


Flash Flood Guidance
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Issued by NWS
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789 AWUS01 KWNH 041141 FFGMPD FLZ000-GAZ000-ALZ000-041700- Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0864 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 741 AM EDT Mon Aug 04 2025 Areas affected...Florida Panhandle into southern Alabama and Georgia Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding possible Valid 041140Z - 041700Z Summary...Showers and thunderstorms will gradually expand into the afternoon and train northward. Rain rates of 2-3"/hr are likely, which through this training could produce 2-4" of rain with locally higher amounts. Flash flooding is possible. Discussion...The GOES-E IR imagery this morning shows multiple areas of rapidly cooling cloud tops centered along the Florida Panhandle. These tops are associated with strengthening updrafts leading to thunderstorms, which are clearly evident on the regional radar mosaic. Rainfall rates estimated within the deeper convection has been as high as 2.5"/hr from KTLH, and although the highest rainfall rates have been offshore so far this morning, convection has been expanding just inland over the past hour. The environment across the region is extremely favorable for heavy rainfall. A surface stationary front analyzed by WPC is serving as a focus for low-level convergence to enhance ascent, with additional lift occurring along a frictional axis near the Gulf/land interface, and downstream of a weak shortwave approaching the coast. This ascent is working into robust thermodynamics to support the heavy rain rates, with PWs measured via GPS as high as 2.3 inches, well above the 90th percentile and approaching the daily records, with MUCAPE already above 1000 J/kg, although the most substantial instability is right along the coast. The sharp gradient of instability is limiting the inland extent of heavy rainfall so far, but over the next few hours more widespread convection should spread northward. This is due in part to increasing southerly flow as the region remains pinched between a ridge to east centered over the Atlantic Ocean, and a trough axis positioned over Mississippi. The persistent southerly flow to draw higher PW/CAPE northward will combine with daytime heating to allow for more robust thermodynamics to expand across the area. As this occurs, convection should rapidly spread across much of the area while intensifying, which is supported by most available CAMs, with 2-3"/hr rain rates likely as reflected by HREF neighborhood probabilities and the 15-min HRRR rainfall accumulation product. With nearly unidirectional 850-500mb flow and 850mb winds exceeding the mean 0-6km wind, storms should rapidly expand in the next few hours and train south to north, leading to multiple rounds of convection which could produce 2-4" of rain with locally higher amounts possible, especially from Apalachicola through the Emerald Coast. Additionally contributing to the increasing flash flood risk is recent rainfall that has been 2-4" with locally as much as 6" the past 48 hours according to MRMS. This has lowered 3-hr FFG, especially across southern AL and southern GA, to 2-2.5". While FFG remains high along the Florida Panhandle, any training of these rain rates moving atop urban areas could additionally quickly result in runoff and instances of flash flooding. Weiss ...Please see www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...BMX...FFC...MOB...TAE... ATTN...RFC...ALR...NWC... LAT...LON 33108546 32948460 32668412 31978387 30808387 30198412 29858443 29668490 29798550 30018573 30168663 30138702 30188746 30378760 30768706 31098605 31978586 32688574