Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather: Flash flood threat grows in Texas, expands to Upper Midwest
Welcome to the Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather. It's Wednesday, June 11, 2025. Start your day with everything you need to know about today's weather. You can also get a quick briefing of national, regional and local weather whenever you like with the FOX Weather Update podcast.
The threat of flooding continues to grow for portions of Texas in the southern Plains, while the Minneapolis-Saint Paul area in the Upper Midwest is also at risk of seeing torrential rain this week.
Noaa's Weather Prediction Center (WPC) has upgraded Wednesday's flash flood risk to a Level 3 out of 4 in Central Texas, including Austin, Waco and College Station.
The threat of flash flooding is also increasing for parts of the Upper Midwest, with a Level 2 out of 4 risk issued for Thursday and into Friday morning, including the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul.
Widespread forecast rain totals of 1-3 inches are expected with locally higher amounts, the FOX Forecast Center said.
The Eastern Pacific hurricane season is running a month ahead of schedule in terms of named tropical cyclones, and odds continue to increase that a fourth named storm could form in the basin by the end of the week.
Barbara became a post-tropical area of low pressure Tuesday night as it tracked over cooler waters, while Cosme is forecast to follow Barbara and become a remnant area of low pressure later Wednesday morning.
Meanwhile, the National Hurricane Center is monitoring a broad area of low pressure several hundred miles south of southern Mexico that has a high chance of developing into a tropical depression or Tropical Storm Dalila later this week or over the weekend.
A second area to watch has also been identified for possible development offshore of southern Mexico and Central America over the next week.
Colorado State University (CSU) is scheduled to release its second updated outlook for the Atlantic hurricane season at 11 a.m. ET Wednesday. This is the second of four annual forecasts issued by the university; the first was released in April.
In its initial April outlook, CSU had forecast an active season with 17 named storms and nine hurricanes. Its latest update may reveal potential changes to those numbers.
CSU's forecasts consider several key factors, including sea-surface temperatures in crucial regions such as the Main Development Region (MDR), which encompasses both its western and eastern portions. It also analyzes temperatures in the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of America.
CSU's initial forecast last year was its most aggressive preseason forecast ever, calling for 23 named storms. The 2024 season ultimately proved to be extremely active.
A dolphin made waves late Saturday night when she gave birth to the first dolphin calf born at Brookfield Zoo Chicago in more than a decade.
Footage of the joyous moment shows a pregnant Allie, a 38-year-old bottlenose dolphin, and her friend Tapeko swimming around a tank as Allie pushes to deliver her calf.
After the calf emerges, Tapeko, an experienced mother, quickly escorts the baby as it swims to the surface to take in its first breath of fresh air.
Here are a few more stories you might find interesting.
Tornado touches down in New York as storms knock out power in mid-Atlantic, Plains
Odds of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting the Moon go up again
Invasive ant species that can cause anaphylaxis reported in nearly 20 states
Need more weather? Check your local forecast plus 3D radar in the FOX Weather app. You can also watch FOX Weather wherever you go using the FOX Weather app, at foxweather.com/live or on your favorite streaming service.
It's easy to share your weather photos and videos with us. Email them to weather@fox.com or add the hashtag #FOXWeather to your post on your favorite social media platform.Original article source: Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather: Flash flood threat grows in Texas, expands to Upper Midwest
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
7 hours ago
- Boston Globe
The government cuts key data used in hurricane forecasting, and experts sound an alarm
NOAA spokesperson Kim Doster, in a statement, called it a 'routine process of data rotation and replacement' and said that the remaining data sources 'are fully capable of providing a complete set of cutting-edge data and models that ensure the gold-standard weather forecasting the American people deserve.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Traditional visible or infrared satellites provide data that becomes images showing the structure, intensity and temperature of a storm, according to NOAA information, along with features such as lightning. But those miss the three-dimensional details of a storm. The microwave data gives critical information that can't be gleaned from the conventional satellites, and helps peer under a regular image of a hurricane or a tropical cyclone to see what is going on inside of it. It is especially helpful at night. Advertisement The news is especially noteworthy during the ongoing hurricane season and as lesser storms have become more frequent, deadly and costly as climate change is worsened by the burning of fossil fuels. Advertisement Microwave imagery allows researchers and forecasters to see the center of the storm. Experts say that can help in detecting the rapid intensification of storms and in more accurately plotting the likely path of dangerous weather. 'If a hurricane, let's say, is approaching the Gulf Coast, it's a day away from making landfall, it's nighttime,' said Union of Concerned Scientists science fellow Marc Alessi. 'We will no longer be able to say, OK, this storm is definitely undergoing rapid intensification, we need to update our forecasts to reflect that.' Other microwave data will be available but only roughly half as much, hurricane specialist Michael Lowry said in a blog post. He said that greatly increases the odds that forecasters will miss rapid intensification, underestimate intensity or misplace the storm. That 'will severely impede and degrade hurricane forecasts for this season and beyond, affecting tens of millions of Americans who live along its hurricane-prone shorelines,' he said. University of Miami hurricane researcher Brian McNoldy called the loss of data 'alarmingly bad news' in a post on Bluesky. 'Microwave data are already relatively sparse, so any loss — even gradual as satellites or instruments fail — is a big deal; but to abruptly end three active functioning satellites is insanity.' NOAA and its National Weather Service office have been the target of several cuts and changes in President Donald Trump's second term. The Department of Government Efficiency gutted the agency's workforce, local field offices and funding. Already, hurricane forecasts were anticipated to be less accurate this year because weather balloons launches have been curtailed because of the lack of staffing. Advertisement 'What happened this week is another attempt by the Trump administration to sabotage our weather and climate infrastructure,' Alessi said.
