National Weather Service United States Department of Commerce

Resaca overflowing on N. Vermillion Ave. in Brownsville, less than a mile north of SR 4 (Boca Chica Blvd.)

October 2021 Roars Into Cameron County With Record Rainfall, Widespread Flooding

Brownsville to Harlingen Shatter Single-Day Records on the 1st; Flash Flooding From Harlingen to Brownsville

Overview

The combination of an upper level disturbance crossing the southern Great Plains, upper level wind and a low level low pressure system moving east from Nuevo Leon, Mexico, and prior boundaries from earlier thunderstorms north of the Rio Grande Valley and from morning thunderstorms along the coast combined with deep atmospheric tropical moisture to create a thunderstorm "system", including a heavy-precipitation "supercell" event, along the IH-69E corridor in Cameron County from Harlingen to Brownsville, including San Benito, Rio Hondo, and Los Fresnos.  Measured and estimated rainfall of 4 to 8 inches in just two hours or so was too much for many drainage systems to handle, and significant flash flooding occurred during the peak of the October 1st (Friday afternoon) late afternoon and evening commute.  The peak of the heavy rainfall occurred between 330 and 7 PM, with some locations in east and northeast Brownsville receiving 7 to 8 inches in two hours or so within that window.  Additional heavy rainfall of 5 to 9 inches (radar and observed) fell mainly in rural eastern Willacy and Kenedy Counties on September 30 and October 1. 

Flooding was most intense to the east and northeast of downtown Brownsville during the late afternoon and well into the evening of October 1. During the peak of the event, hundreds of streets were impassible, hundreds of vehicles became trapped in the high water, with many partially submerged and others totally submerged.  Hundreds of residences sustained some damage from the floodwaters, which ranged from inches to more than a foot indoors. All resacas and retention ponds in this area were at or even just above bank full late on October 1, with at least one just north of Boca Chica Blvd. on Vermillion Ave. over spilling onto the road well into the following day (Oct. 2, above).  Many harvested fields were filled with water in Cameron County between Brownsville, Los Fresnos, and Rio Hondo.  Based on first-hand reports from residents and law enforcement, peak water depth in streets, parking lots, and other locations ranged from "waist to chest high" - 3 to more than 4 feet. The highest levels were where water pooled, such as toward the edges (curbs, rightmost lanes, etc).  On October 2, County Judge Eddie Trevino issued a local disaster declaration to account for public and private damage, which was likely to end up in the millions of dollars.  Additional damage information will be posted to this site later this autumn. 

The torrential rain in Harlingen spiked the flows in Arroyo Colorado, with a peak level of 14.97 ranking 8th highest on the historical record (below), and just below the most recent October Rio Grande Valley flood events in late October, 2015.  

The localized nature of the rainfall was more common with an event on August 31, 2015 (Cameron County), and October 30, 2015 (Cameron, Willacy) than those in recent years (most of the populated Rio Grande Valley). While Cameron County generally received 3 to more than 13 inches of rain in two calendar days, the McAllen metro area received less than 1 inch.  

Photo provided by resident at intersection of Kingsway and Canterbury Road in east Brownsville during heavy rainfall/flooding on October 1, 2021.    Photo at the same intersection, nearly 18 hours later (2 PM October 2) showing continued high water of 1 to 2 feet in the streets.   Hydrograph for Arroyo Colorado (in Harlingen), showing spike in flow inside the levee late on October 1, 2021

Event Data in Context

Combined with earlier heavy rainfall from bands that slid across east Brownsville to Harlingen, daily totals in both locations shattered prior records.  The single-day rainfall also ranked near the top for October overall, as well as for the calendar year, at both locations.  Combined with a separate early morning event the prior day (September 30), total rainfall was a high as 13.53 inches (see map, below) fell just north of the NWS Office in East Brownsville - a total that is roughly 4 inches above the average for September and October combined. In just two calendar days!  A preliminary list of these and other observations is shown at the end of this document.  Specific points of note include:

