


Flash Flood Guidance
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Issued by NWS
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690 AWUS01 KWNH 121816 FFGMPD OKZ000-KSZ000-130015- Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0658 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 215 PM EDT Sat Jul 12 2025 Areas affected...OK and southern KS Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding likely Valid 121815Z - 130015Z Summary...Expanding convection ahead of an MCV will result in areas of heavy rainfall and an isolated to scattered flash flood risk over portions of central and eastern Oklahoma and far southern KS. A more concentrated area of flash flooding is possible near a lingering outflow boundary over central OK. Discussion...A well defined MCV moving across OK will likely trigger additional convective development as we head through the afternoon hours. A pretty messy convective pattern at the current time with several convective clusters ongoing ahead of the MCV. High res model guidance has been inconsistent in the handling of convection...but a combination of recent HRRR and RRFS runs, along with observational trends, has resulted in an increase in confidence on how things should evolve. Despite the ongoing convection and cloud cover, instability is on the uptick ahead of the MCV...with MLCAPE around 2000 J/KG. PWs average around 1.8", and should continue to tick up slightly, likely approaching 2" in spots by later this afternoon. Deep layer shear remains weak, but the combination of the MCV and decent upper level divergence centered over the state should help sustain convection. Deep layer mean flow is relatively weak (about 10-15 kts) out of the southwest. Given this is similar to the MCV track, would generally expect a slow northeast movement to convection. Upwind propagation vectors are divergent over the region...typically an indicator of potential backbuilding and/or stationary cluster motions. We have already seen some of this during the morning hours over portions of eastern OK. The overall expectation is that convection will expand in coverage over the next few hours ahead of the MCV as destabilization continues. The aforementioned slow deep layer mean flow and backbuilding potential alone would point to some flash flood risk. However this risk may be exacerbated by the presence of the long lived outflow boundary that resulted in the earlier flash flooding near Tulsa. This boundary has persisted longer than earlier guidance had expected...and now should play a role in the flash flood risk going forward as well. The general expectation is that convection will build into this boundary...with some continued south southwest propagation possible. This should allow for a pronounced training convective risk and the likelihood of at least some additional flash flooding, some of which could be locally significant. The 15z run of the experimental RRFS does indeed show an evolution such as this...resulting in additional rainfall of 3-5". Given that the RRFS seems to have a decent handle on the current outflow, its evolution seems plausible. The 16z HRRR is a bit less aggressive...but still shows 2-3" totals...despite not having a great handle on the aforementioned outflow boundary. Thus tend to think amounts will likely exceed the HRRR output, and would expect hourly rainfall locally exceeding 2", and additional rainfall totals approaching or even exceeding 5" on an isolated basis through 00z. Chenard ...Please see www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...ICT...OUN...TSA... ATTN...RFC...TUA...NWC... LAT...LON 37609721 37469658 36719598 36399578 35829521 35159477 34349554 34009674 34389765 35109806 35899855 36909841 37389790