT values from the GEFS peak at about 600 kg/ms around 12Z=20
    Friday. While river levels have come down a bit from the recent=20
    rainfall and atmospheric river event, expected rainfall on Day=20
    2/Wednesday should bring levels back up and resaturate the soils.
    Thus, with this next round Thursday night, the expected 2-4 inches
    of rain could still cause isolated instances of flash flooding.=20
    The front does not have a true connection to the tropics, so this=20
    round of rain is expected to be of lighter intensity and lesser=20
    duration than the previous A.R. event.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_fxmIyRmeYjp3x1BOOcSYvRuybf85Ft85YEVEmX_2b80= QSDXECAyV4idlaDYcYdQS3TusMCEFT3TxLh5VTX33ZOqRhg$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_fxmIyRmeYjp3x1BOOcSYvRuybf85Ft85YEVEmX_2b80= QSDXECAyV4idlaDYcYdQS3TusMCEFT3TxLh5VTX3A2gMNIs$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_fxmIyRmeYjp3x1BOOcSYvRuybf85Ft85YEVEmX_2b80= QSDXECAyV4idlaDYcYdQS3TusMCEFT3TxLh5VTX37Iwj44w$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 31 15:40:22 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 311540
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1040 AM EST Tue Dec 31 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHWEST
    OREGON AND NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    A strong front associated with a compact low will approach and move
    into the Pacific coast of Oregon and California late Thursday
    night. IVT values from the GEFS peak at about 600 kg/ms around 12Z
    Friday. While river levels have come down a bit from the recent
    rainfall and atmospheric river event, expected rainfall on Day
    2/Wednesday should bring levels back up and resaturate the soils.
    Thus, with this next round Thursday night, the expected 2-4 inches
    of rain could still cause isolated instances of flash flooding.
    The front does not have a true connection to the tropics, so this
    round of rain is expected to be of lighter intensity and lesser
    duration than the previous A.R. event.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4cyGefhW5Qn8GVXGHOl5mdW4VpTh6w-Rl2bQ_wpgQpg6= HoMyrRtRziwgMSqoTflaGt3WEC4UNdEvS9e11tnDo61wWP0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4cyGefhW5Qn8GVXGHOl5mdW4VpTh6w-Rl2bQ_wpgQpg6= HoMyrRtRziwgMSqoTflaGt3WEC4UNdEvS9e11tnDwDlHJ8A$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4cyGefhW5Qn8GVXGHOl5mdW4VpTh6w-Rl2bQ_wpgQpg6= HoMyrRtRziwgMSqoTflaGt3WEC4UNdEvS9e11tnDlXWFzl0$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 31 20:15:26 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 312013
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    313 PM EST Tue Dec 31 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Tue Dec 31 2024 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth/Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHWEST
    OREGON AND NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    A strong front associated with a compact low will approach and move
    into the Pacific coast of Oregon and California late Thursday
    night. IVT values from the GEFS peak at about 600 kg/ms around 12Z
    Friday. While river levels have come down a bit from the recent
    rainfall and atmospheric river event, expected rainfall on Day
    2/Wednesday should bring levels back up and resaturate the soils.
    Thus, with this next round Thursday night, the expected 2-4 inches
    of rain could still cause isolated instances of flash flooding.
    The front does not have a true connection to the tropics, so this
    round of rain is expected to be of lighter intensity and lesser
    duration than the previous A.R. event.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4nJVzAMI1wzwigZbzS5oAFJOdRYJwwKuuuc__Fzp8kyF= b6Z6O44RCNDT_Rg8qkWdscaOJt7w_ByGbeDukLugnAgg6FY$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4nJVzAMI1wzwigZbzS5oAFJOdRYJwwKuuuc__Fzp8kyF= b6Z6O44RCNDT_Rg8qkWdscaOJt7w_ByGbeDukLug-MWa34U$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4nJVzAMI1wzwigZbzS5oAFJOdRYJwwKuuuc__Fzp8kyF= b6Z6O44RCNDT_Rg8qkWdscaOJt7w_ByGbeDukLugg20iucs$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 1 00:27:46 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 010026
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    726 PM EST Tue Dec 31 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Roth


