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re: Official Harvey Observation Thread

Posted on 8/27/17 at 6:56 am to
Posted by Jobu93
Cypress TX
Member since Sep 2011
21166 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 6:56 am to
Just waking up here in Cypress and we continue to be safe by the Lords grace.
Posted by baytiger
Boston
Member since Dec 2007
46978 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 6:57 am to
Lake Charles should be preparing for heavy thunderstorm/rain bands if you haven't already
Posted by Prominentwon
LSU, McNeese St. Fan
Member since Jan 2005
94786 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:01 am to
Thanks bay
Posted by Jobu93
Cypress TX
Member since Sep 2011
21166 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:03 am to
I will take it whatever you want to call it.
Posted by baytiger
Boston
Member since Dec 2007
46978 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:14 am to
Take it to the other thread
Posted by cwill
Member since Jan 2005
54755 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:23 am to
I'm in the Heights...just street flooding so far...but we're probably home bound all day. So far flooding seems to be occurring mostly where expected.
Posted by NorthEndZone
Member since Dec 2008
13781 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:27 am to
All-time record level - already. Incredible!

60 At levels above 60 feet major lowland flooding begins as homes above the gage begin to flood and several streets near the gage are inundated.

59.3 At levels above 59.3 the bridge at Briar Forest SW is inundated.

57 At levels above 57 feet moderate lowland flooding begins as portions of Briar Forest Drive begin to flood.

Posted by rds dc
Member since Jun 2008
21041 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:30 am to
Very little change in the overall setup since yesterday afternoon, flooding rains to continue today. It is hard to wrap the mind around this but we could be watching the worst ever flooding event in US history.



Posted by baytiger
Boston
Member since Dec 2007
46978 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:37 am to
quote:


All-time record level - already. Incredible!

60 At levels above 60 feet major lowland flooding begins as homes above the gage begin to flood and several streets near the gage are inundated.

59.3 At levels above 59.3 the bridge at Briar Forest SW is inundated.

57 At levels above 57 feet moderate lowland flooding begins as portions of Briar Forest Drive begin to flood.


And that's all upstream of the heaviest rain totals in central and southeastern Houston... and more is coming.
Posted by LSU Patrick
Member since Jan 2009
76948 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:40 am to
The heavy bands look like they are just going to circulate in Houston.

radar
Posted by NorthEndZone
Member since Dec 2008
13781 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:41 am to
Edited to only include rainfall and 10+ inch amounts...

STORM SUMMARY NUMBER 05 FOR TROPICAL STORM HARVEY RAINFALL AND WIND
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD
400 AM CDT SUN AUG 27 2017

...TROPICAL STORM HARVEY OBSERVED RAIN TOTALS AND WIND REPORTS...

FOR A DETAILED GRAPHICAL DEPICTION OF THE LATEST
WATCHES...WARNINGS AND ADVISORIES...PLEASE SEE WWW.WEATHER.GOV

AT 300 AM CDT...THESE ARE THE MOST RECENT RAINFALL AND WIND
REPORTS FROM TROPICAL STORM HARVEY. PLEASE REFER TO NHC FOR THE
LATEST PUBLIC ADVISORIES ON HARVEY.

...SELECTED STORM TOTAL RAINFALL IN INCHES FROM 800 PM CDT THU AUG
24 THROUGH 300 AM CDT SUN AUG 27...

...TEXAS...
BERRY BAYOU AT NEVADA AVENUE 19.52
BEAMER DITCH AT HUGHES ROAD 19.28
HORSEPEN CREEK AT BAY AREA BOULEVAR 18.56
CLEAR CREEK AT BAY AREA BLVD 17.84
PASADENA 2 NW 17.72
SMITHVILLE 15.77
AUSTWELL 6 SSE 15.10
PECAN GROVE 1 NNW 14.83
BASTROP 5 S 14.82
SAN ANTONIO RIVER NEAR MCFAD 13.82
LA GRANGE 1 W 13.49
COLETO CREEK AT ARNOLD ROAD 13.25
COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE 12.64
ROSANKY 12.35
CARMINE 12.29
HALLETTSVILLE 11.73
HOUSTON HOBBY AIRPORT 11.44
MULDOON 2 NE 11.27
LITTLE CYPRESS CREEK AT BECKER ROAD 11.12
FULSHEAR 3 NE 10.58
ARANSAS NWR 10.54
HOUSTON INTERCONTINENTAL AIRPORT 10.26
This post was edited on 8/27/17 at 7:42 am
Posted by PowerTool
The dark side of the road
Member since Dec 2009
22898 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:41 am to
quote:

