Flooding pivots west in Texas, wildfires continue to produce prolific smoke, and the Gulf stays a teensy bit interesting

In brief: Heavy rains continue to pound parts of Texas. Wildfire smoke is choking parts of the Great Lakes, Northeast, and Mid-Atlantic. And the tropics continue to slow burn in the northeast Gulf with lower-end risks over the next few days.

Texas flooding

This morning’s rains mostly ended up where they had been expected, which was between San Angelo and I-10. Unfortunately, that has led to additional flash flood emergencies this morning for both Sonora and Ozona. This is north and west of yesterday’s catastrophic flooding.

Radar estimated rainfall over the last 24 hours is 3 to 6 inches in these areas. (WeatherFront)

Totals of 3 to 6 inches have been recorded so far. You may be asking why the totals there are so much lower than to the east, yet still prompting flash flood emergencies. As you move toward San Angelo, you get deeper onto the Edwards Plateau, and you run into more of an arid climate. Thus, it takes less rain in some of these areas to generate flash flooding. And 3 to 6 inches of in 12 to 24 hours in a place that averages roughly 20 inches of rain annually can cause major problems. And in both Sonora and Ozona there are reports of water into homes and water rescues ongoing. Eldorado is seeing significant impacts as well. Much like it has the last few days, the rain will need to basically rain itself out over the next few hours. Rainfall tonight is expected to shift even farther north and west as the upper level system gradually loses definition. Whatever the case, this is going to end up being a memorable and very damaging Texas flooding week.

We can start to wrap our minds around what occurred south and east of today’s impacted areas. Here are rain totals for the week.

Rain totals this week. (NOAA)

Some places received over 27 inches of rainfall. I want to wrap some context on this. First, for the latest on the impacts of the flooding on people and communities, the Texas Tribune has been all over things. Second, if you want to learn more about the lengthy history of flooding in Texas, you want to pick up a copy of “Flash Floods in Texas,” by Jonathan Burnett. It’s on backorder at bookshop.org. But it’s a fantastic reference on the many, many types of flooding events that have impacted the state.

Two things can and are true. 1.) Texas flooding is a normal part of life in the state. It’s happened forever. It will continue to happen. The response to the 2025 floods was positive, but the state should be doing more to manage and mitigate it. 2.) Flooding is becoming more likely because of climate change. Slow moving upper lows across Texas are fairly common at times. But the amount of moisture available in the region has been excessively high. At least some of that is due to the increasingly warmer Gulf.

Gulf of Mexico water temperatures in recent years. (University of Arizona)

In recent weeks the Gulf has been hovering near all-time record warm levels. It’s still up there. Is the Gulf warm every summer? Yes it is. However, in recent years it has become just a little bit hotter. That is the equivalent of adding icing to an uniced cake. Not sure who would eat an uniced cake, but if you did, you’d still be consuming sugar and calories. But by adding icing, you’ve increased the sugar and calories by a certain percentage. That’s what the warm Gulf means for available atmospheric moisture. In a perfectly stable world, would you have had this flooding event? Probably. But would it have had slightly lower peak rain totals and rain intensities? Yes, probably. Those extra “calories” can mean the difference between a bad flood and a catastrophic one. It’s important to understand this reality in the context of saying “flooding is normal” in Texas. It is, but that’s far from the whole story today.

Wildfires

On the other extreme, rampant wildfires in Ontario continue to choke out parts of the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, and Great Lakes with smoke today. Air quality? Not great!

Hazardous air quality levels exist from the Upper Midwest through the Mid-Atlantic today due to wildfire smoke. (Purple Air)

From Duluth through DC, air quality sits at hazardous levels. Kudos to Major League Baseball and ESPN for moving last night’s Phillies vs Mets game up an hour to avoid the worst smoke. It still looked bad visually, but the difference in observed air quality readings was enough to avoid having to delay the game.

The good news is that air quality will dramatically improve tonight and tomorrow as winds shift and move the smoke to more of a north to south trajectory. Unfortunately, this means Minnesota and parts of the Midwest including Milwaukee and Chicago will likely be back in the smoke by tomorrow night.

Smoke forecast for Saturday afternoon with smoke exiting the East Coast but returning to the Upper Midwest. (WeatherFront)

Wildfires continue apace in Ontario. Suppression efforts should be aided by cooler temperatures and rain chances.

Active wildfires (black) and fire weather conditions (shaded) as of Friday morning in Canada. (Environment Canada)

One of the primary causes of the wildfires was exceptionally hot and dry weather, with several locations very far north setting records earlier this week for highest 500 mb height or hottest temperature of all-time. Another situation where several things are simultaneously true: Wildfires are not abnormal in this part of the world, forest management plays a not inconsequential role in size and scope of fires, and climate change adds the icing to the cake increasing the heat, fire intensity, and potential for fire starts.

