Tropical Storm — Eastern Clay, Florida
2024-10-09 to 2024-10-10 · Eastern Clay, Florida
Event narrative
Clay county received about 2-3 inches of rain across the county, with the highest storm total northeast of Keystone Heights at 3.76 inches. There were reports of surge flooding from the St. Johns river resulting in road closures near the intersection of Plainfield Avenue and Lakefield Lane in the Orange Park area and Williams Park Road near the boat ramp adjacent to the St. Johns River south of Green Cove Springs. On Oct. 10th at 6:24 PM EDT, the St. Johns River at Buckman Bridge river gauge reached major river flood stage and measured a peak height of 3.01 FT MHHW. There were also reports of trees and powerlines down.
Wider weather episode
A tropical disturbance over the southwest Gulf of Mexico quickly developed into Tropical Storm
Milton on Saturday, October 5th. Milton then moved slowly east-southeastward, strengthening into a
hurricane the following day. On Monday, October 7th, the storm underwent rapid intensification,
reaching Category 5 strength as it neared the northwestern coast of Mexico's Yucatn Peninsula. Late
on Monday and into Tuesday, Milton shifted eastward and then northeastward across the
southeastern Gulf of Mexico.
As Milton approached Florida's Gulf coast on Wednesday, October 9th, it began to gradually weaken,
but still maintained major hurricane status. The storm made landfall that evening near Siesta Key on
Florida's west coast as a strong Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.
While it weakened further as it crossed central Florida overnight, Milton remained a hurricane. By
early Thursday morning, October 10th, it emerged off Florida's Atlantic coast as a Category 1 storm.
Milton caused widespread impacts across north-central and northeast Florida, as well as coastal
southeast Georgia. Flagler County, along with large portions of St. Johns, Putnam, and Marion
counties, experienced sustained tropical storm-force winds and hurricane-force gusts. Rainfall
amounts ranged from 7 to 11 inches as outer rainbands and the storm's powerful northern side
swept through these areas late Wednesday night into early Thursday morning.
This heavy rainfall caused Deep Creek, a tributary of the St. Johns River in St. Johns County, to reach
record levels on Thursday, October 10th, surpassing the previous record set during Hurricane Irma in
2017. This led to extensive flooding throughout the southern half of St. Johns County, particularly in
the Flagler Estates community and the towns of Hastings and Spuds. Additionally, record flooding was
observed along Haw Creek in western Flagler County, exceeding the previous record set in the
aftermath of Hurricane Ian in 2022.
Storm surge flooding of around 3 feet above Mean Higher High Water (MHHW) was recorded along
the St. Johns River and the northeast Florida coast. Significant inundation was reported along the
lower St. Johns River, with widespread flooding in areas such as Welaka, FL.
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1213110. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.