I'm in the Heights...just street flooding so far...but we're probably home bound all day. So far flooding seems to be occurring mostly where expected.


I lived off Studemont during Allison. House never flooded but was a wee bit stranded for a little bit. Hunker down and booze up.
Posted by rds dc
Member since Jun 2008
21041 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:42 am to


MESOSCALE PRECIPITATION DISCUSSION 0742
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD
809 AM EDT SUN AUG 27 2017

AREAS AFFECTED...SOUTHEAST TX & SOUTHWEST LA

CONCERNING...HEAVY RAINFALL...FLASH FLOODING LIKELY

VALID 271208Z - 271808Z

SUMMARY...CATASTROPHIC FLOODING IN THE HOUSTON METROPOLITAN AREA
IS EXPECTED TO WORSEN AND COULD BECOME HISTORIC IN ASSOCIATION
WITH HARVEY, WITH POTENTIALLY SIGNIFICANT FLOODING ALSO EXPECTED
IN OTHER SATURATED AREAS OF SOUTHEAST TX. HOURLY RAIN TOTALS UP
TO 3" WITH LOCAL AMOUNTS TO 7" ARE EXPECTED, BRINGING LOCAL STORM
TOTAL ACCUMULATIONS TOWARD 35" LOCALLY BY 18Z.

DISCUSSION...A COMBINATION OF DRIER/STABLE LOW LEVEL AIR HAS
INFILTRATED THE CENTER AND FORCED THE CONVECTIVE PATTERN AROUND
THE SYSTEM TO RESEMBLE A CONVECTIVE T-BONE STRUCTURE. A
SIGNIFICANT DEW POINT GRADIENT IS SHOWING UP SOUTH OF ITS CENTER
NEAR THE COAST OF MAINLAND TX -- WEST OF PADRE ISLAND, EXTENDING
RIGHT UP THE COAST BEFORE CURLING NORTHWARD WEST OF ANGLETON TX.
MID-LEVEL DRY AIR IS IMPINGING ON ITS WESTERN SIDE -- THERE IS THE
APPEARANCE OF SOME WESTERLY VERTICAL WIND SHEAR OVER HARVEY.
BANDS OF DEEP CONVECTION CONTINUE TO ROTATE INTO GALVESTON,
HOUSTON, AND AREAS NORTHEAST OF PALACIOS TX OVER 100 MILES FROM
THE CENTER OF HARVEY, WHOSE CENTER IS SLOWLY EDGING AWAY FROM THE
AREA. HOURLY RAIN TOTALS PER RECENT RADAR ESTIMATES HAVE FALLEN
TO ABOUT 3", WHICH CORRESPONDS TO HARRIS COUNTY EMERGENCY
MANAGEMENT RAIN GAGE TOTALS. RAIN TOTALS OVER THE PAST 48 HOURS
HAVE REACHED 27" IN SOUTHEAST HARRIS COUNTY, WITH AMOUNTS CLOSER
TO 12" ACROSS NORTHERN AND WESTERN HARRIS COUNTY. VOLUME-WISE,
THIS HAS LIKELY REACHED THE RAINFALL THAT FELL DURING ALLISON IN
JUNE 2001, AND IT CONTINUES TO RAIN. BOTH THE ML CAPES AND MU
CAPES HAVE BEEN SLOWLY DECLINING, WHICH LIKELY EXPLAINS THE
REDUCING HOURLY RAIN RATES, WITH VALUES NEAR 1000 J/KG ALONG THE
UPPER TX COAST. INFLOW AT 850 HPA IS CYCLONIC, OUT OF THE
SOUTHEAST AT 35-45 KTS PER VAD WIND PROFILES. PRECIPITABLE WATER
VALUES ARE ~ 2.75".