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHWEST
    OREGON AND NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    A strong front associated with a compact low will approach and move
    into the Pacific coast of Oregon and California late Thursday
    night. IVT values from the GEFS peak at about 600 kg/ms around 12Z
    Friday. While river levels have come down a bit from the recent
    rainfall and atmospheric river event, expected rainfall on Day
    2/Wednesday should bring levels back up and resaturate the soils.
    Thus, with this next round Thursday night, the expected 2-4 inches
    of rain could still cause isolated instances of flash flooding.
    The front does not have a true connection to the tropics, so this
    round of rain is expected to be of lighter intensity and lesser
    duration than the previous A.R. event.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8OHuhvaWhFeIvncmGe8lu5A-DsiHpB8RcUdRonuTe1wk= qUtURU1Nmgc68jVhDpZ88ZL6uQNtod12iS-z2Cs0viKaO04$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8OHuhvaWhFeIvncmGe8lu5A-DsiHpB8RcUdRonuTe1wk= qUtURU1Nmgc68jVhDpZ88ZL6uQNtod12iS-z2Cs0_bYAiXU$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8OHuhvaWhFeIvncmGe8lu5A-DsiHpB8RcUdRonuTe1wk= qUtURU1Nmgc68jVhDpZ88ZL6uQNtod12iS-z2Cs0jcEc7Ic$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 1 07:52:43 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 010752
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    252 AM EST Wed Jan 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHWEST=20
    OREGON AND NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    The 00Z HREF guidance has come in with a somewhat wetter footprint
    for today across areas of southwest Oregon and northwest California
    as a new round of offshore shortwave energy and proximity of a=20
    front helps to bring in a new round of moderate to heavy rainfall.=20
    The GFS and ECMWF solutions suggest IVT values increasing to near=20
    500 kg/m/s along the immediate coast from Curry County, Oregon down
    through Del Norte and Humboldt Counties in northwest California.
    Offshore CMORPH2/microwave data shows heavier rainfall rates=20
    associated with this next modest surge in atmospheric river
    activity that will be arriving, and the HREF guidance suggests=20
    rainfall rates will generally peak in the 0.25" to 0.50"/hour range
    with perhaps an occasional instance or two of 0.50"+/hour rates.=20
    Going through 12Z/Thursday, the HREF consensus suggests some=20
    24-hour rainfall amounts of 2 to 4 inches with a couple of spotty=20
    5+ inch amounts possible, and especially for northwest California
    where some of the higher IVT values will persist a bit longer. The
    antecedent conditions are wet across the region, and these rains=20
    may cause some isolated runoff concerns. As a result, a Marginal=20
    Risk of excessive rainfall has been depicted for this area.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF=20 SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA...

    Multiple impulses of upper level energy racing along a 150 kt WSW=20
    jet will move into the Oregon and California coast near the state=20
    line during this Day 2/Thursday period. The first is a front that=20
    will have already moved into the area tonight, and will diminish in=20 intensity and slowly shift north through the early morning. A second=20
    impulse moves in Thursday afternoon, resulting in a much more=20
    concentrated area of rain about 50 miles or so to either direction=20
    of the state line. Finally, a third and the strongest impulse will=20
    move in late Thursday night and Friday morning. Each of these 3=20
    impulses of energy will cause rainfall rates to pick up on the=20
    Oregon and far northern California coast. None of them are expected=20
    to advect in much instability, so upslope will likely be the primary=20
    forcing mechanism for rainfall. With nearly continuous rainfall,=20
    albeit to varying intensity with each impulse over already very=20
    saturated ground, runoff and small stream flooding will be
    possible. Since the heavier/steadier rainfall will be ongoing at=20
    the start of the period over northern California, and guidance has=20
    been creeping up as far as total rainfall amounts go, the Marginal=20
    Risk extends south into Humboldt County to account for continuing=20
    rainfall and isolated runoff problems that may be ongoing from the
    Day 1/Wednesday period.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025 - 12Z Sat Jan 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR FAR=20
    SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND PORTIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA...