And don’t look now, but we have new fires going in the West, especially Oregon today as well.

New fire starts in Oregon are highlighted in yellow. (Oregon Emergency Management)

Multiple new fires have started with lightning a culprit in that area. Hotter and drier weather next week may exacerbate some of these fires.

Tropics

The NHC continues with about a 20 percent chance of development in the northeast Gulf over the next few days. This is fine for now. Over the next couple days, about 18 percent of Google’s 1,000 member ensemble develops this system into a low-end one.

(TC Atlas)

Of the 18 percent of members, most of them go to a strong depression or weak tropical storm at best. And that’s probably a longshot. What’s more likely is that we see a sloppy, rain-laden system over the northeast Gulf that perhaps drifts west and weakens. The NBM blend through Wednesday shows heavy rain off the coast of Florida, with locally heavy rain from Tampa into the Big Bend and Panhandle.

Forecast NBM rainfall through Wednesday. (WeatherFront)

Rain would be generally welcome here, so all in all, this would probably be a good system on net.

Another terrible flooding event for Texas Hill Country

In brief: Texas Hill Country was battered by heavy rain again this week, culminating in numerous flash flood emergencies this morning. Rain will gradually decrease and pull away tonight and tomorrow. Wildfire smoke is degrading air quality to extremely poor levels in the Great Lakes and parts of the Northeast. And the tropics? Not a whole lot to report.

Hill Country — again

Let’s start in Texas today. On Tuesday and Wednesday it rained heavily in areas west of San Antonio. Overnight and this morning, it rained torrentially. As a result, there is ongoing severe flash flooding in the area, including a flash flood emergency for Uvalde, Kerrville, and the Guadalupe River downstream of Kerrville.

Radar loop ending around 8 AM on Thursday. (WeatherFront)

Unfortunately, there is additional heavy rain coming for Uvalde and probably Medina and Kerrville as well. This will move through before lunchtime, and it may deposit another 1 to 3 inches of rain before things settle down this afternoon. During the July 4, 2025 tragedy, the heaviest rainfall fell in the Guadalupe watershed upstream from Kerrville, near or just west of Ingram.

Comparison of rains near Kerrville in 2025 and today. (NOAA, WeatherFront)

On the Guadalupe River downstream from Kerrville in Comfort, the river rose over 30 feet in a matter of hours.

A comparison of river gauge behavior in 2025 vs today in Comfort, TX. (NOAA)

The outcome this time around has some notable differences from July 4th of last year. For one, the river rose higher at Comfort, likely due to the amount of water falling slightly farther downstream from 2025. It also rose “slower.” A 30 foot rise in 3 to 4 hours is incredible. Keep in mind, however, the water in 2025 accomplished a similar feat in 2 hours or less. Not to say this was a “gentle” rise, but it did not have quite the force and suddenness of last year’s. We also had 2 days of flooding leading into this in the area, so it should have been much more on people’s radars.

Now, the heaviest rain for this whole event has fallen near and north of Uvalde, more in the Nueces River watershed and Upper Frio River. The Frio below Uvalde right now has been raging. We had one crest yesterday over 19 feet, another this morning over 17 feet, and likely a third one coming.

Frio River below Uvalde has been in or near major flooding for a couple days now. (NOAA)

The amount of rain that has fallen is really remarkable. Gauge corrected estimates are around 27 to 28 inches in areas just north of Uvalde over the last 3 days.

Radar estimates of rainfall near Uvalde over the last 3 days. (WeatherFront)

All this water is going to flow into the Nueces River. If you’re looking for some silver lining in all this, at least some of this water should be captured in Choke Canyon and Lake Corpus Christi, which would help further alleviate water supply issues in the Coastal Bend. Either way, the flooding right now is catastrophic near Uvalde and on the Guadalupe downstream from Kerrville. We don’t yet know the toll of this event, but the hope is that it should be less costly in human lives than 2025. Our thoughts are with those impacted areas at this time.

Going forward

Once the rain slows down this afternoon, we’ll get a break into evening in many impacted areas. The upper low that has been helping to drive the storminess in Texas is slowly backing toward New Mexico. This should lead to the focus of rain shifting west too.

HREF model rainfall tonight into tomorrow night. (WeatherFront)

While some isolated heavy downpours are possible once again near Kerrville and Uvalde, the heaviest rain tonight should fall near Ozona north into San Angelo. We’ll need to watch for flooding in those areas overnight, but the good news is that there has been far less preceding rainfall there like we saw in Uvalde and Kerrville the last few days. So hopefully the flooding issues tonight will be more standard flash flooding than this crazier stuff. But we’d strongly advise folks to take these rain forecasts seriously.

