
Drenching Rain, Powerful Storms Pepper Eastern U.S., Near Front Range
Heavy rainfall and big thunderstorms could pepper the Eastern U.S. to begin the work week, while similar acitivity may occur near the Front Range.
A Weather Alert has been issued for a nearby area. While your current location is outside of the impacted area, please stay alert and monitor weather conditions. # HEADLINE -------------------- A STRONG THUNDERSTORM WILL IMPACT EAST CENTRAL RED RIVER AND NORTHWESTERN BOWIE COUNTIES UNTIL 1215 AM CDT # SUMMARY -------------------- At 1143 PM CDT, Doppler radar was tracking a strong thunderstorm 9 miles northeast of Boxelder, moving southeast at 15 mph. # DETAILS -------------------- HAZARD Wind gusts up to 40 mph and pea size hail. SOURCE Radar indicated. IMPACT Gusty winds could knock down tree limbs and blow around unsecured objects. Minor damage to outdoor objects is possible. LOCATIONS IMPACTED INCLUDE Avery, Annona, Lydia, Beaverdams and English. ISSUED AT Monday, June 22, 2026 at 11:43 PM CDT ISSUED BY National Weather Service Shreveport LA HEADER Special Weather Statement # PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS -------------------- Monitor the weather situation closely and be alert for threatening weather conditions. # AREAS AFFECTED -------------------- Bowie TX, Red River TX
# HEADLINE -------------------- FLOOD WATCH IN EFFECT FROM 4 PM CDT THIS AFTERNOON THROUGH TUESDAY MORNING # DETAILS -------------------- WHAT Flooding caused by excessive rainfall is possible. WHERE Portions of Arkansas, including the following counties, Columbia, Hempstead, Lafayette, Little River, Miller, Nevada and Union, Louisiana, including the following parishes, Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Caldwell, Claiborne, De Soto, Grant, Jackson, La Salle, Lincoln, Natchitoches, Ouachita, Red River, Sabine, Union, Webster and Winn, and northeast Texas, including the following counties, Bowie, Camp, Cass, Franklin, Gregg, Harrison, Marion, Morris, Panola, Red River, Rusk, Smith, Titus, Upshur and Wood. WHEN From 4 PM CDT this afternoon through Tuesday morning. IMPACTS Excessive runoff may result in flooding of rivers, creeks, streams, and other low-lying and flood-prone locations. Flooding may occur in poor drainage and urban areas. ADDITIONAL DETAILS - Storms with locally heavy rainfall will increase in coverage during the evening and overnight hours. Rainfall totals of 1-3 inches may be possible with isolated higher amounts. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood ISSUED AT Monday, June 22, 2026 at 11:33 AM CDT ISSUED BY National Weather Service Shreveport LA HEADER URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED | Flood Watch # PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS -------------------- You should monitor later forecasts and be alert for possible Flood Warnings. Those living in areas prone to flooding should be prepared to take action should flooding develop. # AREAS AFFECTED -------------------- Bienville, Caddo, La Salle, Marion, Bossier, Bowie, Caldwell, Camp, Cass, Claiborne, Columbia, De Soto, Franklin, Grant, Gregg, Harrison, Hempstead, Jackson, Lafayette, Lincoln, Little River, Miller, Morris, Natchitoches, Nevada, Ouachita, Panola, Red River, Red River, Rusk, Sabine, Smith, Titus, Union, Union, Upshur, Webster, Winn, Wood Including the cities of Clarksville, Logansport, Colfax, Winnsboro, Lewisville, El Dorado, Quitman, Shreveport, Prescott, Columbia, Linden, Bossier City, Winnfield, Big Sandy, Queen City, Hawkins, Hope, Henderson, Clarks, Tyler, Pleasant Hill, Marshall, Jonesboro, Montgomery, Dry Prong, Mansfield, Gilmer, Lone Star, Ashdown, Bradley, Bernice, Martin, Daingerfield, Minden, Coushatta, Stamps, Arcadia, Hughes Springs, Ruston, Jefferson, Pittsburg, Jena, Mount Pleasant, Zwolle, Olla, Atlanta, Bogata, Mineola, Farmerville, Natchitoches, Magnolia, Springhill, Haynesville, Carthage, Naples, Texarkana, Longview, Gibsland, Stonewall, Monroe, Grayson, Mount Vernon, Midway, Omaha, Homer, Ringgold, and Many
Closest strike: 6.59 miles Stay Alert! Remain in a safe area until there has been no lightning within 10 miles of this location for 30 minutes. Please be aware that lightning activity can remain high even when a storm is moving away from your location. Even if rain has stopped, do not leave your safe area until WeatherBug indicates that lightning is more than 10 miles away from this selected location. IF OUTDOORS Avoid water, high ground, and open spaces. Avoid all metal objects including electric wires, fences, and machinery. Find a safe area in a building or in a fully enclosed vehicle with the windows completely shut. Unsafe places include underneath canopies, small picnic or rain shelters, convertibles, or near trees. IF INDOORS Avoid water and stay away from doors and windows. Avoid using a hard line telephone. Take off headphones. Turn off, unplug, and stay away from appliances, computers, power tools, and TV sets. Lightning may strike exterior electric and phone lines, inducing shocks to inside equipment.
There is a Marginal Severe Storm Risk for your location. Continue reading for today's outlook from the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center. -------------------- National Severe Storm Outlook THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS AND PARTS OF THE MID ATLANTIC SUMMARY Supercells and multicell clusters will continue to produce significant-severe wind/hail across the central High Plains this evening. Severe gusts and widn damage may accompany storms near the Mid-Atlantic coast through late evening. Tonight, isolated severe storms may occur across the southern Plains into the Middle Mississippi Valley. Synopsis A mid-level trough will advance toward the Mid-Atlantic Seaboard while a pronounced mid-level impulse ejects into the central/northern High Plains. At the surface, a trough will impinge on the East Coast while ongoing/developing storms continue to progress along a baroclinic boundary, from the Mid-MS Valley northwestward along the High Plains. Strong shear and buoyancy in both of these regimes will continue to foster severe potential into the evening hours. Mid Atlantic into the Southeast A well defined QLCS is tracking across the Mid-Atlantic, with more sporadic pulse-cellular/multicellular storms progressing over the Southeast. The QLCS will move offshore over the next hour, accompanied by a damaging gust threat. Across the Southeast, multicellular storms supported by the remnants of daytime heating or localized lift along MCVs appear to be on the wane. Nonetheless, 1000-2000 J/kg remnant MLCAPE will support localized wet downburst potential with some of the stronger storms over the next couple of hours. A brief tornado also cannot be ruled out with MCV storms across the TN Valley. High Plains Supercells remain in progress across the central to northern High Plains, where 2-3 inch in diameter hail and gusts well exceeding 75 mph have occurred. 2000+ J/kg MLCAPE, driven by 8+ C/km mid-level lapse rates, precede many of these supercells, so a severe wind/hail threat will continue with these storms for at least a few more hours. A tornado is also possible for supercells that remain inflow dominant. There is some chance that supercells could grow upscale into an MCS, which would traverse a surface boundary across the southern High Plains into the Southern Plains. Confidence in this scenario is quite low. However, should this evolution occur, severe gusts would be possible. Southern Plains into the Middle MS Valley Thunderstorms are initiating along a surface boundary, draped from the TX Panhandle into central MS. 2000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE and 30-50 kts of effective bulk shear overspreads this boundary, which would promote multicells and supercells with a severe wind/hail threat wherever storms mature. Nonetheless, forcing along this boundary is weak, so the severe threat should remain isolated through tonight.




