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This area has been one area that has been hit especially hard lately. Torrential rains which resulted in flooding in CT will move into the warned area shortly. Flash flooding may begin and could become significant quickly. https://t.co/y1BTQZ8X0N
— NWS Boston (@NWSBoston) September 13, 2023
National Weather Service: “A slow moving cold front will bring showers, downpours, and embedded T-Storms to southern New England through early Thursday morning”
[Wed] A slow moving cold front will bring showers, downpours, and embedded T-Storms to southern New England through early Thursday morning. An additional 1-2" of rain may result in a renewed risk for urban, poor drainage and flash flooding given very wet antecedent conditions pic.twitter.com/gX5ZbKAcWO
— NWS Boston (@NWSBoston) September 13, 2023
⚠️ Flood Watch – 11 AM Today through 7 AM Thursday
— NWS Boston (@NWSBoston) September 13, 2023
Know the difference between a 'watch' & a 'warning' when it comes to flooding. A watch means conditions are favorable for flooding to occur, while a warning means it is currently happening or is about to happen #MAwx #CTwx #RIwx pic.twitter.com/CPjJRrC1ww
Cindy Fitzgibbon, WCVB: “Potential for 1-2″ rain w/ localized spots near 4″”
WEDNESDAY AM weather update ⤵️
— Cindy Fitzgibbon (@Met_CindyFitz) September 13, 2023
More rain coming today with the potential of slow-moving downpours leading to more flooding. Drying out and much less humid tomorrow. #WCVB pic.twitter.com/AKyYqZlYlW
WEDNESDAY…
— Cindy Fitzgibbon (@Met_CindyFitz) September 13, 2023
More rain coming today with showers and downpours with the risk of t-storms developing late morning and continuing into the evening along a slow-moving front. FLOOD WATCH in effect thru tonight #WCVB pic.twitter.com/TOkVShCagw
FLOOD THREAT
— Cindy Fitzgibbon (@Met_CindyFitz) September 13, 2023
Today as tropical moisture interacts with a slow-moving front bringing more downpours and the risk for t-storms
▶️Late AM thru the evening
▶️Potential for 1-2" rain w/ localized spots near 4"
▶️Training cells (moving over same area) could cause flash flooding #WCVB pic.twitter.com/yyeXiRCEVw
HUMIDITY…
— Cindy Fitzgibbon (@Met_CindyFitz) September 13, 2023
Drops way down tomorrow behind the front that triggers more storms and downpours today. Will feel more like September heading into the weekend #WCVB pic.twitter.com/p7AU7o83Sd
HURRICANE #LEE
— Cindy Fitzgibbon (@Met_CindyFitz) September 13, 2023
Will make it's closest pass to SNE on Saturday as a weakening CAT1 hurricane transitioning to a post tropical storm w/ a large wind field. Cone has ticked west- TS force (sustained) winds are likely on Cape Cod with large waves 20' just offshore Fri night #WCVB pic.twitter.com/KXaG6KmVPr
NEXT 7 DAYS
— Cindy Fitzgibbon (@Met_CindyFitz) September 13, 2023
After today's downpours and storms the humidity drops way down. Impacts from #hurricaneLee Friday night-Saturday with strong winds at the coast and some wind and rain inland. Large waves and rip current risk begin today and last thru the weekend. Clearing Sunday #WCVB pic.twitter.com/u8OxdQIuDx
Chris Lambert, 7News: “Flood watch up today. Localized downpours dropping a quick 1-2″ for some. Few localized higher totals possible.”
Flood watch up again today, Lee a coastal concern Saturday, especially Cape/Islands. pic.twitter.com/nYyYiuagm8
— Chris Lambert (@clamberton7) September 13, 2023
Flood watch up today. Localized downpours dropping a quick 1-2" for some. Few localized higher totals possible. pic.twitter.com/irp7woOQgV
— Chris Lambert (@clamberton7) September 13, 2023
Closest pass to New England with Lee is Saturday morning/midday. Cone is for the eye/center of the storms. Impacts will extend well away from center. pic.twitter.com/ZGBfgT6p4t
— Chris Lambert (@clamberton7) September 13, 2023
As max sustained winds decrease as it moves north, the wind field in Lee actually expands. Even a track 100 miles offshore would produce gusts 60-70+mph across the Cape/Islands. pic.twitter.com/SC8vFSXyzs
— Chris Lambert (@clamberton7) September 13, 2023
High tide Saturday is around 1pm. Big wave action and high rip current risk is a lock. Track will determines the amount of coastal flooding/erosion we'll get. More eastern track = less impact, more western track = significant impacts with coastal concerns/wind. pic.twitter.com/PshG5MAlvR
— Chris Lambert (@clamberton7) September 13, 2023
Shiri Spear, Boston 25 News: “I expect some, if not several, problem spots this afternoon & during the evening commute. NEVER DRIVE THROUGH A FLOODED ROAD.”
The weather today will be high impact with localized flooding and the chance for a severe t-storm with wind damage or an isolated tornado. Stay alert this afternoon. @Boston25 pic.twitter.com/e06WSjR6iC
— Shiri Spear (@ShiriSpear) September 13, 2023
FLOOD WATCH starts at 11 AM for slow t-storms/downpours. I expect some, if not several, problem spots this afternoon & during the evening commute. NEVER DRIVE THROUGH A FLOODED ROAD. @boston25 pic.twitter.com/LBVusldbOy
— Shiri Spear (@ShiriSpear) September 13, 2023
Here’s the latest #HurricaneLee track as of 5 AM today. That track is about 125 miles off #CapeCod Saturday, close enough for some rain & wind locally. Estimates will start coming into focus over the next 24 hours. @boston25 pic.twitter.com/wCMOXToYqi
— Shiri Spear (@ShiriSpear) September 13, 2023
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