    A strong shortwave and associated surface low will plow into the=20
    coast of California and Oregon on Friday. Locally heavy rain with=20
    rates around 1/2 inch per hour will be ongoing Friday morning along=20
    the coast. The shortwave and low will move into the coast Friday=20
    evening and through the overnight. This will shift the heaviest=20
    rains both southward and inland, bringing northern portions of the=20 Sacramento Valley, which has been largely missed with the previous=20
    days' rains into the potential for heavy rain and higher elevation=20
    snow. The Marginal Risk inherited was left unchanged with this=20
    issuance. The heaviest rains are likely to be Friday morning as the=20 aforementioned shortwave and surface low approach. Once they move=20
    into the coast Friday evening and overnight, rainfall rates should=20
    diminish quite a bit as the associated moisture moves inland. Any=20
    flooding from the Day 2/Thursday period will likely continue into=20
    Friday morning along the Oregon and California coasts...with the=20
    flooding for the Sacramento Valley more likely Friday afternoon.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-WVL2toOY_f6DpCmDYn4q231pvomp3QYT5Cwb9KIKkZZ= tsY3DtJLC6pTvCvWBGomVZFy3FlLkIOfHQ260eZhIG5sCT8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-WVL2toOY_f6DpCmDYn4q231pvomp3QYT5Cwb9KIKkZZ= tsY3DtJLC6pTvCvWBGomVZFy3FlLkIOfHQ260eZhkujEBcM$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-WVL2toOY_f6DpCmDYn4q231pvomp3QYT5Cwb9KIKkZZ= tsY3DtJLC6pTvCvWBGomVZFy3FlLkIOfHQ260eZhS3rTmnY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 1 15:46:41 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 011546
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1046 AM EST Wed Jan 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHWEST
    OREGON AND NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    ..16Z Outlook Update...
    Current observational/model trends support continued, yet spotty=20
    areas of ~0.25 inch/hr rain rates at times within the Marginal Risk.
    These rain rates are falling on wet soils from recent rainfall=20
    events, and could prompt minor/localized excessive runoff and flood
    issues. The bulk of the heavier rainfall should persist through=20
    about 03Z today before tapering off thereafter. Rainfall totals of
    1-2 inches (locally higher) are possible. These trends continue to
    support a Marginal Risk, and no changes are made to the previous=20
    outlook. See the discussion below for more information.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The 00Z HREF guidance has come in with a somewhat wetter footprint
    for today across areas of southwest Oregon and northwest California
    as a new round of offshore shortwave energy and proximity of a
    front helps to bring in a new round of moderate to heavy rainfall.
    The GFS and ECMWF solutions suggest IVT values increasing to near
    500 kg/m/s along the immediate coast from Curry County, Oregon down
    through Del Norte and Humboldt Counties in northwest California.
    Offshore CMORPH2/microwave data shows heavier rainfall rates
    associated with this next modest surge in atmospheric river
    activity that will be arriving, and the HREF guidance suggests
    rainfall rates will generally peak in the 0.25" to 0.50"/hour range
    with perhaps an occasional instance or two of 0.50"+/hour rates.
    Going through 12Z/Thursday, the HREF consensus suggests some
    24-hour rainfall amounts of 2 to 4 inches with a couple of spotty
    5+ inch amounts possible, and especially for northwest California
    where some of the higher IVT values will persist a bit longer. The
    antecedent conditions are wet across the region, and these rains
    may cause some isolated runoff concerns. As a result, a Marginal
    Risk of excessive rainfall has been depicted for this area.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA...

