Tropical system will pass by Houston today, lashing parts of the region with rain before moving on

Originally published at: Tropical system will pass by Houston today, lashing parts of the region with rain before moving on – Space City Weather

In brief: Central and southern parts of Houston are seeing rain from an approaching tropical system this morning, which should pass near Galveston Island later today. Winds should be mostly modest, and we expect rains over the Houston region to diminish by late morning or early afternoon.


Tropical update

As of 7 am CT a low pressure system lies just off the coast of Texas, near Matagorda Bay. According to the National Hurricane Center, it is moving to the northeast at about 7 mph and should continue to track more or less along the upper Texas coast today. This will bring its rather poorly defined center near Galveston Island sometime today, likely during the early afternoon hours. Although there remains a chance this system becomes a tropical depression or storm, whether it does so largely does not matter for the greater Houston region today as it passes by. The system’s effects are now essentially baked in.

Wednesday

Most of the Houston region saw a quiet night, but areas southeast of Houston, including Pearland, Clear Lake, and League City, picked up 2 to 3 inches of rainfall. Additional showers are now spreading into the Houston metro area this morning as the tropical system nears our region. These showers are likely to persist through the morning hours before lesser coverage this afternoon. Additional accumulations of 1 to 2 inches are possible, although most locations will see less than this. The impactful rains from this system are falling to the north and east of its center, so as the center moves near Galveston Island these rains should move on to east Texas and southern Louisiana.

In terms of winds, coastal areas including Galveston Island could see winds pick up to 15 to 20 mph today as the center passes nearby, with some gusts up to 30 mph. Water levels may rise 1 to 3 feet above tide levels, so some minor coastal flooding is possible.

High temperatures today will be dependent upon rain coverage in your location, but should range between 85 and 90 degrees.

Thursday and Friday

These are likely to be partly to mostly sunny days with rain chances of 10 percent or less, allowing the soaked Houston region a good opportunity to dry out. Each day should have high temperatures in the lower 90s with a good deal of humidity. Nighttime lows will be very muggy, with air temperatures likely falling only to around 80 degrees.

Saturday and Sunday

A decent chance of rain, perhaps 40 or 50 percent, returns on Friday night or Saturday, but the day should still be partly sunny with highs in the vicinity of 90 degrees. I don’t have great confidence yet in Saturday’s rains, but these showers should be of the passing variety rather than something that persists for hours on end. Sunday looks to be mostly sunny with significantly lower rain chances. Expect highs in the lower 90s.

Next week

Most of next week looks warm and sunny, with highs in the low- to mid-90s. Temperatures have been cooler this week with the widespread showers. That likely will change next week as we experience more summer-like weather in Houston.

2 Likes

No problems driving in on the Gulf Freeway this morning, though rain was quite heavy around Ellington.

Uh oh.

95 degrees all of next week? Ahhh come on,I gotta stop being such a butterscotch and man up.

Summer 2026 has been so far, so good.

Anyone who works outside must take care though. With this rain we’ve had, the heat indices will make for pro grade funk.

3 Likes

The rain was heavy driving to League City on I45 this morning. I wouldn’t recommend it

All in all, it really has. Hopefully things are somewhat moderate into July, so that we’re not so overwhelmed with heat and humidity. I know, a boy can dream, can’t he?

3 Likes

Looks like we will continue our regular programing of the one extreme to the other climate system we live in.

Although, those monthly forcast can be wrong sometimes. However, I would not be surprised if high pressure does take hold eventually and not let go for a long time, which is fairly common between July and September.

1 Like

As a storm lover, this is very rare for someone like me to say, but we have reached the point where it’s time for a break from the rain. My yard has been like a wet marsh land for days and you can’t walk outside without wearing rubber boots. And the mosquitoes have long outstayed their not welcome to our area.

We need a good 1 to 2 weeks without rain to let the top soil dry some before our next timely downpour. And the grass is overdue for mowing as well. The issue is once it stops raining it basically takes an act of god to bring the rains back. I would not be surprised if by August you probably won’t be able to tell we had all this rain. High pressure dominating for two months during the summer can drastically dry the soils out and scorch the green grasses. The summers of 2015 and 2023 are a great example of this.

2 Likes

I had my doubts it would happen, but we now officially have Tropical Storm Arthur.

1 Like

Wash your mouth out with lifebuoy young man.

You’re not wrong broski.

2 Likes

Eric called that a flash drought.

I’m hopeful that’s not going to happen this go around because El nino arrived so early and more intense than in those years.

1 Like

This topic was automatically closed after 24 hours. New replies are no longer allowed.