Flood — Carroll, New Hampshire
2023-07-11 to 2023-07-12 · near North Conway, Carroll, New Hampshire
Event narrative
The Saco River came out of banks on July 11th following heavy rain showers. The USGS river gage at Conway exceeded the flood stage of 9 feet, cresting at 9.4 feet on the 11th. The impacts were mainly focused at low lying campgrounds and flooding at Transvale Road.
Wider weather episode
Saturday, July 8th through Monday, July 10th was an active weather period with numerous rounds of heavy rainfall moving across the state. Thunderstorms developed during the afternoon of Saturday, July 8th with scattered thunderstorms from the White Mountains down through the Monadnocks. Storms came to an end during the evening hours. Localized 3-hr rainfall totals ranged from 1 to 3', but no flooding was reported.
There was a short break in rainfall activity the night of July 8th through noon on July 9th, before a cluster of showers and thunderstorms developed around noon on Sunday across Cheshire County. The storms continued to train over the same region with storms repeatedly hitting the same areas in Cheshire County. Thunderstorms and showers expanded in aerial coverage across western New Hampshire through the late evening. The rain ended in the hardest hit areas of Cheshire County by 9 PM on July 9th.
After a brief lull in the rainfall activity around midnight, rainfall activity began to increase once again during the early morning hours of July 10th. A large area of rainfall pushed into Western New Hampshire as an area of low pressure moved into Northern New England. Rainfall was light with areas of moderate rainfall rates through the morning hours of July 10th. Overall rainfall rates were not as heavy as previous days but the rain was more widespread and constant across the Connecticut River Valley region of New Hampshire. There was a short lull in rainfall across Southwest New Hampshire during the afternoon hours, before a heavy band of heavy rain showers with intense rainfall rates pushed through the region during the evening of July 10th. Rainfall rates up 1 to 1.25' per/hour were reported with this band. Additional flooding was reported as saturated soils led to rapid run-off, especially in Sullivan and Northern Cheshire County.
View location on OpenStreetMap → (44.0500, -71.1300)
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1124131. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.