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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTexas and Louisiana - that's a lot of water heading your way
with soon to be TS Arthur
https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/refresh/graphics_at1+shtml/171144.shtml?cone#contents
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Texas and Louisiana - that's a lot of water heading your way (Original Post)
malaise
Yesterday
OP
Tropical system will pass by Houston today, lashing parts of the region with rain before moving on
LetMyPeopleVote
Yesterday
#1
LetMyPeopleVote
(183,554 posts)1. Tropical system will pass by Houston today, lashing parts of the region with rain before moving on
I love Space City Weather. We have light rain at my house right now
https://spacecityweather.com/tropical-system-will-pass-by-houston-today-lashing-parts-of-the-region-with-rain-before-moving-on/
In brief: Central and southern parts of Houston are seeing rain from an approaching tropical system this morning, which should pass near Galveston Island later today. Winds should be mostly modest, and we expect rains over the Houston region to diminish by late morning or early afternoon.
Tropical update
As of 7 am CT a low pressure system lies just off the coast of Texas, near Matagorda Bay. According to the National Hurricane Center, it is moving to the northeast at about 7 mph and should continue to track more or less along the upper Texas coast today. This will bring its rather poorly defined center near Galveston Island sometime today, likely during the early afternoon hours. Although there remains a chance this system becomes a tropical depression or storm, whether it does so largely does not matter for the greater Houston region today as it passes by. The systems effects are now essentially baked in.
Wednesday
Most of the Houston region saw a quiet night, but areas southeast of Houston, including Pearland, Clear Lake, and League City, picked up 2 to 3 inches of rainfall. Additional showers are now spreading into the Houston metro area this morning as the tropical system nears our region. These showers are likely to persist through the morning hours before lesser coverage this afternoon. Additional accumulations of 1 to 2 inches are possible, although most locations will see less than this. The impactful rains from this system are falling to the north and east of its center, so as the center moves near Galveston Island these rains should move on to east Texas and southern Louisiana.
Tropical update
As of 7 am CT a low pressure system lies just off the coast of Texas, near Matagorda Bay. According to the National Hurricane Center, it is moving to the northeast at about 7 mph and should continue to track more or less along the upper Texas coast today. This will bring its rather poorly defined center near Galveston Island sometime today, likely during the early afternoon hours. Although there remains a chance this system becomes a tropical depression or storm, whether it does so largely does not matter for the greater Houston region today as it passes by. The systems effects are now essentially baked in.
Wednesday
Most of the Houston region saw a quiet night, but areas southeast of Houston, including Pearland, Clear Lake, and League City, picked up 2 to 3 inches of rainfall. Additional showers are now spreading into the Houston metro area this morning as the tropical system nears our region. These showers are likely to persist through the morning hours before lesser coverage this afternoon. Additional accumulations of 1 to 2 inches are possible, although most locations will see less than this. The impactful rains from this system are falling to the north and east of its center, so as the center moves near Galveston Island these rains should move on to east Texas and southern Louisiana.

catrose
(5,383 posts)2. I'm already flooded out in Central Tx and was hoping things would dry out
mwmisses4289
(5,047 posts)3. Yup, for the costal counties it is and going to continue to be a mess.
MineralMan
(151,948 posts)4. This appears to be the new pattern now.
Texas looks like it's going to be in the path of flooding rains frequently now and in the future. Everything seems to have moved Southward when it comes to storms. Not looking good for the flatlands of Texas, I think.
Don't say "global climate change," though. Nope.