


Flash Flood Guidance
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
Versions:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
824 AWUS01 KWNH 311817 FFGMPD TXZ000-NMZ000-AZZ000-010015- Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 1040 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 216 PM EDT Sun Aug 31 2025 Areas affected...far western TX into central to southwestern NM and southeastern AZ Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding likely Valid 311815Z - 010015Z SUMMARY...Thunderstorms will pose an isolated to scattered flash flood threat across portions of far western TX into central to southwestern NM and southeastern AZ through 00Z. Storms should be disorganized in nature, but some slow movement and brief training will carry a threat for 1-2 in/hr rain rates. DISCUSSION...Visible satellite and radar imagery at 18Z showed a gradual uptick in the coverage of thunderstorms, tied to the diurnal cycle, over the southwestern quadrant of NM. Mostly clear skies and anomalous moisture (12Z EPZ sounding with a PW of 1.3 inches, just above the 90th percentile for the end of August) was contributing to a bubble of higher instability from near El Paso into southwestern NM with 500 to 1500+ J/kg MLCAPE shown on the 18Z SPC mesoanalysis page. Moisture values were closer to average for northern NM and into western AZ. A 700-500 mb ridge was centered over the AZ/NM border with easterly low level flow located from far western TX into southern NM and this pattern will maintain through the late evening. A small region of weak deeper layer mean winds was located over south-central TX with (<10 kt 0-6 km) with 10-15 kt located elsewhere. Continued heating and moisture advection into southeastern AZ should allow for an expansion of instability with 500-1500 J/kg becoming widespread across southwestern NM into southeastern AZ by 21-00Z. Low level easterly winds should cause an increase in low level moisture and instability into southeastern AZ by late this afternoon with thunderstorms either moving into or developing over southeastern AZ. Some thunderstorms will carry the potential for brief training along with slow movement, supportive of 1-2 in/hr rain rates. At least an isolated threat of flash flooding may continue beyond 00Z within lingering instability but the flash flood threat is expected to begin to wane after sunset. Otto ...Please see www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...ABQ...EPZ...FGZ...TWC... ATTN...RFC...FWR...STR...NWC... LAT...LON 34840748 34660549 33920502 32410525 31410603 31320750 31030917 31341101 33500982 34340905 34670834