SPIRAL BANDS TEND TO MOVE AWAY FROM THE CENTER OF CONVECTIVE LOWS,
SO IT IS POSSIBLE THAT THE BANDING IN THE GALVESTON/HOUSTON AREA
COULD CONTINUE FOR SEVERAL MORE HOURS -- FOR AS LONG AS THE STORM
IS DRIFTING SOUTHWARD. ANY EASTWARD DRIFT WOULD POTENTIALLY MOVE
THE HEAVIEST RAIN AXIS EASTWARD. MEANWHILE, TO THE NORTHEAST,
ISSUES ARE EXPECTED ACROSS THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE OF SOUTHEAST TX AND
IMPERIAL CALCASIEU AS RECENT RAINS HAVE LOWERED FLASH FLOOD
GUIDANCE VALUES AND CONVECTION FROM THE SLOWLY INCOMING BAND
OCCASIONALLY MERGES IN WITH THUNDERSTORMS ALONG AN EFFECTIVE
STATIONARY FRONT TO ITS EAST-NORTHEAST. RAINFALL HAS BEEN WELL
ABOVE AVERAGE IN SOUTHWEST LA AND DAM ISSUES REMAIN IN PORT ARTHUR
TX. THE MESOSCALE GUIDANCE SHOWS A SLOW RETREAT IN RAINFALL
RATES/AMOUNTS WHEN COMPARED TO OVERNIGHT AND EARLIER THIS MORNING,
BUT THE DAMAGE HAS BEEN DONE. THE MESOSCALE GUIDANCE INDICATES
LOCAL AMOUNTS TO 7", WITH HOURLY RAIN TOTALS UP TO 3" EXPECTED.
THIS WOULD ELEVATE THE CATASTROPHIC FLOOD EVENT INTO RECORD
TERRITORY FOR THE HOUSTON METROPOLITAN AREA.


ROTH
Posted by Lsut81
Member since Jun 2005
83713 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:43 am to
quote:

I'm in the Heights...just street flooding so far...but we're probably home bound all day. So far flooding seems to be occurring mostly where expected.


+1

no standing water anywhere, but I can't imagine what the water runoffs, especially around washington look like right now.
Posted by Lsut81
Member since Jun 2005
83713 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:44 am to
quote:

but we could be watching the worst ever flooding event in US history.


So although it looks to be slacking off, you think daytime heating will ramp this thing back up over Houston today?
Posted by LSU Patrick
Member since Jan 2009
76948 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:45 am to
I don't think it is really slacking off.
Posted by jlntiger
Member since Feb 2011
1573 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 7:45 am to
What are y'all thinking for today?
Woke up to a leak in roof and trying to determine what to do. Think I know the source but not sure

Edit / nvm so your post in last page
This post was edited on 8/27/17 at 7:47 am
Posted by MyNameIsInigoMontoya
Woodlands
Member since Oct 2012
587 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 8:07 am to
Checking in from Spring in SE Montgomery county (across 45 from the Woodlands)...we got hammered overnight. So far, drainage in my area is doing a great job. I read that lake Conroe has reached its overflow levels, so they have opened the flood gates, which is not good for us. Spring Creek is the closest to me and as of this morning, it's projected to get to the same level that it did during last year's flood. We were good during that, so I'm hoping for the best, but if this shite continues, I don't know how long the drainage can keep up. Thank you all for your info in this thread.
This post was edited on 8/27/17 at 8:07 am
Posted by L S Usetheforce
Member since Jun 2004
23242 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 8:10 am to
14.75 inches in College Station since landfall. Water still moving good here. However Brazos river is getting this massive amount of water.
Posted by Lsut81
Member since Jun 2005
83713 posts
Posted on 8/27/17 at 8:13 am to
quote:

Checking in from Spring in SE Montgomery county (across 45 from the Woodlands).


Any major flooding up there? Have a friend who lives off of Sawdust in that area.

Haven't heard of standing water anywhere in those areas though.
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