    Multiple impulses of upper level energy racing along a 150 kt WSW
    jet will move into the Oregon and California coast near the state
    line during this Day 2/Thursday period. The first is a front that
    will have already moved into the area tonight, and will diminish in
    intensity and slowly shift north through the early morning. A second
    impulse moves in Thursday afternoon, resulting in a much more
    concentrated area of rain about 50 miles or so to either direction
    of the state line. Finally, a third and the strongest impulse will
    move in late Thursday night and Friday morning. Each of these 3
    impulses of energy will cause rainfall rates to pick up on the
    Oregon and far northern California coast. None of them are expected
    to advect in much instability, so upslope will likely be the primary
    forcing mechanism for rainfall. With nearly continuous rainfall,
    albeit to varying intensity with each impulse over already very
    saturated ground, runoff and small stream flooding will be
    possible. Since the heavier/steadier rainfall will be ongoing at
    the start of the period over northern California, and guidance has
    been creeping up as far as total rainfall amounts go, the Marginal
    Risk extends south into Humboldt County to account for continuing
    rainfall and isolated runoff problems that may be ongoing from the
    Day 1/Wednesday period.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025 - 12Z Sat Jan 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR FAR
    SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND PORTIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA...

    A strong shortwave and associated surface low will plow into the
    coast of California and Oregon on Friday. Locally heavy rain with
    rates around 1/2 inch per hour will be ongoing Friday morning along
    the coast. The shortwave and low will move into the coast Friday
    evening and through the overnight. This will shift the heaviest
    rains both southward and inland, bringing northern portions of the
    Sacramento Valley, which has been largely missed with the previous
    days' rains into the potential for heavy rain and higher elevation
    snow. The Marginal Risk inherited was left unchanged with this
    issuance. The heaviest rains are likely to be Friday morning as the aforementioned shortwave and surface low approach. Once they move
    into the coast Friday evening and overnight, rainfall rates should
    diminish quite a bit as the associated moisture moves inland. Any
    flooding from the Day 2/Thursday period will likely continue into
    Friday morning along the Oregon and California coasts...with the
    flooding for the Sacramento Valley more likely Friday afternoon.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9yL5Nn3Ix453KcAe2wTcqkAyuGUxeEkYAUImcd06P8Sa= DJ52Ty3Rcl_0B0qP_LU7aK1TIl7MnGsKJEmfkq6sSyBbODo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9yL5Nn3Ix453KcAe2wTcqkAyuGUxeEkYAUImcd06P8Sa= DJ52Ty3Rcl_0B0qP_LU7aK1TIl7MnGsKJEmfkq6sItD9tPc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9yL5Nn3Ix453KcAe2wTcqkAyuGUxeEkYAUImcd06P8Sa= DJ52Ty3Rcl_0B0qP_LU7aK1TIl7MnGsKJEmfkq6sl-mBWOY$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 1 18:47:10 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 011846
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    146 PM EST Wed Jan 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Wed Jan 01 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHWEST
    OREGON AND NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    ..16Z Outlook Update...
    Current observational/model trends support continued, yet spotty
    areas of ~0.25 inch/hr rain rates at times within the Marginal Risk.
    These rain rates are falling on wet soils from recent rainfall
    events, and could prompt minor/localized excessive runoff and flood
    issues. The bulk of the heavier rainfall should persist through
    about 03Z today before tapering off thereafter. Rainfall totals of
    1-2 inches (locally higher) are possible. These trends continue to
    support a Marginal Risk, and no changes are made to the previous
    outlook. See the discussion below for more information.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    The 00Z HREF guidance has come in with a somewhat wetter footprint
    for today across areas of southwest Oregon and northwest California
    as a new round of offshore shortwave energy and proximity of a
    front helps to bring in a new round of moderate to heavy rainfall.
    The GFS and ECMWF solutions suggest IVT values increasing to near
    500 kg/m/s along the immediate coast from Curry County, Oregon down
    through Del Norte and Humboldt Counties in northwest California.
    Offshore CMORPH2/microwave data shows heavier rainfall rates
    associated with this next modest surge in atmospheric river
    activity that will be arriving, and the HREF guidance suggests
    rainfall rates will generally peak in the 0.25" to 0.50"/hour range
    with perhaps an occasional instance or two of 0.50"+/hour rates.
    Going through 12Z/Thursday, the HREF consensus suggests some
    24-hour rainfall amounts of 2 to 4 inches with a couple of spotty
    5+ inch amounts possible, and especially for northwest California
    where some of the higher IVT values will persist a bit longer. The
    antecedent conditions are wet across the region, and these rains
    may cause some isolated runoff concerns. As a result, a Marginal
    Risk of excessive rainfall has been depicted for this area.

