The month of July brought 4 major flash flood events to my area. One was very close with over 5 inches of rain where I live in Salisbury,Md. and over 7 inches just to our west. The other was near Seaford in Delaware (and extended into Maryland), and another just south on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, where over 9 inches of rain fell in Accomack County. Then came Saturday night, across the Bay, in historic Ellicott City, just west of Baltimore. Extreme rain events are WAY up over the last 50 years across the Northeast U.S. and the fact that the oceans are the warmest ever measured, are an obvious factor.

Warmer oceans mean more water vapor in the atmosphere and when conditions are right for heavy thunderstorms, you can get some incredible rainfall totals. These sudden extreme flood events are nearly impossible to forecast temporally and spatially but there were clues in the special IR satellite imagery we use to look at water vapor in the atmosphere. The graphic below is courtesy of Sheldon Kusselson (NOAA retired) who is an expert in using water vapor imagery from satellites.

Below is a video posted on YouTube from Ellicott City as the flooding began. From my friend Sean Sublette at Climate Central- “According to the National Weather Service, 5.52” of rain fell in 90 minutes there, with more than half of it (3.16”) coming in the first 30 minutes. The storm total rainfall was 6.50″. The early analysis from the NWS suggests this rainfall rate has less than a 0.1% chance of occurring in any given year. Put another way, this is a rainfall rate that statistically occurs there less than once in a thousand years.”