Hurricane Helene dropped heavy to excessive amounts of rain on a large area from the Ohio Valley, central Appalachians, and mid-Atlantic Piedmont southward to the eastern Gulf Coast region. The storm moved inland across the Florida Panhandle and northward into the South Atlantic States, then slowed down and drifted westward as it interacted with an upper-level low pressure system, becoming quasi-stationary as it slowly dissipated. The heaviest rains fell where precipitation was orographically enhanced on the east side of the Appalachians. Part of the central North Carolina mountains received 20 to almost 30 inches of rain, with totals topping 10 inches over the rest of the North Carolina mountains as well as the central Blue Ridge in Virginia, part of central and western South Carolina, some patches in central Georgia, and near the landfall site. More than 4 inches soaked a broad area from the middle and lower Ohio Valley southward through eastern Alabama and eastward through the central and southern Appalachians and Piedmont, including most of the Carolinas and Georgia. Widespread flooding resulted, with devastating floods impacting the wetter areas, along with prolonged power outages. Helene is the deadliest tropical system to affect the Nation since Hurricane Katrina in 2005, with a death total was approaching 200 as of this writing. At the same time, the intense rains dramatically improved or ended the various degrees of dryness and drought that had been affecting many of the areas impacted by Helene, especially from the Appalachians westward through the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys and southward to the central Gulf Coast, in addition to much of South Carolina and northern Georgia. Outside the broad area impacted by Helene, subnormal precipitation prevailed across most of the contiguous states. Precipitation was almost non-existent over a large area from the western Great Lakes and most of the Mississippi Valley westward to the Pacific Coast, with only scattered sites in the northern Intermountain West and areas from the northern Cascades to the Pacific Coast receiving over one-tenth of an inch. Above-normal temperatures accompanied the low precipitation totals, resulting in dryness and drought persisting or intensifying across this area covering a majority of the contiguous states. Farther east, the Northeast, mid-Atlantic region, and eastern Great Lakes recorded generally 0.5 to 2.0 inches of rain, with a little more reported in parts of western Michigan, southern and western Pennsylvania, and the higher elevations from upstate New York eastward across Vermont, New Hampshire, and western Maine.
Moderate to heavy rain doused much of the Northeast Region, with totals near or exceeding 3 inches in areas impacted by Hurricane Helene (western Maryland and most of West Virginia). Excessive totals of 5 to 8 inches soaked southeastern West Virginia. Widespread improvements were brought into West Virginia and adjacent Maryland, with the wetter areas experiencing 2-class improvements. Widespread extreme drought (D3) across southeastern West Virginia last week was reduced to moderate drought (D1) this week. In contrast, lesser amounts of precipitation in central and northern West Virginia and the Maryland Panhandle led to little or no improvement, keeping much of these areas entrenched in the extreme (D3) to excessive (D4) drought which developed and expanded after mid-July.
Hurricane Helene dropped heavy to excessive rains over a large part of this region, dramatically improving or eliminating dryness and drought. Between 20 and 30 inches of rain pounded some of the highest elevations in western North Carolina while at least 10 inches soaked the rest of the North Carolina mountains, the central Blue Ridge in Virginia, a few areas from west-central Georgia into western South Carolina, and the Florida Panhandle near the landfall site. Last week, moderate to severe drought (D1 to D3) was entrenched across western Virginia, the southern Appalachians, central and northern Georgia, much of South Carolina, and most of Alabama. But the intense rains spawned by Helene nearly eradicated dryness and drought. Abnormal dryness (D0) to moderate drought (D1) still affected much of Alabama, which received much less rainfall than areas farther east. In fact, little or no rain fell on the southwestern quarter of the state, where most of the D1 is located. Farther east, abnormal dryness (D0) was restricted to the western fringe of Virginia, extreme northwestern Georgia, and the western Florida Panhandle.
Intense rains spawned by Helene dropped 2 to locally 6 inches of rain on Tennessee and northeastern Arkansas, but lesser amounts fell elsewhere. A few tenths of an inch of rain (with isolated higher amounts) fell on parts of eastern Texas and Oklahoma and scattered portions of Louisiana, Mississippi, and the remainder of Arkansas. Other locations recorded little or no rain. Predictably, the heavy rains across Tennessee led to broad-scale reductions in the areal coverage dryness and drought, leaving only south-central parts of the state in drought (D1 and isolated spots of D2). Improvements were also indicated in northern Mississippi and eastern Arkansas, where a re-assessment of conditions demonstrated that early September rainfall from Hurricane Francine was more beneficial than initially thought. Meanwhile, D0 was expanded across southern Louisiana, and areas of deterioration were identified in Texas and Oklahoma, including an expansion of exceptional drought (D4) in the Texas Big Bend, and increased coverage of severe to extreme drought (D2 to D3) in portions of Oklahoma. Rainfall during the past 60 days was less than half of normal in portions of northeastern Oklahoma, the Red River Valley, eastern Texas, and the Texas Big Bend. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), half of the Texas cotton crop was in poor or very poor condition, along with 31 percent of Texas corn and 24 percent of Oklahoma cotton.