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
Tropical Storm Andrea Hemmed And Hawed In The Central Atlantic Bringing A Lackluster Start To Hurricane Season
After multiple days of burst and bust, Tropical Storm Andrea formed in the open Central Atlantic, kicking off the Atlantic hurricane season, but this fish storm didn't last long. Andrea moved rapidly east-northeastward at 15 to 20 mph well to the southeast and east of Bermuda. The National Hurricane Center tracked the area of low pressure that became Andrea for two days, but the storm struggled to organize at first. An increase in persistent thunderstorm activity near the center of that low allowed the NHC to deem it the first Atlantic tropical storm of 2025. Thunderstorms quickly fell apart as the storm hit chilly waters and strong wind shear. On average (1991-2020), the first Atlantic storm of the season has formed by June 20, so Andrea's formation was about right on time. Chris Dolce has been a senior digital meteorologist with for 15 years after beginning his career with The Weather Channel in the early 2000s.
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
Hurricane Season In July: Storm Formation Zone Expands Eastward, But Atlantic Activity Still Slow To Ramp Up
Hurricane season's first month has lived up to its reputation as being slow to start, with only short-lived Andrea forming. July has often followed that same sleepy script, but as we saw last year, the month can sometimes pack a U.S. hurricane threat. Hurricane Season's Slow Ramp-Up Usually Continues: July has accounted for 7% of the Atlantic's tropical storms since 1851. That pales in comparison to the percentage of named storms that have formed in the busiest months of hurricane season: August (22%), September (35%) and October (21%), according to NOAA's Hurricane Research Division. Put another way, about one named storm has formed in July each year, on average. Typical Formation Area Creeps Eastward: Similar to June, the Gulf and the western Atlantic waters near the East Coast are areas where tropical storm formation has historically been more common in the season's second month. However, the area favored for storm formation also expands eastward, farther away from the U.S., into parts of the Atlantic waters near and east of the Lesser Antilles, as well as into the eastern Caribbean. Why Storms Begin To Form Farther East: Disturbances called tropical waves, which are one of five seeds for tropical storm development, become a bit better defined in July. They regularly move westward from Africa across the Atlantic toward the Caribbean and Gulf throughout hurricane season Still, only about one in five of them becomes an Atlantic basin tropical depression, storm or hurricane. Conditions in the atmosphere and ocean allow them to have a better shot at development beginning in July, but the August to October peak is still much more conducive. Beryl Was An Extreme Outlier Last July: Beryl formed in June, but it hit Category 5 intensity while in the Caribbean on the month's first day in 2024, making it the earliest on record any Atlantic storm has reached that rare top-end intensity by more than two weeks. The hurricane-ravaged parts of the Windward Islands as a strong Category 4 just before that happened. The U.S. Was Heavily Impacted By Beryl: The hurricane made landfall on the Texas coast as an intensifying Category 1 on July 5, contributing to serious wind damage in southeast Texas, including Houston. Many trees were downed and millions had power knocked out. Beryl produced 65 tornadoes in the U.S., which ranks fifth-most of any tropical cyclone on record. Damage was estimated to be $7.2 billion and 46 deaths were blamed on the hurricane and its remnants from Texas to New England. July's Record For Named Storms Was Recently Tied: The hyperactive 2020 hurricane season had five storms form in July: Edouard, Fay, Gonzalo, Hanna and Isaias. That tied 2005 for the most storms in the month since 1950. Hanna made landfall in Texas and Isaias would later go on to rake the East Coast in early August. On the opposite side of the spectrum, no named storms roamed the Atlantic waters at any point in July as recently as 2016. The Next Storm Names We'll See: Barry, Chantal and Dexter are next on the list of 21 names. Dexter is a new name on this year's list, replacing Dorian from 2019 which was retired after the destruction it caused in the Bahamas. Chris Dolce has been a senior digital meteorologist with for 15 years after beginning his career with The Weather Channel in the early 2000s.