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Posts Tagged ‘Central Texas’

Edouard Weakens To Tropical Depression As It Moves Inland

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

(CNN) – Edouard weakened to a tropical depression Tuesday afternoon after moving inland from the Gulf of Mexico and bringing much-needed rain to Central Texas.

Edouard was a tropical storm when it made landfall in the McFaddin National Wildlife Refuge just west of the Louisiana-Texas border earlier Tuesday, but its movement and wind speed had slowed by early afternoon.

Flooding in and around Houston, Texas, on Tuesday morning closed eastbound lanes along a stretch of Interstate 10 near Hankamer and Wallaceville, “after 10 to 12 vehicles slipped off the road,” a Chambers County sheriff’s deputy said.

No injuries were reported.

At about 5 p.m. ET, Edouard was centered about 35 miles north-northeast of Houston with maximum sustained winds near 35 mph. It was moving west-northwest at 9 mph and was expected to maintain that pace for the next day or so until it dissipates, forecasters said.

“A continued west-northwest motion with some reduction in forward speed is expected over the next day or two … taking Edouard across Central Texas,” the National Hurricane Center said.

High winds downed trees and power lines in Beaumont and Port Arthur, both east of Houston. Four to 6 inches of rain were reported in that area.

“We have a lot of wind and rain right now,” Galveston, Texas, Mayor Lyda Ann Thomas said Tuesday morning. iReport.com: Galveston power lines spark in storm

“Of course, we always feel very fortunate when we don’t get a direct hit,” Thomas said. “Galveston is used to tropical storms. Fortunately, this did not become a hurricane.”

Galveston was nearly wiped out by a hurricane in 1900 that killed 8,000 people. It is the nation’s worst natural disaster.

Two years later, Galveston built a sea wall 17 feet above sea level.

“It’s done a good job since 1902,” Thomas said.

The storm was expected to dump up to 5 inches of rain in some southwestern Louisiana coastal parishes. Isolated amounts up to 10 inches could fall in some areas, the hurricane center said, and tornadoes were possible.

Flooding from the storm surge — which was expected to be 2 feet to 4 feet above normal tide levels in some of the warning areas — would gradually subside during the afternoon, the hurricane center said.

Source — CNN

Dangerous Days Loom For Central US

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Severe thunderstorms (and flash flooding) will threaten the central U.S. over the next several days with the threat growing each day. The risk through this evening should be relatively minimal, however, with a few severe storms possible from southeast Illinois and southwest Indiana southwestward into central Texas. The likelihood of dangerous storms, including isolated very strong tornadoes, will increase significantly tomorrow, especially in West Texas and parts of Oklahoma. (See National Forecast for more details.) Thursday is expected to be the most active day, though, with severe storms looming for Mid-America anywhere from southeast Iowa, Illinois and Indiana southward to the western Gulf Coast. At highest risk may be southeast Missouri, Arkansas, northern Louisiana and the lower Mississippi Valley. There, deadly, long-track tornadoes could churn over the landscape. Other weather concerns in the more immediate future include the forecast of heavy, wind-driven snow tonight for far northeast Wisconsin and western portions of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Up to 8 inches could fall in some locations.

Source — Yahoo!