  • Brownsville's 8.09 inches on October 1 shattered to prior daily record of 2.44 inches set on October 1, 1958.  The value ranked second highest for any October day on record (9.09 in 1996, associated with Tropical Storm Josephine) - and 7th highest for the entire calendar year. (12.09 remained in first place, associated with Hurricane Beulah on September 20, 1967).  It joined April 5, 1991, as the only non-tropical cyclone related single-day rainfall in the top 7. (Records back to 1878)
  • Brownsville's two-day total of 10.42 inches ranked 10th highest all-time (records back to 1878), and was only one of two events on record in the top ten not associated with a tropical storm or hurricane (September 1984 was the other) 
  • Harlingen's 7.97 inches on October 1 shattered its prior daily record of 1.43 inches set in 1998, and also ranked first for the month (based on cooperative calendar-day observations), crushing the 4.66 inches that fell on October 1, 1998. (Harlingen/Cooperative data records back to 1911).  The value ranked 2nd highest for the calendar year, with only 9.79 inches on April 5, 1991, being higher.
  • The Harlingen Cooperative location's two-day total of 8 inches ranked 10th highest all-time.

Community Collaborate Rain, Hail, and Snow Network (CoCoRaHS) rainfall map for the lower/mid Rio Grande Valley, for September 30-October 2, 2021.

Rainfall totals from September 29 through October 1, 2021, for all of the Deep South Texas/Rio Grande Valley region.  Heavy rainfall also occurred on September 30th (evening) in Brooks, Kenedy, and extreme eastern Jim Hogg County.

Rainfall Data and Historical Return Frequency

In areas of east and northeast Brownsville where flooding was most intense, the estimated hourly and multi-hourly rainfall rates were likely well beyond the specified drainage capacity, based on return frequencies in specific locations. The combination of observed rainfall during the heavy-precipitation supercell portion (generally between 430 and 7 PM in east and northeast Brownsville) suggested hourly rainfall rates of 3 to 4 inches for up to two hours.  These short-term totals match closely with 1 in 100 to 1 in 500 annual probability events, also known as "100 to 500 year" floods. Single-hour rates were a bit less but still impressive, ranking between 1 in 10 and 1 in 50 probabilities ("10 to 50 year" floods). The 12-hour, single-day, and 2-day return frequencies ranged from 1 in 25 to nearly 1 in 100 ("25 to 100 year" floods).  Bottom line?  Even if neighborhood drainage capacity was rated for the "100 year" flood, the 2-hour rainfall rates overwhelmed said systems - and widespread flash flooding was inevitable. 

Atlas-14 rainfall return frequencies for Brownsville, based on observing location at the Brownsville/South Padre Int'l Airport

 

Video

Two videos were provided to our office by Jim Danner, Broadcast Meteorologist from KGBT Channel 4, of ongoing flooding just before sunset Friday, October 1, along Paredes Line Road northeast of downtown Brownsville. 

Video 1:  Resaca and nearby thoroughfares in the Paredes Line/Morrison Road area of Northeast Brownsville

Video 2:  Paredes Line Road with hundreds of vehicles under feet of water, many stranded

Preliminary 3-Day Rainfall Totals, Valley-Wide

Below is a list of rainfall from multiple sources, collected on October 2nd. Note that some of these may not match mapped data due to automated collection methods. 

...UPDATED PRECIPITATION REPORTS FROM 10 PM THURSDAY TO MIDNIGHT SATURDAY...

Location                     Amount    Time/Date       Provider             

...Texas...