Other news: Smoke and tropics

The tropics remain generally quiet. The NHC continues to outline a 20 percent risk of development in the northeast Gulf or off the Southeast coast. We continue to see minimal model support for anything of note there. They’ve also introduced a 10 percent risk off the coast of Africa, but models seem to agree that any disturbance and development risk will be eliminated by Sunday.

(NOAA/NHC)

Canadian and Minnesota wildfires continue to rage, and all that smoke is being blown toward the Great Lakes, New England, and the Mid-Atlantic.

Toronto (Skyline webcams)
Webcam of Syracuse, NY (WSYR-TV)
(EarthCam/Empire State Building)

Yes, there will be moments of dystopian looking conditions across the Northeast and Lakes. Air quality is likely to be severely degraded in spots as well.

Absolutely horrendous air quality (PM 2.5) over the Great Lakes this morning. (Purple Air)

The PM2.5 levels over the Great Lakes are already at their most hazardous. They’ve been there for a couple days now, and it’s important for anyone with sensitivities to air quality to take this seriously.

So, a lot going on, very little of it good. We’ll continue to monitor things in the days ahead.

Tropical mischief risk remains low, while Texas flooding risk is high

In brief: Today we discuss potential tropical mischief in the northeast Gulf next week, flooding in Hill Country in Texas that could worsen through tomorrow, and heat waves on both coasts.

Tropics update

Let’s start today with the tropics, which remain quiet. There have been rumblings on some models in the northeast Gulf this weekend or early next week.

Google Deep Mind’s 1,000 member ensemble shows about a 10 to 15 percent chance of a tropical storm forming in the northeast Gulf early next week. (TCAtlas)

AI modeling has led the way on this, with Google Deep Mind’s 1,000 member ensemble getting up close to the 15 percent chance of development level at times. It seems that most model guidance today backed off things just a bit versus yesterday, which is perfectly reasonable. The culprit would likely be the tail of a decaying cold front. This is a common June and July development pathway, and given the ongoing broad hostility in the Atlantic basin, it may be the type of outcome that’s most likely to produce a tropical system this season. We colloquially call these types of systems “homebrew” ones, not because they form close to home but because sometimes one needs a little beer when forecasting the tropics.

AIFS model rainfall for the Southeast over the next 8 days. (Pivotal Weather)

Either way, at this point, it appears this system will not be a major concern, although some heavy rain is possible in the Southeast heading into next week.

Texas flood

We have been covering the heavy rain and flooding potential in the Houston area over at Space City Weather. Meanwhile, the interior part of Texas has been slammed since yesterday.

Radar estimated rainfall in Hill Country shows upwards of 10 to 12 inches or more near Uvalde and Hondo, along with numerous flash flood warnings. (WeatherFront)

Rain totals so far have exceeded 10 inches in spots west of San Antonio and south of Kerrville. Numerous high water rescues have occurred in these areas. An additional couple inches of rain may fall as the circulation over Hill Country basically rains itself out.

Radar and satellite combo over Hill Country late morning. (WeatherFront)

Additional heavy rain is likely tonight and tomorrow. Some models are showing high (> 75%) probabilities of 5 inches of rain or more. Dangerous flash flooding is a possibility in the areas between Del Rio, Uvalde, San Antonio, and perhaps close to I-10 and south near Kerrville. A moderate risk for flash flooding is in place for both today and tomorrow (shown) for these areas.

A serious flash flooding setup will continue through tonight in parts of Texas. (NWS WPC)

Obviously this area is extremely sensitive to flooding concerns after last year’s tragedy, but unfortunately flooding is a real part of life here and folks will want to pay close attention to how things evolve tonight and ensure they have a way to receive flood warnings in vulnerable areas.

Bring the heat

I am in New Jersey now, and I can assure you it’s going to get quite hot.

Numerous record highs are forecast to be threatened tomorrow, including 102 inland from Atlantic City. (NWS)

The current forecast high for Atlantic City Airport just inland from the seaside resort is expected to be 102 degrees on Wednesday, threatening a 100 degree record from 1995 (which was a very hot summer if I can recall correctly). Additionally, highs near 100 degrees are expected from Richmond north through New York City. Heat began today and will continue until Friday, another in a string of heat waves this summer in the Eastern U.S.

On the opposite side of the country, the first real intense heat of summer in SoCal kicks off today too. The LA Basin is under an extreme heat warning through Thursday.

