Flood — Greenbrier, West Virginia
2025-02-16 · near East Rainelle, Greenbrier, West Virginia
Event narrative
Sewell Creek abv Little Sewell Creek at Rainelle, WV (RANW2), crested at the minor flood stage of 14.30 feet at 3:30 am EST on the 16th above the flood stage of 14.0 feet. The flooding was the result of between 2 and 2.50 inches of rain falling across the Camp Creek basin in about 11 hours ending at around 9:00 pm on the 15th. There were no reports of flooding received from the Town of Rainelle, though similar flooding events of the past have resulted in flood waters entering people's properties.
Wider weather episode
A deep upper level trough was observed exiting the southern Rockies during the morning of February 15th, with southwesterly windflow ahead of the trough allowing for a fetch of deep moisture from the western Gulf of America. This moisture pooled along a warm front situated across from Kentucky into southwest Virginia, where precipitable water values increased from 0.6 to 0.7 inches at 7 am that morning, to around 1.1 to 1.2 inches by early afternoon, which would be around 2 standard deviations above normal for mid-February. While the warm front shifted northward to the west of the Appalachians, high pressure off the Atlantic coast that was wedged against the eastern face of the Appalachians delayed the northward progress of the warm front. As such, the front provided the focus for training of bands of heavy rain that fell across southeast West Virginia through much of the day on February 15th. The rain fell at rates of 0.3 to 0.5 per hour beginning at around 9 am EST in the morning, which persisted for a 9-10 hour period. Rainfall totals ranged from 2 to 3.5 inches across southeast West Virginia during this period. Soils across the area were nearly saturated from 2 rounds of widespread precipitation that fell earlier in the month. Additionally, the rain was falling over ground that was partially frozen, and covered in snow and ice from a winter storm that impacted southeast West Virginia a few days earlier, increasing the rapid runoff potential into the creeks and rivers. In this event, CREST Unit Streamflow did not show impressive returns, while MRMS underestimated some of the precipitation totals. It was those factors combined with the high runoff potential of the rainfall that resulted in a lack of realization how quickly river levels were rising, and just how intense the flooding was becoming. CREST Hydrophobic Unit Flow proved to be a more accurate tool in this situation given the frozen ground, with returns as high as 500 cfs/m^2 across Mercer County, which is where some of the most intense flooding was observed. Because MRMS was underestimating rainfall amounts, both the FLASH ARI and QPE/FFG values were also significantly underestimated. In these situation, monitoring ground-truth precipitation totals from a network of private weather stations might have prompted Flash Flood Warnings to be issued sooner.
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Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1228199. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.