Inundating rains from Hurricane Helene pounded the Ohio Valley while much lighter precipitation was observed farther north. Most of Kentucky recorded 3 to 6 inches of rain last week, along with 2 to 4 inches in many adjacent areas on the other side of the Ohio River. Farther north, most locations from southeastern Missouri and the central sections of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois northward through the Lower Peninsula of Michigan received 0.5 to 2.0 inches of rain with isolated higher amounts, especially in Missouri near the Ohio/Mississippi Rivers’ confluence. In sharp contrast, little or no rain fell on the western tier of the Midwest Region from most of Missouri northward through Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. This highly variable rainfall pattern affected dryness and drought predictably, with conditions improving along most of the southern tier of the Midwest Region while dryness and drought was unchanged or intensified along the western tier of Midwestern states. Drought was eliminated across Kentucky and a large majority of Indiana and Illinois. Drought has been more severe farther east across most of Ohio, and despite improvements in central and southern reaches of the state, extreme to exceptional drought (D3-D4) still covered a sizeable portion of southeastern Ohio. Meanwhile, in areas unaffected by Helene, severe drought (D2) was introduced in northern Wisconsin and much of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, and also expanded to cover a larger part of southwestern Missouri. Meanwhile, D0 and D1 conditions expanded substantially in the rest of Wisconsin, Minnesota, and to a lesser extent Iowa. Accumulated precipitation over the past 60 days is above normal across Kentucky, southern Illinois, and part of southeastern Missouri while totals are 3 to 6 inches below normal in the northern Great Lakes region, southern Minnesota, most of Iowa, northwestern Illinois, and most of northern and western Missouri. Over the northern Great Lakes, northern Minnesota, the west half of Iowa, and part of western Missouri, these totals were near or less than half of normal. The lack of rain is significantly impacting livestock and some field drops across southwestern Missouri and adjacent areas.
It was very warm and almost bone dry throughout the region, with only a few highly isolated spots of measurable rainfall. Unusually high temperatures worsened the situation, with weekly mean anomalies ranging from +1 to +2 deg. F in eastern Kansas to +15 to +18 deg. F in most of the Dakotas. Wyoming and most of Colorado saw temperatures average near or over 10 deg. F above normal. As a result, dryness and drought in the region was unchanged or worsened. Moderate to severe drought expanded in coverage across the central Great Plains and northern High Plains, with increased areas of extreme drought D3) noted in eastern Wyoming, plus a few spots in the western Dakotas. Over the past 30 days, only a few tenths of an inch of rain at most has fallen on much of Wyoming and Nebraska, northern Kansas, and the southeastern Dakotas.
Some of the higher elevations in Washington recorded 1.0 to locally 2.5 inches of rain while a few tenths of an inch were measured in other parts of the Northwest from the Cascades to the Pacific Coast, and in portions of northern Idaho and northwestern Montana. However, most of the West was very warm and free from any measurable precipitation. A few areas in Utah saw conditions noticeably deteriorate this past week, but no other degradations took place. Some D0 and D1 areas were actually scaled back in central and northwestern Montana despite the warm and dry week due to a few rounds of heavy precipitation in late August and September, which has continued to have a positive impact on soil moisture, vegetative health, and 1- to 4-month precipitation anomalies. Elsewhere, conditions are unchanged from last week. Low relative humidity, high temperatures, and gusty winds continue to produce periods of extreme fire danger, and supplemental feeding and watering of livestock has been common in eastern Montana. With the Southwest monsoon season ending and the wet season in the West not yet underway, drought tends to progress slowly in the region this time of year.
Subnormal rains continued in south-central parts of the Commonwealth, prompting the introduction of abnormal dryness (D0) over Salinas and Guayama Municipalities, and some adjacent areas. These regions reported a few tenths of an inch of rain last week..
The U.S. Virgin Islands were wetter in the first half of September than the second half, and all islands were free of drought. CoCoRaHS observers reported 0.47 inches or less on St. Thomas, 1.18 inches on St. John, and 0.37 to 2.19 inches on St. Croix.
The Standardized Precipitation Index for the islands indicated mild dryness for St. John’s Windswept Beach on the one-month time scale, but no dryness otherwise. St. Thomas had adequate moisture, as did East Hill on St. Croix. Christiansted near the east end of St. Croix was slightly dry at one and three months. Wells levels for St. Thomas and St. John were edging lower in recent weeks, while the level of the well on St. Croix was rising.