(NWS Los Angeles)

High temperatures will be over 100 degrees in some valleys (including the San Gabriel and San Fernando) and well into the 90s in Los Angeles proper. Much cooler at the coast where heat advisories are posted, with highs into the 80s expected.

Other notes

Monsoon storms have cranked up in the Southwest as expected this week. Some of the gust fronts ahead of these storms can produce massive dust storms, or haboobs that darken the skies over the Southwest. In Phoenix, Arizona State has also even established a rating scale for these events.

Large wildfires are burning in northern Minnesota, and the smoke from those fires will probably impact air quality across the Eastern U.S. and Canada in the coming days.

Early July Check-up on the tropics and some other miscellany

In brief: The tropics remain quiet, and the season continues to look as if it will be quiet. We take stock of the current situation. Flooding risks will be in the forecast once again for the Ohio Valley, Midwest, and Mid-South. We also check in on our one year anniversary on Substack. Thank you for your support!

Thank you again for your patience as I am mid-relocation from Houston, currently in Chicago where it’s rather hazy. Likely some lingering degree of wildfire smoke and typical “summer haze.” Whatever the case, look for a more typical posting regime to return next week.

Tropics check in

As of this morning, there is nothing doing in the tropics on the Atlantic side.

A whole lot of nothing! (NOAA NHC)

Again, this is not atypical per se for July, but it certainly adds to a body of evidence suggesting that this hurricane season will not be all that and a bag of chips. In fact, as of earlier this morning, the experts at Colorado State University dropped their latest seasonal forecast numbers, indicating 9 named storms (including Arthur), four hurricanes, and only one major hurricane. Their ACE forecast, or that of accumulated cyclone energy, is 50 for the season. If that were to verify, it would be the least active hurricane season since 2013.

All that is and would certainly be welcome news. The usual caveats apply here. First off, I think it’s worth noting that the Gulf is extremely warm for this time of year.

Gulf of Mexico SSTs are near record levels for July. (Kim Wood, University of Arizona)

Warm SSTs alone will not generate tropical activity, but if we end up with a period of time where storm activity increases or has a brief window of healthy conditions, well then that could be an issue. Also, it is July 8th, and although we have one full month of hurricane season behind us, in terms of ACE, we still have 96.8 percent of hurricane season in front of us.

So what’s the logical takeaway? Yes, it looks like we’re trending toward a relatively weak season. El Nino is quite bulled up right now, and that will add above average wind shear to the equation. The deep Atlantic is cool, but the Gulf is warm. So it’s a hurricane season you still want to prepare for even if the odds strongly favor a pretty subdued one.

In the meantime, I don’t see anything of note over the next 7 to 10 days. Some models, including Google Deep Mind’s 1,000 member ensemble are showing low-risk of something off the Southeast coast, but as of right now, those odds are less than 10 percent and any system would likely track east out to sea.

Probability of a tropical cyclone within 200km of a given location over the next 10 days, generated using Google Deep Mind’s 1000 member forecast ensemble. (Google)

But aside from something lower-end there, I think we’re quiet for a bit longer.

One year on Substack!

First off, we just passed our 1-year anniversary on Substack. I want to thank our readers there, including the several thousand that have subscribed since last summer and the several hundred that have concluded they can also support us financially by subscribing. We sincerely appreciate your generosity and support for our efforts to keep people informed without scaring the daylights out of them. I have read more and more stories of what’s been happening in some other big media corners of the world, and I want to just double down on the fact that we feel an independently-driven site with a niche focus (tropics and extreme weather) is a big part of the equation for helping solve some of what ails the media landscape in 2026. We will continue to commit ourselves to writing our posts by hand, not generating them through AI. We continue to commit to this space being free of AI slop and running against the broader “enshittification” of online media. Above all, thank you for your support.

Flooding risks

There’s always flooding to talk about, but I want to just highlight a Midwest/Mid-South risk over the next few days. Flood watches are already posted for parts of Kentucky and the Ohio Valley, as several rounds of thunderstorms and heavy rain are likely the next few days. By Monday, an average of 2 to 4 inches of rain will likely occur between St. Louis and Knoxville, including Nashville, Evansville, and perhaps Louisville. Locally higher amounts are a safe bet in spots.

NBM model forecast rainfall through Monday. (WeatherFront)

These areas have seen 200 to 300 percent of normal rainfall over the last month, so the combination of already saturated soils and additional heavy rain rates will likely lead to numerous instances of flash flooding. A weather story to be aware of.

After this weekend, the focus will shift to a reloading heat dome over the Northern Plains that should bring back hot weather to parts of the Midwest and Great Lakes, as well as thunderstorm risks on the northern periphery in Canada and perhaps down to New York and New England.