    Orrison


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...

    The ongoing forecast is on track and no changes are needed. A few
    areas of 0.25-0.5 inch/hr rain rates are expected throughout the
    forecast period, with the greatest focus for relatively heavier
    rainfall expected to occur across southwestern Oregon both at the
    start of the forecast period (around 12-18Z) and peaking again in
    the 06-12Z Friday period. 2-4 inch rainfall totals are expected to
    fall on saturated grounds, likely prompting a few areas of excess
    runoff/minor flooding.

    See the previous discussion for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Multiple impulses of upper level energy racing along a 150 kt WSW
    jet will move into the Oregon and California coast near the state
    line during this Day 2/Thursday period. The first is a front that
    will have already moved into the area tonight, and will diminish in
    intensity and slowly shift north through the early morning. A second
    impulse moves in Thursday afternoon, resulting in a much more
    concentrated area of rain about 50 miles or so to either direction
    of the state line. Finally, a third and the strongest impulse will
    move in late Thursday night and Friday morning. Each of these 3
    impulses of energy will cause rainfall rates to pick up on the
    Oregon and far northern California coast. None of them are expected
    to advect in much instability, so upslope will likely be the primary
    forcing mechanism for rainfall. With nearly continuous rainfall,
    albeit to varying intensity with each impulse over already very
    saturated ground, runoff and small stream flooding will be
    possible. Since the heavier/steadier rainfall will be ongoing at
    the start of the period over northern California, and guidance has
    been creeping up as far as total rainfall amounts go, the Marginal
    Risk extends south into Humboldt County to account for continuing
    rainfall and isolated runoff problems that may be ongoing from the
    Day 1/Wednesday period.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025 - 12Z Sat Jan 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR FAR
    SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND PORTIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    The ongoing forecast is on track and no changes are needed. A=20
    strong cold front will move inland across northern California=20
    through the day Friday. The front will aid in continued areas of
    moderate to heavy rain early in the forecast period, although
    eventually a focused area of convection/orographic lift will
    promote heavier rainfall across the windward side of the Sierra and
    adjacent Sacramento Valley regions. Isolated instance of
    flooding/flash flooding remain possible given the aforementioned
    scenario.

    See the previous discussion for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A strong shortwave and associated surface low will plow into the
    coast of California and Oregon on Friday. Locally heavy rain with
    rates around 1/2 inch per hour will be ongoing Friday morning along
    the coast. The shortwave and low will move into the coast Friday
    evening and through the overnight. This will shift the heaviest
    rains both southward and inland, bringing northern portions of the
    Sacramento Valley, which has been largely missed with the previous
    days' rains into the potential for heavy rain and higher elevation
    snow. The Marginal Risk inherited was left unchanged with this
    issuance. The heaviest rains are likely to be Friday morning as the aforementioned shortwave and surface low approach. Once they move
    into the coast Friday evening and overnight, rainfall rates should
    diminish quite a bit as the associated moisture moves inland. Any
    flooding from the Day 2/Thursday period will likely continue into
    Friday morning along the Oregon and California coasts...with the
    flooding for the Sacramento Valley more likely Friday afternoon.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ObqAC1d1I6fbkQ4arjIAmCJkm6g4gW6qRcSY8HW32dR= 2DyncHDZLbWUJpZoDgLtD-2AIqQWIgl2t23TQmj620mEirw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ObqAC1d1I6fbkQ4arjIAmCJkm6g4gW6qRcSY8HW32dR= 2DyncHDZLbWUJpZoDgLtD-2AIqQWIgl2t23TQmj6M1fsc_4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8ObqAC1d1I6fbkQ4arjIAmCJkm6g4gW6qRcSY8HW32dR= 2DyncHDZLbWUJpZoDgLtD-2AIqQWIgl2t23TQmj640p6g9U$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 1 23:57:41 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 012357
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    657 PM EST Wed Jan 1 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 01Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHWEST
    OREGON AND NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA...

