48°30'S / 122°14'Z / Výška 17 m / 19:24 20.03.2026, America/Los_Angeles (UTC-7)
Od: 20.03.2026, 16:56
Do: 20.03.2026, 19:45
* WHAT...Flooding caused by excessive rainfall continues to be possible.
* WHERE...Portions of northwest and west central Washington, including the following counties, in northwest Washington, Skagit and Whatcom. In west central Washington, King and Snohomish.
* WHEN...Until 8 PM PDT this evening.
* IMPACTS...Excessive runoff may result in flooding of rivers, creeks, streams, and other low-lying and flood-prone locations.
* ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - Area rivers will still be rising into Saturday, with multiple cresting into Sunday. The rain has largely ended for the area. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood
Od: 20.03.2026, 17:27
Do: 21.03.2026, 01:30
...The Flood Warning continues for the following rivers in Washington...
Skagit River Near Concrete affecting Skagit County.
* WHAT...Moderate flooding is occurring and moderate flooding is forecast.
* WHERE...Skagit River near Concrete.
* WHEN...Until late tomorrow evening.
* ADDITIONAL DETAILS... - At 5:15 PM PDT Friday the stage was 30.6 feet. - Flood stage is 28.0 feet. - Recent Activity...The maximum river stage in the 24 hours ending at 5:15 PM PDT Friday was 30.6 feet. - Forecast...The river is expected to rise to a crest of 32.0 feet late this evening into tonight. The river will then fall below flood stage around midday Saturday and continue to recede into Sunday. - Flood History...This crest compares to a previous crest of 31.4 feet on 10/28/1967. - http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood
Od: 20.03.2026, 12:16
Do: 21.03.2026, 17:00
Rainfall amounts of 2 to 9 inches over the past 3 days has increased soil moisture to high levels across western Washington. This amount of rain that has been observed will continue to put extra pressure on soil instability, leading to an increased threat of landslides and debris flows, especially from recent burned areas.
Over the last couple days multiple slides have been reported across locations of western Washington. More landslides are possible.
Areas most susceptible to landslides debris flows under these conditions are steep coastal bluffs, other steep hillsides or road cuts, and recent burned areas. A diminishing threat of landslides and debris flows will continue over the weekend after the rain ends.
For more information about current conditions, visit www.weather.gov/seattle, select Hydrology, and then scroll down for the links to the landslide information pages.
For more information on landslides, visit the website for the Washington State Department of Natural Resources landslide geologic hazards at: http://bit.ly/2mtA3wn