All from brief/heavy rainfall last evening around 6 PM
2026-06-29
9:00 AM
0.00
0.0
NA
NA
NA
2026-06-28
9:00 AM
0.00
0.0
NA
NA
NA
Fog at 7:30 had burned off by 9:00
2026-06-27
9:00 AM
0.10
NA
NA
NA
NA
All from evening of 6-26, bulk of it finished by 22:30 with only drizzle thereafter. No indication of rain coming in sky at 20:00.
2026-06-26
9:00 AM
0.04
0.0
NA
NA
NA
Pavement dry.
2026-06-25
9:00 AM
0.00
0.0
NA
NA
NA
2026-06-24
9:00 AM
T
NA
NA
NA
NA
Minor trace.
2026-06-23
9:00 AM
0.60
NA
NA
NA
NA
2026-06-22
9:00 AM
0.00
0.0
NA
NA
NA
2026-06-21
9:00 AM
0.00
0.0
NA
NA
NA
2026-06-20
8:30 AM
0.00
0.0
NA
NA
NA
Clear & dry
2026-06-19
8:30 AM
1.10
NA
NA
NA
NA
Rain arrived with initial downburst APX 6 p.m., a brief pause and then slightly less intense rain at about 6: 20 p.m.. Surprisingly high ceiling, estimate no clouds below 1500-2000 feet. No lightning, enough wind was first dial burst to blow water onto east facing windows, did not occur with second.
What was most noticeable to me about the first downburst was how still everything had become, how the wind had completely vanished, and how high the ceiling was. APX 5:50 PM., I could almost see patches a blue sky in places looking to the east of the oncoming storm. I would’ve said that it was not going to rain yet until it suddenly did.
APX 5 PM, individual high-level white “fair weather“ clouds rapidly moving to NNE — suspect strong upper level (3000-4000 feet) steady wind from SSW. This shortly before NWS issued EAS tornado warning alert AM radio
Would this be counterclockwise in flow into the system which was then still 40–50 miles away?
All rain ended by 6:30 PM on Thursday, June 18