    Maintained the Marginal risk area through the overnight hours with
    the expectation that rainfall will persist into the evening hours=20
    before rainfall rates gradually taper off. Location of the heavier
    amounts could shift northward somewhat from where rain has been=20
    focused so far today in response to a trough that approaching=20
    130W as of late this afternoon. Even so, any additional rain=20
    falling on wet soils from recent rainfall events could still result
    in minor/localized excessive runoff and flood issues overnight.=20
    These trends continue to support a Marginal Risk, and no changes=20
    are made to the previous outlook.=20

    Bann


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...

    The ongoing forecast is on track and no changes are needed. A few
    areas of 0.25-0.5 inch/hr rain rates are expected throughout the
    forecast period, with the greatest focus for relatively heavier
    rainfall expected to occur across southwestern Oregon both at the
    start of the forecast period (around 12-18Z) and peaking again in
    the 06-12Z Friday period. 2-4 inch rainfall totals are expected to
    fall on saturated grounds, likely prompting a few areas of excess
    runoff/minor flooding.

    See the previous discussion for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Multiple impulses of upper level energy racing along a 150 kt WSW
    jet will move into the Oregon and California coast near the state
    line during this Day 2/Thursday period. The first is a front that
    will have already moved into the area tonight, and will diminish in
    intensity and slowly shift north through the early morning. A second
    impulse moves in Thursday afternoon, resulting in a much more
    concentrated area of rain about 50 miles or so to either direction
    of the state line. Finally, a third and the strongest impulse will
    move in late Thursday night and Friday morning. Each of these 3
    impulses of energy will cause rainfall rates to pick up on the
    Oregon and far northern California coast. None of them are expected
    to advect in much instability, so upslope will likely be the primary
    forcing mechanism for rainfall. With nearly continuous rainfall,
    albeit to varying intensity with each impulse over already very
    saturated ground, runoff and small stream flooding will be
    possible. Since the heavier/steadier rainfall will be ongoing at
    the start of the period over northern California, and guidance has
    been creeping up as far as total rainfall amounts go, the Marginal
    Risk extends south into Humboldt County to account for continuing
    rainfall and isolated runoff problems that may be ongoing from the
    Day 1/Wednesday period.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025 - 12Z Sat Jan 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR FAR
    SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND PORTIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA...

    ...21Z Outlook Update...
    The ongoing forecast is on track and no changes are needed. A
    strong cold front will move inland across northern California
    through the day Friday. The front will aid in continued areas of
    moderate to heavy rain early in the forecast period, although
    eventually a focused area of convection/orographic lift will
    promote heavier rainfall across the windward side of the Sierra and
    adjacent Sacramento Valley regions. Isolated instance of
    flooding/flash flooding remain possible given the aforementioned
    scenario.

