Flood Watch in effect until midnight EST tonight...
Tonight
Rain until early morning...then periods of rain late. Rain may be heavy at times early this evening. Breezy with lows in the lower 40s. North winds around 20 mph with gusts to 35 mph. Chance of rain near 100 percent.
Friday
Cloudy. Periods of rain early in the morning...then a chance of rain in the late morning and afternoon. Breezy with highs in the lower 50s. North winds 15 to 20 mph with gusts to 30 mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.
Cloudy. A chance of rain until early morning...then a slight chance of rain late. Lows in the upper 40s. North winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday
Mostly cloudy in the morning...then becoming partly sunny. Warmer with highs in the mid 60s. North winds 5 to 10 mph.
The Flood Warning continues for the Appomattox river at Mattoax * from this evening until further notice... or until the warning is cancelled. * At 10:30 am Thursday the stage was 16.5 feet * minor flooding is forecast. * Flood stage is 21.0 feet * forecast... rise above flood stage by this evening and continue to rise to near 24.9 feet by Sunday morning. Additional rises are possible thereafter. * At 25.0 feet... agricultural and some secondary roads flooded. This river level is comparable to a previous crest of 23.7 feet on Jan 5 2007.
Lynch
1045 am EST Thu Nov 12 2009
The Flood Warning continues for the Appomattox river above Farmville * from this afternoon until further notice... or until the warning is cancelled. * At 9:45 am Thursday the stage was 14.2 feet * minor flooding is forecast. * Flood stage is 16.0 feet * forecast... rise above flood stage by late this afternoon and continue to rise to near 18.6 feet by tomorrow early afternoon. This river level is comparable to a previous crest of 17.0 feet on Sep 7 2008.
Areal Flood Watch
Statement as of 4:01 PM EST on November 12, 2009
... Flood Watch now in effect until midnight EST tonight...
The Flood Watch is now in effect for
* portions of central Virginia... east central Virginia... interior southeast Virginia... south central Virginia... the middle peninsula of Virginia... the Northern Neck of Virginia... the peninsula of southeast Virginia and the Piedmont of central Virginia... including the following areas... in central Virginia... Chesterfield... Hanover... Henrico and Prince George. In east central Virginia... Charles City... King William and New Kent. In interior southeast Virginia... Greensville... Surry and Sussex. In south central Virginia... Brunswick... Dinwiddie... Lunenburg... Mecklenburg and Nottoway. In the middle peninsula of Virginia... Essex... Gloucester... King And Queen... Mathews and Middlesex. In the Northern Neck of Virginia... Lancaster... Northumberland and Richmond. In the peninsula of southeast Virginia... James City. In the Piedmont of central Virginia... Amelia... Cumberland... Goochland... Powhatan and Prince Edward.
* Until midnight EST tonight
* periods of heavy rain will continue through this evening. Additional rainfall amounts of 2 to 4 inches are anticipated through midnight tonight... with locally higher amounts possible. Total rainfall amounts from this storm will will range between 5 and 10 inches.
* Additional rainfall may cause flooding of creeks and small streams through today. Also... flooding may occur in poor drainage areas. Main Stem river levels will also continue to rise... with minor to moderate river flooding expected into the upcoming weekend. See wbcflwakq for additional information.
Precautionary/preparedness actions...
A Flood Watch means there is a potential for flooding based on current forecasts.
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.
Record Report
Statement as of 04:33 am EST on November 12, 2009
... Record daily maximum rainfall set at Norfolk VA...
Norfolk received 2.31 inches of precipitation yesterday... November 11th. This is a new daily record... breaking the old record of 1.44 set in 1979.
Public Information Statement
Statement as of 4:00 PM EST on November 12, 2009
... Intense coastal storm continues to bring widespread heavy rainfall and strong winds to the mid Atlantic region...
Widespread heavy rain continues across portions of eastern and central Virginia and is moving northward into the Delmarva Peninsula. Low pressure responsible for the heavy rainfall and strong winds is located near Cape Hatteras at 3 PM Thursday. Rainfall amounts have varied over the region over the past 48 hours... with the heaviest rainfall occurring over southeast Virginia and northeast North Carolina. Rainfall amounts in these region have ranged from near 5 to around 8 inches since Tuesday night... with locally higher amounts.
The following are unofficial peak wind gusts from ASOS and AWOS sites across southeast Virginia... the Delmarva Peninsula and northeastern Virginia... since 600 am Wednesday through 3 PM this afternoon.
Here are the latest unofficial reports in inches from storm spotters and cocorahs... along with a few official reports from area airports. Precipitation amounts are storm totals unless otherwise specified.