Excessive Rainfall Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
1153 AM EDT Sat Apr 11 2026
Day 1
Valid 16Z Sat Apr 11 2026 - 12Z Sun Apr 12 2026
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...
...Central Plains...
The MCS responsible for periods of excessive rainfall and
resulting flash flooding will continue through the remainder of
this morning. The 12Z TOP sounding shows as much as 1,000 J/kg of
MUCAPE, along with a saturated and nearly 8,000ft warm cloud layer
aloft, plus a highly sheared environment featuring excellent low-
level SRH in the sfc-1km layer that exceeds 250 m2/s2. The ARW has
handled this complex the best, and its new 12Z run suggests
organized thunderstorms will linger for at least a couple more
hours over northeast KS and far northwest MO. WPC has issued a new
MPD, #0091, to highlight the ongoing flash flood threat. But with
several more hours of excessive rainfall expected, opted to
maintain the Marginal Risk until at least the 01Z update.
Mullinax
...Southern Plains...
Flash flooding is very much a concern from the Big Bend on north
and east through the heart of TX this evening and into tonight.
NAEFS shows anomalous IVT values over 500 kg/m/s (above the 97.5
climatological percentile) ahead of an approaching 200-500mb mean
trough axis. Current visible satellite paints a generally broken
cloud field over much of the state, although some surface based
heating should allow for up to 1,000 J/kg of MLCAPE late afternoon
and this evening. Storms initiating along the dryline will have a
favorable vertical wind profile that sports sufficient shear
(30-40kts of sfc-6km shear) and sfc-3km storm-realtive helicity
(SRH) >100 m2/s2. Any discrete cells initially should manifest
into a congealed cluster with some cells potentially training and
back-building north of the Rio Grande. The new 12Z HREF shows
pockets of moderate-to-high chances (50-80%) for rainfall totals
>3" from the Rio Grande to as far north as the Red River. More
concerningly, there are moderate chances (40-50%) for localized
totals >5" close to Del Rio, TX. While a moderate was considered,
ultimately held a Slight given the regions lower FFGs. However,
this is more of a "high-end" Slight, given the potential for
rainfall rates up to 2"/hr and the typical flash flood risks that
the TX Hill Country has a long history of enduring.
Mullinax
---Previous Discussion---
The presence of an increasing southerly low level will transport
Gulf moisture northward and pool over the Plains and Mississippi
Valley as an upper level trough enters the West and ridging builds
over the East. Meanwhile the upper dynamics and embedded shortwave
energy will support ascent ahead of a longwave trough. At the
surface, a dry line across West Texas will help serve as an
initiating mechanism for convection in the afternoon. Strong to
severe thunderstorms are expected to fire up over the Southern and
Central High Plains, migrating eastward eventually making headway
into the adjacent Concho Valley and lower Trans Pecos. As cells
merge due to cold pool mergers and low-level jet initiation, a
large cluster of heavy rainfall will ensue through the rest of
Saturday night into Sunday morning.
General consensus maintains 2-4 inches possible from the Concho
Valley in West Texas to the Red River Valley in southern Oklahoma.
Neighborhood 24 hr QPF HREF probabilities show a strong signal for
50-80% for 2 inches for this region and 40-70% for 3 inches. A
Slight Risk for Excessive Rainfall remains in effect across
portions of the Southern Plains, especially the areas referenced
above.
Campbell
...Upper Midwest and Great Lakes...
The Marginal Risk was expanded southward into southern WI,
northeast IA, and northern IL for the 16Z update. Latest ARW and
HRRR have trended south with their QPF axis with storms forming
closer to the lifting warming front. This setup has eerily similar
characteristics that led to the flash flooding in northeast KS
this morning; sheared lobes of 500mb vorticity to the west of the
upper-level ridge axis with area-averaged soundings showing
notable low-level SRH values and over 500 J/kg of MUCAPE aloft.
Warm cloud layers at least 8,000ft deep and NAEFS highlighting a
robust 750 kg/m/s IVT over central IA being aimed at southern WI
tonight also supported both warm rain processes and healthy
moisture advection. 1-hr FFGs remain as low as 1" in some locations
given the saturated soils in place. With these factors accounted
for, the Marginal Risk will focus on the potential for flash
flooding in these aforementioned areas tonight and into the early
morning hours on Sunday.
Mullinax
---Previous Discussion---
Scattered to widespread convection is expected across parts of
Wisconsin and Michigan as moisture increase along a warm front
lifting northward through the region. Areal averages of around 1
inch are still on track. Much of the region will be sensitive to
additional precipitation as there has been ongoing snow melt and
high river flows. Although it may be isolated, flash flooding
may be possible during this period. A Flood Watch remains in effect
across the Michigan U.P. and far northern Lower Michigan and
Wisconsin.
Campbell
Day 2
Valid 12Z Sun Apr 12 2026 - 12Z Mon Apr 13 2026
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR CENTRAL TEXAS...
...Central Texas...
Multiple rounds of strong to severe storms will persist across the
Southern/Central Plains and Lower Mississippi Valley given high
moisture presence, favorable wind shear and instability in place.
A meandering dry line across the region will provide a focus for
backbuilding cells. With limited eastward progression of the QPF
footprint expected during this period, there is a growing threat
for flash flood concerns across portions of Hill Country to the I-35
corridor south of Dallas. A Slight Risk for Excessive Rainfall is
now in effect for central Texas for the threat with a Marginal Risk
extending northeastward through Oklahoma and adjacent areas of
Kansas/Missouri/Arkansas.
...Northern Michigan...
Gulf moisture will continue to transport northward and interact
with the frontal boundary draped across the region. An additional 1
to 2 inches of rain is expected across the upper portion of the
Mitten which may expedite local snow melt and runoff. A Marginal
Risk for Excessive Rainfall remains in effect across northern
Michigan.
Campbell/Wilder
Day 3
Valid 12Z Mon Apr 13 2026 - 12Z Tue Apr 14 2026
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND UPPER GREAT LAKES REGION...
Showers and thunderstorms will persist through this period as the
warm front lifts into southern Canadian and the cold front advances
through the Northern Plains into the Upper Mississippi Valley.
Additional rainfall will maintained an elevated threat for isolated
flash flooding and speed up snow melt around the region. A Marginal
Risk remains in effect from eastern Minnesota to northern Michigan.
Campbell
Day 1 threat area: www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoints.txt
Day 2 threat area: www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/98epoints.txt
Day 3 threat area: www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/99epoints.txt