    See the previous discussion for more details.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    A strong shortwave and associated surface low will plow into the
    coast of California and Oregon on Friday. Locally heavy rain with
    rates around 1/2 inch per hour will be ongoing Friday morning along
    the coast. The shortwave and low will move into the coast Friday
    evening and through the overnight. This will shift the heaviest
    rains both southward and inland, bringing northern portions of the
    Sacramento Valley, which has been largely missed with the previous
    days' rains into the potential for heavy rain and higher elevation
    snow. The Marginal Risk inherited was left unchanged with this
    issuance. The heaviest rains are likely to be Friday morning as the aforementioned shortwave and surface low approach. Once they move
    into the coast Friday evening and overnight, rainfall rates should
    diminish quite a bit as the associated moisture moves inland. Any
    flooding from the Day 2/Thursday period will likely continue into
    Friday morning along the Oregon and California coasts...with the
    flooding for the Sacramento Valley more likely Friday afternoon.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8hlPzRyqPGfBoQFFDDkYUfttV8uh15lwkGdmPnTTzE_7= fqxEEe-twCq61m3xqDzmeBYjbDPMG30T6LDrD9PCcJtwSa8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8hlPzRyqPGfBoQFFDDkYUfttV8uh15lwkGdmPnTTzE_7= fqxEEe-twCq61m3xqDzmeBYjbDPMG30T6LDrD9PCBjrD9B0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8hlPzRyqPGfBoQFFDDkYUfttV8uh15lwkGdmPnTTzE_7= fqxEEe-twCq61m3xqDzmeBYjbDPMG30T6LDrD9PCjYysXHc$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 2 07:05:37 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 020705
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    205 AM EST Thu Jan 2 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA...

    A relatively weak, long duration atmospheric river will continue=20
    to impact portions of the Pacific Northwest coast today, shifting
    focus from northwest California into far southwest Oregon. While
    there is a distinct lack of instability to fuel rainfall rates
    beyond 0.25"/hr, tropospheric moisture is still rather elevated
    with precipitable water values of 1.0-1.2" (2.0-2.5+ standard
    deviations, near the 95th percentile). Two distinct rounds of
    precipitation (one from late this morning through mid afternoon,=20
    and another round from late evening through the overnight) are
    expected to bring additional rainfall of 3-5" (primarily for Del=20
    Norte county, CA and Curry county, OR). While rapid onset flooding
    is generally not expected (given the muted rainfall rates), these=20
    areas (and surroundings) have already received 1-2" over the past
    24 hours with USGS streamflow data indicating widespread above
    normal to much above normal streamflows (with some even at record
    territory for the date), suggesting additional rainfall may lead to
    localized flooding impacts.=20

    Churchill


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025 - 12Z Sat Jan 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR FAR
    SOUTHWESTERN OREGON AND PORTIONS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA...

    A strong shortwave and associated surface low will plow into the
    coast of California and Oregon on Friday. Locally heavy rain with
    rates around 1/2 inch per hour will be ongoing Friday morning along
    the coast. The shortwave and low will move into the coast Friday
    evening and through the overnight. This will shift the heaviest
    rains both southward and inland, bringing northern portions of the
    Sacramento Valley, which has been largely missed with the previous
    days' rains, into the potential for heavy rain and higher=20
    elevation snow. The Marginal Risk inherited was left unchanged with
    this issuance. The heaviest rains are likely to be Friday morning=20
    as the aforementioned shortwave and surface low approach. Once they
    move into the coast Friday evening and overnight, rainfall rates=20
    should diminish quite a bit as the associated moisture moves=20
    inland. Any flooding from the Day 2/Thursday period will likely=20
    continue into Friday morning along the Oregon and California=20
    coasts...with any minor flooding for the Sacramento Valley more=20
    likely Friday afternoon.

    Wegman


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jan 04 2025 - 12Z Sun Jan 05 2025

    The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
    than 5 percent.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!55uWU4SqTkpkCTOn2LOuIf4nQ5yO2q682TwWm4S9O9PI= z6JAbRjwqLGfnQC1IGn10IUCigIU-eIjOaHvr44l66L2Tp4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!55uWU4SqTkpkCTOn2LOuIf4nQ5yO2q682TwWm4S9O9PI= z6JAbRjwqLGfnQC1IGn10IUCigIU-eIjOaHvr44lu8cSKx4$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!55uWU4SqTkpkCTOn2LOuIf4nQ5yO2q682TwWm4S9O9PI= z6JAbRjwqLGfnQC1IGn10IUCigIU-eIjOaHvr44loFLSZ9I$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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