Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Central US violent storms, flash flooding may strike at night adding to dangers this weekend

By Alex Sosnowski, AccuWeather senior meteorologist
April 25,2017, 12:24:29PM,EDT
 
 
Violent storms and flash flooding will target the south-central United States from late Friday through Sunday and may hit some neighborhoods hard in the middle of the night.
The severe weather this weekend will follow locally damaging storms from Tuesday night to Wednesday in much of the same area.
The severe weather threat to end the week can evolve into a very damaging and life-threatening event from parts of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Missouri and Kansas, as well as much of Oklahoma and Arkansas.
Static Severe Outbreak

The full spectrum of severe weather conditions, including large hail, high winds, tornadoes, frequent lightning strikes and flooding downpours, can occur with the upcoming outbreak.
"The most dangerous aspect from this particular severe weather event will be for powerful, nocturnal thunderstorms Friday night and Saturday night," according to AccuWeather Storm Warning Meteorologist Richard Schraeger.
"Some people may retire for the evening, thinking that they were missed by the storms, only to be slammed by violent weather conditions in the middle of the night," Schraeger said.
Severe weather timing
The first heavy storms will erupt in scattered fashion over the southern Plains during Friday.
Static Friday Night Severe 10am

Storms from west-central Oklahoma and northwestern Texas will likely turn violent Friday evening, Schraeger stated.
"These potentially dangerous storms will progress eastward across central and eastern Oklahoma and will brush some of the neighboring counties in north-central Texas and southeastern Kansas Friday night," Schraeger said.
Storms could turn locally violent as far to the east as western Tennessee, southeastern Missouri and southwestern Kentucky from Friday night to Saturday morning.
During the midday and afternoon on Saturday, the threat of severe storms will progress farther to the southeast through Arkansas and northeastern Texas to northern Louisiana and northwestern Mississippi.
Static Severe Saturday 10am

During Sunday, the potential for severe thunderstorms will extend from eastern Louisiana through much of Mississippi, northwestern Alabama and perhaps central Tennessee.
Flooding threat
Some locations from the southern Plains to parts of the middle and lower Mississippi Valley will be hit by multiple storms and excessive rainfall. A few inches of rain in a few hours is more than enough to trigger flash, urban and small stream flooding.
RELATED:
AccuWeather Severe Weather Center
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Be AccuWeather Ready ahead of severe weather

Depending on exactly how much rain falls through the weekend, a significant rise in water levels along some of the main tributaries of the Mississippi could also occur.
Be prepared
People will need to be prepared to take quick action, including during the middle of the night. They can protect themselves from approaching storms by monitoring severe weather and flash flood bulletins.
Leave a fully charged cell phone, television or radio on with the volume up to hear weather alerts. People who download a weather application for their phone should enter their local area information and enable notifications.
Have clothes, shoes, a flashlight and valuable information handy in case of an emergency, such as an evacuation or dash to a storm shelter.
People who must travel through the severe weather and flood threat zone should be extremely cautious.
To reduce the risk of being overtaken by rapidly rising waters, limit travel to elevated roads, such as major interstate highways, but be on the lookout for rapidly changing weather conditions.

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