Flash Flood — Torrance, New Mexico
2024-08-08 · near Moriarty, Torrance, New Mexico
Event narrative
A driveway a few miles south of Edgewood became flooded and impassable.
Wider weather episode
A backdoor front pushed through northern and eastern NM during the morning of August 8th, settling along the east slopes of the central mountain chain. This front replenished monsoon moisture across this part of the state. Showers and storms developed across the northern and central mountains midday spreading to surrounding lower elevations later in the day. Heavy rainfall from storms resulted in flash flooding on the Hermits Peak/Calf Canyon burn scar and across the East Mountains and Central Highlands. Outflow from storms over the East Mountains and Central Highlands reinforced the backdoor front through the gaps of the central mountain chain bringing a high east canyon wind to the Rio Grande Valley during the mid evening hours. Storms across eastern New Mexico gradually dissipated before sunrise August 9th. Another round of showers and storms developed across northern and western NM during the afternoon hours of August 9th. Some of these storms produced flash flooding and severe thunderstorm wind gusts across parts of northern, central and eastern New Mexico.
View location on OpenStreetMap → (35.0400, -106.1900)
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1190865. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.