906  
FGUS72 KFFC 221935  
ESFFFC  
GAC009-011-013-015-021-023-035-045-047-053-055-057-059-063-067-  
077-079-081-083-085-089-091-093-097-107-111-113-115-117-121-123-  
125-129-133-135-139-141-143-145-149-151-153-157-159-163-167-169-  
171-175-187-193-195-197-199-207-209-211-213-215-217-219-221-223-  
225-227-231-233-235-237-247-249-255-259-261-263-265-269-271-279-  
281-283-285-289-291-293-295-297-301-303-307-309-311-313-315-317-  
319-230800-  
 
HYDROLOGIC OUTLOOK  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PEACHTREE CITY GA  
235 PM EST MON JAN 22 2024  
   
..RAINY WEEK WILL INCREASE FLOOD THREAT THROUGH THE WEEKEND
 
 
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
AN EXTENDED PERIOD OF UNSETTLED AND AND ABNORMALLY WARM WEATHER  
WILL KEEP WET CONDITIONS OVER NORTH AND CENTRAL GEORGIA THROUGH  
THE WEEK. WHILE THERE IS SOME VARIABILITY IN THE FORECAST, THERE  
IS INCREASING CERTAINTY THAT THE EXPECTED RAINFALL WILL ENHANCE  
FLOODING CONCERNS.  
   
RAINFALL EXPECTED
 
 
FORECAST RAINFALL AMOUNTS THROUGH THE WEEK CONTINUE TO BE  
UNSEASONABLY HIGH. CURRENT FORECAST RAINFALL TOTALS FOR TUESDAY  
THROUGH EARLY THURSDAY RANGE FROM 1 TO 2 INCHES FOR AREAS NORTH  
OF A LINE FROM LAGRANGE TO ATLANTA TO ATHENS. FOR THIS SAME AREA,  
ADDITIONAL RAINFALL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY BRING THE SEVEN-DAY  
RAINFALL TOTALS TO 2.5 TO 5 INCHES. LOCALLY HIGHER AMOUNTS ARE  
POSSIBLE. THE WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER ALREADY HAS A SLIGHT RISK  
(LEVEL 2 OF 4) OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THURSDAY AND FRIDAY.  
 
SOUTH OF THE LAGRANGE TO ATLANTA TO ATHENS LINE, RAINFALL AMOUNTS  
FOR TUESDAY THROUGH EARLY THURSDAY ARE LESS THAN HALF AN INCH,  
BUT COULD REACH 2 TO 2.5 INCHES THROUGH SATURDAY.  
 
ALTHOUGH RAIN IS EXPECTED EACH DAY TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, THE  
HIGHEST FLOOD THREATS AT THIS TIME APPEAR TO BE THURSDAY AND  
FRIDAY. ADDITIONAL RAINFALL IS EXPECTED NEXT WEEK.  
   
ANTECEDENT CONDITIONS
 
 
SOILS ARE ALREADY SOGGY FROM RECENT RAINY CONDITIONS AND LOCAL  
CREEKS AND RIVERS ARE CURRENTLY AT NORMAL TO MUCH ABOVE NORMAL  
STREAMFLOW. YEAR-TO-DATE, RAINFALL AMOUNTS HAVE ALREADY TOTALED  
150 TO 400 PERCENT OF NORMAL OVER NORTH AND PORTIONS OF CENTRAL  
GEORGIA. AS NEW RAINFALL ACCUMULATES THROUGH THE WEEK, THE ABILITY  
FOR RIVERS TO HANDLE INCREASED RUNOFF WITHIN THE CHANNEL IS  
SUPPRESSED, AND COULD RESULT IN FLOODING.  
   
IMPACTS
 
 
WITH THE EXPECTED RAINFALL AMOUNTS, ISOLATED FLASH FLOODING IS  
POSSIBLE. PERIODS OF HEAVY RAIN CAN OVERWHELM OR CLOG STORM DRAINS  
AND DITCHES WITH DEBRIS. TAKE TIME AHEAD OF THE RAIN TO CLEAR  
LEAVES AND DEBRIS FROM THESE DRAINAGE SYSTEMS.  
 
MINOR FLOODING OF SOME OF THE LARGER CREEKS OR RIVERS IS LIKELY  
WITH THE FORECAST STORM TOTAL RAINFALL. QUICKLY ACCUMULATING  
RAINFALL CAN PRODUCE WIDESPREAD MINOR FLOODING OF SMALLER, FAST-  
RESPONDING CREEKS, AND MODERATE FLOODING CANNOT BE RULED OUT.  
   
ACTIONS
 
 
STAY ALERT TO THE CHANGING FORECASTS. IT CAN BE DIFFICULT TO STAY  
SITUATIONALLY AWARE TO CHANGING WEATHER OR FLOODING CONDITIONS.  
DON'T BE CAUGHT OFF GUARD. KNOW WHAT TO DO IF A WARNING IS ISSUED,  
PARTICULARLY IF YOU LIVE OR ARE VISITING AN AREA NEAR A CREEK OR  
RIVER.  
 
TYPICALLY, A HYDROLOGIC OUTLOOK IS ISSUED ONLY ONCE BEFORE A  
SIGNIFICANT WEATHER OR WATER EVENT AND MAY BE FOLLOWED WITH A  
FLOOD WATCH WITHIN 48 TO 72 HOURS. FOR ADDITIONAL HYDROLOGIC  
INFORMATION, VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT WEATHER.GOV/ATLANTA. CLICK ON  
THE RIVERS AND LAKES TAB ABOVE THE STATE MAP TO ACCESS THE LATEST  
RIVER AND PRECIPITATION INFORMATION.  
 

 
 
BELANGER  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab GA Page Main Text Page