43°0'поўн. / 85°46'зах. / Вышыня 231 m / 13:25 04/04/2026, America/Detroit (UTC-4)
ад: 04/04/2026, 10:25
каб: 04/04/2026, 16:30
* WHAT...Flooding caused by excessive rainfall is expected. * WHERE...A portion of southwest Michigan, including the following county, Kent. * WHEN...Until 430 PM EDT Saturday. * IMPACTS...Minor flooding in low-lying and poor drainage areas. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - At 1024 AM EDT, Radar and automated rain gauges indicated heavy rain with totals of 1 to 2 inches of rainfall. Additional totals of up to 0.25 inches expected through Saturday afternoon. Minor flooding is ongoing or expected to begin shortly in the advisory area. - Some locations that will experience flooding include... Grand Rapids, Wyoming, Kentwood, Walker, Grandville, East Grand Rapids, Caledonia, Gerald R. Ford International Airport, Ada, Cutlerville, Dutton, Byron Center and Cascade. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood
ад: 03/04/2026, 11:15
каб: 04/04/2026, 15:00
ESFGRR 2 To 4 inches of rain has fallen across a large portion of Lower Michigan over the last week. Rivers are now rising, and soils are saturated. A final round of rain from this storm cycle is expected to impact our area late Friday night and continue through the day Saturday. Most areas will receive an additional 0.5 to 1.0 inches of rain, with some indications that a few counties could end up with a streak of more like 1.5 to 2.5 inches of rain or more. If this heavier rain tracks over an urban area like Kalamazoo, Grand Rapids, or Lansing, localized urban flooding issues are likely. Meanwhile, as all this water continues to find its way into our river systems, minor flooding is becoming likely on parts of the Muskegon River, and is also a possibility on some of the typical flood-prone trouble spots in the Grand River watershed, including in Comstock Park and Maple River. Much will depend on exactly where the heaviest swath of the upcoming rain falls, but the bottom line is that some minor river flooding is becoming more likely across parts of Southwest and West-Central Michigan as all this rain continues to add up.