发布日期:2026-07-16T09:20+00:00
FFWEWX The National Weather Service in Austin/San Antonio has issued a * Flash Flood Warning for... Western Kinney County in south central Texas... Northwestern Maverick County in south central Texas... Southeastern Val Verde County in south central Texas... * Until 1130 AM CDT Thursday. * At 420 AM CDT, Doppler radar indicated thunderstorms producing heavy rain across the warned area. Between 1 and 3 inches of rain have fallen. The expected rainfall rate is 2 to 4 inches in 1 hour. Additional rainfall amounts of 3 to 6 inches are possible in the warned area. Flash flooding is ongoing or expected to begin shortly. HAZARD...Life threatening flash flooding. Thunderstorms producing flash flooding. SOURCE...Radar. IMPACT...Life threatening flash flooding of creeks and streams, urban areas, highways, streets and underpasses. * Some locations that will experience flash flooding include... Del Rio, Brackettville, Lake View, Amanda, Laughlin AFB, Val Verde Park, Standart, Cienegas Terrace, Long Point, Black Brush Point, Diablo East, Amistad Village, Governors Landing, Escondido Estates, 277 South Boat Ramp, 277 North Campground, Lake Ridge Ranch, San Pedro Canyon, Devils Shores and Rough Canyon Recreation Area.
发布日期:2026-07-16T01:17+00:00
...The Flood Warning continues for the following rivers in Texas... Cibolo Creek At Selma affecting Bexar and Guadalupe Counties. Cibolo Creek at Sutherland Springs affecting Karnes and Wilson Counties. Cibolo Creek Near Falls City affecting Karnes County. San Antonio River Near Elmendorf affecting Bexar and Wilson Counties. Medina River At Hwy 281 affecting Bexar County. ...The Flood Warning is extended for the following rivers in Texas... Medina River At Bandera affecting Bandera County. Devils River At Cauthorn Ranch Near Juno affecting Val Verde County. Devils River At Bakers Crossing 19N Of Comstock affecting Val Verde County. * WHAT...Minor flooding is forecast. * WHERE...Devils River at Bakers Crossing 19N Of Comstock. * WHEN...Until late Saturday morning. * IMPACTS...At 6.0 feet, (1.8 meters), Minor lowland flooding extends into low areas of the flood plain with no significant impact. At 8.0 feet, (2.4 meters), Moderate lowland flooding reaches the Highway 163 bridge floor several miles below Juno. This level is turbulent and dangerous for inexperienced swimmers, canoeists and kayakers. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - At 7:15 PM CDT Wednesday the stage was 2.7 feet. - Bankfull stage is 4.0 feet. - Forecast...The river is expected to rise above flood stage tomorrow evening to a crest of 7.9 feet early Friday morning. It will then fall below flood stage late Friday evening. - Flood stage is 6.0 feet. - Flood History...This crest compares to a previous crest of 8.2 feet on 08/31/2022. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood
发布日期:2026-07-15T18:05+00:00
* WHAT...Flooding and flash flooding caused by excessive rainfall continues to be possible. * WHERE...A portion of south central Texas, including the following counties, Bandera, Bexar, Blanco, Burnet, Comal, Dimmit, Edwards, Frio, Gillespie, Guadalupe, Hays, Kendall, Kerr, Kinney, Llano, Maverick, Medina, Real, Travis, Uvalde, Val Verde, Williamson and Zavala. * WHEN...Through Thursday evening. * IMPACTS...There is a potential for life threatening flooding somewhere in the watch area. Considerable to locally catastrophic flash flooding impacts are likely for the southern Edwards Plateau, Rio Grande, western Hill Country, and US 90 corridor west of San Antonio. Excessive runoff may result in flooding of rivers, creeks, streams, and other low-lying and flood-prone locations. Creeks and streams may rise out of their banks. Flooding may occur in poor drainage and urban areas. Catastrophic impacts are possible downstream of the heaviest rains. Low-water crossings may be flooded. Extensive street flooding and flooding of creeks and rivers are possible. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - Intense rainfall rates and compounding effects from multiple rounds of storms will maintain a dangerous flash flood threat through Thursday. Additional rain amounts of 2 to 6 inches are possible within the Flood Watch area with isolated amounts of 10 to 15 inches possible in the Rio Grande Plains, southern Edwards Plateau, western Hill Country, and US 90 corridor west of San Antonio. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood