Skip to content
DAMWeather DAMWeather

The weather can get scary. Reporting on it doesn't have to be.

DAMWeather DAMWeather

The weather can get scary. Reporting on it doesn't have to be.

  • About Me
  • All Bylines
    • Books, Bylines, and Press
    • The Skies Above (Book)
    • Extreme Weather (Book)
    • The Weather Network
    • The Vane
    • Forbes
    • Capital Weather Gang
    • Mental Floss
  • Maps
    • Hurricane Maps
    • Hurricane Names
    • Monthly Tornadoes
    • Tornado Tracks
    • F5/EF-5 Tornadoes
    • SPC High Risk Days
  • GIS Resources
  • Contact Me
    • Bluesky
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
  • wxdam.com
  • About Me
  • All Bylines
    • Books, Bylines, and Press
    • The Skies Above (Book)
    • Extreme Weather (Book)
    • The Weather Network
    • The Vane
    • Forbes
    • Capital Weather Gang
    • Mental Floss
  • Maps
    • Hurricane Maps
    • Hurricane Names
    • Monthly Tornadoes
    • Tornado Tracks
    • F5/EF-5 Tornadoes
    • SPC High Risk Days
  • GIS Resources
  • Contact Me
    • Bluesky
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
  • wxdam.com
Close

Search

DAMWeather DAMWeather

The weather can get scary. Reporting on it doesn't have to be.

DAMWeather DAMWeather

The weather can get scary. Reporting on it doesn't have to be.

  • About Me
  • All Bylines
    • Books, Bylines, and Press
    • The Skies Above (Book)
    • Extreme Weather (Book)
    • The Weather Network
    • The Vane
    • Forbes
    • Capital Weather Gang
    • Mental Floss
  • Maps
    • Hurricane Maps
    • Hurricane Names
    • Monthly Tornadoes
    • Tornado Tracks
    • F5/EF-5 Tornadoes
    • SPC High Risk Days
  • GIS Resources
  • Contact Me
    • Bluesky
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
  • wxdam.com
  • About Me
  • All Bylines
    • Books, Bylines, and Press
    • The Skies Above (Book)
    • Extreme Weather (Book)
    • The Weather Network
    • The Vane
    • Forbes
    • Capital Weather Gang
    • Mental Floss
  • Maps
    • Hurricane Maps
    • Hurricane Names
    • Monthly Tornadoes
    • Tornado Tracks
    • F5/EF-5 Tornadoes
    • SPC High Risk Days
  • GIS Resources
  • Contact Me
    • Bluesky
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
  • wxdam.com
Close

Search

Another Round Of Flash Flooding Is Likely In Southeastern Texas Over The Next Few Days

By Dennis Mersereau
May 10, 2019 3 Min Read

Extensive rainfall over the last week will set the stage for more flash flooding in the Houston area over the next couple of days as another round of extreme rainfall drags across the region. More than half a foot of rain is possible through Saturday as periodic thunderstorms train across southeastern Texas.

NOAA’s Weather Prediction Center calls for a ton of rain across the northwestern Gulf Coast over the next seven days. Much of that rain will fall through the weekend. A significant threat for flash flooding will unfold across coastal communities over the next couple of days, with the greatest chances occurring in areas that saw heavy rain earlier this week.

It’s important to note that not everybody painted in “build an ark” colors on the above map will see all that rainfall. Rainfall totals will depend on the tracks of individual thunderstorms and where the training thunderstorms set up. Training occurs when heavy thunderstorms continuously develop and moves over the same areas for hours at a time, appearing on radar like train cars moving along railroad tracks.

Houston’s Hobby Airport recorded 2.26″ of rain in the one hour between 9:53 PM and 10:53 PM on Thursday night. The chance for that kind of flooding rain will persist through early Friday morning, and continue across the region through Saturday before a pattern shift allows things to calm down.

The latest observations between the mornings of May 2 and May 9 show up to a foot of rain has fallen across parts of Harris, Montgomery, and Fort Bend counties in southeastern Texas, covering some of Houston’s suburbs. The extreme rainfall totals were rather isolated; unlike Hurricane Harvey, which broke area-wide rainfall records, this week’s intense rains were the result of thunderstorms that merged and trained over relatively small areas.

Small as this week’s rainfall bullseyes have been, though, they caused significant problems. News reports from Houston described a flash flood in Sugar Land, one of Houston’s southwestern suburbs, occurring so quickly that residents barely had time to react to water covering their streets and entering their homes. One resident told the Houston Chronicle that the flooding was “quicker than Harvey.” Neighborhoods that didn’t flood in Harvey are still at risk for flooding—the ground in the Houston area leaves the entire region susceptible to flooding. Areas that don’t flood in one major rainfall event could easily flood in the next as every situation is different.

This region is no stranger to flooding. Hurricane Harvey in 2017 brought the worst flooding ever recorded in southeastern Texas, killing dozens of people and leaving thousands more homeless. Extensive flooding followed more than a foot of rain in some of Houston’s suburbs in April 2016, less than a year after double-digit rainfall totals turned area interstates into rivers and left behind nearly half a billion dollars in damages.

[Top Image: Radar at 10:15 PM CDT May 9, 2019, via GREarth/AllisonHouse]


You can follow me on Twitter or send me an email.

Please consider subscribing to my Patreon. Reader-funded news is more important than ever and your support helps fund engaging, hype-free weather coverage.
 

Author

Dennis Mersereau

I have 15+ of experience providing hype-free weather information for folks across the United States and around the world. In addition to DAMWeather, I also contribute to The Weather Network as a digital writer and weather specialist.

Follow Me
Other Articles
Previous

The 1999 Okla. Tornado Sticks With Us Because It Was Our First Immersive Weather Disaster

Next

This Week, The U.S. Is The Least Dry It’s Been In At Least 20 Years


Local ◈ UTC
Facebook | Bluesky
Instagram | Threads | Email
DAMWeather is now ad-free! Everyone benefits from engaging, hype-free weather coverage. Please consider supporting my efforts through Patreon:




Order The Skies Above today!

Bookshop.org || Barnes & Noble
Mountaineers Books || Amazon

My latest book, The Skies Above, is now available!

Did you know a puffy cloud can weigh millions of pounds? Or that every rainbow you see is unique to you?

Our atmosphere is full of spectacular sights that are always within your reach. Glistening layers of fog, gorgeous sunsets, and brilliant meteors flashing through the sky can light up even the calmest day.

The Skies Above, published by Mountaineers Books, is a celebration of what we overlook when we look up. I was thrilled to work with the editors and illustrators at Indelible Editions to share with you the quotidian beauty of our sky.

Order your copy now and learn about the wonders we take for granted every day.

I teamed up with the editors of Outdoor Life magazine to write The Extreme Weather Survival Manual, your guide to surviving and thriving in almost any weather condition. Whether you're an avid outdoorsperson or you enjoy watching the radar from the comfort of your home, you're sure to find helpful tips, advice, and new bits of knowledge in this fascinating book.

You can buy my book today through Amazon.
  • 2026 (35)
  • 2025 (49)
  • 2024 (59)
  • 2023 (43)
  • 2022 (57)
  • 2021 (71)
  • 2020 (83)
  • 2019 (88)
  • 2018 (92)
  • 2017 (1)
  • 2016 (4)
  • 2015 (10)

Copyright 2026 — DAMWeather. All rights reserved. Blogsy WordPress Theme