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Southwest flash flooding risk returns Sunday as Tropical Storm Gabrielle strengthens in Atlantic

Southwest faces a renewed flash flood risk as of Sunday, September 21st, and the tropical moisture returns to the region after a few days of fatal floods. Meanwhile, the tropical storm continues to develop in the Gabrielle Atlantic Ocean.

Scattered shower and thunderstorms are possible on Saturday, primarily to the north of the areas affected by the flash flood. As tropical moisture decreases in the region, there is no organized flash flood threat today. Currently, no flood warning is in force.

A new monsoon explosion will create the level of 4 flash floods for the southwestern parts of the desert between Sunday and Saturday. Isolated torrential rainfall and storms can produce localized flash floods in Far Southern California and Arizona on Sunday. The low flood threat passes to the east of New Mexico on Monday.
Also read: Tropical Storm Gabrielle, while moving in Atlan this weekend expects to give power to a hurricane

It faces high flash hazards that can trigger burning scarf areas, debris flows and mud shifts. Burned soil reduces the rainfall threshold for flash floods, that is, lower rainfall totals can produce significant flood effects that develop rapidly.


For the rest of the next week, dry and quiet weather conditions are estimated for the southwest.

The last southwestern floods cause fatigue

Heavy rainfall and flash flood has recently affected the southwest, which resulted in a death. In California, Barstow, a 2 -year -old child was swept after the flood waters passing the family’s vehicle and moving them through a path.
“After more than 20 hours of more than 20 hours of search and rescue operations, emergency response teams found the child’s body.”
Since the heaviest torrential rainfall gave 1 to 2 inch rainfall in some places, flash floods occurred in other southwest areas. He washed the heavy rainfall and swept objects on the way to rush floods.

Tropical Storm Gabrielle is strengthening in the center of Atlantic

Tropical Storm Gabrielle continues to pass through the Middle Atlantic while fighting negative atmospheric conditions. The storm is structurally developing late on Saturday morning, but the conditions that challenge the survival of tropical cyclone continue to encounter wind cutting and dry air.

Gabrielle is expected to enter a less wind -cutting and dry air with warmer water temperatures and probably allow a hurricane to strengthen until the end of Sunday. The system will not produce direct land effects because it is in the east of Bermuda at the beginning of next week, and will eventually return to the northeast during the north-middle Atlantic until the middle of the week.

Also read: The tropical storm Gabrielle Road avoids big US cities as the system strengthens in Atlantic

If Gabrielle reached the status of hurricane, it would be the second hurricane of the 2025 Atlantic Hurricane season. Typically, the second hurricane of the season occurs around 26 August and leaves this potential hurricane about a month behind the average timeline.

The Hurricane Hunter plane is planned to investigate Gabrielle to better evaluate the current structure and density of the storm.

Additional Atlantic Tropical Activity

The National Hurricane Center follows a weak tropical wave located on the west coast of Africa, which creates scattered storm activity. The system has the possibility of development of 20 percent in the next seven days because it slowly moves in the central Atlantic.

If this system develops further, it will probably follow a similar path to Gabrielle, probably avoiding direct land effects.

Atlantic tropical activity is estimated to gradually increase in the coming weeks as atmospheric conditions become more favorable for storm development.

The Atlantic Hurricane season continues until 30 November.

Flash flood security issues

The areas with burns from the last fires are especially faced with dangerous flash floods. The modified soil composition in these regions significantly reduces the amount of precipitation required to trigger dangerous floods and debris flows.

Also read: The tropical wave outside Africa can be strengthened with Gabrielle; NHC rising hurricane Threa warns

Residents in Flash Sleery -prone areas should closely monitor the weather conditions and avoid trying to cross the floods or waterways during heavy rainfall.

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