...Brooks County...
Falfurrias                   1.25 in   0115 AM 10/02   AWOS                    

...Cameron County...
Brownsville 4.1 E            10.72 in  0800 AM 10/02   COCORAHS                             
Brownsville 6.4 SE           9.45 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Brownsville 1.7 NNE          9.34 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Harlingen 1.1 NE             8.41 in   0800 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Brownsville 4.1 ENE          8.40 in   0800 AM 10/02   COCORAHS                             
Brownsville                  8.09 in   0953 AM 10/02   ASOS                 
1.0 NE Harlingen             7.97 in   0700 AM 10/02   COOP                 
Brownsville 4.4 N            7.95 in   0800 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Brownsville 3.5 N            7.45 in   0800 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Brownsville 12.6 E           6.23 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Brownsville 1.9 ESE          6.15 in   0800 AM 10/02   COCORAHS
Harlingen                    6.11 in   1252 AM 10/02   ASOS             
Brownsville 3.9 NNW          5.86 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
San Benito 6.3 ENE           5.50 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Brownsville 0.4 WSW          5.50 in   0902 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Harlingen 0.4 N              5.45 in   0800 AM 10/02   COCORAHS                                              
Los Fresnos 0.3 NE           4.99 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Brownsville 0.1 SSE          4.93 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Los Fresnos 2.1 NNE          4.89 in   0708 AM 10/02   COCORAHS                              
Los Frenos                   4.63 in   0907 AM 10/02   CWOP                 
San Benito 0.9 SSE           4.52 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS                              
Port Isabel                  4.05 in   0953 AM 10/02   ASOS                                  
Laguna Atascosa              3.95 in   0922 AM 10/02   RAWS                 
Harlingen 4.2 W              3.73 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Brownsville 1.5 WNW          3.45 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Harlingen 4.4 W              3.23 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Los Fresnos                  3.12 in   0646 PM 10/01   CWOP                 
Laguna Vista 0.3 N           3.04 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Los Fresnos                  3.02 in   0956 AM 10/02   CWOP                 
Harlingen 6.2 WSW            2.65 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS                             
La Feria                     2.57 in   1010 AM 10/02   CWOP                 
Laguna Vista                 2.52 in   0101 AM 10/02   CWOP                                                 
Brownsville                  2.10 in   1001 AM 10/02   CWOP                 
Rancho Viejo 0.7 E           1.75 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Brownsville 6.4 WNW          1.55 in   0830 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             

...Hidalgo County...
Mercedes 1.9 SW              2.32 in   0800 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
Weslaco Midvally             2.24 in   0955 AM 10/02   AWOS                 
RIO GRANDE NWR EDINBURG 17 N 2.14 in   0910 AM 10/02   HADS                                  
Edinburg Intl                1.84 in   1015 AM 10/02   AWOS                 
1.4 NE Weslaco               1.81 in   0700 AM 10/02   COOP                                  
Linn-San Manuel              0.54 in   0946 AM 10/02   RAWS                                 
Edinburg                     0.51 in   1010 AM 10/02   CWOP                 
Santa Ana Nwr                0.29 in   0945 AM 10/02   RAWS                 
McAllen 3.5 N                0.15 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
3.0 W Santa Rosa             0.10 in   0700 AM 10/02   COOP                 
Edinburg                     0.10 in   0700 AM 10/02   COOP                 
Mccook                       0.06 in   0700 AM 10/02   COOP                 
McAllen 2.4 NE               0.04 in   1201 AM 10/02   COCORAHS                
McAllen                      0.04 in   1005 AM 10/02   CWOP                 
7.3 S Alamo                  0.03 in   0945 AM 10/02   HADS                 
Mcallen                      0.01 in   0953 AM 10/02   ASOS                 

...Jim Hogg County...
18 N La Gloria               0.50 in   0125 AM 10/02   AWS                

...Willacy County...
Port Mansfield 1.1 SE        4.00 in   0700 AM 10/02   COCORAHS             
1.8 W Raymondville           2.70 in   0800 AM 10/02   COOP                 

Observations are collected from a variety of sources with varying
equipment and exposures. We thank all volunteer weather observers 
for their dedication. Not all data listed are considered official.