The Vegetation Health Index was not available for the week of Sept. 29, but the previous week indicated small areas of stress on St. Croix, and relatively normal conditions on St. Thomas and St. John.
The dry region in southeasternmost Alaska recorded a few inches of rainfall this past week, which is within several tenths of an inch of the normal. Totals increased from north to south across the region. These amounts are unremarkable in this climatologically-wet region, so abnormal dryness remained essentially unchanged.
Light to moderate trade winds prevailed over the past week and not much rainfall, especially over leeward areas. Streamflow along the leeward slopes of Oahu have been dropping, and some vegetation stress has been reported. This prompted the eastward extension of D0 and D1 conditions into eastern Oahu, including some areas around Honolulu, with the driest conditions along the southern tier of the island. Other areas of dryness and drought were unchanged from the previous week.
The Republic of Palau received 1.76 at Koror COOP and 1.74 at WSO Palau and require 2 inches per week to meet minimum water needs.
For the Mariana Islands, Guam received 0.24 inches, while Rota reported 2.0 inches. Saipan IAP received 0.68 inches. These islands received enough rainfall the previous week to meet their minimum water needs as these locations require an inch weekly.
The Federal States of Micronesia were on the dry side with only Yap and Pohnpei WSO receiving more than two inches. All other locations have received enough precipitation in recent weeks to have adequate water supplies, but were trending dry lately.
The Marshall Islands were mixed, but received enough rain recently that water supplies should be adequate. Jaluit remained abnormally dry and received 1.2 inches. Kwajalein received 0.77 inches, while Wotje got 2.0 inches. Ailinglaplap and Majuro collected more than 2 inches for the week. The Majuro reservoir held 29.66 million gallons on Sept. 30.
American Samoa was doused with 4 inches to nearly 8 inches of rain. These islands need an inch of rain per week to meet minimum water needs.
Looking Ahead
During the next five days (October 3 - 7), warm and dry weather will dominate the contiguous United States. Very little if any precipitation is expected across a vast majority of the Nation. The Florida Peninsula the immediate rim of the Gulf Coast are significant exceptions, where abundant tropical moisture is expected to feed heavy rainfall. There is some potential for tropical cyclone development over the Gulf later in the period. Over an inch is forecast across the Florida Peninsula and along parts of the immediate Gulf Coast from the Florida Panhandle through coastal southern Texas. Generally 1.5 to 3.0 inches are expected in a swath across the central Florida Peninsula and near the central Gulf Coast, with heavy amounts of 3 to 5 inches forecast on the Florida West Coast from the Tampa area southward through Ft. Myers, and across the Louisiana Bayou. Moderate amounts (0.5 to 1.5 inches) are forecast from the Cascades of Washington and northern Oregon westward to the Pacific Coast, and over parts of northern Idaho and adjacent Montana. Meanwhile, several tenths of an inch are expected across most of the Great Lakes region and the Northeast. Several tenths of an inch are also expected over most of Hawaii, with the largest totals forecast in central Lanai, eastern Maui, and part of the western Big Island. Between 2 and 3 inches are expected to fall on southeasternmost Alaska, where normals are relatively high. Near normal temperatures are expected in most areas east of the Mississippi River while well above-normal temperatures should prevail farther west. Daily maximum temperatures 10 – 15 deg. F above normal are anticipated from the central and northern Plains through most of the Rockies and Intermountain West to near the California Coast. Temperatures are expected to average closer to normal across Hawaii and southeastern Alaska.
The Climate Prediction Center’s 6-10 day outlook (valid October 8 - 12) continues to favor warmer and drier than normal weather for most of the Nation. Above-normal rainfall is expected to continue across the Florida Peninsula, possibly spreading into southern Georgia. Meanwhile, marginally-enhanced chances for wetter than normal weather cover much of Maine, portions of the Far West from the Cascades westward, and west-central California. A much larger area with increased chances for drier-than normal weather stretch across the northern Rockies and from the High Plains eastward through the southern and middle Atlantic Coast. The best odds for subnormal rainfall extend from the Great Lakes southward through the lower Ohio and middle Mississippi Valleys. Surplus precipitation is expected in southeasternmost Alaska while totals over Hawaii are expected to be near normal. Meanwhile, warmer than normal weather is expected from the Great Lakes and the Mississippi Valley westward to the Pacific Coast, with odds for unusual warmth exceeding 80 percent over northern and central sections of the Rockies and Plains. Warmer than normal weather is also favored over the Florida Peninsula. In contrast, there are enhanced chances for subnormal temperatures along the Eastern Seaboard from Georgia through Maine, over most of the Appalachians, across the middle and upper Ohio Valley, and in the Tennessee Valley and adjacent areas. Outside the contiguous U.S., near normal temperatures are forecast for southeast Alaska, with nominally elevated chances for warmer than normal conditions across most of Hawaii